Friday, June 14, 2013

Common Core: Commentary on NY TImes Sunday Piece from Ohanian and Daily Howler

Our public schools were now being compared to the world’s most famous shipwreck! And by the way: As long as this Standard Story is told, our public school teachers will get blamed for the disaster they have produced. The wreck of the Hesperus will get blamed on them and their infernal unions.
.....does it make sense to have a uniform set of “standards” for every child in each grade? Given the large academic gaps within our ginormous student population, this basic notion has never made a lick of sense. But given the way our “public discourse” works, this question has almost never been raised as the so-called “standards movement” has taken hold in the past twenty years. In their apparent main point, Hacker and Dreifus worried about the millions of kids—black kids, white kids, Hispanic kids—who are functioning near the bottom end of the vast academic ranges found in our public schools. If those kids can’t make it through high school today, how will they be helped if we make our “standards” tougher?
... Daily Howler
There are loads of comments on this piece (Who’s Minding the Schools by Andrew Hacker and Claudia Dreifus - New York Times, June 09, 2013) and below are a few. One thing I found interesting was the emphasis on the right wing (Glenn Beck) and minimizing the left/anti-testing crowd. This was from my Wave column today:

We can expect the testing to get heavier due to another national imposition on schools called the “common core” with all kinds of ridiculous rules on what and how to teach – really, why trust teachers to make ANY decisions? You know something weird is going on when Glen Beck and the tea partiers and right wing Republicans are joining the left in opposing the Common Core. For the right it is the Obama/Arne Duncan assault on local control over education. Like let’s teach that the South really won the Civil War (maybe they did) or that Darwin was really the serpent in the Garden of Eden. That has been used by CC supporters but the left is not having any of it, opposing the CC on the heavy testing and control exerted over schools where they would actually teach important stuff if they were allowed to.
Susan Ohanian chose a few (http://susanohanian.org/core.php?id=507):

Indiana Reader Comment: There is a winner-takes-all aspect to the implementation of Common Core that I find chilling. The authors are right to ask: how does this curriculum account for or prepare those who don't "make it" (whether that means not finishing high school, not going to college, or some other form of societal misstep)?

It reminds me of the horribly-named "Race to the Top". Dearies, we can't all be at the top. By definition. We need to be considering the 80% of our population who aren't, well, the top 20%, and who likely won't be getting good jobs with good benefits and living out the American Dream.

Please don't pretend that ensuring a continually higher level of average academic achievement will somehow produce happier citizens who feel more secure in their health and well-being. That's nothing more than an academic arms race.

Los Angeles Reader Comment: Does anyone with a functioning brain really think that education and standardization have anything in common? Education by its very definition is the exact opposite of standardization. Education is a liberating force, the breakdown of boundaries and limits in pursuit of knowledge in its purest and most profound sense.

Standardization is great for Microsoft and other businesses that mass produce a product. But does anyone want their children to think or be like everyone else? Does anyone even believe such a goal is possible?

One could easier imagine standardized, one-size-fits-all liquor laws and drivers license tests across these 50 diverse and unique states before anything approaching standardized education. Yet 45 states have rushed to embrace Common Core? This hasty and ill-considered attempt to radically change the very heart of public education in America without the slightest bit of public discussion is sheer madness.

Westchester County Comment: As a 7th grade English teacher, this year, I incorporated numerous informational texts to link to the novels my class was reading. Many of these included New York Times articles of high interest levels for my 7th graders. It was gratifying to help students to deconstruct the articles, along with some movie reviews, so that they could interact directly with well-crafted writing. It was exciting to see students work to make sense of difficult vocabulary and to share their interpretations in lively discussions.

On a regular basis, I ask myself: Am I giving them a foundation that will help to fire up curiosity about how to communicate and to understand other points of view? Am I helping to demystify novels and articles and approaches to writing?

Wow. Was I ever asking the wrong questions! The ELA exam wiped my students and me out. We are all demoralized.

During the three days of testing, my students struggled to finish textbook informational texts that didn't resemble any authentic newspaper or magazine articles we had studied earlier in class.

If somebody from another planet had visited us on those test days, s/he/it might conclude that reading is an unpleasant chore and that writing is something you've got do to shove the words down on the paper, so you can get it over with; get as far away from the "learning" as possible, because it is painful.

I'm not on the same page as the Common Core and the Exams.
Here is a different take from Bob Somerby at The Daily Howler. Bob was a long-time teacher in the Baltimore school system so he knows of what he speaks when it comes to education. Somerby talks about a lot of stuff but I love it when he talks education.

Posted: 13 Jun 2013 07:01 AM PDT
THURSDAY, JUNE 13, 2013

Part 4—Including some horrible facts: We’ve been asking the question all week:

How many readers were able to discern the main point of the piece by Hacker and Dreifus in Sunday’s New York Times?

We raised that question at the start of the week, noting the rather jumbled writing the Times didn’t bother to edit. Because their piece was a bit opaque, we wondered how many readers had actually discerned the authors’ (apparent) main point.

Yesterday, one set of results came in.

The Times published five letters about the piece. None of the letters addressed the (very worthwhile) point the professors seemed to be raising in their piece about the new Common Core standards.

The authors seemed to be asking a critical question: If twenty-five percent of American students can’t get through high school as matters stand now, what will happen when the “more rigorous” Common Core standards make the task that much harder?

“Supporters are confident that students will rise to these challenges and make up for our country’s lag in the global education race,” Hacker and Dreifus said at one point in their stroll through the land. “We are not so sure.”

In our view, Hacker and Dreifus raised an extremely good point. Yesterday morning, in five separate letters, no one seemed to realize that this was the question they asked.

We don’t know what kinds of letters the New York Times may have received. But none of the letters the paper published addressed the authors’ (apparent) main point.

That said, two of the letters did recite the propagandistic Standard Story which dominates our nation’s discussions of the public schools. We refer to the mandated Standard Story about “our country’s lag in the global education race,” a Standard Story the authors themselves recited as part of their piece.

The first letter-writer praised the new standards, failing to mention the point of concern Hacker and Dreifus had raised. But as she ended, she tickled the strings of our nation’s Favorite Song:

“I think that we all agree—the old approach was not working.”

The old approach has been working reasonably well for a fairly large number of kids, as we will note below. But it seems to be federal law: You simply can’t discuss public schools without advancing that Standard Claim.

Another letter-writer pumped up the volume on this mandated tune. “Isn’t arguing about the Common Core State Standards rearranging the deck chairs on the Titanic?” he gloomily wondered.

That was more like it! Our public schools were now being compared to the world’s most famous shipwreck! And by the way:

As long as this Standard Story is told, our public school teachers will get blamed for the disaster they have produced. The wreck of the Hesperus will get blamed on them and their infernal unions.

Alas! These letter writers approached Sunday’s piece like the famous blind men groping the elephant. Though these folk seemed to be down the hall groping parts of a rhino instead.

The basic point of the piece went unaddressed. But twice, we got to hear the mandated Standard Story—the familiar old story about how gruesome our public schools actually are!

Let’s be clear: American students do not lead the world on international tests. On most measures, the Asian tigers outscore the rest of the world, the United States included.

On the other hand, we aren’t exactly on the Titanic, though everyone and his crazy uncle seems to know that such a claim must, by law, be made.

Sorry, Virginia! American students do not “score well below their European peers in reading and math,” the false claim advanced by Hacker and Dreifus midway through their piece. Even on the international test the authors cherry-picked for maximum gloom, American students outscored their peers from Germany, France and England.

Sorry, Virginia! Scandinavian countries do not “show higher levels of student achievement than the United States,” the bogus claim which appeared in the Washington Post on May 18, placed there by the brightest college kid in the country—by a very bright and caring kid who has been brainwashed by the ubiquity of the Standard Story.

But so what? Everyone from Hacker on down repeats the Standard Story, preferably in a demonstrably bogus form. But then, the Standard Tales which control our discourse are typically built upon two kinds of facts—invented and withheld.

Today, let’s look at some facts which get withheld from your view when public schools get discussed. You will never see these facts when your upper-end press corps pretends to discuss public schools.

Some of these facts are almost uplifting; some of these facts are horrific. All these facts open the window onto our brutal history. But all these facts are actual facts—and they are highly relevant to Hacker and Dreifus’ apparent main point.

These facts are constantly withheld from your view. Although they routinely appear in major reports, you are never shown them.

Let’s start with the semi-gloomy facts which Hacker and Dreifus misstated. Below, you see average scores in reading literacy on the 2009 PISA, the international tests on which the professors chose to focus:
Average scores in reading literacy, 2009 PISA:
Korea 539
Finland 536
Canada 524
New Zealand 521
Japan 520
Australia 515
[...]
United States 500
Germany 497
France 496
United Kingdom 494
Average of OECD countries 493
Italy 486
Spain 481
Turkey 464
Chile 449
Mexico 425
Korea scored highest of the 34 OECD nations; Mexico scored lowest. For simplicity, we are omitting 21 countries, none of which outscored the U.S. in a "measurably different" way.

To peruse the entire list, click here, scroll down to page 8.

As you can see, the United States outscored the major European nations, though sometimes by small margins. The New York Times should file a detailed, prominent correction of the claim made by its high scholars.

(If they do, they will of course load it with other cherry-picked facts.)

That said, the United States was outscored on this test, in a “measurably different” way, by half a dozen nations. Prompted by endless propaganda, excitable people may compare this to an outing on the Titanic.

If they do, the New York Times will rush their cries into print.

Propagandized people will wring their hands over this gruesome result. Below, we’ll present a different, more detailed version of this list.

We will include some additional facts, including some which are horrifying. The National Center for Educational Statistics gives prominent placement to these “disaggregated” scores; scroll down to page 14. But when you read about public schools, these facts are always withheld, perhaps because they are accurate:
Average scores in reading literacy, 2009 PISA:
(United States, Asian-American students 541)
Korea 539
Finland 536
(United States, white students 525)
Canada 524
New Zealand 521
Japan 520
Australia 515
[...]
United States 500
Germany 497
France 496
United Kingdom 494
Average of OECD countries 493
Italy 486
Spain 481
(United States, Hispanic students 466)
Turkey 464
Chile 449
(United States, black students 441)
Mexico 425
Propagandists and tribalists will interpret those “disaggregated” scores in various ways. But only to the extent that they’re forced to view them, since these facts are always withheld when we discuss public schools.

Some of those scores are almost encouraging; others are horrifying. For ourselves, we will say that the worst of those scores represents the effect of three centuries of brutal racial history, in which our benighted ancestors worked very hard, for three hundred years, to eliminate literacy from one major segment of the American nation.

Aside from that, how did you like the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries? With Jim Crow to follow?

That much said, we’ll ask two questions. Let’s start with the first:

Even on this cherry-picked test, do our schools seem like the Titanic when you look at the average score of white students? These are the kids whose ancestors weren’t violently stripped of access to literacy for roughly three hundred years, depending on when you stop counting.

That is this country’s mainstream majority population, the population of kids whose ancestors weren’t violently stripped of the culture of literacy. (Some of those other countries have nothing but a mainstream majority population. To their credit, they didn’t direct three centuries of violence at segments of their populations.) And yes, that average score includes the work of the gap-toothed, shoeless, yahoo-raised kids we fiery liberals like to picture in the southern red states.

Do our schools really seem like the Titanic when you look at that average score?

That said, the average score on this test by American black kids is close to horrifying. It must be said, because it’s true, that many black kids are doing extremely well in school. And it must be said that Americans kids of all descriptions tend to score better on other international tests.

In Massachusetts, black kids outscored Finland in math on the 2011 TIMSS! To review those inspiring numbers, click this. Remember, the authors cherry-picked the PISA because it provides the gloomiest scores. This is one of the basic ways the nation gets propagandized.

We reach our second question:

Our nation still lives in the backwash of centuries of brutal racial history. Meanwhile, many black kids do extremely well in school; many white kids do quite poorly. But on the 2009 PISA, our white kids were reading, on average, like kids from middle-class, unicultural Finland. On average, our black kids were closer to Mexico.

In such a country, does it make sense to have a uniform set of “standards” for every child in each grade? Given the large academic gaps within our ginormous student population, this basic notion has never made a lick of sense. But given the way our “public discourse” works, this question has almost never been raised as the so-called “standards movement” has taken hold in the past twenty years.

In their apparent main point, Hacker and Dreifus worried about the millions of kids—black kids, white kids, Hispanic kids—who are functioning near the bottom end of the vast academic ranges found in our public schools. If those kids can’t make it through high school today, how will they be helped if we make our “standards” tougher?

For kids who are struggling as it is, won’t tougher standards just make matters worse? Hacker and Dreifus seemed to be asking that (very important) question.

Alas! In the cluelessness which never sleeps, the New York Times printed exactly no letters which spoke to this, the authors’ main point. But on Monday, the paper did publish a front-page report which touched on this general question.

Slate and Salon tried to comment.

Almost all our public discussions are built around two kinds of facts. The cluelessness of our elites was on display in Monday’s reports, which tended to withhold basic facts about our nation’s academic divides.

Tomorrow: Can our elites read and do math?

UFT Fiddles as Christine Rubino 2-Year Suspension Ends Today

Thursday, June 13, 2013
To: mmulgrew@uft.org, mmendel@uft.org, Amy Arundell, aabrams@uft.org, asolomon@uft.org, hschoor@uft.org,

I am sure you all are well aware of the fact, that my 2 year suspension is supposed to be over-effective tomorrow. I have yet to hear from anyone regarding this matter. If possible, can someone please contact Laura Brantley or Claude Hersch to find out what is going on with this issue? Maybe, Theresa Europe can be consulted?

Thank You,
Christine Rubino
A union is "supposed" to stand by their members and seek information that will help them... [My NUSYUT attorney] kept telling me the benefits of resigning. I was completely shocked. Why would a NYSUT lawyer even suggest that was an option? ... The App division affirmed the lower court decision [negating the firing] and the 2 year suspension is now over--- effective 6/14.... I make phone calls and visit UFT offices and get no response.... I went to go see Amy Arundel in the Manhattan office and she actually said.."What can we do for you? You have your own lawyer?"... I would like to know who or what can be done, so that on 6/14 I know where to go... It has been 2 years, I have lost my career, my house, my whole life, and my identity.... Christine Rubino, letter to UFT officials (excerpts from June 11 letter).
Well, today is the day that Christine's suspension ends and she is due back on payroll. [For background links see below].

The fundamental thing unions must do it protect their members, which it is clear the UFT leadership does not do. Christine admits she made a mistake --saying something privately on facebook to her "friends" -- one of which obviously wasn't -- that I heard so much worse in teachers rooms. Yet the UFT leadership seems to be making a value judgement on a teacher -- they don't want to be seen as defending a teacher who might make a comment they don't deem proper?

When we had breakfast with George Schmidt, in from Chicago a few weeks ago, I brought up Christine's case and George made the emphatic point: we don't get into judging people -- especially with the attacks going on against teachers -- we defend people and stand up for the role a union plays in doing that, especially in a case that has nothing to do with in school issues. This is just the Tweed lawyer gotcha squad being allowed to run rampant to justify their existence while the UFT sits by -- sort of like watching someone in the middle of the road with a truck bearing down but not bothering to holler, "Watch out!"

(MORE put out a statement of support for Christine a few weeks ago: A Call For Fair Discipline: MORE Supports Christine Rubino).

Here is the full email Christine sent to all of the above plus Randi Weingarten the other day:
My name is Christine Rubino and I was a due paying UFT member until June 2011, when I was fired for a Facebook comment. When, I first received charges, I could not believe how quickly my union abandoned me. My "crime" did not seem like an offense worthy of termination.
When, I was assigned to a my NYSUT attorney, Mr. Sean Kelley, I could not believe what I was hearing. There I was – a 14 year teacher with nothing but satisfactory ratings and wonderful write ups from my principal, being chased down for one minute of stupidity.
The first time, I met Mr. Kelley, he was hell bent on having resignation papers drawn up. He kept insisting, it was much easier to resign, than to be fired. He kept telling me the benefits of resigning. I was completely shocked. Why would a NYSUT lawyer even suggest that was an option?
Through diligent research I came to realize the whole 3020a process is completely skewed against the teacher. In fact, I came to realize, that the whole process is INDEED skewed against the teacher.  I have even spoken to many other teachers who say, they were told the same thing. I kept my mouth closed, and sought outside counsel. This came in the form of a wonderful man, named Bryan Glass.

Mr. Glass, has been by my side since the beginning of this nightmare, and although we couldn't win at the hearing (of course, not...the cards are stacked against teachers) I continued to work closely with Mr. Glass. We took case to Supreme Court, we won.
NYCDOE slapped a stay on order, we asked App. Division to lift the statutory stay, and they did. This forced the NYCDOE...to negotiate a new penalty---before the App. Division would here the case. The NYCDOE needed to have a remand hearing. They chose to do this on paper, with the same arbitrator who fired me, presiding. Of course, she came back with a 2 year suspension, which would take me through the Appeal case.
The App division affirmed the lower court decision [negating the firing] and the 2 year suspension is now over--effective 6/14. The time is here, I have been a VERY PATIENT GIRL. I make phone calls and visit UFT offices and get no response. Nothing. I would like to know who or what can be done, so that on 6/14 I know where to go. I do not want to let that day come and go. I have been out of work long enough and have gotten to where I am, BECAUSE, my lawyer hard faith in the case, when my own union did absolutely nothing to help me. A union is "supposed" to stand by their members and seek information that will help them. To this day, I have not heard from anyone who has any information about returning. NOTHING.
As a matter of fact, I went to go see Amy Arundel in the Manhattan office, and she actually said.."What can we do for you? You have your own lawyer?"
My lawyer is my lawyer... he works with the law, he is not a direct pipeline to NYSUT, UFT, or the DOE. I would appreciate some answers as to my current situation, and what can be done, to get me back on the payroll.
It has been 2 years, I have lost my career, my house, my whole life, and my identity. I am the only person who has suffered through this, and yet people who have been accused and found guilty of far worse...have been returned to their school and are working. I look forward to hearing from someone soon, as I have many questions I would like answered. Please feel free to reach out to me...anytime...

Thank you
Christine Rubino
Outrage at Christine Rubino Two Year Suspension for Facebook Transgression, 

The Arbitrator's original decision can be found here. Barbara Jaffae,  ruling

The Assailed Teacher: The Human Cost of Teacher Bashing: The Christine Rubino Case, The DOE’s Long War on Christine Rubino

Perdido Street SchoolA Two-Tiered Justice System

If Only Christine Rubino Were Either Michelle Rhee, Mychael Willon, Derrick Townsend, John Chase JR, or Jose Maldanado-Rivera
The Christine Rubino Facebook Decision And Why The Arbitrator's Award Is Excessive.   

NYCDOENUTS: Rubino Plans To Appeal the Two-Year Suspension

Betsy Combier: here and here and here.

Francesco Portelos: The Christine Rubino Story

Afterburn:
Look for multiple posts today -- I feel like a July day at Kennedy airport with all the backups.


IS YOUR CHILD’S PROMOTION IN DOUBT? Find out what you can do about it

Change the Stakes Provides NYC Parents With Resources on Convoluted DOE Promotion Policy.
SO AMAZING!!!! Thank you! Thank you! --- NYC parent (and teacher)
As letters of horror rolled in from parents about threats to hold their kids back if they don't go to summer school, the CTS crew took on the immense task of collating lots of invaluable info.

It takes a village and Change the Stakes is a VILLAGE.

I always say that given where CTS started less than two years ago, and the fact that the people running it today mostly came on board later on (I play almost no role other than cheer-leading) seeing their output and the spirit with which this now almost all parent group works is one of the most gratifying aspects of activism. It makes this old guy kvell.

Please share this info with your students' parents.

Here is the email from Janine Sopp (who claims she has become this amazing parent activist after being inspired by our film.)

The CtS Student Promotion committee (Andrea, Jane, Diana, Nancy, Deborah, Igor, Lisa Shaw, and Jia) did an amazing job of creating new materials and assembling links to answer many of the questions and concerns you may have about your child's promotion.  It is all posted on our website in two different ways.  The first is on the homepage and a featured post, the second is in a stationary position under opt out/portfolio assessment.

We hope you find this helpful and encourage you to share this information with other parents, teachers and administrators.  Thanks for your patience and for the hard work the committee did on this!

http://changethestakes.wordpress.com/2013/06/13/questions-about-student-promotion-decisions-this-year-change-the-stakes-resources-and-additional-links-right-here/

http://changethestakes.wordpress.com/national-opt-out-movement/opt-into-portfolios/promotion-in-doubt-what-parents-need-to-know/

June 14 Mayoral Forum, June 15-16 booth at Clearwater Festival

Additional news:
     June 14, 6-8 PM at Murray Bergtraum HS 7 candidates for mayor will respond to questions from 15 parents representing a range of education groups and unions.  See attached flier

June 15-16 Michael Shaw, David Greene, and Rosalie Friend will host a Save Our Schools booth in the activists area of the Clearwater Hudson River Revival at Croton Point Park on the Hudson River.  The Clearwater is a replica of the wooden sloops that carried freight up and down the Hudson River.  It was created by Pete Seeger and others to focus efforts to clean up the Hudson River and enhance the environmental health of the Hudson River Valley.  The festival is a huge gathering - 20,000 people, 7 stages of music, dance and story-telling, plus crafts, activists, and a children's area.  If you attend the festival, be sure to come to our booth.
The Save Our Schools booth will ask people to respond to the question of the Campaign for Artful Resistance, "What is it you love about school that you have lost because of high stakes testing, school closings, budget cuts, curriculum losses, teacher firings, and other educational catastrophes?" by creating a tweet of 140 characters or drawing a picture.  Tweets and pictures will be photographed and posted in the on line Gallery of the Campaign for Artful Resistance.  At noon Saturday, Terry Moore will play the guitar and sing original songs like "Testing Sells, Testing Smells"  and "There are teachers I'll remember  all my li--ife though schools has changed."   We will also have fliers to distribute about the missions of Save Our Schools and Change the Stakes, and we hope to engage others in our effort.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

The Worm Turns on Ed Deform in Indiana as the NEW Status Quo Comes Under Attack

Indiana’s love affair with so-called school reform is cooling. Serious cracks are showing in the relationship between lawmakers and anti-labor, pro-privatization forces that have fueled the so-called reform with millions in campaign contributions.... Fort Wayne Journal-Gazette 
For the last decade we have been attacked as status quoers by the deformers, which was so funny given that some of  us have been fighting the status quo since the early 70s. Joel Klein couldn't get a sentence out with resorting to the mentioning the old SQ while establishing the new SQ. But given that ed deform has been actively been pushed since Chicago, 1994, the deformers are now the SQ and real reformers have been on the counter attack, with new organizations springing up all over the place.
The signs of reform pushback come as no surprise to Phyllis Bush, who retired from South Side High School as an English teacher and department chair in 1999. She became a vocal critic of the school reform movement about two years ago after attending a town hall meeting by an area legislator who seemed to know little about the bills being pushed on schools and instead deferred to one of Bennett’s assistant superintendents to respond.
“A roomful of teachers asked some pretty good questions about charters and vouchers,” Bush said. “I was completely appalled by his smugness.”
After attending a Washington rally for public schools, she mobilized a group of Fort Wayne residents to establish the Northeast Indiana Friends of Public Education. Energized by education historian Diane Ravitch’s appearances in Bloomington and at IPFW’s Omnibus Lecture, the group jumped in to help elect a new state superintendent. Since Ritz’s election night upset, they have continued to monitor so-called reform measures and kept up a relentless letter-writing campaign.
We (our GEM group - Julie, Brian, Lisa D, Lisa N, Gloria, Khem, Alev) met Phyllis Bush when she attended the workshop we presented at that SOS event in DC in July 2011 where they showed our movie. Phyllis went home to help organize the Northeast Indiana Friends of Public Education --- and told us she was using our movie as an education and organizing tool -- and has accomplished a hell of a lot in less than 2 years. Defeating the slimy Tony Bennett as state ed commissioner with Glenda Ritz, a candidate opposed to ed deform -- in Indiana, yet, is a MAJOR victory for all of us.

Yes, it takes individuals to act -- educate, organize, mobilize -- and retired teachers who stood up to ed deform have the knowledge and time to take on these roles.

Hey, how about calling for an election for NY State Ed Comm so we can get rid of John King? I know people worry about the money that comes into an election but Indiana of all places proves we can defeat the deformers even with all their money. Bennett was one of the deform stars that Phyllis and crew helped shoot down.

I wrote a post on worm turning back in Dec. '12:
Dec 10, 2012

Anthony Cody is in the forefront of the NPE. Note the ref to New Zealand, which I visited in Dec. 2011 and had some social media contact with an educator who wanted to see our film (we got a nice donation from the NZ teachers assoc to support the film.)

By the way -- if you haven't watched our film or shared it with your colleagues, help break the UFT boycott just click the tab at the top of this blog.



Volume 1, Issue: #11

June 13, 2013
Inside NPE News
The Worm is Turning
New Zealand Joins NPE
Uncovering the Truth Webinar
10,000 Sign Education Declaration
Tell NPE Your Story

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Greetings!
Welcome to the eleventh edition of our newsletter. From coast to coast, we are seeing signs of what is being called Education Spring. We have news from Indiana to New Zealand, of the growing movement to take back our schools. Read it all here! And like us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, and JOIN US at our website.


"The Worm is Turning"
Headlines in Indiana, the "Reformiest State in the Union"


Indiana has been on the front lines for corporate reform for years. Vouchers, charter schools, and more. But a recent editorial in the Fort Wayne Gazette declared that "The Worm is Turning" on education reform. 

Anne Duff, one of the members of the North East Indiana Friends of Public Education who helped select teacher Glenda Ritz to the office of state superintendent of education, offers us this description of a recent visit by Ritz.

After Glenda Ritz beat Tony Bennett last fall for the position of Superintendent of Public Instruction for the state of Indiana, those of us who had been advocating for public education and had been working diligently spreading her name through mailing postcards, changing our Facebook profile pictures to her logo, and talking about her to friends, family and even strangers at the grocery store, were elated by her victory.  Most people know by now that this was not only big news for Indiana, but for the country as well.  Bennett had ten times the amount of money for his campaign, yet Glenda won 52% of the votes, earning more than even the governor, as often stated in the news. 

But once the race was won, we didn't hear much.  We didn't notice many changes, and as the legislative session began, it seemed to be a huge attack on public education.  Vouchers were expanded, budgets were cut, programs were cut, and grading our schools A-F became law.  Those of us who had been writing letters and talking to legislators in support of public education felt powerless as our voices had not been heard and our words written out of passion for our schools had not been read.

Last Wednesday a small glimmer of hope shined over those of us working so hard to effect change for public schools.  Glenda Ritz spoke about her work as Superintendent of Public Instruction at the Future of Education conference held in Fort Wayne, IN. Her words inspired us to continue the fight even though this last legislative session made us feel as if all of our efforts had been ignored.  She is working on eliminating the high-stakes, pass-fail assessments that we are currently using and working on implementing a true growth model assessment so teachers and students know how they are doing and what grade level they are working at; not just whether or not students can pass or fail a grade level test. She is coming up with a new teacher evaluation model instead of RISE that bases part of teacher evaluations on the high stakes tests. She is focusing on student centered learning instead of market-based education. She is a hero for public education.  Slowly, yet deliberately and thoughtfully, she is trying to undo Tony Bennett's iniquities. There is definitely light at the end of the tunnel; there is hope for public education.  What is right for our children and for public education shall prevail. 


NPE's First International Ally: New Zealand's Quality Public Ed. Coalition

From down in New Zealand we learn that corporate education reform is a global phenomenon. 


Bill Courtney 
of the Quality Public Education Coalition, has written to share how people in his nation are facing challenges very similar to ours.  He would like a little help as well, in figuring out some things. He writes:

So, how can you help us?  We'd love to hear from you with feedback and ideas on a few key areas for us:
  • How do we promote stronger parent feedback on issues such as standards, league tables, school reporting, testing and narrowing the curriculum?
  • Charter school analysis and evaluation.  We keep an eye on sites such as School Finance 101 and Mercedes Schneider's excellent insight into Louisiana schooling but we need more insights and stories about charter schools and their impact on the public school system;
  • How do we fight the (Global Ed Reform) GERM agenda in our country and the raft of common policies it seems to generate?
Read more here.


NPE Webinar: Uncovering the Truth About Education Reform: Recording Available
Learn from the Experts!


Are you frustrated when corruption goes on and nobody even seems to notice? Do you want to learn how to uncover the truth about what is happening to our schools? We are presenting a special webinar where two outstanding experts will share tips and techniques.

Michael Corwin, a licensed investigator with twenty-five years of case preparation experience discussed techniques for identifying, locating and using public records in researching public officials.

Mercedes Schneider shared techniques for discerning truth versus "hype" in research on educational reform, including tips on critically reading data and research studies. Her 

 The online webinar was recorded and can be found here.
 

10,000 Sign Education Declaration to Rebuild America
More than 10,000 people signed the new Education Declaration in the first day of its launch. A statement from the sponsors says,

For too long, our policymakers have engaged the nation's schoolchildren in a grand experiment, with frequent testing, incentive programs and top-down mandates that promised much but delivered little.

Today, after an education spring of protest and dissent, leading advocates, academics, and educators have come together to demand An Education Declaration to Rebuild America.

We invite you to add your name and forward this to friends so that we can grow this movement for real education reform based on what America needs and our children deserve.
You can read the Declaration and sign on here. 

Tell NPE 

Your Story

NPE wants to hear from you! We would like to publish real stories about the effects of misguided school reforms on our Friends & Allies. Please share this and send responses to 



Here is this week's topic:
June  3rd - "Recently there have been major glitches with high stakes testing in Indiana, Kentucky, Minnesota, and Oklahoma causing enormous issues for students, teachers, parents, and schools. What have been the consequences of testing in your area and/or what has been your experience this year with high stakes testing? Tell us your story."
 

Please forward this newsletter far and wide! 
In solidarity,
NPE sq
The Network For Public Education

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Today's Rally: I Ain't Marching Anymore, But I will be Filming

So I have mixed feelings about going to a rally to cheer Mulgrew 10 minutes after the giveaway of the contract to John King. I expressed some of these thoughts on the MORE and ICE listserves and there have been some heated discussions.

My brain is fried. after an evening of eating and drinking at Peter Luger's last night (Note to Fiorillo -- WHEN ARE WE GOING AGAIN? - And to vegetarian Julie Cavanagh -- why don't you join us?) so I can't even remember what was discussed but my instinct for this rally is "ho-hum, yet another rally amongst the dozen the UFT has been part of, all designed to make them look like they are actually doing something."

But the MOREs are enthusiastic and they are meeting at Tweed before the rally from 4-4:30 with people from their schools - if they can get people to go -- so I will go and maybe they can get me excited about this. Meet at 6PM at the post rally happy hour at Maxwell's, 59 Reade St. bet Church and Brwy. I have my writing group meeting at 7 but will stop by.

June 12th Citywide Labor Rally at City Hall!

10 Jun
Image
We hope you are mobilizing for Wed. June 12th Citywide Labor Rally at City Hall!
Please join the MORE contingent at 52 Chambers St. DOE Building (Tweed Courthouse) between 4-4:30 pm. We march to the City Hall Rally together at 4:30

Here are some things you can do:

1.    Sign up people at  your school and bring co-workers! Use thisflier to print and get people out
2.    Bring poster paper, markers, and sign ideas, or make signs and bring them. We will be handing out this flier to UFTers at the rally.  Please make some copies to supplement the ones we’ll have on site.
3.    Get ready to chant! We will have chant sheets (download for some great slogans for you placard as well!) and plan to rally people around important points during the rally.
4.    We are having a post-rally Happy Hour near the rally 6 PM at Maxwell’s, 59 Reade St. between Broadway and Church. One block north of Chambers St. (http://www.maxwellsnyc.com).
5.    Join our Group Text! Download “Groupme” app to your cellphone (iPhone, Android,etc.). Then email your cell # to Mike Schirtzer mschir@gmail.com and we’ll send you text updates during the rally.

NY Ed Commissioner John King to speak at crooked Gulen Syracuse charter school graduation

Gulen schools are also known for their abusing the H 1B visa program; hiring uncertified teachers mostly from Turkey, and allegedly demanding that they kickback 40% of their salary.  The program was designed to bring in foreigners in “shortage areas”; Gulen schools have used this program more than Google.  This Syracuse school submitted 28 H-1B visa applications from 2003-2010.
Why would anyone be surprised that State Ed Comm John King is speaking at a charter that requires its teachers to kick back 40% of their salaries? But one think I can bet-- they are not subject to the same rules he just imposed on NYC public school teachers.

Want to know more about Gulen? Follow Leonie's trail as she follows the trail:

http://charterschoolscandals.blogspot.com/p/gulen-school-characteristics.html

and  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/11/09/new-york-state-board-of-r_n_2101333.html

http://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2013/06/new_york_education_commissione_1.html


And the Gulen exposer, Sharon Higgins, Perimeter Primate:
http://perimeterprimate.blogspot.com

Inform yourself about the Gulen movement!

Inform yourself about the Gulen movement!

1. LISTEN to my interview with At The Chalk Face , slide marker to 32:00 min. (5/19/2013)
2. WATCH the 60 Minutes segment "U.S. charter schools tied to powerful Turkish imam" broadcast. (5/13/2012)
3. READ my response to the 60 Minutes piece.
4. READ my guest article about Gulen charter schools published by The Washington Post. (3/27/2012)
5. WATCH my interview talking about Gulen charter schools, or my presentation at LaborFest (segment between 49:18 min. & 1:07:36 min.)
6. READ my postings labeled "Gulen movement" HERE.

As one observer tweeted, "U.S. media have focused too much on the Islamic nature of the Gulen movement. Real concern is its shady dealings and improprieties."

Please be aware that Gulenists have created a large number of anonymously-operated damage control websites. They started to appear a few months after publication of Greg Toppo's article in USA Today (August 2010).

UPDATED from Leonie:

More info about the school that John King has agreed to speak at its graduation: the Gulen-linked Syracuse Academy of Science Charter School. http://gulencharterschools.weebly.com/syracuse-academy-of-science.html

More on Gulen here: Turkey Feels Sway of Fethullah Gulen, a Reclusive Cleric - NYTimes.com http://shar.es/wPilM
 
Gulen schools are also known for their abusing the H 1B visa program; hiring uncertified teachers mostly from Turkey, and allegedly demanding that they kickback 40% of their salary.  The program was designed to bring in foreigners in “shortage areas”; Gulen schools have used this program more than Google.  This Syracuse school submitted 28 H-1B visa applications from 2003-2010.

The school is also the lead agency in a $500,000 grant application to the state, “from a program that seeks to disseminate the successful practices of charter schools to traditional public schools.”

A comment from a Gulen expert:
It is so incredibly inappropriate for SASCS to have taught some of its students how to do the Mevlevi whirling dervish "dance," a.k.a. the Sema ceremony, an Islamic Sufi ritual. Doesn't anyone understand that?! This is NOT a folk dance.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L87AHciZSoM

Syracuse Academy of Science Charter School: Evidence of Affiliation with the Gulen Movement


Page created August 2010; last updated Mar 3, 2013
by C.A.S.I.L.I.P.S. - Citizens Against Special Interest Lobbying in Public Schools

Syracuse Academy of Science Charter School is a publicly-funded charter school in Syracuse NY.

In common with all other Gulen charter schools, SASCS uses H-1B visas to hire staff from other countries, primarily Turkey.  The website myvisajobs.com, which tracks H-1B visas, shows that this school submitted 28 H-1B visa applications from 2003-2010.

Syracuse Academy of Science students participated in the Turkish Language Olympiads, an event run by the Gulen Movement. 

A Youtube user named "GulenMovement" has uploaded a video of some of these students at the Turkish Olympiads.  The accompanying text says “Kyla Tailor from Syracuse Academy of Science came in first with Yunus Emre poem.  And Ahsan Khan from the same school was third with the song called 'My Turkiye'."  Note that Yunus Emre is a Sufi poet of great significance to Fethullah Gulen and his followers. [Note added Mar 3, 2013: Since this was first written, the original link for the video has been made private.  It can now be viewed at the ebrutv everest youtube channel In another video, from the 4th New York Turkish Olympiads, the announcer enthuses "And here they are...the Whirling Dervishes of Syracuse Academy of Science" after briefly explaining the religious significance of this Sufi ritual. 

SASCS students participated in ISWEEEP, a science fair in Houston, and in the GENIUS Olympiad in Oswego; both competitions are run by the Gulen Movement and are heavily biased towards Gulen schools.

In April 2011, the SASCS wrestling team participated in a camp at Yamanlar College in Izmir, Turkey.  The visit was reported by Cihan News Agency, a Gulenist media outlet.  Yamanlar College (Yamanlar Koleji) is a college-prep high school run by the Gulen Movement.

In 2011, Mehmet Ozhabes submitted an application for the Westchester Academy of Science Charter School.  This proposed Gulen charter school never materialized, but the application stated that it was to be a replication of Syracuse Academy of Science.  Mehmet Ozhabes has other connections to the Gulen Movement; he was on the board of Truebright Science Academy, a Gulen charter school in Philadelphia, and was a founder of Central Jersey College Prep, a Gulen charter school in New Jersey.  In 2012, Tolga Hayali ran an apparently successful effort to replicate Syracuse Academy of Science in Utica with the proposed Utica Academy of Science, scheduled to open in fall 2013.

Four members of SASCS' class of 2011 were accepted at North American College, a Gulen institution located in Houston TX.

Lotus Media Productions, a Gulenist corporation that has done website development and graphics design for a number of Gulen charter schools, Gulenist businesses and Gulenist organizations, also contracted to Syracuse Academy of Science.

In 2011, Syracuse Academy of Science applied to the E-Rate program (a federal subsidy program for telecommunications and internet) for the amounts of $193,932.00 and $23,228.10.  The vendor in both cases was Technotime Business Solutions LLC, a New Jersey-based Gulenist corporation that has done business with other Gulen charter schools.

Further connections to the Gulen Movement and nationwide network of Gulen charter schools are shown by the multiple affiliations, both past and present, of the following individuals:

Mustafa Coban
  • Operations Manager, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Husband of Syracuse Academy of Science board member and teacher Patricia Coban
  • Terra Science and Education Foundation (Gulenist organization)  - as of 2011, owner of building that SASCS rents; this is a conflict of interest.

Fehmi Damkaci
  • Board President, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Terra Science and Education Foundation (Gulenist organization)  - as of 2011, owner of building that SASCS rents; this is a conflict of interest.
  • Founding board member, Pioneer Charter School of Science  (Gulen charter school in Massachusetts)
  • President, Turkish Cultural Center of Syracuse  (Gulenist organization)
  • Founder, organizer, GENIUS competition (Gulenist)
 
Ehat Ercanli
  • Founder, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Speaker at event at Turkish Cultural Center of Syracuse (Gulenist)
  • Involved in formation of Concept Schools and development of Horizon Science Academy network of Gulen charter schools in Ohio
  • Horizon Educational Services of Columbus
Note: Horizon Science Academy is the name of a network of Gulen charter schools in Ohio.  Concept Schools now oversees most of the Horizon schools, and Horizon Educational Services is another corporation in charge of some Horizon schools; both companies are Gulenist.

Ertugrul Gerdan
  • College Counselor, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Coached several Syracuse Academy of Science students to be Whirling Dervishes (as per video of the Gulen-run Turkish Olympiads)
  • Terra Science and Education Foundation  (Gulenist organization)

Tolga Hayali
  • School director, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Principal of Pioneer Academy of Science (private Gulen school in New Jersey)
  • Participated, along with Levent Koc, Director of the Interfaith Dialog Center and Mevlut Kirazli, Program Coordinator of the Interfaith Dialog Center, in Assemblyman Thomas Giblin’s tour of Pioneer Academy of Science
  • Teacher, Horizon Science Academy Cleveland Middle School, Ohio
  • Horizon Science Academy Denison, Ohio
  • Superintendent at Horizon Educational Services, Cleveland, Ohio
  • Participated in events at Interfaith Dialog Center, New Jersey
  • Speaker at HUTACA (Hudson Turkish American Cultural Association) events
  • Co-applicant, Capital Academy of Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (proposed Gulen charter school; application denied)
  • Co-applicant, Lancaster Academy of Science, Pennsylvania (proposed Gulen charter school; application denied)
Note: The Interfaith Dialog Center, now renamed the Peace Islands Institute, and HUTACA are Gulenist non-profits.  Horizon Science Academy is the name of a network of Gulen charter schools in Ohio.

Hakki Karaman
  • Principal, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Principal, Magnolia Science Academy 3, California
Note: Magnolia Science Academy is the name of a network of Gulen charter schools in southern California.  

Gurkan Kose
  • Math teacher, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Director of Mathematics Instruction, Apple Educational Services (Gulenist corporation and vendor to many Gulen charter schools in the northeastern US)

Akin Ozturk
  • College Guide, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Teacher, Putnam Science Academy  (private Gulen school in Connecticut)
  • Staff, Rochester Academy Charter School  (Gulen charter school)

Birol Ozturk
  • Board Secretary, Syracuse Academy of Science, per IRS Form 990 2008
  • Turkish Cultural Center Syracuse  (Gulenist)
  • Dove Science Academy (Gulen charter school in Oklahoma)
  • involved with Institute of Interfaith Dialog  (Gulenist organization)

Kamil Toprak
  • System Administrator, Lotus Media Productions  (Gulenist corporation and vendor to Gulen charter schools)
  • IT Manager / Computer Teacher, Hampden Charter School Of Science  (Gulen charter school in MA)
  • IT Manager / Computer Teacher, Truebright Science Academy Charter School  (Gulen charter school in PA)
  • IT Manager / Computer Teacher, Syracuse Academy of Science Charter School

Taha Uzumcu
  • computer science teacher, Syracuse Academy of Science
  • involved with Turkish Cultural Center Syracuse (Gulenist organization)

Halil Yavuz
  • Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Turkish Cultural Center Syracuse (Gulenist)
  • Shown on 2007 IRS Form 990 as Director, High Way Education (Gulenist corporation)

Yildiray Yildirim
  • Syracuse Academy of Science
  • Editorial Board, Eurasian Journal of Business and Economics (Gulenist publication)
  • Editorial Board, Journal of Economic and Social Studies (Gulenist publication)








Tuesday, June 11, 2013

DFER names Bill Thompson, Christine Quinn and Anthony Weiner as the three most palatable candidates to focus their support around

Bill de Blasio has “offered the least support for issues of concern to education reform advocates,” perhaps a reference to the public advocate’s public spate with influential charter school leader Eva Moskowitz.... Gotham Schools
Hmmm.. The UFT and DFER both showing love to Bill Thompson.


For now, DFER tells its supporters that it’s going to wait until after the UFT makes its endorsement: “This will mark the official start of the 2013 Mayor’s Race.”
After that, sources say that one thing to look out for is negative advertising funded by groups like DFER and StudentsFirstNY against its lesser favored candidates.

Candi Peterson on Washington DC Union Election

Liz and Candi
I'm not in a position to sort out what is happening in the Washington DC teachers union. I could recount some history but just don't have the heart or strength to rehash it. I do know that Candi's blog played a major role in fighting the wicked witch of the Rhee. Candi and Nathan Saunders were both in LA with us in 2009 and in Chicago in 2011. And then things fell apart. It's just plain sad.

See Candi's blog when she announced she was running.

WTU 2013 Election- The Best Kept Secret in Town?

WTU's Secret 2013 Election

By Candi Peterson
Vote Davis Slate for WTU
 Liz Davis /Candi Peterson
WTU Can Be Better!
The recent Washington Teachers' Union 2013 presidential election was the best kept secret in town. The current Teachers' union president, Saunders kept our union elections on the Down Low (D.L.)  as possible. Members weren't notified officially of this election and there was not any official notice on the WTU website of the first election. Even though the WTU's Constitution & By-Laws calls for members to receive a copy of the union's publication, "The Washington Teacher" magazine's Election Edition announcing the presidential candidates' bio's, this print edition did not get to members homes until well after ballots were mailed out. If you were not the curious type, and didn't dare to check out the contents, you wouldn't have noticed the candidates bio's buried within the magazine on page 5. Nothing on the front cover suggested there was a union election underway. Although promised by WTU, no official notices of elections were placed within our local schools, when I surveyed members from various citywide schools.
To add insult to injury, a significant number of union members complained of not receiving their ballots to vote. Since many members weren't aware an election was underway, they didn't know they needed to contact the union office to get a ballot. The WTU Election Committee had members jump through a series of hoops to get a ballot including Elizabeth Davis, candidate for WTU President. First members were advised to call union headquarters and when members did exactly that, the requirement was  modified to put all requests in writing to get a duplicate ballot. 
What is really disturbing in this election, is that full dues paying members reported that when they contacted the union office they were advised that they were no longer full dues paying members and were now agency fee members. Union members I spoke to indicated that they never gave their consent or authorization to have their membership status changed. This means that members whose status has been changed to agency fee could not vote in the 2013 union election. Sound like election tampering??You decide. I bet Ray Charles could see this one a mile away. I'm troubled anytime a members' right to representation is tampered with and you should be as well, if you are one of the people this effected. (more on this later)
Well, in the event you didn't know- there was a Washington Teachers' Union election. The vote count was held on June 7, 2013. Here are the results that you will most likely will only read here on The Washington Teacher blog, since WTU is not releasing the official vote count and only percentages of the vote count. I am supplying it here because I believe in transparency:
394      Ballots received from WTU members
  50      Soiled ballots
3000    Ballots mailed to members (according to True Ballot, who mailed ballots/performed ballot count)
Candidates for WTU President
Saunders received 175 votes
Davis received       158 votes
17 point difference
Due to the fact that neither candidate received more than 50% of the vote, a run off election will be required according to the WTU Constitution &By-laws. According to the amended election schedule, run off ballots will be mailed no later than June 17.
The most important thing is that if WTU members do not receive a Run Off ballot through the mail, contact Alyssa Limberakis @ ALimberakis@wtulocal6.net to request your ballot. Provide your name and mailing address in the request. All requests for duplicate ballots must be in writing.

Remember vote Davis slate. We believe WTU Can Be Better!


Tweed/Bloomberg Wastes Half a Million for PR to Maintain Useless Networks

The DOE is prepared so spend half a million dollars to make sure this incoherent and pointless management structure remains in place past the elections – one that NO ONE including principals likes, outside of Tweed and the PSO’s , including New Visions, which of course benefit from the steady revenue stream of taxpayer money.  --- Leonie Haimson
Leonie has just posted this important analysis bases on a leaked memo to Gotham Schools - and kudos to them and Geoff -
by Geoff Decker.
One of their scummy ideas is to start long-term projects using the networks that a new administration can't kill. These people are such swines.


Everyone should read this full Parthenon memo; reprinted below – showing how desperate DO is to retain network structure they have hired Parthenon as consultants for $275K, paid for through private funds.  FYI Parthenon is also one of Gates Foundation’s favorite consulting companies so quite possible they are footing the bill for initial phase of project.  

Note however that “A longer-term phase of the project that Parthenon pitched involves managing the implementation of its vision during the 2013-2014 school year. That phase would cost more than $400,000, but Polakow-Suransky said he anticipated that part of the project being completed in house.” 

That means that the DOE is prepared so spend half a million dollars to make sure this incoherent and pointless management structure remains in place past the elections – one that NO ONE including principals likes, outside of Tweed and the PSO’s , including New Visions, which of course benefit from the steady revenue stream of taxpayer money.

I have spoken to network staff who say that even they don’t think the system makes any sense and that it should be eliminated and districts restored – especially as they have to spend most of their time driving from one part of the city to another, wasting time and contributing to global warming. 

One of the projects envisioned : “Internal communications: Increasing Principal support of the networks to bolster their defense of the aspects of the structure that are most valuable.” 
Expect statements, with principals pressured to sign on, especially from New Visions schools; New Visions in the past has pressured principals to hire their network as their PSO. 

Also, (as I wrote in comments section)

Note how conversations with "key stakeholders" exclude parents, teachers, & students. A better example of Bloomberg's oppressive reign is hard to imagine. They should have called it educrats first instead of children first.”

See also Crain’s – revealing how a leaked memo from DFER says that they don’t think any GOP candidate can win, but that Thompson, Quinn, and Weiner should be expected to be charter-friendly and continue to co-locate charters in DOE buildings. 

Education reformers are MIA in campaign | Crain's New York Business http://shar.es/wBZ2E


by Geoff Decker, at 8:27 pm
Intent on preserving the Bloomberg administration’s education legacy, the Department of Education has hired a favored consulting firm to craft a plan that would safeguard a signature policy.
The city has hired the Parthenon Group to assess the strengths and weaknesses of the system through which principals choose support organizations to provide professional development, curriculum, and budgeting help.
The consulting firm, which has previously studied school closures and small schools for the department, is charged with crafting a strategic vision to ensure that Children First Networks are preserved when another mayor takes over next year.
“While there is no set of actions that can perfectly ensure ‘sustainability’ of the network model, the goal of the project will be to identify a series of steps that can bolster the odds of sustaining those elements the DOE views as most essential,” the firm wrote in its bid for the project. The confidential bid was submitted in April and obtained by GothamSchools.
Related Stories
MORE below the fold

Loretta Prisco on Mayoral Control

The UFT and mayoral candidates all speak against "this mayor" as what is wrong with mayoral control. They propose to "tweak" it, give parents a voice and be fairer to teachers. The problem with mayoral control is much deeper than that.

Education philosophy, content, and policy should not be dictated by a partisan political point of view. That does not mean that education is void of a political point of view in a larger context, to be sure all things are determined by a political point of view, but not in a partisan party point of view determined by electoral politics.  


Educational policy should not reflect the beliefs or pronouncements of a Democratic or Republican candidate.

Mayoral control lead to a mayor running for re-election on platform of improving schools. And how was this done? By using the system and our kids and manipulating the scores to prove that we are doing better. When you arrive in your first year of office, manipulate scores through test selection and scale scores to be low. Then create a test factory and have schools and teachers focus only on reading and math, and the following year, give the same tests, manipulate the scaling. Voila-an improved system.
Education policy should never be determined by the whim and caprice of any individual. Nor should it change with an election every four years. Education change does not happen overnight. Policies have to be given a chance to work-years to work. A system wide, or even a district wide change doesn't happen with teachers getting a CD to view over the summer or a webinar on brooklyn-queens day.

The call for a chancellor who is an educator is a hollow one under mayoral control. The "educator" does what the mayor wants or he/she will be driven out of town.
I want to add that I don't trust the "educator" as chancellor given that there are so many sellout educators. Steiner was a so-called educator and he gave Cathie Black a waiver. So that being a major demand is pretty toothless. Inf act why do we even need a chancellor? In a locally controlled school system he would be fairly irrelevant.