Tuesday, July 31, 2012

Confessions of a Teaching Fellow « Diane Ravitch's blog

Confessions of a Teaching Fellow « Diane Ravitch's blog:


Confessions of a Teaching Fellow

This just arrived in my email box. The writer signed her name:
There has been so much debate about educational reform and about Michele Rhee and her Students First organization. I am compelled to describe my experience this past June with the Rhode Island Teaching Fellows Program, a Rhee brainchild. The Teaching Fellows work along the same lines of The New Teacher Project but the Teaching Fellows is an alternative route to teacher certification. The premise is to attract people from the public sector and after 5 weeks of training they will be employed as first year’s teachers in high needs urban schools. The catch phrase is “Let’s close the achievement gap” and get your teaching certification in an alternative route program-well yes I know all about the achievement gap and only starting to realize all the components at work and I decided to re-enter school to become a teacher and this program sounded perfect. I could not have been more wrong!  
We start week one learning this militant type tactics of behavioral control-such as “Do it again” “Do it now” and “Slant” to name just a few-we practice this over and over again in a highly structured environment where our every move is scheduled and monitored. We are told where to sit, when to stand and when to speak-they occasionally 



Pop Quiz about “The Irreplaceables”

This just in from California educator Robert Skeels:
POP QUIZ:
What do you call plutocrat funded “research” that isn’t peer reviewed and is conducted by an organization that has already drawn a priori conclusions? Answer: A policy paper.
Pretty much everything one would ever need to know about The new Teacher Project (TNTP) is summed up here:
TNTP is “a leading voice on teacher quality.” – American Enterprise Institute
With extreme right-wing credentials like that, how can TNTP go wrong with Arne Duncan? Nice the ED