Latest News and Comment from Education

Friday, December 14, 2018

Webinar: Lift Us Up, Don't Push Us Out! Stories About Organizing Against the School-to-Prison Pipeline | Schott Foundation for Public Education

Webinar: Lift Us Up, Don't Push Us Out! Stories About Organizing Against the School-to-Prison Pipeline | Schott Foundation for Public Education

Webinar: Lift Us Up, Don't Push Us Out! Stories About Organizing Against the School-to-Prison Pipeline

The new book Lift Us Up, Don't Push Us Out! features voices from the frontlines of a growing movement for educational justice across the United States. Organizers and activists recount their journeys to movement building, lift up victories and successes, and offer practical organizing strategies and community-based alternatives to traditional education reform and privatization schemes.
These powerful stories teach us the hard-won lessons of organizers from across the country — and in conjunction with Dignity in Schools Campaign's new Toolkit on Organizing to Combat the School-to-Prison Pipeline they point a way forward for social movements today and tomorrow.
We discussed school discipline, organizing for educational justice, and more with Lift Us Up contributors.
Our speakers included:
  • Zakiya Sankara-Jabar, National Field Organizer, Dignity in Schools Campaign
  • Jonathan Stith, National Director, Alliance for Educational Justice
  • Mark R. Warren, Professor of Public Policy and Public Affairs, University of Massachusetts Boston
  • Marianna Islam (moderator), Director of Programs & Advocacy, Schott Foundation for Public Education
About the Speakers
Zakiya Sankara-JabarZakiya Sankara-Jabar
Zakiya is the National Field Organizer at Dignity in Schools Campaign. She came to advocacy, organizing, and policy work as a parent pushing back on the pre-school to prison pipeline. Prior to joining Dignity in Schools Campaign, she co-founded Racial Justice NOW! (RJN!) in Dayton, Ohio and served as Executive Director for 5 years. During her time at RJN! Zakiya organized Black parents to fight back against schools’ overly harsh discipline policies and practices that are ineffective, unfair and detrimental. Through this advocacy, organizing, and policy work-parents were able to win some significant victories; including a moratorium on out of schools suspensions for PK students and the creation of the ‘office of males of color,’ in the Dayton Public Schools. This work was the impetus in the new law passed in 2018 strictly limiting PK-3rd-grade suspensions and expulsions for public and charter schools in the State of Ohio.
Zakiya has received the Emerging Leader Award from the Center for Community Change in 2017 and the Community Advocacy Award from Advocates for Basic Legal Equality and Legal Aid of Western Ohio in 2016. Zakiya also received the Drum Major for Justice Award from the Dayton (OH) Chapter of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC) in 2015.

Jonathan StithJonathan Stith
Jonathan Stith is a founding member and National Director for the Alliance for Educational Justice, a national network of intergenerational and youth-led organizations working to end the school-to-prison pipeline. He has over 20 years of experience organizing with youth and community organizations to address injustice in education. Alliance for Educational Justice played a critical role in shaping federal policy on school discipline, ending the access of school police departments to military grade weapons from the DFA 1033 program and the defense of Niya Kenny and Shakara in the #AssaultAtSpringValley. Jonathan is trainer with BOLD/ Black Organizing for Leadership and Dignity.
Last and most importantly, he is a father of three young adults whom taught him everything he knows.
Mark R. WarrenNick Donohue
Mark R. Warren is professor of public policy and public affairs at the University of Massachusetts Boston. Mark studies and works with community and youth organizing groups seeking to promote equity and justice in education, community development and American democratic life. Mark is the author of several books, most recently Lift us up! Don’t push us out! Voices from the front lines of the educational justice movement. His other books include Dry Bones Rattling: Community Building to Revitalize American Democracy, Fire in the Heart: How White Activists Embrace Racial Justice, and A Match on Dry Grass: Community Organizing as a Catalyst for School Reform. Mark is a founder and co-chair of the Urban Research-Based Action Network (URBAN), a national network of scholars and community activists designed to promote collaborations that produce research that advances racial equity and social justice. He is a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellow and has won many other awards and fellowships.
Marianna Islam
Marianna Islam is the Director of Programs and Advocacy at the Schott Foundation for Public Education where she works with the program team to develop and implement the Foundation’s resource delivery strategy. Marianna brings over a decade of experience in the philanthropic sector, having served as the Associate Project Director for Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Roadmaps to Health Community Grants Programs at Community Catalyst and Vice President of Community Impact Initiatives at the United Way of Central Massachusetts. Marianna brings passion to her role as a philanthropic leader, youth worker and community organizer for racial, gender, economic and social justice.

CONTINUE READING: Webinar: Lift Us Up, Don't Push Us Out! Stories About Organizing Against the School-to-Prison Pipeline | Schott Foundation for Public Education

Sac City Teachers Association: $60 million in SCUSD cuts | The Sacramento Bee

Sac City Teachers Association: $60 million in SCUSD cuts | The Sacramento Bee

Sacramento City Teachers Association proposes $60 million in SCUSD cuts



Amid Sacramento City Unified School District’s dismal financial situation, the Sacramento City Teachers Association proposed its plan Thursday evening to balance the budget while also funding student programs.

The teachers union presented its “Students First Budget Rebalancing Proposal” at a Board of Education meeting, claiming that it could save the district $60 million, balance the budget, improve student experience, and still have cash left over afterward.
SCTA’s proposed savings would come in part through cuts to administration, including $16 million from reducing the number of central office administrators from 267 to 190, and $600,000 from reducing administrators’ pay to “a more reasonable level.” The proposal also outlined $16 million in health care savings that the district has already voiced interest in.
SCTA submitted a previous savings proposal in September that also called for significant cuts in administration shortly after the district’s budget was rejected for the first time ever. That proposal was not adopted by the district.
SCTA president David Fisher said he is optimistic the district will be open to discussion on the new proposal going forward in part because the union believes it offers comprehensive steps to improve the district.

After saving $60 million through administrative cuts, eliminating vacation buyouts for administration and management, limiting the use of third-party services and reducing health care costs, SCTA suggested the district focus on “students first priorities” with its funds.
Of those savings, $16 million would go toward balancing the budget and $24.4 million toward improving learning by reducing class sizes, implementing professional development practices for teachers — which would include cultural sensitivity training to CONTINUE READING: Sac City Teachers Association: $60 million in SCUSD cuts | The Sacramento Bee

Juvenile Justice Reform Bill Quietly Passes Senate | The Marshall Project

Juvenile Justice Reform Bill Quietly Passes Senate | The Marshall Project

The Criminal Justice Reform Bill You’ve Never Heard Of
Mitch McConnell’s Senate has quietly passed juvenile justice legislation that would ban states from holding children in adult jails.


On Thursday, the House of Representatives passed the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act. It now will go to the White House for President Donald Trump's signature.

The criminal justice buzz on Capitol Hill this week is that Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, after stalling for weeks, will finally allow a prison reform bill called the First Step Act to come up for a vote. The legislation, which would reduce some federal mandatory-minimum sentences, could make it to President Trump’s desk by the end of this year.

But that’s not the only perpetually-in-limbo crime bill that, in the span of a few days, suddenly appears likely to make it through a logjammed Congress and get signed into law.

With much less fanfare, the Senate on Tuesday passed major juvenile justice legislation that has been postponed and picked over for more than a decade—and that would ban states from holding children in adult jails even if they’ve been charged with adult crimes.

The Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, which is expected to pass the House as soon as today, would also require states receiving federal dollars to collect data on racial disparities in the juvenile system and to come up with concrete plans for addressing those inequities. It would ban the shackling of pregnant girls, as well as provide funding for tutoring, mental health, and drug and alcohol programs for kids.

Despite the president’s usual tough-on-crime rhetoric, congressional staffers and youth advocates said he appears unlikely to veto the bill, which has CONTINUE READING: Juvenile Justice Reform Bill Quietly Passes Senate | The Marshall Project

What If Policymakers Stopped Condemning Poor People and Considered their Real Needs and Circumstances? | janresseger

What If Policymakers Stopped Condemning Poor People and Considered their Real Needs and Circumstances? | janresseger

What If Policymakers Stopped Condemning Poor People and Considered their Real Needs and Circumstances?

  Merry Christmas and Good Wishes for the Season!   This blog will take a holiday break.  Look for a new post early in the new year.
In 2012, Mike Rose published Back to School: Why Everyone Deserves a Second Chance at Education, a book about the potential of community colleges to help people discover their interests, widen their experiences, and perhaps change the direction of their lives.  He begins: “This is a book about people in tough circumstances who find their way, who get a second… or third.. or fourth chance, who in some cases feel like they are reinventing themselves.  Education can play a powerful role in creating that second chance…  One of the defining characteristics of the United States is its promise of a second chance; this promise is central to our vision of ourselves and to our economic and civic dynamism. When we are at our best as a society, our citizens are not trapped by their histories.” (Back to School, p. xiii)
But we live in an age when work requirements—and participation in sometimes endless workplace training programs—have been added as conditions to qualify for Temporary Assistance for Needy Families, and when some states have made eligibility for Medicaid and even SNAP (food stamps) contingent on working or participating in basic and overly generalized training programs.  What does it mean when education ceases to be seen as a second chance and is instead conceptualized as a punishment for the those we disdain as dependent.  What if our society were to recover our belief in second chances?  What if we were to begin to consider in human terms the people who care for our grandparents or our children or pour our coffee or change the beds after we leave our hotel rooms—people whose employers may not regularly assign them enough hours to qualify for social program work requirements—people who never know their work schedules in advance—people working at minimum wage?  And how does our opinion of the people struggling to find jobs that pay so little affect the programs we design supposedly to provide that second chance?
To consider this question, in 2013, Rose published a piece in Dissent MagazineThe Inner Life of the Poor, an article he later added as a new chapter in the revised and expanded 2014 edition of his extraordinary Why School?   Rose republished the article last month on his personal blog.  Here’s why: “I reprint it now, for I think it is especially relevant in these times of brutal social policy and the day-to-day dehumanization of vulnerable people both within and at our borders.”
Here is what Rose asks us to consider as he profiles the woman who served as the primary CONTINUE READING: What If Policymakers Stopped Condemning Poor People and Considered their Real Needs and Circumstances? | janresseger



¿¿ What Are YOU Resisting ?? – redqueeninla #UTLAStrong #StrikeReady #March4Ed #WeAreLA

¿¿ What Are YOU Resisting ?? – redqueeninla

¿¿ What Are YOU Resisting ??


I’m resisting the attack on our public school system.  And we need to defend it now, right now, or else it will be gone.

¿¿When Are You Gonna Do It ??
Now. THE MOMENT IS NOWTHIS SATURDAY.  Really:



Now is the time for you to stand up, march and be counted.  Now is when the big push is going down to privatize that Jewel in the Crown of Public Education:  LAUSD.
I know, you and everyone else loves to hate on LAUSD.  It’s the second-largest school district in the country, the largest one run by a publicly-elected school board.  But it’s not a hell-hole of incompetence.  Really.  My children graduated from there and they’re not incompetents and neither are their teachers.  Really. The school sites are not a viper’s den of scary gangsters.  Really. (It’s actually downtown, in the District’s central headquarters (“Beaudry”) that the true financial criminals are stored. Really.)
Because “Education Reform” is just one instance of Privatizing All Our Public Works, Everything.  And that’s what’s on the table, right now, coming to a head in this fair city of ours. 
I know what I’m resisting: the flow of money, ever-increasing in the going, into just a tiny few number of private pocketsies.  We the millions are just standing around while it makes this giant sucking sound from out of our wallets and into their precious few accounts:  Eli Broad’s, Alice Walton’s, Reed Hasting’s, Austin Beutner’s, etc….  You know, the same old.
Right Now, all the stars carefully positioned over such along time are coming into alignment – for them. They’ve got a school board stacked with Privatizers, and it’s under threat from long-time progressive activist Jackie Goldberg running for the seat vacated by CCSA’s last anointed lackey, the felon from LAUSD BD5 (Vote Jackie, LAUSD5 on March 5, 2019!).

They’ve got a superintendent from their stable of Ideological Privateers, the venture capitalist Austin Beutner of Blackstone Group/Russian-privatization/Oaktree Capital/Evercore/Villaraigosa-Riordan-Broad/LAPD fame. He’s all poised and scripted-up for disparaging his own team of personnel, school teachers and their support staff.
And they’ve got one of America’s largest remaining unions with its back up against that proverbial negotiating wall, penned in on oneside by public opinion, CONTINUE READING: ¿¿ What Are YOU Resisting ?? – redqueeninla




What Happened to 2018 As The Year of the Teacher? | gadflyonthewallblog

What Happened to 2018 As The Year of the Teacher? | gadflyonthewallblog

What Happened to 2018 As The Year of the Teacher?

This year teachers took their mission way beyond the classroom.
Starting in West Virginia, we staged half-a-dozen walkouts in red states across the country demanding a better investment in children’s educations and often getting it.
It was so effective and unprecedented that the story began circulating that 2018 would be known as “The Year of the Teacher.”
And then, just as suddenly, the story stopped.
No more headlines. No more editorials. No more exposes.
So what happened?
The gum in the works seems to have been a story in The Atlantic by Alia Wong called “The Questionable Year of the Teacher Politician.”
In it, she writes that the teacher insurgence was overblown by unions and marks little more than a moment in time and not an authentic movement.
It really comes down to a numbers game. Numerous sources cite high numbers of teachers running for office. Wong disputes them.
National Education Association (NEA) senior political director Carrie Pugh says about CONTINUE READING: What Happened to 2018 As The Year of the Teacher? | gadflyonthewallblog