Tuesday, December 31, 2019

TOP POSTS THIS YEAR AND TOP POSTS OF THE DECADE #REDFORED #tbats

Big Education Ape


TOP POSTS THIS YEAR





TOP POSTS OF THE DECADE

Big Education Ape: The real story of New Orleans and its charter schools - The Washington Post - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2018/09/the-real-story-of-new-orleans-and-its.html

Big Education Ape: Bill Gates spent hundreds of millions of dollars to improve teaching. New report says it was a bust. - The Washington Post - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2018/06/bill-gates-spent-hundreds-of-millions.html

Big Education Ape: Seth Meyers shreds Detroit’s shady school system: You have to pay your teachers for teaching - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2016/05/seth-meyers-shreds-detroits-shady.html

Image result for Tuesday, May 22, 2018 Black congresswoman visibly annoyed as Betsy DeVos struggles to answer basic civil rights questions
Big Education Ape: Black congresswoman visibly annoyed as Betsy DeVos struggles to answer basic civil rights questions - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2018/05/black-congresswoman-visibly-annoyed-as.html

Image result for Disruptions: Minecraft, an Obsession and an Educational Tool - NYTimes.com
Big Education Ape: Disruptions: Minecraft, an Obsession and an Educational Tool - NYTimes.com - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2013/09/disruptions-minecraft-obsession-and.html

la
Big Education Ape: UPDATE: Voters send mixed signals to school reformers in L.A. + How closing schools hurts neighborhoods - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2013/03/how-closing-schools-hurts-neighborhoods.html

Big Education Ape: John Oliver's Last Week Tonight charter school clip spurs $100000 contest - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2016/09/john-olivers-last-week-tonight-charter.html

Big Education Ape: Tim Kaine Loves Public Schools. So Does His Wife Anne, Who is Virginia’s Secretary of Education | Diane Ravitch's blog - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2016/07/tim-kaine-loves-public-schools-so-does.html

Big Education Ape: Why Teachers Are So Tired ~ Teacher Habits - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2017/02/why-teachers-are-so-tired-teacher-habits.html

Image result for New Media charter school satisfies SRC conditions for operating charter
Big Education Ape: New Media charter school satisfies SRC conditions for operating charter | Philadelphia Inquirer | 07/05/2010 - http://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2010/07/new-media-charter-school-satisfies-src.html

Bill Raden: Failing the Test: Oakland’s Charter School Tipping Point - Beyond Chron

Failing the Test: Oakland’s Charter School Tipping Point - Beyond Chron

FAILING THE TEST: OAKLAND’S CHARTER SCHOOL TIPPING POINT


Last September’s sensational leak of the Great Public Schools Now Initiative, a half-billion-dollar plan to double the number of charter schools in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD), sparked a firestorm of controversy. Citing the plan’s potentially crippling fiscal impact on a financially troubled district that already leads the nation in its number of charters (around 230), critics denounced the plan as “an outline for a hostile takeover” and “a declaration of war on public schools.”
The combination of public furor and the LAUSD school board’s unanimous repudiation of the initiative — which was quickly dubbed the “Broad Plan” after its sponsor, Los Angeles philanthropist Eli Broad — subsequently forced the nonprofit tasked with implementing it to beat a retreat in its rhetoric, if not its intent to transform half of Los Angeles’ public schools into charters.
Rosie Torres, Oakland School Board Member: “What’s going to happen if we continue to have charter schools opening and we destabilize the financing of public schools?”
Yet Capital & Main has learned that a similar private initiative has been on the table for the Oakland Unified School District (OUSD) for at least a decade. Virtually unknown to Oakland’s parents, and without the benefit of public exposure or open debate by its school board, the Oakland charter expansion scheme has been quietly driving policy under the political radar for a number of years. (The OUSD school board did not respond to Capital & Main’s request to comment for this article.)
Charter schools, which were born of the education reform movement of the 1980s, compete for public tax dollars but are today often run like private businesses and aren’t bound by much of the state’s education code. But what makes such CONTINUE READING: Failing the Test: Oakland’s Charter School Tipping Point - Beyond Chron


The LAUSD’s 2019 Report Card - Carl J. Petersen - Medium

The LAUSD’s 2019 Report Card - Carl J. Petersen - Medium

The LAUSD’s 2019 Report Card

When I predicted that the charter industry’s recapturing of the Los Angeles Unified School District’s Board would bring a level of chaos not seen in the district since the days of the iPad debacle, the MiSiS Crisis and other John Deasy disasters, I had no idea how quickly this would occur. Within months of taking control, Board Member Ref Rodriguez, a former charter school operator, was under criminal indictment. Before he could be forced from office, he and his cohorts operated behind closed doors to hire Austin Beutner as the new Superintendent. The country’s second-largest school district would be led by a man whose resume was filled with failures and lacked any professional experience in the field of education.



As 2019 began, the effects of this chaos were in full swing. Rodriguez was gone, but his cohorts had blocked the appointment of Jackie Goldberg as a temporary replacement, leaving one-seventh of the district unrepresented. The charter industry had also blocked a proposal to put a parcel tax on the general election ballot, depriving the district’s students of needed funding. Their allies in the Los Angeles County Office of Education then threatened a takeover of the district based on manufactured warnings of impending economic doom. Beutner had botched negotiations with the CONTINUE READING: The LAUSD’s 2019 Report Card - Carl J. Petersen - Medium

Shawgi Tell: Opposing Charter Schools Equals Defending the Common Good | Dissident Voice

Opposing Charter Schools Equals Defending the Common Good | Dissident Voice

Opposing Charter Schools Equals Defending the Common Good

There is no shortage of convoluted and bizarre “arguments” for creating and multiplying privately-operated non-profit and for-profit charter schools.
The rich and their conscious and anti-conscious allies in politics, the media, think tanks, higher education, and many other spheres have spent an astonishing amount of time, energy, and money promoting and imposing privately-operated non-profit and for-profit charter schools on society.
The crux of these top-down antisocial efforts is to advance a capital-centered outlook and agenda by erasing a human-centered outlook and agenda. Charter schools represent the partial victory of narrow private interests over the public interest. In this sense, charter schools are a big step backward for society.
Since their inception several decades ago, privately-operated non-profit and for-profit charter schools have functioned effectively as pay-the-rich schemes while self-servingly posing as arrangements that “benefit the kids.” They have funneled billions of public dollars to private interests with impunity. They CONTINUE READING: Opposing Charter Schools Equals Defending the Common Good | Dissident Voice

NIA Today is the fifth day of Kwanzaa – Parenting for Liberation #P4LKWANZAA

NIA – Parenting for Liberation

Habari Gani?  Nia!

Today is the fifth day of Kwanzaa, a week-long celebration that honors African heritage of the Black Diaspora. We will be highlighting the importance of the seven core principles of Kwanzaa, how you can practice in your families and communities, and share how Parenting for Liberation work embodies the tenets of each principle. 
Today, on the fifth day of Kwanzaa, we celebrate Nia (Purpose) which is to make our collective vocation the building & developing of our community in order to restore our people to their traditional greatness.
One way Parenting for Liberation practices purpose is by holding space for Black families to learn from from historical role models who lived a purpose driven life, such as Harriet Tubman.
What this video below of our “Harriet” private screening CONTINUE READING: NIA – Parenting for Liberation

Unvaccinated Seattle Students Could Be Barred From School In The New Year | HuffPost

Unvaccinated Seattle Students Could Be Barred From School In The New Year | HuffPost

Unvaccinated Seattle Students Could Be Barred From School In The New Year
Washington state has eliminated exemptions for the MMR vaccine on personal and philosophical grounds.

Students in Washington state’s largest school system who have not met their vaccination requirements will not be allowed back at school next week, according to school officials.
Seattle Public Schools has informed parents they have until Jan. 8 to provide proof that their children have received the measles, mumps and rubella vaccine or else file for a religious or medical exemption. Any students whose parents don’t do this will not be allowed to attend classes.
In May, the state of Washington passed a bill that eliminated exemptions for the MMR vaccine on personal and philosophical grounds. The bill, which applies to public and private school students and to kids in child care, took effect in July. Volunteers and people employed by child care centers must also be vaccinated.

The state experienced two measles outbreaks in 2019, with a combined 87 cases. It was the most cases Washington had seen since 1990, according to the state’s Department of Health.
The Seattle school system, which reports more than 53,000 enrolled students, has been reminding families about the new requirement since the start of the school year in CONTINUE READING: Unvaccinated Seattle Students Could Be Barred From School In The New Year | HuffPost

Recommended: Literacy Crises: False Claims and Real Solutions, Jeff McQuillan | radical eyes for equity

Recommended: Literacy Crises: False Claims and Real Solutions, Jeff McQuillan | radical eyes for equity

Recommended: Literacy Crises: False Claims and Real Solutions, Jeff McQuillan

Recently, I have been (frantically but carefully) drafting a new book for IAP about the current “science of reading” version of the Reading War: How to End the Reading War and Serve the Literacy Needs of All Students: A Primer for Parents, Policy Makers, and People Who Care.
Those familiar with this blog and my scholarly work should be aware that I often ground my examinations of education in a historical context, drawing heavily on the subject of my dissertation, Lou LaBrant. The book I am writing begins in earnest, in fact, with “Chapter 1: A Historical Perspective of the Reading War: 1940s and 1990s Editions.”
As I have posted here, the “science of reading” over-reaction to reading and dyslexia across mainstream media as well as in state-level reading legislation has a number of disturbing parallels with the claims of a reading crisis in the 1980s and 1990s. Few people, I explained, are aware of the 1997 report authored by Linda Darling-Hammond on NAEP, reading achievement in the U.S., and the positive correlations with whole language (WL) practices and test scores.
I imagine even fewer  education journalists and political leaders have read a powerful and important work about that literacy crisis in the 1990s, Literacy Crises: False Claims and Real Solutions by Jeff McQuillan.
In his Chapter 1, “What Isn’t Wrong with Reading: Seven Myths about CONTINUE READING: Recommended: Literacy Crises: False Claims and Real Solutions, Jeff McQuillan | radical eyes for equity

It's Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... A VERY BUSY DAY | The latest news and resources in education since 2007

Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... | The latest news and resources in education since 2007


It's Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... A VERY BUSY DAY | The latest news and resources in education since 2007


“Elements of an Effective Math Lesson”

Elements of an Effective Math Lesson is the headline of my latest Education Week Teacher column. In it, teachers explain how creative math lessons can spring from students’ surrounding environments and culture such as the cost of the Thanksgiving meal and the search for “math selfies.” Here are some excerpts:
Interactive: “In search of refuge”

12019 / Pixabay In Search of Refuge that is designed for “Mapping forced displacement from 1951 to 2017.” I’m adding it to The Best Sites For Learning About World Refugee Day .
A Look Back: “What Do School Reform Technocrats and Failed Urban Renewal Schemes Have in Common?”

I thought that new – and veteran – readers might find it interesting if I began sharing my best posts from over the years. You can see the entire collection here . Today, I’m highlighting a piece I wrote in The Huffington Post over several years ago, What Do School Reform Technocrats and Failed Urban Renewal Schemes Have in Common? Here’s an excerpt:
Every School District Staffperson In Charge Of Curriculum Adoption Should Read This Piece Explaining Why We Teachers Tend To Not Use The Materials

Dylan Wiliam shared an incredibly important piece on Twitter explaining how Districts screw-up adopting materials, including technology. To start off with, here are a couple of tweets: Because they tend to be bad? https://t.co/qCKr6UZrGK — Larry Ferlazzo (@Larryferlazzo) December 31, 2019 Really, monumentally bad. — Tom Rademacher (@MrTomRad) December 31, 2019 Why aren’t teachers using the resour


The Best Resources To Help Educators Teach ELL Newcomers

geralt / Pixabay Obviously, a ton of other “Best” lists are useful to teachers of ELL Newcomers, including: The Best Online Resources For Teachers of Pre-Literate ELL’s & Those Not Literate In Their Home Language (which also 
Larry Ferlazzo's Websites of the Day... | The latest news and resources in education since 2007

Grassroots Education Network- December 2019 Newsletter - Network For Public Education

Grassroots Education Network- December 2019 Newsletter - Network For Public Education

Grassroots Education Network- December 2019 Newsletter

The NPE Grassroots Education Network is a network of over 150 grassroots organizations nationwide who have joined together to preserve, promote, improve, and strengthen our public schools. If you know of a group that would like to join this powerful network, please go here to sign on. 
If you have any questions about the NPE Grassroots Education Network please contact Marla Kilfoyle, NPE Grassroots Education Network Liaison at marlakilfoyle@networkforpubliceducation.org

Notes from Marla

I want to wish everyone a prosperous and productive 2020. I hope to see you all at the NPE Action National Conference in March. Registration is still open but please remember that seats are limited this year to 500, so DO NOT delay your registration. Go here to register and book your hotel. There are fewer than 60 discounted hotel rooms left on Friday and Saturday nights.  
Our next newsletter will be the New Year Edition. Please email me your most important accomplishment in 2019. Let’s show the nation how much we were able to accomplish without being bought off by privatizers!

Public Schools Week will be held from February 24th-28th. Start planning NOW by doing the following:

  • Begin to ask your Governor, state and federal lawmakers, Mayor, City Council, or Board of Education to adopt a resolution in support of Public Education. Begin to do this now. You can adopt, edit, or modify this resolution from The School Superintendents Association. If you get a resolution please send it to Marla Kilfoyle at marlakilfoyle@networkforpubliceducation.org and we will forward it along.
  • National organizations please cut a three-minute video that encourages your members to participate in Public Schools Week. Here are the instructions for the video. To see sample videos please go here.  
  • Please share and ask your members to take the pledge in support of Public Schools week. You can do that here.
  • Please consider hosting an event. Starting planning NOW and register your event here  
  • To learn more about Public Schools Week, messaging for 2020 and the #PublicSchoolProud campaign please go here and the toolkit has all kinds of amazing things you can do to support the week on social media.
National Organizing CONTINUE READING: Grassroots Education Network- December 2019 Newsletter - Network For Public Education