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Monday, September 14, 2020

The Fourteenth: We all do better when we all do better. | Live Long and Prosper

The Fourteenth: We all do better when we all do better. | Live Long and Prosper

The Fourteenth: We all do better when we all do better.



Today marks the fourteenth blogoversary of this blog. When I began it on September 14, 2006, I was in my late 50s and teaching Reading Recovery in a small public school in northeast Indiana (which has since closed), the US was at war in Iraq, there had just been a mass shooting at Dawson College in Montreal, and George W. Bush was the US President.
In September of 2006, Beyoncé and Justin Timberlake released their second albums and Elton John released his 29th; naturalist Steve Irwin and former Texas governor Ann Richards died; the Cubs finished last in the National League Central (a year later they would finish first); and Star Trek celebrated 40 years of television and movies (premier Sept 8, 1966).
Public education in the US was deep into the mess of No Child Left BehindTesting defined (and still defines) everything taught in America’s public schools. In Indiana, we weren’t yet spending huge amounts of tax money on vouchers and charter schools, and Hoosier teachers still had seniority rights, the right to due process before getting fired, and collective bargaining for things like prep time and class size.
My blog’s focus was on 1) the overuse and misuse of standardized testing, 2) the overwhelming intrusion of politics and politicians into public education, and 3) my students. I was reading education authors like Richard Allington, Gerald CONTINUE READING: The Fourteenth: We all do better when we all do better. | Live Long and Prosper