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Wednesday, February 8, 2017

Why I’m Saying Farewell to EduShyster – Have You Heard

Why I’m Saying Farewell to EduShyster – Have You Heard:

Why I’m Saying Farewell to EduShyster


It’s time for me to wave goodbye to the man with the outstretched hand…
Since I started this blog back in 2012 I’ve gotten occasional complaints that the name, EduShyster is anti-semitic. When one of these arrived last week, I started to compose what has become my standard response: that whole books have been written on this topic, and that historians have traced the etymology of the word back to its very first appearance in 1843, in a New York newspaper crusading against political and legal corruption. And then I stopped. As any English teacher worth her salt can explain, meaning and context go hand in hand. Our current context is that anti-semitism has roared back with a vengeance and has taken up residence in the highest office in the land. Even the slightest possibility that I might be lumped in with that kind of hate is too much. Now is the time to speak up against all kinds of intolerance, and so I’m taking this opportunity to wish EduShyster farewell.
If you’ve followed the evolution of my blog, you know that I started out as an anonymous commentator, taking aim at all things education *rephorm.* Snark was my weapon, along with wine by the boxful—a sort of metaphor for the volume of intoxicants necessitated by the edupreneurial schemes and scams that I spent my days untangling. Along the way, the blog morphed into something more serious. There was so much I didn’t understand, and so I sought out people who knew things and used my blog as a way to make complex ideas more accessible. I also discovered that my curious nature—OK, nosy—translated into a reporting skill I didn’t know I had. I’ve now raised money from readers and traveled to Chicago, New Orleans and Michigan, talking to anyone who will talk to me, and producing actual journalism. Who knew??? Last year I launched a story-driven podcast series called Have You Heard that sought to *disrupt* the debate over the future of public education by Why I’m Saying Farewell to EduShyster – Have You Heard:

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: Setting the table for fascism, American-style

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: Setting the table for fascism, American-style:

Setting the table for fascism, American-style


After Dr. King was assassinated in Memphis, nearly a half-century ago, there was an attempt by the dominant culture to turn him into a harmless icon. That often happens to revolutionaries when they die. But if you ever doubted the power of King's ideas, yesterday's Senate hearings on the appointment of racist Alabama Sen. Jeff Sessions as AG should put those doubts to rest.

When Sen. Elizabeth Warren attempted to enter an appropriate, brief, and relatively mild letter from King's widow Coretta Scott King, criticizing Sessions' record on civil rights, Warren was immediately silenced by her trembling Republican colleagues,who charged that she was "impugning his integrity."

The silencing of critics, media, judges and legislators, combined with a propaganda blitz based on big lies and "alt-facts" have become central features of the Trump regime. Every day we're fed more and more until the cynicism runs so deep that the lies all becomes normalized and the war drums become ambient noise.

But make no mistake. There's a method to this madness. The lies aren't just pathological, they're political as well. The latest example was Trump's big lie yesterday, at a confab of county sheriffs. He claimed, without any evidence, that the U.S. murder rate is now the "highest in 47 years." In fact, the murder rate, while horrific, is at its lowest point in decades. It remains as high as it is, not for want of more cops and federal agents, but for the flood of cheap guns, which Trump encourages.

Why make such a provocative and easily debunked fib? The answer lies in Trump's follow-up statement“If you ran Chicago, you would solve that nightmare.”

If that isn't an open call for a police state, I don't know what is.

Remember, Trump's selling this BS to whip up the same group of sheriffs who were mobilized Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: Setting the table for fascism, American-style:

State urged to shift $1 billion from county education offices to school districts | EdSource

State urged to shift $1 billion from county education offices to school districts | EdSource:

State urged to shift $1 billion from county education offices to school districts

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e independent, nonpartisan Legislative Analyst’s Office is recommending that the state shift nearly all of  $1 billion in unrestricted funding that currently goes to county offices of education to school districts instead. That would allow districts to choose how to provide many services they now get from county offices, whose operations could be scaled way back as a result.
In a report issued Monday, the LAO criticized the lack of accountability of a system that funds county offices “regardless of how well they address the priorities of their districts.” It said that funding school districts directly would be more consistent with the Local Control Funding Formula’s philosophy of burdening districts with “few strings” in deciding what works best for them.
But the executive director of the organization representing the state’s 58 county offices called the report a “fundamentally flawed analysis” that would dismantle county offices. “The findings are dramatically out of proportion” and “show a misunderstanding of what we are doing,” said Peter Birdsall, who runs the California County Superintendents Educational Services Association.
The LAO report comes at a critical time for the county offices. Starting this spring, one of their mandated duties under a new school and district accountability system will be to see that districts address areas of poor performance on a range of new measures, including test scores, student suspension rates, and readiness for college and careers. Birdsall’s organization says that the counties need more funding for additional oversight responsibilities – money that Gov. Jerry Brown didn’t include in his proposed budget for next year.
But the bigger, costlier question – one that the LAO doesn’t address – is who would actually provide low-performing schools and districts with the technical help and more extensive assistance they would require. Would it be county offices, many of which already provide training and guidance, by default, or could a district choose their providers from other county offices, high-performing school districts, and for-profit and nonprofit organizations with proven expertise? The LAO suggests that the State Board of Education and the Legislature together should decide how the system would work. At the same time, they should redefine the functions of State urged to shift $1 billion from county education offices to school districts | EdSource:


Booker and Betsy DeVos worked together on school choice. He just voted against her. | NJ.com

Booker and Betsy DeVos worked together on school choice. He just voted against her. | NJ.com:

Booker and Betsy DeVos worked together on school choice. He just voted against her


 WASHINGTON a As mayor of Newark, Cory Booker joined Betsy DeVos on the board of Alliance for School Choice, which advocated using taxpayer dollars for charter, private and religious schools.

He's known her for years. 
But when DeVos was nominated to be U.S. secretary of education by President Donald Trump, Booker (D-N.J.) voted no.
DeVos was confirmed Tuesday, 51-50, when Vice President Mike Pence cast the deciding vote in favor of her nomination after two Senate Republicans joined Booker, U.S. Sen. Robert Menendez (D-N.J.) and every other Senate Democrat in opposing her.
Will Trump era make Booker a star?
"This year could potentially be one of the most difficult and challenging years in modern American history," U.S. Sen. Cory Booker said.


"I found many of her answers inadequate, unsatisfactory ... or just plain violative of what I believe a leader in that position should do," said Booker, who has taken a more visible role in opposing Trump and broke with tradition in testifying against the nomination of fellow U.S. Sen. Jeff Sessions (R-Ala.) to be attorney general.
Despite their past history of working together, DeVos refused to meet with him, Booker said.
He said her hearing was rushed though so she couldn't properly be questioned, and was troubled by the answers she did give, such as refusing to rule out allowing guns in schools "to protect from potential grizzlies," and saying the federal Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, which is supposed to provide an appropriate education to students with disabilities, should be enforced by states.
"There are numerous things in her testimony that I found problematic and in Booker and Betsy DeVos worked together on school choice. He just voted against her. | NJ.com:


CARL PETERSEN FOR LAUSD BOARD DISTRICT 2 - Perdaily.com

CARL PETERSEN FOR LAUSD BOARD DISTRICT 2 - Perdaily.com:

CARL PETERSEN FOR LAUSD BOARD DISTRICT 2

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(Mensaje se repite en Español)

It is with a great deal of all too rare enthusiasm that I whole-heartedly endorse the candidacy of Carl Petersen in the race for the Los Angeles Unified School District Board District 2 position presently held by Monica Garcia. In her long tenure as an LAUSD board member Garcia has done absolutely nothing to stem the decay of public education at LAUSD nor has she done anything to rein in the obscene profits of vendors of goods and services to LAUSD that presently have the district on the verge of bankruptcy.

While voter apathy in the past has normally seen a small turnout of around 20% of eligible voters in these school board elections, given the numbers of teachers, students, parents, and others who continue to suffer from endemic LAUSD corruption, it is my belief that Carl Petersen now offers you the first step toward a viable alternative that will finally hold those in power accountable, while bringing about independently verifiable academic achievement and the change necessary for all students and teachers to fulfill their potential.

Read what Carl Petersen says about his candidacy and rest assured that with 3 kids of his own in the system he will do what he says:

What are the most critical issues in your district and how would you address them?

1) The Threat of Bankruptcy: In December, the LAUSD warned: "that the district may not be able to meet its financial obligations in upcoming years because it faces a cumulative deficit of $1.46 billion through the 2018-2019 school year." A significant reason for this deficit is the loss of students because many parents feel the District is not listening to their concerns. As an example, a majority of parents surveyed by the District preferred that the school year start after Labor Day. After a vote to keep the current start date, Mónica García thanked "all the effective voices that made this possible for our youth!", as if parents who wanted a different schedule were working against the needs of their children. The former Superintendent celebrated a winning round in court by calling it "a civil rights victory for our students with special needs". The District's opponents in the case were parents who wanted to preserve the choices available to them.

Unlike any of the current Board members, I actually have children enrolled in the District. Therefore, my voice would add a perspective that is missing from current deliberations.

Existing charters also need to be properly regulated. Just this month the Board renewed the charter of View Park Middle School even though it had been ranked a one out of ten by the California Charter School Association, they demonstrated a 0% reclassification rate for English Learners and the "staff has limited special education capacity and knowledge." I will vote to shut down failing charters and ensure that their enrollment policies comply with the law.

2) At least 25% of students do not graduate: First, it must be CARL PETERSEN FOR LAUSD BOARD DISTRICT 2 - Perdaily.com:



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Explaining Betsy DeVos and her poor judgment on education

Explaining Betsy DeVos and her poor judgment on education:

Explaining Betsy DeVos and her poor judgment on education

Betsy Devos, an unqualified billionaire with a knack for destroying education in her own state, has been confirmed as the country’s new Secretary of Education. Many are wondering whether the strategic Republican marketing of “school choice” has any leg to stand on.
“Public schools are failing,” is something that I hear a lot when we break down education in the U.S.. While reports and studies are mixed on charter schools, with some that perform well and others that fail miserably, I’ll do my best to make a case for why someone with DeVos’ thought process can be a potential nightmare for the future of education in the country.
Much of the criticism centered around Betsy DeVos focuses on her lack of experience with public schools. While she has shown some interest in “protecting” students from the non-existent threat of grizzlies wandering onto their campuses, she has never run, taught in, attended or sent a child to a public school.
But she’s swimming in an olympic pool overflowing with hundos, and in the Trump era, inheriting cold hard cash from papa is all the qualification you need to toy with opportunities for the underprivileged. Although that statement reads as a bit hyperbolic, all one needs to do is a take a nuanced look at what DeVos did to education in Michigan.
DeVos and her family have donated a whopping $200 million to Republican politicians, and her political influence has been impactful enough to convince Michigan state lawmakers to push for under-regulated charter schools. Keep in mind that these are schools that are insulated from common sense regulations that ensure students are getting a decent education. That may be the reason why test scores in some these Michigan charters are abysmal, yet their unqualified administrators still take home $130,000 a year.
To be fair, not all charters in Michigan were always in bad shape. In fact, Stanford’s Center for Research on Education Outcomes analyzed data from these schools up until 2011 and found that some of them do perform rather well, while others perform the same as traditional public schools. But this study, which conservatives love to share as proof of charter success, has its limitations including how dated it is.
A great deal changed for Michigan charters after 2011, when DeVos’ relentless lobbying convinced lawmakers to lift a cap on the number of charters in the state and all of a sudden both traditional public schools and charters were fighting for the limited resources available. In 2014, charters were already receiving $1 billion in state funding, and thirty new charter schools popped up in 2013 alone.
Charter schools were supposed to compete with public schools, and in turn, that competition was meant to improve education. But that wasn’t the end result. The New York Times explained all this perfectly last July, before DeVos was a household name:
While the idea was to foster academic competition, the unchecked growth of charters has created a glut of schools competing for some of the nation’s poorest students, enticing them to enroll with cash bonuses, laptops, raffle tickets for iPads and bicycles. Leaders of charter and traditional schools alike say they are being cannibalized, fighting so hard over students and the limited public dollars that follow them that no one thrives.”
The rapid growth and chaos of charters in Michigan even alarmed their proponents who feel these schools weren’t held accountable when they did fail. Greg Richmond, who played a pivotal role in pushing for charter schools throughout the country, and also happens to be the head of the National Association for Charter School Authorizers, understands that not all charters will succeed. He wants to make sure there are enough standards and reporting so failing charters are shut out of receiving valuable taxpayer money.
“The quality of schools in Michigan — what you’re seeing there is probably pretty nationally representative,” Richmond said in an interview. “I never thought that all charter schools were going to be great.”
In Michigan, some charters are a complete and utter disaster. The Detroit Free Press shares just one of many examples:
On the west side, another charter school, Hope Academy, has been serving the community around Grand River and Livernois for 20 years. Its test scores have been among the lowest in the state throughout those two decades; in 2013 the school ranked in the first percentile, the absolute bottom for academic performance. Two years later, its charter was renewed.
The push to defund public schools and reroute taxpayer money to charters and private institutions is actually a very clever strategy by the right wing, which has always had a Explaining Betsy DeVos and her poor judgment on education:

After the DeVos Vote: the Fight for Public Education Continues | Schott Foundation for Public Education

After the DeVos Vote: the Fight for Public Education Continues | Schott Foundation for Public Education:

After the DeVos Vote: the Fight for Public Education Continues

Yesterday the Senate voted 50-50, with Vice President Mike Pence casting the tie-breaking vote, to confirm Michigan billionaire Betsy DeVos as the 11th U.S. Secretary of Education. The vote—which followed an overnight session of protest and some support of DeVos—marked the first time in history a vice president has been called upon to break a tie on a presidential nomination. The historic vote also followed a widely publicized groundswell of grassroots opposition to the nomination, citing among other issues, DeVos’s lack of experience, support of privatization and unfamiliarity with education policy and practice.
At the Schott Foundation we were clear that DeVos is dangerously unqualified for such an important position governing our nation’s public schools.
Following yesterday’s confirmation, our grantees and allies in education justice are speaking loud and clear: the fight for public education and equity in opportunity for all students continues.
The Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools, of which Schott is a member, released a call to join the resistance:
Starting today, the resistance must dig in and expand.
We will not let this Administration continue to fail public schools—particularly in Black and Brown communities—by starving them of the resources they need to be successful.
We will not allow this Administration to divert public dollars to charters and private schools, defunding the public schools that majorities of children rely on.
We will not allow students to be attacked, bullied, or targeted in any way for the color of their skin or their country of origin. We will resist practices that push children out of schools and in to the criminal justice system.
We are united as students, educators, parents and communities. We will be ready to resist, when President Trump and Betsy DeVos try to take away our schools. Read more >
New York-based Alliance for Quality Education made it clear it would not allow Governor Cuomo to join DeVos in attacking public schools:
“Betsy DeVos is a disastrous choice that spurred massive public resistance to her nomination. In New York State it is time for resistance to focus on Governor Cuomo who, like DeVos and Trump, is proposing massive attacks on public education. Just like DeVos and Trump, Governor Cuomo wants to cut funding commitments for our neediest students and to privatize schools,” said Zakiyah Ansari, Advocacy Director of the Alliance for Quality Education.
“Governor Cuomo wants to repeal the state’s $4.3 billion commitment to increase funding for schools that are filled with black and brown students and students in poverty. This funding is owed as a result of the landmark Campaign for Fiscal Equity lawsuit. Just as New Yorkers have been leaders in the fight to resist Trump and dump DeVos, we will now fight back against Cuomo and his attacks on public education.” Read more >
The Annenberg Institute for School Reform collected advice and inspiration from education experts and organizers:
In response to the Senate vote to confirm Betsy DeVos as Secretary of Education, we wanted to share some words 
After the DeVos Vote: the Fight for Public Education Continues | Schott Foundation for Public Education:


EduColor Statement on the DeVos Confirmation — EduColor

EduColor Statement on the DeVos Confirmation — EduColor:

EDUCOLOR STATEMENT ON THE DEVOS CONFIRMATION

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WASHINGTON – Following the Senate’s recent confirmation of Donald Trump’s choice for Secretary of Education, Betsy DeVos, EduColor Policy Chair Khalilah Harris made the following statement on behalf of the collective:
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We are incredibly heartened to see how many people have finally stepped up to take action in support of public education. Because of this unprecedented outpouring of public opposition to Betsy DeVos–driven by her shocking lack of qualifications and preparation, her privatization agenda, and her unwillingness to affirm any commitment to the vulnerable students the US Department of Education (USED) exists to protect–what was once assumed to be a guaranteed confirmation quickly became the most hotly contested Cabinet appointment in recent history.
But let’s be clear: as an organization committed to full educational justice for students and communities who are systematically denied access to a quality public education, we are fully prepared to resist policies and positions put forth by this Secretary of Education and this White House, and will be vigilant in protecting the important work of USED’s Office for Civil Rights. Betsy DeVos has pushed an agenda in Michigan that has devastated public education, and we have no confidence in DeVos, the Trump administration, nor its leader, whose hateful statements as a candidate and reckless and unconstitutional actions since taking office are now legendary.
EduColor is a collective that seeks to elevate the voices of public school advocates of color on educational equity and justice. We are an inclusive cooperative of informed, inspired and motivated educators, parents, students, writers and activists who promote and embrace the centrality of substantive intersectional diversity.

www.educolor.org | @EduColorMVMT | www.facebook.com/educolormvmt
EduColor Statement on the DeVos Confirmation — EduColor:

CURMUDGUCATION: DeVosian Threat Inventory

CURMUDGUCATION: DeVosian Threat Inventory:

DeVosian Threat Inventory

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So now Betsy DeVos has her very first big girl job, and we live in a Trump-DeVos education era. Time to take an inventory of what education issues to watch for. Here's my set of best semi-educated guesses.














Common Core

Pshaw. Common Core continues to be a zombie policy, existing in various mangled forms both under its old name and its new one. This administration will claim to have gotten rid of it while having not done much of anything. It's like building the Wall; people keep saying Trump can't do it, but they forget his most potent policy tool-- lying.

So we will claim that CCSS is dead and gone and applaud states for adopting strong college and career ready standards, which will continue to be the Core oinking through one more layer of lipstick. None of it will be the source of much fuss.

Charters and Choice

Technically, Secretary DeVos can't really do anything much to get states to go all in on charters, vouchers, and choice. But then, technically Secretary Duncan couldn't do anything much to get states to adopt the Common Core.

The tools available to USED just happen to be tools that DeVos is familiar with-- bribes and extortion. Jump through this hoop and get a big fat check! Displease me and I will cut off your Title I funding.

Expect to see every possible tool used to throw money at charters and push for some version of vouchers. Watch for skirmishes between former allies, as charter-loving accountability hawks face off against a USED that doesn't want to restrict "innovation" or hurt "flexibility" by making charter schools follow actual rules. Cyber-school operators can now breathe a sigh of relief; for a while it looked like someone might actually hold them accountable for their crappy results, but that ship has, well, not so much sailed as been blown up in the harbor.

And be prepared to fight on the state level to keep pubic schools from being sucked dry in order to fund choicey stuff. Remember-- throwing money at public schools is a huge pointless waste, but 
CURMUDGUCATION: DeVosian Threat Inventory:





The Pedagogy of Antoine Roussel | Blue Cereal Education

The Pedagogy of Antoine Roussel | Blue Cereal Education:

The Pedagogy of Antoine Roussel

Roussel Thumbs Up

Most of you are probably unfamiliar with the name “Antoine Roussel.”
He’s not a traditional educator – or an educator at all. He’s a professional hockey player. A personal favorite of mine, actually. 
And I have the t-shirts to prove it. 
Pro hockey, like any other high-end form of athletic entertainment, is home to the elite. That’s why we pay big money to watch them – because they’re better than everyone else at what they do. Lots better. 
Ridiculously better.
Nevertheless, there is much to learn from Roussel for those of us in a very different world. A world in which many people do what we do, for not very much money. A world in which it’s eternally debatable whether we’re winning or losing, and no one can seem to agree about exactly what our job is, let alone whether or not we’re doing it well.
I’d like to introduce you to the man fans call the Feisty Frenchman, the Rousster, or DangeRouss – all names I’m pretty sure he hates. In fact, if it comes up, don’t tell him I shared those, covenu
I’d like to tell you why he’s one of my edu-heroes. And yes, it’s a list. Like cargo pants or cover bands, contrived blog-lists never quite go out of style. 

1. Have a plan, but be ready to follow unexpected paths. 

With Great Power...
Roussel was born in Roubaix, France. For those of you who don’t follow God’s Favorite Game, professional hockey players don’t generally come from France. Rouss is one of only three currently playing in the NHL. 
He played rugby as a youngster. It was hot out there on the field, so he kept going to the sidelines to get water. Once Antoine went, teammates followed.
We all have that kid in class – not necessarily intentionally disruptive, but a natural leader who often chooses directions we wish they wouldn’t. And they never go alone.  
It made his coach crazy, and eventually it was clear rugby wasn’t going to work. His mother figured hockey would be cooler – like, literally. 
He played in France, and eventually came to North America. For several years he bounced around in the minor leagues, sometimes getting looks from NHL affiliates, but The Pedagogy of Antoine Roussel | Blue Cereal Education:

U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy Devos to Address all Department Staff | U.S. Department of Education

U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy Devos to Address all Department Staff | U.S. Department of Education:
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy Devos to Address all Department Staff

U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos will address the Department staff on Wednesday, Feb. 8, at 2 p.m. ET. Secretary DeVos’ speech will focus on the importance of the work and mission of the Department of Education. Following her remarks, Secretary DeVos will continue to visit with Department staff. 
The event will be live streamed at https://edstream.ed.gov/.
WHO: 
Betsy DeVos, U.S. Secretary of Education
Philip H. Rosenfelt, Acting General Counsel
WHAT: 
Remarks to the full staff of the U.S. Department of Education
WHEN: 
Wednesday, Feb. 8, 2017, 2 p.m. ET
WHERE: 
U.S. Department of Education
Lyndon Baines Johnson Education Building, Barnard Auditorium
400 Maryland Ave., S.W.
Washington, D.C. 20202
ACCESS:
Media representatives must present a valid media credential.
All credentialed media should arrive at the Maryland Avenue, S.W. entrance.
Satellite trucks must RSVP immediately to request parking.
RSVPs: Credentialed media planning to attend the event should RSVP to press@ed.gov
Questions: Please contact the Press Office, (202) 401-1576 or press@ed.gov
PRESET:
12:30 p.m. 
Final access for writers and still photographers, no later than 1:30 p.m.
U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy Devos to Address all Department Staff | U.S. Department of Education:

Federal website for special education is down. But no, it hasn’t been scrubbed - The Washington Post

Federal website for special education is down. But no, it hasn’t been scrubbed - The Washington Post:

Federal website for special education is down. But no, it hasn’t been scrubbed


A government website that explains a key federal law for students with disabilities was not working on Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s first morning in office, leading to anxiety among special-education advocates who are monitoring her views on the issue.
But an Education Department spokesman said what happened to the site was just a glitch.
The spokesman said the agency was made aware of the problem early Wednesday and is working to fix it as soon as possible. “The site was not taken down,” he said, adding that there have been server issues related to the site since at least Jan. 27.
The site lays out student rights under the Individuals with Disabilities Act, or IDEA. DeVos stumbled over questions related to IDEA during her Jan. 17 confirmation hearing, first suggesting that states could decide whether to enforce the federal law, and then saying she had been “confused” about it. DeVos has since pledged to enforce IDEA.
Many people have closely watch federal websites since President Trump’s inauguration, when Federal website for special education is down. But no, it hasn’t been scrubbed - The Washington Post:


Worsening teacher shortage puts more underprepared teachers in classrooms, report says | EdSource

Worsening teacher shortage puts more underprepared teachers in classrooms, report says | EdSource:

Worsening teacher shortage puts more underprepared teachers in classrooms, report says


e number of underprepared teachers working in California’s public school classrooms has more than doubled in just three years, a key indicator that the teacher shortage continues to worsen, according to a new report from the Learning Policy Institute.
For the 2015-16 school year, California issued 10,200 intern credentials, permits and waivers. These candidates had not yet completed, or sometimes even started, teaching preparation programs, according to the report, “Addressing California’s Growing Teacher Shortage: 2017 Update.”
In recent years, the state issued an increasing number of these temporary credentials from fewer than 5,000 in 2012-13, to just over 6,000 in 2013-14 and more than 7,600 in 2014-15.
These temporary credentials reflect a tiny fraction of the state’s more than 300,000 teachers.
“There are thousands of students today in classrooms with teachers who are wholly unprepared,” the report concludes.
The institute, a leading voice urging the state to confront the teacher shortage problem, said the state needed “to invest in rapidly building the supply of qualifiedWorsening teacher shortage puts more underprepared teachers in classrooms, report says | EdSource: 

Time to protect your children by opting them out of the unfair, inappropriate and discriminatory SBAC testing scheme - Wait What?

Time to protect your children by opting them out of the unfair, inappropriate and discriminatory SBAC testing scheme - Wait What?:

Time to protect your children by opting them out of the unfair, inappropriate and discriminatory SBAC testing scheme


We are once again coming up on the time of year that Connecticut public school students will be told to stop learning and start testing.
Students in grades 3-8 and high school juniors will have their time and attention diverted from instructional activities in order prepare and take the Common Core Smarter Balanced Assessment (SBAC) test and the SAT.
These tests are useless and unscientific.  They fail to provide teachers and parents with any useable information about how to improve teaching or about their student’s real academic performance in relation to what is actually being taught in Connecticut’s classrooms.
Equally disturbing, these unfair and discriminatory tests are being used to categorize, rank and punish students, teachers and public schools.
As Wendy Lecker explained her in her recent piece, Failed common core SBAC/SAT tests punish students by Wendy Lecker,
Neither the SBAC nor the SAT is valid to measure student “growth.”
Administrators overwhelmingly agree that the SBAC and SAT are not user-friendly for students with disabilities or English Language Learners.
They are a worthless measure of how students are doing with what is actually taught in Connecticut classrooms.
And most troubling of all, the Common Core Smarter Balanced Assessment Consortium (SBAC) test is literally designed to fail many Time to protect your children by opting them out of the unfair, inappropriate and discriminatory SBAC testing scheme - Wait What?: