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Saturday, June 10, 2017

Proof Your Teacher Evaluation is Meaningless - Teacher Habits

Proof Your Teacher Evaluation is Meaningless - Teacher Habits:

Proof Your Teacher Evaluation is Meaningless

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meaningless

It’s bad enough that part of teachers’ evaluations are based on student growth. This growth, usually based on just a few poorly designed assessments and for which students are not personally held accountable, can be affected by a number of factors completely outside the control of the teacher, such as student attendance, motivation, technical issues, and whether or not a kid remembered his glasses or whether or not mom remembered his medication on the critical day.
But even more egregious is that a large percentage of a teacher’s evaluation comes from administrator observations.
A principal is given a huge checklist of “best practices,” and is supposed to assess the teacher in real-time on each of them. They might do this a couple of times each year. Of the more than 1,000 hours that teachers do their jobs in a year, their evaluation may rest on just 80 minutes of observed teaching. In other words, a teacher’s entire year is judged on about one-tenth of one percent of her efforts.
That’s not the worst of it. Because in the case of observations, it’s not what districts are doing that proves teacher evaluations are meaningless. It’s what districts are not doing.

What Districts Won’t and Never Will Do

See if you can imagine your district doing the following:
On a day in May, say a week or two before you are to receive your end-of-year evaluation, the entire staff is invited to a one-hour professional development session. The topic is “Why Your Teacher Evaluation is Credible.” You all gather inside the high school auditorium. A huge Proof Your Teacher Evaluation is Meaningless - Teacher Habits:

Catch up with CURMUDGUCATION

CURMUDGUCATION:

Catch up with CURMUDGUCATION





You'll Never Be a Writer

This is a line often included in one of those self-reported stories that people feel compelled to share when they discover they are talking to an English teacher. It's not quite as popular as those standards "I Always Hated English Class in High School" or "I Hate To Read" or the super-popular "I Guess I'll Have To Watch My Grammar When I'm Around You." Just today, someone once again summed up her

YESTERDAY

The Federal Regs Voucher Workaround

Betsy DeVos is having some trouble making up her mind on whether it's OK for private schools to discriminate. pic.twitter.com/JF97GkrASq — AJ+ (@ajplus) June 9, 2017 After Betsy DeVos's last round of Congressional obfuscation testimony, many folks are asking the same question as EdWeek-- " When Do Voucher Programs Allow Private Schools To Discriminate Against Students ?" As you can see in the cli

JUN 08

Data Overload

The last nine months have brought a shift in my view of data. Despite my long and vocal opposition to the gathering in data in schools, to the use of standardized tests to generate data that is in turn used for everything from judging students tons of it every day in my classroom-- in fact, one of my criticisms of many reformer data programs is they involve far too little data. On top of that, you

JUN 07

The Long Run

Raising tiny humans is nuts. It is nuclear space brain science jumping-over-the-Grand-Canyon-on-a-tricycle nuts. And yet I am hopeful. I come at that hopefulness from a not-entirely-usual perspective. I am, aa of yesterday, the father of two new twin boys, and my wife and I are contemplating the tremendous challenge we have been set. These tiny humans are fraught with all sorts of possibility and
Why Do We Need Professionals

This is my short answer to the question. It's my wife and newborn twin sons, now about twenty-seven hours old, and it has been an adventure every step of the way, which is how it goes with childbirth, a process that can unroll gently like the Miracle of Freaking Life, or like a terrifying rush of nurses and doctors and anesthesiologists into the operating room where they cut the mother's body ope

JUN 05

Expertise

Do teachers need to be experts in the subjects they teach or ‘just’ experts at teaching? #education #visiblelearning #teaching — Visible Learning (@VisibleLearning) June 5, 2017 I was not the only person to see this tweet and have the following thought... One of my college education professors drilled this into me, and my last thirty-some years of teaching have only confirmed it-- half the secret

JUN 04

NPE and Charter Schools

The Network for Public Education has issued a clear, concise and pointed statement about charter schools in the US, and it's worth your eyeball time.* The statement is useful if you have been trying to explain to friends or civilians why, exactly modern charter schools are such a contentious concern. It nails some of the fundamental problems of the charter industry: We believe that taxpayers bear
Treating Teachers The Same Way

Marc Tucker and Chester Finn have been having a bit of a conversation about a new report about teacher empowerment. We may get to that another day, but among Finn's complaints was this old standard, explaining why the reports recommendations can't work: the teacher unions have demanded and not deviated far from an industrial model in which everyone is treated alike. This is an oft-repeated complai
ICYMI: Graduation Day Edition (6/4)

Here is my neck of the woods, we're just a few hours away from high school graduation. It's definitely that time of year. Here's your assorted pieces of reading from the week. Remember to pass on the ones that speak to you. These Activists Want Greater Home School Monitoring In the background, as other education debates rage, is the old set of issues surrounding homeschooling. Here's a look at act

JUN 03

Paperwork

Rick Hess had a good piece this week that called back to one of my favorite films-- Hess noticed that much of the ESSA planning rolling in looks suspiciously like TPS report work. But you rarely see the paper-shufflers get as much ink or as 
CURMUDGUCATION:

Jersey Jazzman: New Jersey's Totally Screwed Up Charter School System, Clifton Edition

Jersey Jazzman: New Jersey's Totally Screwed Up Charter School System, Clifton Edition:

New Jersey's Totally Screwed Up Charter School System, Clifton Edition

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Here we go again:

CLIFTON — City school board members remain united in opposition to the state education department's mandate that the district allocate $2 million toward a controversial charter school group.
The state Department of Education issued a directive to the Clifton school board late in the budgetary process, said Clifton school officials.
The directive calls for the funding of 225 students set to attend Passaic Arts and Science Charter schools, including a new building opening this fall on Clifton Avenue. The school formerly housed the Sacred Heart Elementary School.
The PASC is affiliated with the ILearn LLC Network, which is the subject of investigations due to allegations of fraud.
Business administrator Edward Appleton said the school system learned of the major increase the final week in February. The state’s directive created a spike in the board’s imposed charter school tuition from $2.69 million in the 2016-2017 budget to $4.68 million for next year, he said. [emphasis mine]
And so it continues with New Jersey's insane charter authorizing system: Trenton mandates a school district must give up funds to support a charter school that the district had no say in approving. Worse, the district cannot exercise any oversight authority over the charter: iLearn can spend the funding the state mandates the district provide any way they wish, so long as NJDOE approves.

It's worth pointing out that, according to data from the Education Law Center, Clifton has suffered from persistent underfunding of state education aid under the Christie Jersey Jazzman: New Jersey's Totally Screwed Up Charter School System, Clifton Edition:

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New trial for Sacramento man who hit Mayor Kevin Johnson in face with pie | The Sacramento Bee

New trial for Sacramento man who hit Mayor Kevin Johnson in face with pie | The Sacramento Bee:

Think retrying the ‘pie guy’ is a waste of taxpayer money? You’re wrong and here’s why

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The guy who rammed a pie in the face of former Mayor Kevin Johnson is headed back to the courtroom and rightly so. It’s just a shame that deportation to another city can’t be a potential punishment for Sean Thompson.
OPINION
The self-described homeless advocate will be tried in August for a misdemeanor assault of Johnson after his felony trial for assault ended in a hung jury in May.
This silly and sordid episode started in September, when Thompson crashed a fundraiser Johnson was hosting at Sacramento Charter High School in Oak Park. As underprivileged kids looked on, Thompson surprised Johnson and shoved a banana cream pie in his face. Witnesses said Thompson hit Johnson hard with the pie. Johnson swung back with his fists and Thompson was arrested.
If this were any other politician, Thompson probably would be in jail right now. But because it was Johnson, and because Johnson attracted controversy – and unhinged detractors – throughout his eight years as Sacramento’s mayor, this straight assault case became a circus, with Thompson’s legal team looking to subpoena Johnson as a witness to add to the spectacle.
Thompson has said the pieing was meant to call attention to Johnson’s not doing enough to help homeless people. “Mr. Thompson is a civil disobedient,” his attorney Claire White said Thursday. “He has never claimed anything otherwise.”
On face value, retrying Thompson is absurd, a waste of time and taxpayer money. But it is necessary, if only because this guy did something so corrosive – attacking someone – and has not only been unrepentant, he’s actually enjoyed the subsequent spotlight.
Thompson has argued that what he did was political theater. But if you reduce his actions to their elements, here’s what you get: Thompson used physical violence to humiliate another human being. When is that ever OK?
Meanwhile, the judge in Thompson’s first trial pegged him correctly: “The defendant’s behavior is a huge minus,” said Sacramento Superior Court Judge Robert Twiss in May after New trial for Sacramento man who hit Mayor Kevin Johnson in face with pie | The Sacramento Bee:




Sean Thompson is wrestled to the ground after hitting Sacramento Mayor Kevin Johnson in the face with a pie at a benefit dinner at Sacramento Charter High School in September 2016.


In Historic Move, Charter School Educators’ Union Vote Overwhelmingly to Unify with Chicago Teachers Union - eNews Park Forest

In Historic Move, Charter School Educators’ Union Vote Overwhelmingly to Unify with Chicago Teachers Union - eNews Park Forest:

In Historic Move, Charter School Educators’ Union Vote Overwhelmingly to Unify with Chicago Teachers Union


CTU members to vote this fall on historic effort to bring together charter and public school teachers in formal coalition as part of broader struggle for fair educational funding for city’s students.

CHICAGO—(ENEWSPF)–June 9, 2017: In an historic vote, members of ChiACTS Local 4343 — the union of charter school educators in Chicago — voted overwhelmingly today to formally unify with the Chicago Teachers Union. CTU members will vote on unification with ChiACTS this fall. Ballots from union charter schools were counted tonight after the close of the Friday school day. Final vote counts of the 1,000-strong union were 671 in favor and 130 against unifying — or about 84% of voting members supporting unification.
“All Chicago educators, charter and district, face the same challenges — shrinking budgets, layoffs, union-busting, lack of voice, and a wholesale assault on the quality of the education of our students,” said Chris Baehrend, President of ChiACTS Local 4343 — the Chicago Alliance of Charter Teachrs And Staff — which represents 32 charter schools in Chicago. “This vote for unification is a vote for educators with both ChiACTS and the CTU to speak with a stronger collaborative voice for real educational justice for all of our students. It is our identity as public educators — not our employers — that defines us, and our overwhelming vote for unity affirms that charter educators are educators first, and servants of the public with a shared commitment to the futures of our students across the city.”In Historic Move, Charter School Educators’ Union Vote Overwhelmingly to Unify with Chicago Teachers Union - eNews Park Forest:
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AN IN-DEPTH LOOK AT PRESIDENT OBAMA’S RECORD IN FIVE AREAS| whitehouse.gov

The White House | whitehouse.gov:

AN IN-DEPTH LOOK AT PRESIDENT OBAMA’S RECORD IN FIVE AREAS


Yes, we did. Yes, we can.

“You were the change. You answered people's hopes, and because of you, by almost every measure, America is a better, stronger place than it was when we started.”
- President Barack Obama