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Saturday, February 23, 2019

Why teacher strikes are touching every part of America - ABC7 News

Why teacher strikes are touching every part of America - ABC7 News

Why teacher strikes are touching every part of America

Analysis by Zachary B. Wolf, CNN Urban, rural, suburban, red, blue and purple, American teachers from across the United States have been on strike. So far this year, teachers have picketed in one of the wealthiest states...



Analysis by Zachary B. Wolf, CNN
Urban, rural, suburbanred, blue and purple, American teachers from across the United States have been on strike. So far this year, teachers have picketed in one of the wealthiest states -- California, which has strong protections for public unions -- and one of the poorest: West Virginia, which has rolled back union protections in recent years.
They've gone on strike in Denver, Los Angeles, Oakland and throughout West Virginia this year. They walked out in ArizonaColoradoKentuckyNorth CarolinaOklahoma and West Virginia last year. They've rallied in Georgia and Virginia.

Donald Trump Jr., the President's son, seemed to invoke striking teachers during a speech last month in El Paso, Texas, when he dismissed "these loser teachers that are trying to sell you on socialism from birth."
While the strikes require solidarity, the reasons for them range from salaries and benefits to school infrastructure and class size to charter schools.
Each of these situations is unique and has its own local concerns, but each also shares the underlying issue of how America should compensate its teachers and educate its children.
The national takeaways, according to Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, are that schools have been underfunded for years, that teachers have had enough and that parents are behind them.
"Nobody believes that striking is a first resort," she said. "It is a last resort. Nobody is strike-happy. But they get to it."
Teacher salaries nationwide are down compared with recent decades. Adjusting for inflation, they've shrunk 1.6% nationwide between 2000 and 2017, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics, which compared the average annual salaries of teachers since 1969. US wages more generally have risen in that time, according to a Pew review of BLS statistics.
In some states that saw recent strikes, such as Arizona and North Carolina, salaries are down more than 10% before teachers fought for increases.
Salaries are up in that time frame in California, but the cost of living is up much more in a place like Oakland, where teachers are currently striking and the theme in reports from the city is that teachers can't afford to live there anymore. It's not too far a leap from that frustration with inequality to the local backlash and activism that drove Amazon from its plans to build part of its HQ2 in Long Island City in New York.
But the average salaries do not tell the whole story, according to research from Sylvia Allegretto of UC Berkeley and Lawrence CONTINUE READING: Why teacher strikes are touching every part of America - ABC7 News



Jersey Jazzman: Thoughts on the Graduation Exam Mess in New Jersey

Jersey Jazzman: Thoughts on the Graduation Exam Mess in New Jersey

Thoughts on the Graduation Exam Mess in New Jersey


Let me recap where we are first -- skip down if you know the background.

Way back in 1979, New Jersey passed a law which required high school students to take an exam before graduating (the Education Law Center has some background on that law here and here). The law says the exam must "...measure those basic skills all students must possess to function politically, economically and socially in a democratic society." (N.J.S.A. 18A:7C-6.1.) Keep in mind that New Jersey is only one of only 12 states to require require an exit exam for high school graduates.



In 2014, the NJ Department of Education, under then-Governor Chris Christie, decided to replace the exam, known as the HSPA, with two tests from the Partnership for Assessment of Readiness for College and Career (PARCC): the Grade 10 English Language Arts and multi-grade Algebra I exams.


In 2016, ELC, the American Civil Liberties Union, and several other groups filed suit against the state, challenging the use of the PARCC tests as exit exams. Late last year, the state appellate court ruled in favor of the plaintiffs and struck down the regulations that led to the change in tests. The court found several problems with the change: the law calls for a single exam, not multiple ones, and the exam has to be in Grade 11, not in multiple grades like the Algebra I exam. 

The ruling left New Jersey's current juniors and seniors without a clear path to graduation. Some advocates suggested the exams should be scrapped altogether. But the plaintiffs and the state reached a settlement that allowed these students to take multiple testing pathways to graduation, including getting a passing score on the SAT, ACT, or military placement exams. The agreement would give the NJDOE time to develop new regulations on exit exams for current sophomores and freshman.

At the same time, however, State Senator Teresa Ruiz introduced a bill that changes the original statute to align with the current regulations -- the same regulations the court CONTINUE READING: Jersey Jazzman: Thoughts on the Graduation Exam Mess in New Jersey


CURMUDGUCATION: Charter Schools Are Not Public Schools

CURMUDGUCATION: Charter Schools Are Not Public Schools

Charter Schools Are Not Public Schools

Modern charter schools prefer to attach the word "public" to their descriptions. Many of the charter advocacy groups include "public charter" in their title. And truthfully, there are no regulations attached to the term--any school can attach the word "public" to its title without having to worryabout any sort of penalty.
So technically, any charter school can call itself a public school. Heck, any private or parochial school can call itself a public school if it's so inclined. But while modern charter schools are financed by public tax dollars, they are not truly public schools for the following reasons.
Transparency
When City Paper recently reported on the salaries of DC charter teachers and administrators, it required extra digging to come up with the information because charter schools are exempt from the Freedom of Information Act. In fact, City Paper reported that a teacher employed by the charter was not even allowed to see the salary scale for her own job. In 2014, when the New York state controller wanted to audit the books of Eva Moskowitz's Success Academy, the charter leader took him to court and won, barring the state from trying to see how public tax dollars were spent.
Public schools are required to provide a transparent look at their finances. At times, some outlets have gone so far as to publish the salaries of individual teachers, and that's perfectly legal. Nor are public school boards allowed to meet privately or in secret. Everything that happens in a public school is paid for with public dollars, and is therefor subject to public scrutiny. Charters deliberately avoid that level of scrutiny.
Subject To State Law
The details here vary from state to state (here's a handy chart for looking up your own state), but charter schools generally don't have to play by the same rules as public schools. Non-discrimination, health and safety, and school year length are often (but not always) exceptions--beyond the specific exceptions, charters operate as they will, and may in some states request additional waivers. So, for instance, many states do not require charter teachers to be certified. Public schools, CONTINUE READING: CURMUDGUCATION: Charter Schools Are Not Public Schools

You are Invited!: Should Teach For America (TFA) be banned in California Schools? | Cloaking Inequity #NOTFA

You are Invited!: Should Teach For America (TFA) be banned in California Schools? | Cloaking Inequity

YOU ARE INVITED!: SHOULD TEACH FOR AMERICA (TFA) BE BANNED IN CALIFORNIA SCHOOLS?


The California State University Sacramento Doctorate in Educational Leadership will be holding a forum entitled “Should Teach For America (TFA) be banned in California Schools?” It will take place in Sacramento, California on Wednesday, March 13 at 7:30 pm. The campus location is still to be determined.
TFA is invited too:



We have also invited Assemblymember Garcia who is the author of AB 221 and other individuals who are former TFA corps members and researchers.
TFA began as the senior project of an undergraduate Princeton University business student, Wendy Kopp. The original mission was the belief that high-achieving students from prestigious backgrounds with no training in education would provide the “best and brightest” teachers to the nation’s neediest of students, thus closing the achievement gap. AB 221 authored by Cristina Garcia (D-58th Bell Gardens) that would prohibit Teach For America (TFA) trained teachers from teaching in schools where at least 40% of students are from low-income households. This forum will include former TFA teachers, community stakeholders and others to feature research and other evidence to discuss whether TFA should be placed in low-income schools.
We hope to see you March 13!
For all of Cloaking Inequity’s posts on Teach For America click here.
Please Facebook Like, Tweet, etc below and/or reblog to share this discussion with others.
Want to know about Cloaking Inequity’s freshly pressed conversations about educational policy? Click the “Follow blog by email” button on the home page.
Twitter: @ProfessorJVH
Click here for Vitae.
I am also wondering what CTA thinks about this:




Diane Ravitch's blog | A site to discuss better education for all via @dianeravitch

Diane Ravitch's blog | A site to discuss better education for all

Diane Ravitch's blog 
 A site to discuss better education for all



Peter Greene on the Tragedy of Lorain, Ohio, and the War to Stamp Out Local Control and Democracy

Who knew that Republicans hate local control of public schools? Who knew that the root cause of low test scores was the input of parents and teachers? Peter Greene tells a story in this post that should be required reading for every course in education and for every state legislator. It is an unbearably sad story, and if it doesn’t make you angry, you aren’t paying attention. http://curmudgucatio
Conservative Journal EdNext Defends Outsourcing American Public Schools to Foreign Entities

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Tennessee: Governor Wants Vouchers, But Many Worry about the Frauds and Scams in Other States

The newly elected Republican governor of Tennessee, Bill Lee, wants vouchers, but he can expect pushback from the local media and local school boards that know of the frauds and scams in other states that have endorsed vouchers. The Daily Memphian warns about the squandering of taxpayer dollars in other states. Tennessee lawmakers say that if broader school choice options are offered, the Legisla
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YESTERDAY

Today is a Very Important Anniversary of Young People of Courage and Idealism

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West Virginia: Send Your Donation to the Striking School Personnel

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Tom Ultican: Elites in Dallas Impose Massive Disruption on Public Schools, with Charters Schools and TFA

Tom Ultican tells a sad story about the takeover of the Dallas school board by the Dallas Chamber of Commerce and other wealthy elites, who don’t send their children to the public schools. After their failed experiment with Mike Miles, a Broadie who surrounded himself with young but very well-compensated aides from TFA, the elites decided to buy control of the school board. It became too expensiv
California Pension Funds Are Major Investors in National Enquirer, Trump’s Ally

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New Jersey: Testing Chaos Continues and Gets Worse

New Jersey believes in testing its children until they cry. The state clung to PARCC long after almost every other state dropped it. Now an even worse disaster is coming down the pike. Now is the time for Governor Phil Murphy to step in and stop this fiasco. Jersey Jazzman called the testing regime in New Jersey “testing chaos.” Students are forced to take tests in order to graduate, even though
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This is a fascinating article. Mimi Swartz of the Texas Monthly asks an important question: Are Texas kids failing or are the tests rigged against them? Researchers with no axe to grind say the state tests are two grade levels above where the kids are. The state doesn’t agree. State Commissioner of Education Mike Morath is not an educator, though he was a school board member in Dallas. He was app

FEB 21

Oakland: Day One of the Strike for Higher Pay, Student Services, and an End to Privatization

Just in from the Oakland Education Association: Mike Myslinski Headquarters Communications California Teachers Association 1705 Murchison Drive Burlingame, CA 94010 650-552-5324 408-921-5769 (cell) www.cta.org NEWS RELEASE February 21, 2019 Oakland Education Association 272 East 12 th Street Oakland, CA 94606 510-763-4020 www.oaklandea.org Contacts : –Jamie Horwitz at 202-549-4921, jhdcpr@starpow
Capitol & Main: Yes, West Virginia, There Is a Teachers Union, and It’s Angry!

Bill Raden and Eunice Park wrote today’s roundup of education news for the excellent California-based website “Capitol & Main.” Everyone should subscribe to it, or for sure, read it regularly. This is an astonishing post, as you will read . LAUSD Board Member Nick Melvoin ran as a “liberal,” but he cites ALEC model legislation! Austin Beutner was forced to release a contract with an organization
L.A. Teachers Will Rally on Behalf of Oakland Teachers

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Austin Beutner, the superintendent of the Los Angeles Unified School District, has a long history in business and apparently thought he could run the school system with the same secrecy that he ran his businesses. He thought he was the boss, and the boss was in charge and could do as he pleased. But no, the board told him, he can’t. He is their employee, not their master. Even board members who w
Los Angeles: District Releases Secret Contracts with Vendors, in Response to Pressure from Board Member

Scott Schmerelson is a hero of public education . I add him to the blog’s honor roll. He has singlehandedly forced transparency on a superintendent and school board that is trying to hide basic facts about the district. First, he released the fact that 82% of all charter schools in Los Angeles have vacancies while the LAUSD board (bought by Eli Broad and friends) echoed the false claim about long
The West Virginia Strike Is Not About Pay: It’s About Charters and Vouchers and the Fight for Public Education

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Senator Lindsey Graham: Building a Border Wall Is More Important than Building a New School

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Steven Singer: Hey, Unions, Watch, Wait, and Listen Before You Endorse a Candidate

Steven Singer urges the two big teachers’ unions to watch and wait before they make an endorsement in the Presidential race, and be sure to listen to their members. The good news is that the Network for Public Education Action is creating a report card for all of the candidates and will regularly update the report card. We want education to be an important issue in the 2020 race, as it was not in


Eric Blanc: West Virginia Teachers Prove That Strikes Work!

Eric Blanc has gone to every teacher strike while writing a book about them. From what he saw this week in West Virginia, he concludes that strikes work. The teachers defeated a dangerous privatization bill. Teachers made clear that