Monday, September 2, 2019

Michael Kohlhaas Reveals More Secret L.A. Charter Emails: How a Grant of $325,000 from the Waltons Evaporated | Diane Ravitch's blog

Michael Kohlhaas Reveals More Secret L.A. Charter Emails: How a Grant of $325,000 from the Waltons Evaporated | Diane Ravitch's blog

Michael Kohlhaas Reveals More Secret L.A. Charter Emails: How a Grant of $325,000 from the Waltons Evaporated


Big Education Ape: JUSTICE FOR HILDA NOW! #BringBackHilda: Video Available Of August 29, 2019 Accelerated Schools Board Meeting Michael Kohlhaas Dot Org - https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2019/09/justice-for-hilda-now-bringbackhilda.html


Michael Kohlhaas is combing through the treasure trove of leaked emails about the inner world of the Los Angeles charter industry.
It got a grant of $325,000 from the Walton Family Foundation. The founder proceeded to pay herself $13,000 a month, spent $63,000 on consultants, and another $15,000 on lawyers, and so on, and soon the money was all gone. But the school wasn’t ready to open, even though the founder was paying a recruiter a bonus of $850 to sign up students.
Kohlhaas writes:
I just got a small set of records from everybody’s favorite star-crossed charter school horror show, that is to say GANAS Academy. The set is woefully incomplete, and it’s pretty clear that Sakshi Jain is lying to her lawyer about it yet again, but nevertheless there is some essential material in there, and you can browse through the whole pile of it over here on Archive.Org.



What are 2020 candidates saying about labor unions? - Education Votes

What are 2020 candidates saying about labor unions? - Education Votes

What are 2020 candidates saying about labor unions?

By Amanda Menas
Even on Labor Day, the National Education Association is focused on preparing its members for the major role they will play in the 2020 election. NEA’s 3 million members are directly impacted by state and federal labor laws that affect their rights to advocate for their profession and their students.
Some candidates offer specific policies to support union membership, while others express their support more broadlyThere is a divide between candidates on whether union workers will stay on their healthcare plans or move into a public option.
But whether they are debating safety, pay, health insurance, or retirement, all candidates agree that union organizing has helped create the American middle class and are willing to fight for it.
In their own words:




CONTINUE READING: What are 2020 candidates saying about labor unions? - Education Votes

The Past and Future of Labor Unions: An Interview with Stephen Greenhouse | Diane Ravitch's blog

The Past and Future of Labor Unions: An Interview with Stephen Greenhouse | Diane Ravitch's blog

The Past and Future of Labor Unions: An Interview with Stephen Greenhouse

Stephen Greenhouse was the labor reporter for the New York Times for 19 years.
In this interview with the California-based Capital & Main, Greenhouse reviews the history of the labor movement, the role it played in building a middle class, and its decline. He goes on to describe strong portents of a revival of power for working people.
Greenhouse has written a new book about the labor movement and why it matters. The book is titled Beaten Down, Worked Up: The Past, Present and Future of American Labor.
He said,
One of the reasons I wrote this book is that there’s a phenomenon that far too few Americans understand. Worker power in the United States, not just union power, but worker power overall, has fallen to its lowest level, certainly since World War II and probably since the Great CONTINUE READING: The Past and Future of Labor Unions: An Interview with Stephen Greenhouse | Diane Ravitch's blog

'The Knowledge Gap' | NewBlackMan (in Exile) + Who's To Blame for the Knowledge Gap - Teacher Habits

'The Knowledge Gap' | NewBlackMan (in Exile)

The Knowledge Gap
            
        

Who's To Blame for the Knowledge Gap - Teacher Habits - http://teacherhabits.com/?p=2364 via @Teacher_Habits
I’m finishing up The Knowledge Gap by Natalie Wexler. It’s good. Teachers should read it. I won’t go into a long review here because other people have done so more capably than I could, but I do want to offer one veteran teacher’s perspective on where the finger should be pointed, which is a large part of the book.
Wexler does a thorough job of retelling the history of the Reading Wars and how the teaching of reading in our elementary schools has evolved to be skills-driven instead of content-driven. This, Wexler asserts, is a disaster, and one of the main reasons too many kids can’t comprehend text. It turns out that finding the main idea or making inferences aren’t transferable skills; it’s the background knowledge a reader has about a topic that matters. Therefore, teaching comprehension skills is mostly a waste of time. According to Wexler (and others whose work she cites), elementary schools should be in the business of erecting towers of factual information inside the brains  CONTINUE READING: Teacher Habits - http://teacherhabits.com/?p=2364

Controversial Black Lives Matter film hailed at Venice – Raw Story

Controversial Black Lives Matter film hailed at Venice – Raw Story

Controversial Black Lives Matter film hailed at Venice

Controversial US director Nate Parker said on Monday that he hopes his powerful new film about police violence against black men will help save lives.
“American Skin” received an eight-minute standing ovation after it premiered at the Venice film festival, with Spike Lee — who travelled to Italy to support Parker — comparing its impact to “scoring a goal to win the World Cup or a home run at the bottom of the ninth in American parlance”.
The veteran maker of “Do The Right Thing” and “Malcolm X” had earlier declared that “I haven’t been affected by a film like this… in a long, long time.”
The movie about a black Iraq war veteran, whose 14-year-old son is killed by police when they stop their car in a wealthy white area, is a blistering indictment of institutional racism.
It culminates in the avenging father taking his son’s killer hostage and putting him — and racist police attitudes — on trial after storming his local precinct.
Parker said he hopes the film will start a debate within CONTINUE READING: Controversial Black Lives Matter film hailed at Venice – Raw Story

Re-reading Faulkner in Trumplandia: “[H]is ferocious conviction in the rightness of his own actions” | radical eyes for equity

Re-reading Faulkner in Trumplandia: “[H]is ferocious conviction in the rightness of his own actions” | radical eyes for equity

Re-reading Faulkner in Trumplandia: “[H]is ferocious conviction in the rightness of his own actions”

Season 2 of Mindhunter focuses on the Atlanta child murders; in one scene investigators interrogate a local KKK member.
As a lifelong white Southern male, I found the characterization of that man—what many would call a Georgia cracker—to be unsettling. He is arrogant, self-assured, and able, as he declares, to wrangle his way out of any trouble.
What is off, I think, is that in real life this type of poor Southern white man is an odd but distinct combination of embarrassed arrogance. They are stubbornly self-assured—and completely un-self-aware. But they are also painfully laconic, and if you look carefully, they often become flushed, the blood rising in their necks and faces as they swell with both anger and embarrassment.
In the audio of the wiretap that leads to this KKK member being interrogated, there were hints that Mindhunter is softening the characterizations (that dialogue, and the verb usage, is far too formal) so CONTINUE READING: Re-reading Faulkner in Trumplandia: “[H]is ferocious conviction in the rightness of his own actions” | radical eyes for equity

Come As You Are (Part 1) | The Jose Vilson

Come As You Are (Part 1) | The Jose Vilson

COME AS YOU ARE (PART 1)

I couldn’t help it. I checked my work e-mail. A list of names with offers I’ll never accept with things I’d never buy from them. A few security checks from central offices. Oh, and an automated e-mail from our teacher rating system that calculated our rating for last year. I skipped the paragraphs and went directly to the table.
Effective. Effective. Effective. This is no brag. I’m on my own rubric. And a few years ago, the algorithms didn’t bestow their blessings so readily.
I eschewed common sense for the sixth year in a row to fix my classroom the week before we’re actively getting paid to work. It’s also the first year in those six that I’ve gotten to keep the same classroom. Every year, I’m entrusted with discarded the old, the misused, the dusty, and the murky from a given classroom and turn it into a learning space for middle schoolers. Every year with varying degrees of success, I accomplish this. Every year, it had been decided that I need to do so for the next class. Every classroom strengthens my spacial and ancestral knowledge in this work.
Oh, and every year, most of my colleagues are already 10 steps ahead of me on Day 1 even with all the pre-work I get done the week before.
That’s why it’s important for people to understand what I’m saying when I accept this as my new-ish CONTINUE READING: Come As You Are (Part 1) | The Jose Vilson

“Harder to Become, Easier to Be” (A path to ending teacher shortages) | The Merrow Report

“Harder to Become, Easier to Be” (A path to ending teacher shortages) | The Merrow Report

“Harder to Become, Easier to Be” (A path to ending teacher shortages)
A number of states and districts are experiencing teacher shortages, with Illinois and Florida apparently at the top of the list.  From my perspective, teacher shortages are a case of the chickens coming home to roost. Two reasons for the shortages: 1) Not enough new blood and 2) a higher rate of departure by veterans,  and both are the result of how badly we treat teachers.
A constant drumbeat of hostile ‘news’ about schools and teaching is keeping young people from choosing the field, while the practice of mistreating teachers in the name of higher test scores is driving some very good teachers out of the classroom.  
Exhibit A for the latter might be this letter I received from an experienced teacher in an eastern state.  Below is an excerpt:
“Let me tell you what a horrific day I had at work.  OK, so yesterday I had to spend the entire morning proctoring the state science assessment for 5th graders. Today I was called to the office and told I needed to proctor yet another test for the 5th graders, whose results would be used to determine what ‘track’ they will be on in middle school. The test had four sub-tests. I was told that I had to pick up all the fifth grade ESL students and get their tests and subtest answer sheets and bring them into another room. None of the classroom teachers knew anything about this test, either.
So my ESL colleague and I took the kids to a separate room and started the test. ESL CONTINUE READING: “Harder to Become, Easier to Be” (A path to ending teacher shortages) | The Merrow Report

CURMUDGUCATION: Third Grade Reading Retention Does Not Work (Example #6,288,347)

CURMUDGUCATION: Third Grade Reading Retention Does Not Work (Example #6,288,347)

Third Grade Reading Retention Does Not Work (Example #6,288,347)


The idea of retaining third graders who can't pass a standardized reading test has its roots in two things: 1) a bunch of research of varying degrees of trustworthiness and usefulness (see hereherehere and here for examples across the scale) and 2) dopey policy makers who don't know the difference between correlation and causation. 

What the more reliable research appears to show is that third grade is a good year for taking a student's reading temperature, and their ability to read at the third grade level seems to be a good predictor of future scholastic success. That seems to be a valid correlation but-- say it with me now, nice and loud for the folks in the back-- correlation does not equal causation. 

Nevertheless, many states have instituted a plan by which students are not allowed to exit third grade until they can show sufficient reading skills (or at least sufficient standardized read test taking skills). This is dumb.

This would be the equivalent of, say, noting that students who are more than four and a half feet tall in third grade are mostly over six feet tall when they graduate from high school. Therefor, in our desire to make graduates taller, we will not let anyone progress beyond third grade until they are at least four and a half feet tall. 

The most likely reading of the third grade reading correlation is that some factors are contributing CONTINUE READING: CURMUDGUCATION: Third Grade Reading Retention Does Not Work (Example #6,288,347)



Gifted and IDEA: Charter Schools Won’t Solve the Gifted Debate

Gifted and IDEA: Charter Schools Won’t Solve the Gifted Debate

Gifted and IDEA: Charter Schools Won’t Solve the Gifted Debate

Even though gifted is listed as a special education category, Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) never adequately addressed it. Intellectually advanced students are complex, not always easy to understand. They need and deserve school support.
Much debate surrounds gifted education. But charter schools will not be a sufficient answer to concerns.
Some gifted students are twice exceptional (2e), meaning they identify as gifted, but also struggle with learning disabilities. Most charter schools do not effectively serve students with disabilities, so 2e students might be left out.
New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio has a panel considering eliminating New York City schools for the gifted. They claim this will desegregate schools.
NYC’s gifted programs have been different than most school districts. They’ve aggressively screened four-year-old children, mostly Asian and white. This raises concerns about fairness and elitism. NYC is said to have more segregated schools than any city.
The Mayor’s suggestion for magnet schools might be worthwhile. But one hopes there’s CONTINUE READING: Gifted and IDEA: Charter Schools Won’t Solve the Gifted Debate

Ohio: State Takeover Law Targets Districts That Enroll Poor Children of Color | Diane Ravitch's blog

Ohio: State Takeover Law Targets Districts That Enroll Poor Children of Color | Diane Ravitch's blog

Ohio: State Takeover Law Targets Districts That Enroll Poor Children of Color

Bill Phillis writes that Ohio’s State Takeover law punishes districts that serve children of color who are poor. The Republicans who run the state do not believe in local control, except in their own districts. Beware! They may come for your district next!
School districts that the state has seized and others it plans to takeover have two things in common: extremely high percentage of disadvantaged students and very low median income
Beware of the state’s motivation for plans to rescue poverty kids. The current statewide, near universal voucher programs were initiated by the “noble” effort of the state to rescue children from the poverty-stricken Cleveland school district. (The State Attorney General argued before the U.S. Supreme Court that vouchers were an escape route for Cleveland children.) Charter schools were initiated as another means to rescue children from urban districts. The state’s “beneficent” effort is now an $11 billion boondoggle that is rife with fraud and failure.
HB 70 is a “virtuous” strategy of the state to rescue CONTINUE READING: Ohio: State Takeover Law Targets Districts That Enroll Poor Children of Color | Diane Ravitch's blog
Image result for OhioĆ¢€™s State Takeover law

Seattle Schools Community Forum: 15 Apps Parents Should Look Out for on Their Kids' Phones

Seattle Schools Community Forum: 15 Apps Parents Should Look Out for on Their Kids' Phones

15 Apps Parents Should Look Out for on Their Kids' Phones

Important story via KING-5 for all parents whose children have cell phones:


The recent arrests of 25 men in Florida for allegedly trying to have sex with children has prompted a sheriff there to issue another 'app warning' for parents, reports CBS Miami.

During his press conference last week, the sheriff listed 15 apps as ones that parents need to know about. (Six of them were used by suspected predators who were recently arrested.)

  • The first is 'MeetMe,' an app where teens can easily be in contact with users much older than them, with an emphasis on dating.
  • 'WhatsApp' and 'SnapChat' are for messaging, but what you should know is teens can send unlimited messages, have video chats and even share their live location with other users, people they may not even know. 
  • 'Skout' is a flirting app that's used to meet and chat with new people. Teens and adults are in different groups, but ages aren’t verified. 
  • 'TikTok' is used for sharing user created videos that can contain bad words, even adult content.
  • 'Badoo' and 'Bumble' are dating apps for adults, but CONTINUE READING: Seattle Schools Community Forum: 15 Apps Parents Should Look Out for on Their Kids' Phones