Latest News and Comment from Education

Sunday, April 20, 2014

4-20-14 Ed Notes Online

Ed Notes Online:







Join Change the Stakes Thursday, 4PM at Tweed - OK, Folks - It's Time to Take a Stand Against Testing
Please join us in NYC for a Rally to demand an end to high stakes testing.Not One More Year Lost - Our Children Are More Than a Test Score!We demand accountability at the top, not on the backs of our children!Thursday, April 24th @ 4 PM (press conference to precede rally) New York City Department of Education, 52 Chambers Street in NYCShare the flier and accept and share the event Facebook invitat


Teachers Unite: What's Your Story? Features Old Pal Matthew Guldin
We were at Sally Lee and Josh Heisler's wedding when right there in front of my eyes was Matthew Guldin who I hadn't seen for a while. We began jumping around like teenagers. He and I were in the same political group in the 70s/80s - The Coalition of NYC School Workers and hadn't seen each other in a while. Turns out that Josh and Matthew had worked together. Then he retired and has been working w

Newark Teacher on Christie, Cami... Sirota Hints at
... I don't care about community criticism. We run the school district in Newark, not them....Governor Chris Christie Ras Baraka, a mayoral candidate who is also Central High School’s principal, said Christie "told the truth at least." "He does run the school district, not us. That’s why we need to get rid of him," Baraka said Wednesday. "To say that he doesn’t care about

Susan's Sunday Special
Some good reading for a Sunday morning from Susan Ohanian.The fact that the announcement I sent out yesterday never arrived is a sign of the site's current troubles. Sometimes it works fine; other times it is very slow loading. Thanks to Eric's hard work, we are moving to a new server. But this takes time and money so please be patient.I know I could go with one of those free blogs but I cling to
4-19-14 Ed Notes Online Week
Ed Notes Online: Ed Notes OnlineSay Wha?Rhee Hubby Kevin Johnson Leads NBA Union Searchhttp://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/18/sports/basketball/nba-players-reset-union-search-with-kevin-johnson-as-point-man.html?hpw&rref=sports&_r=0N.B.A. Players Reset Union Search With Kevin Johnson as Point ManHis tenure has not been free of controversy; in 2012, he was fined $37,000 by the Fair Political Pra

4-20-14 Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day… | …For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day… | …For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL:








This Week’s “Links I Should Have Posted About, But Didn’t”
I have a huge backlog of resources that I’ve been planning to post about in blog but, just because of time constraints, have not gotten around to doing. Instead of letting that backlog grow bigger, I regularly grab a few and list them here with a minimal description. It forces me to look through these older links, and help me organize them for my own use. I hope others will find them helpful, too


More Resources On Everest
Mt. Everest has been in the news recently with the news of the tragic avalanche. Here are some new additions to The Best Sites For Learning About Mount Everest (we do a unit on it to finish up the year in our mainstream ninth-grade English classes): Survivor recalls how ice tumbled down in Mount Everest avalanche is from CNN. Death Is Part of the Business for Everest Sherpa Guides is from NBC New
The Best Movies For IB Theory Of Knowledge Classes – What Are Your Suggestions?
Generally, the only times students in my classes watch full movies are the few times I’m absent (though we’ll often watch short clips), and when I’m not there it usually relates to a school-related meeting. All of the English teachers at our school spend four days each year — two near the beginning and two near the end — to review writing assessments all students in our school do twice a year (yo

Three Good New Resources On Wealth & Income Inequality
Here are some new additions to The Best Resources About Wealth & Income Inequality: Get Rich, Live Longer: The Ultimate Consequence of Income Inequality is from The Atlantic. The short guide to Capital in the 21st Century is from Vox. Economist Receives Rock Star Treatment is from The New York Times.


Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Week… 4-19-14 …For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EF
Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day… | …For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFLLARRY FERLAZZO’S WEBSITES OF THE DAY“The Best Commentaries On The ‘Broken Compass’ Parent Involvement Book”You might, or might not, be aware of the recent controversy around a new book titled The Broken Compass:Parental Involvement With Children’s Education. Its authors recently had an op-ed in The NY Times reviewing their co

4-20-14 Fred Klonsky | Daily posts from a retired public school teacher

Fred Klonsky | Daily posts from a retired public school teacher who is just looking at the data.:



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Sunday reads.
Recruiting new members at the IEA Representative Assembly. On Easter Sunday the NY Times’ house conservative expresses interest in the resurrection of…Marx. Beware of corporate reformers who steal the language of The Movement. Defending public schools from the wolves of Wall Street. Matt Farmer’s Graze to the Top. Farewell to The Hurricane. Pistols shots ring out in the barroom night Enter Patty


Sunday book review section. This is Not a Test.
  This is Not a Test. Jose Vilson. Haymarket Books Professor Bill Schubert, who is my professional mentor, advocated the very Deweyian idea of teacher lore as a basis for educational research. Schubert’s idea is to extend to teachers “a progressive faith acknowledging that they are researchers and theory builders in their professional lives.” In an age of education experts who have no experience



4-19-14 Fred All Week Klonsky | Daily posts from a retired public school teacher
Fred Klonsky | Daily posts from a retired public school teacher who is just looking at the data.: Fred All Week Klonsky | Daily posts from a retired public school teacherKeeping retirement weird. Stopping the Tom Foolery.Joe from New Jersey commented on my blog about Governor Christies diversion of public employee pensions, “ummm, NJ is a blue state you nincompoop. Christie has done more for the p

NYC Educator: More Media Mendacity--Charter Lobbyist Says Public Schools Pick and Choose

NYC Educator: More Media Mendacity--Charter Lobbyist Says Public Schools Pick and Choose:



More Media Mendacity--Charter Lobbyist Says Public Schools Pick and Choose

You have to love the audacity of a charter proponent twisting logic to this point. He opens with a story of Bill de Blasio's son in Stuyvesant. It's true Stuyvesant is selective, but it's also true that Stuyvesant is far from representative of public schools.

Then, of course, there is the preposterous image of people having to cross velvet ropes to get into public schools. According to this lobbyist, we pick and choose, and leave the undesirables at the door.

One way, according to the writer, that we are selective is via zip code. If you live in a neighborhood, you can attend that neighborhood's schools. And if you can afford a great neighborhood, you can attend a great school.

Actually, that's true less and less in NYC as fewer and fewer schools are neighborhood schools, and that's been accomplished by uber-reformy Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

And city schools take everyone. We take the kids I teach--ESL students who've been here a very short time. We take special ed. kids regardless of how many services they require. When charters talk of what percentage of special needs kids they take, they never mention the extent of those needs.

But even if we really used velvet ropes, the writer conveniently forgets that charters can require NYC Educator: More Media Mendacity--Charter Lobbyist Says Public Schools Pick and Choose:

4-20-14 @ THE CHALK FACE

@ THE CHALK FACE:





@DCSDFagen pushing propaganda: “No Shelter” for Professional teachers.
In this video Liz Fagen (Douglas County Schools Superintendent in Colorado) attempts to spew mythology concerning market place tactics for employing and keeping teachers (pay for performance). First let it be known that since 1710, market principles such as merit pay have been tried to motivate and keep teachers. The result was a narrowed curriculum which […]

Spend part of your holiday with us at 6PM EST as we speak to GA parents with a strange #optout story
Here’s the deets. Now listen to the story.


My progressive friends prefer demagoguery over truth on education reform
My progressive friends in the broader media have it frequently wrong on corporate education reform, touting views that are hardly socially just. Instead, they mine their neoliberal connections to peddle the same corporate canards. It is obvious to me that mainstream progressive media are so disinterested in education that their reporting on the issue is […]
My Easter Post
Today is Easter, the Christian celebration of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, Who claimed to be the Messiah prophesied in the Old Testament. George Friedric Handel wrote about Him in the famous musical composition, Messiah, first performed on Easter Sunday in the Musick Hall in Dublin on April 13, 1742. I believe Jesus is the Messiah. On September 13, 1981, […]
All Week 4-19-14 @ THE CHALK FACE
@ THE CHALK FACE : All Week @ THE CHALK FACE Let It Go for the test refusersOriginally posted on An Antique Teacher:I was making my way around the internet and found this, which was billed as a “parody”. I guess in the simplest terms, it is a parody, but sadly as I watched it, I realized that it was a video encouraging students to do their very best on the…by antiqueteacher60 / 1min Two Americas:


4-20-14 With A Brooklyn Accent Go BATs

With A Brooklyn Accent:









Game On!!! How Common Core Changed the Face of Education Activism in the US

Teachers never were treated with much respect in the United States, but until recently they weren't demonized or singled out as responsible for the nation's problems and weaknesses. What has changed? That public education is now viewed as a major opportunity for profitable investment if it can be privatized or reorganized to allow for continuous testing and assessment. When the housing market tank
4-19-14 With A Brooklyn Accent Go BATs All Week
With A Brooklyn Accent:With A Brooklyn Accent Go BATs All WeekAnother Reason Why Public School Teachers are Silenced: They Might Expose the Wounds of PovertyA disinterested observer, coming from another place or time, would find it odd that the voices of American public school teachers are systematically excluded by those making education policy. No better example of this is the "Education Re




4-20-14 Perdido Street School Week

Perdido Street School:







Andrew Cuomo's Budget Causes SUNY Tuition Increases

From Newsday: Students at Suffolk County Community College will face a tuition increase of $250 this fall, bringing the annual charges to $4,390 at the two-year school. The tuition hike is part of the $208.4 million 2014-15 operating budget that college trustees sent to county officials Friday. The increase comes even though the Bellone administration agreed after two days of talks with college of
4-19-14 Perdido Street School Week
Perdido Street School: Perdido Street School WeekCuomo To Be Honored In Washington D.C. As "Champion Of Charters"May's going to be a banner month for Andrew Cuomo and the charter entrepreneurs.First he's hosting a ritzy education reform vacation getaway/conference in Lake Placid for charter entrepreneurs and other reformy types and now we learn that he's to be honored by the National All


Pastors: Cami must stop! | Bob Braun's Ledger

Pastors: Cami must stop! | Bob Braun's Ledger:



Pastors: Cami must stop!

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Christie hugs Rev. Carter
Christie hugs Rev. Carter
Scores of Newark’s religious leaders—including nationally known ministers and a major supporter of Gov. Chris Christie’s re-election–have repudiated as potentially “catastrophic” the state-imposed “One Newark” plan to close neighborhood schools and “launch” new charter schools in the state’s largest city. The pastors,  who labeled the plan “disruptive and divisive,” called on Christie and  state-appointed schools superintendent Cami Anderson to immediately stop its implementation.
“We call upon Newark Superintendent of Schools, the
Acting Commissioner of Education, and the Governor of the State of New
Jersey to agree to a suspension of any further action pertaining to the One
Newark Public School Plan until an alternative educational plan can be
developed with substantial input from stakeholders at all levels of the
Newark community,” the religious leaders wrote.
Christie at New Hope Baptist on the morning of his inauguration to a second term.
Christie at New Hope Baptist on the morning of his inauguration to a second term.
The pastors included Rev. Joe Carter of New Hope Baptist Church where Christie attended a service the day of his second inauguration last January. Carter had endorsed Christie’s re-election, contending his support of the Republican governor shows African-Americans “have options, too.”
The list also includes Rev. William Howard, one of the state’s and the nation’s most prominent clerics, the first African-American president of the New York Theological Seminary and head of the National Council of Churches. Howard also served as Pastors: Cami must stop! | Bob Braun's Ledger:

Russ on Reading: David Brooks Hearts Common Core

Russ on Reading: David Brooks Hearts Common Core:



David Brooks Hearts Common Core



If you haven’t heard already, New York Times columnist, David Brooks, the liberals' favorite conservative, wrote a column yesterday supporting the Common Core and characterizing critics on the right and left as members of a “circus.”

My blogger colleagues Mercedes Schneider  (deutsch29) and Aaron Barlow (Academe blog) have already done a wonderful job of critiquing Brooks’ peculiar journey into Common Core Wonderland, so I encourage you to visit their blogs for a full discussion of Brooksian misinformation.

There is one statement in Brooks’ column, however, that really frosts my literacy teaching pumpkin. So, I feel compelled to address that one statement here.

In a discussion of how superior the Common Core is to prior standards, champion of the Core Brooks says:

The [Common Core] English standards encourage reading comprehension. Whereas the old standards frequently encouraged students to read a book and then go off and write a response to it, the new standards encourage them to go back to the text and pick out specific passages for study and as evidence.

That’s right folks in the old bad days BCC (Before Common Core), we teachers did not encourage reading comprehension, we just sent our little cherubs off to respond to what they read willy nilly. This claim is so far out of bounds as to be ludicrous. But it is typical of Core advocates, who seem to think the Russ on Reading: David Brooks Hearts Common Core:

Viewpoints: What Sac City schools lose - Viewpoints - The Sacramento Bee

Viewpoints: What Sac City schools lose - Viewpoints - The Sacramento Bee:



Viewpoints: What Sac City schools lose

Published: Sunday, Apr. 20, 2014 - 12:00 am



After my first 100 days as superintendent in theSacramento City Unified School District, I remember thinking that if we were going to change a culture of “good is good enough” to one of “greatness” – which all children deserve – we would have to fundamentally do things differently as a district and community.
What if we did something radical and based every decision on what was best for children? What would change if our mantra was “Putting Children First”? What if more than just a catchy phrase, these words were used to deliberately and intentionally guide our actions? Would those of us in positions to make change have the commitment, competence, courage and compassion to actually put children first? And would this action survive changes in leadership?
You can imagine my shock and sadness at hearing the news of the district’s decision to abandon its hard-earned waiver from the failed and punitive No Child Left Behind law. Equally distressing is the lack of discourse over what our children will lose, and the lack of outrage, empathy and courage from those in a community whose sole focus should be on protecting and advocating for the best interests of children. By giving up the No Child Left Behind waiver, here is what the children of Sacramento will lose:
• Sacramento City Unified will lose flexibility over the use of $4 million to support our most disadvantaged students.
Roughly $4 million is wasted each year on ineffective supplemental education service providers – tutors approved by the state – who are not accountable to the district and over which Sacramento City Unified has no direct supervision. With the waiver, district schools and teachers could have used these dollars much more effectively to expand engaging after-school programs and offer summer experiences filled with civic and community engagement such as Summer of Service, and more.
Without the waiver Sacramento City Unified no longer has the flexibility to give these students what they need and deserve – and families should be outraged.
• Sacramento City Unified will lose the ability to remove the label of “failure” that No Child Left Behind attached to three-quarters of Sacramento schools.
NCLB labeled these schools failures because they did not reach every annual goal that the law set. But NCLB is a misguided and ineffective federal policy that labels students, schools and teachers based on unachievable and unrealistic goals. It doesn’t take into account children’s academic growth or other pertinent measures that demonstrate how greatly Sacramento City Unified schools have improved.
Without the waiver, the dark cloud of “failure” will once again cloak Sacramento schools.
• Sacramento City Unified will lose the ability to evaluate its schools using meaningful measures of success.
With the waiver, the district was part of the only accountability model in the country to use multiple measures to assess student success. This model asserts that a school’s performance should be judged on how well it is preparing children for college, career and life, something that the single measure of a test score can never do. This approach assesses critical factors such as school culture, climate and social and emotional learning. We began moving from “No Child” to the “Whole Child” by focusing on closing the achievement gap for disadvantaged students.
Without the waiver, this progress is lost, and test scores are the sole criterion by which Sacramento City Unified schools will be judged.
• Sacramento City Unified will lose its partnership with other large, urban school districts throughout California.
With the waiver, Sacramento City Unified was part of a network of districts with similar demographics and challenges. These districts shared ideas and best practices, learning from each other’s successes and failures. Sacramento’s Men’s Leadership Academy and the Sacramento Pathways to Success are a direct result of this cross-district learning.
Without the waiver, Sacramento will be excluded from the rich conversation among these districts and risk reinventing the wheel, when solutions already exist.
• Sacramento City Unified will lose the less tangible but equally valuable resource of being viewed as a district on the move, a thought leader in public education and an innovator in the region, state and nation.
With innovation and risk-taking come resources from business and philanthropy, because they want to support the future of public education – not the status quo. With innovation and risk-taking comes investment from businesses that choose to locate in Sacramento because of the reputation of its schools. Our schools should be seen as a vital asset to the community, not a deficit to be overcome.
Without the waiver, Sacramento will once again be seen as a place where caution replaces boldness and the status quo replaces innovation.
All this makes the district’s decision so heartbreaking. After all the collective progress on behalf of children, for adults to so quickly change course should not be overlooked or forgotten. “Putting Children First,” though just words, inspire thoughts that become actions, which should be Sacramento’s destiny.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2014/04/20/6333843/viewpoints-what-sac-city-schools.html#storylink=cpy