Monthly Archives: June 2011

The Save Our Schools March and Rally

The Save Our Schools March and National Call to Action from July, 28th to July 30th, 2011…

…is getting huge!

Those attending and participating are, Jonathan Kozol, Diane Ravitch, Deborah Meier, Yong Zhao, Susan Ohanian, Valerie Strauss, Matt Damon (whose mom is a teacher and also attending), Dr. Linda Darling-Hammond, Jim Horn of Schools Matter (and one of my fave education bloggers), Mike Klonsky, Alfie Kohn, Cornell West, Anthony Cody, By Any Means Necessary (BAMN!), Democracy for America and many, many more. Oh yeah, and me.

This is proving to be an awesome three days starting on July 28th and culminating with the march on July 30th.

Everyone is invited and encouraged to attend.

There will a webinar and fundraiser on July 7th with Pedro Noguera.

Amtrak is offering a special deal for the SOS March and Rally, a 10% discount off of the best available rate to and from Washington D.C. on any date between July 25th and August 3rd if you say that your are going to the SOS rally. Call 800-872-7245 for reservations.

This just in:

The FLORIDA SCHOOL BOARD ASSOCIATION voted to endorse the Save Our Schools March and Rally and they’ll be sending representatives to the three-day event.

AND Parents Across America will be hosting a reception with Diane Ravitch and Valerie Strauss on July 29th at the Marriott Wardman Park. This would be the perfect time to meet and talk to many of the founding members of Parents Across America as well as have the opportunity to meet Diane Ravitch and Valerie Strauss.

For Seattleites who will not be able to participate in the SOS March and Rally in Washington, D.C., there will be a torchlight march in Seattle in solidarity with the march in D.C. on July 30th at 6:00 PM at the Seattle Center on the South Fountain Lawn

There will be Parents Across America, Seattle members at the torchlight march so watch for them. They will be handing out flyers. More to follow as we closer to the date.

Dora

Questions for the Seattle School Board Candidates

Anyone who has been following not only what’s happening within the Seattle Public School district but really any district now in the country understands the importance of a strong school board. With millions of dollars being spent by billionaire financiers who want nothing more than to privatize our public school system, we need school board members who can remember their priorities when millions of dollars and promises of brighter political futures become the carrot for voting an absolute “Yes!” for all things ed reform whether they work or not for that specific district.

Parents Across America, Seattle has developed a list of questions that will be asked of each candidate. Those answers will be published on this blog. I will also be listing candidate forums and gatherings as they become available. And, needless to say, I will be throwing in my two cents worth of observations as I meet with the candidates personally.

To follow are the list of questions that will be asked. If you have additional questions that you would like to get answered, please note that in the comment section of this post.

Questions for all school board candidates, including the incumbents:

1. Do you support charter schools and why?

2. What is your opinion of wealthy individuals and foundations backed by those individuals offering money to a school district and thus altering the focus of that school district? For example, the Gates funded Seattle Foundation provided money to pay for the expense to have TFA, Inc. in our district for the first year even though the majority of teachers and parents did not want to have TFA, Inc. in Seattle.  Where would you draw the line between an individual determining the fate of our school system and a more democratic process?

2. Name three things the district is doing right.

3. Name three things the district is doing wrong.

4. What will you do to fix those three things? Please list in priority.

5. Define “achievement gap.”

6. Are you a teacher or do you have children in the Seattle Public School system? If not, in what way do you feel that you are a stakeholder?

7. The Seattle Education Association voted “no confidence” in MAP testing. Tell us what you know about the MAP test and whether you believe it should continue to be administered. If so, do you think it should have a place in teacher evaluations?

8. Why do Seattle school children have to take 4 standardized tests
during the school year when the State of Washington only requires 1?

9. The Seattle Public School district claims that data drives the major decisions concerning the direction the district is taking. If that is the case, how do you respond to the National Academy of Sciences’ report on the effect of standardized testing?

10. Do you believe Seattle should use Teach for America, Inc. recruits?

11. What role do you think that alternative schools play within the Seattle Public School system?

12. Would you support the creation of more alternative schools in the district?

13. Would you support the alternative schools that already exist within the Seattle Public School system?

14. What is the most crucial thing the school board needs to do to regain the public’s trust?

15. Does class size make a difference?

16. What is an ideal class size and why?

17. What do you think about making cuts to central administration
instead of to the classroom?

18. What should we look for in a new superintendent?

19. What is an appropriate salary for a superintendent?

20. Does it make sense to hire administrators from outside the District
when we have qualified administrative candidates who are already SPS
employees and are familiar with district operations?

21. Why do we outsource curriculum development when our teachers are
trained to develop curriculum?

Well, let’s see what the candidates have to say.

Dora

Do We Respect Seattle Teachers?

Seattle’s public schools sure have been through a lot in the 2010-2011 school year. On top of the multimillion dollar scandals and the firing of superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson, we saw funding cuts from the legislature that has decimated our classroom teachers and classroom supports and caused serious overcrowding at Garfield High School and other schools, which meant that some students had to go without teachers or classrooms for part of the year. At Lowell, overcrowding has brought a need for more classrooms, and I have heard that the district plans to take away space from developmental preschool and toileting facilities.

But something else is happening that many parents may not realize: above and beyond funding problems, teachers are being hit hard with a loss of respect. One culprit is the movie Waiting for Superman, which in highlighting “bad teachers” has brought widespread disrespect to all teachers, in every school, regardless of quality.

This hit home hard to me recently at a party. I was deep in conversation with a middle school teacher who has been working 60-80 hour work weeks all year. Somebody came into the room, heard the word “teaching,” and launched into a discussion about the movie Waiting for Superman and this problem of “bad teachers.” I stuck up for her and helped her try to refute some of the flawed arguments, but we didn’t get through. I could see the teacher’s blood boiling as she tried to maintain her composure, finally leaving the house in order to avoid spilling all her year’s frustrations all over this well-meaning but misinformed guest.

Guess what, everybody? If we focus on “bad teachers” we are going to get bad teachers. Because our good teachers are going to quit. They’re already overworked. They are facing layoffs even though the numbers of students in our district are going up. They are losing the ability to control what they teach. And on top of all that, they are losing respect.

Don’t take my word for it, ask a teacher. Seattle is full of teachers. Some of your best friends are teachers.

Paired with this loss of respect are efforts to de-professionalize teachers in Seattle, efforts that will do material harm to teachers and the teaching profession. And this is terrible for our children. Here are just a few things that happened this year:

  • Ex-superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson tried to ram through a proposal to tie teacher evaluations to the results of standardized tests – a measure that would increase “teaching to the test.”
  • The state legislature tried to pass law after law that would erode seniority, even though teachers improve greatly over the first five years of teaching, and most especially in their first year.
  • The district laid off teachers, even though we will see an increase in enrollment next year.
  • The district also signed a deal with Teach for America to bring in teachers with five weeks of training to address “shortages,” despite the fact that there were 18,668 applications for 766 positions last year.

This doesn’t just hurt teachers. This attacks teaching as a profession. Could we, instead of spending all our efforts blaming bad teachers, ask what quality teaching looks like, and see how we can support it? Looking broadly at “teaching” instead of narrowly at “teachers” gives us the big picture that we need in order to work for real reforms in education, like:

  • Quality teacher preparation. (By the way, the UW College of Education is ninth in the nation.)
  • National Board certification, which came about as a result of teachers wanting to set clear standards for quality.
  • Experience. Teachers improve over time for the first five years. The first year, especially, is a struggle.
  • A manageable workload.
  • Classroom supports like aides and tutors and counselors.
  • Relationships built in the school community and the classroom.
  • Excellent curriculum and the flexibility to adapt it to the needs of the students.
  • Clear standards that teachers, parents, and students can all understand.
  • Funding for school supplies such as markers and scissors. (Ask a parent who pays for these.)
  • Placement in the right classroom, because a poor fit makes for poor teaching even if the teacher is great!

These are all factors that directly impact teachers’ ability to do their jobs, but right now our education system is being privatized, and many of these factors are coming under attack.

Can teachers defend their profession? Yes, to an extent, but remember, they’re overworked already! We need to give them our support, and we need to keep a close and critical eye on what is happening district-wide, statewide, and nationally.

I said it before and I’ll say it again: don’t take my word for this. Ask a teacher. Let them know beforehand that you won’t jump all over them but honestly want their opinion. Listen nicely and don’t argue! And above all, let them know you support them. Every little bit helps!

-Kristin

"Honor Teachers" bumper sticker

Seattle School Board’s Voting Record: Yes, Yes, Yes and Yes

I thought that before we take a look at the school board candidates this year, and there are plenty to choose from, we would take a look back to the voting record of the school board directors during the reign of our Broad trained superintendent, Dr. Goodloe-Johnson, before she was fired.

The voting record of these four incumbents, sometimes referred to as the Gang of Four, is understandable given the fact that there were plenty of Broad sponsored retreats run by Broadies in the last three years.

So let’s see how the incumbents voted on the critical issues. The School Board Directors who are up for re-election are Sherry Carr, Peter Maier, Harium Martin Morris and Steve Sundquist.

Collectively they voted the following: Sherry Carr- 2 No votes, Peter Maier-0 No votes, Harium Martin-Morris-14 No votes and Steve Sundquist-  0 No votes.

Here’s the rundown.

The RIF (laying off of teachers termed a Reduction in Force) authorization in May, 2008

Sundquist: Abstained

Carr: Yes

Martin-Morris: Yes

Maier: Yes

Pay raise and contract extension for Dr. Goodloe-Johnson in July, 2008

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

School closures and splitting of APP in 2009.

Sundquist, Carr and Maier: Yes

Harium Martin-Morris: No (A flash of critical thinking outside the Broad box?)

Acceptance of a $1.2M grant from the Broad Foundation for the 5 Year Strategic Plan (Can you imagine that Broad was actually going to and did write our “Strategic Plan” that the board fell in lockstep behind?)

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

RIF Authorization in 2009 that didn’t make a lick of sense unless you understood the (Broad) superintendent’s intention of beginning the conversation about seniority, a hot issue with the privateers who think that experience does not a good teacher make, particularly if instead you can have Teach for America recruits on board. The majority of teacher gained their jobs back because as it turned out more students attended the Seattle Public School system than anticipated by central staff even though the census report and common sense and the early student registrations said something entirely different.

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

The NWEA contract for $400,000.

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

The “New Student Assignment Plan”, (What a joke! Did anyone even try to understand the ramifications of re-segregating our schools and making it difficult for students to apply to the alternative schools? Apparently not. The ultimate plan is to make the south end of Seattle ripe for charters. Gates, CPPS and the League of Education voters have begun to seep into those minority communities where charter schools reign in other regions of the country. See the e-mail below from Kelly Munn of the Gates backed League of Education Voters. The bold print is mine.)

Hello,
> If you know of anyone who would be interested in working for six months as a field contractor…please send them the job listing below. Preferably the person is of color, a parent, has done some education
advocacy and/or political work.
> –
>
> Kelly Munn
> League of Education Voters
> State Field Director
> Cell 425.773.7878

Contract Announcement:
>
> Community Organizer for Education Reform

> Who We Are: The League of Education Voters is a nonprofit
> organization who advocate for quality education for all children from
> cradle to career. We are the only Washington-based organization
> working to improve public education from early learning through higher
> education. We shape the debate, build powerful coalitions, and grow
> the grassroots to achieve meaningful reform and adequate resources for
> education.

Wanted: Six month Contract community organizer for education reform -
Highline, Seattle

Gates is doing the same thing in the Somali community of Seattle.

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

Yet another contract extension for Dr. Goodloe-Johnson in July, 2009 who had met only 4 out of her 17 goals.

(Need I even say?) Yes, yes, yes and yes.

Performance Management Policy

(I know this is getting redundant) Yes, yes, yes and yes

RIF Authorization in April, 2010

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

Pay raise, incentive (as in “merit pay” as Sundquist referred to is as) and contract extension in July, 2010.

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

NWEA contract for $450,000 while Dr. Goodloe-Johnson was on the NWEA board but had not disclosed this to the school board or anyone else for that matter.

(Conflict of interest for our former superintendent? The board said “No” but the rest of us said “Yes!” The reason that the superintendent finally announced to the board that she was on the Board of Directors of NWEA, which created that special MAP test that our students take 3 times a school year at the cost of $10M and counting,  was because some of us let it be known that she was on the NWEA board.)

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

The sale of the Martin Luther King school property at a bargain basement price to First AME Church, the church that Dr. Goodloe-Johnson and her friend Fred Stephens attended at the time, even though other interests offered higher bids.

Yes, yes and yes.

Maybe Martin-Morris smelled a rat because he voted “No” on this deal.

Bringing Teach for America, Inc. to Seattle for no good reason that any of us can come up with. Oh yeah, that five year strategic plan that Broad provided us with which had the ultimate intent of establishing charter schools in the south end of Seattle.

Yes, yes, yes and yes!

RIF authorization in May, 2011 by interim superintendent Dr. Susan Enfield.

Yes, yes, yes and yes.

Pay raises for central administration staff announced by Dr. Enfield in June, 2011.

Are you starting to see a pattern here?

This is why all four of the incumbents need to be replaced with folks who are not bought and can maintain their critical thinking skills throughout their tenure.

Next up, the candidates.

Dora

Post Script: The information on the voting record of the incumbents was compiled by a member of Parents Across America, Seattle and can be found at this location.

Architecture 101 Summer Camp

I’m back from my one week vacation of fun in the sun and am now back online.

Much has happened as all of you can imagine and it’s starting to pile up in my inbox, but first a little business.

Because I have to pay the rent, pay my bills and manage to get my daughter through 4 years of college, I need to have this commercial break. This is for all of the parents who suddenly realized that “Yikes! It’s summer!”, and not too much has been planned.

Well, worry no more. I provide a fun program for students grades 3 to adult introducing students to different aspects of architecture and design. The name of the program is Architecture 101 and I have been evolving this series of classes since my daughter was in third grade and I began teaching her class about town planning where the students got involved in creating their own town.

There is still room available in classes such as Eco-Resort, Atlantis, Town Planning, Bridges and Tunnels, At the Zoo and Airport Terminal.

For additional information, please go to the Architecture 101 website.

Next up, the Save Our Schools March and Rally, Seattle school board candidates (it looks like we have a plethora of them) and much, much more.

Dora

School Board Director Steve Sundquist Gets the Boot From His Own District

Excerpts from the West Seattle blog:

A standing-room-only crowd filled the main room at The Hall at Fauntleroy tonight for the 34th District Democrats‘ pre-primary-election endorsement meeting. “Always one of our best-attended meetings,” as the group’s vice chair Sabra Schneider observed. The toplines: 34th DDs member and Seattle School Board incumbent Steve Sundquist did not win the group’s endorsement; the only challenger who has filed, Marty McLaren, was endorsed, with 62 percent support.

SEATTLE SCHOOL BOARD POSITION 6
Endorsement: Marty McLaren

Walter Sive spoke for Sundquist, saying he is even more impressed with the board president’s work now than he was four years ago when he was first asked for support. “Steve has set the bar for reaching out to constituents,” Sive said, calling him an “incredible individual” and “great listener” who “takes his time to work through the issues.” Susan Harmon spoke against Sundquist’s nomination, saying that he was “completely unaware of things that were happening within the school district and the community” during his first run. She also said “He helped give a raise to a school superintendent that we sent packing back to South Carolina … and it cost us. … Steve Sundquist is part of a failed school board.”

Bill Schrier was the second speaker for Sundquist, saying that in a budget-crunched era, “We need innovation in our school district … and that’s happening in the Seattle school district.” Schrier acknowledged, “We had a failed school superintendent,” but applauded Sundquist for firing her after holding her accountable. He then mentioned the controversial Teach for America, which drew hisses. He said it would help provide diversity to the district’s teacher corps. Then came a second speaker against endorsing Sundquist – past 34th DDs chair Ivan Weiss. “Steve promised us fiscal accountability and responsibility,” but didn’t provide it during the scandal that led to superintendent Dr. Maria Goodloe-Johnson’s firing, Weiss said. “He voted to lay off 70 teachers when he voted to allow” Teach for America “scab” teachers into the district.

Speaking for McLaren, Seattle Education Association president Olga Addae said the board needs someone who understands education. “I support Marty McLaren because she has been there” as a former teacher, said Addae. “(The board) voted out elementary counselors, career center specialists, a skill center for Seattle that the Legislature was going to give us and build us … and this School Board turned it down. How can we continue to support that?” McLaren was endorsed on the first ballot, with 62 percent. She spoke briefly (Sundquist had not spoken prior to the vote), saying, “”I am absolutely floored,” adding that she believes the endorsement underlines “all the wrong decisions …that have brought (the school district) downward.”

Interesting how Teach for America has gone over like a stink bomb in West Seattle. I suppose Gates will now start throwing more money at West Seattle by way of the League of Education Voters (LEV), et al and we’ll start hearing ads about the wonders of TFA, Inc. on KUOW soon as we did with the Broad Foundation and now with the Gates Foundation.

Dora

The Failure of Education Reform: “Transformation” at Central Falls High School

Remember this?

In response to that horrific event, people responded like Esther Wojcicki, a dedicated teacher in Palo Alto, CA. She wrote an op-ed for CNN titled Work with teachers, don’t fire them. And this response from Nanette Richard on what the real cause of “low student performance” was at that time, RI teachers fired at Central Falls High School. And this from the teachers at Central Falls High School, Fired teachers defend their positions.

That was last year when there was all of the hoopla from  Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and even President Obama that the firing of teachers en masse heralded a new day in education reform.

Well, well, well. And now what do the good people of Central Falls and their children have? An even bigger mess that Duncan will try to spin or mask over and then simply move on to greener pastures. He may be in your town next, Mr. Fix-It and his billionaire crew.

This just in:

Changes at R.I. School Fail to Produce Results

Rhode Island Education Commissioner Deborah Gist, center, looks on as Central Falls school superintendent Frances Gallo, right, and teachers union president Jane Sessums, left, answer questions during a news conference after the union approved an agreement that allows the entire staff to be rehired, Monday, May 17, 2010, in Central Falls, R.I. (AP Photo/Stew Milne)

For the last year, Central Falls High School in Rhode Island has been under a microscope. Long considered one of the poorest-performing high schools in the state, administrators abandoned a proposal to fire all the teachers as long as they agreed to a so-called “transformation” plan.

Now, as the school year winds down, that plan is in shambles.

Since August, when the restructuring of Central Falls High School began, 26 teachers have resigned or been fired. Josh Karten is one of them.

“I think I’ve been let go because I’m not a true believer,” Karten says.

Karten, a history and business teacher for four years here, says he was all for the school’s transformation — which called for a much tougher teacher evaluation policy, mandatory training and more time dedicated to struggling students. The plan and the money to pay for it came from the Obama administration’s campaign to fix schools labeled “dropout factories.”

Karten’s enthusiasm took a dive after he was put in charge of the “restoration” room, a holding pen for the school’s most disruptive students.

“But then once I started questioning some of the things they were doing — putting kids in a room just to get them out of the way for the period and then putting them back out. And they basically kept telling me to shut my mouth and just log people when they come in. I never got to teach,” Karten said.

Karten says the school was in such disarray that in-school suspensions jumped from 2,300 to 8,500 by the end of May. His contract was not renewed because, he says, he had seen too much and refused to be muzzled.

Not true, says Superintendent Francis Gallo, although she declined to discuss Karten’s firing.

“Personnel matters are personnel matters, but shame on us if we didn’t have enough planning with Josh so that he understood the role and knew what had to be done,” Gallo says.

Placing Blame

The debacle at Central Falls High has gotten national attention because President Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan have publicly sided with administrators arguing that teachers must be held accountable for students’ dismal test scores. Last year, only 7 percent of students tested at grade level in math, 24 percent in reading. This year’s test results could be worse. Why?

“Because of our low expectations in the classroom — meaning teachers,” Gallo says.

Gallo believes some teachers have sabotaged her reforms. Teachers say those reforms are a joke. Joe Travers, a 21-year veteran, was transferred to an elementary school after saying so at a town hall meeting.

“I’m fighting this because what they did is wrong. They use that word transformation as a buzzword for everything: ‘We can do this because of transformation.’ But transformation tries to retain the teachers that are doing a good job, tries to retain teachers that can move the school forward,” Travers says.

Instead, says Travers, the absolute lack of trust in Gallo and administrators has made it impossible to move forward. Rhode Island’s Education Commissioner Deborah Gist agrees.

“If people are not working together, there’s no chance for its success,” Gist says.

With teachers and administrators at an impasse, Gist, too, has come under fire for failing to bring both sides together.

“I am ultimately responsible for getting that done,” Gist says.

Gist says the school could eventually be shut down or turned into a charter school. State legislators are calling for an investigation into how the $1 million in federal funds for the school’s transformation have been spent and whether the school district violated the due process rights of teachers.

Feeling Cheated

No one has been hurt more by the upheaval at Central Falls High than this year’s seniors. “I think most of us do feel cheated for the four years. Every year has been different and this year has by far been the worst,” senior Derrick Lopes says.

“Like they let all the bad kids do whatever they want. It’s just kind of pathetic,” his classmate, Ashley Castro, says.

And so, as the Obama administration considers how to turn failing schools around, Central Falls High has become a cautionary tale about the complexities of school reform and whether the federal government should be dictating what those reforms should be.

Need I say more?

Dora

Plan to host Teach for America at Univ. of Washington highlights hypocrisy of ed reform

The doublespeak of ed reformers who repeatedly declare that the key to a successful education is to put an “excellent” teacher in every classroom, and then turn around and promote young, Teach for America recruits — with only five weeks’ training, no in-class experience, and only a two-year commitment to the profession — as the answer, has come into sharp focus at the University of Washington in Seattle these past two weeks.

On May 11, the University of Washington’s College of Education announced it would sponsor Teach for America at its teaching college, providing the missing component to the deal that TFA, Inc. struck with the Seattle School District last fall.

Last November, Seattle’s school board approved a (troubling and one-sided) contract to allow TFA, a short-term alternative teacher credentialing program, into Seattle’s hiring pool for the first time. TFA, Inc. also demands a financial and university sponsor in order to brings its program to a new location, and charges school districts an extra $4,000 or more per year for each trainee, in “recruitment, placement and training” fees. (Apparently the millions of dollars from private investors and $50 million recently granted to TFA, Inc. by the federal government isn’t enough to cover expenses.) Those in the parent ed advocacy community guessed that ed reform sugardaddy Bill Gates would pony up at some point. And he did — his Washington STEM organization will pay the $4,000 annual fee for the science and math TFAers, which would otherwise be billed to our cash-strapped district. But who would be the university sponsor? We waited for an announcement.

There were rumors that the University of Washington was going to take this on. After all, the new Dean of Education, Tom Stritikus, is a former TFAer himself, and he coincidentally wrote an op-ed about the values of “alternative” teacher preparation programs in the Seattle Times, just a few weeks before then School Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson out of the blue proposed bringing TFA to our already teacher-filled, recession-struck district.

The University of Washington already has a well-regarded M.A. teacher ed program (ranked ninth in nation by U.S. News & World Report in 2011). It takes two years and requires a year of student teaching in an actual classroom.

Then the announcement finally came two weeks ago. From the U.W. press release:

Teach For America negotiated directly with Seattle and Federal Way school districts to allow their corps members to interview alongside other candidates for open teaching positions in those districts. Corps members who are hired complete an intensive summer training institute before becoming U-ACT students and begining (sic) full-time teaching. Those hired will enroll as graduate students in the College of Education. They will earn teacher certification through U-ACT and, in subsequent years, a master’s degree through one of the college’s existing programs — in Curriculum & Instruction, Special Education, Leadership & Policy Studies or Educational Psychology.

In this new arrangement, the students in the TFA special program will be housed alongside the full program students, but would only be required to take a five-week course, after which they would be deemed immediately eligible to apply for a full-time, full-salaried teaching position, while still learning on the job. The full-term U.W. students, meanwhile, won’t be certified and able to enter the workforce until they have completed the first year of their program.

Not surprisingly, this announcement was not well received by Dean Stritkus’ current M.A. teaching students. Outrage, dismay and confusion soon followed. One student referred to the UW-TFA deal as a “slap in the face.” You can’t blame them for feeling betrayed by Stritikus and the university.

Here they have been spending two years following the rigorous standards the dean ostensibly believes in, diligently studying the art and science of teaching, paying their own way for a $23,000 ($50,000 nonresident) masters degree at what they thought was a reputable teaching institution. They are spending hours of in-class time in actual public school classrooms getting invaluable experience, all in the hopes of applying for one of the rare teaching positions in the fall. Now they are being told that a stream of fresh grads will be brought in alongside them at U.W., given a special, condensed education, will do little to no student teaching, but will compete against them for the same jobs.

It must feel like running a 10-mile race, only to have the judges allow a group of new runners join in the last 100 yards and race you to the finish — on skateboards.

To have these two programs side by side at U.W. will send a pretty schizophrenic message to the students there. After all, here is Stritikus, essentially telling one group of his students that it takes two full years of dedicated study towards an education degree to be fully qualified and ready to be a solid teacher, while telling another group, a five-week “accelerated” course is all you need. It’s clearly inconsistent — and defies common sense. It’s also a recipe for huge resentment.

The University of Washington has a credibility problem on its hands — and reputation.

How could anyone find this double-standard even remotely fair? It isn’t. Furthermore, how can Stritikus, a TFA alum and loyal supporter of the enterprise, not show favoritism towards the TFA-ers? So there’s a potential conflict of interest problem as well.

This hypocrisy was highlighted at a tense and emotional meeting last week between Dean Stritikus and his M.A. students, which was covered by the local news. Understandably, Stritikus’ current students had a lot of questions.

Why is Stritikus and U.W. bending over backward to accommodate TFA? Here are a couple of clues. Stritikus himself is a TFA alum with very little primary and secondary teaching experience. So he comes into the equation with a potential bias and perhaps limited understanding of the true demands of the field. He became dean only last September, coincidentally right before Seattle’s school superintendent introduced a proposal to bring Teach for America to Seattle. Then Superintendent Maria Goodloe-Johnson was trained by the pro-privatizing Broad Foundation which has vowed to help institutionalize Teach for America in the nation’s public schools system, and until recently, was a member of its board of directors — alongside Wendy Kopp, CEO of TFA.

More recently, a trove of hundreds of documents and e-mails between Stritikus and Teach for America has emerged, revealed by the public disclosure requests of two parent activists, one a local education blogger, the other the public schools parent of a child with special needs, one of the categories of children TFA plans to focus on in Seattle. These reveal that Stritikus had plans dating back from at least since his appointment last fall, to facilitate the introduction of TFA to Seattle using his new position at U.W. to do so.

Reports Melissa Westbrook on the Save Seattle Schools Community Blog:

• The day before his appointment was even announced (August 18th), he contacted Wendy Kopp, the head of TFA. He asks her if she wants to build an on-line endorsement program for TFA with UW and to do press for him. She replies, “As you say, this is a terrific moment in the history of TFA and hopefully is a just a harbinger of all that’s to come in terms of the influence of alumni on teacher education.” • Further on in the e-mail, she says, “Let’s absolutely see what we can cook up in terms of ways of working together…”

• Just one week later, he is tries to get together with TFA staff in Washington, D.C. He says, “I would love to be able to get a set of possible ideas for collaboration on the table and identify priorities.” • Also that week, he says, “I offered to help Janis in anyway she needed.” Janis is Janis Ortega, the TFA director for Puget Sound.

• In an e-mail on Sep 13, 2010, again just weeks after he became Dean, Stritikus writes to a TFA official and says, “By that time (9/29-10/1), I will have talked to key faculty, developed a sketch plan for the master’s degree, and gotten a handle on the certification issues.”

It would seem that Stritikus has a severe case of divided loyalties.

Given the fact that students in the U.W. MA teaching program are likely paying their own way (or into debt), while the TFA-ers get their training funded by TFA, Inc. ($50 million of it coming from taxpayers) and local school districts, which have to pony up an extra fee for each TFA-er they hire, and you’ve got economic inequality in the mix as well.

The public disclosure documents also indicate that Stritikus is trying to arrange special funding for the TFA-ers that the other students will ostensibly not be eligible for.

Indeed, an announcement for a Teach for America general recruiting “info session” that was held on the U.W. campus last October 14 explains these benefits in more detail:

Benefits include:

•Full salary and benefits ranging from $27,000-$50,500 (depending on region/cost of living)

•Two year deferral/forbearance on loans

•AmeriCorps Education Award of $10,700 over two years

•Graduate school and employer partnerships

•For ALL academic backgrounds and majors

In the latest development in this story, the College of Education has just announced a new summer school option for existing M.A. students to graduate early. This appears to be a response to the obvious inconsistency inherent in sponsoring the TFA program. But, in this apparent effort to quiet controversy and level the playing field, rather than demanding equal rigor, investment of time and money from the TFA students, the U.W. College of Education is potentially lowering the bar and diluting its rigor to match the standards of TFA.

It has never been clear why TFA should be brought to the Puget Sound area in the first place. There is no teacher shortage here. In fact, the Seattle School District recently announced it would lay off 30 teachers this year. Have low-income parents or those with special needs children (both targeted communities for Seattle’s TFAers) been demanding short-term, fast-tracked young temps in their kids’ classrooms? No. Or are major ed reform funders like the Gates Foundation, and others who would like to bring privatization to Seattle’s public schools, trying to create a spigot of young, impressionable, non-union teaching staff for future charter schools? (Charters are currently illegal in Washington State, but there are forces here trying to change that.) Or do they want teaching staff or future “leaders of education” who will absorb and perpetuate their brand of top-down, test-heavy, approach to teaching? These are some of the theories swirling about.

Dean Stritikus, the University of Washington and Teach for America can try to spin this problematic arrangement all they want. They can even give the special program a different name to disguise its connection to TFA (U.W. has christened the TFA path “UW Accelerated Certification for Teachers, or U-ACT” – not to be confused with “U-ACT,” the anti-human-trafficking organization). But it doesn’t matter. This dual-track teaching certification plan is patently unfair and inconsistent. It’s rigged in favor of the TFA-ers.

The Seattle School District has signed a (biased, liability-heavy) contract with TFA all but assuring it will hired 25-35 TFAers in the fall — Wendy Kopp confidently stated as much on local radio recently. (It’s not lost on district observers that this number almost exactly matches the number of teacher layoffs just announced by the Seattle School District. Meanwhile enrollment is growing district-wide and classrooms are overcrowded. Parents fully expect that the district will need to rehire for those positions in the fall. The question is, who will it choose to fill them?)

The TFA students will be given every unfair advantage. And in the end, as many as 80 percent of them won’t even remain in the profession past their third year. How is this worth the investment of time, money and now, resentment?

This controversy has prompted letters to Stritikus and U.W. like this one, from a U.W. alum (commenting as “MapleLeafer”):

“Your obvious willingness to appease the forces in our society aligned against public education has angered me, your obvious willingness to sell out the integrity of my alma mater has made me mortified and your obvious willingness to do virtually anything to support an organization like the T.F.A. has made me incensed. Shame on you and the whole U.W. College of Education – you should know better.”

According to the Seattle Times, “UW’s planning for the [U-ACT] program is well under way, and the program is awaiting final approval from the state’s Professional Educator Standards Board.” Perhaps the Educator Standards Board will see through this contradiction and unfairness and not approve it.

In the meantime, however, the blatant hypocrisy, political maneuvering and self-interest of ed reformers doesn’t come much more clearly illustrated than this.

sue p.

Parents Across America Seattle Meeting Date and Other Announcements

This poster is based on the video Stems Need Blooms and a free print quality pdf  is available if you submit a 300 word or less essay on teachers or teaching.

Pretty cool.

Next, there will be a Parents Across America, Seattle meeting this Saturday at 4:00 PM at the Roy Street Cafe located in Capitol Hill on Broadway. Parents, teachers, students and concerned citizens are welcomed to join us. There is always a lively discussion and much information is shared.

Regarding The Nova Project news, (full disclosure, I have a student there until next week when she will be graduating), there is a lot happening in the month of June.  On June 9th at 6:00 PM is the Nova Art Show at the Vera Project. Then on June 11th:

An Afternoon with Nova’s Guatemala Committee
Saturday, June 11, 2:00 PM to 5:00 PM
2021 NE 75th St (Joe’s casa)
Donations greatly appreciated!
Join us for an afternoon of tasty Guatemalan food, crafts and a screening of our new DVD featuring footage from our recent trip to Guatemala.
All proceeds benefit scholarships and job training for students in the Nuevo Amanecer (New Dawn) community of repatriated refugees. Over the past four years, Nova’s Guatemala Social Justice program has provided ongoing support, helping build the community a bridge out of extreme poverty.  Invest in justice and youth activism!
Questions? Contact Joe:

joeszwaja@earthlink.net

And then on June 16th is the popular Nova Animation Showcase that will be happening on the school campus starting at 6:00 PM.

Busy times at Nova!

And…a new education blog in our state. Check out:

Truth in American Education

Lots of great information available on the site with an emphasis on Common Core Standards.

And one final word for today. I’M GOING ON VACATION! Yes, it is finally happening, I will not even see my computer for at least a week.

I will be “away from my desk” but because life goes on, I am inviting all to send in an article or an opinion that they would like to see posted on this site. I will review all submittals for appropriateness and accuracy but the sky is the limit as long as it has to do with education here in Seattle or anywhere else in the world. It can be a few paragraphs or a treatise. The approved essays, articles, rants or raves will be posted next week during my absence.

So have some fun puting something together and send it to dora.taylor@gmail.com.

Dora

“Not a good move, Mr. Duncan” and Smooth Move Gregoire

While we’re still on the subject of the billionaire boyz attack on Dr. Ravitch, there is a post by a teacher, Martha Infante, that is a great read.

Here is an excerpt regarding a statement that was made by Arne Duncan about Diane Ravitch.

It would not be the first time that Mr. Duncan spoke off the cuff and showed the public a brief look into the true machinations of his corporate mind.  This is the same secretary that believed Hurricane Katrina was the “best thing to ever happen to New Orleans schools.”  Now Arne Duncan feels he can disparage the foremost expert on education history, using a personal attack to distract from the facts she brought to light.

Not a good move, Mr. Duncan.

You see, while trash-talking may be an effective method in the NBA, in academia it is perceived as a simple vehicle to distract from the debate at hand.  We the teachers, the academics, see through this.  Classroom teachers especially have fine-tuned their BS detection skills with years of experience working with adolescents.  Dr. Ravitch pointed out what few journalists have dared write about: how the schools hailed as miracles by the President and Arne Duncan have high attrition rates that render any assertion of celestial occurrences moot.

See the full post, Not Insulted, on the blog InterACT.

Diane Ravitch and Jonathan Alter will go toe to toe tomorrow, Wednesday, June 8th at 7:00 AM Denver time, that would make it 6:00 AM in Seattle and 9:00 AM in New York, on 760 AM, Dave Sirota’s radio program. A podcast should be available for all who can not listen during the live airing of the show.

Another interesting tidbit came through my inbox this morning with some great links. It’s an article in the Seattle PI Gregoire, Microsoft and Boeing “Transform” Higher Education. It’s basically regarding the chutzpah that Boeing and Microsoft have being at a bill signing that will allow Washington state colleges to set their own tuition rates thanks to the fact that the state is not able to subsidize the education of students in this state and that is in part due to the fact that Boeing, who according to he Daily Beast made a pre-tax profit of $4.5 billion in 2010 and paid 0.3% of its’ pre-tax income in federal taxes, and Microsoft, who made $25 billion in pre-tax income in 2010 but shifts the majority of that income to foreign countries to avoid paying taxes, don’t pay their fair share of taxes.  Also in the state of Washington we do not pay income tax. There was a proposal to require that folks over a certain income pay state income tax but that was shot down by gee, who could that have been? But both companies wanted to be represented as heroes at this bill signing. With friends like these who needs enemies?

Dora