Latest News and Comment from Education

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

All Out for Oakland Schools! Tomorrow, Wedn., 5:30 @ Board Meeting! | Classroom Struggle

All Out for Oakland Schools! Tomorrow, Wedn., 5:30 @ Board Meeting! | Classroom Struggle:


All Out for Oakland Schools! Tomorrow, Wedn., 5:30 @ Board Meeting!

Kaboom! Parent Power! NYC Parents Stop The Department of Education From Announcing Election Results And Conducting Runoffs For Flawed Community and Citywide Education Council Elections | New York City Parents Union

Kaboom! Parent Power! NYC Parents Stop The Department of Education From Announcing Election Results And Conducting Runoffs For Flawed Community and Citywide Education Council Elections | New York City Parents Union:


Kaboom! Parent Power! NYC Parents Stop The Department of Education From Announcing Election Results And Conducting Runoffs For Flawed Community and Citywide Education Council Elections

PSAT for 5-21-13: Do what you do to stand up to the school closings Parents United for Responsible Education

Parents United for Responsible Education » Blog Archive » PSAT for 5-21-13: Do what you do to stand up to the school closings:


PSAT for 5-21-13: Do what you do to stand up to the school closings

Everyone can do something.
psat_logoToday PURE held a press conference with six child mental health experts who spoke out about the damage the proposed school closings may do to children, giving their professional backing to what parents, teachers, students and others have been saying over and over for the past few months. We faxed 11 powerful statementsfrom those six and others to the Board of Education members this morning .
You can share these excellent resources with your networks. They need to be in the hands of parents, teachers, and other public school advocates wherever corporate reformers are moving to close big numbers of schools.
I was also able to speak out on Channel 2, the local CBS station – not sure when today it will air.
Lots of folks have been marching all over the city, making connections among all the schools threatened with closure. Many more are planning to be at the Board of Ed meeting tomorrow to make some noise as the decisions are made. You can be there.
You can start calling the Board of Education number now – 773-553-1600. If you’re not sure what to say, read any of these excellent articles that detail the many ways that CPS and the Mayor have lied about the schools. You’ll be inspired.
Do what you do, and what you can do. Just do something.

Jersey Jazzman: Great Moments In White People Cluelessness

Jersey Jazzman: Great Moments In White People Cluelessness:


Great Moments In White People Cluelessness

From Matt Kramer, Co-CEO of Teach For America:
As white person, I thk role of white ppl in ed reform is a fair Q. But, I believe answer lies in allyship, not abdicating responsibility.
So please don't get so upset, black parents, when Matt sends privileged, young, white, untrainedunqualified,uncommitted "teachers" into your children's schools, even as TFA racks up a billion dollars and shoves career teachers out on to the street.

After all, he's willing to admit it's "fair" to talk about race - just so long as you agree to engage in "allyship" with him. Golly, aren't you lucky?

This Is What Equal Opportunity Looks Like « The Core Knowledge Blog

This Is What Equal Opportunity Looks Like « The Core Knowledge Blog:


This Is What Equal Opportunity Looks Like

UPDATE: How Safe Are Seattle Schools? Seattle Schools Community Forum: Youth Health/Behavior Survey Results

Seattle Schools Community Forum: Youth Health/Behavior Survey Results:



How Safe Are Seattle Schools?

A headline from the Huffington Post - Oklahoma Schools Lacked Consistent Tornado Shelter Rules.  

From the article (highlights mine):

The two elementary schools leveled by the deadly tornado that swept through the Oklahoma City area Mondaylacked designated safe rooms designed to protect children and teachers, despite state warnings that the absence of such facilities imperils lives.

At least two other schools in Moore -- the epicenter of the disaster -- did have safe rooms. So far no fatalities have been tied to those schools, whose buildings were fortified after a devastating twister hit the area in 1999.

These disparities in structural standards speak to the seeming randomness of who lived and who died in a natural disaster now blamed for taking the lives of at least 24 people, including nine children. Requirements for safe rooms in public schools vary from community to community across the swath of Midwestern and Southern states so accustomed to lethal twisters that it is known as Tornado Alley.

In Oklahoma and in bordering states, land-use regulations are often derided as unnecessary government intrusions. State building codes do not require that schools provide safe rooms, leaving the decision to individual 


Youth Health/Behavior Survey Results

From the district webpage (with links to all the info/surveys):

Results of recent state and federal surveys of health- and risk-related behavior among Seattle Public Schools middle and high school students provide a snapshot of everything from drug use and sexual behavior to how often they eat fruit and vegetables and watch television.

The state-funded Healthy Youth Survey is taken every two years by students in grades 6, 8, 10, and 12 and focuses on attitudes and health risk behaviors. Topics include gangs, physical activity, suicide, sexual activity, bullying and drug, alcohol, and tobacco use.

The federal CDC-funded Youth Risk Behavior Survey, also conducted every two years, surveys students ingrades 9-12, with a focus on health risk behaviors that result in unintentional injuries and violence; tobacco use; alcohol and other drug use; sexual behaviors that contribute to HIV infection; other sexually transmitted 

Implications of the New "Poor" — Whole Child Education

Implications of the New "Poor" — Whole Child Education:


ASCD Whole Child Bloggers

Implications of the New “Poor”

Posst written by Pam Capasso, Sara Gogel, Tracy Knight, and Janine Norris of Holly Glen Elementary School in Williamstown, N.J.
Holly Glen Elementary School serves approximately 580 students with one-third on free or reduced meals. Our school houses English language learners, autistic population, and students from low-income housing. In the past, Holly Glen comprised various socioeconomic levels ranging from upper class to lower income areas.
With recent redistricting, Holly Glen has seen a significant shift in socioeconomic levels. Today's economy has also brought about a change in our school climate. We have had to rethink the way we fundraise, involve parents, and the utilization of community agencies. For example, many students lack dental coverage, so we invited a mobile dental service to come to the school. It provided our students with x-rays, cleanings, and sealants free of charge with parent permission. This program was so successful we have already confirmed the date for next school year.
In the past, our Home and School Association had more parents involved and were able to fundraise with success. Recently, we have seen a decline in parental involvement and participation in fundraising events. The association now has fewer funds to help contribute to school resources (i.e., laptops, projection 

“This has seriously been the most indescribable past 48 hours of my life.” | Fred Klonsky

“This has seriously been the most indescribable past 48 hours of my life.” | Fred Klonsky:


“This has seriously been the most indescribable past 48 hours of my life.”

me-2
I met Stephanie Rivera last summer in Washington, D.C. through our mutual friend, Adam Heenan. Stephanie came to Chicago from New Jersey this weekend to take part in the three days of protests against Rahm’s school closings, the largest mass closing of public schools in American history.
Visit her blog for the rest of the story of her visit to Chicago.
This has seriously been the most indescribable past 48 hours of my life. Chicago students, teachers, parents, & community organizers, it was empowering watching you all over the internet since September, but having the privilege to march alongside you, cause disruption, exchange “WTFs” when we heard an elementary school was put on lockdown & surrounded by cops so they couldn’t walkout to join the march, hugging our civil disobey-ers after they were released from arrests for occupying City Hall, and being in the heart of the education revolution with the most 

Jersey Jazzman: Charter Schools = Wingnut Welfare

Jersey Jazzman: Charter Schools = Wingnut Welfare:


Charter Schools = Wingnut Welfare

No one who reads this blog will be at all surprised by this:

Last year, I wrote about fake Democrat Cody Bailey who had his ass handed to him by now-State Representative David Knezek. Bailey barely beat a candidate in the Democratic primary who didn’t even run a campaign and got his clock cleaned by Knezek. As I outlined in my expose, Bailey was anything but a Democrat and ran one of the sleaziest, most fact-challenged campaigns in my experience.
Imagine my (non) surprise to discover this week that Bailey, at the tender age of 22, is now the president of the Taylor Preparatory High School in Grand Rapids Taylor, a for-profit charter high school that opens in the fall. What qualifies Bailey to be the president of an educational institution with a lofty mission of being “a bridge to a life well lived” for high schoolers? In a word (well, two words): not much. [emphasis mine]
That's right, folks: Michigan didn't have enough money (until the last minute) to keep the public schools in Buena 

Schooling in the Ownership Society: Learning from Prof. Joravsky about Rahm's latest TIF deal

Schooling in the Ownership Society: Learning from Prof. Joravsky about Rahm's latest TIF deal:


Learning from Prof. Joravsky about Rahm's latest TIF deal

Rahm's Choose Chicago pals applaud the latest great TIF swidle.
I continue to learn from Professor Joravsky about TIF, the Mayor's own taxpayer supported slush fund. Today,the prof schools us on what might be Rahm's greatest-of-all scams, the DePaul Arena TIF swindle, by which he takes millions in taxpayer dollars that should go to Chicago Public Schools and funnels them to his rich pals and corporations. In the latest case, that means spending $55 million of your property tax dollars to build a hotel and basketball arena for DePaul, on the near-south side. This at the same time he's about to close more than 50 neighborhood schools, primarily in the city's most under-served black communities, because the city is too broke to operate them.

Writes Joravsky:
 And what do you, the taxpayers, get for this $55 million? You get a hotel that you'll probably never stay in. And an arena for DePaul basketball games that you'll probably never attend. Because let's 

The Death of Private Schools is Greatly Exaggerated (& Misrepresented!) | School Finance 101

The Death of Private Schools is Greatly Exaggerated (& Misrepresented!) | School Finance 101:


The Death of Private Schools is Greatly Exaggerated (& Misrepresented!)

As I’ve explained on previous posts, specific to New Jersey, claims of the dying private sector in education are grossly over exaggerated.
These days, such claims are often over exaggerated with the purpose of framing some broad policy interest in supporting private schools. That is, some need for immediate public policy attention to the problem – some reason to consider how to better integrate our private sector schools into the provision of the public good of elementary and secondary education.
It is argued broadly that the loss of our ever important private sector of schooling is a threat to educational excellence – or even national security. That this loss is of particular concern for our middle and lower income populations who have now lost access to private sector schooling.
In short, policymakers must act swiftly to stabilize this “too big to fail” sector of schooling that is critical to the future of low income children in America. This is not a religious issue. It’s a public interest issue. It has no religious boundaries. No specific religious identity. It is entirely neutral of religion. Or is it?
Indeed, I’m painting a caricature of recent arguments regarding private schooling and the public good. But I would 

Tornado survivor: Our teacher saved our lives

Tornado survivor: Our teacher saved our lives:




Tornado survivor: Our teacher saved our lives



Here’s a video from “Today” about how a teacher saved some children when the massive tornado struck Moore, Okla., and the transcript:
Reporter: You know, there have been some amazing stories of survival that are starting to emerge from the rubble and I have one of those, Brandi Klein, Damien Klein and Bobby Britain. Damien, you’re a fourth-grader at Plaza Tower Elementary School. Do you remember anything from yesterday?
Damien: We were in class and all we heard was the sirens go off and we all ran to the hallway. Some of us had a math book, some of us had backpacks and they went off again. Then we ducked again and then it went off and then we went in the bathroom, and then they went off again and then we heard the tornado and it sounded like a train coming by, and then we all, we were all covered and a teacher took cover of us, Miss [Rhonda] Crossway.
Reporter: Miss Crossway threw her body right over 


Quiet protest staged at Teachers College graduation

Some students staged a quiet protest at Columbia University Teachers College commencement ceremonies Tuesday in New York to express their unhappiness with the choice of Merryl Tisch as a speaker and award recipient. The protesters opposed the choice of Tisch, … Continue reading →

NYC Public School Parents: Parents in Western NYS outraged about testing and confidential data sharing

NYC Public School Parents: Parents in Western NYS outraged about testing and confidential data sharing:


Parents in Western NYS outraged about testing and confidential data sharing

An excellent news story below from WIVB TV news in Western New York State that captures the parent outrage at the NY State Education Department concerning the increase in testing and student data sharing being imposed on our schools, leading to a growing opt out movement.

I strongly recommend you watch the whole thing; the section on the state's plan to share confidential student data with inBloom Inc. and private vendors is at about 6 minutes in; this part is transcribed under the screen.  For the entire transcript, you can go to the WBEZ website here.



Parents also fear their children's private information is no longer private.

New York is one of five states providing personal information about its students to an electronic database - including names; addresses; race; ethnicity; disabilities; parent contact information; dates of absences, out-of-school suspensions, grades; and State standardized test scores.

The database was built by a company owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, with money from the Gates Foundation. It's run by a new non-profit, inBloom Inc., and third parties can access all the information it contains.

Press release from PURE press conference on school closings and child mental health Parents United for Responsible Education

Parents United for Responsible Education » Blog Archive » Press release from PURE press conference on school closings and child mental health:


Press release from PURE press conference on school closings and child mental health

Erin Mason speaks at PURE press conference
Erin Mason speaks at PURE press conference
Press Release **** For Immediate Release
 May 21, 2013
Contact:
Julie Woestehoff, Parents United for Responsible Education. 773-715-3989
Diane Horwitz, Chicagoland Researchers and Advocates for Transformative Education (CReATE). 847-332-2756
Ann Aviles de Bradley, Assistant Professor, Northeastern Illinois University. 773-339-8479
Child mental health experts raise serious concerns about the impact of proposed mass school closings on Chicago students
Today, several notable social workers, counselors, and academic researchers from prominent Illinois and Chicago organizations and universities submitted a set of statements to the members of the Chicago Board of Education detailing their serious concerns about the potential negative impact of school closings on Chicago Public Schools (CPS) students’ social-emotional health. Their statements are available here.
Tomorrow, the Board of Education is scheduled to consider approving up to 54 school closings and consolidations.
The experts shared their statements at a press conference held at Roosevelt University and sponsored by Parents United for Responsible Education, a Chicago public school parent advocacy organization, along with education professors Ann Aviles de Bradley and Diane Horwitz.
Among those speaking at the press conference were
  • Ann Aviles de Bradley, Assistant Professor, Department of Educational Inquiry and Curriculum Studies, Northeastern Illinois University
  • Daniel Cooper, Assistant Director, Institute of Public Safety and Social Justice, Adler School
  • Francisco X. Gaytan, Assistant Professor School of Social Work, Northeastern Illinois University
  • Erin Mason, President, Illinois School Counselor Association
  • Cassandra McKay-Jackson, Assistant Professor, Jane Addams College of Social Work, University of Illinois at Chicago
  • Erika Schmidt, Director of the Center for Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy of the Chicago Institute for Psychoanalysis
Significant concerns raised by these experts include grief and loss, issues of transition, schools as community cornerstones, inclusion of student voice, and lack of adequate mental health services.
Erin Mason, speaking on behalf of the Illinois School Counselor Association, said “not unlike losing a loved one, leaving a school that is closing may be devastating for some students and families who have built strong ties to faculty, staff and other families.” Mason cites articles that state, “transitions for some students result in academic difficulties, social/emotional problems, decline in self-concept, poor motivation, decreased attendance, and increased dropout rates,” and another which concludes, “States, schools, and districts need to recognize student mobility as a barrier to success.”
UIC’s Cassandra McKay-Jackson highlighted additional negative outcomes associated with school mobility,“(L)ow attachment (or school detachment) is related to higher levels of violent behavior and aggressive beliefs, more negatively perceived school climate, and lower academic motivation as well as higher risk for school dropout.”
According to Erika Schmidt, director of the Center for Child and Adolescent Psychotherapy, “School communities are built on a network of important relationships. While the primary relationship is between the child and teacher, other relationships within the school – the principal, assistant principal, classmates, older and younger students, the security guard – all these people provide an integral role in supporting children and helping them thrive. The continuity of these relationships is critical for children whose lives may be frequently disrupted by trauma or loss. Without this kind of stability and continuity, children have a difficult time engaging in learning or even feeling like learning matters to them.”
One important group impacted by school actions are homeless students.“CPS has failed to provide needed support even for its most vulnerable homeless children.” Ann Aviles de Bradley added that “instability in both home and schooling environments is associated with the poorest educational outcomes.”
Approximately 18% of students impacted by school actions are Latino. NEIU’s Francisco Gaytan stated that “The complex lives of newcomer immigrant youth and Latinos often require a single, easily and regularly accessible site, where comprehensive and culturally sensitive services are available. Schools often are the only site that plays such a role in the lives of Latinos and immigrants.” Further, as one of the rare institutions that welcomes all, closing down a nearby neighborhood school would place a large burden on many immigrant Latino families when the school is quite possibly the only social service that they can access.
Many of the experts mentioned that significant cut-backs in mental health services make mass school closings even more problematic. Researchers stated thatproviding critical services for students experiencing mental health has become more difficult due to the closure of several community-based centers. Further, Illinois ranks third in the nation for cuts to mental health services and funding for community mental health services for children has been reduced by 13 percent between fiscal year 2009 and 2012. CPS has a ratio of approximately 1 social worker for every 1,000 students, which is well above the ratio recommended by the National Association of Social Workers, which is a ratio of 1:250. Similarly, elementary school counselors in CPS are only 1 to a school building and have student caseloads well beyond the American School Counselor Association’s recommended 1:250 ratio. Many of these also serve in a second clerical position as the special education case manager which severely limits the services they can provide to all students.
The efforts CPS has made so far to address these concerns have fallen far short of what our experts consider appropriate. Aviles de Bradley said, “The current whole class exercises that have been reported in some closing schools are simply inadequate to meet the myriad of complex individual needs of children and their families.”
Schmidt added, “CPS has demonstrated a disregard for the health and well being of these children and their families through its handling of the slated closures….CPS has assigned outsiders to go into each school to help bridge this transition. These are people the children do not know or trust and those people the children do know and trust are given scripts to program their communication, rather than being allowed to help the children deal with the fears and anxieties that inevitably attend such disruption in their lives. Children, parents, principals, teachers, and all the staff that make a school a community feel devalued by this impersonal and unrealistic handling of these closures.
According to Aviles de Bradley, “We must criticallyexamine and understand the potential negative outcomes, as they are not in the best interests of students, families, schools and their respective communities. This lack of planning and resources will be especially harmful to students experiencing poverty and homelessness. To minimize and ultimately eliminate the negative social-emotional impacts on students, a reconsideration of the proposed school actions must occur.
McKay-Jackson added, “When school detachment is coerced it could be likened to a traumatic event that occurs without any preparation, shattering feelings of security and promoting a feeling powerlessness and vulnerability to a potentially dangerous world. McKay-Jackson urges school leaders to involve students in their deliberations: Engaging student voice and their meaningful participation in positive decision- making also fosters social emotional development. Yet through the exclusion of student voices from the school closure conversation there has been a missed opportunity to support future school attachment. Supporting student voice does not require adults to abdicate their decision-making roles but it does invite youth to participate in joint problem solving, promoting an equity-based reform that requires participation of those who are intended to receive support and who have been most affected by inequitable policies.”
Mason’s statement for the Illinois School Counselor Association includes a detailed list of recommendations, including hiring critical staff from the closing school at the welcoming school and adding additional school counselors. She also recommends minimizing or eliminating administrative and clerical responsibilities of all school counselors so that they have the time to develop transition and adjustment plans for students from the closing and welcoming schools Suggested steps toward this would be creating a transition team at each school that would include parents, school counselors, and school social workers and using school social workers to offer positive, proactive programs to address student, family, and school community needs.
PURE’s response
Parents United for Responsible Education is grateful to all of these professionals who took the time to providetheir expertise and opinions about how Chicago’s proposed mass school closings may affect our children.
These experts’ concerns echo those of many parents who spoke out during the hearings and in other venues and events over the past months.
We have been more than disturbed by the apparent lack of attention by CPS leaders to parents’ concerns and to similar issues raised by education experts, including CPS teachers. We hope that today’s presentation by theseprofessionals will be seriously and thoughtfully considered by those leaders before making a decision that clearly has the potential to cause a great deal of harm to so many children.

Statements from child mental health experts concerned about Chicago school closings

The following statements were presented at the PURE press conference on May 21, 2013 (press release here) and shared with the Chicago Board of Education members. They include information from a variety of child development perspectives which substantiate some of the concerns raised by parents and others at the school closing hearings and in other venues and events over the past months.
Also included with the packet for the press and the Chicago Board of Education were:

John “002″ Cullerton: Part-Time President of the Senate | Reclaim Reform

John “002″ Cullerton: Part-Time President of the Senate | Reclaim Reform:


John “002″ Cullerton: Part-Time President of the Senate

John “002″ Cullerton is the Part-Time President of the Illinois Senate at $67,836.
What does he do as his full-time job?


Cullerton quiz“Cullerton serves part-time as an Illinois state senator. Fagel Haber merged with Thompson Cobern LLP in 2007, and Cullerton continues as a partner practicing in the areas of government relations, zoning, licensing, real estate tax assessment, and nonprofit law. Cullerton is a lobbyist registered with the City of Chicago, and has in the past registered as a lobbyist withCook County, Illinois. Cullerton’s clients include real estate developers, restaurants, and the National Safety Council.. Cullerton co-owns a bar in Chicago, Tavern on Rush, with Illinois State Senator James DeLeo (D-Chicago) and others.”
Source and full info HERE.

Now, what could possibly go wrong with that?
It’s legal. As a top lawmaker who wrote what is legal and not legal since 1979, he should know.