Latest News and Comment from Education

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Charters grapple with admissions policies, question how public they should be - The Washington Post

Charters grapple with admissions policies, question how public they should be - The Washington Post:

Charters grapple with admissions policies, question how public they should be






At Achievement Prep, the test scores of low-income African American children rival those at wealthy neighborhood schools. Over at D.C. Prep, middle school graduates routinely go on to top high schools. And at Latin American Montessori Bilingual, the combination of instructional approaches is so attractive to parents that more than 800 names filled the school’s waiting list for pre-kindergarten classes last spring.
Such high-performing public charter schools in the District are in constant demand. But their policies of limiting new enrollment to certain grades and times of the year have been causing their class sizes to dwindle to less than half of their original size by the upper grades.
The enrollment cutoffs — which leave seats at some of the city’s most successful urban schools empty — put the charters in the middle of a debate that has divided advocates across the country.
Some argue that limiting student mobility is crucial to building the kind of routines and school culture that enable success and offer students the chance at a challenging, college-preparatory education. Others say it’s not fair for publicly funded schools to have a key advantage in bolstering academic performance that neighborhood schools don’t have: the ability to limit the number of underprepared transfer students they serve while focusing on more stable students who are better able to meet the schools’ higher expectations.
With 8,500 students on wait lists for public charter schools in the District last spring, an increase of 18 percent from the previous year, many wonder whether it makes sense to limit the number of students who can access the Charters grapple with admissions policies, question how public they should be - The Washington Post:

Jitu Brown in Camden | WeArePCAPS

Jitu Brown in Camden | WeArePCAPS:

Jitu Brown in Camden

This is a speech given by Jitu Brown, from Journey for Justice and a leader of the recent hunger strike to stop the closure of Dyett High School In Chicago and make it a community school. Jitu is speaking to parents, teachers and community members in Camden where a growing coalition is fighting for local control and against the privatization of Camden’s schools. The speech is in 3 parts owing to the time limits on youtube.
We hope to be hosting an event with Jitu and possibly some other members of the hunger strike late next month.




Jitu Brown in Camden | WeArePCAPS:

Public School Shakedown - A Project of The Progressive | The Progressive

Public School Shakedown - A Project of The Progressive | The Progressive:

PUBLIC SCHOOL SHAKEDOWN - A PROJECT OF THE PROGRESSIVE

A fundamental struggle for democracy is going on behind the scenes in statehouses around the country, as a handful of wealthy individuals and foundations pour money into efforts to privatize the public schools. 
The Progressive launched Public School Shakedown in September 2013 to pull back the curtain and reveal what is at stake—to follow the money and expose the privatizers—but also to celebrate the resistance and the hard work of people on the front lines of public education.  Our goal is for all parents, teachers, and concerned citizens to understand what is going on and connect with each other to stick up for schools.
The “Progressive Education Fellows,” is an online gathering of twelve prominent, advocates, activists, thinkers, and writers in the progressive education movement. Throughout 2015 we'll be posting submissions from them on all things public education and democracy. Read more here.


https://www.flickr.com/photos/59937401@N07/5857473535
Rome wasn’t burnt in a day. There are several stations on the way to schoolmageddon.
Topics: 

Weren't parents told when they enrolled their students in the charter schools that the schools might close at any time pending a Supreme Court decision?
Topics: 

If you have the misfortune to teach at a school that thinks there's something useful to learn from PSAT-ing every single student, then, well, it sucks to be you.
Topics: 
- See more at: http://www.progressive.org/section/public-school-shakedown-project-progressive#sthash.Pq9A0rqp.dpuf




Reading & Math Scores Fall -- Obama Education Agenda’s Bad Report Card | National Review Online

Reading & Math Scores Fall -- Obama Education Agenda’s Bad Report Card | National Review Online:
A Train Wreck for Reading and Math Scores



by FREDERICK M. HESS & JENN HATFIELD 


On Tuesday, the National Center for Education Statistics reported that the nation’s reading and math scores were down almost across the board on the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). This marked a striking shift from a quarter-century of steady increases on the NAEP, which is informally known as “the nation’s report card” and has been given pretty much every other year since 1990. Administered to a sample of fourth- and eighth-grade students in every state, the NAEP has come to serve as the gold standard for gauging the performance of U.S. students.


The 2015 results were dismal. Eighth-grade reading and math scores fell, as did fourth-grade math scores. Fourth-grade reading scores stayed flat — the closest thing to a bright spot one could find. In 22 states, eighth-graders did worse on the math test than they did in 2013; no state saw its score improve. In eighth-grade reading, scores were down in eight states and up in one. Overall, just 36 percent of fourth-graders and 34 percent of eighth-graders were deemed proficient in reading. In math, the figures were 40 percent of fourth-graders and 33 percent of eighth-graders. Viewed against more than two decades of prior scores, these results can only be described as a train wreck. They were so disturbing mostly because we’ve gotten so used to steady improvement in NAEP scores. Never before had fourth-grade math scores declined. Eighth-grade reading scores hadn’t fallen since 1996. Fourth-grade reading scores haven’t dipped since 2003, or eighth-grade reading since 2005. In other words, the widespread carnage on display this year is wholly unprecedented. The Obama administration, which has bragged about the efficacy of its federally fueled school-reform agenda, immediately moved to aggressive damage control. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan explained that the declines should in no way raise questions about Obama-promoted education policies such as Common Core or the administration’s Race to the Top program. “Big change never happens overnight,” Duncan said. “I’m confident that over the next decade, if we stay committed to this change, we will see historic improvements.” Duncan’s insistence that it will take a while for Obama policies to bear fruit would be more compelling if he had not — just last week— already credited Obama policies such as the School Improvement Grant program with boosting the nation’s graduation rate. Or if, two years ago, he hadn’t credited administration policies for 2013’s NAEP gains. At the time, he said, “All eight states that had implemented the state-crafted Common Core State Standards at the time of the 2013 NAEP assessment showed improvement . . . and none of the eight states had a decline in scores.” He added, “Tennessee, D.C., and Hawaii have done some really tough, hard work, and it’s showing some pretty remarkable dividends” on the NAEP results.

Read more at: http://www.nationalreview.com/article/426222/reading-math-national-assessment-educational-progress-arne-duncan

Stadium Developers give big to Luke Bronin – Sarah Bronin responsible for approving big changes that Stadium Developers want - Wait What?

Stadium Developers give big to Luke Bronin – Sarah Bronin responsible for approving big changes that Stadium Developers want - Wait What?:

Stadium Developers give big to Luke Bronin – Sarah Bronin responsible for approving big changes that Stadium Developers want






The City of Hartford Planning and Zoning Commission will hold a special meeting on Wednesday, November 4, 2015 at 260 Constitution Plaza, Plaza Level Conference Room, Hartford, CT 06103 at 6:00 p.m. on the developers plan to modify the DoNo Hartford Development Project.
Sara Bronin, wife of Harford mayoral candidate Luke Bronin, is the Chair of the Hartford Planning and Zoning Commission.
The contact between the City of Hartford and the developers of the Dunkin Donut Baseball Stadium and the entire DONO Downtown North Development Project required that construction on Phase II (Parcel E), which includes the desperately needed north-end grocery store, was to begin no later than November 1, 2015.
However, the developers failed to fulfill that responsibility and now want permission from the City of Hartford to delay and modify the construction plan related to Phase II (Parcel E).
The conflict of interest that Sara (and Luke) Bronin face is obvious.
As reported in a Wait, What? post on Wednesday, October 28, 2015 entitled, Bronin reports another $174,000 collected with seven days to go until Election Day, the Greenwich native who moved to Hartford and new wants to be Hartford’s next mayor revealed in his latest campaign finance report that he had raised another $11,750 from the developers of Hartford’s new Dunkin Donuts Yard Goats Baseball Stadium and the DONO Project.
The latest bundle of stadium money comes in addition to the thousands of dollars Bronin had already collected from those whose who are directly benefiting financially from the Stadium Developers give big to Luke Bronin – Sarah Bronin responsible for approving big changes that Stadium Developers want - Wait What?:

PUBLIC EDUCATION ARE WE WINNING? | Jacobin

Are We Winning? | Jacobin:

Are We Winning?

The Obama administration’s new rhetoric on testing shows the tide may be turning against corporate education reformers.






ast year, students in Washington DC sat for exactly 6,750 tests. The average American student takes approximately 112 tests between pre-K and twelfth grade (yes, pre-K, when one’s senses of space, self, and time are still developing).
Those figures are out this week from the DC-based Council of the Great City School (CGCS), which conducted a comprehensive two-year study documenting the types, uses, and frequency of the city’s standardized tests. Decades into a relentlessly ambitious program of testing and accountability for America’s school children, we finally have data on the data.
Produced by an organization whose corporate advisory group counts Apple and Pearson (hardly radical anti-testing voices) among its members, the report finds that state tests are redundant, with multiple tests being administered at the same time to evaluate the same things; that they “do not tell us everything that’s important about a child”; and that they are being used for purposes for which they were not designed.
In other words, the report confirms what parents and educators have been saying about standardized testing for decades.
The report’s authors recommend revising the US Department of Education’s policy of tying test scores to teacher evaluations and affirm the need to address racial, cultural, and linguistic bias in tests. For example, they suggest a one-year testing exemption for recently arrived English Language Learners, who are presently assessedduring the first round of exams after entering school.
In anticipation of the report’s release, Secretary of Education Arne Duncan — a longtime cheerleader for standardized tests who made linking teacher evaluations to student performance a condition for receiving Race to the Top funds — asked Congress on Saturday to “reduce over-testing” and put a cap on test-taking time.
“I still have no question that we need to check at least once a year to make sure our kids are on track or identify areas where they need support,” Duncan said. “But I can’t tell you how many conversations I’m in with educators who are understandably stressed and concerned with an overemphasis on testing in some places and how much testing and test prep are taking from instruction.”
Duncan’s announcement should not be seen as a surrender, an about-face, or a dramatic policy shift from President Obama’s Department of Education, as some corporate reform opponents have hoped. Duncan has called for making tests more efficient and more effective before, all the while affirming the underlying values of choice, competition, and self-discipline that orient our public education system today.
Moreover, Duncan’s proposed cap — limiting testing time to 2 percent of instructional time — does not represent a significant decrease from the current level. The issue is not just the hours students spend physically taking exams, but the ethos that underpins it.
When high-stakes, hyper-competitive demonstrations of individual competence are the method of determining what and how teachers should teach — and assessing what students have learned — how likely is it that cooperative learning, problem-based teaching, and portfolio assessment will occur in the classroom?
On the first day of school this year, when I asked my classes of ten-year-olds what their aspirations were for the school year, many replied that they wanted to do well on state tests. Before giving the high-stakes exams, several colleagues warned me that kids might cry or vomit (as they did last year).
Even if the adults are not willing to be honest about the logic of testing, the children understand what’s at stake in a system where schools serve as an occupational sorting ground, separating the Are We Winning? | Jacobin:

Seattle Teachers Strike for the Public Schools Seattle Students Deserve | CLASSROOM STRUGGLE

Seattle Teachers Strike for the Public Schools Seattle Students Deserve | CLASSROOM STRUGGLE:

Seattle Teachers Strike for the Public Schools Seattle Students Deserve



Back to school time for most communities across the U.S. puts students and teachers back in the classroom charting a course for the next ten or so months. Yet one collective of courageous educators put their community building exercises on hold to form picket lines — collectively withholding their labor for the schools Seattle students deserve.
In the days before the school year was to begin, the Seattle Education Association (SEA) (for the first time in thirty years) unanimously voted to strike for fair compensation, secure working conditions and a decrease in high-stakes testing. SEA teachers also demanded the establishment of site-based teams to address the gross inequities and institutional racism for which the Seattle Public School system is notorious. The strike lasted six days before being suspended on Weds Sept. 16, 2015; school started  across the district on Thursday Sept. 17.  (For more on the strike check out the post of the eleven reasons why the Seattle Teachers Strike was important in the struggle for quality public education.)
No mincing of words, the strike is the number one tool teachers have at our disposal in the interests of our students, their families and the entire bargaining unit. It is what the Seattle Teachers Strike for the Public Schools Seattle Students Deserve | CLASSROOM STRUGGLE: 



Peg with Pen: Digital Badging & Hickenlooper: The Emperor Has No Clothes

Peg with Pen: Digital Badging & Hickenlooper: The Emperor Has No Clothes:

Digital Badging & Hickenlooper: The Emperor Has No Clothes






I am spending my Halloween morning reading through all the docs related to a digital badge grant application here in Colorado (however this is moving nationwide so I recommend everyone take a look).
Beware the "Commission" - as they will be referred to in the near future. Our corporate governor Hickenlooper has signed an executive order for creating the Business-Experiential Learning Commission. The Commission will launch the Digital Badges initiative statewide, more or less creating a complete overhaul of our public education system and community colleges by tying data to the needs and future profits of the corporate community using our statewide longitudinal database to funnel your child's data.

The data will be used to document your child's skills (including "soft" skills) and the data will guide the curriculum of the public schools based on the market's demands. Note that the term "competencies" is used as you review the executive order - this goes back to the competency-based learning - therefore competency-based badges. Also note that there is not a SINGLE EDUCATOR appointed to the Commission.

I'd be lying if I didn't say this has completely overwhelmed me. I knew digital badging was coming. But to see it all in writing and to know what we must fight and where we are headed Peg with Pen: Digital Badging & Hickenlooper: The Emperor Has No Clothes:

CURMUDGUCATION: Reformsters and Dinosaurs

CURMUDGUCATION: Reformsters and Dinosaurs:

Reformsters and Dinosaurs




Last night my wife and I watched our newly acquired copy of Jurassic World, a movie that doesn't have an original idea in its head, but is still plenty of fun to watch. Even more than when we saw it in the theater, I'm struck by how the themes of education reform are laced through the film, and though I wrote about the movie at the time, I want a do-over, to expand on what I originally noticed.

Virtually every reformster foible is on display in this movie.

Our leading lady is introduced with a big Marked for Redemption sign on her forehead. She refers to the animals in the park as "assets," things rather than living beings, and she prefers to manage based on data and spreadsheets-- management by screen. She follows procedure rather than listening to her expert.

The movies baddest human is Vincent D'Onofrio's ex-military corporate tool. He's most immediately marked as a bad guy with his speech about competition, and how that's the road to improvement. What I noticed more clearly this time through is that he likes the idea of competition because he believes that he will come out on top-- competition is important because it's how other things are brought up to snuff.

Paired with that belief in competition is yet another rejection of expertise. Chris Pratt (playing 
CURMUDGUCATION: Reformsters and Dinosaurs:


2014-15 Alabama Teacher of the Year Abruptly Resigns | deutsch29

2014-15 Alabama Teacher of the Year Abruptly Resigns | deutsch29:

2014-15 Alabama Teacher of the Year Abruptly Resigns

Ann Marie Corgill
Ann Marie Corgill


On October 29, 2015, as AL.com reports, the 2014-15 Alabama Teacher of the Year, Ann Marie Corgill, quit her job.



She is state certified to teach primary through third grade. Corgill is also National Board Certified to teach through seventh grade.
Corgill began the 2015-16 school year teaching second grade but was moved to fifth grade.
The state says that she now needs to renew her state certification to include teaching fifth grade.
But here’s the kicker:
When she was chosen as state teacher of the year, Corgill was teaching fourth grade– outside of her state certification.
On October 29, 2015, Corgill decided she had had enough and tended her resignation. Here is an excerpt:
After 21 years of teaching in grades 1-6, I have no answers as to why this is a problem now, so instead of paying more fees, taking more tests and proving once again that I am qualified to teach, I am resigning. …
Please know that I wanted to give my all and share my expertise with Birmingham City Schools. …
In order to attract and retain the best teachers, we must feel trusted, valued and treated as professionals. It is my hope that my experience can inform new decisions, policies and procedures to make Birmingham City Schools a place everyone wants to work and learn.
Corgill has over 20 years of teaching experience, much of it in Alabama, in grades 1 2014-15 Alabama Teacher of the Year Abruptly Resigns | deutsch29:



On October 29, 2015, Louisiana state superintendent John White released the 2014-15 school performance scores for Louisiana high schools enrolling grades 9 – 12.
In a story about the release, Danielle Dreilinger of nola.com included this table on the results (source: Louisiana Department of Education) (Click image to enlarge):
SPS 2015 HS
If one compares the percentages of A though D letter grades across the three years in the table (2012-13 to 2014-15), one sees that the percentage of B, C, and D schools is lower in 2014-15, and the percentage of A schools is notably higher.
Now, here’s the trick:
As Dreilinger reports,
Superintendent John White said 2015 should be considered a baseline year. Over the next 10 years, he plans gradually to raise the standard for what’s considered an A.
What White wants the public to believe is that receiving an A will become progressively more difficult.
But he just inflated the number of A high schools.
So, when the standard for an A high school is “raised” in future years, White is positioned to ride the optical illusion of rigor as that A-school percentage does nothing more than return to its pre-inflated percentage.
He just bought himself roughly 13 percentage points from the 2013-14 percentage of A-graded high schools (10.1%) to the 2014-15 percentage of A-graded high schools (23.0%).
Again, that means a 13-percent staged opportunity to lower the number of Louisiana high schools receiving A’s during upcoming years, call it “raising standards,” but Louisiana’s 2014-15 High School Letter Grades… So Many A’s….

The Parents’ Dilemma: What Should My School Do about New Technologies | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice

The Parents’ Dilemma: What Should My School Do about New Technologies | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice:

The Parents’ Dilemma: What Should My School Do about New Technologies





Sixty-seven percent of parents in a recent survey agreed with this statement: “I don’t mind my child spending more screen time if he or she is learning.”  And in another survey of parents, 67 percent said that “incorporating more technology in the classroom” is  a “high priority.” So where is the dilemma?
The conflict in perceptions arises over the one-third of the parents in one survey disagreeing with the statement: “I don’t mind my child spending more screen time if he or she is learning.” And a similar percentage in the other one responding that more classroom technology is a low, not a high, priority.  Within that one-third of dissenters, is where the high value of students using devices for their lessons comes into play rubbing up against another prized value of children and youth employing non-screen devices during school to learn since those very same kids are on their varied screens once they leave school and come home. And it is this tension between these values that wracks the one-third of dissenters in these surveys.
In this post I want to go behind the survey numbers and listen to Yalda Uhls,* a parent who advocates sensible use of new technologies in classrooms given the available research.
Many parents are unsure about the best path to technological modernization. When my children were in elementary school, our parent association held many tense meetings about the best technology plan for the school. The parents argued for months. The many valid and important questions included:
1.     Our children already spend too much time outside of school with media; is it really necessary for them to do their homework and school reading on these devices?
2.     If educators focus too much on technology in the classroom, what other The Parents’ Dilemma: What Should My School Do about New Technologies | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice:

The NAEP Scores: It doesn’t look like the “education reform” policies are working | Seattle Education

The NAEP Scores: It doesn’t look like the “education reform” policies are working | Seattle Education:

The NAEP Scores: It doesn’t look like the “education reform” policies are working

…and much to the detriment of millions of students who have spent most of their school years slogging through it.
bill-gates (1)
From the National Education Policy Center:
BOULDER, CO (October 28, 2015) – This morning’s release of results from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) reports a dip in scores, according to multiple sources. These lower grades on the Nation’s Report Card are not good news for anyone, but they are particularly bad news for those who have been vigorously advocating for “no excuses” approaches — standards-based testing and accountability policies like No Child Left Behind. Such policies follow a predictable logic: (a) schools are failing; and (b) schools will quickly and somewhat miraculously improve if we implement a high-stakes regime that makes educators responsible for increasing students’ test scores.
To be sure, the sampling approach used by NAEP and the lack of student-level data prohibit direct causal inferences about specific policies. Although such causal claims are made all the time, they are not warranted. It is not legitimate to point to a favored policy in Massachusetts and validly claim that this policy caused that state to do well, or to a disfavored policy in West Virginia and claim that it caused that state to do poorly.
However, as Dr. Bill Mathis and I explained eight months ago in an NEPC Policy Memo, it is possible to validly assert, based in part on NAEP trends, that the promises of education’s test-driven reformers over the past couple decades have been unfulfilled. The potpourri of education “reform” policy has not moved the needle—even though reformers, from Bush to Duncan, repeatedly assured us that it would.
This is the tragedy. It has distracted policymakers’ attention away from the extensive research showing that, in a very meaningful way, achievement is caused by opportunities to learn. It has diverted them from the truth that the achievement gap is caused by the opportunity gap. Those advocating for today’s policies have pushed policymakers to The NAEP Scores: It doesn’t look like the “education reform” policies are working | Seattle Education:




The Black Box of charter school funding and the disastrous results | Seattle Education

The Black Box of charter school funding and the disastrous results | Seattle Education:

The Black Box of charter school funding and the disastrous results

charter school oversight




From PR Watch:
“The waste of taxpayer money—none of us can feel good about,” Education Secretary Arne Duncan told the Appropriations Subcommittee on Labor, Health & Human Services and Education just last month.
Yet, he is calling for a 48% increase in the U.S. Department of Education’s (ED) quarter-billion-dollar-a-year ($253.2 million) program designed to create, expand, and replicate charter schools—an initiative repeatedly criticized by the Office of the Inspector General (OIG) for suspected waste and inadequate financial controls.
In late 2014, CMD submitted a total of 33 Freedom of Information Act requests to ED for information about how taxpayer money was being spent and monitored since 2007, covering some of the expenditures under both Republican and Democratic presidencies and congresses.
Only a handful of those FOIA requests have been fully responded to by ED, but those responses shed new light on how widespread the problems are with how charter school money is being managed—or, more accurately, mismanaged and not adequately monitored by federal and state government oversight agencies.
Notably, ED could not provide the public with a current list of all the state authorizers of charters, and it has never published a record of which charter schools received federal tax dollars, because it does not track that information at all, apparently. Its charter school rep urged CMD to contact a private organization, the National Association of Charter School Authorizers (NACSA)—which has no obligation to provide such information—to obtain a list of the authorizers approved to redirect American taxes.
But NACSA is a private association that only oversees around “half of the nation’s 6,000 charter schools.” It has no governmental authority over charter school authorizers in the states that operate largely outside of control by State Education Agencies (SEAs). And The Black Box of charter school funding and the disastrous results | Seattle Education:

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: R.I. P. Alex Poinsett

Mike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: R.I. P. Alex Poinsett:

R.I. P. Alex Poinsett



I'm deeply saddened by news of the passing of old friend and renowned journalist/author, Alex Poinsett at age 89.

Poinsett spent three decades as Ebony Magazine's senior editor. He was author of five books: “Black Power Gary Style: The Making of Mayor Richard Gordon Hatcher,” and “Walking with Presidents:  Louis Martin and the Rise of Political Power.” He received the 1999 University of Michigan Book Award for his work.

He also wrote extensively about Chicago's inner-city schools and communities.

I met Alex back 1996 when he interviewed me for some stories he was writing about the small schools movement. Later we traveled together to South Africa to look at schools and the emerging post-apartheid educational system.

Here's a piece Alex wrote for Catalyst in 1996 about DuSable High School's attempt to restructure into small schools.

DuSable’s 8-year journey toward small schoolsMike Klonsky's SmallTalk Blog: R.I. P. Alex Poinsett:

California Indian Voice in Schools…. Long Overdue | Cloaking Inequity

California Indian Voice in Schools…. Long Overdue | Cloaking Inequity:

California Indian Voice in Schools…. Long Overdue





Imagine your reaction if your elementary aged child came home from school and announced that in order to get a passing grade in a class that they will have to construct a model that recreates the Twin Towers while under attack. Certainly, your sensibilities as with most of us who experienced the horror, the sadness, and the anger of the 9/11 attack would be offended by such an expectation. For those with any leanings of national unity the assignment strikes as an insult to our identity. As a nation, we honor the lives of those we lost and those who gave their lives to save others. We do not hint nor imbed in the minds and hearts of our children that the act, itself, is cause for celebration. The symbol of destruction is not commemorated.
Nonetheless, every year across schools in California, children are required to recreate a California Mission and, often across the country, are expected to flex their artistic abilities as they put crayon to construction paper in portrayal of the three ships that sailed across the Atlantic in 1492. The Spanish Missions and the three ships are symbols of Spanish Imperialism. In the psyche of most U.S. Americans, these symbols may be innocuous, yet, to millions of people who are of indigenous ancestry, they represent acts just as injurious to our psyche as the images of the twin towers while under attack.
Trust and respect of the classroom teacher are major requisites to the teacher-student relationship. If a child feels safe in their learning environment, then they are more likely to learn from their teacher. Once this relationship is compromised, however, it can be difficult for the teacher to regain a child’s trust and respect once the child has psychologically withdrawn in order to safeguard their spirit. In the end, people will not learn from someone who they do not trust.
Many in the teaching ranks have recognize that when curriculum reflects, embraces, and celebrates a position that brought genocide to millions, California Indian Voice in Schools…. Long Overdue | Cloaking Inequity: