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Monday, August 13, 2018

Children learn best when engaged in the living world not on screens | Aeon Essays

Children learn best when engaged in the living world not on screens | Aeon Essays

Look up from your screen
Children learn best when their bodies are engaged in the living world. We must resist the ideology of screen-based learning

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A rooster crows and awakens my family at the farm where we are staying for a long weekend. The air is crisp, and stars twinkle in the sky as the Sun rises over the hill. We walk to the barn, where horses, cows, chickens, pigs, dogs and cats vie for our attention. We wash and replenish water bowls, and carry hay to the cows and horses. The kids collect eggs for breakfast.
The wind carries the smells of winter turning to spring. The mud wraps around our boots as we step in puddles. When we enter a stall, the pigs bump into us; when we look at the sheep, they cower together in a corner. We are learning about the urban watershed, where eggs and beef come from, and how barns were built in the 19th century with wood cauls rather than metal nails. We experience the smells of the barn, the texture of the ladder, the feel of the shovels, the vibration when the pigs grunt, the taste of fresh eggs, and the camaraderie with the farmers.
As a parent, it is obvious that children learn more when they engage their entire body in a meaningful experience than when they sit at a computer. If you doubt this, just observe children watching an activity on a screen and then doing the same activity for themselves. They are much more engaged riding a horse than watching a video about it, playing a sport with their whole bodies rather than a simulated version of it in an online game.
Today, however, many powerful people are pushing for children to spend more time in front of computer screens, not less. Philanthropists such as Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg have contributed millions of dollars to ‘personal learning’, a term that describes children working by themselves on computers, and Laurene Powell Jobs has bankrolled the XQ Super School project to use technology to ‘transcend the confines of traditional teaching methodologies’. Policymakers such as the US Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos call personalised learning ‘one of the most promising developments in K-12 education’, and Rhode Island has announced a statewide personalised learning push for all public school students. Think tanks such as the Brookings Institution recommend that Latin-American countries build ‘massive e-learning hubs that reach millions’. School administrators tout the advantages of giving all students, including those at kindergarten, personal computers.
Many adults appreciate the power of computers and the internet, and think that children should have access to them as soon as possible. Yet screen learning displaces other, more tactile ways to discover the world. Human beings learn with their eyes, yes, but also their ears, nose, mouth, skin, heart, hands, feet. The more time kids spend on computers, the less time they have to go on field trips, build model airplanes, have recess, hold a book in their hands, or talk with teachers and friends. In the 21st century, schools should not get with the times, as it were, and place children on computers for even more of their days. Instead, schools should provide children with rich experiences that engage their entire bodies.
To better understand why so many people embrace screen learning, we can turn to a classic of 20th-century French philosophy: Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s Phenomenology of Perception (1945).
According to Merleau-Ponty, European philosophy has long prioritised ‘seeing’ over ‘doing’ as a path to understanding. Plato, René Descartes, John Locke, David Hume, Immanuel Kant: each, in different ways, posits a gap between the mind and the world, the subject and the object, the thinking self and physical things. Philosophers take for granted that the mind sees things from a distance. When Descartes announced ‘I think therefore I am’, he was positing a fundamental gulf between the thinking self and the physical body. Despite the novelty of digital media, Merleau-Ponty would contend that Western thought has long assumed that the mind, not the body, is the site of thinking and learning.
According to Merleau-Ponty, however, ‘consciousness is originally not an “I think that”, but rather an “I can”’. In other words, human thinking emerges out of lived experience, and what we can do with our bodies profoundly shapes what philosophers think or scientists discover. ‘The entire universe of science is constructed upon the lived world,’ he wrote. Phenomenology of Perception aimed to help readers better appreciate the connection between the lived world and consciousness.
Philosophers are in the habit of saying that we ‘have’ a body. But as Merleau-Ponty points out: ‘I am not in front of my body, I am in my body, or rather I am my body.’ This simple correction carries important implications about learning. What does it mean to say that I am my body?
The mind is not somehow outside of time and space. Instead, the body thinks, feels, Continue reading: Children learn best when engaged in the living world not on screens | Aeon Essays


Facebook news chief Campbell Brown to media: ‘Work with Facebook or die’ / Boing Boing

Facebook news chief to media: ‘Work with Facebook or die’ / Boing Boing

Facebook news chief to media: ‘Work with Facebook or die’


The Australian reports that Facebook media relations chief Campbell Brown privately disclosed that Mark Zuckerberg is indifferent to publishers and offers the news media a simple choice: "Work with Facebook or die."
A senior Facebook executive has privately admitted Mark Zuckerberg “doesn’t care” about publishers and warned that if they did not work with the social media giant, “I’ll be holding your hands with your dying business like in a ­hospice”.
That's a strange thought, isn't it? Right down to how an attempt at intimidation is undermined its own awkward spitefulness.
Still, she (invoking he), is effectively threatening to destroy news publishers unless they comply with Facebook's vision for their future. So everyone has work to do.
Brown was hired last year after to help Facebook "smooth over its strained ties to the news media."
















But Facebook executives said they were hiring Ms. Brown for her understanding of the news industry as a onetime White House correspondent, co-anchor of “Weekend Today” and primary substitute anchor of “Nightly News” at NBC News, and prime-time anchor on CNN, which she left in 2010.
Some commentators noted Ms. Brown’s ties to the Republican donor Betsy DeVos, Mr. Trump’s nominee to lead the Department of Education. Ms. DeVos’s family foundation funds The 74, an education-focused journalism site co-founded and led by Ms. Brown.
Hiring a DeVos crony to deal with fake news and media relations quickly became the Facebook Executives Puzzled By Human Emotion trainwreck it promised to be: Brown was last in the news threatening to sue The Guardianfor breaking the Cambridge Analytica story.
Facebook news chief to media: ‘Work with Facebook or die’ / Boing Boing







Charter schools scramble to become legal as new school year nears - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Charter schools scramble to become legal as new school year nears - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Charter schools scramble to become legal as new school year nears

With the new school year just days away, hundreds of San Diego-area charter school students and their parents are waiting to see if their school will be legally allowed to exist.
For years, independent study California charter schools, many of which combine in-class and online instruction, had opened “satellite” locations outside of the school district that authorized them under the assumption that state law allowed it. Every charter school needs authorization to operate, whether it be a school district or a county education office.
These “satellite” schools were controversial because they took students — and state funding — away from districts that didn’t have a say in authorizing them. It was often easier way for such charter schools to get approved, because their authorizing school district would not be losing students to the charter school.
In 2016, an appeals court ruled that charter schools can no longer have satellite locations outside the boundaries of the authorizing school district. So charter schools that already had these satellites were forced to find ways to comply with the court decision. Many charter schools got waivers from the state that gave them about a year of extra time to do so.



In order to comply, some charter schools have simply closed satellite locations that couldn’t get authorized, had too few students or wouldn’t survive financially as their own school. That’s why Julian Charter School closed its San Diego and Alpine locations at the end of June, said Jennifer Cauzza, Julian Charter School’s executive director. Some schools have also combined locations and shuffled students around.
But mainly, charter schools have petitioned the school districts in which their satellites are located, asking them for authorization.
Charter school leaders describe it as an arduous process that has taken so long, it's beginning to spill over into the new school year. Charter school officials had to draft applications, often with as many as 1,000 or more pages, for each satellite ___location.
“If you wonder why it took so long, that’s why it took so long,” Cauzza said.
The issue frustrates charter school leaders because they have been operating schools for years, and now they’ve found themselves relying on different school districts to authorize them and let them stay open.
“It is crazy, it is complicated, and it’s sad because it was working well to begin with,” Cauzza said.
This almost became a problem for the National University Academy charter school network, which was authorized by the Lakeside Union School District but had a satellite dual language school in the Vista Unified School District, as well as other locations.
The charter school asked the Vista school board this year to authorize the Dual Language Institute, which has about 260 students.
Vista denied the application for a number of reasons, including that the charter school’s Continue reading: Charter schools scramble to become legal as new school year nears - The San Diego Union-Tribune

Big Education Ape: Court ruling limits charter schools' expansions with satellite campuses outside their territory | Northern California Record - https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2016/11/court-ruling-limits-charter-schools.html
How Goldilocks Opened a Charter School That Nobody Wanted
Big Education Ape: Satellite charter schools under fire - The San Diego Union-Tribune - https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2016/10/satellite-charter-schools-under-fire.html

Big Education Ape: Charter challenges appellate ruling to state Supreme Court - The San Diego Union-Tribune - https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2016/11/charter-challenges-appellate-ruling-to.html



How about creating schools with more purpose than test scores and letter grades? | The Lens

How about creating schools with more purpose than test scores and letter grades? | The Lens

How about creating schools with more purpose than test scores and letter grades?



I got my start in education as a Peace Corps volunteer in southeastern Ecuador. I lived and worked in a small rural community. Moya had a tiny school with about 45 students in kindergarten through sixth grade. There was one teacher and two part-time parent volunteers. It was an adobe version of the little red schoolhouse that figures in stories of the American frontier.
During the day, the children studied the basics: reading, writing and arithmetic. But they also had to work, and there was a lot to do: tend the garden, pick up the eggs, milk the cows, look after the school’s sheep and goats, keep the schoolhouse clean and tidy, help prepare breakfast and lunch. Since there was only one teacher, the older students spent time reading with the younger ones.
The students also participated in mingas. A minga is an Andean version of an Amish barn raising. The entire community would come together to tackle large tasks, from repairing irrigation canals to carving out hillside terraces for crop cultivation.
Whenever possible, the teacher tried to incorporate skills and knowledge from the curriculum into the various chores. She asked the kids to estimate the number of ripe cherries on the capulin trees, to describe the behavior of the various animals in their journals, and to divide up ingredients and portions for meals. She always challenged them to come up with the most efficient way to complete each task.

Curriculum tie-ins aside, the chores instilled a sense of responsibility and community. They helped the kids develop discipline, a work ethic, and strong habits of mind. They also nurtured increasingly important workplace skills like collaboration and communication. I noticed that the kids seemed more motivated by chores that had a direct impact on their daily lives.

When I returned to the United States and became a teacher, I tried to incorporate some of the lessons I learned in Ecuador. One of these was to make the learning relevant or purposeful.
It wasn’t easy.
My kids had little interest in the history of Louisiana, let alone the ancient world. (Maybe, I would have had more luck teaching fashion, dating, or contemporary music.) Finding connections to the real world was a challenge in itself — and then there was the need to “cover” a myriad of Common Core topics in impossibly short 50-minute periods.
Nonetheless, I tried.
I had my kids take oral histories from war veterans, write letters to the editor of the local paper, teach “lessons from the past” to younger students, and suggest policy changes to politicians (alas, mostly ignored).

Folwell Dunbar
Parents join their children to participate in school beautification days.
I was working in a private school, so I had some latitude. One time, I took a group of middle- and high-school students to clean up a nearby swamp. There was a recreational area near the highway that was littered with trash. We filled up more than a hundred garbage bags in less than a day.
Most parents embraced the field work, but when we returned to school in the late afternoon, a few met me at the gate to complain. “We don’t pay tuition for our kids to pick up trash in a &%$# swamp,” they griped! “Wouldn’t it be easier to just drain the damn thing?!”
“No,” I said, “draining is actually one of the problems.” I then rattled off a litany of reasons for protecting and preserving fragile wetlands.
“Your kids literally got their feet wet reinforcing lessons learned in the classroom,” I said. “And, they did a good deed.” (The school had experienced a minga moment.)
While my argument to clean up the swamp may have irked a few parents, the confrontation actually strengthened my resolve to make learning more purposeful.

FINDING PURPOSE

Today, whenever I visit a school as an educational consultant, I always ask the kids, “So, what are you learning today?” I immediately Continue reading: How about creating schools with more purpose than test scores and letter grades? | The Lens







Sunday, August 12, 2018

DeVos Retracts Gainful Employment Rule for For Profit Colleges | Law & Crime

DeVos Retracts Gainful Employment Rule for For Profit Colleges | Law & Crime

DeVos Just Pulled a Full Marie Antoinette And Retracted Fraud Rules Against For-Profit Colleges
 


Welp, now we’ve at least closed the circle on Betsy DeVos and for-profit colleges. She’s gone from evading questions about whether she would regulate these fraud machines to disbanding the team charged with investigating them. Now, she flat out withdrew the gainful employment rule, signaling to all that under her watchful eye, the DeVrys, the Trump Universities, and the Corinthian Colleges are free to flourish – while unwitting students and their families can simply eat cake.
The “gainful employment rule,” you may remember, is the one adopted in 2016 under the Obama administration, after several cash-cow diploma mills found themselves defending fraud lawsuits brought by swindled students. The rule prohibited these businesses from using deceptive practices to entice customers to plunk down thousands in student loan money when the corresponding “degree” wasn’t worth the expensive paper on which it was printed. Or in other words, exactly what Trump University was accused of doing. It was also the rule Senator Elizabeth Warren skewered DeVos on at DeVos’ confirmation hearing.

In the DOE’s press release issued yesterday, Secretary DeVos unctuously couched her decision to eliminate oversight as a protection for higher ed students. “Students deserve useful and relevant data when making important decisions about their education post-high school,” said U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos. “That’s why instead of targeting schools simply by their tax status, this administration is working to ensure students have transparent, meaningful information about all colleges and all programs. Our new approach will aid students across all sectors of higher education and improve accountability.”
Let me get this straight. Harvard might also be swindling students, the difference between for-profit and non-profit is meaningless, and American consumers will be better protected if there are no rules. Gotcha. It’s Betsy’s world, and we’re just living in it. That logic sounds like it may have been part of the DeVry curriculum, brought to Ms. DeVos’ attention by her right-hand man, and diploma-mill professor emeritus Julian Schmoke.
Viewed in context with the rule’s past success, DeVos’ decision is Continue reading: DeVos Retracts Gainful Employment Rule for For Profit Colleges | Law & Crime

Steven Singer: This Wall Street PAC Bankrolling Democrats Thinks Being Progressive Means Mirroring Betsy DeVos

This Wall Street PAC Bankrolling Democrats Thinks Being Progressive Means Mirroring Betsy DeVos

This Wall Street PAC Bankrolling Democrats Thinks Being Progressive Means Mirroring Betsy DeVos
If Democratic candidates want to keep the support of grassroots voters, they need to reject money from Democrats for Education Reform


Democrats for Education Reform (DFER) put out a new video about what they think it means to be an education progressive.
And by the political action committee’s definition, Betsy DeVos may be the most “progressive” education secretary ever.
She champions “public charter schools.” Just like them!
She is in favor of evaluating teachers on student test scores. Just like them!
She is a booster for “holding schools accountable” through the use of standardized tests. Just like them!
And she loves putting public tax dollars into private hands to run schools “more efficiently” by disbanding school boards, closing public debate, and choosing exactly which students get to attend privatized schools. Just like... you get the idea.
But perhaps the most striking similarity between DeVos and DFER is their methodologies.

She gives politicians bribes to do her bidding! The only difference is she pays her money mostly to Republicans while DFER pays off Democrats. But if both DeVos and DFER are paying to get would-be lawmakers to enact the same policies, what is the difference!?
Seriously, what is the difference between Betsy DeVos and Democrats for Education Reform?
Progressives in Colorado and California say it is only the word “Democrat.”
Democratic party conferences in both states passed resolutions asking DFER to stop using the name “Democrat” because the privatization lobbying firm does not represent party ideals or goals.

Why do some progressives vote third party? Because of groups like DFER.
Voters think something like—if this charter school advocacy group represents what Democrats are all about, I can’t vote Democrat. I need a new party. Hence the surge of Green and other third party votes that is blamed for hurting Democratic candidates.
The Democrats have always been a big tent party, but the canvas can’t shelter the most regressive far-right bigotry without destroying the organization’s identity as an opposition party.
The reason for the confusion is that DFER is not a grassroots organization. It is funded by Wall Street hedge fund managers.



Journey for Justice Alliance Releases Myth-Shattering Report “Failing Brown v. Board” that Exposes Deep Inequities in Public Education Across Race and Class

Home - Journey For Justice

Journey for Justice Alliance Releases Myth-Shattering Report “Failing Brown v. Board” that Exposes Deep Inequities in Public Education Across Race and Class

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 Journey for Justice Alliance Releases Myth-Shattering Report “Failing Brown v. Board” that Exposes Deep Inequities in Public Education Across Race and Class
Report examines course offerings in 12 cities revealing inequities that have remained since the civil rights movement, inspiring call from national organizations for a “new Brown v. Board”
The Journey for Justice Alliance, a national network of community-based organizations in 31 cities, released its report “Failing Brown v. Board” which illuminates just how inequitable public education remains today, largely across racial lines.  Through examining course offerings at high schools in 12 cities (and one elementary in Chicago), this report, which is backed by substantial research shows how black and brown students are denied “access to inspiration” in comparison with their white, more affluent peers.  “Failing Brown v. Board” was released on the first day of the “Poor People’s Campaign.”
“In America, inequity is ignored as children in the same city have two completely different educational experiences and the dividing line in many cases is race. Every American child and their family have the right to a high-quality neighborhood public school from grades pre-k through 12. We aren’t asking for a handout in this report, we are demanding a fair return on our tax investment,” said Jitu Brown, National Director of the Journey for Justice Alliance.  “Without access to great equitable public schools, we are failing an entire generation of students and their families solely based on the color of their skin and their socioeconomic status.”
This shattering myth report, its findings, and multiple statewide educator walkouts have pushed national and local organizers to call for a “new Brown v. Board” initiative for educational equity. On Monday morning at the steps of the Supreme Courts, the Journey for Justice Alliance, in partnership with the #WeChooseCampaign and the Alliance to Reclaim our Schools (AROS), will release the report and outline planks of the nationwide campaign.
“As parents this report is true to our lived experience.  We must have zero tolerance for inequity and demand justice for every child now,” Zakiyah Ansari, a New York public school parent and advocacy director of the Alliance for Quality Education. “We choose equity, not the illusion of school choice”
In cities across the U.S., low-income and working families are organizing to win important victories and we know that none of us can win equity in public education alone. The Journey for Justice Alliance reached out to many of the strongest organizing, civil rights, advocacy & labor groups across the country to form the #WeChoose Coalition; the NAACP, Alliance for Education Justice, American Federation of Teachers, Advancement Project, Badass Teacher’s Association, National Education Association, Institute for Democratic Education in America, Dignity in Schools Coalition, Save Our Schools, Network for Public Education and Alliance to Reclaim our Schools and the #WeChoose Campaign was born.
The #WeChoose campaign is a declaration from hundreds of thousands of parents and students in cities across the United States with a clear, yet profound message – we refute and resist corporate education policies that are inflicted upon our children without our voice.
The failure of previous administrations to respect the voices of all Americans has set the tone for this perilous moment that we are in now. We reject appointed school boards. We reject zero tolerance policies that criminalize our children. We reject mediocre corporate education interventions that are only accepted because of the race of the children served. We choose equity. We organize to build local coalitions and alliances to have the power to realize this vision. The conference will celebrate this work and build on it: We Choose Equity, Not the Illusion of School Choice!
Read more: Home - Journey For Justice




#WeChoose Campaign - Journey For Justice - https://wp.me/s9YPAH-wechoose

Study: Students’ math scores drop after using private school voucher

2017 Indiana Study — National Coalition for Public Education (NCPE)

Study: Students’ math scores drop after using private school voucher

A SUMMARY OF

IMPACT OF THE INDIANA CHOICE SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAM: ACHIEVEMENT EFFECTS FOR STUDENTS IN UPPER ELEMENTARY AND MIDDLE SCHOOL (JUNE 2017)

Publication cover image

PROGRAM OVERVIEW:

  • The study analyzed outcomes for students in grades 3-8 who used a voucher to transfer from a public to a private school during the first four years of the program (2011-12 through 2014-15 school years).

MAIN FINDINGS:

The voucher program had a negative impact on students’ academic achievement. 
  • Overall, students who used a voucher experienced an average annual loss of 0.10 standard deviations in mathematics after attending a private school compared with matched public school students.
  • Overall, students who used a voucher had no statistically meaningful overall effects in Language Arts (ELA). However, special education voucher students experience an average annual loss of 0.13 standard deviations in ELA.
Voucher students' scores in math improve after four years, but do not lead to higher scores. 
  • The negative affect on students’ math scores is worse in the first two years. By year four, students generally recoup those losses and end up with math scores on par with their peers.
  • It is difficult to accurately measure whether the students truly catch back up due to the small number of students left in the program after four years. This is because many students give up their voucher and return to public school.


Impact of the Indiana Choice Scholarship Program: Achievement Effects for Students in Upper Elementary and Middle School* - Waddington - - Journal of Policy Analysis and Management - Wiley Online Library - https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/pam.22086



Study: Students’ math scores drop after using private school voucher - The CT MirrorThe CT Mirror - https://ctmirror.org/?p=849861 on @ctmirror


Saturday, August 11, 2018

2nd BANANA: Top Posts This Week 8/11/18

Top Posts This Week



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TODAY

American Public Education Will Face Extinction Unless We Stop It | The Global Dispatch | The Global Dispatch
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Oakland's BayTech Charter School Violated Multiple State Laws | East Bay Express
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'Disaster Capitalism Strikes Again!': Puerto Rico's High Court Gives Green Light to Charter Schools, Vouchers
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All the ways Brett Kavanaugh is going to help Betsy DeVos – ThinkProgress
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Ref Is Gone: Ripples of Hope from a Resignation - LA Progressive
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Black To School With The New Book, “Teaching for Black Lives”: “Every school in the country needs this.” – I AM AN EDUCATOR
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AUG 09

The Secret Network of Black Teachers Behind the Fight for Desegregation - The Atlantic #educolor
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AUG 08

GULEN FRAUD IN OAKLAND: BayTech Charter School Under Investigation | East Bay Express
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Teachers are getting targeted anti-union emails from conservative groups | PBS NewsHour
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AUG 07

Despite LeBron’s admirable efforts, most black millionaires can’t save public education
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LeBron bankrolls I Promise School in Ohio
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Senate Democrats Want Answers From Jeff Sessions Over Repealed Memos On Racial Diversity In Schools
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LeBron James Akron school: Why it matters that I Promise is public.
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OMG: Arizona school districts and charters that pay teachers the most, least
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AUG 05

Wendy Lecker: As public education stumbles, democracy falls - StamfordAdvocate
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ESJ Capital Partners, LLC, bought four charter school campuses in Arizona, Ohio and Washington, D.C., for $45M | Charter Schools
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Top Posts This Week 8/4/18
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How Billionaires Hack Their Taxes With a Philanthropic Loophole - The New York Times
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AUG 02

School Choice is a Bamboozle a Hornswoggle a Flimflam | tultican
School Choice is a Bamboozle a Hornswoggle a Flimflam | tultican School Choice is a Bamboozle a Hornswoggle a Flimflam ACSA endorsed a candidate for California State Superintendent of Public Instruction who actively works to privatize public schools. As a participant in the Destroy Public Education (DPE) movement, he supports initiatives undermining the teaching profession and good pedagogy. Esta
LeBron’s Education Promise Needs to Become This Country’s Promise | The Nation
LeBron’s Education Promise Needs to Become This Country’s Promise | The Nation LeBron’s Education Promise Needs to Become This Country’s Promise A school funded by LeBron James in Akron, Ohio, is a beautiful example of what all our public education should look like. “ W e don’t deserve LeBron James.” This has been the drumbeat, steadily repeated on social media, ever since the greatest basketball
Destroying Public Education With Vouchers and Charters in Wisconsin + The Privatization of Puerto Rico’s Public Schools Has Begun – Betsy DeVos Is On the Job | Video Worth Watching
Destroying Public Education With Vouchers and Charters in Wisconsin Destroying Public Education With Vouchers and Charters in Wisconsin This past school year, Wisconsin taxpayers sent $250,000,000 to religious schools. Catholics received the largest slice, but Protestants, evangelicals, and Jews got their cuts. Wisconsin’s Department of Public Instruction (DPI) reveals that private Islamic school
DeVos Family Money Is All Over The News Right Now | 89.3 KPCC
DeVos Family Money Is All Over The News Right Now | 89.3 KPCC DeVos Family Money Is All Over The News Right Now From the policy of separating immigrant families, to limiting the power of labor unions, to naming the next justice of the U.S. Supreme Court, this summer the DeVos family name has been all over the news. Over the years, the parents, in-laws and husband of U.S. Education Secretary Betsy

AUG 01

New report uncovers systemic failure by California charter schools to meet basic obligations of transparency and accountability - Public Advocates
New report uncovers systemic failure by California charter schools to meet basic obligations of transparency and accountability - Public Advocates New Report Uncovers Systemic Failure by California Charter Schools to Meet Local Control Obligations A new report by Public Advocates Inc. uncovers a massive failure on the part of California charter schools to be transparent about how they spend milli
Privatization and Segregation of U.S. Public Education Endangers Democracy - BTL
Privatization and Segregation of U.S. Public Education Endangers Democracy - BTL Privatization and Segregation of U.S. Public Education Endangers Democracy Interview with Noliwe Rooks, author and director of American 

Our Public Schools, Our Democracy: Our Fight for the Future - https://events.bizzabo.com/NPE18INDY on @Bizzabo