KYE- NYS Senators John J. Flanagan and Ken LaValle

Way back in July, before Dr. Rella became a celebrity, before we called for John King’s firing, and before we rallied for public ed, we announced a new series of posts that we would be writing this year.  That series would be broken into two parts.  One part titled “Know Your Friends” (KYF) and one titled “Know Your Enemies” (KYE).  The first post of the series was a “Know Your Friends” detailing a dear friend of public education, Diane Ravitch.  Today we pull back the curtain on our first “Know Your Enemies” post.

Our first KYE post is a special two for one edition featuring two of our most local politicians, New York State Senators John J. Flanagan and Ken LaValle.  Each of these state senators represent parts of the Comsewogue School District.  Each of these politicians received one of Dr. Rella’s letters regarding the scores of the NYS Common Core tests.  Each of these senators could not be bothered to show up to the rally because they do not support the will of their constituents and the rally message “Students, Not Scores”.

We will discuss LaValle first.  He issued this statement the day before Saturday’s #SNSRally.  There are a few problems with this statement…

I met with those parents, listened to their concerns,  and also met with representatives of the State’s Education Department.

He chose not to meet with any actual teachers who, you know, proctored the exams and teach the content the students are responsible for?!  Surely those reps from NYSED included the reformy John King and others of his ilk… people who are selling NY State’s public education system to the highest bidder.

I agree that the implementation of the Common Core could have been better handled

Perhaps LaValle meant. “It could have been handled better.  But we were really in a rush to get this system in place so that we can start firing teachers sooner rather than later.  If it hurts the children in the process, so be it… I have a political agenda and I am not going to let common sense stand in the way of it!”

The bill also requires the Commissioner of the State Education Department to report, annually to the Legislature about: the effectiveness of Common Core state tests in enhancing student learning and performance

The commissioner already tells us that our Common-Core assessments are “very high quality”.  I am just dying to hear his report to the legislature.

Senator LaValle, who also supported the tax cap that has crippled New York State schools, is a clear enemy of public education.  He is from the 1st Senate District.  He will likely run for re-election again next fall.  Vote him out.

Now onto John J. Flanagan.  Senator Flanagan, representing the 2nd Senate District, also chairs the New York State Senate Standing Committee on Education.  No wonder public education is a mess.  He also was a recipient of Dr. Rella’s letter.  While LaValle issued a cop-out statement, Flanagan didn’t even bother.  Maybe he was busy basking in the glow of his “Pet Lemon Law“.  He did contact Rella privately.  You can read between the lines to figure out how that went.

Senator Flanagan has known ties to ALEC.  You can read about their involvement with the Common Core to get an idea about where Senator Flanagan’s education agenda stands.

Additionally, the PJSTA knows from it’s own personal experience that Senator John J. Flanagan is no friend of ours.

A little while back PJSTA President Beth Dimino went to Flanagan’s office with the rest of the Suffolk NYSUT contingency during a NYSUT Committee of 100 event.  This was right after the Comsewogue cap budget failed to get 60%.  During the meeting Dimino confronted Flanagan about the fact that he supported the tax cap.  She told him that as a New York State Senator that represents Comsewogue and as the head of New York State Senate Standing Committee on Education that he was directly responsible for the fact that we would have to eliminate programs, have larger class sizes, lay off teachers and reconfigure our elementary schools, even though 59% of the voters didn’t want these things to happen.  She was respectful in her presentation, though in typical Dimino fashion she was passionate and didn’t sugar coat anything.  He was not pleased with what she had to say or the way that she spoke to him.  At the end of the meeting Dimino went up to him and when he shook her hand she presented him with a gift.  She gave him one of these pins…

The pin Dimino gave to Flanagan.

Mrs. Dimino told him that the gift was a pin from Comsewogue and the PJSTA and that she hoped he would wear it.  Flanagan was furious.  He proceeded to complain about her to a NYSUT official and then he called a Comsewogue School District official.  Flanagan told the NYSUT official what she said and demanded that Dimino needed speak to him in a more deferential tone in the future.  He asked the district official to “get control of” Dimino.  The individual told Flanagan that if he had actually knew Dimino he would know that no one was going to control her!

So please make sure that when speaking to King Senator Flanagan you are deferential enough.  He is after all an extremely important guy.  He will even tell you so himself.

As the chairman of the New York State Senate Standing Committee on Education, Flanagan will be holding hearings throughout New York State in the coming months to review the impact and effectiveness of recent education reforms.  Of course he could skip the hearings and just walk into any school and a teacher could tell him how destructive these education “reforms” have been.  The first hearing is scheduled to be right here on Long Island.  His office informed me that the hearing will take place during the second week in September and is by invite only.  By waiting until the school year has started Flanagan has a built in excuse not to invite many real teachers to the hearing.  That would be a disaster of course because then he wouldn’t get to hear what he wants to hear.  Holding these hearings without real educators is akin to seeking medical advice from your dog.  But we already know that public education is a rigged game and John J. Flanagan is making sure that he does everything he can to rig it in the favor billionaires, corporations, and potential big money donors.

Senator Flanagan, like Senator LaValle will likely be running for re-election again in 2014.  He too is an enemy of public education.  He too should be voted out.

Everyone thinks John King should resign!… and other assorted notes

Our friend Diane Ravitch today called for the resignation of New York State Education Commissioner John King.  Citing the harm King has done to children and educators, Ravitch is calling on all concerned parents, educators, and citizens of New York State to contact the New York State Board of Regents to demand the resignation of John King.  Regent Roger Tilles represents Long Island.  Merryl Tisch is the chancellor at large.  Tell them how you feel about the harm done to your students, your own children, and your profession.

Here is one teacher’s letter.

Assemblyman Steve Englebright says that King should resign.

Reality Based Educator had this write up about Tisch and King last week.

Commissioner John King

 

 

An Interview with Dr. Joseph Rella

We were
fortunate enough to grab a few thoughts from Dr. Rella on his
recent celebrity, his interaction with our elected officials,
mainstream media’s creative filtering, and most importantly, what
we can do to continue to stand up for public education.

Dr. Rella

PJSTA: You obviously
couldn’t have imagined that your letter to elected officials would
go viral as it did. When you sat down to write it what were
you hoping to be able to accomplish?

RELLA:
Last Thursday, I wrote a letter to each of our state
legislators in light of the release of the test
scores. I also wrote a letter to our parents in
anticipation of the avalanche of negative press and press releases
from the State – lots of spin and magical thinking. I
posted them on our district
website Thursday evening. On a normal weekend
in early August, it would get about 30
hits. By Friday morning I was getting emails
from all over Long Island, California, Louisiana, Indonesia,
etc. Apparently, my words have found resonance beyond
Comsewogue.
PJSTA: What has surprised
you most about the response to the letter?

RELLA: There’s
one common theme. It was expressed best by a
teacher:
I am an elementary teacher in the Plainview
School District for almost 30 years. I cried when I read your
letter. It was such a relief to read that someone influential (like
yourself) in a school district gets it!
Thanks for being so “right-on” in your
appraisal of the current testing situation and for speaking so
eloquently for me.
Most appreciatively,
I cried when I read her
email!
PJSTA: When did you realize
that it was going to be a rallying point for groups who support
public education?

RELLA: By the
weekend people from around the Island – more
correctly, teachers, from around the Island
were emailing and calling. Teachers who have
set up major blogs, etc.
PJSTA: Which elected
officials did you write to?

RELLA: Our three
local legislators, Senators LaValle and Flanagan
and Assemblyman Englebright.
PJSTA: Have they all
responded to you? If so, what have their responses
been?

RELLA: I spoke
with all three. They understood my
points.
PJSTA: When you say they
understand your point, are they in agreement with you? Did
they express to you whether or not they are supportive of the
Common Core and it’s implementation or is it something that they
oppose?
RELLA: Let
me phrase it this way. Steve Engelbright said that
he supports the views I expressed in my letter. He
said he would be proud to stand next to me in the “public square”
and do just that. He’s coming on
Saturday. I’m proud to know him.
PJSTA: Why should people
attend Saturday’s rally?
RELLA:
The Common Core implementation and testing is hurting
children. We need to stop it now. We need to
fix it now. If it can’t be fixed – we need to SCRAP
IT!
STOP IT – FIX IT – or SCRAP
IT!

PJSTA: What would make the
rally a success in your eyes?
RELLA: We’re
going to need hundreds of thousands of emails, tweets, etc. to get
to the Governor, Commissioner, Regents, and the legislature.
The rally last June had over 10,000 people – it didn’t get a single
word of coverage down here. The traditional media is
OUT. The power of social media is the way we will communicate
with those hundreds of thousands. In fact, that’s why I’m
doing this here, on the PJSTA blog.
Channel 12’s editorial director was looking to
speak with me. They’re done. The filtering is too much
for me. Last Sunday’s NEWSDAY had a
two sentence quote from my letter. Given the tone of the
article, it looked like I was saying: “I can’t understand why so
many of our kids failed.” I can perfectly understand
it. The Commissioner told us last fall that it would happen,
he designed a test to make it happen, and then it happened.
I’m done with them.
PJSTA: What can people do
after the rally? What is the next step?
RELLA: Contact
that group above – weekly! An email or a tweet is no big
deal. We’ll probably have a “day” to do it en masse.
Numbers matter. The first question I was asked by one of our
legislators was: “How many emails did you
get?” With apologies to Will Shakespeare: They have
taught us well but we “will better the
instruction.”
PJSTA: Have you now
eclipsed Clinton Kelly as the most famous
person from Comsewogue?
RELLA:
LOL.
PJSTA: Any final words or
thoughts?
RELLA: WE (ALL of
us collectively) ARE THE ONLY ONES WHO CAN GET THIS
DONE. Up until now, no group has gotten it done – NOT
the educational leadership – schoolboards, superintendents,
administrators – NOT the unions – NYSUT, UFT, AFT, NOT the
parents. NOT our State representatives. ONLY
COLLECTIVELY DO WE HAVE A SHOT AT DOING THIS. Also, keep
in mind that none of the rhetoric used in the past has
worked. Time to try something
different

No one is going to help
us – EXCEPT ALL OF US TOGETHER

Thanks again to Dr. Rella for taking time out of his busy schedule
to provide us with his thoughts. We are looking forward to
throngs of people at Saturday’s rally. Just a reminder it
will be at Comsewogue High School at 12:00 pm.
For more information on the rally you can follow Students Not
Scores
on Twitter or use the hashtag #studentsnotscores.

Wednesday Link Around

A few links to keep you busy the week before the holidays (because I know you weren’t busy already)…

Diane Ravitch
  • Inexplicably, Teach for America hack David Rosenberg called it reprehensible.  Jersey Jazzman has the story, including the brilliant opening line of “David Rosenberg of Teach For America is quite possibly the worst person in the world.”
  • Our old friend from Chicago, CTU President Karen Lewis chimed in with this…

Diane, et. al.
I have read these posts (alas I do not do Twitter), and I am struck by the lack of authenticity by the Rosenberg comment. Diane has been at the forefront of the desire to lift up the beleaguered profession of teaching in each and every post. She has drawn the connections between people who wouldn’t think of sending their children to public schools and their policies that are destroying the common good. Anyone who doesn’t know that in the marrow of their bones, doesn’t read her blog.

On the other, the educrats who do not agree with her, read her posts, too so as to keep abreast of her thoughts and are ready to pounce if they see an opening. There might have been a time where “politicizing” tragic events, especially mass shootings was thought to be in poor taste. That has changed with the 24/7 news cycle that continues to focus far too much time and energy on the perpetrator of the massacre than that of our precious victims. Rosenberg’s “false outrage” needs to be checked. That same false outrage should show itself when policies his colleagues support kill and disenfranchise children from schools across this nation. We in Chicago have been the victims of their experiments on our children since the current secretary of Education “ran” CPS.

The accolades heaped on a group of education missionaries, (hopefully with beautiful intent on the part of the TFA teachers) cannot go unchallenged. Diane does that. Day in and day out, she champions rank and file educators and the hard work they do. She has a special place in heart for those who see the value of the classroom and not as stepping stone to a more lucrative career or the opportunism of self-promoters like Michelle Rhee who, with her lies about her own classroom experience has catapulted herself into the welcoming arms of those who hate unions, tenure and anything else that provides due process and gives teachers real voice.

To David Rosenberg, Shanda! Shame on you for such a paranoid rant. If you had nothing of which to be guilty, those words would have rolled off your back.

To Diane – Keep speaking the truth!

Karen Lewis

Karen Lewis of the CTU
  • And finally, you can always count on the Chicago Teachers Union to tell it like it is.  Ms. Lewis’ union produced the video below.  Although it was geared towards the fat cats in Chicago, it can easily be applied to just about any area in the nation.