Weekend Links

Enjoy the great article about Philly’s teachers and why they deserve a fair contract.

A few links for your reading pleasure before classes start on Monday morning…

The best article I have read all week (and why you should be following what’s happening in Philly).

Cuomo wants to double down on failing schools and take dramatic action.  (We know what that means).

Ravitch with Why Hedge Fund Managers Are So Interested in School Reform… she touches on the public school hating Democrats for Education Reform and Barack Obama

A group of activists wants the CTU’s Karen Lewis to run for mayor against the public school hating Rahm Emanuel in 2015.

AQE’s response to Cuomo’s “death penalty” comment.

WaPo’s Valerie Strauss with Seven Facts You Should Know About the Common Core.

A brand new site to help follow the war on public ed: Public School Shakedown

More on Cuomo’s Death Penalty Comment

Death to failing schools!
Death to failing schools!

Yesterday Governor Cuomo shared how he believed that “failing schools” (failing based on his rigged tests) should receive the death penalty.

Today NYSUT President Dick Ianuzzi responded with this tweet…

But perhaps the best response of all came, not surprisingly, from Reality-Based Educator on the Perdido Street School Blog.  Please read the entire post.  It’s worth it.  But the highlight is right here…

 But Cuomo has ratcheted up the level of animosity and hostility here by using such inflammatory language.

It is high time we return the favor.

If Governor Cuomo thinks it is time some schools be given the “death penalty” for struggles that are often beyond their means to fix, then it is time for teachers of all political ideologies to get together and help pull the plug on the 2014 Cuomo re-election plan and the Cuomo 2016 presidential plan.

Andrew Cuomo is a thug and a bully and a crook, that we’ve known for a while.

Now, after the “death penalty for schools” statement, he is also a war criminal against public schools.

It is time to put an end to his Reign of Terror.

Cuomo: “a death penalty for failing schools”

WARNING: The video linked to below may cause nausea, vomiting, and dizziness.

Click here to watch Governor Cuomo call for failing schools to receive the death penalty.

New York State Dictator Governor Andy Cuomo yesterday called for the death penalty for failing schools.  He seriously used that terminology when talking about schools.  The video is rather chilling.  Cuomo says…

“We’re making great progress in the education system.”

That might be the most “off-target” comment, regarding public education, that I’ve heard.

About the evaluation process he says…

“You’ll be able to know what teachers are working well.  What teachers are not working well.” and “You’ll be able to know what schools are working well and what schools aren’t working well.”

“We can’t allow these failing schools to continue.  Whether it is a take over by the state or mayoral control or take over by a charter school there’s going to have to be a death penalty for failing schools”

So here is the governor’s agenda:

Use junk science to show how bad teachers are.  Fire them.  Use junk science to show how schools are failing.  Strip those districts of local control.  Place control in the hands of John King.  Replace the schools with charter schools, which have proven to be less effective than public schools.  Have the people profiting from those charters fund Cuomo’s campaign for president.

PJSTA members, if you haven’t been paying attention to education issues you should.  Regardless of how well things are or are not going in your classroom, there is a significant push to destroy your profession and it is funded by some very wealthy and influential people.  The PJSTA will be offering you plenty of opportunities to ACT this year.  Actions that show your support for public education.  Actions that show you will NOT continue to be pushed around by forces bent on destroying you.  We are excited to work with you and with our allies this coming school year as we act against those forces.

Looking for Money?

Interested in earning some extra money?  Pearson is advertising on Craigslist in Texas.  They are looking to pay $12 an hour for test scorers.  While one may think you need some sort of background in education in order to evaluate the high stakes tests that will determine the fates of teachers across the great state of Texas, that person would be wrong!  You need only a bachelor’s degree in any field whatsoever in order to qualify for this low paying, no benefits, temp job.  Pearson, who bribed New York’s State Ed officials with overseas trips and was rewarded for such behavior by Governor Cuomo,  has a contract for nearly $500 million over five years in Texas.  They must not want to waste money on test scorers when they know that they’ll have to help bankroll Cuomo’s push for the presidency in 2016.

Andy gives a thumbs up to Pearson!

Imagine We Had a Real Governor?

California’s Governor Jerry Brown

Imagine we had a governor who said things like this about education…

In the right order of things, education—the early fashioning of character and the formation of conscience—comes before legislation. Nothing is more determinative of our future than how we teach our children. If we fail at this, we will sow growing social chaos and inequality that no law can rectify. 

In California’s public schools, there are six million students, 300,000 teachers—all subject to tens of thousands of laws and regulations. In addition to the teacher in the classroom, we have a principal in every school, a superintendent and governing board for each school district. Then we have the State Superintendent and the State Board of Education, which makes rules and approves endless waivers—often of laws which you just passed. Then there is the Congress which passes laws like “No Child Left Behind,” and finally the Federal Department of Education, whose rules, audits and fines reach into every classroom in America, where sixty million children study, not six million. 

Add to this the fact that three million California school age children speak a language at home other than English and more than two million children live in poverty. And we have a funding system that is overly complex, bureaucratically driven and deeply inequitable. That is the state of affairs today. 

The laws that are in fashion demand tightly constrained curricula and reams of accountability data. All the better if it requires quiz-bits of information, regurgitated at regular intervals and stored in vast computers. Performance metrics, of course, are invoked like talismans. Distant authorities crack the whip, demanding quantitative measures and a stark, single number to encapsulate the precise achievement level of every child. 

We seem to think that education is a thing—like a vaccine—that can be designed from afar and simply injected into our children. But as the Irish poet, William Butler Yeats said, “Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire.” 

This year, as you consider new education laws, I ask you to consider the principle of Subsidiarity. Subsidiarity is the idea that a central authority should only perform those tasks which cannot be performed at a more immediate or local level. In other words, higher or more remote levels of government, like the state, should render assistance to local school districts, but always respect their primary jurisdiction and the dignity and freedom of teachers and students. 

Subsidiarity is offended when distant authorities prescribe in minute detail what is taught, how it is taught and how it is to be measured. I would prefer to trust our teachers who are in the classroom each day, doing the real work – lighting fires in young minds. 

My 2013 Budget Summary lays out the case for cutting categorical programs and putting maximum authority and discretion back at the local level—with school boards. I am asking you to approve a brand new Local Control Funding Formula which would distribute supplemental funds — over an extended period of time — to school districts based on the real world problems they face. This formula recognizes the fact that a child in a family making $20,000 a year or speaking a language different from English or living in a foster home requires more help. Equal treatment for children in unequal situations is not justice.

With respect to higher education, cost pressures are relentless and many students cannot get the classes they need. A half million fewer students this year enrolled in the community colleges than in 2008. Graduation in four years is the exception and transition from one segment to the other is difficult. The University of California, the Cal State system and the community colleges are all working on this. The key here is thoughtful change, working with the faculty and the college presidents. But tuition increases are not the answer. I will not let the students become the default financiers of our colleges and universities. 

Those words were really spoken by California’s Governor Jerry Brown during his state of the state speech today.

Instead we are stuck with this buffoon, the “lobbyist for students” who has done nothing but harm NY State’s students…