BK’s Reviews and Reflections

A Blog by Bonnie Kaplan

Archive for the 'Education' Category

Ed Investigating Reporter at Your Service!

Posted by Bonnie on 10th August 2010

I  recently read a pair of articles in the   NY Times: Lesson Plan in Boston Schools:Don’t Go it Alone and Inexperienced Companies Chase U.S. School Funds and I’m thinking a lot about a conversation I had last week with my former student/friend Alison and her partner Sarah as I continue to dig into the latest wave in educational reform. After reading Diane Ravitch’s blistering attack in her latest book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System, against the federal approach to educational reform, the reality seems to support her work and my greatest fears.

Both young women, passionate and committed to teaching, began their careers  in at charter school led by a former teacher, who created a small community of young teachers who felt welcomed and supported.  As Alison, the theater/art teacher, prepared her students for a performance, her principal came to her with open arms offering her anything she needed. As her former director, I could relate to that need for administrative support and it was wonderful when a principal worked with you.

Both Sarah and Alison worked hard in their first years without a union behind them, but they were a part of a great community of teachers but when her first principal teacher left the school, he was replaced by a school manager, who rapidly destroyed the sense of community and demanded total control and obedience and the teacher and parent moral was destroyed with one fell blow and soon Alison was looking for a new job.  She found one in a public school in a tough section of Boston and without administrative and faculty support she was lost in an elective theater classroom. So it isn’t just Charter vs Public School in this educational war, but there’s a wind blowing through that’s creating serious insecurity in the teaching profession.

The Times articles support the need for educated administration and the need for teacher respect and support.  Teachers in the Boston public school system now can be moved from school to school each year at the whim of the system. So yes, there’s still some job security but under the pressure of  federal educational reform, the state’s Democratic Governor and legislature, to win Race to the Top funds sold our their teachers and their unions.

Now Alison will be teaching part-time in a small Catholic School in the fall and even though she has to suppliment her income with non-teaching part time jobs to she is looking forward to teaching art and directing theater because the school leadership and staff are welcoming her.  Sarah, a math teacher, has also left the charter school where they first met, for a brand new charter.  She will be making good money and so far the staff is just being hired so the jury is out as to how positive the experience will be.

In my 30 years,I spnet half my teaching career in a school with good to fair administrators and union leaders who didn’t care very much about education. They were working for teacher benefits.  But  the second half of my career was spent at Pearl River where serious teachers  led the union and worked cooperatively with some great, some good  and few fair administrators.  Our  staff was a good one.  Some great teachers, lots of good teachers, some fair and a few lazy ones.  The adminstrators were all former teachers and not managers. Many left a strong bond with the community and for the most part supported, the staff.

It was good to have a supportive administrator, colleagues on your wave length, and union leaders behind you.  As I think back to my teaching life, the world of my classroom was supported by the school community just outside the door.

Sadly, I worry that many dedicated teachers will be beaten down and forced to leave the profession or have to accept the will of the unedcated to keep their jobs. I’m worried.

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Posted in Education, Slice of Life Tuesdays | 10 Comments »

I’m Under a Rain Cloud

Posted by Bonnie on 20th September 2009

This morning, as I walked into the kitchen to join Tuvia and get back into life as left it, Tuvia handed me the New York Times to read this article

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/17/education/17educ.html?ref=education

Obama Pushes States to Shift on Education

By SAM DILLON
Published: August 16, 2009
Holding out billions of dollars as a potential windfall, the Obama administration is persuading state after state to rewrite education laws to open the door to more charter schools and expand the use of student test scores for judging teachers.

That aggressive use of economic stimulus money by Education Secretary Arne Duncan is provoking heated debates over the uses of standardized testing and the proper federal role in education, issues that flared frequently during President George W. Bush’s enforcement of his signature education law, called No Child Left Behind.

A recent case is California, where legislative leaders are vowing to do anything necessary, including rewriting a law that prohibits the use of student scores in teacher evaluations, to ensure that the state is eligible for a chunk of the $4.3 billion the federal Education Department will soon award to a dozen or so states. The law had strong backing from the state teachers union.

Illinois, Indiana, Louisiana, Tennessee and several other states have moved to bring their laws or policies into line with President Obama’s school improvement agenda.

The administration’s stance has caught by surprise educators and officials who had hoped that Mr. Obama’s calls during the campaign for an overhaul of the No Child law would mean a reduced federal role and less reliance on standardized testing. The law requires schools to bring all students to proficiency in reading and math by 2014 and penalizes those that do not meet annual goals.

The proposed rules make testing an even more powerful factor in schools by extending the use of scores to teacher evaluations. The proposed rules for the $4.3 billion in grants, which the administration calls the Race to the Top, require states to show they are fostering innovation, improving achievement, raising standards, recruiting effective teachers, turning around failed schools and building data systems.

Just to be eligible to apply, a state must have no “barriers to linking data on student achievement or student growth to teachers and principals for the purpose of teacher and principal evaluation,” the rules say.

While many educators and advocates support the administration, there has also been an outpouring of complaints, including in comments on the rules filed with the Education Department. (The department will issue final rules after the comment period ends Aug. 28.)

“The proposed regulations are overly burdensome,” Robert P. Grimesey, superintendent of the Orange County Public Schools in Virginia, said in written comments. “They give the impression that stimulus funds provide the federal government with unbridled capacity to impose bureaucratic demands.”

Much of the grumbling is from educators who say they supported Mr. Obama’s candidacy.

“I am a public school teacher who vehemently wanted to vote for a president who would save us from No Child Left Behind,” Diane Aoki of Kealakekua, Hawaii, wrote to the department. But linking test scores to teacher evaluations, Ms. Aoki said, means “the potential is there for the test frenzy to get worse than it is under No Child Left Behind.”

An Education Department spokesman, Peter Cunningham, said, “There’s a healthy debate around this grand application, which is what we were hoping for.”

“We’re mindful of all the criticisms about federal overreaching, about too much testing, of all the complaints about No Child Left Behind,” Mr. Cunningham said. “These complaints come up all the time in conversations about all our programs, not just this one, with education officials across the country. The context that No Child has generated is the context that we have to live with.”

The New Teacher Project, a nonprofit group, published a report this month handicapping states’ chances. Florida and Louisiana, it said, were “highly competitive,” New Jersey and others were “competitive,” and Connecticut was “somewhat competitive.” California, New York and Wisconsin, the report said, were not eligible because of state laws limiting the use of achievement data in teacher evaluation.

Lawmakers and officials in California and Wisconsin are debating whether to make legislative changes.

In New York, officials are pushing back against suggestions that the state is ineligible. Merryl H. Tisch, chancellor of the Board of Regents, said Friday that because the law banned the use of student data in evaluating teachers only for tenure decisions, New York should be eligible.

Also, Dr. Tisch said, the state law is scheduled to expire in June 2010, and “there is no appetite to renew that law.”

Not everyone is upset with the administration’s tactics.

“We like the way the administration is using Race to the Top to send a message about its priorities,” said Joe Williams, executive director of Democrats for Education Reform. “We like that it’s gotten states to take a close look at their laws and practices.”

Diane Ravitch, an education historian at New York University, disagreed. “The Department of Education should respect the requirements of federalism and look to states to offer their best ideas rather than mandating policies that the current administration likes,” Dr. Ravitch said in comments filed with the department.

I’ve been watching Arne Duncan and not getting a good feeling about him and he is Obama’s guy. Not an educator.  And to think I was worried about Joe Klein getting this top spot.

I cant write more about this now, but I will.

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Posted in Education, Politics | No Comments »

I’m under a rain cloud!: Slice of Life Tuesday

Posted by Bonnie on 17th August 2009

As I woke up this morning and joined Tuvia in the kitchen to watch Joe in the Morning and begin the day, Tuvia handed me the New York Times to read this front page article:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/08/17/education/17educ.html?ref=education

Over the past months, since Obama tapped Arne Duncan as his head of Education, I’ve been reading and listening to Arne and I have had a very uneasy feeling and after reading the Times article, I am feeling even worse.

Like so many others, I was hoping that NCLB would be gone as Bush left the White House and there would be something better in its place.  Will that happen?  Charter Schools? Firing teachers when the test scores don’t improve? Seems even worse…

What do you think?

More Slices to read back on TWO WRITING TEACHERS

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Posted in Education | 4 Comments »