The following is from Crazy Crawfish's Blog
I’d be lying if I told you I wasn’t feeling overwhelmed by all the
rapid changes happening in the education sphere. I’m positive I’m not
alone in feeling this way based on the feedback, articles and
correspondence I’ve been receiving from local and national groups and
individuals. As I struggled to zero in on a topic where I could help or
enlighten the most, something else even more screwed up would be sent to
me. I’ve started and stopped work on several pieces, which may make
their appearances later, but I feel the need to get my bearings again.
All this crazy “stuff” (not my first word choice) needs to be sorted out
and organized before I can make any more forward progress. I think the
mistake I was making, and many others are probably making, is not
connecting all the dots and figuring out what kind of picture they
reveal.
Right now hundreds and probably thousands of disparate groups
polishing their individual pieces of the puzzle and identifying a few
corners and straight edges here and there . . . maybe the occasional
face piece. All of us are focusing on our own small pieces of what is
actually a very complex puzzle. If we could put them all together, it
would surely show a grand scheme, but we’re all convinced we’re holding
the key. I can’t solve this puzzle on my own, but what I can do is show
you the pieces I’ve managed to put together, and what I think I’m
starting to see. These are my pieces:
Intentionally Flawed Teacher Evaluation Systems
A scourge of questionable teacher evaluation systems and Value Added
programs has surged across Louisiana, but across dozens of other states
as well. While all these systems are referenced as “
Valued Added”
or “Teacher Evaluation” systems, they all have very different methods
of operating and degrees of crappiness. Every one I’ve reviewed or seen
reviewed by unaffiliated evaluators all of them have been revealed to be
questionable at best, and outright absurd such as in the case of
Louisiana’s Value Added system. Despite all these studies and findings,
reformers and their allies still tout these kangaroo court evaluation
systems as valid and necessary, and tie tenure and continuing employment
and compensation to them. When the public starts to recognize just how
absurd the metrics are, Reformer headed DOEs change the formulae, either
in small ways or even quite dramatically. Sometimes this makes the
systems even worse – for teachers and in terms of accuracy, but this
change is only meant to fool the masses. Changing these systems gives
the appearance of reasonableness, and shifts the conversation to one of
getting data from DOE’s to prove their new systems are more accurate. Of
course reformers like John White refuse to provide this data except to
sympathetic patsies. The clamorings of researchers unable to get data
without lengthy lawsuits is never covered by the mainstream media.
Ultimately what happens is experienced teachers are driven from the
profession in droves to make room for poorly trained, easily
manipulated, inexpensive temporary recruits, teachers unions are
dissolved and public education is diluted and destroyed to make way for
privately held charter schools. These systems are a farce and are simply
a tool to evict experienced teachers from their schools, so those
schools can be handed over to private companies, who make campaign
contributions to anyone who will further their destructive agenda.
Vouchers and Charter Schools are better for “Choice” although not a better choice
John White and his ilk routinely defend unvetted voucher schools and unregulated charter schools in the name of “choice.”
John White has claimed he doesn’t need to monitor and evaluate these
programs because parents are in the best position to know what is best
for their children. He and his allies actively fight any attempts to
evaluate these programs receiving public dollars by the same standards
he evaluates public schools, student performance and teachers. The
routine claims that are made is that such evaluations are cumbersome and
interfere with learning (which is true and why they are foisted off on
public schools). However it is also true that most charter students and
voucher students perform worse than their peers, in many cases much
worse. Initially reformers encouraged this type of comparison, until the
results came back overwhelmingly negative. Since they can no longer
claim these schools are “better” by their own standards, they have
shifted the argument away from quality to one of “freedom” allowing
these schools empowers parents by providing them “choice.” However
without any information, or guidance, most children (and probably most
adults) would choose chocolate chip cookies over carrots. Without
nutritional information, calorie content, and high blood sugar readings
which would you choose?
It’s Okay to segregate our schools by class, race, disability as long as we claim to be doing it “for the children”
Since desegregation didn’t work, it’s okay to re-segregate our schools. It doesn’t matter how this is accomplished.
You can create shadow schools
(multiple campuses miles apart that are racially segregated and
reported as a single school to disguise that fact), you can create
charter schools that through sheer coincidence only enroll white
students in a majority minority district, you can split your school
district into as many different school boards and zones until you get
your preferred racial mix, you can refuse to hire Special education
teachers to serve disabled students so they are forced to enroll
somewhere else, you can banish all your low performing students or
discipline problems to alternative schools (ideally done after the
funding date but before the testing date.) As a side note, you can say
or do anything to anyone as long as you end your suggestion with “for
the children.”
Student data is a commodity that can be handed over to private entities as long as they claim it is for an educational purpose
Several years ago the Federal Department of education secretly made
an exception to allow vendors, states and school districts to
ignore
FERPA and provide as much private student data to whomever they wish
and use it for whatever purpose they see fit, regardless of whether
parents consent or not. This data will be very valuable to these
companies, and potentially very harmful to the children. This data can
be used for non-educational purposes; there is no oversight as to how
this data is used or protected, and no way to correct data that may be
erroneous. This data will be used by employers, credit agencies,
insurance companies, and marketing companies to direct market products
to children throughout their lifetime.
History and Science are negotiable and can be rewritten to suit conservative agendas
Creationism and biblical teachings are being substituted for true
Science curricula. Schools teach children that humans probably herded
dinosaurs just a few thousand years ago, and they probably still exist
in hidden enclaves such as
Loch Ness
or off the Japanese coast. Students are taught that evolution is
impossible (because it seems complicated) that Climate change is either
not happening because God would not allow it, or if it is happening it
is part of God’s will and plan and not caused by burning rainforests or
manufacturing everything in Chinese coal powered factories. Schools are
teaching slavery was just a misunderstood part of our nation’s history,
and not a very bad one. They are being taught that hippies and liberals
are Satan Worshipping amoral communists trying subvert all that is great
and decent in society.
Virtual Schools with virtually no attendance compliance, or any
compliance, and universally poor track records for preparing students
are exploding in every education market
In every study I’ve seen, Virtual school students do worse than their
demographic equivalents in physical settings. Virtual school classes
have been known reported having in excess of 500 students per teacher.
These schools are being offered to students of all grade levels (k thru
12). It is clear that these schools are money makers as in most states
they earn a sizeable portion of the funding that goes to a traditional
student (in Louisiana it ranges from 90% to 100% of MFP) with less than a
tenth of the cost. Often these students withdraw and return to a
traditional setting, but the virtual school gets to keep the entire
funding for the year, and the traditional school has not only the
uncompensated cost of the student to cover, but also takes a hit on
their “scores” (in Louisiana it’s called an SPS or School Performance
Score) as well as the additional cost of trying to get that student
caught up. Many of these students enroll in virtual schools simply to
dropout without getting hassled. They get a free computer and internet
connection and never have to log into school or complete an assignment.
This is especially true in Louisiana where virtual school operators
are forbidden by the Louisiana State Department of Education from exiting students that stop logging in, or fail to ever log in.
Teach for America has been converted into a temp teacher displacement and replacement organization
Teach for America originally had a noble purpose but it has been
corrupted by billionaires and special interested and serves as little
more than a temp agency for school districts and a training ground for
new education “leaders.” These leaders are often political science and
marketing/media majors that preach the Reform gospel. TFA now even
establishes staffing contracts
and demands placement fees
from states for bringing in a constant pool of new, 5 week trained
teachers that rarely stay longer than their 2 year commitment and often
leave sooner.
It’s better to close schools and spread the students around to higher performing schools to mask the problem.
Rather than trying to fix the schools which have poor students who
are performing poorly, Reformers believe it’s better to close the doors
and shove all those kids into higher performing schools, no matter how
high the class size gets. Just this past week Rahm Emmanuel closes
54 schools in Chicago and shuffled all those kids to other schools.
I have not seen any studies that show this strategy works. I have seen
some that show these students are more likely to feel disaffected by
school, by the longer bus rides, the cramped classrooms, by the loss of
all their friends and teachers
, and tend to perform worse the next year and even drop out.
You won’t see any studies showing this is effective, because it’s not.
What you will see is “school” scores which Reformers point to and say
things are going swell. What they don’t tell you is they routinely
change these formula from year to year to make them say whatever they
want to say. Pre-school closing and privatizing they say how horrible
the scores are. After a few years of destructive policies they boost the
scores by
adding points or changing the test
and say all is going well and pat themselves on the back. For the
schools that even the most generous boosts are insufficient they simply
exclude from the rankings. You can’t be disappointed by what you can’t
see. To make sure you can’t see it they usually stop providing data to
researchers and remove all traces of historical or current school data
from their websites
, as Louisiana has done.
So what’s my point do you ask?
I could go, and maybe I will later when the fancy strike me, but I
hope this is enough for you to start seeing the picture I am. What I am
seeing is a purposeful plot to destroy public schools, and to profit
from the destruction. These folks say they are data conscious and want
to rely on “data driven decisions” but if that were true the data
already readily available shows that everything they are doing is having
the opposite effect of what they are purporting to provide. There is
too much coordination for this to be accidental, and they are too
successful for me to believe they are simply not competent enough to
understand the data that disproves everything they claim. These groups
have gone out of their way to spin the data, falsify the data, or simply
hide or destroy the data to prevent people from seeing what is going
on. These groups are fully aware of what they are doing – destroying
public education in our country. Some of them are doing it purely for
profit driven motives, but there is more going on here. These are some
of the puzzle pieces I have and what I see. Now if we allow this to
continue, what do you see?