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ron saari

How To Explain the Michelle Rhee Syndrome: The Big Picture | Larry Cuban on School Refo... - 1 views

  • Historically, when the nation has a cold, schools sneeze. Examples are legion. When the Soviet Union launched the satellite Sputnik in 1957, President Eisenhower signed the National Defense Education Act (1958) aimed at getting better math and science teachers National problems of drug and alcohol abuse and tobacco smoking has led to states mandating courses to teach children and youth about the dangers of all of these substances. The Civil Rights movement in the 1950′s and 1960s’s spilled over the schools across the nation. Christian groups have pressured school boards to have prayer in schools, teach creationism, and vouchers (Educational Policy-2004-Lugg-169-87). The U.S. has competed economically with European and Asian countries for markets in the 1890s and since the 1980s. Each time that has occurred, business leaders turned to the schools to produce skilled graduates then for industrial jobs and now for an information-based economy.
  • This vulnerability to political stakeholders is very clear now with business and civic leaders pushing schools to be more efficient and effective in competing with China, Japan, and Germany.
  • In big cities where the problem of bad schooling is worst, results-driven reformers want mayors to take over schools and appoint their own superintendents, individuals who will accept no excuses from teachers and principals, will fight union rules, raise test scores, and create more charter schools.
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  • In American culture there is a decided historical preference for individual action, technological fixes (“miracle cures,” “silver bullets”) to problems, and heroic leaders.  And here at the intersection of cultural traits and a dominant business-driven school reform agenda stretching back over a quarter-century is where Michelle Rhee, Joel Klein, Paul Vallas, Arne Duncan, Geoffrey Canada, and similar figures enter the Big Picture.
  • The current business-dominated reform agenda is harnessed to heroic, media-wise individuals carrying tool-kits filled with charter schools, union-busting devices, and pay-4-performance schemes. This agenda and bigger-than-life individuals place major attention on  ineffective teachers as the major reason for poor student performance in schools.
  • Yes, the conflating of urban schools with all U.S. schools is as damaging a fiction as schools being responsible for economic growth and heroic leaders saving urban schools. No one says such things about schools and teachers in LaJolla (CA), Northbrook (IL), and Massepequa (NY). 
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    I don't always agree with Cuban on his views of tech integration, but he has a wonderful way of explaining the "big picture" which helps us understand what's happening better. 
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    interesting article about school reformers
ron saari

Google Reader (1000+) - 0 views

  • fair ways of assessing classroom effectiveness that include test scores but go far beyond these limited numbers. Such sane efforts, however, get forgotten in the wake of wave after wave of anti-teacher union tirades.
  • In doing so, they have narrowed the role of schools to being an arm of the economy reinforcing the fiction that all U.S. schools, not just urban ones, are lousy and that “effective” teachers and schools can solve poverty, put every kid into college, and end the skills gap with international competitors.
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    A good article about teachers and unions
Bradford Saron

Yong Zhao » Blog Archive » It makes no sense€: Puzzling over Obama'€™s St... - 0 views

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    Zhao in Obama and education.
Bradford Saron

Five myths about America's schools - The Washington Post - 1 views

  • 1. Our schools are failing.
  • 2. Unions defend bad teachers.
  • 3. Billionaires know best.
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    via @mcleod. A great article for talking points. 
Bradford Saron

How to Overhaul the U.S. Education System - WSJ.com - 0 views

  • to make all of the politically unpopular choices that had been put off for decades
  • year after year, our schools have been run for the benefit of the adults in the system, not for the benefit of the kids.
  • first time someone dared to question an entrenched practice that had only served the interests of adults.
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  • based on quality and performance instead of seniority.
  • Ineffective teachers are immediately dismissed from the system
  • higher level of accountability with some of the highest teacher pay
  • comprehensive system for evaluating teachers, including growth in student achievement as measured by standardized tests (so that teachers who take on the toughest students aren't unfairly penalized), observation of their classroom practices and assessment of their contributions to the school community.
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    Rhee's parting comments as she leaves the office of DC district administrator. 
Bradford Saron

Gates vs. Weingarten « Matt Bowman - 1 views

  • “tenure is a proxy for fairness”
  • Weingarten deflects the accusation and suggests the real problem is a lack of “support” for teachers, aka funding:
  • Then Gates nails it: No, we spend more on professional development than they do. We spend more on salaries than they do. We spend more on pensions than they do. We spend more on retirement health benefits than they do. But we have less evaluation than they do. In many districts you have to give advance notice before anybody can come into your classroom. That’s part of the contract. So there are some real differences in terms of the personnel system in these other countries.
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    This is the exchange between AFT national president and Bill Gates as they debate tenure for teachers. 
Kelly Burhop

Praising Teachers While Bashing Them | Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice - 0 views

  • This naked bipartisan effort to exert power over teachers comes at a time when rhetoric praises teachers and recognizes their crucial role in the lives of children yet actual policies end up smearing all teachers with the tar-brush of selfishness and self-interest in this unrelenting attack upon teacher unions. Related Articles
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    Teachers are praised and bashed at the same time.  
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