"Teachers & Parents for Real Education Reform"

An initiative of teachers and parents in the DC Public Schools aimed at improving the quality of teaching and learning. We aim to get the administration and the union focused on what matters -- support for high quality teaching.

Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Education Reform Hasn't Hit A Wall; It Is The Wall

Award winning former NY principal, Carol Burris analyzes the whopping 14 point nationwide drop in SAT scores for 2015 in this Washington Post column.
Posted by Real Ed Reform DC at 11:58 AM No comments:
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Great Teachers, Low Value Added Scores in DC & NYC

  • Valerie Strauss Publishes Principal's letter Pointing Out How Use of Value Added Scores in Teacher Evaluation Hurts Kids. 1500 Principals in NY State Sign Letter
  • Linda Darling-Hammond, Jesse Rothstein and others summarize in the March, 2012 issue of the Kappan Magazine what's wrong with using Value Added student test score data to evaluate teachers
  • Bill Turque writes in the post today about a great teacher fired in DC based on student test scores. Jason Kamras says firing justified. Won't admit cheating affected base scores.
  • In a devastating piece today, New York Times' Michael Winerip documents just how invalid student test scores are in measuring the quality of NYC teachers
  • Linda Darling-Hammond Looking at the Recent Release of VAM Scores in NYC writes in Ed Week that Value-Added Measures are Hurting Teaching

School Closings in Chicago -- Parent and Teacher Leaders Outraged at Proposal to Close Five Schools

  • Jitu Brown and Karen Lewis interviewed on MSNBC's Ed Show about Mayor's plan to close schools in low income neighborhoods
  • How Charter Schools Get the Students they Want

Finland Achieves Success Using the Opposite Approach to that Advocated by US Corporate Reformers

  • In the March New York Review of Books Diane Ravitch describes "Schools We Can Envy" in Finland as evidence that corporate reform strategies of Rhee, Klein and the Edu-reformers are flat-out wrong
  • Part 2 (March 22nd) is Ravitch's Critique of the Global Education Reform Movement (GERM): How and How Not to Improve Schools

Montgomery County and DCPS Move in Exact Opposite Directions on Standardized Tests and Motivation

  • Author Daniel Pink Explains What's Wrong with Rewards and Punishments for Test Scores as Motivation for Professionals to MCPS Audience

Parent and Community Reaction in Five Cities to School Closure as Reform

  • Gathering of Community Activists from Chicago, Newark, Philadelphia, New York, Boston and LA in NYC Draws Important Lessons for DC

Market Mindset Wrong for Education

  • Michael Dedrich on What's Wrong with a Market Approach

Looking Back at 2011

  • Richard Kahlenberg sees some progress nationally in 2011 amid the insanity

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"August to June" Film

  • See the Trailer Here

Diane Ravitch -- The Anti-Michelle Rhee

  • City Paper: Diane Ravitch's Story and How She Got To Be the Clearest Voice Exposing What's Wrong with Rhee's Message and Track-Record

What Parents Really Want

  • Helen Gym -- Parent in the Philadelphia Schools Puts It Very Well and Self-Styled "Reformers" Need to Listen

Videos that Make You Think (Click the text to watch.)

  • Dan Pink on Motivation -- why bonuses don't work and what a better source of motiveation would be.
  • What's Behind Education Reform - Lecture by Sir Ken Robinson

The Rhee Record Debated

  • Washington Post: Valerie Strauss tracks Rhee's true colors coming out over the past six months.
  • Diane Ravitch reviews "The Bee Eater" and the recent revelations that call that account into question
  • Video of teachers talking about Rhee's botched consolidation of Hart MS in 2008
  • Now from the Daily Kos this summary of the significance of the test erasure scandal on calling Rhee era strategies into question
  • A great summary of the Rhee record from a colunmist in Forbes Magazine, no less
  • Michelle Rhee's Splendid Run at the Wrong Target -- Issue Brief by Gordon MacInnes
  • Rhee myths versus realities of her tenure as Chancellor
  • Richard Kahlenberg bursts the Rhee bubble in response to Richard Whitmire
  • Review of an Evening with Richard Whitmire Attempting to Defend His Bee-Eater Book at the Politics and Prose Bookstore Event
  • Alan Ginsburg study of DCPS NAEP Scores Comparing Rhee, Janey and Vance

The Importance of Dignity and Respect in the Classroom

  • An Accomplished Public School Teacher is Outraged
  • A Wonderful Post by Deborah Meier from her Ed Week Blog

What's Wrong With The Bi-Partisan Consensus Narrative Behind Education Reform?

  • Pedro Noguera's Commentary on CNN -- Obama Has A Long Way To Go On Education Reform
  • Columbia Professor Amy Stuart Wells - What's Wrong with the Obama/Republican Drive for NCLB Re-authorization and How Community Groups Fight Back

Value-Added Modeling to Evaluate Teacher

  • The Numbers Do Lie -- Article about a great teacher with low VA score, by Matt Weinrip in the NY Times

Remembering Howard Zinn on the One-year Anniversary of his Death

  • Author Henry Giroux remembers Zinn as a mentor

Education Management Organizations Not the Panacea Promised

  • What Rhee Wrought -- Miserable Failure by EMO in HS Turnaround Effort
  • Kaya Henderson Ousts Friends of Bedford from Management of Dunbar HIgh School
  • New National Report Shows EMOs Fail to Deliver the Goods

Mayoral Control? After 15 years Chicago Turns Out To Be A Catastrophy. And NYC Gets Curiouser

  • Lessons of the Cathie Black Fiasco
  • And now Cathie Black is out as NY Chancellor, A Stinging Rebuke to Bloomberg and Mayoral Control
  • Robert Bobb's Reform Strategies Ruled Illegal in Detroit
  • In New Public Opinion Poll Voters in NYC Reject Cathie Black and Bloomberg 2-1
  • Michael Klonsky sums-up the trail of disasters wrought by mayoral control of Chicago public schools
  • Gotham Schools reports that Joel Klein might have been pushed out in NYC

Followers


What's Wrong With Waiting for Superman?

This month's The New York Review of Books has a powerful critique of WfS by Diane Ravitch titled "The Myth of Charter Schools" in which she puts the message of the film in a broader context.

An expose of where the funding for the film came from reveals its political agenda in Barbara Miner's article on the Not Waiting for Superman Web Site.

Here's a thoughtful review by Columbia University educational sociologist, Aaron Pallas... An Inconvenient Truthiness.

Read this careful, point-by-point reflection on the film by Rick Ayers, professor in teacher education at the University of San Francisco: "What 'Superman" Got Wrong, Point by Point."

The Nation magazine writes "Grading 'Waiting for Superman," an in-depth piece responding to the film and media coverage of public education in recent months.

Comment from the Education Law Center, "Superman Is from Another Planet."

Here are talking points,"Why We Can't Wait for Superman," from our partners at the National Opportunity to Learn Campaign.

Here are "The Real Facts about Waiting for Superman" according to the National Center for Fair and Open Testing, FairTest.

Education historian, Diane Ravitch, responds to the film in "Stop Trashing Teachers."

Here is a reflection by NY Times columnist, Gail Collins, "Waiting for Somebody."

Check out this reflection by Nicholas Lemann in the September 27 issue of the New Yorker magazine.

In this thoughtful piece, President of the American Federation of Teachers, Randi Weingarten answers her critics.

Mark Phillips, professor emeritus of secondary education at San Francisco State University, attempts to create what he considers a balanced view of the movie: "Strengths and Weaknesses of 'Superman'."


Future of Reform in DC

  • Why Its Bad To Evaluate Teachers Using Test Scores
  • Diane Ravitch on Why Rhee and Fenty Lost

Obama's Blueprint for Reauthorization of ESEA and the "Race to the Top."

  • Politico.com reports (May 14) States and Congress Pushing Back Against RTTT
  • "Race to the Top" not exactly objective and scientific -- Judging the Judges
  • Richard Rothstein offers an Analysis of why the Blueprint Needs More Work
  • PEN -- Good reading, in case you don't subscribe yet.

Video/Print Interviews with Diane Ravitch

  • US News & World Report interview with Ravitch March 25th
  • Interview with Diane Ravitch on Diane Rehm
  • Interview at EPI Book Event March 15th
  • Diane Ravitch on Democracy Now -- A critical view of Race To The Top

Mooney Institute Links

  • Tracking RTT and School Turnaround Insights from a progressive union perspective

Web Sites and Blogs We Like

  • The Education Optimist
  • Skoolboy Blog on Gotham Schools
  • Mooney Institute for Teacher and Union Leadership
  • Advancing the Teaching Profession - Barnett Berry's blog
  • DC Education Blog
  • TheWashingtonTeacher
  • DC Watch
  • 21 St Century School Fund DC
  • Center for Inspired Teaching - DC
  • DC Creative Writing Project
  • Teaching for Change
  • DC Voice
  • Mike Klonski's Blog
  • Center for Teaching Quality
  • Ed Wize from the UFT in NYC

Transforming School Districts and Schools

  • Avoiding Central Falls Disasters -- Annenberg Advice

Objections to Student Test Scores Determining Teacher Evaluation

  • "Carrots and Sticks Are So Last Century" says business author Dan Pink in an interview with Claus von Zastrow.
  • National testing experts caution against using student test scores on any high stakes decisions like teacher evaluation.
  • Confessions of a Standardized Test Scorer -- A Commentary by Todd Farley in the NY Times
  • Testimony of Ellen Moir at the New Teacher Center, Santa Cruz, recommending changes in the US Ed Dept. regulations using student test scores to measure teacher quality
  • Duke Professor and BBA Co-Chair Helen Ladd Argues Against Student Test Scores Being Used to Determine Teacher Evaluations

Fixing Reform in DCPS

  • Charters No Panacea according to the LA Times
  • Gerald Bracey's final "report" takes on three trendy reforms and argues that real reform has to be about more than these.
  • Kathy Paterson's Advice to Rhee on How To Get Along - How to Make Real Reform Happen

October 5: Growing Student, Teacher, Community Protests Over Teacher Cuts

  • First Year Teacher Describes What It Meant To Be Fired
  • National Board Certified Teacher Fired -- raising questions overall about who was fired and why
  • Video of McKinley Student Speech at October 8 Rally
  • The Post's Bill Turque Asks Fifteen Good Questions of Michelle Rhee
  • Washington Post reports: Teachers stunned and dismayed at being fired and how it was done Friday.
  • Bill Turque's piece in the Washington Post today covers the snowballing protest of students, teachers, and clergy over the firing of popular teachers at McKinley High School

Diane Ravitch says Woa! not so fast on Charters Ms. Hoxby

  • New Century Foundation Study Reports Stanford Critique of Hoxby's Methodology
  • While the Washington Post over interpretted the new Hoxby study on Charters, Diane Ravitch reminds us that there are two Stanford studies. The new one on NYC may have less relevance for the rest of the nation.

Washingont Post' DC WIRE Covers Teacher Staffing Cut Process in Schools

  • Rhee's Promise of Input by Parents and Teachers Through the LSRTs Is Doubtful Given That The Principal's Cut List and Rationale Were Due Downtown on Monday.

Pay for Performance? New reports suggest more caution to DCPS

  • Barnett Berry -- New Study Points to Teacher Colleagues As More Important Than Individual Contribution Casting Doubt On Individual Value Added Gain Rewards
  • Ed Week Commentary from William Slotnik
  • A new study from the Center for American Progress on performance-based teacher compensation
  • Dan Goldhaber Interview on Performance Pay and Measuring Teacher Quality

Standards Based Reform?

  • Ed Week Commentary: "SBR will fail for the same reason the No Child Left Behind Act failed—because it will be driven by data derived from simplistic tests keyed to simplistic standards keyed to a simplistic, dysfunctional, obsolete, 19th-century curriculum."

NYC "Rubber Room" Blame De-mystified

  • DC Teacher Dan Brown explains why the NYCPS "Rubber Room" scandal really happens -- in response to the shocking New Yorker Article last month

The Moral Imperative for Reform

  • John Deasy's Speech On His Experience Reforming PGCPS on C-SPAN from the America's Choice Event Last Week

New Studies on Teacher Evaluation should provide caution to DCPS

  • Fixing Tenure by Joan Snowden
  • So long, Lake Wobegone? by Morgaen Donaldson

A Broader, Bolder Approach to School Accountability

  • The Broader, Bolder Approach Report on School Accountability issued June 25, 2009
  • Interview with Diane Ravitch on how the Broader, Bolder Approach compares with NCLB
  • Christopher Cross describes how the Broader, Bolder Approach compares with NCLB

Teachers and Parents' opening salvo in the POST's Outlook section "Bargaining for Better Teaching"

  • pdf of our original OUTLOOK op-ed from September
  • Washington Post - Outlook Sept. 28, 2008

March 23 The American Prospect article focuses on Weingarten, Rhee, and the WTU

  • The Education Wars

Developing the New Teacher Evaluation System

  • MIchelle Rhee Threatens End Run Around Teachers' Union -- Huffington Post, March 2

WTU Contract Proposal

  • Randi Weingarten and Michelle Rhee seem to move closer on teacher contract -- Weingarten comments in Wash Post
  • WTU Launches Web Site for Public Information Campaign -- specifics still lacking, but more information to follow.

Rhee praises WTU/AFT Contract Proposal as ideas "that warrant some hard thought."

  • Rhee: District to Trim Teacher Wage Proposal

National Council on Educating Black Children in DC April 29-May 2

  • Program for NCEBC Convention

Advocates urge teacher support and funding equity

  • Testimony of Margot Berkey before the City Council Jan.16
  • Testimony of Cathy Reilly before the City Council Jan.16
  • Testimony of Mary Levy before the Council Jan.16
  • Testimony of Iris Toyer before the Council Jan.16
  • Testimony of Mark Simon before the Council Jan.16

Improving the Quality of Teaching in DCPS

  • Thomas Toch testifies before the City Council on Development of a New Teacher Evaluation System with a Warning about What Not To Do.
  • Rhee Plans Shake-Up of Teaching Staff, Training, Jan.5 Washington Post METRO

An In-depth Look at the Union/Administration Collaboration to Turn Around Broad Acres Elementary

  • Broad Acres Case Study -- Lessons for DCPS
  • 2004 Independent Evaluation of Montgomery Couny's Four Year effort to improve the quality of teaching with a Professional Growth System

Obama's Federal Policy On Education

  • Join the Forum for Education and Democracy's Petition Campaign to President Obama to make Education a Priority for Action

The Research on Teach For America

  • More of Skoolboy's thoughts on how TFA'ers handle tough teaching assignments
  • Eduwonkette on Morgaen Donaldson's study on how long they stay and whether they can handle tough assignments

The difference between "student achievement results" and the "quality of teaching"

  • Eduwonkette's Skoolboy blog weighs in on the problem with equating student test results with the quality of teaching

Arne Duncan Appointed as Next Secretary of Education

  • Mike Klonsky's Blog from Chicago has lots of information about Duncan
  • Statement of Randi Weingarten reported on EdWize

Assessment for Learning

  • Linda Darling-Hammond Explains Why US is Falling Behind in This Month's Kappan--a must read

Linda Darling-Hammond

Linda Darling-Hammond

Up Close Rhee's Image Less Clear - Schools Chief's Media Stardom Hasn't Dispelled Local Misgivings

  • Bill Turque's Washington Post article Dec. 8

Debate Over Darling-Hammond for Secretary Gets Ugly

  • Linda Darling-Hammond Responds Dec.12 in the NYTimes
  • Alfie Kohn critique's the critics and the George Bush Education Agenda -- eloquent
  • Post Wrong on Darling-Hammond
  • Thomas Toch -- Darling-Hammond Unbound
  • Martin Carnoy responds to the rabid nay sayers
  • Greg Palast -- "Way to Go Brownie"

AFT's Randi Weingarten pushes collaboration, capacity & community in National Press Club speech

  • NPR Interview December 9 - Weingarten touts school reform strategies
  • Scapegoating Unions Won't Work

Analysis of the TIME piece: "School Reform as And/Both" - Rhee's focus is not wrong, but...

  • Barnett Berry's Blog

Link to author, researcher and former superintendent Larry Cuban's advice in Sept.23 Post

  • Michelle Rhee: Better to Be a Marathoner

NY Times & Wash Post Cover Our Teacher and Parent Perspective - Kerry Sylvia and Jeff Smith quoted

  • A Schools Chief Takes on Tenure, Stiring a Fight
  • Teacher Tenure: A Battle in the Capital
  • Marc Fisher: DCPS School Reform -- The Backlash

Nov. 5th Forum on What Real Reform Looks Like

Nov. 5th Forum on What Real Reform Looks Like
Deasy, Weingarten, and Whitman address a packed DC crowd -- talk about how PG and Montgomery nurture skillful teaching -- these photos are larger at the bottom of this page

Links to where they're talking about us...

  • Ed Wize in NYC talked about our blog
  • Barnett Berry loved our WaPost Piece
  • Weingarten Letter in NY Times 10-9-08
  • http://www.mooneyinstitute.org

Wash POST and Ed Week Blogging about our Nov. 5 Forum

  • Teacher Beat
  • Bill Torque's Blog post about our Nov 5 Forum

Washington Post Series on Charter Schools

  • Eduwonkette Blog notes POST story and questions research design leading to faulty conclusion

About Us

  • Crystal Sylvia
  • Deborah Menkart
  • Down Not Out
  • Elizabeth Davis
  • IrisT
  • Kerry Sylvia
  • Margot Berkey
  • Mark Simon
  • Mary Levy
  • Mary M
  • Real Ed Reform DC
  • Susan Born-Ozment
  • Suzanne Wells
  • Tina DeAnna
  • gfb9+2/3
  • luv2teachdc
  • sndburst

"A Marshall Plan for Teaching"

  • Stanford Professor and Obama Advisor Linda Darling-Hammond's Prescription for reform.

Eduwonkette offers a warning to Michelle Rhee

  • Oct. 6 Eduwonkette

Blog Archive

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      • Education Reform Hasn't Hit A Wall; It Is The Wall
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Our testimony October 28,2008 before the City Council on the Council Hearing Amendment Act

Chairman Gray and members of the Council,

We come before you today representing a growing group of DCPS teachers and parents we call “teachers and parents for real education reform” who very much care about improving the quality of teaching and learning in our schools. We support much needed education reform. We have a new blog at http://realeducationreformdc.blogspot.com/.

Most of those involved in this new initiative are teaching students this morning or working other jobs as DCPS parents. If you held this hearing in the evening or on Saturday, I would not be the one giving this testimony, and we would have a large group here adding emphasis to our words. We are all volunteers in this work. If you could consider evening or weekend hearings in the future, we would certainly appreciate it.

Our point today is really quite simple. In the past year transparency, accountability and the opportunity for citizen input into school system decision making has drastically diminished. There is no reason for this to be the case, even under mayoral control.

As you heard in the one budget hearing you held last year, principals have never before been so in the dark about the budgets for their schools, which makes local school planning very difficult. Even Mary Levy, who may know more about the DCPS budget than anyone in the school system, had trouble figuring out what was and was not in the budget. This isn’t right in a democracy.

At this time in the history of our school system, the opposite is needed. Even among those who advocate dramatic reform of our school system, which we do, there are very different philosophies and very different directions that reform can take. Those differences need to be debated out and the Chancellor and the Council need to hear from informed citizens now, like never before.

Some would have you believe that there are only those who favor reform and those who do not, and of course there is no point in hearing from those who oppose change. This is a distortion. In fact, there are many knowledgeable people in this town who believe in urgent change and are critical of aspects of the current reform effort.

We wrote, quite knowledgably we believe, in the pages of the Washington Post’s Close to Home section September 28th, that if the Chancellor is serious about improving the quality of teaching and learning, that there are five programmatic elements that need to be in her plans. None of these necessary components of a system that supports good teaching seem to be part of current DCPS plans. We need to see and be able to comment on the budget and the extent to which it does and does not support what most educators would consider essential for systemic improvement in the quality of teaching and learning.

The context here is important. There seems to be a stark philosophical contrast between the approach being taken by the Chancellor in DCPS and that being taken in all the surrounding jurisdictions – Montgomery, Prince Georges, and Fairfax; between Chancellor Rhee’s approach and that advocated by education researchers, educational testing experts, and that supported by those who for decades have advocated the creation of a professional teacher workforce. The approach being taken in DCPS is perceived as a radical outlier, nationally. At the very least, there is a need now, more than ever, to have an opportunity for some debate, some discussion and public input before the DCPS budget is finalized and decisions are made. That will not happen without Council action.

At any time, the dialogue between those empowered to make decisions about our schools, and those impacted by those decisions is essential, but it is more so now than ever before.

Please restore the hearing process that used to exist before mayoral control. We support the requirement in the bill before you that the Chancellor annually make public, on the DCPS web site, a detailed estimate of the projected overall budget request, and a school-by-school breakdown, before the request is final so that the public can really come to understand the vision and comment.

November 5th "Teachers and Parents for Real Education Reform" Forum - 19th Street Baptist Church

November 5th "Teachers and Parents for Real Education Reform" Forum - 19th Street Baptist Church
150 teacher and parent leaders and DCPS policy wonks turned out to the Forum organized by "Teachers and Parents for Real Education Reform" to hear John Deasy, Randi Weingarten and Jen Whitman talk about what reform focused on improving teaching and learning looks like to the north in Montgomery and Prince Georges' counties.

There Is Another Way

The proposed WTU contract does not address many of the problems teachers face and will not make DCPS a better place to teach or learn. Successful reform of education in DC will require more than what we’ve seen, and we believe you know that too.

We who chose teaching as a profession want support for teachers to improve their craft but see nothing but disrespect and blame in the proposed contract.

The proposed raises and bonuses rely on private funding, which is not guaranteed. The green and red salary tiers will result in a teacher workforce that is a revolving door of short-timers. We think this approach disrespects the profession of teaching.

We need dramatic improvement in teacher salaries and high standards for teaching quality, but this contract is not the answer. It won’t work and it may bring disrespect for teachers and teaching that cannot be reversed.

Arbitrary, unaccountable power in the hands of principals to make every teacher an “at will” employee does not lead to better teaching. DCPS hasn’t clearly defined what good teaching is, but wants teachers to put their fate in the hands of principals, or worse, unreliable student test results as the measure of school and teacher quality.

The AFT is a national leader in fixing teacher evaluation systems, support systems for new and veteran teachers, and accountability to standards of good teaching practice. Why weren’t they brought in to help develop the WTU’s reform proposals? It’s not too late for the AFT to work with the WTU and put forward a new plan.

How do we create a stronger contract?
1. Vote “no” on the tentative agreement! We can do better.
2. Demand that the WTU leadership and negotiating team bring in the expertise of the AFT to develop and bring our proposals to the table.
3. Don’t worry! Voting against the proposed contract means that the current contract remains in force. We do not lose if we work for a better approach.

Learn more and join with your colleagues who see another way to reform. Please fill out the index card with your name, email, school, and contact information. Drop it in the box as you leave.


To find out more fill out an index card and give it to: Liz Davis (lizday_1951@yahoo.com),
Kerry Sylvia (kerrysylvia@yahoo.com), or any of the teachers distributing this flyer.
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