"A child's learning is the function more of the characteristics of his classmates than those of the teacher." James Coleman, 1972
Showing posts with label NAACP. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NAACP. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 24, 2018

Marshall Tuck’s racist dog whistle

“Blowing the racist dog whistle in politics is shameful. This disgraceful practice against black candidates unfortunately has a long and shameful history. That this would happen in California in 2018 is deeply disturbing. It appears you have chosen to follow President Trump’s playbook of using lies and fake news to smear prominent leaders of color.” — California Hawaii NAACP letter admonishing Marshall Tuck’s racism

The following is adapted from commentary here

The NAACP’s letter rightfully calls Marshall Tuck and his corporate backers out for their “[b]lowing the racist dog whistle in politics.” For business banker Tuck and the market-share obsessed charter school industry to accuse others of “not serving minorities” is really quite astonishing.

We must bear in mind that this is the same Tuck whose policies, much like those of his contemporary counterparts Tom Horne and John Huppenthal of Arizona, caused irreparable harm to students of color. Tuck closed down popular, research proven, Ethnic Studies programs. For example, Tuck completely eliminated Ethnic Sudies at (PLAS) Santee High School. Tuck also restricted and shuttered well regarded and research proven Heritage Language Programs and Dual Language Immersion programs. These language program closures and restrictions were so egregious, and such a violation of students’ civil rights, that the Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund and Public Counsel Law Center jointly filed a Uniform Complaint Cause of Action against Tuck on their behalf.

It took years of protracted court battles to defeat Horne and Huppenthal’s attacks on students of color. We can stop Tuck from carrying out that same agenda by simply electing Tony Thurmond. Californians have an opportunity to show Tuck and his right-wing backers that there’s no room for bigotry and ethnocentrism in our public institutions.

See also: Tuck’s Ethnocentrism Contradicts Californian Values

Friday, August 11, 2017

Ravitch Doubles Down on NAACP Charter Embrace

Last October the NAACP passed a resolution calling for a moratorium on the approval of new charter schools.  The resolution did nothing for the millions of segregated children already suffering in the penal no excuses charters that no NAACP Board member would ever allow for his or her own children, but it was a decision that, nonetheless, freaked out the multi-billion dollar charter industry and the abusive, well-paid overseers who run the charter reform schools.
  
As a result of NAACP call for a moratorium last fall, the billionaires went to work to put pressure on the NAACP to recant.  The NAACP, an organization largely dependent upon the generosity of corporate foundations, the philanthrocapitalists, and their corporate unions, caved to the pressure.  Less than a year after the squeeze began, members of the NAACP Board issued a report that ignores the moratorium by making recommendations for how new charters are to approved. The report provides a clear signal that the moratorium is now irrelevant.  

The NAACP report won the praise of the DNC/AFT/NEA/NPE.  As schoolmarm to the nation's neoliberals, Diane Ravitch went so far as put the NAACP in her blog's Honor Roll.  


On August 8, Ravitch took the opportunity to praise once again the new NAACP position, which mirrors the AFT/NEA/NPE position on charters.  Here are the two NAACP points regarding charters that Ravitch posted on her blog:


4. Mandate a rigorous [charter] authorizing and renewal process. States with the fewest authorizers have the best charters. Only local school districts should be allowed to authorize charters, based on their needs.
      . . . .
5. Eliminate for-profit charter schools and for-profit charter management companies that control nonprofit charters. Not a dollar of federal, state or local money should go to for-profit charters. The report notes that the widespread reports of misconduct of for-profit charters and their for-profit managers is reason enough to forbid them. As for-profits, they have an “inherent conflict of interest,” and may well put the interest of their investors over those of students. 

-->
Ravitch then asks:  Now, I ask you, what part of these five recommendations suggests that the NAACP is wrong? That it was doing the bidding of teachers’ unions?"  


The second part of your question I will answer with a question: Does anyone believe that it's a coincidence that the NAACP position on charters now mirrors the AFT/NEA/NPE position?  Or is the NAACP seeking refuge inside the DNC education tent?  Can they afford to support a moratorium that the DNC, which still run by the Clintonians, is not supporting?

As to why the NAACP/NEA/AFT/NPE position is wrong:  As I have noted most recently, putting local boards in charge of deciding which charter chain gangs get approval does nothing to staunch the flow of education dollars into the pockets of charter operators. It just makes local boards complicit in the corruption.

And as for the weak call to eliminate for-profit charters, here's what I said about that a couple of weeks ago:

-->
. . . the majority of charters have always been of the “non-profit” variety, with only 13 percent of the nation’s 7,500 charters run by for-profit companies.  Insisting that all charters become “non-profit” will only guarantee that that state and local education dollars will continue to fill the coffers of the charter industry, which thrives by claiming “non-profit” status for their segregated cultural sterilization schools based on the KIPP Model. 
 
Which, of course, is the final and most egregious "wrong" associated with the NAACP position: it ignores the damage being done to children in the neo-eugenic psychological neutering camps that are the chosen solution to controlling the urban poor.
 

Friday, July 28, 2017

NAACP Dumps Charter Moratorium And Wins Ravitch "Honor Roll" Status

Last October the NAACP adopted a resolution calling for a moratorium on the authorization of new charter schools.  Even though the new position did nothing to help the millions of children already trapped and abused in thousands of apartheid "no excuses" charter schools in 45 states, the resolution was viewed as the beginning of a societal shift away from the paternalistic "broken windows" school model that billionaires, hedge funders, and corporate foundations have supported for two decades as the final solution for urban pre-K-12 education.

In adopting the new resolution against charter expansion, however, the NAACP found itself outside the political mainstream and, thus, upstream from the primary flow of cash that sustains the organization's top-heavy hierarchy.  Then, as the AFT and NEA moved "all in" with their bet on a charter-embracing DNC that was/is owned by the Clintonians, the NAACP found itself further isolated and cut off from political influence and union generosity.

The result has been a quiet death of the moratorium accompanied by a new charter-friendly policy by the NAACP.  Not surprisingly, it is policy that mirrors the positions of AFT and NEA and NPE, which will be front and center in the 2018 midterm election year.

How does the NAACP explain its reversal?  Easy.  As Diane Ravitch explains, the NAACP has simply, though "boldly," asserted that charter schools now are public schools and, therefore, incapable of draining public money away:
The NAACP report boldly acknowledges that charters are part of a public-funded system. It says that it makes no sense to strip funding from the public schools that enroll the great majority of students in order to fund a parallel system that is usually no better than the public system and often worse.
Got that?  If charters are now "public," how can charters be stripping money away to a "parallel system?!"  Charters, then, are no longer part of the problem--they are part of the solution!  Bingo.

A month ago before the new NAACP report was released, Ravitch was thoroughly convinced by reading Rebecca Klein' dissembling at HuffPo that the moratorium would remain intact. She had this say then:
I am very impressed that the NAACP did not succumb to the big-money behind the privatization movement. That shows their genuine commitment to the children and families for whom they fight.
And what about now, after it has become clear that the NAACP capitulated and has, in fact, become the parrots of the AFT/NEA/NPE position for embracing charters. As you might imagine, now Ravitch is even more impressed by her new allies:
Like every national organization, the NAACP relies on major donors to survive. By standing strong against privatization of public schools, the NAACP has demonstrated courage and integrity. I add the NAACP to the honor roll of this blog, with admiration and respect.
 Remember, now, boys and girls: charter schools are public schools, so they can no longer be accused of privatizing.

Tuesday, October 18, 2016

Will NAACP Courage on Charters Blaze a New Trail?

Ever since Bush II and the dregs of Bill Clinton's DLC successfully framed NCLB's undeniable assault on public education, poor children, and their teachers as a civil rights crusade, I have been amazed at how acquiescent the NAACP has remained during the years of unrelenting denigration and humiliation of black and brown children in urban charter schools.  

Did the NAACP really believe the cynical rhetoric of the corporate usurpers and the predatory privatizers who built education industry empires on the backs of unpaid child laborers working 10 hour days to grind out test scores that are then held up as tangible signs of "educational equity?" 

Could the punishing segregated test prep charter schools for black children really become choice enough for NAACP leaders, who once led the charge for high quality integrated schools for all children?

How long would it take for civil rights leaders to throw off their passivity and inattention, so that schools might once more become instrumental in bending the arc of the moral universe toward justice?

One might argue that the NAACP has begun its awakening.  The ratification on October 15 of the resolution passed in July at the annual convention is a significant first step.  

Even so, there is evidence in the press release accompanying the ratification vote that the pressure from the neoliberal corporate press, the education industry, and the corporate foundations has had some success in influencing the final wording of the ratification statement:
We are calling for a moratorium on the expansion of the charter schools at least until such time as:

(1) Charter schools are subject to the same transparency and accountability standards as public schools


(2) Public funds are not diverted to charter schools at the expense of the public school system


(3) Charter schools cease expelling students that public schools have a duty to educate and


(4) Cease to perpetuate de facto segregation of the highest performing children from those whose aspirations may be high but whose talents are not yet as obvious.
Numbers 3 and 4 above could be worded more strongly, and here's why.   

As to #3 above, charter school rarely "expel" students, but suspensions are common and grade failure, more so. In effect, children who represent threats to the corporate brand, whether KIPP or another of the "no excuses" corporate chains, are provided a multiplicity of draconian reasons to leave.

As to #4 above, charter schools have been found to be more segregated than public schools, whether or not they have higher or lower test scores than the public schools they replace.

 


Friday, October 14, 2016

Moral Necessity and the NAACP Charter Moratorium, Part 1

Principal JondrĆ© Pryor of KIPP South Fulton Academy (KSFA) is just one among many corporate education reform schoolers who are wringing their hands over the NAACP's 2016 decision to support a strongly-worded resolution calling for a moratorium on the spread of privately-operated charter schools (see resolution at bottom of this page). 

Rather than accepting the possibility that NAACP members have read and heard about too many child abuse cases at "no excuses" charters to remain silent any longer, Mr. Pryor claims the problem is simply a matter of NAACP delegates suffering from an overload of "misinformation.  Pryor says,
I came to understand the NAACP’s position a little better when I attended a panel on education with several of my KIPP colleagues and when I talked one-on-one with several delegates. It became clear that misinformation was the basis for their opposition. They had heard stories about a few bad charter schools, and they were using that to judge all 6,800 schools in the movement. There have been some terrible stories about charter schools, just as we’ve all read terrible stories about traditional public schools and private schools. Those are unfortunate, embarrassing, disheartening exceptions.
"Embarrassing, disheartening exceptions?"  How about Mr. Pryor's own KIPP school, where he has been principal for the past eight years?  Mr. Pryor could have mentioned in his October 9 essay published by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution that his first year at KSFA was marred by news stories of student mistreatment and abuse, which resulted in at least seven parents yanking their children from his school:
Sunday, March 22, 2009

A south Fulton County charter school following one of the most lauded education programs nationwide is embroiled in a dispute over discipline that has led at least seven parents to yank their children out midyear.

The parents were so angry at what they saw as excessive punishment at KIPP South Fulton Academy that they complained to several agencies, including the Fulton school board and state Department of Education.

The parents said a group of children were mistreated by teachers who separated them from their peers in class and at lunch. The students, parents said, reported sitting on the floor and said one girl urinated on herself after not being allowed to use the restroom immediately.

School administrators said they erred in not calling parents as soon as their children got in trouble. First-year principal JondrƩ Pryor said he also should have done more to warn parents about the high expectations for conduct, as well as academics. . . . .
Some of the angry parents who pulled their children said "their children needed counseling afterward."   One male student told his mom, Ms. India Wood, that "I can’t take them yelling at me 10 hours today."  Ms. Wood withdrew her son in February 2009.

Below is a photo from the Atlanta Journal-Constitution showing KIPPsters sitting on the floor until students "earned" desks by displaying totally compliant behavior.  Embarrassing, I guess.  Or maybe criminally negligent would be a better description.


While Mr. Pryor offers up the usual short list of carefully-selected data claims related to high test scores to underpin his argument for more charter schools and to justify his condemnation of the NAACP demand for a charter moratorium, there are other KIPP data closer to home that Mr. Pryor does not mention.

For instance, KSFA performance has been moving down steadily among the state rankings of middle schools since 2007, when KSFA ranked 31st among Georgia middle schools.  In 2016 it ranks 129th.

During that past eight year span, which coincides with Mr. Pryor's tenure at KIPP,  KSFA's average standard State score has declined from 84.71 to 70.88 in 2016.

Oddly, KSFA academic performance seems to be moving in the opposite direction of its "profitability."  For a "non-profit" charter school, this KIPP seems to be doing pretty well, based on information from 2013:

I checked online to find out what parents are saying about Mr. Pryor's school, and I found this single 2016 rating here by a parent who gave KSFA "one star:"
My child comes homes crying because she feels dumb... because the teacher yells at her constantly for small things like dropping a pencil more than once in one class period. They also call kids to school to early. There is a summer school program even for kids that got good grades, its mandatory. They really only get one month of summer which really takes away from traveling plans and just family time all together. Very disappointed. I mean my child learns but i hate for her to learn in such a cruel way. NOT RECOMMENDED AT ALL.

 Perhaps the NAACP delegates should look the other way.

Part 2 will have more to say about Mr. Pryor's essay and the NAACP resolution below, which spawned his outpouring of concern:








Monday, August 10, 2015

Why Have Some Civil Rights Groups Flipped on Standardized Testing?

By Ken Derstine @ Defend Public Education!
August 10, 2015
(Most recent link update August 13, 2015)


 
In 1947, as a student at Morehouse College, an eighteen-year old Martin Luther King, Jr. wrote an article for the student newspaper The Maroon Tiger. In the article, The Purpose of Education, he explained his vision of what education should be. He said education should not be about equipping students “with the proper instruments of exploitation so that they can forever trample over the masses”. He continued, education must also be about more than training for a career, stating,

“Education must also train one for quick, resolute and effective thinking. To think incisively and to think for one's self is very difficult. We are prone to let our mental life become invaded by legions of half truths, prejudices, and propaganda. At this point, I often wonder whether or not education is fulfilling its purpose. A great majority of the so-called educated people do not think logically and scientifically. Even the press, the classroom, the platform, and the pulpit in many instances do not give us objective and unbiased truths. To save man from the morass of propaganda, in my opinion, is one of the chief aims of education. Education must enable one to sift and weigh evidence, to discern the true from the false, the real from the unreal, and the facts from the fiction.” 
_______________

On October 28, 2014, eleven civil rights groups sent a letter to President Obama and Education Secretary Arne Duncan urging them to drop the test based K-12 ‘accountability’ system. In it they state,

“While the need for accountability is almost universally agreed upon, there have been concerns raised about overly punitive accountability systems that do not take into account the resources, geography, student population, and needs of specific schools. In particular, the No Child Left Behind law has not accomplished its intended goals of substantially expanding educational equity or significantly improving educational outcomes. Racial achievement and opportunity gaps remain large, and many struggling school systems have made little progress under rules that emphasize testing without investing. We must shift towards accountability strategies that promote equity and strengthen, rather than weaken, schools in our communities, so that they can better serve students and accelerate student success.”

The letter goes on to list eight recommendations – none of which call for high stakes testing.

The organizations signing the letter were:

Advancement Project
Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights Under Law
League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund (MALDEF)
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
National Opportunity to Learn (OTL) Campaign
National Urban League (NUL)
NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDF)
National Council on Educating Black Children (NCEBC)
National Indian Education Association (NIEA)
Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC)

On May 5, 2015, twelve civil rights organizations, including some of those listed above issued a press release opposing opting-out of standardized tests. In it they state,

“Standardized tests, as ‘high stakes tests,’ have been misused over time to deny opportunity and undermine the educational purpose of schools, actions we have never supported and will never condone.  But the anti-testing efforts that appear to be growing in states across the nation, like in Colorado and New York, would sabotage important data and rob us of the right to know how our students are faring. When parents ‘opt out’ of tests—even when out of protest for legitimate concerns—they’re not only making a choice for their own child, they’re inadvertently making a choice to undermine efforts to improve schools for every child.”

The organizations signing the press release were:

*The Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (also known as NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund)
The American Association of University Women (AAUW)
Association of University Centers on Disabilities (AUCD)
Council of Parent Attorneys and Advocates, Inc. (COPAA)
Disability Rights Education and Defense Fund (DREDF)
*League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC)
*NAACP
*National Council of La Raza (NCLR)
National Disability Rights Network (NDRN)
*National Urban League (NUL)
*Southeast Asia Resource Action Center (SEARAC)
TASH

The organizations that signed both documents are marked with an asterisk.

That standardized tests are needed for funding decisions is a bogus claim. Community income levels should determine the needs of a school. Torturing students for hours with tests that have nothing to do with diagnosis or remediation of student learning deficits are not going to bring equity in education. Quite the opposite!

Under corporate education reform, which is a full-scale assault on public education, standardized tests are used to rank teachers and schools for the purpose of closing schools or doing a “turnaround” from a public to a charter school. The ultimate purpose of these tests is to advance a privatization agenda that affects low-income communities the hardest.

So why would these organizations, some of the largest civil rights organizations in the United States, jointly agree to do a one-eighty on standardized testing in just a few months?

On May 9, 2015, Wayne Au, associate professor in the School of Educational Studies at the University of Washington Bothell, and an editor for the social justice teaching magazine Rethinking Schools, had a column in the Washington Post, “Just whose rights do these civil rights groups think they are protecting?

Au says,

“We cannot, of course, say that these groups came to the defense of high-stakes, standardized testing at the behest of the Gates Foundation, but we should be clear that their politics align with that of the Gates Foundation, and so the fact that these particular civil rights organizations came out in force to support a central reform backed by the foundation should come as no surprise to anyone.”

Au found the following funding of these organizations by the Gates Foundation:

National Council of La Raza: $33,446,160 total
National Urban League: $5,286,017 total
Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights (also listed as the Leadership Conference Education Fund): $3,811,021 total
NAACP: $2,456,106 total
Southeast Asian Resource Center $1,680,105  total
League of United Latin American Citizens: $943,687 total

From the Walton Foundation (Walmart), Au found the following funding for civil rights organizations.
National Council on La Raza: $2,561,741 total
National Urban League (and Urban League of New Orleans): $731,300 total

Au notes,
According to Making Change At Walmart, Walmart is the largest single employer of African Americans in the country (20 percent of the 1.3 million total employees), pays employees an average of $8.81 an hour, and under Walmart’s definition of full-time work, an employee would only earn 65 percent of the 2014 federal poverty rate for a family of four. According to a brief by the Economic Policy Institute, the Walton Family’s total wealth equals that of 79 percent of the combined wealth of all African American families (or almost 78 percent of the combined wealth of all Latino families).

That two major leaders of corporate education reform have targeted civil rights organizations for “philanthropy” is no accident. It allows them to carry out their neoliberal stealth campaign giving their funding a progressive veneer, while actually targeting low-income communities as the most vulnerable for advancing their privatization agenda.
The Walton Foundation has been especially involved with the Black Alliance for Educational Opportunity in advancing the privatization agenda among civil rights organizations. Milwaukee-based BAEO is a promoter of charter schools and vouchers in urban areas all over the country. Founder Howard Fuller has said, “We wouldn’t exist without John Walton and this is one of the reasons I love that man.” See Corporate Education Reform and Civil Rights | Defend Public Education!

The National Urban League, at its recent national convention, gave Jeb Bush the platform to promote charter schools and the tax-credit voucher program which he pioneered while he was governor of Florida. In the August 6, 2015 GOP debate Bush advanced his support of Common Core, taking a states rights position that each state should have its own version of Common Core. This is to bring him in line with Congressional Republicans who are promoting the ALEC states rights position in the current Congressional Conference on the ESEA rewrite.

On the day of the GOP debate, Daniel Pfeiffer, a former senior advisor to President Obama for strategy and communications, tweeted that the White House was grateful to Jeb Bush for helping to promote Common Core. Probably meant in jest, it nevertheless shows the coming together of constituents from the two parties for the common goal of advancing the privatization of public education.

For their part, neoliberal Congressional Democrats continue to promote the goals of the Murphy Amendment in the Conference Committee that had been rejected in the Senate version of the ESEA rewrite. All but two Democrats voted for this doubling down of No Child Left Behind that would expand the role of testing in school and teacher evaluations. It was voted down because Senate Republicans saw it as an expansion of the federal role in education. Teacher blogger Mercedes Schneider describes the Murphy Amendment goal this way:

“Senator Murphy’s (D-CT) amendment 2241 (which Warren co-sponsored) went up for a vote and was rejected 43-54. The 12-page text of Murphy’s SA 2241 reads more like No Child Left Behind (NCLB), with its detailed prescription for reporting on student test results, for “meaningfully differentiating among all public schools” (i.e., grading schools), including publicly identifying the lowest five percent, and, among interventions, potentially firing staff and offering students the option to transfer to other schools and using part of the budget to pay for the transportation.

This amendment would have enacted tough, federal-mandated accountability, akin to setting up an “achievement school district” in every state.”

This will be a major goal of neoliberal Democrats when the Conference Committee resumes deliberations after a five-week summer break in September.

Neoliberal Democrats have used civil rights organizations as a way to justify expanding standardized testing.

The bill’s lead sponsor, Senator Chris Murphy (D-CT), said rejection of expansion of testing would “return the country to the days when states and school districts could ignore achievement gaps and allow poor, minority and disabled children to languish.”

American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten, on a panel at the Network for Public Education, on April 26, 2015 said, (47:00 in the linked video)

“The civil rights community and the President of the United States of America is fighting very hard to have annual tests for one purpose. They have seen in states for years, that if they didn’t have them that states would ignore children.”

The National Education Association, on the other hand, is against the Murphy Amendment because it “would result in an over-identification of failing schools, repeating a key problem with No Child Left Behind.” The union was attacked by the Gates funded Education Trust (see Education Trust: Profoundly Gates-funded, Test-driven-reform Machine by Mercedes Schneider) for its position. Its President, Kati Haycock, accused the NEA of working to protect suburban schools that perform well on average, but not “gritty urban districts” whom she claims need standardized tests to be funded.

U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan has been notorious for using waivers from the NCLB requirements to whip states desperate for federal funding into line. The Race to the Top program uses a carrot-and-stick approach for advancing the neoliberal privatization agenda.

Isn’t it obvious that corporate education reform “philanthropists” are using the same method to hold out desperately needed (whether for organizational survival or greed)  funding to civil rights organizations and others? They attempt to buy the loyalty of civil rights organizations while advancing corporate interests and higher profits that actually sells out the interests of the people they claim to represent.

How can public education and democracy itself survive when the interests of profit are put above the common good?

What would Martin Luther King do?

This is what he said at the close of The Purpose of Education,

“We must remember that intelligence is not enough. Intelligence plus character--that is the goal of true education. The complete education gives one not only power of concentration, but worthy objectives upon which to concentrate. The broad education will, therefore, transmit to one not only the accumulated knowledge of the race but also the accumulated experience of social living. 



If we are not careful, our colleges will produce a group of close-minded, unscientific, illogical propagandists, consumed with immoral acts. Be careful, ‘brethren!’ Be careful, teachers!”


Also see:

As of this writing, 623 organizations and 19,691 individuals have signed a resolution to the Obama Administration and Congress calling for the “overhaul the Elementary and Secondary Education Act, currently known as the "No Child Left Behind Act," reduce the testing mandates, promote multiple forms of evidence of student learning and school quality in accountability, and not mandate any fixed role for the use of student test scores in evaluating educators.” The Real News



Black Lives Do Matter But Do They Move?
The Real News – August 10, 2015

The Betrayal by the Black Elite with Chris Hedges and Cornel West
The Real News – August 11, 2015