Steven Singer's Blog, page 35

August 6, 2018

Top 10 Reasons You Can’t Fairly Evaluate Teachers on Student Test Scores

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I’m a public school teacher.


 


Am I any good at my job?


 


There are many ways to find out. You could look at how hard I work, how many hours I put in. You could look at the kinds of things I do in my classroom and examine if I’m adhering to best practices. You could look at how well I know my students and their families, how well I’m attempting to meet their needs.


 


Or you could just look at my students’ test scores and give me a passing or failing grade based on whether they pass or fail their assessments.


 


It’s called Value-Added Measures (VAM) and at one time it was the coming fad in education. However, after numerous studies and lawsuits, the shine is fading from this particularly narrow-minded corporate policy.


 


Most states that evaluate their teachers using VAM do so because under President Barack Obama they were offered Race to the Top grants and/or waivers.


 


Now that the government isn’t offering cash incentives, seven states have stopped using VAM and many more have reduced the weight given to these assessments. The new federal K-12 education law – the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) – does not require states to have educator evaluation systems at all. And if a state chooses to enact one, it does not have to use VAM.


 


That’s a good thing because the evidence is mounting against this controversial policy. An evaluation released in June of 2018 found that a $575 million push by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation to make teachers (and thereby students) better through the use of VAM was a complete waste of money.


 


Meanwhile a teacher fired from the Washington, DC, district because of low VAM scores just won a 9-year legal battle with the district and could be owed hundreds of thousands of dollars in back pay as well as getting his job back.


 


But putting aside the waste of public tax dollars and the threat of litigation, is VAM a good way to evaluate teachers?


 


Is it fair to judge educators on their students’ test scores?


 


Here are the top 10 reasons why the answer is unequivocally negative:


 


 


1) VAM was Invented to Assess Cows.

I’m not kidding. The process was created by William L. Sanders, a statistician in the college of business at the University of Knoxville, Tennessee. He thought the same kinds of statistics used to model genetic and reproductive trends among cattle could be used to measure growth among teachers and hold them accountable. You’ve heard of the Tennessee Value-Added Assessment System (TVAAS) or TxVAAS in Texas or PVAAS in Pennsylvania or more generically named EVAAS in states like Ohio, North Carolina, and South Carolina. That’s his work. The problem is that educating children is much more complex than feeding and growing cows. Not only is it insulting to assume otherwise, it’s incredibly naïve.


 


2) You can’t assess teachers on tests that were made to assess students.

This violates fundamental principles of both statistics and assessment. If you make a test to assess A, you can’t use it to assess B. That’s why many researchers have labeled the process “junk science” – most notably the American Statistical Association in 2014. Put simply, the standardized tests on which VAM estimates are based have always been, and continue to be, developed to assess student achievement and not growth in student achievement nor growth in teacher effectiveness. The tests on which VAM estimates are based were never designed to estimate teachers’ effects. Doing otherwise is like assuming all healthy people go to the best doctors and all sick people go to the bad ones. If I fail a dental screening because I have cavities, that doesn’t mean my dentist is bad at his job. It means I need to brush more and lay off the sugary snacks.


 


3) There’s No Consistency in the Scores.

Valid assessments produce consistent results. This is why doctors often run the same medical test more than once. If the first try comes up positive for cancer, let’s say, they’re hoping the second time will come up negative. However, if multiple runs of the same test produce the same result, that diagnosis gains credence. Unfortunately, VAM scores are notoriously inconsistent. When you evaluate teachers with the same test (but different students) over multiple years, you often get divergent results. And not just by a little. Teachers who do well one year may do terribly the next. This makes VAM estimates extremely unreliable. Teachers who should be (more or less) consistently effective are being classified in sometimes highly inconsistent ways over time. A teacher classified as “adding value” has a 25 to 50% chance of being classified as “subtracting value” the next year, and vice versa. This can make the probability of a teacher being identified as effective no different than the flip of a coin.


 


4) Changing the test can change the VAM score.

If you know how to add, it doesn’t matter if you’re asked to solve 2 +2 or 3+ 3. Changing the test shouldn’t have a major impact on the result. If both tests are evaluating the same learning and at the same level of difficulty, changing the test shouldn’t change the result. But when you change the tests used in VAM assessments, scores and rankings can change substantially. Using a different model or a different test often produces a different VAM score. This may indicate a problem with value added measures or with the standardized tests used in conjunction with it. Either way, it makes VAM scores invalid.


 


5) VAM measures correlation, not causation.

Sometimes A causes B. Sometimes A and B simply occur at the same time. For example, most people in wheelchairs have been in an accident. That doesn’t mean being in a wheelchair causes accidents. The same goes for education. Students who fail a test didn’t learn the material. But that doesn’t mean their teacher didn’t try to teach them. VAM does not measure teacher effectiveness. At best it measures student learning. Effects – positive or negative – attributed to a teacher may actually be caused by other factors that are not captured in the model. For instance, the student may have a learning disability, the student may have been chronically absent or the test, itself, may be an invalid measure of the learning that has taken place.


 


6) Vam Scores are Based on Flawed Standardized Tests.

When you base teacher evaluations on student tests, at very least the student tests have to be valid. Otherwise, you’ll have unfairly assessed BOTH students AND teachers. Unfortunately standardized tests are narrow, limited indicators of student learning. They leave out a wide range of important knowledge and skills leaving only the easiest-to-measure parts of math and English curriculum. Test scores are not universal, abstract measures of student learning. They greatly depend on a student’s class, race, disability status and knowledge of English. Researchers have been decrying this for decades – standardized tests often measure the life circumstances of the students not how well those students learn – and therefore by extension they cannot assess how well teachers teach.


 


7) VAM Ignores Too Many Factors.

When a student learns or fails to learn something, there is so much more going on than just a duality between student and teacher. Teachers cannot simply touch students’ heads and magically make learning take place. It is a complex process involving multiple factors some of which are poorly understood by human psychology and neuroscience. There are inordinate amounts of inaccurate or missing data that cannot be easily replaced or disregardedvariables that cannot be statistically controlled for such as: differential summer learning gains and losses, prior teachers’ residual effects, the impact of school policies such as grouping and tracking students, the impact of race and class segregation, etc. When so many variables cannot be accounted for, any measure returned by VAMs remains essentially incomplete.


 


8) VAM Has Never been Proven to Increase Student Learning or Produce Better Teachers.

That’s the whole purpose behind using VAM. It’s supposed to do these two things but there is zero research to suggest it can do them. You’d think we wouldn’t waste billions of dollars and generations of students on a policy that has never been proven effective. But there you have it. This is a faith-based initiative. It is the pet project of philanthrocapitalists, tech gurus and politicians. There is no research yet which suggests that VAM has ever improved teachers’ instruction or student learning and achievement. This means VAM estimates are typically of no informative, formative, or instructional value.


 


9) VAM Often Makes Things Worse.

Using these measures has many unintended consequences that adversely affect the learning environment. When you use VAMs for teacher evaluations, you often end up changing the way the tests are viewed and ultimately the school culture, itself. This is actually one of the intents of using VAMs. However, the changes are rarely positive. For example, this often leads to a greater emphasis on test preparation and specific tested content to the exclusion of content that may lead to better long-term learning gains or increasing student motivation. VAM incentivizes teachers to wish for the most advanced students in their classes and to push the struggling students onto someone else so as to maximize their own personal VAM score. Instead of a collaborative environment where everyone works together to help all students learn, VAM fosters a competitive environment where innovation is horded and not shared with the rest of the staff. It increases turnover and job dissatisfaction. Principals stack classes to make sure certain teachers are more likely to get better evaluations or vice versa. Finally, being unfairly evaluated disincentives new teachers to stay in the profession and it discourages the best and the brightest from ever entering the field in the first place. You’ve heard about that “teacher shortage” everyone’s talking about. VAM is a big part of it.


 


10) An emphasis on VAM overshadows real reforms that actually would help students learn.

Research shows the best way to improve education is system wide reforms – not targeting individual teachers. We need to equitably fund our schools. We can no longer segregate children by class and race and give the majority of the money to the rich white kids while withholding it from the poor brown ones. Students need help dealing with the effects of generational poverty – food security, psychological counseling, academic tutoring, safety initiatives, wide curriculum and anti-poverty programs. A narrow focus on teacher effectiveness dwarfs all these other factors and hides them under the rug. Researchers calculate teacher influence on student test scores at about 14%. Out-of-school factors are the most important. That doesn’t mean teachers are unimportant – they are the most important single factor inside the school building. But we need to realize that outside the school has a greater impact. We must learn to see the whole child and all her relationships –not just the student-teacher dynamic. Until we do so, we will continue to do these children a disservice with corporate privatization scams like VAM which demoralize and destroy the people who dedicate their lives to helping them learn – their teachers.


 



NOTE: Special thanks to the amazingly detailed research of Audrey Amrein-Beardsley whose Vamboozled Website is THE on-line resource for scholarship about VAM.



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on August 06, 2018 09:21

August 2, 2018

Wannabe Terrorist Attempts to Flood Our Schools & Public Spaces With 3D Printed Guns to Make Common Sense Restrictions Moot

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In the United States, we literally have more guns than people.


 


Yet we’re trying really hard to make even more available with the touch of a button.


 


It’s not enough that our right to kill is better protected than our right to live, we need to make it EASIER to commit murder. In the land of the drive-by shooting, slaughter needs to be as convenient as ordering a pizza.


 


Cody Wilson, a wannabe terrorist who apparently believes John Wayne westerns are documentaries, claims to have invented the first gun that can be made almost completely on a 3D printer. And he wants to post the plans on-line so anyone with access to the device can make one.


 


He was stopped by a U.S. District judge in Seattle who temporarily banned the plans from publication on the Internet this week following a last-minute lawsuit filed by seven state attorneys general.


 


They argued that 3D-printed firearms would be invisible to metal detectors and could bypass gun restrictions recently adopted after a string of school shootings in some states.


 


The issue will go back to court on August 10, when the sides will discuss whether a preliminary injunction is needed.


 


The whole matter was almost settled in 2013 when the Obama administration originally stopped Wilson from putting his plans online with a lawsuit. After years of back and forth, the federal case against the virtual arms merchant seemed like a slam dunk. Then Donald Trump came into office and not only stopped the suit but paid Wilson $40,000 in damages.


 


So the question remains – why would any sane human being want to post a do-it-yourself gun kit on the Internet where any criminal, psychotic or violent fanatic could easily access it?


 


Wilson says he’s not in it for financial gain. He wants to make a political point – to flood the world with so many cheap, untraceable guns that the idea of passing any kind of regulations on them would be impossible.


 


No, really.


 


As he told Wired:


 


“All this Parkland stuff, the students, all these dreams of ‘common sense gun reforms’? No. The Internet will serve guns, the gun is downloadable. No amount of petitions or die-ins or anything else can change that.”


 


Not only that, but the owner and founder of Defense Distributed, an Austin, Texas, based start up that pretends to be a nonprofit organization, says he is prepared to kill police and federal agents if the courts don’t continue seeing things his way.


 


In the same Wired interview, he says he wasn’t expecting support from the Trump administration. He expected Hillary Clinton would win the White House in 2016 and that she would continue to oppose his 3D printed firearms.


 


As Wired reported:


 


“If that happened, as Wilson tells it, he was ready to launch his [3D printed gun] repository, regardless of the outcome of his lawsuit, and then defend it in an armed standoff. “I’d call a militia out to defend the server, Bundy-style,” Wilson says calmly, in the first overt mention of planned armed violence I’ve ever heard him make. “Our only option was to build an infrastructure where we had one final suicidal mission, where we dumped everything into the Internet,” Wilson says.”


 


So let’s be clear about one thing – the guy pushing for 3D printed firearms is literally a terrorist imitator.


 


He is an American extremist. He is to us as Osama bin Laden is to mainstream Muslims.


 


Or at least he wants to be that.


 


While we’re rounding up brown people and separating them from their children without any workable plan to reunite them on this or that side of the border, we have a US citizen making terroristic threats with the means to carry them out and he’s walking around free.


 


Oh, but he’s a privileged white dude, so no harm no foul.


 


If Wilson’s little plastic death dealers do become widely available on-line, they won’t immediately make a huge difference.


 


It’s hard to make a 3D-printed gun. You need an expensive, top-of-the-line 3D printer and some knowledge of how to work it. And even then the result is a shoddy firearm at best. It may only fire a few bullets before falling apart.


 


A shooter would have to work extra hard to accomplish his goal with Wilson’s design. It would be much easier to use one of the billions of firearms already available – and much more deadly.


 


But it wouldn’t take much to make a 3D-printed gun more dangerous.


 


To comply with federal law, Wilson’s design requires a metal firing pin, which he claims would set off a metal detector. However, it may be relatively easy to bypass that metal part to make his design truly concealable from such devices.


 


Moreover, technology is always advancing – 3D printers will probably be able to create stronger and more deadly firearms in time. With these sorts of designs readily available, it is easy to imagine a school shooter accessing a device in a tech or computer lab and creating a weapon of mass destruction. He wouldn’t set off any alarms because he wouldn’t have the gun when he entered the building. He’d make it in school.


 


Some shrug at these dangers saying that they’re inevitable.


 


Even if we stop Wilson, these sorts of designs will eventually be available in some form on-line. That’s the double-edged sword of mass media – all information is available including easy ways to kill a large number of people.


 


However, I think this is a cop-out.


 


For instance, the Internet and computer technology make it fairly easy to mass produce currency as well as firearms. In fact, it’s theoretically much easier.


 


Yet we don’t see a major influx of counterfeit bills. The reason? Business and industry have collaborated with government to make sure this doesn’t happen.


 


Programs like Adobe Photoshop include software that restrict the printing of your own money. We could do the same with future 3D printers. We could recall those already in service and retrofit them with such code.


 


Oh, sure not everyone will comply. There will always be someone who breaks through the safety net. But if all we can do is greatly reduce the spread of 3D-printed firearms, that doesn’t make it futile.


 


There is a mountain of research proving that the more firearms you have in a country, the greater the number of firearm deaths.


 


We should be working to restrict guns to responsible people.


 


But the Wilson’s of the world don’t want to allow us that choice.


 


They want to force us all to live in a world where guns are even more pernicious than they are today.


 


Will we let them?


 


Human beings have such potential, but we seem determined to kill ourselves.


 


If intelligent aliens came to Earth today and landed in the USA, what would they think of us?


 


Would they see what we might become or would they only see a pitiful animal struggling to put itself out of its own misery?



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on August 02, 2018 18:39

July 31, 2018

Resistance to High Stakes Testing Persists as Media Celebrates Its End

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There has never been more opposition to high stakes standardized testing.


 


Yet the corporate controlled media is pretending that the resistance is over.


 


Parents are refusing to let their kids take these tests at the same or even greater numbers than ever.


 


Fewer states require high stakes tests as graduation exams and/or use them to evaluate their teachers. Across the nation, states are cutting the size of standardized tests or eliminating them altogether. And more state legislatures passed laws explicitly allowing parents to opt their children out of the tests.


 


Yet Education Week published an article a few days ago called “Anti-Test Movement Slows to a Crawl.”


 


I think we have different definitions of “Slows” and “Crawl.”


 


That may not be surprising since we also seem to have different definitions of “Anti-Test.”


 


The Opt Out Movement is not “Anti-Test.” It is anti-high stakes standardized test.


 


It is against the federal government forcing states to use corporate written, corporate graded and corporate remediated standardized assessments.


 


It is against the federal government requiring each state to participate in a corporate boondoggle that not only wastes billions of tax dollars that could be better spent to educate children but also unfairly assesses their academic progress and feeds the push to privatize public schools.


 


Most people against high stakes standardized testing, however, have no problem with authentic teacher-created assessments.


 


Calling these folks “Anti-Test” is like labeling those pushing for stricter gun regulations “Anti-Gun” or smearing those protesting government corruption as “Anti-Government.”


 


And that’s just the title!


 


The author Alyson Klein further misdirects readers by conflating opt out rates and test resistance.


 


She implied that the only measure of opposition was the percentage of students who opt out. However, as noted above, there are multiple measures of resistance.


 


 


Moreover, few states advertise their opt out rates. Especially after the movement began, states made that information harder to come by to dissuade more people from joining it.


 


Of those states where information is available, Klein puts the most negative possible spin on the facts in order to make her point – a point that it seems to me is not at all justified.


 


For instance, Klein writes:


 


“At least some of the steam has gone out of the opt-out movement in states such as New Jersey and New York, considered hotbeds of anti-testing fervor.”


 


Really?


 


In New York, Opt out numbers remained at approximately 20% – the same as they have for the past three years.


 


And New York is one of our most densely populated states. That percentage represents more than 225,000 parents across the Empire State who refused to let their children take the tests despite threats from many administrators and district officials for doing so.


 


 


In New Jersey, opt out rates were marginally lower this year than last year. They went from 7% to 5%. But once again New Jersey is a populous state. That percentage represents about 68,500 students.


 


In addition, this is after massive opt outs three years ago that forced the state to change its federally mandated assessment. Testing boycotts pushed the state education association to get rid of four PARCC assessments and allow students who fail the remaining two tests to take an alternative assessment. And this is in a state where there is no law explicitly allowing parents to opt out of the tests.


 


I don’t know if I’d call that running out of steam.


 


Moreover, opt out rates have increased in other states for which we have data. For instance, test refusal is on the rise in heartland states like Minnesota.


 


And it nearly doubled in Utah over the past two years to about 6%. In some schools in the Beehive State, rates are much higher. According to the Salt Lake Tribune, 1 in 5 students in the Park City school district refused to take the tests.


 


 


Though my own state of Pennsylvania has been mum on last year’s opt outs, from my own personal experience as a teacher in suburban Pittsburgh, I never had more students boycott our federally mandated standardized test than I did last year.


 


There were so many they had to be quarantined in a special room.


 


Moreover, an increasing number of parents ask me about the issue, express concern and wonder about their rights.


 


So even when examining just the rate of opt out, I don’t see any reason to assume the movement is slowing down.


 


On the contrary, it is picking up steam with multiple victories.


 


As recently as 2012, half of all U.S. states required high school exit exams in order for students to graduate. Today that number has dropped to 12. The reason? Exit exams don’t raise student achievement – they raise the dropout rate. At least that’s what The National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences tells us.


 


Another positive sign – seven states have stopped using value added measures (VAM) to judge teachers. This is the highly controversial practice of assessing educators based on their students test scores – a practice that has never been proven fair to teachers or effective in helping students learn. Six states have dropped this requirement altogether: Alaska, Arkansas, Kansas, Kentucky, North Carolina and Oklahoma. Connecticut still gathers the information but cannot use it in the teacher’s “summative rating.” And other states like New Mexico still use value added measures but have reduced the weight given to student test scores.


 


Moreover, let’s not forget how many states have slashed the size of the high stakes tests they’re giving to students. After the recent wave of opt outs and public outcry, state education departments have ensured that testing at least takes up less time. This includes New York, Maryland, New Mexico, California, Minnesota, Kentucky, Tennessee, Florida, Washington, Illinois, West Virginia, Hawaii, Oklahoma, Ohio, South Carolina, Pennsylvania and Texas. Some of this is because the PARCC test used in 21 states was slashed by 90 minutes.


 


And when it comes to opt out, two more states – Idaho and North Dakota – now have explicit laws on the books allowing parents to refuse the test for their children – in whole or in part. That brings the total number of states up to 10. It would have been 11, but Georgia Governor Nathan Deal, a Republican, vetoed an opt-out bill. The federal government still wants us to penalize these districts for non-participation in flagrant violation of its authority. But as more states respect parents’ rights on this matter, it will be increasingly difficult for the U.S. Department of Education to continue trampling them.


 


And speaking of the federal government, some states are taking advantage of the wiggle room in the federal law that governs K-12 education – the newly passed Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) – to allow students to avoid standardized testing entirely. Some states are implementation performance assessments instead. Kids can use a portfolio of classwork to demonstrate learning instead of getting a grade on a corporate-written standardized test. New Hampshire, for instance, has pioneered this approach with a program that now involves half the state’s districts.


 


These are not the signs of a movement that is slowing to a crawl.


 


It just makes sense that some of the rhetoric of the movement may have become less forceful with the enactment of the federal ESSA.


 


Many had hoped for a better law – one that did away with federally mandated testing altogether.


 


And that could still happen sooner than many think. Next year it will be time to reauthorize the law again.


 


It took Congress six years to reauthorize the federal education law last time. Perhaps our duly elected representatives can be coaxed into doing their jobs a bit quicker this time.


 


There is already some proposed legislation to make positive changes. Sen. Jon Tester (D-Mont.) and Rep. Krysten Sinema (D-Ariz.) introduced legislation last year to replace annual assessments with grade-span tests. The United States is, after all, one of the only countries in the world – if not the only one – to require students be tested every year. These proposed changes are not nearly enough, but they’re a step in the right direction.


 


One of the biggest obstacles to abolishing federally mandated testing last time was that some of the oldest and most well funded civil rights organizations opposed it. Many of them get their money and support from the same billionaires who profit off of the standardized testing and privatization industries.


 


However, that support for testing was short lived. Already the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) has revoked it returning to a call for opposition to testing.


 


If our nation survives the many crises of the Donald Trump administration, there is no reason our future cannot be bright.


 


We have the support, we have the tools, we just need the chance to do right by our children.


 


And the pendulum is swinging back our way.



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 31, 2018 07:47

July 29, 2018

Republicans, Democrats – Let’s Scrap Them Both!

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Political parties are a huge mistake.


 


Our founding fathers knew this.


 


Though it was their constant squabbling and political power struggles that gave way to the party system in the first place, they also were incredibly vocal about the errors they, themselves, were committing.


 


Thomas Jefferson and James Madison preferred state power that would protect southern interests including slave-holding. George Washington, John Adams and Alexander Hamilton favored federal authority that would benefit the north and manufacturing.


 


But in taking sides to protect their own power, they split into the very factions they knew would poison the newborn Republic.


 


At his farewell address in 1796, Washington put it this way:


 


“However [political parties] may now and then answer popular ends, they are likely in the course of time and things, to become potent engines, by which cunning, ambitious, and unprincipled men will be enabled to subvert the power of the people and to usurp for themselves the reins of government, destroying afterwards the very engines which have lifted them to unjust dominion.”


 


His successor, Adams wrote:


 


“There is nothing which I dread so much as a division of the republic into two great parties, each arranged under its leader, and concerting measures in opposition to each other. This, in my humble apprehension, is to be dreaded as the greatest political evil under our Constitution.”


 


In 1789, Jefferson put it more succinctly:


 


“If I could not go to heaven but with a party, I would not go there at all.”


 


So why do we today enshrine political parties in our system of government?


 


In short, it keeps the wealthy in power.


 


Nothing robs democracy of its populism so much as the party system.


 


Backward legislation and regressive court decisions equating money with speech only make this worse. But they are simply exacerbating a sickness that’s already there.


 


Political parties condense the world of advertising and commerce to that of government.


 


Political ideas are sorted and processed until they can become tasty sound bites – one accorded to one group and the corresponding response to another.


 


Federalism vs. States.


 


Taxation vs. Business


 


Guns vs. Regulations


 


It’s all bullshit.


 


No one really cares whether rules are made by an aggregation of the entire nation or merely an aggregation from each individual state. We only care that laws are fair and just.


 


No one really wants businesses to be taxed to death, nor do they want individuals to be unfairly burdened. They want a just system of taxation where everyone pays their fair share and supports an equitable distribution of the wealth.


 


No one really wants to unilaterally prohibit individual freedoms – including the freedom to own a gun. They want sane regulations so that killers and maniacs can’t as easily destroy innocent lives.


 


But political parties obscure these simple truths and sort us all into one of two teams. Yet both sides support the same unchangeable status quo.


 


As writer Gore Vidal put it:


 


“Officially we have two parties which are in fact wings of a common party of property with two right wings. Corporate wealth finances each. Since the property party controls every aspect of media they have had decades to create a false reality for a citizenry largely uneducated by public schools that teach conformity with an occasional advanced degree in consumerism.”


 


Part of this is due to our insistence that the party system be limited to two groups – Republicans and Democrats. We make it incredibly difficult – nearly impossible – for any third party candidate to appear on the ballot less than win a major election.


 


But increasing the party system would only minimize the damage. It wouldn’t stop it.


 


When issues are divided into political camps, they obscure basic similarities about voters.


 


Fairness and justice are not political. They are human.


 


By making them political, we obscure basic truths to convince subsections of the populace onto our side.


 


And these are rarely legitimate differences of opinion. They are often a matter of truth or falsity.


 


For instance, take trickle down economics. Either it is a fair and just distribution of wealth or it is not. Either it provides both rich and poor with a means of equitable economic advancement or it does not.


 


We have tried this policy for decades. There is a plethora of evidence that this system does not work. It unjustly favors the rich and starves the poor.


 


To understand this, one need not have an advanced degree in political science. A simple understanding of mathematics will suffice.


 


If there were no political parties, this would be self-evident. But the rich have used both parties to obscure this fact and make it a game of policy football. You support whichever team you’ve signed up for regardless of how doing so impacts you, personally.


 


It is the victory of tribalism over common sense.


 


The same goes for almost every issue facing the nation.


 


Should schools be public or private?


 


Should LGBT people be allowed the same rights as cis citizens?


 


Should we spend the majority of our federal budget on the military?


 


Should there be a path to citizenship for those wishing to immigrate?


 


Each and every one of these questions could be decided on facts. Instead evidence is hardly mentioned at all. We use the issues to elect the legislators who then can’t do anything about them for fear that action one way or another would upset the political power struggle against them.


 


Some economists suggest that the principle behind Democrats and Republicans, the principle behind liberals and conservatives, really comes down to economics.


 


It is an innate psychological reaction to scarcity and abundance.


 


In times of little food or resources, conservative tendencies are ascendant because they help us survive the lean times. However, in an era where there is enough for all, liberal tendencies flourish because they help the growing population thrive.


 


Even if this were true, it is a factual question of whether we live in times of abundance or scarcity.


 


In the 21st Century United States, we have more wealth than we have ever had. There is enough food for everyone. We grow more than we can eat and end up throwing much of it away. Yet a tremendous amount of us live in abject poverty. More than half of public school students live below the poverty line.


 


This is not because we live in a time of scarcity. We live in a time of abundance where we keep much of that surplus away from the majority in order to create a false sense of scarcity so that the richest among us can horde as much as they possibly can.


 


That is the ugly truth hidden behind the party system.


 


It is a truth that could not be maintained without the easy marketing and tribalism of political parties – Republicans, Democrats, Whigs, the Judean Peoples Front or the People’s Front of Judea.


 


Until we remove the stranglehold of political parties, until we set up a government that makes factionalism difficult, until we establish a government that welcomes candidates regardless of party – our politics will be forever immobilized by wealth, sectarianism and voter apathy.


 


This could mean holding nonpartisan primaries where all candidates irrespective of party who meet a certain signature threshold are welcome, followed by a general election of the two highest vote-getters. Or it could mean something radically different like not voting at all but filling government with ordinary citizens randomly drafted into public service.


 


The point is that we can do better than party politics.


 


If we’re to survive as a nation, we’ll need to find a more just way.


 


Or as Hamilton put it:


 


“Nothing could be more ill-judged than that intolerant spirit which has, at all times, characterized political parties.”



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 29, 2018 08:16

July 25, 2018

Cyber School Kingpin Gets Slap on Wrist For Embezzling Millions from PA Students

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Nick Trombetta stole millions of dollars from Pennsylvania’s children.


 


And he cheated the federal government out of hundreds of thousands in taxes.


 


Yet at Tuesday’s sentencing, he got little more than a slap on the wrist – a handful of years in jail and a few fines.


 


He’ll serve 20 months in prison, be on supervised release for three years, and payback the tax money he concealed.


 


As CEO and founder of PA Cyber, the biggest virtual charter school network in the state, he funneled $8 million into his own pocket.


 


Instead of that money going to educate kids, he used it to buy a Florida condominium, sprawling real estate and even a private jet.


 


He already took home between $127,000 and $141,000 a year in salary.


 


But it wasn’t enough.


 


He needed to support his extravagant lifestyle, buy a $933,000 condo in the Sunshine State, score a $300,000 twin jet plane, purchase $180,000 houses for his mother and girlfriend in Ohio, and horde a pile of cash.


 


What does a man like that deserve for stealing from the most vulnerable among us – kids just asking for an education?


 


At very least, you’d think the judge would throw the book at him.


 


But no.


 


Because he took a plea deal, he got a mere 20 months in federal prison.


 


That’s less than two years in jail for defrauding tens of thousands of students and multiple districts across the Commonwealth.


 


In addition, once he serves his time he’ll be on probation for 3 years.


 


And even though there is no mystery about the amount of money he defrauded from the Internal Revenue Service by shifting his income to the tax returns of others – $437,632, to be exact – the amount he’ll have to pay back in restitution is yet to be determined.


 


One would think that’s easy math. You stole $437,632, you need to pay back at least that amount – with interest!


 


And what of the $8 million? Though I can’t find a single explicit reference to what happened to it in the media, it is implied that the money was recovered and returned to Pa Cyber.


 


Yet there seems to be no discussion of a financial penalty for embezzling all that money. If my checking account dips below a certain balance, I’m penalized. If I don’t pay the minimum on my credit cards, I’m charged an additional fee. Yet this chucklehead pilfers $8 million and won’t be docked a dime!? Just paying it back is good enough!?


 


But what makes this sentence even more infuriating to me is the paltry jail time Trombetta will serve.


 


The judge actually gave him 17 months LESS than the minimum federal guidelines for this kind of case! He should at least be serving 37 to 46 months – 3 to 4 years!


 


Nonviolent drug charges often lead to sentences much longer than that!


 


For instance, in 2010, Kevin Smith was arrested for drug possession. He was locked up in a New Orleans jail for almost 8 years (2,832 days) without ever going to trial!


 


But then again, most of these nonviolent drug charges are against people of color. And Trombetta is white.


 


So is Neal Prence, a former certified accountant who pleaded guilty to helping Trombetta hide his ill-gotten gains.


 


Prence will serve a year and a day in prison and pay back $50,000 in restitution.


 


It’s a good thing he didn’t have any drugs on him.


 


And that he didn’t have a tan.


 


This is what we talk about when we talk about white privilege.


 


And speaking of that, compare this crime with the sentences given to the Atlanta teachers who were convicted of cheating on standardized tests a few years back.


 


These were mostly women and people of color.


 


Tamara Cotman, Sharon Davis-Williams and Michael Pitts received the harshest sentences.


They each got three years in prison, seven years probation, $10,000 in fines and 2,000 hours of community service.


 


So in America, cheating on standardized tests gets you a harder sentence than embezzling a fortune from school kids.


 


I’m not saying what the Atlanta teachers and administrators did was right, but their crime pales in comparison to Trombetta’s.


 


Think about it.


 


Atlanta city schools have suffered under decades of financial neglect. The kids – many of whom are students of color – receive fewer resources, have more narrowed curriculum and are forced to live under the yoke of generational poverty.


 


Yet their teachers were told to increase test scores with little to no help, and if they didn’t, they’d be fired.


 


I can’t imagine why they tried to cheat a system as fair as that.


 


It’s like being mugged at gunpoint and then the judge convicts you of giving your robber a wooden nickel.


 


The worst part of all of this is that we haven’t learned anything from either case.


 


High stakes standardized testing has become entrenched in our public schools by the newly passed federal law – the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).


 


And though Trombetta resigned from his post as CEO of PA Cyber in September 2013, cyber charters are as popular as ever.


 


These are publicly funded but privately run schools that provide all or most instruction on-line. Think Trump University for tweens and teenagers.


 


You can’t turn on the TV without a commercial for a cyber charter school showing up. You can’t drive through a poor neighborhood without a billboard advertising a virtual charter. They even have ads on the buggies at the grocery store!


 


Yet these schools have a demonstrated track record of failure even when compared to  brick-and-mortar charter schools. And when you compare them to traditional public schools, it’s like comparing a piece of chewed up gum on the bottom of your shoe to a prime cut of filet mignon.


 


A 2016 study found that cyber charters provide 180 days less of math instruction than traditional public schools.


 


Keep in mind there are only 180 days of school in Pennsylvania!


 


That means cyber charters provide less math instruction than not going to school at all.


 


When it comes to reading, the same study found cyber charters provide 72 days less instruction than traditional public schools.


 


That’s like skipping 40% of the school year!


 


And this isn’t just at one or two cyber charters. Researchers noted that 88 percent of cyber charter schools produce weaker academic growth than similar brick and mortar schools.


 


They concluded that these schools have an “overwhelming negative impact” on students.


 


AND THAT’S ALL LEGAL!


 


In Pennsylvania, nearly 35,100 of the 1.7 million children attending public schools are enrolled in cyber-charter schools. With more than 11,000 students, PA Cyber is by far the largest of the state’s 16 such schools.


 


 


If Trombetta had just stiffed Pennsylvania’s students that much, he wouldn’t have been in any trouble with the law.


 


However, he got even greedier than that!


 


He needed more, More, MORE!


 


Justice – such as it is in this case – was a long time coming.


 


Trombetta was first indicted back in 2013 – five years ago.


 


 


He was facing 11 counts of mail fraud, theft or bribery, conspiracy and tax offenses related to his involvement in entities that did business with Pa. Cyber. He pleaded guilty to tax conspiracy almost two years ago, acknowledging that he siphoned off $8 million from The Pennsylvania Cyber Charter School.


 


He has been free on bond all this time.


 


His sister, Elaine Trombetta, agreed to cooperate with prosecution, according to federal court filings. She pleaded guilty in October 2013 to filing a false individual income tax return on her brother’s behalf and has yet to be sentenced.


 


It was only yesterday that her brother – the kingpin of this conspiracy – was ultimately sentenced.


 


Finally, he’ll have to face up to what he did.


 


Finally, he’ll have to pay for what he’s done.


 


Just don’t blink or you’ll miss it.



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 25, 2018 09:17

July 24, 2018

Since School Vouchers Don’t Increase Test Scores, Racism is an Acceptable Reason for Privatization, Says Advocate

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For decades, school voucher advocates claimed that sending poor kids to private schools with public tax dollars was acceptable because doing so would raise students’ test scores.


 


However, in the few cases where voucher students are even required to take the same standardized tests as public school students, the results have been dismal.


 


In short, poor kids at private schools don’t get better test scores.


 


So why are we spending billions of public tax dollars to send kids to privately run schools?


 


A 2018 Department of Education evaluation of the Washington, D.C., voucher program found that public school students permitted to attend a private or parochial school at public expense ended up getting worse scores than they had at public school.


 


Their scores went down 10 points in math and stayed about the same in reading.


 


These are not the pie in the sky results we were promised when we poured our tax money into private hands.


 


However, corporate education propaganda site, The 74, published a defense of these results that – frankly – makes some pretty jaw dropping claims.


 


The article is “More Regulation of D.C. School Vouchers Won’t Help Students. It Will Just Give Families Fewer Choices for Their Kids” by far right Cato Institute think tanker Corey DeAngelis.


 


In his piece, not only does he call for less accountability for voucher schools, he downplays the importance of standardized test scores.


 


And he has a point. Test scores aren’t a valid reflection of student learning – but that’s something public school advocates have been saying for decades in response to charter and voucher school cheerleaders like DeAngelis.


 


Supply side lobbyists have been claiming we need school privatization BECAUSE it will increase test scores. Now that we find this claim is completely bogus, the privatizers are changing their tune.


 


But that’s not the most shocking irony in DeAngelis article.


 


Parents don’t really care about the scores, he says. Instead they send their children to voucher schools because… You know what? I’ll let him tell it.


 


“Families choose schools for their children based on several important factors, including culture, individual attention, and, of course, safety. Research tells us that parents — unsurprisingly — often value these things more than standardized test scores.”


 


Certainly parents prefer their children have more individual attention. But many private schools have larger class sizes than public schools.


 


Moreover, reducing class size at all schools would be a more equitable reform than letting some kids enjoy smaller classes if they can just get into the right school.


 


However, it is his other two claims that sent my racist dog whistle senses tingling.


 


So parents don’t like the CULTURE of public schools. And they’re afraid public schools aren’t as SAFE.


 


Hmm. I wonder what culture these parents are objecting to. I wonder why they would think public schools wouldn’t be as safe.


 


Could it perhaps be fear of black students!?


 


I don’t want my little Billy to be exposed to all that rap music and kids with sagging pants. I don’t want my little Susie to cower in a class full of thugs and gangstas.


 


This is racist, stereotypical and just plain wrong about what you’ll actually find in public schools.


 


But it’s also typical white flight – the impulse behind the charter and voucher school movement in the first place.


 


Where did the boom for privatized schools come from historically?


 


It was a reaction to Brown vs. Board. When the US Supreme Court ruled in 1954 that segregated schools were unconstitutional, many white parents rebelled. They didn’t want their kids to go to school with THOSE kids. Hence, Georgia Gov. Herman Talmadge’s aborted plan to close all state schools and issue vouchers to private schools instead.


 


Hence, the plan that actually did take place in Price Edward County, Virginia, in 1959 where the public schools were closed and all taxpayer money for education was funneled to segregated white academies that would not admit black students. Though the term had yet to be invented, these were proto-“charter schools.” They were publicly funded but privately run. They were housed in privately owned facilities such as churches and the local Moose Lodge.


 


Hence, various segregationist “freedom of choice” plans in several states that allowed white students to transfer out of desegregated schools. Black students could apply but because of various administrative hurdles were never admitted.


 


This is the history of so-called school choice. And it is a history that DeAngelis, the 74 and the Cato Institute are willing to bring full circle.


 


School privatization advocates pretend they’re defending choice, but what choice are they championing?


 


The choice to segregate?


 


Pardon me, but I don’t think we should be spending public tax dollars to enable bigots.


 


If you want to shield your children from the horrors of kids with darker skin, do so on your own dime.


 


Public money should only be spent on policies that are in the public good – and that’s not segregation. It’s the exact opposite – integration.


 


Learning how to get along with people who are different than you is an essential skill for good citizens. Understanding that people of different races, ethnicities, religions and cultures are also human is vital if our nation is to survive.


 


Being exposed to another culture isn’t a bad thing. It’s the definition of the American melting pot.


 


Our public schools are not perfect. They suffer from targeted disinvestment – especially those situated in urban neighborhoods and those serving larger populations of children of color.


 


But that is because of the same segregation school privatization lobbyists are empowering. If all students went to the same schools, parents wouldn’t allow this kind of inequity.


 


In protecting their own kids, parents with power and resources would be protecting all kids.


 


But this isn’t the goal of privatization promoters. They don’t care about what’s best for children. They’re looking out for what’s best for the businesses running the privatized schools.


 


So what have we learned?


 


School vouchers do not increase test scores.


 


And when that excuse behind the entire school privatization movement is exposed as nonsense, opportunists have no problem using racism and prejudice to defend their industry.



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 24, 2018 07:51

July 20, 2018

Wealth – Not Enrollment in Private School – Increases Student Achievement, According to New Study

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Students enrolled in private schools often get good grades and high test scores.


 


And there’s a reason for that – they’re from wealthier families.


 


A new peer-reviewed study from Professors Richard C. Pianta and Arya Ansari of the University of Virginia found that once you take family income out of the equation, there are absolutely zero benefits of going to a private school. The majority of the advantage comes from simply having money and all that comes with it – physical, emotional, and mental well-being, living in a stable and secure environment, knowing where your next meal will come from, etc.


 


The study published in July 2018 attempts to correct for selection bias – the factors that contribute to a student choosing private school rather than the benefits of the school, itself.


 


The study’s abstract puts it this way:


 


“Results from this investigation revealed that in unadjusted models, children with a history of enrollment in private schools performed better on nearly all outcomes assessed in adolescence. However, by simply controlling for the sociodemographic characteristics that selected children and families into these schools, all of the advantages of private school education were eliminated. There was also no evidence to suggest that low-income children or children enrolled in urban schools benefited more from private school enrollment.”


 


This has major policy implications.


 


Corporate school reformers from Barack Obama to Donald Trump, from Arne Duncan to Betsy DeVos, from Cory Booker to Charles and David Koch, have proposed increasing privatized school options to help students struggling in public schools.


 


Whether it be increasing charter schools or vouchers to attend private and parochial schools, the implication is the same – such measures will not help students achieve.


 


We need programs aimed at poverty, itself, not at replacing public schools with private alternatives.


 


According to the abstract:


 


“By and large, the evidence on the impact of school voucher programs casts doubt on any clear conclusion that private schools are superior in producing student performance…


 


“In sum, we find no evidence for policies that would support widespread enrollment in private schools, as a group, as a solution for achievement gaps associated with income or race. In most discussions of such gaps and educational opportunities, it is assumed that poor children attend poor quality schools and that their families, given resources and flexibility, could choose among the existing supply of private schools to select and then enroll their children in a school that is more effective and a better match for their student’s needs. It is not at all clear that this logic holds in the real world of a limited supply of effective schools (both private and public) and the indication that once one accounts for family background, the existing supply of heterogeneous private schools (from which parents select) does not result in a superior education (even for higher income students).”


 


Researchers repeatedly noted that this study was not simply a snapshot of student performance. It is unique because of how long and how in depth students were observed.


 


The study looks at student outcomes at multiple intervals giving it a much longer time frame and much greater detail than other similar investigations. Researchers examined wide ranging family backgrounds and contextual processes to reduce selection bias.


 


Participants were recruited in 1991 from ten different cities: Little Rock, Arkansas; Irvine, California; Lawrence, Kansas; Boston, Massachusetts; Philadelphia and Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania; Charlottesville, Virginia; Seattle, Washington; Hickory and Morganton, North Carolina; and Madison, Wisconsin. They were followed for 15 years and had to complete a month long home visit. In addition, they submitted to both annual interviews and home, school, and neighborhood observations.


 


The final analytic sample consisted of 1,097 children – 24% of whom were children of color, 15% had single mothers, and 10% had mothers without a high school diploma.


 


Moreover, student academic achievement wasn’t the only factor examined.


 


Researchers also assessed students social adjustment, attitudes, motivation, and risky behavior. This is significant because they noted that no other study of private schools to date has examined factors beyond academics. Also, there is a general assumption that private school has a positive effect on these nonacademic factors – an assumption for which the study could find no evidence.


 


From the abstract:


 


“In short, despite the frequent and pronounced arguments in favor of the use of vouchers or other mechanisms to support enrollment in private schools as a solution for vulnerable children and families attending local or neighborhood schools, the present study found no evidence that private schools, net of family background (particularly income), are more effective for promoting student success.”


 


One reason behind these results may be the startling variation in “the nature and quality of private school classrooms.” There is no consistency between what you’ll get from one private school to the next.


 


The x-factor appears to be family income and all that comes with it.


 


We see this again and again in education. For instance, standardized test scores, themselves, are highly correlated with parental wealth. Kids from wealthier families get better test scores than those from poorer families regardless of whether they attend public, charter or private schools.


 


It’s time our policymakers stop ignoring the effect of income inequality on our nations students.


 


If we really want to help our children, the solution is not increased privatization. It is increased funding and support for anti-poverty programs, teachers and a robust public school system.



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 20, 2018 10:58

July 18, 2018

The NAACP Once Again Opposes High Stakes Standardized Testing!

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The nation’s oldest and largest civil rights organization has come out against high stakes standardized testing.


 


The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) distributed an issue brief yesterday at its national convention in San Antonio, Texas, titled “NAACP OPPOSES HIGH-STAKES EDUCATIONAL TESTING.”


 


The brief stated that the organization has concerns about using a single standardized test as a graduation requirement, as a prerequisite for advancement to the next grade or otherwise blocking students from receiving various educational opportunities. In its place, the organization favors the use of multiple measures, which may include standardized testing but should also include other assessments such as student grades and teacher evaluations.


 


In short, the brief concluded:


 


“Using a single standardized test as the sole determinant for promotion, tracking, ability grouping and graduation is not fair and does not foster equality or opportunity for students regardless of race, income, or gender.”


 


This is a huge policy shift from where the organization was just three years ago.


 


In 2015, the NAACP along with several other larger and older civil rights groups changed its position against testing to one in favor of it.


 


At the time, Congress was getting ready to pass a new education law, the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA). The civil rights organizations – many of whom had just asked Congress a year earlier to reduce standardized testing – suddenly demanded it be kept a federal accountability standard and that taking these tests was, itself, a civil right.


 


At the time, many education activists were shocked by the turnaround obviously coerced by the standardized testing and school privatization industry. For instance, see this email from Teach for America alum Liz King giving organizations an ultimatum to sign.


 


The new issue brief is more in-line with the NAACP’s history of opposition and activism against corporate education reform.


 


Once again we have the NAACP that advocated against standardized testing in the Debra P v. Turlington case (1981), where the Florida legislature made passing a single standardized test a graduation requirement. The NAACP supported black students who had a disproportionate failing rate on the test and claimed the Florida legislature was violating the Fourteenth Amendment. The courts eventually ruled against the plaintiffs but the issue has remained contentious to this day.


 


The new issue brief isn’t just a return to form. It builds on concerns that are still plaguing our schools.


 


Of particular note in the new issue brief is the caution that, “…when standardized tests are used by schools and school districts, that the tests be valid and reliable, measure what the student was taught and provide appropriate accommodations for disabled children.”


 


Many would argue that the new batch of Common Core aligned tests being used by states do not meet this requirement. They do not test what students have been taught – they test students’ ability to spit back the same kind of thinking of the person who wrote the test. Moreover, special needs students are rarely afforded the same accommodations on federally mandated standardized test day that they are allowed during every other assessment they take during the school year.


 


The brief continues:


 


“Furthermore, the NAACP is opposed to individual students being unfairly denied critical educational opportunities because of their performance on a single, standardized test.


 


This, itself, is a nationwide problem. Administrators are pressured to make district policies “data-driven” and thus deny students the chance to take advanced classes or go on special field trips because of performance on one multiple choice test.


 


The NAACP certainly could go farther in its criticism of high stakes testing.


 


Organizations like the Journey for Justice Alliance (JJA), a group made up of 38 organizations of Black and Brown parents and students in 23 states, have never wavered in their opposition to high stakes standardized testing. In 2015 while the NAACP and other well established groups defended testing, JJA was joined by 175 other national and local grassroots community, youth and civil rights organizations asking Congress to stop requiring standardized tests at all.


 


Standardized testing violates students civil rights – especially the poor and students of color.


 


It is nice to see the NAACP returning to the activism on which it built its justly deserved reputation.


 


What follows is the full text of the new NAACP issue brief:


 


 


 


“ISSUE BRIEF


 


Date: Summer, 2018


 


To: Concerned Parties


 


From: Hilary O. Shelton, Director, Washington Bureau


 


NAACP OPPOSES HIGH-STAKES EDUCATIONAL TESTING


 


THE ISSUE


 


Many states are relying on a single examination to determine decisions (such as graduating from high school or promoting students to the next grade), despite the fact that leading education experts nationwide recommend multiple measures of student performance for such decisions. While these “high-stakes” tests serve an important role in education settings, they are not perfect and when used improperly can create real barriers to educational opportunity and progress. Furthermore, one-time, standardized tests may have a disparate impact on students of color, many of whom have not had the benefit of high quality teaching staff (urban school districts have the greatest challenge in attracting and keeping high qualified teachers), adequate classroom resources, or instruction on the content and skills being tested by the standardized tests. Considering additional measures of student achievement, such as grades and teacher evaluations, adds not only to the fairness of a decision with major consequences for students but also increases the validity of such high stakes decisions.


 


Due to our concerns about the fairness of such testing, as well as the potential impact these tests have on the lives of our children, the NAACP has supported legislation in the past that would require that States follow the recommendation of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Research Council of the National Academy of Sciences. Specifically, the bills require that High Stakes decisions be based upon multiple measures of student performance and, when standardized tests are used by schools and school districts, that the tests be valid and reliable, measure what the student was taught and provide appropriate accommodations for disabled children. Furthermore, the NAACP is opposed to individual students being unfairly denied critical educational opportunities because of their performance on a single, standardized test.


 


The NAACP will continue to promote the initiatives that ensure equal opportunity, fairness, and accuracy in education by coupling standardized tests with other measures of academic achievement. Using a single standardized test as the sole determinant for promotion, tracking, ability grouping and graduation is not fair and does not foster equality or opportunity for students regardless of race, income, or gender.”


 


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Special thanks to Dr. Julian Vasquez Heilig who first released the issue brief on his education blog.



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 18, 2018 10:40

July 16, 2018

Five Things I Learned About Ed Tech While Playing ‘Zelda: Breath of the Wild’

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I don’t mean to brag, but I just beat “Zelda: Breath of the Wild.”


 


This summer I sat down with my 9-year-old daughter and together we played the most popular Nintendo Switch game for hours, days, weeks.


 


And at the end of all that time, I came away victorious – something I wasn’t sure I’d be able to do when I started.


 


There are so many buttons to learn, two joy sticks, various info screens and menus.


 


But when it was all over, I had cleared all four divine beasts. I got all 18 captured memories. I completed about 80 shrines. I mastered about 45 side quests. I shredded guardians, lynols and bokoblins. And, yes, I opened a major can of whoop ass on Calamity Gannon.


 


As the kids say, I’m jelly.


 


My video game skills are lit.


 


You can’t handle me, bro.


 


And so on.


 



 


But I’m not a kid. I’m a grown man.


 


Didn’t I have anything better to do?


 


Couldn’t I have found a more productive use for all that time?


 


Maybe. Maybe not. However, beyond the sheer fun, I did learn something from the whole experience.


 


As a public school teacher, I learned about my students by following in their footsteps.


 


That’s really why I started playing in the first place – my middle school kids this year loved that game.


 


I got more Zelda doodles, more Hyrule poetry, more Link fan fiction than you might at first believe.


 


The world of the game was really important to my children and having even a passing knowledge of that world helped me relate to them.


 


I even asked for a few tips after class.


 


One of my best students took her Switch out of her backpack and showed me a prime location to pick hot peppers so I could withstand the cold of Mount Hyrule (Don’t ask).


 


It was worth doing just for that – I showed my willingness to be the student and for them to be the teachers. I showed them we were all a community of learners.


 


At least, that’s my hope.


 


But now that the dog days of summer are here and my video game victory is complete, I keep thinking of the implications of my experience in Hyrule on the world of education.


 


Specifically, I’m thinking about education technology or Ed Tech.


 


I’m thinking about how we use various software packages to try to teach students and how they invariably fail at the task.


 


Well-meaning administrators hear about this program or that classroom management system or an assessment app and they spend beaucoup bucks on it.


 


We’re instructed to give up valuable instruction time so our kids can sit in front of a computer while a digital avatar attempts to do our job.


 


Kids listen to a cartoon person instruct them in the rudiments of grammar or literacy, play loose skills exercises and earn digital badges.


 


It may sound like fun to us, but they hate it.


 


The reason: nine times out of ten it’s little more than a standardized test given on a computer.


 


Sure, there are lots of bells and whistles, but the kids catch on mighty quickly. There is no student as bored as a student forced to play an educational video game.


 


I have real concerns with issues of student privacy and how the data being collected by these apps is used. I have real problems with how this technology facilitates dumbing down the curriculum – narrowing it to only that which can be measured on a multiple choice assessment. I take umbrage that these programs are used by some as “evidence” that human educators and brick and mortar schools are unnecessary. And I shed real tears at the massive amounts of funding being funneled to corporations that could be better spent in our own districts.


 


But playing this game has given me hope.


 


In seeing how “Zelda” succeeds with kids – because it succeeded with me – I think we can illuminate some ways ed tech goes awry.


 


I found five distinct lessons from the game, five areas where “Zelda” succeeds where ed tech fails.


 


Perhaps these could be used to improve the quality of ed tech devices to make them better at teaching students.


 


Or they could show why ed tech will never be as effective at teaching as flesh and blood instructors.


 


In any case, here is what I learned.



1) Focus on Fun

 


One of the biggest differences between ed tech and “Zelda” was the focus.


 


The games we make children play at school are designed to teach them something. That is their purpose. It is their raison d’être. The point behind the entire activity is to instruct, test and reward.


 


By contrast, the purpose of “Zelda” is fun.


 


Don’t get me wrong. “Zelda” can be very educational.


 


There are points where the game is actively trying to teach you how to do things usually associated with game play.


 


You have to learn how to make your character (Link) do what you want him to do. You have to learn how to manipulate him through the world. How to run, how to climb, how to heal, how to use weapons, how to cook and make elixirs, etc.


 


However, the point behind the entire game is not instructional. It’s fun – pure and simple.


 


If you have to learn something, it is all in service to that larger goal.


 


In the world of the game, learning is explicitly extrinsic. It helps you have more fun playing. Only the pursuit of winning is intrinsic or even conceptualized as being so.


 


In real life, this may not be the right approach to education, but it seems to be a rule of virtual experience. If it is superseded, the game becomes just another class assignment – lifeless, dead, boring.


 


If educational software is going to be effective in the classroom, it must find a way to bridge this divide. It must either put fun before pedagogy or trick the user into thinking it has done so.


 


I’m not sure this is possible or desirable. But there it is.


 


2) Logic and Problem Solving Work but not Curriculum

 


There are many aspects of “Zelda” one could consider educational.


 


However, when it comes to things that have importance outside of the game, the biggest would be problem solving and logic games.


 


A great deal of game play can be characterized under this umbrella.


 


The ostensible mission is to defeat the bad guy, Calamity Gannon. However, to do so you often have to solve various puzzles in order to have the strength and skills to take him down.


 


The most obvious of these puzzles are shrines. There are 120 special areas throughout Hyrule that Link needs to find and solve.


 


Each one involves a special skill and asks the gamer to decipher problems using that skill. For example, one asks you to manipulate fans so that the air flow makes windmills turn in a pattern. Another asks you to get a ball through an obstacle course.


 


In each case, the emphasis is on logic and critical thinking.


 


That has tremendous educational value. And it’s something I’ve seen done easily and well in many educational video games.


 


The problem is it doesn’t teach any particular curriculum. It doesn’t teach math, science, English or social studies – though it does help contribute to all of these pursuits.


 


 


Ed tech games are not nearly so coy. They often try to go right for the curriculum with disastrous results. Ed tech software, for instance, will have you find the grammatical error in a sentence or solve an equation in order to move on in the game.


 


That just doesn’t work. It feels false, extraneous and forced. It’s doesn’t seem like an organic part of the experience. It’s something contrived onto it from outside and reminds the gamer exactly why you’re playing – to learn.


 


3) Option to Seek Help

 


One of the most surprising things to me about playing “Zelda” on the Switch was how much of an on-line gaming community has formed around the whole experience.


 


If you get stuck in a particular area, you can find numerous sites on-line that will help you get passed it. You can even find gamer videos where YouTubers will show you exactly how they solved this or that problem. And they don’t all have the same solution. Some provide elegant, well-detailed advice, and others seem to stumble on it and offer you their videos as proof they could actually get the job done somehow.


 


It’s a lot different from when I was a kid playing video games. Back then (30 years ago) you had your friends but there were few other places to go for help. There were fan magazines and a few video game companies had tip hotlines. But other than that, you were on your own.


 


One of my favorite YouTubers this summer was Hyrule Dude. His videos were clear, informative and helpful. However, I didn’t always agree with his solutions. But they invariably helped me find things that would work for me.


 


It reminded me a bit of Khan Academy and other learning sites.


 


If kids really want to grasp something today, they have so many places they can go on-line. As educators, it’s hard to incorporate them into a classroom environment because there are certain things we want kids to find out for themselves.


 


For instance, as a language arts teacher, I want my students to do the assigned readings on their own. Yet I know some of them try to skip to the on-line summaries they can find and use that instead of reading the text. I have no problem if they access good summaries and analysis but I don’t want them to take the place of trying to comprehend the text on their own first.


 


I think there are ways to use this larger social media community to help support learning without spoiling the hard work kids need to put in on their own. But it’s something we need to think about more and find better ways to incorporate.


 


4) Open Ended

 


One of the most striking things about this new “Zelda” is how much choice the gamer has. In most games you have to complete the first board and then the second and so on until you win.


 


On the Switch, the world you’re thrust into is incredibly open ended. You can do pretty much what you want, when you want. Or at least you can try.


 


At first, your character is limited to one area of the world – a plateau. But once you complete a certain number of the challenges there, you get the paraglider which allows you to access most of the rest of the world.


 


It’s a huge area to explore – impossible to travel the entire length of it without spending hours of game play. And it’s entirely up to you where to go and what to do next.


 


The central mission of the game is to defeat Calamity Gannon in Hyrule Castle. However, that would be incredibly difficult early on. You’re advised to get the four Divine Beasts first. And you can do them in any order you want.


 


Moreover, I mentioned shrines earlier. When you complete four shrines, you can either increase your hearts (the amount you can be hurt without dying) or your stamina (how long your character can do something hard like climbing or swimming without having to rest). Technically, you don’t have to complete more than a few shrines, but doing so makes your character stronger and better able to get the Divine Beasts and defeat Gannon.


 


There are also side-quests (totally optional) that reward your character with money, items, etc.


 


I think this is the secret to the game’s success. It’s why game play is so immersive and addictive.


 


Ed tech software is exactly the opposite. You must do section A before section B before section C. It’s little more than a multiple choice test with only limited possible answers of which only one is correct.


 


In “Zelda” there are often multiple ways to achieve the same end. For instance, I would assume the programmers wanted me to fight my way through every room of Hyrule Castle to get to Calamity Gannon. However, I simply climbed over the walls and swan through the moats – a much quicker and efficient method.


 


If we could recreate this freedom of movement and multifarious solutions within educational software, we might really be onto something. But, frankly, it’s something that even traditional video games have difficulty being able to recreate.


 


5) Choice to Play or Not

 


And speaking of choice, there is the choice whether to play or not.


 


Video games are one of the things kids choose for leisure. When we force kids to play them in school, that choice is gone.


 


They become a task, a trial, an assignment.


 


Moreover, not every child enjoys video games.


 


We can’t mandate kids learn from games – even the best of ed tech games. At best, they should be an option. They could be one tool in the toolbox.


 


In summary, I think the goal of the ed tech industry is deeply flawed.


 


Ed tech will never adequately replace brick-and-mortar schools and flesh and blood teachers.


 


At best, it could provide a tool to help kids learn.


 


To do so, games would have to primarily be focused on fun – not learning. They would have to be organized around critical thinking and logic – not curriculum. They would need to utilize the on-line community for help but not cheating. They would need to be open ended worlds and not simply repackaged standardized testing. And finally, students would need the choice whether to play them or not.


 


Unfortunately, I am skeptical that the ed tech industry would even attempt to incorporate these ideas in its products.


 


They are market driven and not student driven. The corporate creatures behind these products don’t care how well they work. They only want to increase profitability and boost market share.


 


Cheaper commodities are better – especially when the consumer isn’t the student forced to play the game but the politician or administrator in charge of school policy.


 


Ed tech’s potential as a positive tool in a school’s toolbox has been smothered by the needs of business and industry. Until we recognize the harm corporations do in the school, we will be doomed to dehumanizing students, devaluing teachers and wasting our limited resources on already wealthy big business.


 



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 16, 2018 07:32

July 12, 2018

Don’t Tread on Me, But Let Me Tread All Over You: The Credo of Personal Freedom and Limitless Greed

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Every neighborhood has one.


 


A yellow flag showing a coiled spring of a snake above the motto, “Don’t Tread on Me.”


 


In my usually well-manicured suburb, you’ll find it waving bravely over the garbage house.


 


There’s three broken down RVs sitting on the lawn, a busted sofa in the back yard, a rotten picnic bench and several rusted out vehicles in various states of disrepair.


 


I’m not sure why the owners think anyone would want to tread on them. We’d much rather walk quickly on by without being seen or commented on.


 


Because in my experience that’s the thing about most of the people who fly this flag.


 


They’re indignant about anyone stepping on their rights but all too ready to step all over yours.


 


I remember it wasn’t really too long ago that this flag had no such connotations.


 


It was simply the Gadsen flag, a relic of the American Revolution. It was nothing more than a reminder of a time when we cherished our national independence from Great Britain and wanted to make sure they knew we didn’t want the King to come back and start ordering us around.


 


In fact, it was designed by American general and politician Christopher Gadsden in 1775. This “Sam Adams of South Carolina” modeled his patriotic statement first used by the Continental Marines on an earlier famous cartoon from Benjamin Franklin’s Pennsylvania Gazette.


 


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You’ve probably seen it. A snake is cut into several pieces – each representing one of the colonies – with the motto, “Join or Die.”


 


So originally it was a call for unity, perhaps even federalism. It was a way of framing the argument that we’d be stronger as one nation than as a group of separate states.


 


Gadsen’s version was really a continuation of that same thought. It was as if he were saying, “Here we are, one unified nation ready to strike to protect itself from tyranny.”


 


It wasn’t until 2009 that Gadsen’s flag became associated with the radical right.


 


Like so many hitherto nonpartisan symbols, it was appropriated by the Tea Party movement, which tried to cast their libertarian extremism as somehow harkening back to the American Revolution.


 


Even the name Tea Party is a misnomer. The original Boston members of the Sons of Liberty who threw British tea into the harbor in 1773 were protesting taxation without representation. Modern day Tea Partiers were protesting the taxes levied by their own duly elected representatives.


 


They were poor people duped into thinking the rich paid too much despite the fact of gross income inequality and the wealthy not paying their fair share.


 


It’s this willful ignorance that typifies the contemporary right.


 


The truth doesn’t matter. It only matters what can be spun into a pithy sound bite that can be broadcast on Fox News or some other propaganda source and then repeated ad infinitum in place of any real debate or conversation.


 


To be fair, the left does it, too, but not nearly to the same degree.


 


When a topic makes the rounds of the 24-hour news cycle, you can hear the same canned responses from right and left on just about every channel regardless of who is speaking. The only difference is that the left usually makes at least passing reference to reality while the right closes its eyes and says whatever it believes to be true with perfect conviction.


 


The Gadsen flag is a perfect example of this hypocrisy.


 


The motto “Don’t Tread on Me” has come to mean radical individual freedom.


 


I can do whatever I like and there’s nothing you can do about it.


 


I can own as many guns as I like. I can teach my kids whatever facts I like. I can discriminate against anyone I like.


 


But there’s never a mention about other people except to limit what they can do in relation to the speaker.


 


In short, there’s nothing explicit about making this rule universal – I won’t tread on you if you won’t tread on me.


 


It’s just don’t tread on me and I’ll do whatever I like in relation to you.


 


After all, many of these personal freedoms the radical right cherishes actually do impact the rest of us.


 


Unregulated gun ownership means more shootings, more suicides, more deadly instances of domestic violence, more kids coming to school with semi-automatic guns in their book bags and more malls and theaters slick with bystander blood.


 


Moreover, if you teach your kids whatever facts you like, that means you indoctrinate them into your worldview. You don’t give them the chance to see the real world for what it is in case they may have different views on it than you do. This impacts both your children and the country, itself, which will have to somehow run with a greater portion of ignorant and close-minded citizens.


 


And don’t get me started on discrimination! You think you should be able to say whatever you like to whomever you like whenever you like. It’s fine to wear a t-shirt calling Hillary Clinton a “cunt” but when late night comedian Samantha Bee does the same to Ivanka Trump, you’re up in arms!


 


You think you can support laws that allow bakers to refuse to make wedding cakes for gay couples but are raving mad when a restaurateur refuses service to Sarah Huckabee Sanders!


 


 


This kind of sanctimonious duplicity has real world consequences.


 


 


Unarmed black people are shot and killed by police at a much higher rate than white people. Yet you won’t tolerate any protest, condemnation or protest. People can’t assemble in the streets, athletes can’t kneel during the national anthem, you won’t even allow the slogan “Black Lives Matter,” because you say, “All Lives Matter,” while in reality you mean “All Lives Except Black Ones.”


 


You oppose abortion but no one is forcing anyone to have abortions. In your headlong crusade for individual freedom you want to ensure that others don’t have this choice because they might choose differently than you. Or at least they might choose differently than you SAY you do, because when the light of day is cast upon you, we find an alarming number of hypocrites here, too.


 


There are too many far right politicians who campaign on overturning Roe v. Wade who pressure their mistresses to abort the unwanted issue of their indiscretion.


 


The underlying cause of such myopia is a perverse focus only on the self.


 


You look at what you want for you and pay no attention at all to what others should likewise be allowed.


 


It is the underlying selfishness of post Enlightenment Western thought come back to haunt us.


 


Hobbes and Locke and Smith told us that greed was good.


 


It’s what makes the world go round.


 


You look to your self-interest, and I’ll look to mine, and that’s what’s best for everyone.


 


However, they forgot that everyone doesn’t have the same power – physical, social, financial or political. Some people are strong and some are weak. Some are rich and some are poor. If you pull the shortest straw at the lottery of birth, you won’t be able to get the same things for yourself as those who won it as soon as the doctor slapped their newborn bums.


 


So we have layers and layers of class and economics. We have social structures designed to keep black people here and Hispanics there and white people at the top. We have a society that worships the rich and bedevils the poor. We have belief systems that praise one kind of sexuality only and demonizes anything that diverges from that norm. And the most defining thing of any newborn baby is what you’ll find between its legs.


 


“Don’t Tread on Me” has become a farce.


 


It’s a maxim hoisted on those with very little individual power to convince them to join together and become powerful while guarding the door for the wealthy.


 


They sit atop their mountains of trash as if they were dragons on piles of gold.


 


And they point their pitchforks at the rest of us as if we wanted a piece of it.


 


In this way, they make themselves the willing patsies of the ruling class.


 


It’s a sad thing to behold.


 


Because if we all just stopped for a second and recognized our common humanity, we’d agree that the status quo is unacceptable.


 


If we were more concerned about the rights of all than just our own rights, we’d agree that the wealth of this great nation has not been fairly distributed.


 


The snake is coiled and ready to strike but it is pointed in the wrong direction.


 


It shouldn’t be pointed at 99% of us. And it shouldn’t be so solitary.


 


It should be a sea of snakes, a great slithering mass of humanity, hissing and spitting with venom, our reptilian eyes focused on the elites.


 


Don’t tread on me?


 


Don’t tread on USSSSSSSSSSS!



 


Like this post? I’ve written a book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform,” now available from Garn Press. Ten percent of the proceeds go to the Badass Teachers Association. Check it out!


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Published on July 12, 2018 06:36