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Schooling Arne Duncan
"Hi, Arne. My name is Jesse Hagopian."
As I locked eyes and firmly shook hands, I wondered if my years of
teaching would be enough to help the freshman Secretary of Education
gain the knowledge and skills he would need.
Arne Duncan had come to the Seattle area on July 9 to address Aviation High School, and his visit happened to coincide with the American Federation of Teachers (AFT) convention taking place in Seattle. I joined the picket of teachers from the AFT who had journeyed to the high school with signs such as "Race to the Top: First place business, last place students."
As we rallied outside the high school, the event planners grew nervous that we would disrupt this stage-managed affair. They offered us a meeting with one of Duncan's aides in exchange for our polite behavior during his address. We agreed, and after the event were escorted to a nearby classroom for the meeting.
When an aide entered the room and told us, "The Secretary will come meet with you soon," I assumed he meant one of Duncan's clerical assistants would come write down our concerns. But a few minutes later, Secretary Duncan himself entered the classroom and took a seat in the center of the room, with us educators fanned out around him.
WE TEACHERS pooled our collective experience that day to construct, on the fly, what turned out to be a comprehensive "lesson plan" for the schooling of Arne Duncan, driven by the essential question: "What is a quality education?" Our lesson was complete with a pre-assessment, a multi-stage lesson plan targeted at Arne's deficiencies, a concluding summative assessment and an intervention plan for follow-up assistance--not unlike what we would do with any other student at risk of failure.
Our pre-assessment of Arne's skills was based on years of following Arne's speeches, writings and public policies--all of which have culminated in his "Race to the Top" initiative (RTTT) and his national "turnaround plan."
RTTT is tied to a $4.3 billion fund to make states compete for desperately needed education money by using eligibility requirements to push for charter schools--schools publicly funded by taxpayers, yet run privately, outside the control of local school boards--and merit pay schemes where teachers are paid according student test scores. Arne's turnaround plan proposes closing some 5,000 schools across the county and firing entire teaching staffs at schools perceived to be failing.
These national initiatives were first developed by Arne in his role as CEO of the Chicago Public Schools (where he served from 2001-2008) for his "Renaissance 2010" program that consisted of closing down dozens of schools, predominately in Black neighborhoods, and converting many to charter schools or military academies.
At numerous school board meetings and protests, teachers, students and community members warned Duncan that the reckless closing of schools would have dire consequences--from the loss of cherished neighborhood schools and union teachers to an increase in gang violence.
Predictably, these education advocates were proven right. Student achievement stagnated, and deadly violence soared in the schools--with some 34 deaths and 290 shootings in 2009 as a result of students being transported to schools across gang boundaries.
A study by the University of Chicago's Consortium on Chicago School Research released in October 2009 examined the academic effects of the closings on students at 18 elementary schools shut down between 2001 and 2006. The study concluded that the vast majority of students went from one low-performing school to another, with no achievement gains--and in fact, even saw temporary decreases in test scores during the stressful period when the announcement of their school being slated for closing was made.
Moreover, a massive study by Stanford University, looking at data covering some 70 percent of all charter school students nationally, found that bad charter schools outnumber good ones by a ratio of roughly 2 to 1--and an astonishing 83 percent of charter schools were either no better, or worse than, traditional public schools.
The performance pay experiment that Duncan imposed on the Chicago Public Schools, known as the "Teacher Advancement Program," had equally dismal results.
Merit pay schemes have long been criticized by teachers' unions and education advocates for driving teachers to narrow the curriculum to cover only what is assessed on tests--and for pitting teachers against each other for a limited pool of money, thus breaking down teacher collaboration and creating disincentives for educators to share effective teaching techniques.
A report issued last May by Mathematica Policy Research on the merit-pay program that Arne initiated in Chicago reveals that paying teachers according to test scores didn't increase student achievement whatsoever.
Thus, every major initiative that Arne Duncan is currently advocating on a national level has been shown by non-partisan research institutions to be ineffective at best.
ONE TEACHER from Detroit opened our meeting with Arne by summarizing the results of our "pre-assessment," saying, "What you are doing is stepping up privatization, charterization, and segregation and inequality...and you know that."
Our "lesson" then began by providing context to our essential question: What is a quality education?
I explained that I was a seventh-grade humanities teacher in the Seattle Public Schools until the budget cuts hit, and I was laid off. I then expressed my displeasure with his decision to reject a call from Congress to tap some of the Race to the Top funds in order to save some of the projected 200,000 to 300,000 teaching jobs that will be cut in the upcoming school year.
What follows is the transcription (taken from my audio recording) of our exchange. Note that I use the "Socratic seminar" teaching method that stresses asking open-ended questions to allow for the student to develop High Order Thinking skills, such as analysis, evaluation and creativity:
Mr. Hagopian: I really need an answer to my questions about the recent Stanford study that was funded by the Walton Family. As soon as that study showed that charters underperformed public schools, I don't know why you didn't change policy.
Arne: There is a real mix of charter schools. You have good charter schools, you have medium charter schools, you have bad charter schools. And so I just think we need more good schools in this country...I have said good charter schools are part of the solution and bad charter schools are part of the problem. So you can't tar or paint everyone with one brush. The reality is much more complex than that.
Mr. Hagopian: I've heard that response that you have given, but what still doesn't make sense to me is...that the problem with charters is that you put public funds under private control. So if public schools on the whole are outperforming charter schools on the whole, then why don't we use the system where public funds stay under public control, and then we bring in innovation and resources to the public schools?...What is the advantage of charters?
Arne: There is nothing inherently good or bad about charters...
As I looked around the room, I noticed my educator colleagues taking mental note that Arne clearly hadn't done his homework on the charter school issue--and thus provided an incomplete answer that could impact his overall grade for the lesson. I realized then that I needed to step in with some facts to help scaffold this activity for Arne.
Mr. Hagopian: I [have also] taught in Washington D.C....I taught 10 minutes from the White House--I would drive by the White House, and then I'm in a school with a hole in the ceiling, and it rains into the class.
Then I would get charter school students who were kicked out of their school come November. But what happened? When they get kicked out of their school, the funds don't follow them. The funds stay in the privatized charter school, but my class size rises. That is a flawed system that has to change.
Our lesson concluded with an informal summative assessment of Arne's analysis of our essential question about "What is a quality education?" Chicago teacher Danielle Ciesielski began the assessment by questioning Arne about his support for scripted lessons in Chicago that eliminated teacher creativity, ended project-based learning and narrowed the curriculum to pre-approved seminars.
Arne: To be clear, we [the Department of Education] want curriculum to be driven by the local level, pushing that. We are by law prohibited from directing curriculum. We don't have a curriculum department.
Mr. Hagopian: I have to interject on that point. Because I think that merit pay...
Arne: Let me finish, let me finish...
Mr. Hagopian: ...Directly influences curriculum. When you have teachers scrambling and pitted against each other for a small amount of money [based on how their students perform on a test], what it does is narrow the curriculum to what's on the test, even if you don't set curriculum specifically. So I think you have to address that.
Arne: I will. No one is mandating merit pay.
Mr. Hagopian: But you support it though?
Arne: I do, I do...
Mr. Hagopian: So you support narrowing the curriculum.
Arne: Can I finish? It's a voluntary program. Schools and districts and unions are working together on some really innovative things.
Mr. Hagopian: Merit pay isn't part of Race to the Top?
ARNE'S NON-answer to my direct question was troubling, and I hoped my rhetorical question at the end of this exchange would push him to a deeper understanding of our topic.
While Arne's performance during our lesson was disappointing, none of us educators were surprised, given his chronic absenteeism from the realm of pedagogy. As a spokesperson for Arne recently admitted to the media, his only instructional experience came as a youngster when "his mother ran an after-school program for underprivileged kids in a church basement, and he was both a student there and a tutor."
At the end of our lesson, we had to acknowledge that we failed in our objective to help Arne develop the concept of a quality education, and my belief that all students can succeed was truly tested. Determined not to give up even on the most challenging of students, however, we recommend Arne meet with the following specialists for these targeted interventions:
Parents: Don't let Arne close your child's school. If the federal government can bail out the banks and find the money to bomb children in Afghanistan, then we know there is enough money to build a world-class education system in your neighborhood. Demonstrate and speak out for the funding your school deserves rather than let it be shut down or privatized.
Students: You are not a number generated by a Scantron machine. You are a passionate, creative young person who can change the world. Refuse to be categorized solely by a test score and demand an education that speaks to who you are and what is important to your community.
Teachers: Unions brought us the weekend. They are indispensable, don't let Arne bust your union. Fight to make your union stronger. Replicate the success of the Caucus of Rank-and-File Educators in Chicago--the reform caucus newly elected to run the Chicago Teachers Union--with its vision of social justice education and social movement unionism in unflinching opposition to those who would seek to profit off of the public schools.
With this action plan of parents, students and teachers finding common cause in building their own vision of a quality education apart from that of Corporate America, Arne Duncan may, despite himself, get the education he so desperately needs.
- Posted in

69 Comments so far
Show AllThe article clarifies the primary goal - which Duncan supports - of NCLB: close public schools.
Of all of his grievous sins, the failure by Obama to even attempt to reverse the decline in public education may be the worst.
Yes, republicans want to abolish public education; they always have. Sadly, the right has been very effective in convincing too many Americans that all teachers are incompetent.
Improving public schools should still be a Democratic priority but it isn't; Dems should be ashamed.
q
They began with claiming teachers were overpaid and the gov. was just "throwing money at school problems".
A competent teacher is one of the most highly evolved skills possible.
Oilbomberbots this is your man and your Dims
Wrong on --------
Education
War and War Crimes
Environment
Jobs
Energy
Wall Street
Healthcare
Choice
Foreign Policy
Wealth Distribution
Domestic Surveillance
.......
You forgot to include his gathering attempt to gut Social Security; Bush couldn't do it, but Obama will give it his best try.
Calling Obama "Bush Lite" ignores the fact that he's worse than Bush.
Very well said, Though I find little difference between the republicans and democrats in their attack on education in public schools.
If you keep doing what you have always been doing, you will keep getting what you have always been getting.
Rather than voting for Democrats again, vote socialist in this years elections.
I will not under ANY circumstance vote for ANY democrat this year or any time soon.
Voting socialist I can't do because I simply don't believe in their philosophy or agenda, nor has any sdocialist government or economic system been sucessful long term, though I'd readily adopt some socialist ideas and policies. (no system has every answer)
I truly don't know what I'm going to do, but as I said, I do know what I'm NOT going to do.
Were you under the impression that only democrats or socialists were allowed here? Or just radical's known as progressives these days?
Liberals not allowed?
I will tell you that considering things that you don't agree with or don't like as right wing doersn't make them so.
To tell the truth, I am here hoping I can move us past all the old thinking and ideologies. Hoping that sometime someone will figure out that thinking this is still the thirties or thinking its even still the seventies or eighties, let alone the sixties is counterproductive.
I keep hoping most will figure out that they are not the "enlightened" ones they like to view themselves as, nor as superior as they like to think and perhaps they might want to rejoin America and do something to really help before we go back to McCarthyism.
Most seem to be missing it, but we are getting our asses kicked when it counts and are on a course to be completely marginalized in two years. Obama and the democrats have destroyed themselves, they may take Liberals and the few Progressives down with them if things don't change.
There are some very good people here and some that can actually do something, others aren't worth anything, they are the folks that used to sit around the bar at corner tables and talk about "come the revolution"
What you see as Right Wing is usually the facts that the rest of the country know and acknowledge.
Maybe I just want to keep CD from being a giant circle jerk. Just remember this one thing, when you see someone demonizing another (no not just me) its because they have nothing to say. When you see someone dismiss others without answering you can be sure they are full of it. When you see any opinion that deviates from the accepted wisdom declared RW, racist, or any other adjective without a clear answer, you can be sure you are dealing with a ole Johnny One Note. And Johnny One Note is the death of any serious social or political movement.
Here's a hint...check back to the last few articles about Haiti, see how many were still interested? Hot button posting or real interest in the subject? You make the call.
Sometimes the intolerance expressed here by those that cloak themselves in the mantle of tolerance makes me want to puke. The fact that they are so apparent makes it intolerable at times. The flat ignorance expressed by so many claiming expertise in things they have no knowledge of other than a lecture or book is exhausting at times.
It like some joker from up North thats never even seen a Mexican or Latino illegal, never worked beside them or at times for them teloling everyone else what the border is like. You know exactly what I mean.
Thats why I stay here for the most part. There are also some really intelligent posters with original thinking. And I'll use anything I think is good, I don't care where it came from or what its labled.
Be well my friend...bet you're sorry you asked that one.
mightymite,
Why are you so turned off by socialism? Do you think a social democracy which blends regulated capitalism and socialist public run programs for the common good could create the most prosperity for the most people and prevent power from being concentrated and used against us?
Most of Scandanavia is pretty socialistic.
"And I'll use anything I think is good." There is the problem: what "I think." Aren't you doing the same thing you accuse other posters of doing?
Look, it is fine to have a variety of perspectives on CD, as we should. But, keep in mind that everyone's BS detection meter is running very high because we daily are fed so much of it by the corporate media, and corporate-controlled political parties.
They're all Repugs now, quickstep. No such thing as a Dem in the 1970 - 1980 sense. Hasn't been since Clinton.
"Democrats For Education Reform"
Their program is straight from the neoliberal thinktanks, and they make no effort to disguise the origins of their ideas or politics. In Denver they are hosting a talk with “Rick” Hess, who heads the education policy unit at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI). Ten years ago AEI would have been called “far-right wing.” But since high-profile Democrats, like Cory Booker, the African American mayor of Newark, NJ, (who is on the Board of Directors of Democrats for Education Reform) now march to AEI’s tune about schools, maybe we have to refer to AEI as “centrist”?
By “entrenched interests” they do NOT mean the for-profit companies that run schools and take care of “outsourced” school services, like school lunch, teacher hiring and professional development. Nor does DER want to toss out corporations that produce and grade standardized tests – and in doing so control what is taught to our kids. They think what what Stephen Ball refers to as “education for sale” and the “commodification of everything.” is just dandy. Nope, the only “entrenched interests” they want to control are…. teacher unions.
Their attack on unions is straight out of the neoliberal blueprint for education, articulated in its most unvarnished form in a draft report of the World Bank “Making Services Work for Poor People.”
As this playbook for crushing the unions puts it , teachers and their unions are a threat to global prosperity. Why? Because "With their political power, teachers and doctors are able to protect their incomes when there is pressure for budget cuts.. Many governments have responded by creating a second class of teachers who are outside the civil service, and are correspondingly paid less with fewer benefits. The experience in several West African countries shows that there are many people willing to take these jobs (a recent announcement in Senegal generated 30,000 applicants for 1,000 positions); even if they are less qualified, the evidence on student performance is mixed; and, over time, these contractual workers have come to dominate the public service, as in Benin." (p.6)
Follow the money:
http://www.dfer.org/list/about/board /
Board of Directors
The DFER Board
Kevin Chavous (chair) - Former Washington, DC, City Council member and chair of the Education Committee.
Tony Davis - Anchorage Capital, board chair for Achievement First East New York, in Brooklyn.
Charles Ledley - Cornwall Capital, NYC, board member and treasurer of Harlem Village Academy and Leadership Village Academy Charter Schools.
Rafael Mayer - Co-founder and managing partner, Khronos LLC, board member for Planned Parenthood of NYC, KIPP AMP, and The Dalton School.
Sara Mead - New America Foundation, former analyst for Education Sector and the Progressive Policy Institute, Washington, D.C.
John Petry - Gotham Capital, co-founder of Harlem Success Academy Charter School, NYC.
Andrew Rotherham - Co-Founder and Publisher, Education Sector, former White House education advisor to President Clinton, author of the blog, Eduwonk.com.
Whitney Tilson - T2 Partners and Tilson Funds, vice chairman of KIPP Academy Charter Schools in NYC, co-founder of the Initiative for a Competitive Inner City.
(Note - Organizations listed here are for identification purposes only and do not imply an endorsement or affiliation.)
The DFER Board of Advisors
William Ackman - Founder, Pershing Square Capital.
Steve Barr - Founder and CEO, Green Dot Public Schools.
Cory Booker - Mayor of Newark, N.J.
David Einhorn - Founder of Greenlight Capital, LLC.
Joel Greenblatt - Founder and Managing Partner of Gotham Capital.
Vincent Mai - Chairman of AEA Investors, LP.
Michael Novogratz - President of Fortress Investment Group.
Tom Vander Ark - Partner, Revolution Learning.Articles in this list link back to phony education website hosted by three RW think tanks:
http://educationnext.org /
The Hoover Institution
http://www.hoover.org /
Program on Education Policy and Governance
Harvard University
http://www.hks.harvard.edu/pepg /
Thomas Fordham Institute
http://www.edexcellence.net/template/index.cfm
Our Funders:
http://www.edexcellence.net/index.cfm/our-funders
Our Funders
2007-2010
The Achelis and Bodman Foundations
The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation
The Broad Foundation
The Brookhill Foundation
The Louis Calder Foundation
The Challenge Foundation
Doris and Donald Fisher Fund
The Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace
The Joyce Foundation
The Ewing Marion Kauffman Foundation
The Koret Foundation
The Kovner Foundation
Richard M. Fairbanks Foundation
The Robertson Foundation
Charles and Helen Schwab Foundation
Searle Freedom Trust
The William E. Simon Foundation
The Spencer Foundation
The John Templeton Foundation
The Walton Family Foundation
Though I take your point and do not disagree with the purposes you assign to the program...
You are confusing Teachers Unions with Teachers themselves. Some Teachers Unions are not good, so lets not give a blanket approval of whatever they do.
Is teachers pay sancrosanct in any case when their neighbors are losing their jobs or experiencing benefit reduction, hikes in HC premiums, pay freezes, etc?
Is not the real problem that education and its elite led by the Arne Duncans simply failing our young in any case?
If we treated Teachers with the respect and pay that the position deserved, then there would be no need for Teachers' Unions.
"Is teachers pay sancrosanct..."? You mean the low pay they get? Especially considering the importance of their job?
Gosh, one might think you were a .....
What do you consider low pay? Our teachers are paid fairly well as most teachers are for the time they work.
What they don't get is the respect they deserve. The profession has been thrown in the ditch by various factions.
Gosh, one might think you were a .....
So let me get this straight - you believe they don't get the respect they deserve, but get high salaries. Somehow, I don't believe you. The two go hand in hand.
Gosh, one might think you were a troll.
How you extrapolated high saleries from what I said I'll never know, but you are in the right place today, words have been placed in my mouth I never said, opinions credited to me I never stated or even indicated and entire areas said to be declared by me to be unworthy.
"Gosh, one might think you were a troll."
The intolerant would certainly like to think so.
"Intolerant", huh. Yeah, I'm intolerant of Trolls; you should have gotten that clue from my handle.
Meanwhile, mightymite the Troll, chew on this:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/07/21/texas-teachers-taking-sec_n_654444.html
"Texas Teachers Taking Second And Third Jobs To Support Their Families"
Now go find another bridge or educate yourself.
Umm, no. Starting pay for a public school teacher in some locales is deplorably low. They barely can get by.
You are clueless.
Clueless is the Johnny One Note song thats sung here and the frankly childish inability to see beyond cherished prejudices.
Pure ideology is a tasteless drink.
Talk about tasteless drinks!
The neocon agenda of the past 30 years is finally achieving its goals: increased unemployment, low wages, decreased benefits, increased panic and fear. The Race to the Bottom that Reagan started, and Clinton, Bush, and Obama have accelerated, is nearing its goal of destroying the middle class. But workers still lucky enough to be protected by unions still have decent incomes and benefits.
That is why the unions, including the teachers unions, are being attacked.
Instead of trying to destroy the one protection working people have in this country, we should be trying to support and expand union membership so more workers will be protected.
I don't know about you, mightmite, but I don't want to live in a country where the wealth and power are concentrated in the hands of the few, while the rest of us fight among ourselves for crumbs. Your suggestion that teachers should lose pay and benefits because that's happening to their neighbors is just more of the same Race to the Bottom rhetoric. Why aren't you suggesting that jobs and benefits be RESTORED to the neighbors, instead?
Yes, we can too afford it. Look at the war budget, look at the Wall Street giveaways, look at the tax cuts for the rich. Get a clue.
"Your suggestion that teachers should lose pay and benefits because that's happening to their neighbors is just more of the same Race to the Bottom rhetoric."
I don't see where I said that at all. What I did indicate was thast teachers or anyone else in the public sector should be given raises at this time. All the snooddle about its right wing to say that the public sector should be given raises or protections while everyone about them is geeting cut is just thast snoodle.
I am damned if I can figure out how a simple statement gets extrapolated to essentially....against unions, for expanding the military budget, favoring wall street or anything else like that.
I'd love to have you take my post and break it down and explain what you think each statement means other than exactly what I said. I'd appreciate the help, maybe I just cant say it correctly.
Tap dancing on mud.
PETRKROP: You raise excellent, pertinent points. Thank you.
mite, mcoyote is not confusing teachers with teachers' unions. You intentionally missed the point of mcoyote's post. Trying to get the topic on teacher unions vs. teachers is the ruse used by the right wing. Teachers unions are teachers. You are a right wing idiot trying to throw in a red herring by using this subject to union bash. Teachers have jobs and must be targeted by idiots like you because they're smart enough to have unions to protect themselves against economic trends.
You and your kind are winning, though. Keep it up. Union bashing has been going on a long time in this stupid country and idiots like you are gaining ground because you have the money on your side. The public could give a shit. So, keep doing your job and making stupid rationales for getting rid of unions. One thing's for sure, the right wing has proven in the last decade: If you repeat the lies often enough eventually idiots, like you, begin to believe them. Congratulations!
Interesting. You have been poisoned by the White Man's monetary mode of thinking.
Price of a home: collecting and preparing thin shafts of wood; chipping flint for arrowheads; preparing sinews to make rawhide ropes; boiling hides and bones to make glue; hunting small animals to obtain the materials; tracking large wild animals for food, hides; stretching and drying hides; assembling poles and hides to make teepees.
Price of food: very similar, as hunters use a lot of animal products; add hours and days of stalking, sometimes with no success; make baskets and containers for gathering edible fruits; prepare meat for winter; collect plant syrups and honey for pemmican; catch fish - build boats
Schooling: setting aside part of the labor force to be instructors and guides, ideally elders who can't hunt anymore; they need to be fed and clothed also; set up sheltered spaces for instruction; gather wood for fires in winter.
Taxes: the portion of the hunt and gathering that went to the elders, shamans, and chiefs, and was stored away for next year.
Destruction of the earth? only because hunting with knives and arrows takes lots of time and effort. Once the rifles and mechanized weaponry appeared, the Natives were as profligate, as reckless of the Creator's earth as the immigrants. Now they had a profit motive, yes?
I know my list is incomplete, but it's an analogy only. Trade is trade, economy is economy, whether it's barter or coin.
Pre-White-Man America was no Garden of Eden either. Life was hard and dangerous; lifespans were short, infant and maternal mortality high, war, starvation frequent. Yes, I agree, the Native Tribes had and still have much to offer of wisdom, prudent stewardship, and respect for creation, but stop idealizing a culture that was no more and no less human and subject to corruption than the current one.
And even with a barter economy, they had to pay for every little thing. Nothing was free. If an individual didn't pull his/her load, s/he got some serious comeuppance.
Nothing costs nothing. You can stop crowing now, Rumpelstiltskin.
It is incomprehensible to me that the Obama administration should declare war against public education and teachers unions. These are bedrock Democratic institutions.
All I can suggest in explanation is to point to Obama's utterly misguided attempts at bipartisanship over health care financing reform and more recently finance industry reform. The combination of blue dogs in the Congress and Obama's need to placate his opponents is apparently part of the answer. But when opponents and treacherous members of your own party give you the finger over and over, continuing to try to appease them looks like cowardice.
Another Obama apologist.
In Central Falls, RI they fired the staff and teachers of a school in a difficult area - AND OBAMA PUBLICLY PRAISED THIS MASS FIRING. There was no Republican call to do this, so there was NO BIPARTISANSHIP INVOLVED. He did it because he's worse than Bush.
Jeez.
Go easy. Mr Reynolds doesn't sound like an apologist. Seems he just hasn't figured out that Obama is a corporatist first, then a Dem. Give him time.
Dems ARE corporatists. Seems you just haven't figured that out.
There's no time like the present, because we've run out of time.
Give who time? Mr. Reynolds or Barack Obama?
I stopped reading this article after the author referred to Mr. Duncan as "Arne" for the third time. I think it is disrespectful to refer to people you don't know by their first names. This is a cheap rhetorical trick to demean people, and I don't like it. I would expect a teacher to have better manners and a higher standard of argumentation.
Oh, boo-hoo.
Some people don't deserve respect. Grownups can tell the difference.
When someone whose education is limited to lessons in his mother's basement becomes Secretary of Education, he needs to confront his utter lack of qualifications - in fact, he ought to get fired. A similar thing happened in 1994, in Ontario Canada, when a used-car salesman became Minister of Education and began to gut the system.
Climb out of your snit and read the article. You may learn something.
Under other circumstances I might agree with your sense of outrage at politesse. However, Arne Duncan destroyed the Chicago Public Schools and credits his success and his job with basketball. Children have died because of the violence in the Chicago schools under his watch ... He has sought to dismantle a public trust nationally without paying attention to research or experience.
He is NOT qualified for his position. He is not an educator, he does not have a degree in education, he does not have experience as a teacher. He does not even have an advanced degree. His experience tutoring at his mom's after school program to be able to write a thesis for his undergraduate degree on the "underclass." Oh, my even that word reeks with a form of noblisse-oblige ... Respect? Respect for a man who seeks to privatize the schools against ALL credible research? Respect for a man given the power to completely dismantle a public trust for what? For some perverted neoliberal notion of expanding the marketplace ...
Without public education there can be no democracy nor can we move towards any form of democratization in this country ... why does he deserve anyone's respect?
I know one thing for certain Obama lost any respect I ever had for him (I wish I could ask for my campaign donations back) by appointing Duncan to this position ...
Rhetorical tricks? How about the word "reform" which is not working on creating a curriculum of social justice of equity or of a critical eye (which is necessary in the contemporary world) rather his reform has only one definition to cast our children into the market -- one more commodity to be bought and sold ...
I would expect any person who believes in the possibility and promise of education to be outraged ... not blasting a teacher who has the courage to stand up and speak out.
What is wrong with education? Defunding, high stakes testing, privatization --- not a teacher calling Duncan "Arne." Indeed, I applaud his restraint I would call him other things that would be a lot worse than his first name
"His experience tutoring at his mom's after school program to be able to write a thesis for his undergraduate degree on the 'underclass.' Oh, my even that word reeks with a form of noblisse-oblige"
Right now, "noblesse oblige" would be a great improvement. The general belief in America is that wealth and power (which tend to translate into each other) release from obligations to the common good.
Furthermore, it would be good for Americans to confront the fact that they have a class system in the first place.
Actually, this is an outstanding article, and the use of Duncan's first name is appropriate, since Hagopian is writing from a "teacherly" perspective.
In fact, this is one of the most entertaining and informative articles I have read in a long time.
this comment could only come from someone obsessively
accustomed to 'respect' authority. This is why horsemanure
like No child left behind is allowed to exist at all, because
enough fools don't understand that Neil Bushs 'curriculum
development corporation is collecting billions from FAUX tests
that have been mandated and accepted at thousands of horn-
swoggled school districts across the country.
HOPE in Obama is worth as much as the CHANGE in your pocket.
The hope we have comes from our own efforts to transform this country and world towards social justice and peace. It is plainly obvious that the man in office, no matter who, is the Man.
I've had comments from education activists around the country expressing dismay at the public apathy, lack of understanding at what is going on under our very noses, that they feel no one is listening...
People are listening - it takes time to build critical mass.... its time, some of us here in Seattle think, to take our pushback against 'reform' national and connect with all the other groups doing the same thing in their areas.
I know a couple of us are following up with the groups that came here two weeks ago for the AFT conference...
Its also time to join up with the teachers who hate what's going on so much and who are being victimised so blatantly...
Teachers and parents/community - three legs of the public education stool - if we can get us all working together, we would have this reform wave beat...
Here in Seattle, tomorrow (July 22), we are filing an appeal against our reformist Superintendent's contract extension and also a recall petition to get rid of 5 of our school board directors who have been implementing the Broad/Gates agenda....
United we stand, divided we fall... If you're interested in discussing/working towards a national effort to push back, please contact me at metamind_universal@yahoo.com or 206 679 1738...
Sahila ChangeBringer
member, Seattle Shadow School Board
The most interesting point raised in this piece was Arne Duncan's utter lack of classroom teaching experience. Sadly, this is typical of virtually all the "reformers" who claim to have the answers for improving our public schools. Very few of them have ever stood in front of a class of 30 to 40 (often unruly) students and taught.
One story is typical of the many I have experienced over several decades. After teaching a 15 minute lesson, one overly confident student emerged from the classroom shaken, pale, and clearly humbled by his experience. "I had no idea how difficult it is to teach," he muttered.
This was after 15 minutes. Think what shape he would have been in if he had been required to stand in front of that class and teach for 6 to 8 hours as most public school teachers must do.
The reason teaching looks easy is because the great teachers make it look easy. They are the original multi-taskers. They have to be functioning on several different cognitive levels simultaneously, while also slipping in and out of various roles as disciplinarians, motivators, couselors, etc. Furthermore, they have to do all this when they are often exhausted.
Until the members of any commission to reform public education have had many years of actual classroom teaching experience, they should be disqualified from passing judgment on our public schools. They are too ignorant and inexperienced to lob their rhetorical banalities into our public classrooms under the guise of educational reform.
Arne Duncan and President Obama are two more of the clueless "experts" who engage in these practices.
Put public school teachers with many years of experience on these commissions, and you would probably get something done--albeit their recommendations would probably not be the ones the political "experts" want to hear.
Maybe we need a new old saying: "Those who can, teach; those who can't, reform."
Hah! How about this one, then: "Those who can, reform, those who can't, get elected."
Well, the original saying was "Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach."
Well, it's often true that those who can, can't actually teach. But anyway, this is my version and it only works as a phrase if you start with the original, which I do even though I don't agree with the idea that teachers are less than:
Those who can do.
Those who can't, teach.
Those who can't teach, administrate.
Those who can't administrate, superintend.
Those who can't superintend, reform.
Those who can't reform, run the Department of Education.
Those who can't run the Department of Education, make millions working for curriculum/testing companies.
Yeah, in my attempt to satirically flip the cliché I started to write, "... those who can't, administer" but it didn't sit well.
But substituting "reform" isn't much better-- I should've deleted it altogether.
I think you're exactly right-- if one is going to begin from that premise, one needs to go 'round the horn.
Good work.
Obama's and Duncan's experience is irrelavent...their mindset is, privatization will bring in the experts. And that's the tragedy. What I don't get is why these clowns, Dems and Repubs alike, buy into privatization?
Quis custodiet ipsos custodes? (Who will guard the guardians, watch the watchers, etc?)
Hello Kane Jeeves,
The simple explanation for the masters of the government "Show me the money". As long as they can get their hands on money for selling millions of students to private industry they will do so. They have done this on a smaller scale for the prison industrial complex and was handsomely rewarded. As long as money is involved this will continue.
KANE: Privatization is a fancy way of siphoning funds (that used to go to public schools and public services) towards private corporations. Since the majority of our elected "leaders" require the largesse of corporate sponsors (to fund their TV & media campaigns/elections), they must come up with a fancy philosophy that provides cover (privatization uses the ruse that government is failing, so communities are directed to let the "efficient" business experts handle their problems) for the planned redirection of funds, straight towards the chosen benefactors' pockets.