Tuesday, June 21, 2022
It's Okay To Stink
Sunday, June 19, 2022
ICYMI: Juneteenth, Jazz and Family Reunion Edition (6/19)
Crazy busy weekend here. Town has a blues and barbecue festival going on, and my extended family is gathering for our first annual June Is Way Easier For Getting Together Than December Thing. So dig into this week's reading list, but don't look for me anywhere on line today.
I worked at a No Excuses charter and here's what I know
From back in May, this piece from a former KIPP teacher does a good job of breaking down the problems with the No Excuses approach.
Caught in the culture wars, teachers are being forced from their jobsCharter schools' influence on Pennsylvania politics
They have lobbyists and money and they know how to work both. From the Bucks County Courrier Times.
Edelblut's past helps explain his destructive policies
Frank Edelblut is the anti-public ed chief of New Hampshire's education system. This piece in Seacoast online looks at some of his connections in the past that illuminate his positions in the present.
5 myths about education gag orders
PEN America with a quick explainer that debunks some of the common arguments for teacher gag laws.
NC Charter School Mandate, “Skirts for Girls as Fragile Vessels,” a No-No.Saturday, June 18, 2022
Does USED Have a Real Teacher Plan?
Earlier this month, Education Secretary Cardona issued a statement about USED's plan to "supprt and elevate" the teaching profession, to "recruit, prepare, and retain great teachers." In other words, take some federal action to reverse the Great Teacher Exodus. Is there anything useful there, or is it just some federal smoke-blowing? Welll.....
When Cardona first pitched the plan (during an address at the Bank College of New York), he led with a description of the problem that sort of gets it.
A great teacher in every classroom is one of the most important resources we can give our children to recover from this pandemic and thrive. Yet, even before the pandemic, many states and communities experienced shortages in qualified teachers, including in critical areas such as special education, bilingual education, career and technical education, and science, technology, engineering, and math education. The pandemic has only served to make these shortages worse—falling hardest on students in underserved communities. It’s not only our responsibility but our commitment at the Department of Education to encourage, invest in, and lift up teachers across America. The future of our country and our children’s futures depend on it.
Friday, June 17, 2022
What Does Moms for Liberty Really Want?
As folks in Florida--the steaming petri dish in which Moms for Liberty originally grew--it's important to remember the third founding member of the group.
"Founded in January 2021 by Tiffany Justice and Tina Descovich, Moms for Liberty" is the pretty standard version of their one-line origin story. Descovitch and Justice make a fine pair of faces for the group--two moms who ran for their school boards, won once, and then once they had a track record, were rejected by voters a second time.All of them—knowingly or not—are part of the best strategy to win the midterm elections since the Tea Party movement in 2010.
Wednesday, June 15, 2022
FL: Looking For Staff In South America
Another small bulletin from the Department of Effects of the Teacher Exodus.
Osceola County is in central Florida, home to roughly 389,000 people, over half of whom are Hispanic. It's the twelfth most Hispanic-majority county in the country, one of three such counties in the state. Their school system has faced the usual issues in recent years, from battles over masking to school board members in prolonged political clashes to hiring an ex-legislator to lobby for the district after that representative resigned his seat over a prostitution scandal. Okay, maybe that last one is a little unusual.
But they have one other usual problem--teaching positions they have trouble filling.
Can't imagine why anyone in Florida would have trouble recruiting teachers. 140 positions remain unfilled. So they hired a company to headhunt for them--in South America.School board Vice Chair Julius Melendez has some theories about the problem: confusion caused by the pandemic, disappointment over low salaries and fear of mass shootings, he suggested, "has made it hard to retain veteran teachers and recruit new ones." I suspect having state leaders who are openly hostile to public education doesn't help, either.
It's not a brand new idea. In 2019, CNN did a whole feature story about districts looking to hire from overseas. Arizona was bringing folks in from the Philippines to fill spots back in 2014, and they must have been happy with the results because it was still a thing in 2019. Osceola calls this a short term fix, but they might want to talk to Arizona about that.
It's an educational rock and a staffing hard place. We know there is not really a teaching shortage, but more of a decent pay, working conditions, and treatment of the job respect shortage, but at this point, we're so far down this hole that if all of those conditions were solved tomorrow (spoiler alert: they won't be, and they especially won't be in Ron DeSantis's Florida) it would still take a couple of years to fill the pipeline again.
"Any warm body" rules changes and "outsourcing to countries where people will put up with our crap" initiatives are not a solution to the actual problem. All these fans of the free market ought to understand, as I've said before, when I can't buy a Porsche for $1.98, that doesn't mean there's a car shortage. If you can't buy what you want (in this case, the labor of teachers) for what you're offering, you have to make a better offer.
In the meantime, we'll get more creative solutions of the "anything but improve our offer" variety. Good luck, Florida.
Is There A School-Scripting Miracle In Kenya?
Short answer: no.
Now for the longer answer.
All of a sudden, the interwebz are buzzing, or at least humming mildly, with news of a highly-standardized education-flavored business that has been found accomplishing awesome things in Kenya, and, hey, maybe there's a lesson for schools everywhere in what they've accomplished. (You can find some of the gushing here and here.) The company is being unironically touted as a McDonald's. Yay?
This new enthusiasm is prompted by a working paper by some reputable economists (Guthrie Gray-Lobe, Anthony Keats, Noble winner Michael Kremer, Isaac Mbiti, and Owen Ozier)-- "Can Education Be Standardized? Evidence from Kenya."We'll get to that in a moment, but let's set up a little context and history first.
About the company
NewGlobe is the corporation behind this operation, and Bridge International Academies is their product. (Actually, Bridge International Academies used to be the businesss, and at some point, fro some reason, they rebranded as NewGlobe.) We've looked at them on this blog before.
Jay Kimmelman graduated from Harvard in 1999, launched an edu-business (Edusoft), sold it, and decided to make his mark in education more globally, opening the first Bridge Academy in 2009.Kimmelman communicates his vision pretty clearly. On his LinkedIN page, the description of Bridge used to include this: "Bridge disrupts the education status quo by ensuring that every child, regardless
of parental income, has access to the education he or she deserves." But that word "deserves" cuts several directions, and it raises the question-- who decides what these children deserve?
"If you were at one of the other 200 locations right now, you'd be seeing the exact same thing," she says. "In some ways, it is kind of the magic of it."
That "magic" of standardized lesson plans changes the role of the teacher. It allows Bridge to hold down costs because it can hire teachers who don't have college degrees.
The winning idea — basic education as a business — sounds counterintuitive, but it was central to planning for the couple and their cofounder, Phil Frei. For parents hovering around $2 in income per day, a potentially transformative education for their kids was just one of many things they couldn’t afford. The demand, however, remains enormous — the global market for low-cost private education is $51 billion annually. To meet the demand, May says, “we drive the price point low enough so parents can become consumers.”
International and local experts say such arrangement is not only a blatant violation of Liberia’s international obligations under the right to education, and have no justification under Liberia’s constitution, but will also deny indigents and poor access to quality education.
Like McDonald’s, Walmart, and many other firms using standardization, Bridge is targeted to a mass market, not to consumers at the high end of the income distribution.
Sunday, June 12, 2022
PA: Mastriano Would Be A Disaster For Education
Doug Mastriano upset the GOP establishment by walking away with the Republican nomination for governor. Everyone else is going to have ample opportunity to be alarmed by this far-right Christian nationalist in the months ahead.
Mastriano is a hard-core MAGA as they come. He has been a huge promoter of the Big Lie, including a a staged hearing that allowed more air time for a parade of debunked Big Lie baloney (including a call-in from Beloved Leader). He has sworn that belief in the Big Lie will be job requirement #1 for his secretary of state. He got as bill through the PA Senate removing a residency requirement for partisan poll watchers (how could that possibly go wrong). Ban abortion completely. Unrestricted gun ownership. And his support from and for christianists is huge.
Based on all that, you can probably guess what Mastriano's ideas are about education, and I'm here to tell you that you haven't imagined anything radical enough.In an interview, Mastriano laid out his plans. Here are some of the highlights.
Per pupil spending. Because per pupil spending varies from district to district, the average per-pupil spending estimates vary. According to the US Census, it's about $15,798. Conservative groups like to estimate it higher, the better to make the case for taxpayer relief. The right-leaning Commonwealth Foundation puts the number at $19,900. Mastriano is running with $19,000.
He would like to cut that in half.
I think instead of 19,000, we fund each student around 9,000 or 10,000 and they can decide which school to go to, public school, private school, religious school, cyber school or home school. And the money goes to the kids. And I believe that would incentivize and drive down the costs of public education.This idea--that about $10K ought to be enough, and by gutting spending we'll just unleash a storm of creative ways to "drive down the costs"-- is the same package that surfaced among the Free Staters of rural New Hampshire. It is, simply, nuts. There is no district anywhere in the state that is spending twice as much as it needs to just because it's not creative enough; that's why there's a long-standing lawsuit about adequate ed funding in PA winding its way through court. This is part and parcel of the far right initiative to end public education and replace it with taxpayer-funded religious schooling.
How would Mastriano accomplish this cut? By simply cutting property taxes to something between practically nothing and actually nothing. We don't need it, he argues, because private and charter schools are cheap. Vouchers will fix it. Just need a little "outside the box" thinking. This is less "outside the box" and more "dumb." We'll get into all the reason why another day, but for the moment, let's stick to just one-- since the state contributes roughly 35% of the funding for public education, ending property taxes would, in most areas, cut funding by more--in many cases way more--than 50%. Will the state be making that up? How?
Mastriano is heavy on vouchers all the way, insisting that by cutting funding, Pennsylvania will makes its schools better (based on "he just thinks so). He has some other thoughts about school quality as well
With the rise in broken homes in certain communities, more students are coming to school unprepared to learn. No amount of money is going to allow these schools to do what they cannot: fill in for disengaged or absent parents.