Foot soldiers for Ron DeSantis: The right-wing money and influence behind Moms for Liberty
Sunday, October 9, 2022
ICYMI: Applefest Edition (10/9)
Foot soldiers for Ron DeSantis: The right-wing money and influence behind Moms for Liberty
Friday, October 7, 2022
One More Misguided Call To End School Boards
At reformy publication Education Next, Henry Smith calls for the elimination of school boards. Smith has been the mayor of a small town (Dover, NH), and an assistant secretary of education under Bill Clinton; currently he's an assistant professor at the Johns Hopkins School of Education. Once upon a time, he interned for a member of Boston City Council.
His takeaway from his experiences is that politicians can be self-aggrandizing and more interested in gaining political power than doing the right thing, and that school board members are often politicians, and therefor do many Naughty Things. And he rattles off some recent scandals, without even getting around to the hijacking of boards by the right-wing anti-public ed crowd. While the recent school board scandals and demagogues echo the old ones, such activities are just a few of the many reasons to call for the elimination of school boards in the 21st century.[F]or parents who want to advocate for their children and the schools’ programs, Parent Teacher Associations offer numerous advantages over school boards. PTAs simply do a better job of giving parents political and social capital within the school system.
Less silly, and perhaps more important, is that Smith's idea cuts a whole vast number of taxpayer stakeholders out of school governance, leaving a critical group paying taxes and having no say. I can't imagine that such a system wouldn't stir up some political battles of its own.
I get it. There isn't a teacher who has taught for more than a week who hasn't felt frustration and/or rage over their local school board and the whole business of being a trained professional who ultimately answers to a batch of elected amateurs.
But a democracy-ish system in which government is run by a bunch of elected amateurs is fundamental to our country's operation. It as, as the saying goes, the very worst system except for every other system. Nor is there any system that cannot be bent to politicized shenanigans if citizens simply stop paying attention and exercising due diligence. I get Smith's frustration, but his solution is no solution at all.
Thursday, October 6, 2022
A No-Cost Gift Schools Can Give To All Students
Slack.
It's been seven years since Robert Putnam published Our Kids, a book that laid out a lot of depressing evidence that the wealthy of this country are, in every way, leaving the poor behind.
One of the things that wealthy families have that poor families do not is what you can think of as either a big web or a large account of social capital. It's a web of connections, the ability to call a guy, the chance to get some slack in a difficult situation. You can think of it as privilege or social capital or simply the power of family reputation.
It shows up in a variety of ways. Some are extra bonuses, like having the right web of connections to get your kid extra help with an area of his or her interest (Little Pat is suddenly interested in widgets, and I know a guy who runs a Junior Widgeteer Club). Some are the chance for a do-over--Pat steals money from the school concession stand, but people decide to give Pat a second chance.
When you're a kid, you learn about slack pretty quickly. I was halfway through high school when I realized that I was coded as a Good Kid and could wander the halls and skirt rules in ways that some of my peers could not.
Some students get slack. They get extra opportunities and extra chances to bounce back from mistakes.
And the thing is, schools can give that kind of slack to everyone. From the classroom to the front office, schools can extend slack to each and every student no matter the circumstance.
Mind you, nobody should get infinite slack. I always told my students that I would trust them until they proved to me that I couldn't, and every year there were a couple who proved to me that I couldn't give them slack.
But you have to start with the slack. Even if you have Heard Things about that kid. Even if you remember How Their Older Sibling Was, or you've lived around the community long enough to know about the Parental Units' various failings.
It's exhausting and wearing to live your life as if you are just one misstep away from disaster and loss. It's hard to fix that in the world at large, but not so hard to fix it inside a school.
That means cutting slack for getting work done, for minor misbehavior, for being surly and uncooperative, for not Getting It yet, for violating some rules. It means not getting pissed at a student for what you imagine they're probably going to do. It doesn't mean a license for assault or otherwise creating an unsafe environment for teachers and other students.
There are many ways in which we cannot give some students the kinds of privileges that come with wealth and station and, well, privilege. But you can treat every single student as if they are from a wealthy, upstanding family.
Tuesday, October 4, 2022
The Fake Furry Story That Will Not Die
Monday, October 3, 2022
Nashville Turns To Arizona To Fund Charters
Management By A Thousand Paper Cuts
Sunday, October 2, 2022
ICYMI: Hello October Edition (10/2)
It's a great month, for certain. Except that it marks the escalation of election-related shenanigans, and I am surely not looking forward to that. Pro tip: If you contribute to your favorite candidate, make a separate email address to use just for that purpose. The you'll have a bucket for catching the onslaught of spam. Sure wish I'd done that.
Here's some reading for the week.
"Statewide book bans" are coming to Florida's classrooms, enforced by the far rightFLDOE Names Book Banners To Workgroup Designing Training For School Library Book Selections and No One is Surprised
Speaking of Florida's work to deny students the right to read, Accountabaloney has some details of the state's new censorship board and who's on it, which turns out to be some folks who are big fans of banning books.
Vouchers will divert $1.3 billion in public money to private schools
Florida also continues to set new standards in funneling taxpayer dollars to privateers. Here's a new report showing just how bad it is.
Bruises, scrapes and trauma: Idaho kids harmed when restrained, secluded in schoolsFrom Idaho Statesman, a disturbing story about the use of restraint and seclusion on the state's children.
We Must Demand Play-Based Education Because, Damn It, That's What The Evidence Tells Us
When I really think about it, I am forced to conclude that a lot of people—including powerful people like governors and legislators—imagine what teachers do by thinking about what teachers do for them—the important adults. School teachers keep kids safe and busy—out of the way and out of trouble—while busy adults are at work—work that these adults consider important, in contrast to the work of schoolteachers.