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Step One: Spot the Real Reformer

Calling All Advocates
by Fawn Johnson
National Journal
September 10, 2012

Politicians love to say the word “education,” but when it comes to actually doing something about it, outside forces must do the pushing. That is the lesson I learned from the political conventions that took over the airwaves and newsrooms in the last two weeks.

Former District of Columbia Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee is one such outside force. She was at both the conventions with the same message, which she outlined for me when I sat down with her in Tampa where Republicans gathered. “There is a huge possibility for both parties to say, ‘OK on this issue, because it has to do with our kids, we can disagree about taxes and everything else, but let’s choose this issue that we can show the American people that we can come together,'” she said.

More from that interview here.

Rhee’s grassroots education group StudentsFirst screened Won’t Back Down, a movie about two mothers who take on a failing inner-city public school, for delegates and convention guests.

BELL, a nonprofit summer and after-school learning provider, was another outside force. “I probably lost 10 pounds of perspiration,” said vice president of schools Joe Small about his two days manning a booth at CarolinaFest, an outdoor carnival of good causes–and bands–organized by the Charlotte host committee for the Democratic National Convention. (The Republican convention did not have a similar exhibit space.) In Charlotte, BELL highlighted the benefits of summer learning for at-risk youth, showing the impact its summer programs have made in a low-income district in the city. Small said the reaction from delegates and visitors alike was, “Wow. How do we bring this back to our community? How do we replicate a Bell program?”

These are just two groups that I happened upon in my wanderings. There were dozens of other education-oriented groups at the conventions. (More of them were at the Democratic convention, in part because many such groups are overtly Democratic.) The American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association sent delegates from several states. NEA President Dennis Van Roekel even sat in Vice President Joe Biden’s sky box during a tribute to the late Sen. Edward Kennedy, D-Mass. Democrats for Education Reform held an “education town hall” in Charlotte that included the famous Newark mayor Cory Booker.

For groups like these, having a presence at a national convention is just like advertising. The more attendees see a slogan or logo, the more likely it is that the topic will bubble up in other areas. Political parties welcome this, assuming they agree with the message. They need backup, just like they need people to wave signs during convention speeches. There is no shortage of advocates for education, but herding them in the same general direction is a daunting task. “People have to strap in for the long haul and understand that it’s not just one or two things that you can change that will change the system, but it’s an entire paradigm shift,” Rhee said.

So, advocates, there is almost no disagreement that the country’s schools need to improve, but polling shows that education is not “top-tier” for voters. How do you raise awareness? What can you do to make sure a consistent message gets out? How do you handle the areas where you disagree? Is Rhee right in saying that part of the trick is converting the local battles into a national narrative? Or do you need a bunch of local, grassroots groundswells to provoke changes in individual communities?

Response – Step One: Spot the Real Reformer
by Jeanne Allen
September 12, 2012

You all have asked the right question … “Politicians love to say the word ‘education,’ but when it comes to doing something about it… outside forces must do the pushing. … what is the trick to provoking change in individual communities? ’”

Education reform is indeed driven by the grassroots. It’s always been that way, and it’s a great movement for that reason. Education reform was “postpartisan” before postpartisan was cool! There are lots of effective strategies and tactics (and some not so much), but one thing allreformers must be able to do is to understand what constitutes real reform.

There is a moment when parents or other would-be reformers join forces with elected officials. Say, there is xx legislation to be passed, or it’s time to implement accountability measures, or they need a better charter law. What happens at that moment? Politicians, as you point out, do indeed like to use the word “education.” The elected have gotten very savvy, and most of them know how to pay lip service to education reform … how to sound like a real reformer. But this has led to an all-too common scenario: people at the grassroots have a passionate desire to work for fundamental changes to ensure a better education for their children. They find a politician to work with, someone who says all the right things. But the end result is a toothless and ineffective piece of legislation, worse than nothing. All because they hitched their wagon to the wrong star – or to mix metaphors, they got taken in by a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

So how can the grassroots discern who are the real reformers? As part of CER’s Taking America Back to School on Education Reform campaign, we developed a tool that helps people figure it out. The Field Guide to Education Reform has a fun, tongue-in-cheek tone, but its content is actually quite serious. We think the Field Guide can help parents (and voters!) separate the “talkers” from the “doers” by giving them questions to ask, and telling what to look and listen for as politicians talk about education.

So look out faux reformers! An informed grassroots and electorate is your worst enemy!

Daily Headlines for September 12, 2012

Where Do Romney, Obama Stand On Education?
FOX News, September 11, 2012

VIDEO

As Chicago Teachers Strike, Unions At A Crossroad
NPR, September 12, 2012

Unions in Wisconsin challenged Gov. Scott Walker’s anti-union policies and lost, while teachers successfully challenged similar laws in Ohio . But many of these policies are supported by President Obama, Education Secretary Arne Duncan and other Democrats. And the American Federation of Teachers has been walking a fine line between advocating for reform and protecting traditional union positions.

WHY IT MATTERS: Education
Associated Press, September 12, 2012

States and local governments have the primary responsibility for education in the United States . But the federal government gets a big say, too, by awarding billions in aid, often with strings attached.

Must Teachers and School Officials Be Foes?
New York Times, NY, September 11, 2012

Do relations between teachers and officials need to cool off and become more cooperative, or can needed change come only through confrontation? Do teachers unions promote or inhibit excellence? And do they help retain the best teachers or drive them away?

Parents: Maybe It’s You Who Should Be Striking
CT Post, CT, September 12, 2012

We can fire bad teachers. We can choose not to re-elect ineffective politicians. But change cannot happen if there is no way to help struggling parents or hold apathetic parents accountable for their child’s success. We can no longer afford to keep parents out of the education reform debate.

Education Monopoly Grinds to Halt in Chicago
Appeal Democrat, CA, September 11, 2012

While Lewis makes a valid point, she also unwittingly makes one of our points: More money for teachers has no effect on classroom outcomes. Caught in the middle of this struggle over money and control are Chicago’s nearly 400,000 students, a large percentage of whom live in poverty, in the more dangerous areas of the city. Chicago mayor Rahm Emanuel characterized the strike as “unnecessary, avoidable and wrong.” He is right.

FROM THE STATES

CALIFORNIA

LAUSD Board Member Zimmer To Revise Charter Schools Proposal After Protests
Daily Breeze, CA, September 12, 2012

Los Angeles Unified board member Steve Zimmer vowed Tuesday to revise his controversial charter schools resolution after nearly a dozen speakers and an overflow crowd voiced strident opposition to his plan to study tougher oversight of the independent campuses and halt approvals of any new schools in the interim.

Charter Campuses Focus of L.A. School-Board Protests
Los Angeles Times Blog, CA, September 11, 2012

About 400 charter school advocates descended on Los Angeles school district headquarters Tuesday to protest a proposed moratorium on new charters. Later, a smaller but equally passionate contingent of parents and teachers from Berendo Middle School arrived to oppose construction of a building to house a charter school on that campus.

L.A. Unified, Union OK System Of Evaluating Principals
Los Angeles Times, CA, September 11, 2012

The one-year agreement allows the use of student achievement as one way of judging administrators.

L.A. Mayor Backs Weighing Student Performance In Evaluating Teacher Quality
CNN, September 12, 2012

School teachers should be held accountable for the performance of their students, the Conference of Mayors said Tuesday, according to the group’s leader.

COLORADO

Denver School Reform Group Wants More Consistent, Better Arts Education
Denver Post, CO, September 12, 2012

Arts instruction is robust in some Denver schools, not so good in others, and opportunities for students to excel in the arts is often a matter of economic status, a new report by A+Denver Schools contends.

FLORIDA

Year-Round Charter School May Open
Gainesville Sun, FL, September 11, 2012

A new charter school with year-round classes may open next year in northeast Gainesville .

GEORGIA

We’ll Cut Off Our Noses To Spite Our Faces
Columbia County News-Times, GA, September 12, 2012

A Morris News Service analysis surprised me somewhat when it said the charter schools amendment on November’s ballot may be one of the bigger issues boosting voter turnout. The reason it surprises me is that I am certain most citizens have little or no idea what the amendment means, or how it could damage their local schools – yet many will vote for it anyway.

ILLINOIS

Merit Pay Opinions Mixed
Chicago Tribune, IL, September 12, 2012

Some district that have tried rewarding teachers for student performance have abandoned practice

Mayor’s Plan To Close Schools Fuels Union Fears During Teachers Strike
Chicago Tribune, IL, September 12, 2012

Emanuel’s administration would close 80 to 120 public schools and open many charter schools, sources say

Grading Teachers
Chicago Tribune, IL, September 12, 2012

Are the social factors Lewis named beyond a teacher’s control? Sure. But do any of those mean kids can’t learn, can’t excel at school? Absolutely not.

Can Teachers Strike Over Evaluations? ‘Yes And No,’ Experts Say
Chicago Sun-Times, IL, September 11, 2012

But while teachers and administrators don’t agree on how the evaluations should be done, the two sides couldn’t even agree over whether the teachers could legally walk out based on the issue. Who is right? It depends, independent legal experts contacted Tuesday said.

Charter Schools Open During Strike
WTTW, IL, September 11, 2012

While the Chicago teachers’ strike continues into a second day, some 52,000 students are going about their normal, daily routines. These students are served by the 119 charter schools in Chicago . And although 10 of these campuses are unionized, with union officials representing teachers in negotiations with school management, they are non-CTU.

Chicago Teachers’ Folly
New York Times, NY, September 12, 2012

Teachers’ strikes, because they hurt children and their families, are never a good idea. The strike that has roiled the civic climate in Chicago — and left 350,000 children without classes — seems particularly senseless because it is partly a product of a personality clash between the blunt mayor, Rahm Emanuel, and the tough Chicago Teachers Union president, Karen Lewis.

Chicago’s Striking Teachers Flunk Sympathy Test
USA Today, September 12, 2012

In the latest tiff between public-employee unions and cash-strapped governments, more than 350,000 Chicago children were shut out of classrooms for a second day Tuesday by striking teachers pursuing goals that are out of step with reality.

Randi Weingarten: Treat Teachers As Equal Partners
USA Today, September 12, 2012

I’ve spent a lot of time talking to Chicago ‘s teachers. What they want more than anything are the tools and conditions to do their jobs and help all students succeed.

Taking Rahm to School
Washington Times, DC, September 11, 2012

Thousands of Chicago public-school teachers have taken to the streets in their first strike in 25 years. Usually Republicans are the ones being denounced by Big Labor for having the temerity to insist on fiscal responsibility in public-sector union deals. This time, Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, of impeccable Obama-era liberal Democratic credentials, is the one facing the chanting mobs and bongo drums. It couldn’t happen to a nicer guy.

INDIANA

EVSC, Other Schools Launch Ad Campaigns To Tout Benefits Of Public Education
Evansville Courier Press, IN, September 11, 2012

Employing a marketing strategy to promote the school district is something new to the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corp., but it is among a growing number of Indiana public school districts that are advertising in newspapers, on bus stop benches and billboards and on the radio.

Local Schools Grappling With New Teacher Evaluations
Pharos-Tribune, IN, September 12, 2012

New state teacher evaluation rules go into effect this school year, but local school corporations can hold off on tying those evaluations to teacher pay.

LOUISIANA

Tougher Standards for La. Nonpublic Schools Coming
Alexandria Town Talk, LA, September 12, 2012

Nonpublic schools soon could have to show more proof that they offer quality education if they want state approval to receive funds and accept vouchers.

Vouchers Will Affect St. Tammany Public Schools’ Budget
St. Tammany New- Banner, LA, September 12, 2012

The new scholarship, or voucher program, that began in St. Tammany Parish this year, may effect the St. Tammany Parish School System budget by as much as half a million dollars.

MARYLAND

Baltimore City Schoolchildren Deserve A Real Choice
Baltimore Sun, MD, September 11, 2012

“Greetings from Maryland , home of the number one public school system in America for four years in a row!” That is how Gov. Martin O’Malley opened his speech at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte , N.C., last week to a roar of applause.

NEW JERSEY

NJ Schools Prepare to Implement New Teacher Evaluations
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, September 12, 2012

With teacher’s tenure now tied to the evaluations, state sets deadlines for districts to decide on the process and performance models

New School Year, New Evaluations in Denville, Rockaway
Denville Community News, NJ, September 12, 2012

January may have New Year’s Day, but for many, September signals the true beginning of the year as schools open once again and summer vacation becomes just a fond memory.

NORTH CAROLINA

Durham County Oks Tax-Exempt Financing For Charter School
News & Observer, NC, September 11, 2012

Durham County commissioners unanimously supported a charter school’s request to receive up to $17 million in tax-exempt financing for expansion and equipment.

OHIO

Audit Flags Ethics Questions At Charter School
Cincinnati Enquirer, OH, September 11, 2012

A local charter school overpaid an employee $3,333 and committed possible ethics violations, according to the Ohio Auditor’s Office.

Four School Workers Lose Jobs, Licenses
Columbus Dispatch, OH, September 11, 2012

A second charter-school treasurer has been permanently banned from working in schools because the state says he didn’t prevent the misspending of more than $600,000 in public money.

State Raises Third-Graders’ Reading Bar
Columbus Dispatch, OH, September 12, 2012

As many as 10,000 third-graders could be held back next school year if they fall short of new cut scores set yesterday by the state Board of Education on the state reading test.

OKLAHOMA

Q&A Sessions With School Leaders Would Serve Oklahoma City District Well
The Oklahoman, OK, September 12, 2012

FOR three hours on a recent Monday night, members of the Oklahoma City School Board listened and asked questions about the operations and academic achievement of the charter schools in the district.

OREGON

Alternative Schools Get Low Grades
Mail Tribune, OR, September 12, 2012

Students in Jackson County’s alternative high schools are failing to achieve at a rate that leaves their schools dead last among all schools in Jackson County, according to data released this week by the Oregon Department of Education.

PENNSYLVANIA

District Reports Recommend Against Renewing 2 Charters
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, September 12, 2012

Philadelphia school district officials recommended against renewals for two charter schools founded by Dorothy June Brown before a federal grand jury in July indicted her and four administrators for fraud.

Should Move Principals When They Can’t Do Job
Philadelphia Inquirer, PA, September 12, 2012

It’s a shame that it took federal action before four Camden principals whose schools are failing could be removed.

Lower Test Scores Follow Drastic Cuts in Bethlehem
The Morning Call, PA, September 11, 2012

Students entered the 2011-12 school year with dozens fewer teachers, fewer tutoring hours at elementary schools, less personalized instruction in middle schools and reduced access to high school after-school activities in the Bethlehem Area School District .

Scranton Schools Under Investigation For Fixing Test Scores
Scranton Citizen Voice, PA, September 12, 2012

The Scranton School District is under investigation for manipulation of standardized tests, including the possibility of teachers or administrators changing answers on bubble sheets.

TENNESSEE

Metro Defies State, Denies Great Hearts
The Tennessean, TN, September 11, 2012

In a surprise move, the Metro Nashville school board defied the state’s education power structure Tuesday and denied a controversial charter school for Nashville’s West Side over concerns that it would cater mainly to wealthy, white families.

WASHINGTON

Unions’ Money Opposes Charter Schools, While Charter Proponents Include Wealthy Donors
The News Tribune Blog , WA, September 11, 2012

Two unions are the biggest donors to People for Our Public Schools, a committee formed to oppose Washington’s charter school initiative, I-1240, according to reports from the Public Disclosure Commission (PDC). The initiative appears on the November ballot.

I-1240: An Essential Escape Route From Failing Schools
News Tribune, WA, September 12, 2012

We’ll let Initiative 1240 speak for itself. The measure would authorize the creation of up to 40 charter schools, public schools freed from many bureaucratic regulations. They are commonly launched and governed by teachers and parents who believe their local schools are failing their students.

WISCONSIN

Our Schools Will See Huge Changes
Wausau Daily Herald, WI, September 12, 2012

But here’s the truth: The fights and protests are largely finished here, but the real changes, especially in the way we track education data, are just beginning. Wisconsin is entering a period of seismic change in education, and students, parents and taxpayers all will feel the difference.

ONLINE SCHOOLS

Online Education Company With Ties To Maine Under Investigation In Florida
Bangor Daily News, ME, September 11, 2012

As Maine moves forward with exploration of virtual charter schools and greater use of digital learning, K12, an online education company that was in line to provide curriculum for a Maine virtual charter school until it withdrew its application, is under investigation in Florida .

Easton Area Unveils Cyber School Plan
The Morning Call, PA, September 11, 2012

Easton Area School District students may soon be able to take cyber classes but still participate in extracurricular activities and graduate with their classmates.

RHS Plans To Add Online Academy
Palladium-Item, IN, September 11, 2012

Richmond High School students soon can earn credits toward their high school diploma over the Internet.

Partnership Expands Online Education
Wausau Daily Herald, WI, September 12, 2012

An online school based in Tomahawk is playing a key role in a new partnership designed to expand the digital learning opportunities for students across the state.

Hudson Isd Embracing A New Vision
Lufkin Daily News, TX, September 12, 2012

Hudson ISD has embraced a “New Vision” for the district. This vision will focus on five key goals: digital learning, 21st century learning standards (academic and career), multiple forms of assessment, accountability that is not focused on one state test, and transforming our school into a 21st century learning organization.

Where do Romney, Obama stand on education?

FOX News
September 11, 2012

CER President Jeanne Allen says any president that doesn’t make education a central issue deserves a “C”.

Educationfifty.com Educates Public About Candidate Reform Positions

CER Press Release
Washington, D.C.
September 12, 2012

The Center for Education Reform’s (CER) campaign to Take America Back to School on Education Reform continues with a web-based guide to candidate positions on education reform. Educationfifty.com is a dynamic tool that empowers voters to educate themselves about which candidates are real education reformers and which ones merely pay lip service to the idea.

Educationfifty.com compares candidate positions on three key reform issues: 1) strong charter school laws, 2) meaningful school choice, and 3) strong teacher evaluations with performance based rewards.

Currently Educationfifty.com contains information on the nation’s gubernatorial races and state superintendent races as well as the incumbent governors who are not up for election. Comparative information on the presidential candidates will be available in October.

The site, which is based on thousands of data points and comprehensive research, will be updated in real time – providing up-to-the-minute research to voters craving the truth about candidate’s plans for fixing education systems.

“Education is only as strong as its weakest link. Bold, substantive reform happens when the public holds policymakers – both present and potential – to their promises and demands answers on specific policy proposals,” said CER President Jeanne Allen. “When Governors and other state policymakers embrace real reform, great things happen. Educationfifty.com arms voters with the information they need to elect reform minded leaders who will take on the status quo and support real solutions that lead to better – and more — education opportunities for kids.”

CER is going all out this election season to educate voters about the nature of true education reform. In addition to Educationfifty.com, the Field Guide to Education Reform: How to Spot a Real Education Reformer provides voters with those important education policy questions they should be asking their policymakers. Those policymakers (present and potential) will soon be receiving their own toolkit on real education reform from CER.

Second Issue of our NEW LETTER TO FRIENDS

September 11, 2012

Dear Friends,I am pleased to share with you the second issue of our NEW LETTER TO FRIENDS, which is our semi-monthly report filled with exclusive news and observations you will not find anywhere else. This new offering from CER will provide in depth coverage of the pressing education reform issues of the day as well as lessons from the front where real policies and real reformers have forged battles once thought unattainable – and won. In between issues of the NEW LETTER TO FRIENDS you can still get a comprehensive daily dose of education reform news from CER’s Newswire.

Below is a sneak peek excerpt from the new issue to give you a taste of what you can expect to receive on a regular basis when you sign up to receive the New Letter. To read the full edition of “My Nest is Empty” here.

The New Letter to Friends of The Center for Education Reform
No. 102
September 2012

“My Nest is Empty” (Excerpt)

Well, not entirely. My 23 year-old son, John, who you might recall from various events and his long time interning here, is working with us now at CER after a year in pharmaceuticals! (yawn) He’s a natural — at a lot of things — and so he’s been charged with raising funds and raising awareness. (Be nice to him, please?) But I digress —

My friends who just sent their first to college are sad. They say they feel empty and they cry. “Come on,” I want to say. I just sent my 4th and last. There are no words. Some of you can appreciate this; others are far away from it happening. My husband and I just made our first dinner with no obligation to feed kids, to yell at them, tell them to do dishes, or (the best and longest running line ever….) to “finish your homework!!!!”

That made me realize in a new way how the rhythm of school is so prevalent our lives.

Please finish eating… so you can FINISH YOUR HOMEWORK!!!

Get off the computer… so you can FINISH YOUR HOMEWORK!!!

No, you can’t watch the final episode of that! You need to FINISH YOUR HOMEWORK!!

What? You are finished? Surely you have a project you can start!!

Some have wondered if there is too much of it, homework, that is. While some movies have warned of a dramatic decline in our education system (think Waiting for Superman), others have suggested we all back off (Race to Nowhere).

A new one actually gets to the real issue — that whether we like it or not, a majority of parents aren’t even in a position to demand that their kids finish their homework. They are stuck in failing schools that leave their kids unmotivated, not caring and unable to be part of the dinner time dialogue that we advantaged people have come to know, love and even at times, balk at the repetitiveness of the routine.

And don’t forget, to receive these missives you will need to subscribe. A modest donation of $120 for rank and file individuals, or $240 for organizations guarantees your exclusive NEW LETTER TO FRIENDS, delivered to you at least semi-monthly, on paper or electronically, (the choice is up to you).

This will serve as the final free preview so you will want to sign up now so you don’t miss out!”

Best Regards,

Jeanne Allen
President

Chicago Teacher Strike Poses Test For Unions

by Sam Hananel
Associated Press
September 11, 2012

The massive teacher strike in Chicago offers a high-profile test for the nation’s teacher unions, which have seen their political influence threatened as a growing reform movement seeks to expand charter schools, get private companies involved with failing schools and link teacher evaluations to student test scores.

Union leaders are taking a major stand on teacher evaluations, one of the key issues in the Chicago dispute. If they lose there, it could have ripple effects around the country.

The American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association – the nation’s two largest teacher unions – have been playing defense in jurisdictions around the country as Republicans and Democrats alike seek greater concessions in a bid to improve ailing public schools.

After decades of growth in membership and influence, the unions now are in a weaker position, said Rick Hess of the American Enterprise Institute, a nonpartisan think tank.

“They are playing on more hostile terrain and they are facing opponents the likes of which they have not had to face before,” Hess said.

Members of the Chicago Teachers Union – the AFT’s oldest local – walked off the job Monday for the first time in 25 years over issues that include pay raises, classroom conditions, job security and teacher evaluations.

They are pitted against Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel, a powerful Democrat – and former chief of staff to President Barack Obama – who wants to extract more concessions from teachers while the school district faces a nearly $700 million deficit.

Major teacher strikes have been rare in recent years, compared with the 1960s and 1970s, when teachers went on strike frequently for better pay and improved bargaining rights. While unions generally got what they wanted in the past, they face a tougher climate today.

With the weak economy, unions have seen massive teacher layoffs, increased class sizes and school districts unable or unwilling to boost teacher salaries. Like other public employee unions, they are also under attack from Republican governors like Scott Walker of Wisconsin, who signed a measure last year to curb collective bargaining rights and limit benefits for state workers.

The 2.2-million member NEA has lost more than 100,000 members since 2010, as fewer public school teachers are hired and more charter schools open, most of which are not unionized. At the 1.5 million-member AFT, years of steady growth have leveled off.

“They certainly are on the defensive,” said Richard Ingersoll, a professor of education and sociology at the University of Pennsylvania. “They are under attack. A lot of times they are demonized. On the other hand there’s really smart and progressive elements in the teacher’s movement who want to get out ahead of this and do it in a way that’s fair.”

In the past, teachers unions could count on a Democratic White House to fight back on their behalf. But Obama’s education secretary, Arne Duncan, is a former head of Chicago Public Schools who has pushed for many of the changes that unions oppose.

“In many ways the Obama administration has signed onto the very conservative set of reforms that the education community is imposing on teachers,” said Richard Kahlenberg of the Century Foundation, a nonpartisan think tank in Washington.

Both the NEA and the AFT have strongly endorsed Obama’s re-election despite his administration’s support of policies to expand charter schools, weaken tenure and base teacher evaluations on how much student performance improves. The Chicago strike could test that alliance, as Obama declines to take a public stand supporting the union.

Evaluating teachers on how much their students improve is a key component of Obama’s education policy. His administration has approved waivers freeing many states from the most onerous requirements of the Bush-era No Child Left Behind law. In order to get a waiver, each state had to promise to show in other ways that its students and schools are improving, and to more closely link teacher evaluations to student test scores.

The Chicago union argues that the new teacher evaluation system relies too heavily on standardized test scores without considering outside factors such as student poverty, violence and homelessness that can affect performance.

Hess said the Chicago strike has become an important test case after unions lost their effort to recall Wisconsin’s governor.

“If it looks like the union folds, especially on the heels of Wisconsin, it’s a huge blow for the unions,” Hess said. “If the union seems to win, that’s going to be a blow to reform-minded mayors and puts some wind into the sails of unions.”

There are major differences, though, between the cases in Wisconsin and Chicago.

While Walker effectively challenged public employee unions’ collective bargaining rights, both sides in Chicago have been negotiating over traditional labor-management issues. The district proposed a 16 percent raise over four years and the two sides have essentially agreed on a longer school day. But job security and a new teacher evaluation system remained in dispute.

AFT President Randi Weingarten said the union didn’t want to strike, but did so only as a last resort after negotiations “that left CTU members feeling disrespected.” Among the issues she cited was the mayor’s decision this year to strip teachers of an agreed-upon 4 percent raise.

“This is a long-term battle that everyone’s going to watch,” said Eric Hanuskek, a senior fellow in education at the Hoover Institution of Stanford University. “Other teachers unions in the United States are wondering if they should follow suit.”

Teacher unions also are growing nervous about how they are portrayed in an upcoming Hollywood movie called “Won’t Back Down,” set to open in theaters on Sept. 28. The film tells the story of a mother’s quest to take control of her daughter’s failing elementary school.

Weingarten has blasted the movie as “using the most blatant stereotypes and caricatures I have ever seen” and unfairly blaming unions for the nation’s school woes. Union leaders were even more outraged that the movie was screened at the Democratic National Convention in Charlotte, N.C., and that Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa – the convention chairman – attended the screening.

Villaraigosa is a former union organizer who has spoken out in favor of greater accountability for schools and teachers.

Daily Headlines for September 11, 2012

Chicago Teacher Strike Poses Test For Unions
Associated Press, September 11, 2012

The massive teacher strike in Chicago offers a high-profile test for the nation’s teacher unions, which have seen their political influence threatened as a growing reform movement seeks to expand charter schools, get private companies involved with failing schools and link teacher evaluations to student test scores.

Ohio Isn’t Alone When It Comes To School Funding Mistakes
Cleveland Plain Dealer, OH, September 10, 2012

After the Great Recession hit, far too many states took out their carving knives and quickly slashed school funding. Yes, in the face of declining state revenues, cuts had to be made, but it was shortsighted to balance the budget on the backs of schools — as a new report suggests many states did.

FROM THE STATES

ARKANSAS

Local Charter School Reports to Department of Education
KARK, AR, September 10, 2012

A charter school that was placed on probation reported to the Board of Education on Monday.

CALIFORNIA

Parent Trigger’ Obstructionism
Los Angeles Times, CA, September 10, 2012

The Adelanto Elementary School District has done everything it can to stymie the law and block improvements at Desert Trails Elementary.

LA Unified To Mull Crackdown On Charter Schools
Mercury News, CA, September 11, 2012

The Los Angeles Unified school board on Tuesday was set to consider a proposal to declare a moratorium on new charter schools and tighten oversight of existing ones in move that charter advocates call illegal.

Charter Amendments Could Change Chico Country Day School Board
Chico Enterprise-Record, CA, September 11, 2012

There could be some changes coming for the Chico Country Day School governing board if some amendments to the charter school’s bylaws are passed during Wednesday’s meeting.

State Education Report Calls For Sweeping Reforms In Teacher Evaluation
San Gabriel Valley Tribune, CA, September 10, 2012

The California Department of Education on Monday released a comprehensive new report calling for sweeping reforms in the way teachers are recruited, trained, mentored and evaluated.

Gov. Brown is AWOL on School Reform
San Diego Union-Tribune , CA, September 10, 2012

Senate President Darrell Steinberg is back at it. A year after Gov. Jerry Brown vetoed his bill that would have broadened the standards used to rate schools in the state’s official Academic Performance Index, the Sacramento Democrat has won passage of a new version of the bill. Steinberg made the measure more flexible and modest in hope of winning Brown’s blessing.

DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

D.C. Charter Schools Try To Simplify Application Process For Parents
Washington Post Blog, DC, September 10, 2012

The rise of charter schools means D.C. parents have more public education options than ever, but it can be overwhelming to navigate the system.

FLORIDA

Montessori Charter Schools Thriving in Lakeland
The Ledger, FL, September 10, 2012

Two Lakeland charter schools have been accepted as full members of the American Montessori Society and are working toward accreditation.

Charter Operators Won’t Say Where They Will Locate Schools In County
St. Augustine Record, FL, September 10, 2012

Say they offer choice that the county doesn’t. During meetings with three charter schools on Monday, St. Johns County school officials wanted to know what the schools could do better than the public schools.

GEORGIA

Half Of Georgians Favor Charter School Amendment, Survey Says
Florida Times Union, FL, September 11, 2012

Half of Georgia voters surveyed a week ago support changing the state constitution to allow Georgia to grant charters to schools begun by parents over the objections of local school boards.

Charter Amendment Advocates Present Their Case
Macon Telegraph, GA, September 11, 2012

Rep. Edward Lindsey, R-Atlanta, majority whip of the Georgia House of Representatives asked me if I would talk to the proponents of the upcoming constitutional amendment on charter schools and get their side of the story. This was after Mr. Lindsey and I had publicly crossed swords over the issue.

ILLINOIS

Charter Schools Remain Open During Strike
WBEZ, IL, September 10, 2012

Not all students were out of classes today.
For those at Chicago ’s 118 charter schools, it was just Monday as usual. Charter schools fall under the Chicago Public Schools system, but they do not hire teachers from the Chicago Teachers Union.

Job Security at Heart of 2 Stumbling Blocks
Chicago Tribune, IL, September 11, 2012

Two issues being cited as primary stumbling blocks to a Chicago teachers contract are a recall policy for teachers and a teacher evaluation system. Both affect job security for teachers and are part of larger efforts to overhaul schools in the city and nationally.

Charter, Parochial Schools Expect CPS Strike To Spark Interest
Crain’s Chicago Business, IL, September 10, 2012

While Chicago Teachers Union members and Chicago Public Schools officials stand their ground in a battle of wills over contract negotiations, charter and parochial schools say they have room for school-age children.

Chicago’s Teaching Moment
Wall Street Journal, September 11, 2012

Has Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel met Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker? If he hasn’t, we’d be glad to mediate a call. Chicago teachers went on strike Monday for the first time in 25 years, and Mr. Emanuel can help the cause of education reform nationwide if he shows some Walker-like gumption.

In Chicago , It’s a Mess, All Right
New York Times, NY, September 11, 2012

“This is going to be a hot, buttery mess.” So said Karen Lewis, the fiery president of the Chicago Teachers Union, when Mayor Rahm Emanuel named a new chief executive of the city’s sprawling school system, the third largest in the nation.

Students Are Victims In Chicago Fight Over Clout
Washington Post, DC, September 11, 2012

Keep the following numbers in mind for the next time a public-sector union official starts lecturing you about social justice.

The Chicago Teachers Strike In An Era Of Accountability
Christian Science Monitor, MA, September 10, 2012

The Chicago teachers strike isn’t only about pay and work hours. The union also opposes merit pay and stricter evaluation of teachers. The strike’s outcome will influence the future of a national movement for accountability of public school teachers.

Teachers Strike Heads Into Second Day
Chicago Tribune, IL, September 11, 2012

Talks between Chicago’s school board and the city’s striking teachers failed to produce an agreement Monday, leaving more than 350,000 children locked out of the classroom for a second day.

Don’t Cave, Mr. Mayor
Chicago Tribune, IL, September 11, 2012

Over the weekend, Chicago Public Schools leaders offered teachers a sweet deal that would make most workers in the city envious. Teachers stood to reap a remarkably generous16 percent raise over four years in a new contract. Guaranteed.

MARYLAND

FIT Member Defends Savings From School Choice Program
Ocean City Gazette, MD, September 11, 2012

While Fairness in Taxes member Vic Staniec deemed it the “hot topic of the day,” at a Friday, Sept. 7 meeting, mold discovered in Ocean City High School earlier in the week took a back seat to the school district’s School Choice program when it came to educational issues.

MASSACHUSETTS

City Schools Can’t Have Monopoly On Added Charter Dollars
Gloucester Daily Times, MA, September 11, 2012

The fact that the excessive enrollment projections of the Gloucester Community Arts Charter School will mean additional money for the city of Gloucester’s general fund, as reported in Saturday’s Times, is certain to spark debate over where that budgeted state money will go.

MICHIGAN

State Rep. Lisa Posthumus Lyons on Chicago Strike: ‘ Michigan Teachers Are Better Than That’
The Grand Rapids Press, MI, September 10, 2012

Adding teeth to Michigan ’s law preventing teachers from striking won’t be a topic in state House Education Committee meetings despite the walkout by 30,000 Chicago educators, the committee’s chairwoman said.

Arabic School Grows Steadily, Prepares To Expand To Jordan
Detroit News, MI, September 11, 2012

The charter schools were founded by Palestinian immigrant Mohamad Issa and his brother Said Issa in 1997 with 97 students. He said learning Arabic, in addition to the traditional core curriculum, will better enable students to compete in a global marketplace.

New Livingston County Charter School Taps At-Risk Student Pool
Livingston Daily Press & Argus, MI, September 11, 2012

From the outside, a building suite in the far corner of a Brighton Township industrial complex looks like it could be an office for the latest high-tech startup.

MISISSIPPI

Teachers, Administrators Divided Over Merit Pay
Hattiesburg American, MS, September 11, 2012

Oak Grove Upper Elementary fourth-grade math teacher Cindy Ricks says she and her fellow teachers put in a lot of extra time with students who need help with their work.

NEVADA

Nevadans Weigh ‘Parent Trigger’ Idea, Empowering Parents To Reform Failing Schools
Las Vegas Sun, NV, September 11, 2012

Fed-up parents who wish to turn around their child’s failing school may soon be able to pressure school boards to action, according to a new policy being considered by Nevada lawmakers and touted by an upcoming Hollywood movie.

NEW JERSEY

Ailing Public and Private Schools Consider Conversion to Charter
New Jersey Spotlight, NJ, September 11, 2012

While option to convert to charter schools grows across nation, just one parochial school in NJ has applied

NEW YORK

State Panel Hears Educators’ Gripes About New Evaluations
Times Herald-Record, NY, September 11, 2012

New teacher evaluations are flawed, expensive and likely to make things worse — not better, a blue-ribbon commission heard Monday.

OHIO

Auditor: Release Report Cards
Columbus Dispatch, OH, September 11, 2012

Go ahead and publish the on-hold school report cards, state Auditor Dave Yost told state education officials yesterday.

PENNSYLVANIA

Commercial Touting Sto-Rox School District Debuts
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, PA, September 11, 2012

The Sto-Rox School District is more than you know. That’s the message of a television commercial airing this week that was created by teachers, staff and students of the Sto-Rox district to counteract negative publicity the district has received and to encourage residents to send their children to the district’s schools rather than charter schools.

SRC Approves Bitter Pill For School District
Philadelphia Daily News, PA, September 11, 2012

IN WHAT ONE member calls “bitter medicine,” the School Reform Commission has approved a five-year financial plan for the school district to help deal with a $1.35 billion hole.

SOUTH DAKOTA

Educators Had Little Input In Legislation
Aberdeen News, SD, September 10, 2012

I was delighted to read the guest column about education reform in South Dakota , written by state Secretary of Education Melody Schopp, in the American News on Aug. 30. This is exactly the kind of dialog and explanation most of us have been looking for.

TENNESSEE

Great Hearts Leader Says $1,200 Donation From Parents ‘Optional’
The Tennessean, TN, September 11, 2012

A controversial charter school expected to be approved tonight by the Metro Nashville school board asks families in its Arizona schools to ante up a $1,200 gift, a separate $200 tax credit contribution, and a few hundred dollars in book and classroom fees.

TEXAS

Vouchers A Bad Bargain For Private Schools
Star-Telegram, TX, September 10, 2012

On Aug. 24, Texas Sen. Dan Patrick conducted a legislative hearing laying the groundwork for potential legislation to establish a private voucher program.

TLCA gets OK to Raise Enrollment to 1,125
San Angelo Standard Times, TX, September 10, 2012

Walt Landers, CEO and chancellor of the Texas Leadership Charter Academy in San Angelo , said the school will be able to accept at least some of the more than 100 students on its waiting list, thanks to an amendment to its charter.

UTAH

Hebrew Charter School Founder Looks to ‘Mormon Model’
Deseret News, UT, September 10, 2012

High school freshman Hayden Mankovitz comes home every day from his Plantation , Fla. , school “bubbling over” to share what he’s been learning about his family’s cultural heritage, according to his mom, Maxine Mankovitz.

Pleasant Grove Allows Schools To Sell Advertising Space
Daily Herald, UT, September 10, 2012

The leaders of Pleasant Grove have OK’d display banners advertising businesses on fences for charter and other public schools.’

VIRGINIA

Thousands Of Virginia Students Aren’t Required To Get An Education
Washington Post, DC, September 11, 2012

Nearly 7,000 Virginia children whose families have opted to keep them out of public school for religious reasons are not required to get an education, the only children in the country who do not have to prove they are being home-schooled or otherwise educated, according to a study.

WASHINGTON

Charter Schools Wrong For Our State
The Columbian, WA, September 10, 2012

The Columbian has editorialized in support of placing an initiative to allow charter schools in Washington state on the Nov. 6 ballot, stating that initiatives force action after the Legislature has refused to act.

ONLINE SCHOOLS

State Investigating Virtual Schools Provider K12
Florida Center for Investigative Reporting, FL, September 11, 2012

The Florida Department of Education has launched an investigation of K12, the nation’s largest online educator, over allegations the company uses uncertified teachers and has asked employees to help cover up the practice.

Wolf Creek to Pursue Race To The Top Money
Marietta Times, OH, September 11, 2012

Wolf Creek Local Schools hopes to join with 19 other Ohio school districts for a shot at their share of millions of dollars in grant funding to help with dual enrollment and blended learning classes.

Job security at heart of 2 stumbling blocks

by Bill Ruthhart and Diane Rado, Chicago Tribune reporters
Chicago Tribune
September 11, 2012

Two issues being cited as primary stumbling blocks to a Chicago teachers contract are a recall policy for teachers and a teacher evaluation system. Both affect job security for teachers and are part of larger efforts to overhaul schools in the city and nationally.

TEACHER RECALL POLICY

The Chicago Teachers Union is pushing hard for a procedure to recall teachers who have been laid off because of school closings, consolidations and turnarounds. The issue is of critical importance, the union has said, because of rumors that the district plans to close as many as 100 schools in coming years.

Earlier this year, CPS and the union struck a deal over the longer school day that temporarily allowed for such a recall. In exchange for the union agreeing to an extra 30 minutes in high schools and 75 minutes in elementary schools, CPS agreed to rehire nearly 500 teachers in noncore subjects from a pool of teachers who had been laid off.

The district, however, has resisted making such a recall policy the permanent method for filling vacancies in Chicago schools.

“Teachers in this city agreed to a longer day … and what our union got in return for that was a promise there would be a recall procedure for those teachers who are going to be hired,” said Jesse Sharkey, vice president of CTU. “Now we see that offer is being taken away from the table, and there is no sign of respect there. That’s important for our members.”

Mayor Rahm Emanuel has framed the issue as one of accountability, saying he doesn’t want to place the district’s hiring control in the hands of the union through such a recall process.

“I don’t believe I should pick ’em. I don’t believe CPS should pick ’em. I don’t believe the CTU leadership should pick ’em,” Emanuel said Monday of hiring teachers. “If we’re going to hold our local principals in the school accountable for getting the results we need, they need to pick the best qualified.”

In the district’s latest proposal, CPS teachers whose schools are closed would be eligible for vacancies at the school that takes in the transferred students. If there are no vacancies, the teachers would have three options: a three-month lump-sum severance, five months in a “reassigned teacher pool” or a spot in a “quality teacher force pool,” which would entitle those teachers to an interview and an explanation if they are not hired.

The CPS offer also provides options for teachers displaced for other reasons, including turnarounds or phaseouts.

Jeanne Allen, president of the Washington, D.C.-based Center for Education Reform, said recall policies do not encourage improvement or change within school districts but rather a status quo that has never led to improvement in educating children.

But the teachers union has countered that its members deserve as much job security as possible, especially with school closings becoming increasingly common.

“In Chicago, there are many good teachers who work in some of the toughest schools in the city, who saw their schools close through no fault of their own,” Sharkey said.

TEACHER RATINGS

Teacher contract negotiations often come down to money and benefits, so parents might be wondering how employee evaluations became a stumbling block in the Chicago Public Schools teacher strike.

The wrangling has to do with a new teacher rating system pushed by the Obama administration, which has sparked new laws and controversy in Illinois and around the country.

The new evaluations judge teachers in part on how their students perform, with a focus on academic gains. Teachers say that isn’t fair for a lot of reasons and that bad ratings resulting from the new system could threaten teachers’ livelihoods.

CTU President Karen Lewis estimates that almost 6,000 teachers could be discharged in the coming years — nearly 30 percent of union membership. “That is unacceptable and leads to instability for our students,” she said.

But supporters of the new system — created under a 2010 Illinois law — say it’s good for students and a way to ensure that the best teachers are in America’s schools.

“I think there is unbelievably strong momentum not only locally but nationally that the time has come to have more substantive evaluations,” said Robin Steans, executive director of the policy group Advance Illinois, which has been instrumental in pushing education reforms.

Steans said a great deal of effort went into negotiating the 2010 law and that the CTU was at the table — though not Lewis, because she wasn’t union president at the time.

The law required CPS to jump-start the new evaluation system this fall in at least 300 schools, though most suburban school districts were not required to put the program in place until 2016-17.

During the first two years of the new system, at least 25 percent of a teacher’s evaluation must stem from how students perform on various assessments and how much they grow in knowledge and skills during the school year. From the third year on, the figure would be at least 30 percent.

CPS had planned to increase the figure to 40 percent in the coming years, but that could change in negotiations with the union, as could other parts of the new evaluation system.

The union wants to alter the scores that determine a teacher’s rating and the timing of tests used to measure student academic gains, among other changes. CPS officials say they’re open to working with the union and making adjustments as needed.

The new system also has been a point of contention between Illinois and the federal government, which wants Illinois to speed up use of the new evaluations. Illinois has refused, creating a standoff that has affected state education reforms.

At a downtown rally Monday, Rick Sawicki, a seventh- grade teacher at Evergreen Middle School, said it’s unfair to tie a teacher’s evaluation to student performance. He compared it to a coach not being able to pick the members of his team but still being evaluated on how they do on the field.

“There are a lot of factors that go into a child’s education that is not reflected in test scores,” he said. “Children are more to me than their test scores.”

What is the BLOB?

The term “Blob” cropped up years ago when reformers began trying to work with the education establishment and ran smack into the more than 200 groups, associations, federations, alliances, departments, offices, administrations, councils, boards, commissions, panels, organizations, herds, flocks and coveys, which collectively make up the education industrial complex.

Taken individually they were frustrating enough, with their own agendas, bureaucracies, and power over education. But taken as a whole they were (and are) maddening in their resistance to change. Not really a wall — they always talk about change — but rather more like quicksand, or a tar pit where ideas slowly sink out of sight leaving everything just as it had been.

They could have been called any number of things: a puddle, a maze, a swamp, a big fat fluffy feather pillow, but BLOB is what stuck. It’s really nothing personal, just descriptive shorthand, like calling accountants “bean counters” and Pentagon officials “brass hats,” and our friends in the blob (yes, we have blob friends) all seem to accept it with good humor. Still, to avoid hard feelings, when we describe the groups that make up the education establishment, we call them the Big Learning Organization Bureaucracies, or… BLOB.

The New Letter to Friends of The Center for Education Reform No. 102

The New Letter to Friends of The Center for Education Reform
No. 102
September 2012

My nest is empty.

Well, not entirely. My 23 year-old son, John, who you might recall from various events and his long time interning here, is working with us now at CER after a year in pharmaceuticals! (yawn) He’s a natural — at a lot of things — and so he’s been charged with raising funds and raising awareness. (Be nice to him, please?) But I digress —

My friends who just sent their first to college are sad. They say they feel empty and they cry. “Come on,” I want to say. I just sent my 4th and last. There are no words. Some of you can appreciate this; others are far away from it happening. My husband and I just made our first dinner with no obligation to feed kids, to yell at them, tell them to do dishes, or (the best and longest running line ever….) to “finish your homework!!!!”

That made me realize in a new way how the rhythm of school is so prevalent our lives.

Please finish eating… so you can FINISH YOUR HOMEWORK!!!

Get off the computer… so you can FINISH YOUR HOMEWORK!!!

No, you can’t watch the final episode of that! You need to FINISH YOUR HOMEWORK!!

What? You are finished? Surely you have a project you can start!!

Some have wondered if there is too much of it, homework, that is. While some movies have warned of a dramatic decline in our education system (think Waiting for Superman), others have suggested we all back off (Race to Nowhere).

A new one actually gets to the real issue — that whether we like it or not, a majority of parents aren’t even in a position to demand that their kids finish their homework. They are stuck in failing schools that leave their kids unmotivated, not caring and unable to be part of the dinner time dialogue that we advantaged people have come to know, love and even at times, balk at the repetitiveness of the routine.

Won’t Back Down is the real deal. When I first read the script, I was excited but guarded. There was some good meat, the right idea, but it wasn’t the full story. The disenfranchised parent and teacher, the sorry state of the failing school — we’ve seen it all happen before. We’ve seen many people triumph from making a change. But what was missing at first was the real live experience of those who dare to challenge the status quo. So, we shared stories about real heroes we knew who dared to create their own schools, of those who endured months — if not years — of stall and delay, about real union contracts that prevent teachers from staying after school or doing cafeteria duty.

Well, they did their homework and it shows! Walden Media’s new film with 20th Century Fox is a blockbuster. The star power and the story are too good to be true. Like The Help, it entertains and engages and teaches us a sad but real story that still happens every day.

Bad Education. And yet, despite the knowledge that real bad education is still happening in far too many places, we are still tied to this nostalgic notion that things just simply don’t have to change much, that the problem is somewhere else, someone else’s. And that’s what keeps us from demanding more from our elected officials. And you know, I think it comes down to homework! We are so familiar and so intimately involved with our children’s schooling till the day they leave for other pursuits, that it’s hard to see the forest. We cant fathom second-guessing the teacher who everyone adores, the curriculum that doesn’t yield real learning or even our fellow parents — our friends! — who spend money on tutors and lots of resources to fix their kids when maybe the problems are external and school related! And federal funds have long subsidized deficiencies, but not by focusing on getting results. Rather, until NCLB and all the other alphabet-named changes were made, it was only about providing remedial education, not necessarily getting results. If we all did our homework, we’d understand how to argue for and rebut the tired old worn solutions of the past, that sadly, linger, despite our best efforts.

You know who else could do more homework? Our policy leaders. With a country still behind most other peer nations and urban areas plagued by corruption and failure, one would hope that our bravest, most courageous officials would not tout compromises as a solution. Yet even the best among them act as if the problems we faced can be solved by a compromise over one weak charter law, or a minor tweak to a tenure bill. Don’t get me wrong; I adore Gov. Chris Christie. Yet the bill he heralds as historic for changing the state’s tenure law is being advertised by the New Jersey Education Association, the union, as “their” tenure bill. What does that tell you? The new law really does give the unions a lot of say, as evaluations for tenure will be determined by districts with very vague requirements imposed by the state. If the Governor tells everyone it was a major victory, no legislator in their right mind is going to suggest otherwise and attract more battle scars!

New Jersey — my old home state — has been a hotbed of reform activity for years, and dozens of people have thrown their money behind efforts there to create more school choice. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg gave Newark $100 million on a match to transform the schools. Mayor Corey Booker has netted accolades for talking tough on school reform. But how, prey tell, does one get reform without changing laws? There was no real change to the Newark labor laws that would allow the superintendent to fire teachers. She can’t close failing schools without a lawsuit. She could open more charters but the state’s law is mired in bureaucracy. And school choice scholarships failed to muster enough votes again for the 9th year running, so few kids can afford other options. Even if they did have the money, their options are closed monthly. As a society, we get crazy about recycling and climate change but we can’t keep Catholic schools open to save children! As my kids would say, “unfreakin’ believable!”

The Honorable Chris Christie is one of those guys who I just know could do anything he wanted to do. He is part Sicilian, and he’s smart and fearless. Yet, he didn’t demand that laws change before letting Facebook’s largesse go to a Newark fund. I wish he had. There is still time.

I want to scream “DO YOUR HOMEWORK!!” so real reform happens next time. It’s hard to accept incremental change when something bigger was possible. I can’t accept calling incremental change historic, not from really good, really smart people. The Garden State is full of people who want change. They are not engaged and they could be because they are consistently told that everything is well in hand, that this coalition or that association is in charge.
Whenever my kids tell me something is well in hand, and yet I haven’t seen results in a while, I question it. We should, too. We should expect more of our friends and allies and more of our elected leaders, no matter who they are.

Before you find yourself falling into the trap that assumes work highly praised must be the real deal, look again. Ask questions. Be cynical. And DO YOUR HOMEWORK!!!

It’s the least we can do for all of our kids, all of the families who never have had the pleasure of repeating that mantra night after night for 20 years, knowing that their kids and their teachers cared enough to demand it — and to expect it.

Now it’s time to call the kids at College. Might as well. What else have I to do?

Be well, and thank you.

Jeanne Allen