Oh, really? "Education leaders," did you say? Well, there must be plenty of teachers and principals on the panel, right?
The committee charged with making education-policy recommendations to Gov. Andrew Cuomo will hold its first public meeting on June 26.The long list of committee members reads like a who’s who of education leaders in the state, from Randi Weingarten, head of the American Federation of Teachers union, to Geoffrey Canada, CEO of the Harlem Children’s Zone.
Wrong; here's the roster:
Richard Parsons, retired chairman, Citigroup (chairman)I guess Randi Weingarten is solely in charge of representing the hundreds of thousands of teachers in New York State, but we need two people on the panel to represent the interests of Citibank. Plus Druckenmiller to represent hedge fund managers; we all know how committed they are to educating kids.
Lisa Belzberg, founder and chair emeritus, PENCIL
Geoffrey Canada, CEO, Harlem Children’s Zone
Jessica Cohen, outgoing superintendent of the Onondaga-Cortland-Madison BOCES*
Jean Desravines,CEO, New Leaders
Elizabeth Dickey, president, Bank Street College of Education
Stanley Druckenmiller, former chairman and president, Duquesne Capital*
Sen. John Flanagan, chair, Senate Education Committee
Patricia Gallagher, member, Lake Placid School Board and Lake Placid Community Alliance for Responsible Excellence in Education (C.A.R.E.E)*
Matthew Goldstein, chancellor, CUNY
Michael Horn, executive director, InnoSight Institute
Thomas Kane, professor of education and economics, Harvard Graduate School of Education
John B. King, Jr., commissioner, New York State Education Department
Eduardo Martí, vice chancellor of Community Colleges, CUNY
Sara Mead, associate partner, Bellwether Education Partners
Karen Hawley Miles, president and executive director, Education Resource Strategies
Assemblywoman Cathy Nolan, chair, Assembly Education Committee
Michael Rebell, executive director, Campaign for Educational Equity
Carrie Remis, executive director, Rochester Parent Power Project*
José Luis Rodríguez, CEO, Hispanic Information and Telecommunications Network, Inc.
Mary Anne Schmitt-Carey, president, Say Yes to Education
Sanford I. Weill, former CEO & chairman, Citigroup*
Randi Weingarten, president, American Federation of Teachers
Irma Zardoya, president and CEO, NYC Leadership Academy
Nancy Zimpher, chancellor, SUNY
But these are all Very Important People, unlike teachers and principals, who are... well... not as important. They're only, you know, teaching the kids...
Andrew Cuomo couldn't insult teachers more with this crap than if he spit right in our eyes. No teacher or principal should listen to anything this panel has to say about education. He could have been like Jerry Brown and showed that he actually respects us by listening to what we might have to say; instead, he has modeled himself on Chris Christie.
We shouldn't have to beg for a seat at the table - it's OUR table!
You guys ignore teachers? Hey, so do I!
3 comments:
Oh Jazzman, you, you, you, hater! Bipartisanship is critical for moving forward! Don't you get it? It's for the kids...
Lewis Black will explain it to you:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IzVGdibTQHU
You know me, girl: I got into teaching for the hate!
LOVE Lewis Black!
Say hi to Mr. jcg for me.
Writing about education reform, it may be helpful to understand a fundamental principle vastly underutilized in US schools--insuring that nearly all students get only superficial learning. It's the strict correlation between practice and skill development of any kind--whether a physical skill or a zone of knowledge. The link following goes to a brief article explaining the idea
http://www.educationnews.org/k-12-schools/john-jensen-just-one-teaching-tweak-can-mean-better-learning/
John Jensen Ph.D.
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