I will protect your pensions. Nothing about your pension is going to change when I am governor. - Chris Christie, "An Open Letter to the Teachers of NJ" October, 2009
Showing posts with label Tony Bennett. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tony Bennett. Show all posts

Saturday, August 3, 2013

Bennett Whines About "Tone"

No one has been a bigger critic of Chris Christie than yours truly. But if you go back through this blog, you'll find I've never once made a crack about his weight. Part of that is simple decency; part is my being close to Christie's age and knowing first hand how hard it can be to get enough exercise.

But the primary reason I don't bring up Christie's waistline is that it's not relevant. He hasn't attacked others for their appearance (as far as I know), and he hasn't pushed policies that punish or reward people based on their size. Why, then, would I bring up a personal matter about the governor when it's not germane? It would be gratuitous and unwarranted, so I don't do it.

On the other hand, I have made what can be described fairly as a personal attack on Christie regarding the choices he and his wife have made for their own children's education. Bringing Christie's kids into it is, admittedly, as personal as it gets. So why is that different? Simple: because it's relevant.

This is a guy who has been cutting school funding for New Jersey's children - particularly our poor children - while complaining about education spending every chance he gets. Yet he sends his own kids to a beautiful, exclusive private school that spends gobs more money than the public schools; a school that doesn't have to educate children who are at-risk or have special needs or who don't speak English at home, the most expensive children to educate.

That is hypocrisy of the highest order. Is pointing that out personal? You bet it is: it speaks directly to the man's character. But is it unwarranted? No, not at all: it's directly relevant to his actions, policies, and words. You can argue over the tone with which I point this out, but understand that is no more than a matter of taste. What shouldn't be in dispute is that the thrust of this "personal" attack is both fair and relevant. Whining about "tone" becomes a way to avoid a criticism that is, without question, germane to the debate.

I bring all this up because we've had a couple of remarkable examples of whining about "tone" this week in reformy circles. The most well-known, of course, is the spectacular spasm of self-righteous indignation that came from Florida's recently-departed education chief, Tony Bennett. I imagine most readers here now know the story of Bennett's grade changing scandal; how he changed the evaluation of a charter school in contradiction to his own staff's assessment.

Bennett, in the tradition of all American politicians caught in a scandal, went before the cameras to deliver a non-apology apology that went heavy on the mea and light on the culpa:
Tony Bennett announced his immediate resignation at a news conference, saying that he while he did nothing wrong he didn't want to be a distraction to ongoing efforts to overhaul Florida's education system. Emails published by The Associated Press this week show that Bennett and his Indiana staff scrambled last fall to ensure Christel DeHaan's school received an A, despite poor 10th-grade algebra scores that initially earned it a C. 
Bennett called that interpretation "malicious and unfounded" and said he would call for Indiana's inspector general to look into the allegations because he is certain he will be cleared of wrongdoing. 
He said it would be unfair to Gov. Rick Scott "to have to spend my time and the State Board (of Education's) time, as things continue to trickle out, defending myself." He called the allegations "politically motivated." He said the decision to step down was his and that both Scott and former Gov. Jeb Bush had urged him to remain on the job. [emphasis mine]
The problem with Bennett's screed is that the facts are not in dispute. He gamed the system to change the grade for a school that did not perform well on the state's Algebra test; even his staff said so. That school was founded by Christel DeHaan, a well-known contributor to Republican politicians, including Bennett himself. He claims he didn't act unethically, that he would never do such a thing - but his actions and his words are there for all to see.

Are the allegations against Bennett "politically motivated"? Maybe, but so what? He did what he did, and he got caught. It's not "malicious" to make a connection between DeHaan's support and his scrambling to change the grade, any more than it's "unfounded" to point out that Bennett's wife, Tina, now works at the for-profit corporation he chose to run some of Indianapolis's schools.

A personal attack? Yeah, OK; I wouldn't use the word "attack," but it's certainly personal. But it's also relevant; it's warranted; it matters. Bennett may now be coming to the good Lord about making the education debate about policy instead of personality (watch towards the end of the video, if you can take it), but that doesn't make the questions about his personal integrity - and how that reflects on his policies - any less germane.

The default position of the "reform" movement is that teachers and their unions are not to be trusted; all reformy policies flow from this axiom. Well, live by questioning motivations, die by questioning motivations. If you spend your day impugning the motives of teachers and their unions, don't be surprised when karma comes back around and bites you in the butt.

From one guy who impugns the motives of teachers and their unions...

...to another.

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Ultimate Chiefs For Change Fail: B'bye, Bennett!

Hey Tony, on your way out, don't let the door hit you on the...
Less than eight months after starting his job, Florida's education commissioner Tony Bennett resigned on Thursday, amid a growing scandal over policy changes he made while serving as schools superintendent in Indiana.
"I asked Governor Scott to accept my resignation, and he did," Bennett said during a press conference.
Bennett's plans to resign were first reported by the Tampa Bay Times. He has faced increasing pressure to step down since the Associated Press published emails on Monday showing that he quietly changed Indiana's school grading formula. The emails show that the formula change happened when Christel House Academy, a charter school backed by influential Republican donors, received a low grade under the original formula.
Since the AP story was published, Bennett has defended himself by saying that the grading formula unfairly dinged Christel House and some other schools for not having traditional grade structures. Christel House didn't offer classes to high school juniors and seniors, he said, so "the data for grades 11 and 12 came in as zero," Bennett said.
But an analysis by New America Foundation's education expert Anne Hyslop claims that Bennett's defense "doesn't add up." "In truth, Christel House was never evaluated on its poor high school performance," Hyslop wrote. "Instead, all of the high school data were thrown out – a little detail Bennett failed to mention." [emphasis mine]
Golly, isn't this a bit premature? I mean, Mike Petrilli said we shouldn't rush to judgement: after all, Bennett is Mike's friend! Isn't that enough proof for anyone that Bennett is a straight-shooter? Plus, Rick Hess vouched for him! What more do you people need?!
Bennett said he stood by everything contained in the emails. When devising Indiana's grading system, he said, he expected "top performing charter schools" to be rewarded for their performance, but "that didn't happen."
"We found a statistical anomaly that did not allow 13 schools -- there's been a focus on one school -- but did not allow 13 schools to have their grades truly reflect their performance, and they were unfairly penalized. That wasn't rigging anything," Bennett said. "We did the right thing for Indiana schools and Indiana children."
BULL. Bennett's own staff told him Christel House's "C" came because of bad performance on the state Algebra test. Worse, the system was already rigged to give "combined" grade-level schools - which are mostly charters - an unfair advantage. No surprise: as Matt DiCarlo reported last year, the Indiana A-F school grading system, Bennett's crowning achievement, gives a big advantage to affluent schools over schools that serve poor kids.

This scandal is certainly an indictment of Bennett's personal integrity; he really had no choice but to resign. But make no mistake: Bennett's transgressions are the inevitable outcome of the ideologically-based "reforms" that he and his fellow "Chiefs For Change" are foisting on school systems across America.

Leave aside Bennett's lack of personal ethics; look at the damage he has already done in Florida:
Florida has been among the fastest states to adopt changes favored by education reformers, from school report cards to radical changes to teacher evaluations and tenure. Some reformers worry that Bennett's resignation could set the state back as it tries to implement Common Core State Standards and grapples with a new wave of standardized testing tied to the core.
The loss will also be a setback for Gov. Rick Scott (R), who appointed Bennett after he lost reelection in Indiana and has supported his reforms. After the allegations surfaced, Scott praised Bennett, telling reporters he was "doing a great job."
His most recent move was to change Florida's school grading formula, but he did so publicly. "The Board adopted a recommendation requested by many of Florida's district superintendents that implements a rule that stipulates no individual school’s grade will drop more than one letter grade in any one year until the state’s transition to the Common Core standards is complete," a July 16 Florida Department of Education memo read.
You can't have a fair, transparent, and informative system of evaluation for schools if it can be changed on the whims of one man (yes, one: the board is clearly a rubber-stamping operation). In a way, what Bennett did in Florida is worse than what he did in Indiana: he gamed the entire system, not just the results for a few schools, to keep parents and teachers from rising up in open revolt against Scott. His decision was purely political; it had nothing to do with improving education.

This may be the most dangerous legacy of Jeb! Bush's "Chiefs For Change": they have moved to consolidate power over districts and schools within their own state-level offices, usurping local control, empowering privatizers, and politicizing school policy in the process.

The common threads for the "Chiefs": autocracy, secrecy, usurpation of local control, a culture of punishment, excuse-making for inadequate school funding, and unaccountability. Tony Bennett may be the personification of their "values," but every one of them, in his or her own way, is carrying out Bennett's program in their respective states.

I can think of no more dangerous group for the future of American public education than Jeb! Bush's "Chiefs For Change." May they all quickly go the way of Tony Bennett; our students will be far better off the moment they do.

One down, seven to go...

I'm running out of "Chiefs"!

ADDING: One more thing:

I like Joy Resmovits, the reporter who wrote this story; she's knowledgable and usually fair, which makes her stand head and shoulders above most "journalists" writing about education. But in the bottom graphs of her piece, she gets reactions to the Bennett resignation from three education "experts":

Seriously? Hess at least taught a few years and has a degree in education. Smarick has no background or degrees in education; Petrilli I think worked at a summer camp. Is there no one who actually works in a school, Joy, that you could add to your Rolodex for occasions like this?

Further: both Petrilli and Hess provided platforms for Bennett to make his excuses (see links above). Both said outright they consider Bennett a friend. And Smarick's reformy credentials are well known.

Come on, Joy: I know you can do better than this. A little balance is all I ask.

Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Tony Bennett's Own Staff Contradicts His Denials

Rick Hess (who else?) gives Tony Bennett a platform to make the case that he only changed the grade for a charter school - whose founder gave him $90,000 in campaign contributions - to correct a small statistical anomaly:
Rick Hess: So, Tony. You know that the story here is disconcerting at first look. Can you offer any more context or backstory that we should know?
Tony Bennett: The backstory is simple here, Rick. In our first run of the new school calculations in Indiana, we turned up an anomaly in the results. As we were looking at the grades we were giving our schools, we realized that state law created an unfair penalty for schools that didn't have 11th and 12th grades. Statewide, there were 13 schools in question had unusual grade configurations. The data for grades 11 and 12 came in as zero. When we caught it, we fixed it. That's what this is all about.
RH: And Christel House is one of those 13?
TB: Because Christel House was a K-10 school, the systems essentially counted the other two grades as zeroes. That brought the school's score down from an "A" to a "C". [emphasis mine]
Now, that actually appears to be true: the high school grade as calculated by IN-DOE includes a score given for graduation rates, which a school like Christel House - which doesn't yet have a senior class - couldn't earn. There's also a chance for a boost if a high school gets enough students to pass an AP or IB test (talk about a bias towards affluent schools; and does the IN-DOE pay for the administration of AP and IB tests?). So, sure, maybe Christel did suffer because it didn't yet have upperclassmen.

But Bennett's implication in making that case is that the school was doing fine otherwise. Was it? In the emails published by the AP, Bennett's staff didn't seem to think so (annotation mine):

Jon Gubera is the Chief Accountability Officer at IN-DOE, and it was his assessment that Christel House's 10th grade Algebra I results were "terrible." Indeed, the 2012 School Performance Report for Christel House Academy shows only 23.1 percent of students who took the Math End of Course Assessment (ECA) passed, compared to a 69.4 percent of students statewide.

And when you look at the historical data, it's even more damning for Christel House. The Indiana state database for the ECA reports no test results for Christel House in Algebra for 2011 (they did report scores for Biology, which, to my mind, lessens the chance that this is a reporting error). In 2010, 21 8th graders took the Algebra ECA; only 4 passed, a rate of 19%. I think it's safe to say all of last year's sophomores were dissuaded from taking the ECA as freshmen; unfortunately, the delay didn't help much.

Let me be clear: this is not an indictment of the school. Given the high poverty rates at Christel House, this pass rate may be the result of good instruction, given challenging students. It's worth pointing out that 77.5 percent of Christel House's ECA test takers in English passed, compared to 77.0 percent across the state: that's obviously something to be proud of. I commend the students and staff of Christel House for their hard work.

Too bad they were being judged by a state commissioner who wasn't worthy of their diligence:
RH: Christel is obviously a longtime supporter of Republican candidates, including yourself. How do you respond to concerns that you reacted as you did to the Christel House results for political reasons? 
TB: It's unfair to characterize Christel as only a donor to Republicans. If you look into it, you'll find that she's donated to both parties. She's a champion for underprivileged children. Her work around the world and in Indianapolis is an inspiration to me. It's absurd that anyone would believe that I would do any of this for a donation. In fact, if you talk to some of my friends, they'll tell you that I maybe pay a lot less attention to this politics stuff than I sometimes should.
What's absurd is to believe that any of Bennett's denials should be given credence. He made the rules, but when he didn't like how things turned out for his political patron, he changed them.

Can you tell this one is really making my blood boil? Bennett was playing around with the lives of educators and children, creating a biased system that did nothing to inform instruction or improve schools. He was more worried about getting the A-F grading system to match his ideological predilections (and the needs of his campaign contributors) than he was in creating a fair, transparent metric that could help schools improve. Now he pretends that he is shocked - shocked, I say! - that anyone would dare question his integrity when it's quite clear that he gamed the system.

Tony Bennett needs to resign and go into another field; the good people of Florida deserve better.

Yet another "Chiefs For Change" fail.

Tony Bennett and the Folly Of A-F School Grades

It feels like the day after anti-reformy Christmas: we're all basking in the glow of the implosion of Tony Bennett's career. The former Indiana state education superintendent, current Florida education commissioner, and star of Jeb! Bush's Chiefs For Change is desperately scrambling to explain himself after getting caught red-handed changing the "school grade" of a charter run by a big-time Republican donor.

Bennett's excuses would even make Anthony Weiner wince:
Bennett says his department ran into problems when initial calculations indicated the school would receive a C under the statewide accountability system, which didn’t sit well with the then-superintendent. 
“So when we looked at our data and saw that three of those schools were A’s and Christel House was not, that told me that there was a nuance in our data,” says Bennett. “Frankly, my emails portrayed correctly my frustrations with the fact that there was a nuance in the system that did not lend itself to face validity.” [emphasis mine]
Read the emails and judge for yourself; personally, I read Bennett's frustration arising from the fact that he made himself look like a fool after running around Indiana praising Christel House Academy, the charter in question.

You can certainly understand the fury of local school officials around Indiana after learning of Bennett's perfidy. "Why," they must wonder, "was Christel House given the benefit of the doubt?" It's a fair question: what made this charter so special (other than the $90,000 Christel Deehan donated to Bennett's failed re-elction bid)? The backbone of the case for the charter is that it was "beating the odds": it had just as many poor students as the public schools of Indianapolis, but was getting far better results.

Give Christel House credit: they've never shied away from taking poor kids (click to enlarge):


I made this chart based on data from the Indiana Department of Education. Certainly, Christel House has enrolled many children in poverty as judged by eligibility for Free or Reduced-Price Lunch. But notice how many public schools in the IPS system serve the same type of students: the vast majority are within ten percentage points of Christel House when looking at FRPL rates.

On the other hand:



Christel House is a laggard when it comes to serving special needs students. That may be because the school has a "voluntary" essay question in its application form that asks parents to: "Please describe the academic and social goals you have for your child's growth and development for the coming school year." Not exactly welcoming to the reluctant special education parent.

Keep all this in mind as we look at Christel House's test performance.



Each data point here is either an IPS school that reported scores for 4th Grade, or Christel House, which is marked in red. The x-axis is the grade the school received from the IN-DOE in "school points"; depending on the cutoff points, the number of school points determines the letter grade for a school. The y-axis shows the percentage of all students at the school who passed both the language arts and math exams in 2012.

You'll notice the r-squared number in the bottom left; this is geek-speak, saying that about 73% of the "school points" grade can be explained by the schools' passing rates. We'll talk about this more in a bit, but for now: this is a fairly strong correlation. As Matt DiCarlo explains in a post about Indiana's school grading system, the school grade is based on "growth" - how much students improve - as well as "absolute" performance. So we don't expect the school points to match the passing rates exactly, but they do track relatively closely.

I've also mapped out a few other schools for comparison, but here's the thing: it's difficult to measure these schools against each other because they don't serve the same grades as Christel House. Bennett even bases his excuse on this discrepancy:
At issue were the school’s low scores on statewide algebra tests. Bennett says the problem stemmed from how combined schools— that is, those that include multiple grade levels — are counted under the state’s accountability system. He says the tweaks his department made benefited a number of schools, not just Christel House, which is run by a prominent Republican donor.
Well, if that's true, then by all rights Indianapolis's elementary schools should not be judged against the performance of Christel House's middle school students. It only makes sense: why should an elementary school be made to look bad in comparison to Christel House if they aren't even teaching the same grades?

Let's pull out a few individual grade levels, then, and see how the IPS public schools compare to the charter founded by Bennett's patron. Here's sixth grade (in Indianapolis, most elementary schools go through sixth grade):


Well, things have shifted a little, but it still looks like Christel House tops the lower-graded schools. How about fifth grade?


OK, wait a minute; what's going on here? Theodore Potter School, which earned a 'D' for its school grade, has more kids passing the Grade 5 state test than Christel House! And the others aren't too far behind. What about Grade 4?


Here's a surprise: a "C" school and an "F" school did better than Christel House on the fourth grade state tests, but Christel House won the "A"! 77% of Cold Spring's 4th Graders passed the tests; 80% of the fourth grade at Raymond F. Brandes School also passed. Yet neither got Christel House's "A," even though only 68% of their fourth grade passed. Let's look at Grade 3:


Well, good for Christel House this time. But you have to wonder about the wide swings in the other schools. Was 2012's fourth grade cohort at Brandes really that much superior to 2012's third grade? And what does it say that the 60 point gap in third grade between Brandes and Christel House is reduced to 27 points in sixth grade? Isn't that a good thing (even if we are talking about different cohorts of students)?

In any case: when comparing these schools to Christel House, remember that most of them do not teach seventh or eight grade. That gives Christel an advantage:


Relative to other middle schools Christel is good; not a miracle worker, but very solid. It appears, however, that their high middle school scores were used to give them a boost to "A"-status, even as they fell behind lower-graded elementary schools in some of the lower gradesIt seems obvious: the Indiana DOE, under Tony Bennett, gave an advantage to this combined school that made their elementary test results look superior to the schools with only younger students.

"Hold on!" I hear some of you cry. "Isn't that what we actually want? Don't we want more students passing in the higher grades? Isn't that proof that Christel House's students are 'catching up' from their slow starts?"

Would that it were true:


Here are the passing rates for each cohort of students who "graduate" in eight grade from Christel House; I've only included those for which the IN-DOE had three or more years of test scores. These are the combined pass rates for math and language arts, just like above. There is no pattern of "catching up": the passing rates bounce up and down for each class. We can't be sure what going on here: is this is a phenomenon arising from the shifting difficultly of the tests from year-to-year? The shifting criteria for a passing grade? Cohort effects? (All these, by the way, add up to yet another reason to avoid mandating high-stakes decisions based on tests.)

In any case, there's not much evidence here that Christel House's students "catch up" more than students in the IPS district's schools (if someone wants to look at Christel's rate changes for each cohort against other schools, be my guest). What we see instead is that Christel House was able to take advantage of a change in the rules of the game - a change that got them an "A," even though other schools that got poor grades had better passing rates in various grade levels.

But let's put aside Bennett's contortions for a moment and think a little more about the relationship between each school's performance and its grade. Here, once again, is the relationship between school points, which determine the grade, and a school's passing rate for all students:


Again, nearly three-quarters of the school grade is "explained" by the passing rate - an absolute measure of school performance. In other words: in Indianapolis, if your school gets low scores it doesn't much matter how much you "grow," because so much of your school grade tracks with your absolute performance.

We've been looking a small sample of Indiana's total number of schools - just Christel and the IPS schools - and the FRPL rates are fairly close. But if we were broaden this out to include the entire state, we'd see that poverty rates correlate strongly to passing rates. And that, explains DiCarlo, puts the schools serving poor kids at a distinct disadvantage:
You can see this in the scatterplot below, which presents passing rates (in reading only) by school poverty, with the red horizontal line representing the 70 percent cutoff. Almost none of the schools below the line have free/reduced-price lunch rates lower than 50 percent. 
 
On the flip side of this coin, the schools with rates above 70 percent (above the red line), some of which are higher-poverty schools, have no risk of a failing final grade, even if they receive the lowest possible growth scores. A grade of D is the floor for them. 
So, it’s true that even the schools with the lowest pass rates have a shot at a C, so long as they get the maximum net growth adjustment, and also that the schools with the highest passing rates might very well get a lackluster final grade (a C, if they tank on the growth component).
However, the most significant grades in any accountability system are at the extremes (in this case, A and F), as these are the ratings to which policy consequences (or rewards) are usually attached. 
And, under Indiana’s system, a huge chunk of schools, most of which serve advantaged student populations, literally face no risk of getting an F, while almost one in five schools, virtually every one of which with a relatively high poverty rate, has no shot at an A grade, no matter how effective they might be. And, to reiterate, this is a feature of the system, not a bug – any rating scheme that relies heavily on absolute performance will generate ratings that are strongly associated with student characteristics like poverty. It’s just a matter of degree. [emphasis mine]
Not only that: as Bruce Baker has pointed out, there appears to be a relationship between test score "growth" and "performance"at the school level: the higher you start out, the more you "grow." I really don't know how New Jersey's growth model compares to Indiana's, but at first glance the basic construction seems similar: a "student growth percentile" with no covariates for student characteristics.

So let's see where the public schools of Indianapolis, serving many children in poverty, stand when it comes to their school grades:
  • They have to compete against schools that don't teach the same grade levels, which creates a bias against them.
  • Because of poverty, they start out with lower "absolute" scores, which decreases their chance of showing "growth" in the IN-DOE's model.
  • Even if they do show growth, the A-F system is designed to keep them from earning the highest grades, while affluent, high-performing schools can't get the lowest grades.
  • The system has so little transparency and accountability that the commissioner can change the rules in the middle of the game.
As I said before: Tony Bennett needs to resign. But even more importantly, this entire A-F system needs to be overhauled, if not thrown away. Just the fact that a group of schools' relative passing rates can vary so much from grade to grade is enough for us to give pause when rating the performance of an entire school. Add to that the bias against schools with high poverty concentrations, the gaming of the system to favor combined-level schools (most of which are probably charters), and the near-impossible hurdles in "growth" that poor schools face...

You wouldn't even need a guy like Tony Bennett at the helm for this thing to run aground (although it helps...).

Changing grades, that is...

ADDING: Reading the emails, it's interesting that the IN-DOE staff views Grades 3 through 8 as a unit, and high school as another unit. There's no evidence that the staff understands it's possible that judging a K-6 school and a K-8 school may yield a false comparison.

Monday, July 29, 2013

Tony Bennett: Grade Fixer

One of Jeb! Bush's most prominent "Chiefs For Change," Tony Bennett got drummed out of Indiana last year when he lost reelection for state superintendent of education. No matter: Jeb! pulled a few strings and got him his current gig doing the same job in Florida, where he has presided over one disaster after another.

As Bob Sikes points out, Bennett's role as the "fiscal agent" for the Common Core test consortium known as PARCC actually followed him from Indiana to Florida, compromising his role as an objective evaluator of the testing regime. So between his own conflicts of interest, the conservative backlash against the Common Core in Florida, and the growing distrust over Florida's "statistically invalid" school grading system, the last thing Bennett needs is another scandal.

Well, as they used to say over at Warner Brothers: cue the anvil.
Former Indiana and current Florida schools chief Tony Bennett built his national star by promising to hold "failing" schools accountable. But when it appeared an Indianapolis charter school run by a prominent Republican donor might receive a poor grade, Bennett's education team frantically overhauled his signature "A-F" school grading system to improve the school's marks. 
Emails obtained by The Associated Press show Bennett and his staff scrambled last fall to ensure influential donor Christel DeHaan's school received an "A," despite poor test scores in algebra that initially earned it a "C." 
"They need to understand that anything less than an A for Christel House compromises all of our accountability work," Bennett wrote in a Sept. 12 email to then-chief of staff Heather Neal, who is now Gov. Mike Pence's chief lobbyist. 
The emails, which also show Bennett discussed with staff the legality of changing just DeHaan's grade, raise unsettling questions about the validity of a grading system that has broad implications. Indiana uses the A-F grades to determine which schools get taken over by the state and whether students seeking state-funded vouchers to attend private school need to first spend a year in public school. They also help determine how much state funding schools receive. [emphasis mine]
Of course, Bennett went straight into denial mode, just like his twerp of a mentor, hypocritical former Indiana governor and current book banner and dishonest scholar Mitch Daniels. I guess it's all he can do, because the evidence is quite damning:
Bennett consistently cited Christel House as a top-performing school as he secured support for the measure from business groups and lawmakers, including House Speaker Brian Bosma and Senate President Pro Tem David Long. 
But trouble loomed when Indiana's then-grading director, Jon Gubera, first alerted Bennett on Sept. 12 that the Christel House Academy had scored less than an A. 
"This will be a HUGE problem for us," Bennett wrote in a Sept. 12, 2012 email to Neal. 
Neal fired back a few minutes later, "Oh, crap. We cannot release until this is resolved."
Heh - "resolved." Sounds like a mob movie: "Vinnie, we need to resolve this current situation, capiche?"
By Sept. 13, Gubera unveiled it was a 2.9, or a "C." 
A weeklong behind-the-scenes scramble ensued among Bennett, assistant superintendent Dale Chu, Gubera, Neal and other top staff at the Indiana Department of Education. They examined ways to lift Christel House from a "C'' to an "A," including adjusting the presentation of color charts to make a high "B'' look like an "A'' and changing the grade just for Christel House. 
 Dear lord - they changed the colors. Seriously.
Bennett said Monday he felt no special pressure to deliver an "A'' for DeHaan. Instead, he argued, if he had paid more attention to politics he would have won re-election in Indiana. 
Yet Bennett wrote to staff twice in four days, directly inquiring about DeHaan's status. Gubera broke the news after the second note that "terrible" 10th grade algebra results had "dragged down their entire school." 
Bennett called the situation "very frustrating and disappointing" in an email that day. 
"I am more than a little miffed about this," Bennett wrote. "I hope we come to the meeting today with solutions and not excuses and/or explanations for me to wiggle myself out of the repeated lies I have told over the past six months."
 Tony, buddy, there's really only two choices here:

  1. Save yourself a lot of headaches and hassle and just resign, never to work in education again.
  2. ...
Yeah, OK, there's only one choice. I know it's a tough economy out there, kiddo, but I'm sure you'll land on your feet...

Florida Commissioner of Education Tony Bennett

Where do I find these guys?!