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

Monday, November 5, 2012

You Don't Mess With the Rocketship

Yesterday, I detailed how an "obscene" amount of money is coming into the Perth Amboy, NJ school board race. Three of the wealthy Californians who have pumped of thousands of dollars into the campaign - Greg Penner, Arthur Rock, and David Goldberg - are also partners in Rocketship Education, a charter school management company.

It turns out that Rocketship is very aggressively involved in California school board politics:
The six-figure spending by independent committees highlights the muscle of charter proponents in Santa Clara County, where the county Board of Education is rapidly approving charter schools that compete for students and funding with established public schools.
The most aggressive campaign appears to be aimed at Anna Song, who is running for her fourth term on the county Board of Education.
The Santa Clara County Schools Political Action Committee has raised nearly $200,000 from Jan. 1 through Oct. 20, and financed auto-dial calls plus four mailers slamming Song and three supporting her challenger, trustee David Neighbors.
"It's an outrageous amount of money to take out one school board member," said Song, who's running for a seat that represents areas served by the Santa Clara, Milpitas and the Berryessa school districts.
Neighbors, who has benefited from $76,000 worth of PAC mailers and auto-calls for his candidacy and against Song, said about the PAC, "I don't know much about it."
[...]
Among the big donations to the PACs are $75,000 from the California Charter Schools Association Advocates; $50,000 from Netflix CEO Reed Hastings; $50,000 from Gap heir John J. Fisher; $40,000 from Emerson Collective, the nonprofit run by Steve Jobs' widow Laurene Powell Jobs; and $10,000 from Rocketship charter schools board member Timothy Ranzetta. [emphasis mine]
Interesting how the candidate benefitting from all this money doesn't "know much about it." And it's not just Santa Clara:
Another political action committee, Parents for Great Schools, has raised $41,000 and spent at least $17,000 promoting Magdalena Carrasco for a seat on the East Side Union High School district board. As of Tuesday afternoon, Carrasco had not reported all the PAC contributions on disclosure forms, although she did list $15,250 in other contributions, many from Southern California interests.
Carrasco did not return calls seeking comment. [emphasis mine]
Sounds familiar to those following the election in Perth Amboy: 

Reyes Ortega, who is running on the Better Schools Now ticket with Junior Iglesias, Damaris Gonzalez and William Ortiz, acknowledged the slate's campaign fund is probably much more than other school board races.
However, Ortega said [sic] declined to comment on the finances and instead stressed the issues facing city schools. [emphasis mine] 
Looks like folks from New Jersey to California are happy to line up and take Rocketship's money - they just don't want to talk about it. Maybe it's because Rocketship goes all out against you if they see you as an impediment to their expansion:
"It's unprecedented that so much money is coming into this race against people who are more measured with their approach to charter schools," said Cortright, who is self-funding his campaign and plans to spend about $1,000.
Had donors given money directly to support high-performing schools, they would have had a more beneficial impact, Song said.
While Song voted against Rocketship Education's application to open 20 charter schools in the county, Mah voted against Bullis Charter School's renewal. Rosenthal said that the endorsements are "based on the totality of board votes" and the candidates' temperament. [emphasis mine]
Rocketship has big plans for California; isn't it obvious they have those same plans for New Jersey? Why else would they get their partners to put so much money into a local school board race 3000 miles away?
We're going to land this baby right in the Raritan Bay!

Sunday, November 4, 2012

The Sickest Attack On Teachers And Unions Ever

What in the hell is wrong with these people?!
In a stunning smear, a GOP group chaired by a prominent Republican strategist and funded by the state Republican leadership, has sent a mailing to Florida voters accusing an elementary school teacher running for state legislature of enabling child molestation because she is in a teacher’s union. 
The mailings attack Karen Castor Dentel, an elementary school teacher in Maitland, Florida, and the Democratic challenger for the 30th District State House of Representatives seat. Because she is a member of the Florida Education Association, which opposed a 2011 bill that eliminated tenure for public-school teachers, the mailer says she would “rather protect bad teachers and the union” than “young and impressionable students.” One one side of the mailing is a picture of convicted serial child molester Jerry Sandusky — who as an assistant football coach at Penn State would not have been protected by any Florida public school teacher’s union; the other side shows a picture of her and the other says:
Karen Castor Dentel’s priorities are clear:
* Use tenure policies to protect bad, burnt-out, longtime teachers at the expense of younger, better teachers.
* Use the courts to keep all teachers in the classroom – even those who prey on young people.
* The right to use our tax dollars and valuable student learning time to promote her political campaign.
Karen Castor Dentel: Good for the union, bad for kids.
Can it get any lower than this? Is it at all possible?

Of course, these cowards can't even stand behind their own sick, twisted words:
The Orlando Sentinel reports that even the Republican incumbent, State Rep. Scott Plakon, denounced the ad as sounding “indefensible,” and called it “exhibit A” of why campaign finance reform is needed to stop anonymous groups from making such attacks. The Supreme Court’s 5-4Citizens United ruling allows outside attacks like this with very little disclosure or restriction.
But the mailings were largely funded by his own party’s leadership: incoming Florida House Speaker Will Weatherford (R) and Rep. Richard Corcoran (R), who is in line to become Florida’s Speaker in 2016. Financial disclosures for the group also indicate that the Florida Chamber of Commerce Alliance Inc., the Florida Medical Association, and AFSCME have made significant contributions to the group. [emphasis mine]
AFSCME?! A pubic employee union is funding these despicable attacks against a teacher - for belonging to a union?!?

I'd write more about this, but I think I'm going to vomit...

How To Buy a School Board Race 3000 Miles Away

Why would California multi-millionaires be interested in a school board race in the small city of Perth Amboy, NJ?

It seems absurd, and yet it's true: four wealthy Californians and one wealthy Coloradan - heavy hitters in the tech, financial, and health care sectors - have contributed tens of thousands of dollars to a slate of candidates running for the school board in Perth Amboy, a city of 50,000 with a majority Hispanic population.

According to New Jersey election records, the slate of candidates calling themselves "Better Schools Now!" has collected $64,700, mostly from sources outside of Perth Amboy. In contrast, an opposing slate, "New Vision, New Voice" has collected $7,005, with all of its donations over $300 coming from within the city.

Why would such a large amount of money come into Perth Amboy from out of state to influence the outcome of a local school board election? Regular readers of this blog will know the backstory, but let me recap quickly:

In 2011, the Perth Amboy school board hired Janine Caffrey as its new superintendent. Caffrey quickly began to appear in the press as an opponent of teacher tenure; she used anecdotes from the Perth Amboy district as evidence that tenure was "...the single greatest impediment to education improvement in New Jersey, without a doubt." This didn't sit well with the school board; neither did her refusal to, allegedly, follow their hiring recommendations for school bus drivers. Caffrey and the board began a war that played out in the media; I've never seen anything quite like it.

In the spring of 2012, the school board put Caffrey on administrative leave. Almost immediately after her dismissal, the lobbying group B4K (an affiliate of Michelle Rhee's national school reform lobbying group StudentsFirst) waged a public relations campaign on her behalf.

In an unprecedented move, NJ Education Commissioner Chris Cerf overrode the board's decision and sent the case to an arbitrator. The board voted a second time to remove Caffrey; Cerf's DOE again overrode their vote.

It's clear that Cerf has delayed the decision in the hopes that the upcoming election would resolve this situation for him. If a new board is elected, and decides to retain Caffrey, Cerf wouldn't have to interfere directly to save her job. Cerf's involvement is further complicated by a large contract before the board that involves a former associate.

Add to this a particularly nasty mayoral race in a town with a history of corruption and you have all of the makings of a hotly contested school board race. Even so: why would so many outsiders donate money to support candidates in a district that barely serves 10,000 students?

A look at the contributors provides us with clues:

- Greg Penner, Atherton CA; $8,000 donation. Penner is the Founder of Madrone Capital Partners and a well-known conservative activist. Married to Walton fortune heiress Carrie Walton Penner, Greg Penner sits on the boards of Teach For America and The Charter School Growth Fund. CSGF invests in charter management organizations around the country, including the KIPP network and Nobel charter schools. As I've written previously, both KIPP and Nobel have reputations for managing schools that serve substantially different student populations than their neighboring public schools.

CSGF is also an investor in Rocketship Education; see below.

Arthur Rock, San Francisco CA; $8,000 donation. Rock is a well-known venture capitalist who also serves on the board of TFA and is an active funder of KIPP. Rock has invested in the Rocketship Education, a "hybrid" school that features extensive use of computerized instruction and, consequently, has a smaller faculty than regular public schools. Larry Miller found that Rocketship had large student attrition rates and smaller percentages of special needs students than its neighboring public schools (Rocketship responds to Miller here).

- David Goldberg, Atherton, CA; $8,000 donation. Goldberg is CEO of SurveyMonkey; his wife is Sheryl Sandberg, COO of Facebook. Both are partners, along with Rock, in Rocketship Education.

- Kent Thiry, Cherry Hills, CO; $10,400 donation. Thiry is CEO of DaVita, a dialysis provider; he was previously a consultant for Bain Capital. DaVita has been the subject of several federal investigations (in fairness, the company was recently cleared in one). Thiry has been interested in Colorado's schools and education policy for some time. He donated $33,000 to a slate of "reform" candidates in Denver school board elections last year, who were also endorsed by Democrats for Education Reform and Jonah Edelman's Stand For Children.

- Lydia Callaghan, Palo Alto, CA; $8,000 donation. Callaghan is the wife of Adam Weiss, a principal at Scout Capital Management. Weiss has been introduced at investor conferences by Whitney Tilson, founder of Democrats For Education Reform, a group well-known for supporting charter school expansion.

It really couldn't be more clear: the "Better Schools Now!" slate is being supported by a group of wealthy outsiders who would love to bring a swarm of new charter schools to Perth Amboy. And they couldn't have picked a better place in all of New Jersey:
  • Perth Amboy has an embattled superintendent with an extensive private school resume who loathes teacher tenure.
  • That superintendent has a guardian angel in Chris Cerf, the state Education Commissioner who ran a charter management company himself for years.
  • The rancorous political climate undoubtedly has local residents itching to "clean house" and elect a new board.
  • The local teachers union is an affiliate of the American Federation of Teachers, not the New Jersey Education Association; NJEA has been the Christie administration's primary target, not AFT.
There's only one question left: who convinced these western plutocrats that Perth Amboy, NJ was the place to make their stand? There's just no way these donors would have found out about this race on their own; someone led them to it. We can't be certain, but there are two final donors - the only big givers who hail from New Jersey (but not Perth Amboy) - who probably provide the answer:

- Jennifer Fournier, Far Hills, NJ - $10,400 donation. 
- Alan Fournier, Far Hills, NJ - $10,400 donation.

Alan Fournier is one of the co-founders of Better Education For Kids (B4K), the NJ lobbying group that has set itself up as the nemesis of the NJEA. You'll remember that B4K paid for Superintendent Caffrey's public relations campaign against the board. It's also worth pointing out that B4K has "partnered" with StudentsFirst, which reportedly received large donations from Rupert Murdoch. Murdoch's education firm, Wireless Generation, built the software engine that runs the School Of One program. SO1's successor has been seeking a $575,000 contract with Perth Amboy's schools.

All that aside: the Fourniers are the only big money donors to Better Schools Now! from in-state. Each gave the maximum amount allowed by law to a school board candidate; their contributions alone would have been enough to give BSN! a clear fundraising advantage.

But perhaps that wasn't enough. Did B4K go out and actively solicit contributions from out-of-state for this race? It would certainly be in keeping with their profile if they did; B4K's Executive Director, Derrell Bradford, is a self-confessed political animal:
He said two interesting things to me in our meeting. “I’m here because you’re not.” Translation – if the education establishment had taken on the issues, or at least been less complacent about messaging (the REAL problem in my opinion) there’d be no market for the “reforms.”  The second thing he said was, and I’m paraphrasing here, “Reform 1.0 was school choice. Reform 2.0 was tenure (for NJ). Reform 3.0 is we have a SuperPAC – we can elect candidates. [emphasis mine]
Well, it sure looks like that's the plan in Perth Amboy. It's worth noting that Bradford's old outfit, the school voucher pushing group E3, threw in $1,000 as well.

And it's also worth noting that, according to BSN!'s Facebook page, this slate's view of teachers unions matches up with B4K's:


If you thought there was acrimony in Perth Amboy before, watch what happens if this slate is elected. And as for charter schools:



Carpe Diem is a "blended learning" charter beloved by the reformy right. Students spend most of their day at cubicles, not unlike a call-center. The school's leaders admit "it isn't for every student." Will Perth Amboy see an influx of schools like Carpe Diem and Rocketship if the Better Schools Now! slate is elected?

There is a nation-wide movement brewing: wealthy business interests are pouring large sums of money into local school board races. We hadn't yet seen this in New Jersey until now, mostly because the big city school districts with large minority populations are already under state control (or will be soon).

Perth Amboy is the first indication I've seen that the reformy types want to move into New Jersey. Thanks to the war between Caffrey and her board, a slate of candidates is poised to take over the city's schools in a campaign fueled by wealthy outsiders. Perth Amboy could be their toehold: the place where the radical transformation of New Jersey's public schools begins.

Tuesday night, we'll find out if they got away with it.

Saturday, November 3, 2012

Finding New Ways To Say "Schools Are Failing"

It's a booming cottage industry: blaming "failing" schools for just about everything:
Top educators and advocates met Friday as part of NJ Spotlight’s Roundtable Series to discuss the growing consensus that high schools in New Jersey – if not nationwide – are not adequately preparing all students for college and careers.
Even in higher performing suburban schools, business leaders see too many students without the necessary skills.
One of the panel members was Jeffrey Scheininger, board chairman for the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce and owner of a small tubing manufacturer in Linden.
“Let me tell what has happened the last couple of years as my initial work force has moved into retirement,” Sheininger said.
“I ran an ad for an entry level manufacturing position,” he said. “Of 100 applicants who were self-described as high school graduates, two were able to pass an elementary arithmetic test…They couldn’t read a ruler. It was stunning.”
Scheininger has been singing this tune for a while.  Frankly, I think the guy is full of it: you're telling me you couldn't find a someone who could read a ruler? The more likely problem, as I wrote before:
There are plenty of kids who graduate from New Jersey's schools who can answer this problem if our SAT scores are any indication. Perhaps the problem Mr. Scheininger faces is that he isn't paying enough to attract those people to work in his factory.

There is, of course, no way to know what his sample was for this little anecdote. If we care to look at real research, we'll find that test scores have been rising in New Jersey for all students, both rich and poor. But that doesn't help him make his case that the problem with New Jersey business is teachers, and not businessmen, does it?
I find this little episode instructive, however, because it illustrates the current state of our national conversation about American education. When Scheininger couldn't get someone with the requisite skills to take his "entry-level" job, he instantly blamed the school system. It never occurred to him that maybe he wasn't offering competitive wages and benefits; he just assumed that anyone qualified for his "entry-level" position would be willing to work for "entry-level" compensation. Maybe he's not getting the applicant pool he needs because he isn't offering a job that would be worth the while of qualified workers.

In other words: if he can't get the workers he needs, it couldn't be his fault; it must be the schools!

This is the default position for corporate America these days: our economic woes are pretty much all the fault of the education system. And folks like Jeff Scheininger are running around trying to convince us that his inability to find qualified applicants for his dead-end job is a good metric for determining whether the schools are actually teaching kids.

Scheininger seems to look back at his "initial work force" with nostalgia. Is anyone really going to try to convince me that young people were smarter 30 or 40 years ago than they are now? That the schools were so much better? Could it be that back then businesses didn't look to the schools to do all of their training for them? That maybe they were happy just to have loyal people of good character with a basic education? And that they, as a responsible, self-sufficient businesses, would be willing to make a long-term investment in training their workers while paying them living wages?

This is a world view that the Jeff Scheiningers of the nation do not want to acknowledge under any circumstances; doing so would mean acknowledging their own complicity in the rising inequity and stagnating wages the afflict the middle- and working-classes. So, rather than looking at rising test scores over the last 20 years and concluding that the problem may lie somewhere other than education, they come up with new ways to say that schools are failing.

What's particularly galling, however, is when the people who are actually in charge of education policy play the same game:
On Friday, state Education Commissioner Chris Cerf said the testing would provide a valuable measure of college and career readiness that isn’t measured accurately by the state’s High School Proficiency Assessment (HSPA). The HSPA testing in language arts and math is given in 11th grade, with two chances for retesting and an alternative test for those who still do not pass.
“We are graduating children in high schools by pretty high rates, about 83 percent by new federal standards, and all have passed certain requirements and the HSPA in particular,” he said.
“The problem is a very material percentage of them, notwithstanding they have completed requirements of graduation, are in fact not college- and career-ready. Something like 90 percent of students at Bergen Community or Essex Community need remediation and not ready to take college-level courses.”
Also on the panel was Raritan Valley Community College President Casey Crabill, who said the high remediation rates were only hurting the students themselves.
“They are ill-prepared, and they don’t know it,” Crabill said. “You spend about six months in remedial education trying to convince them that this really will help. For many of them, it is discouraging. They come to us because they want to study automotive tech, but they don't have the skills to read the textbook.”
Again: who decided that the number of students taking remedial classes in community colleges was a good measure of whether American K-12 education is succeeding?

We are seeing a leveling-off in community college enrollment, but that was preceded by a huge prolonged boom. This parallels the fortunes of for-profit colleges. The students who have been enrolling at these institutions would have been part of Scheininger's "initial work force" a few decades ago. Now, they know they won't be able to live a decent middle-class life working in manufacturing; they are heeding the siren call of those who tell them the only chance they have is to get a college education.

But there's no evidence that their K-12 schools failed them; in fact, there's evidence that the colleges themselves are the schools that aren't doing their jobs:
"Simply putting (students) in three levels of remedial math is really taking their money and time with no hope of success," said Stan Jones, president of Complete College America.
The group's research shows just 1 in 10 remedial students graduate from community colleges within three years and a little more than a third complete bachelor's degrees in six years. Yet the classes are widespread, with more than 50 percent of students entering two-year colleges and nearly 20 percent of those entering four-year universities put in at least one remedial course, the report said.
"At the end of the day if we could say that we are getting more students to graduate, particularly those coming into college without the requisite skills, the investment we have now is worth it," said Bruce Vandal, director of postsecondary education for the Denver-based Education Commission of the States, a nonpartisan group that researches education policy. "I think the fact that we aren't getting that result is why legislators and policymakers are up in arms and rightfully so."
Well, not Cerf: he seems to think the blame, once again, lies with the K-12 system. He'd rather put aside the evidence that test scores are rising for New Jersey (and the nation's) students and instead use a bad proxy - college remedial course enrollment - to once again make the case that our K-12 schools suck.

I've been at this for a while, but one of the things about this reformy world that still amazes me is how many of these people seem to have an investment in slamming our public school system - and, by extension, our students. It's like they are actively searching for ways to beat up on schools.

Could it be that they are looking to distract us from where the real problems in our society lie?

NJDOE Commissioner Cerf's Ethics: Safety Scissors Sharp

Cross-posted at Blue Jersey.

NJ Commissioner of Education Chris Cerf was the ACTING Commissioner for 18 months. His nomination was blocked by State Senator Ron Rice under senatorial courtesy; Rice wanted Cerf to testify before his committee about his relationship with Mayor Cory Booker and shady dealings with charter schools in Newark. Since Rice is the senator representing Montclair, Cerf's hometown, he invoked his privilege to block the nomination.

So, how did Cerf finally get confirmed? He simply claimed that he had moved to be closer to work. Strangely, he decided to move not to Trenton, but to Montgomery, which just happens to be represented by a Republican senator, Kip Bateman.

At Cerf's hearing, the Senate Judiciary Chairman expressed his displeasure with this slick move:
Sen. Nicholas Scutari (D-Union), the committee chairman, said Cerf’s answers about his residency nearly kept him from voting to affirm the nomination. Scutari said Cerf may have perpetrated "something like fraud" by not being truthful about his motivation to move.
Earlier this year, Cerf rented an apartment in Somerset County that is closer to his job in Trenton than the home he shares with his wife and children in Montclair. Cerf said he rented the apartment in Montgomery because the area was "charming" and the rent was "reasonable." 
Scutari said he didn’t buy it.
He said the committee should be "insulted" by Cerf’s deception. The real reason for Cerf’s move, he said, was a need to get out of Essex County because of Rice’s decision to block the nomination. The unwritten senatorial courtesy rule allows senators to block gubernatorial appointees who reside in the counties the lawmakers serve.
"If you had sat down and said ‘I moved because of Senate rules or senatorial courtesy or Senator Rice and I had to get a residence somewhere else,’ that’s one thing," Scutari said. "For you to sit here and tell us you moved to be closer to work when you have a driver, I cannot accept that answer." [emphasis mine]
Well, Scutari went ahead and voted to confirm him anyway. And I'm sure that reasonable, charming apartment, so close to Trenton, has come in handy during the aftermath of Sandy, right?

Yeah, not so much:
The Education Department was hobbled all week by a disrupted email system. Commissioner Chris Cerf was fielding calls from his home in Montclair, where he had no electricity. For two days, he said, he was unable to reach Robert Gilmartin, the executive county superintendent for Bergen and Passaic counties, who had cellphone problems and no power. Several superintendents expressed frustration that they couldn’t reach Gilmartin for guidance. [emphasis mine]
Scutari was right; Cerf does not live in Montgomery, no matter what his driver's license says. If he did, he obviously would have stayed there during Sandy to be "closer to work" in a time of crisis.

Remember Senator Loretta Weinberg's words at Cerf's hearing:
During the five-hour hearing in Trenton, state Sen. Loretta Weinberg praised Cerf’s rich professional background as an educator, lawyer and law clerk for former U.S. Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor. But she also had a clear warning.
"I think you have one thing you have to be careful of," Weinberg (D-Bergen) said. "Your antenna when it comes to ethics needs to be sharpened. Sometimes, something can seem okay if the goal is alright when it’s not really okay." [emphasis mine]
I find it ironic that the Education Commissioner's ethics are as about as sharp as a pair of safety scissors.

Chris Cerf's ethics (artist's conception).

Friday, November 2, 2012

Where Are Your Former Presidents?

As we here in Jersey sit in the dark, waiting for our aging electrical grid to crackle back to life, let's play a game to pass the time: Where Are Your Former US Presidents Right Now?

Bill Clinton:
The Big Dog is suddenly Barack Obama’s Top Dog – and the candidate is delighted at being upstaged by Bill Clinton.
In the closing days of this epic campaign, the former President is dashing across the battleground states, trying to seal the deal for Obama with undecided voters and white, blue-collar Democrats.
“I may be the only person in America, but I am far more enthusiastic about President Obama this time than I was four years ago,” Clinton told a crowd in Lake Worth, Fla. – the first of an astounding five stops Friday in the Sunshine State.
After he joins Obama for a Virginia rally on Saturday and another in New Hampshire on Sunday, Clinton will have logged 16 campaign appearances in a single week – an extraordinary and possibly unprecedented display of electioneering by a former President.
George W. Bush:
GEORGE TOWN, Cayman Islands -- Organizers of an investment conference in the Cayman Islands have been forbidden from disclosing any details about a speech by former President George W. Bush in the offshore financial haven, an event spokesman said Thursday.
The keynote speech by the former president was "totally closed to all journalists," and conference organizers were banned from discussing any aspect of it even in general terms, spokesman Dan Kneipp said.
Sponsors of the conference include KPMG, a company that provides tax advisory services, and Deutsche Bank. It costs $4,000 to attend and other speakers include billionaire Richard Branson. 
"We've got a complete blackout on discussing the Bush details," Kneipp told The Associated Press.
[...]
Cayman Islands officials are proud of the British territory's role as an offshore finance center. But members of the U.S. Congress and advocates for changes in tax laws have accused corporations and wealthy individuals of using so-called financial havens to improperly avoid taxes.
Jimmy Carter:
Head of the constitution's Constituent Assembly (CA) Counsellor Hossam el-Ghiriany received on Tuesday 30/10/2012 visiting former US President Jimmy Carter, who is also the chairman of Carter Foundation for Peace.
Carter urged ending outlining the new constitution of Egypt.
He said that he met with several ambassadors here who asserted that completing writing the constitution is a cornerstone for the development process in Egypt and for attracting more investments and tourists.
In statements after the meeting, Secretary General of the CA Amr Darrag said that Carter was not satisfied with judicial supervision of Egyptian elections.
George H. W. Bush:
One-time world leaders George H.W. Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev are renewing their friendship.
The former American president and his former Soviet counterpart had a private lunch Thursday in Houston. Former Secretary of State James A. Baker III and former first lady Barbara Bush joined them, along with Gorbachev's daughter.
Gorbachev hugged Bush as he entered a Houston club and presented Bush and Baker with an autographed copy of a Russian-language book with Gorbachev's photo on the cover.
The then-presidents first met in 1989 in Malta, shortly after the Berlin Wall fell. They had four U.S.-Soviet summits during their time in office.
In 2001, Gorbachev received a public service award from the Bush Presidential Library Foundation at Texas A&M University.
Pretty much what you expected, wasn't it?

NJDOE Meddles In Local Politics

Not even superstorm Sandy can calm the rancor in Perth Amboy's schools:
A final decision from the state assistant education commissioner on a judge’s ruling upholding the school board’s May vote to place Superintendent of Schools Janine Walker Caffrey on administrative leave has been delayed.
On Wednesday, Board of Education President Samuel Lebreault said the board received a decision from the assistant state education commissioner that sent the case back to the administrative law judge because certain issues required further study.
“We are disappointed by the delay that these proceedings will pose to implementation of the lawful will of this board and we are confident that we ultimately will prevail,” Lebreault said.
So the duly elected local school board made a personnel decision. An administrative judge upheld their decision. But the education commissioner's office gets to override their decision because... well, because Commissioner Chris Cerf wants to, I guess.

Obviously, Cerf's office is punting until after the November school board election. It's clear that this has been the tactic since last spring. Do you think they would try this with a suburban district?

You tell me.

And what if the new school board doesn't support Caffrey? Will Cerf allow the board's decision to stand? Here's a clue:
He [Cerf] said it is the school board’s responsibility to pick an effective school superintendent who will move the district forward, but the board must then let that person do their job, even if it does generate controversy.
Boards do not exist to make microdecisions about personnel,” he said. “When I hear about some of the things that are happening, I know that is a dysfunctional district.” [emphasis mine]
I think we all know which district he was talking about, don't we?

Caffrey is New Jersey's Queen of Tenure. The lobbying group B4K, which stands against teacher tenure, paid for a public relations campaign in her defense. Caffrey brought in a contractor, who just happens to be a buddy of Cerf's, for a big, expensive deal with the district.

Does anyone doubt what Cerf's office will decide if the school board elections don't go Caffrey's way?

And just in case you think I'm reading too much into this:
One slate of Perth Amboy school board candidates has raised more than $44,500, much of it from founders and supporters of charter schools, some from out-of-state, an opposing slate charged Monday.
"That's an obscene amount of money," said Jeanette Gonzalez, who is running with three other candidates under the banner "New Vision, New Voice."
Four candidates running under the name "Better Schools Now" released a state election financing report that showed they have raised $44,500 in campaigns funds as of Oct. 9.
Gonzalez and her running mates, Nina Perkins-Nieves, Benjamin Salerno and Maria Garcia, have raised about $5,000, according to their report. Gonzalez said her husband previously served four terms on the school board and never raised large sums for his campaigns. She said school board campaigns often raise $5,000 to $8,000[emphasis mine]
So outsiders are paying an "obscene" amount of money to fund a local school board election. And the NJ Education Commissioner's office just happens to be delaying a crucial ruling on a controversial superintendent until after that election.

Meddling in local politics is not the job of the NJDOE (although they often act as if it were). If the Perth Amboy board violated the rules in removing Caffrey, the NJDOE should say so. If not, the board's decision should stand, and the school board members who made the decision should be accountable to the local voters. Any other interference by the NJDOE is nothing more than political tampering.

Further: now that New Jersey has moved so many school board elections to November, we need to be watching for a nasty national trend: large amounts of money flooding into local school board races. At the very least, there should be full transparency about where this money is coming: no more hiding behind PACs. (I can't access NJ campaign records right now thanks to Sandy, but I will be looking at this closely as soon as I can.)

And, again: B4K never should have involved itself in this affair. There is too much danger for at least the appearance of a quid pro quo when a well-heeled group like B4K sticks its nose into a local matter. They ought to have stayed out; since they didn't, they owe it to the citizens of Perth Amboy - and, yes, to Caffrey herself - to show us that their funding of Caffrey's public defense has not tainted her ability to do her job.

That is, if she stays. Stay tuned...

Thursday, November 1, 2012

UPDATE: NJEA Cancels Convention

UPDATES BELOW

This really is unprecedented:

For the first time in its 158-year history, the NJEA Convention has been cancelled.
NJEA President Barbara Keshishian announced the decision today, “in light of the natural disaster that has struck New Jersey and Atlantic City in particular. It was a difficult decision, but we believe it was the correct one, considering the statewide impact of this unprecedented storm.”
Keshishian also announced that the leadership of NJEA is exploring ways for NJEA members, leaders, and staff to contribute to and assist in the city’s cleanup and recovery.
The two-day event, the largest educational gathering of its kind in the world, was scheduled for Nov. 8-9 in Atlantic City.
 “Our primary concern is the safety and well-being of everyone in Atlantic City, and everyone planning to attend our convention this year,” Keshishian said.  “Because we are a statewide organization, and public schools across the state have been grappling with the impact of Sandy all week long, we have to consider the feasibility of holding this event in a broader context.  Like Atlantic City, New Jersey’s school districts need time to recover and regroup from the devastation of Hurricane Sandy,” Keshishian said.
“The NJEA Convention is a massive event, involving tens of thousands of people.  We concluded it was simply not advisable to try to have that many people on the roads and using public transportation while so many communities are struggling to restore power and basic services to their residents – including NJEA members,” she said.
Citing NJEA’s long history of holding the Convention in Atlantic City, Keshishian said NJEA leaders, staff, and members “want to assist in helping this historic city rebuild and recover.  Accordingly, we have reached out to area officials to ascertain how we may be of the greatest assistance.  People in Atlantic City are hurting, and we genuinely want to help them in whatever ways we can.”
Keshishian said the NJEA Convention would be back next year, “bigger and stronger than ever, and we look forward to a long and productive relationship with the great people of Atlantic City.”

It's a shame, but there really is no other choice.

Here's an interesting question: now that the convention is cancelled, will school districts try to have school on November 8 and 9? I don't even know if it's possible, but I'll bet many teachers and parents would rather have the kids in school those days than add more days to the school calendar at the end of the year.

I'll look into this some more...

UPDATE: Here's the law about the convention:
18A:31-2. Attendance at conventions of New Jersey Education Association
Whenever any full-time teaching staff member of any board of education of any local school district or regional school district or of a county vocational school or any secretary, or office clerk applies to the board of education by which he is employed for permission to attend the annual convention of the New Jersey Education Association, such permission shall be granted for a period of not more than two days in any one year and he shall receive his whole salary for the days of actual attendance upon the sessions of such convention upon filing with the secretary of the board a certificate of such attendance signed by the executive secretary of the association.
That's fine... but what if there isn't a convention? If it's canceled, can a district open up on the days it was supposed to occur?

I have no doubt some districts are going to ask to open on these days. Let's see what happens. Watch for whether Christie decides to make this a state-wide proclamation or not.

Bloomberg Ties Up NYC Just To Torture Teachers

El Bloombito* is going to send 1,800 Absent Teacher Reserve members (ATRs) out into the crowded, dangerous, chaotic streets of post-Sandy New York on Friday for no apparent reason other than to torture them:
Well my feeling of pointlessness just reached a new high when I heard that schools will remain closed for the remainder of this week for children, but teachers must report to work on Friday. All week I've had an assignment in an unnamed high school, but due to inclement weather, I haven't had the opportunity to report to this high school. But now, on Friday, I guess I will make my way through several bus transfers to go there to ... sub for non-existent classes? It's going to be all sorts of meaningful.

Next week I'm supposed to be shuttled off to yet another school, but I haven't gotten my assignment yet. Again, because of the inclement weather they're a bit undecided about which schools would most need a week-long sub.

I guess this is Tweed's idea of really putting teachers to the best possible use. Don't you think? 
Frankly, I don't understand why teachers are reporting for work on Friday at all. Why put 75,000 more people on New York's streets if it's not necessary? While I'm sure there are some teachers who have to assess the damage to their classrooms, many teach at schools that weren't directly affected by Sandy. Why clog up the transportation system with all of the teachers if we don't need to?

But having the ATRs report is just silly. ATRs are basically substitute teachers; there will be nothing for them to do. This is yet another absurdity foisted upon teachers for only one reason: control. Jonathan Kozol gives my favorite example of this phenomenon:
In some districts, even the most pleasant and old-fashioned class activities of elementary schools have now been overtaken by these ordering requirements. 
A student teacher at an urban school in California, for example, wanted to bring a pumpkin to her class on Halloween but knew it had no ascertainable connection to the California standards. 
Only Exam Stuff 
She therefore had developed what she called the 'Multimodal Pumpkin Unit" to teach science (seeds), arithmetic (the size and shape of pumpkins, I believe— this detail wasn't clear), and certain items she adapted out of language arts, in order to position "pumpkins" in a frame of state proficiencies. Even with her multimodal pumpkin, as her faculty advisor told me, she was still afraid she would be criticized because she knew the pumpkin would not really help her children to achieve expected goals on state exams. 
Why, I asked a group of educators at a seminar in Sacramento, was a teacher being placed in a position where she'd need to do preposterous curricular gymnastics to enjoy a bit of seasonal amusement with her class on Halloween? How much injury to state-determined "purpose" would it do to let a group of children have a pumpkin party once a year for no other reason than because it's something fun that other children get to do on autumn days in public schools across most of America? 
"Forcing an absurdity on teachers does teach something," said an African American professor, "it teaches acquiescence. It breaks down the will to thumb your nose at pointless protocols— to call absurdity 'absurd.'" 
Writing out the standards with the proper numbers on the chalkboard, even though these numbers have no possible meaning to the children, has a similar effect, he said. [emphasis mine]
Making substitute teachers go to an empty school in the wake of the worst storm of our lifetimes is absurd. And that's why El Bloombito* is forcing the ATRs to report: because he can.


* El Bloombito is the hilarious tweeter who parodies the mayor's riotous habit of attempting to speak Spanish during his press conferences. Check him/her out.