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Archive for the ‘BESE’ Category

It’s 87 pages long and typical of last year’s education reform package rushed through the legislature by Gov. Piyush Jindal, the proposed changes to Bulletin 741, otherwise known as the Louisiana Handbook for School Administrators, was first introduced to the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) at the Dec. 4 meeting of the Academic Goals and Instructional Improvement Committee.

BESE member Holly Boffy of Baton Rouge offered a substitute motion at the time to defer committee action until January because, she said, she was hungry. The committee report, however, was approved and on Tuesday, Jan. 15 (tomorrow) the full board will take up the proposed changes that, among other things, will:

• Not require school systems to participate in a school accreditation program every five years and receive a certification classification (The proposals, in fact, call for the scrapping of Section 311 of the bulletin, which deals with accreditation, in its entirety.);

• No longer require certification of teachers;

• Strip Section 2313 for Elementary Program of Studies of its suggested outline of content areas, meaning any school can design any curricula it deems appropriate (so much for uniformity);

• Gut summer schools of their requirements, including minimum instructional hours and class size limits;

• Allow a single person with no valid teaching certificate to teach hundreds of students in one class taught for one week;

• Allow local educational agencies to use state money to purchase textbooks not approved by BESE;

• Do away with the requirement of taking roll for virtual (course choice) classes, thereby eliminating any assurance of a student’s attending the course;

• Allow for the elimination of the positions of school counselors, physical education teachers and school librarians.

Allow for the elimination of the positions of school counselors, physical education teachers and school librarians.

Board member Lottie Beebe of Breaux Bridge said there will be no public hearing per se on the proposed changes. Instead, if the proposals are adopted by BESE the legislative auditor must attach a family impact statement (statement of family values) and fiscal note (cost). Following that, the proposed changes are uploaded in the State Register which then triggers a 90-day public notice. Citizens beginning at that point, have 30 days for public (online) comment before the new rule becomes final after 90 days.

Beebe said many of the proposed changes are rationalized by State Superintendent John White and department staff as offering flexibility to school systems.

But at a time of increased focus on school bullying (both physical and electronic) and concerns about student mental health and safety, “cutting counselors and replacing them with untested teams is contrary to good public policy and a danger to our kids,” Beebe said.

She said because counselors are needed for college preparation, cutting those positions is also contrary to White’s stated goals of promoting college readiness.

“I have never before received so many emails,” Beebe said. “The LDOE is proposing the elimination of many of the structures we have had in place in traditional systems. Some will say this is good because it gives districts autonomy. I disagree,” she said. “I believe in having a framework, or structure.

“It appears (that) traditional systems have been given a lethal injection and will slowly expire unless our legislators derail this train. If you want to see what the state takeover of schools looks like, visit the Recovery School District in New Orleans and interview parents and students.

“I attended a meeting in New Orleans in November where students appealed to BESE for assistance. Students voiced concerns relative to the lack of certified teachers, lack of textbooks, etc. If you visit the DOE website to check on the RSD school report cards, you get a diagnostic comment: ‘This page is not available for display.’”

Mike Desehotels, a retired teacher and retired executive director of the Louisiana Association of Educators, said he has several concerns about the proposed changes to Bulletin 741 but that he is most concerned with the potential for abuse and fraud in the Course Choice program.

Course Choice is a new program whereby students are allowed to take online courses from providers approved by BESE. The Course Choice allows operators to set their own tuition and to provide their own curricula but are not required to take roll to ensure that students are attending the virtual course.

Moreover, Desehotels said, Course Choice providers are allowed under Act 2 of 2012 to be paid 50 percent of their tuition upon a student’s registering for a course and the remaining 50 percent upon the student’s completion of the course.

“Since there is no provision for taking roll, I wanted to know what safeguards were in place to assure…that the proper instruction had been provided,” Desehotels said. “The answers I got from DOE can be summarized as follows: the provider can confirm that the student has completed the course by just stating that either the student has passed or has completed the required portfolio of work.

“Apparently the discretion for awarding course credit is totally in the hands of the providers and they have every incentive to do so because they get paid in full as soon as they say the student has completed the course. So the provider can be paid and the student can get credit for a course when he may not have received adequate instruction.

“I believe this is fraud and a waste of taxpayer dollars,” he said.

Desehotels said he posed that question to White several months ago. “He promised to review the matter and get back to me. He never did.

That should not be too surprising given the mindset of this administration.

BESE President Penny Dastugue of Mandeville instructed St. Tammany teacher Mercedes Schneider to cease emailing her with concerns about BESE policy and BESE member James Garvey of Metairie emailed White relative to a public records request from a Louisiana citizen, “…try to find some way to charge her for the cost of responding.”

Garvey attempted to explain his email which was inadvertently sent to the individual requesting the public documents by saying he had been informed that DOE has not been recovering the costs of documents. “I was focusing on the part of the job that they have not been doing well.”

It’s generally outside the scope of BESE members to micromanage day-to-day department operations by counting paper clips and making sure citizens are charged for information—even information transmitted electronically by a simple keystroke of a computer.

Had he simply been watching out for the fiscal well-being of DOE, he might well have said something along the lines of “Be sure that the costs of responding are recouped” instead of “Try to find some way to charge her.”

Garvey tried again to say he had heard complaints about the large “chunks of time” dedicated to responding to public records requests.

With John White and DOE, however, the biggest “chunks of time” are dedicated to denying information and withholding records from the public under the guise of “deliberative process” or by simply ignoring the requests.

Apparently there is no charge for those services.

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Undaunted by an earlier revelation that a somewhat suspect national study that gave Louisiana high marks for its education policies was less than candid, State Education Superintendent John White continues trying to change his frog—otherwise known as Americal Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC)-inspired and Teach for America (TFA)-executed education reform—into a prince by touting yet another national ranking that appears at first blush to show that Louisiana’s overall ranking leapt from 23rd to 15th over the last year.

What White conveniently neglected to report via his Department of Education propaganda arm Louisiana Believes is that same study, done by Quality Counts for Education Week magazine, gave Louisiana an F for public education achievement for the third consecutive year.

White may have neglected to report that little tidbit, but Baton Rouge Advocate reporter Will Sentell was inquisitive enough to look past Piyush’s burnished version of the report’s contents.

That may have been because only a week before a report was issued by StudentsFirst, an organization founded by Michelle Rhee, whose professional reputation has come under a cloud of controversy for suspicious scoring gains at Washington, D.C. schools during her tenure as chancellor, which ranked Louisiana first in the nation in educational policies that prioritize the interest of children.

The StudentsFirst study was debunked almost immediately when the New York Times pointed out that it focused purely on state laws and policies and “did not take into account student test scores.” Test scores are tantamount to the educational Bible for Piyush, White, et al. Test scores make up the centerpiece of the entire Piyush education reform package.

The StudentsFirst report may have been tempered both by the cheating scandal and by an almost simultaneous report by the U.S. Department of Education that shows Louisiana ranked sixth from the bottom in its public high school graduation rate—even despite White’s apparent efforts to color those statistics pretty (see Mercedes Schneider’s blog post of Jan. 12 on LouisianaVoice).

StudentsFirst has poured money into the campaigns of four of Jindal’s hand-picked Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) members—$5,000 each to Holly Boffy, James Garvey, Kira Orange Jones and Roemer.

When LouisianaVoice reported other campaign contributions in an earlier post, Boffy bristled at the perceived suggestion that campaign contributions influenced her December vote to approve Course Choice applicants when in fact we never once intimated that her vote was bought—or even rented, for that matter.

The fact remains, however, that each of five board members, including Boffy, just happened to vote to approve applications from two applicants who combined to contribute $41,000 to the BESE members: Jay Guillot of Ruston ($5,000), James Garvey of Metairie ($5,000), Boffy of Youngsville ($6,000), Chas Roemer of Baton Rouge ($10,000) and Kira Orange Jones of New Orleans ($15,000).

We’re just sayin’…

It is certainly interesting to see how Gov. Piyush Jindal and White cherry-pick the categories on which the state scored well while ignoring the F for public education achievement.

But never let it be said that LouisianaVoice is not fair (objective? Certainly not. Fair? emphatically yes). So here are the areas on which Louisiana scored well:

• Transitions and Alignment (We’re still not sure what “Alignment” is; we’re assuming it has nothing to do with automobiles. For that matter, we aren’t too sure what “Transitions” means, though we do know what a transmission is): 92.9, up from 82.1 for an A;

• School Finance Analysis: 75.3, up from 74.7 for a C.

At this point, the Louisiana Believes “news” release says (drum roll, please), “The scores in remaining categories—Standards, Assessments and Accountability and The Teaching Profession—are based on the state’s score from the 2012 report.

Wait. What? Remaining categories? But what about that public education achievement category? Did you forget that? Oh well, never mind. Here are the scores for the “remaining categories”:

• Standards, Assessment and Accountability: 97.2, for a B;

• The Teaching Profession: 72.5 (11th in the nation), for a C.

Of course, the teaching profession, in case you haven’t been paying attention, is the one area that Piyush and White have in their crosshairs. It’s the teaching profession they have consistently demonized from Day One of their so-called “education reform” efforts and yet Louisiana’s teachers, according to the very report that Jindal and White are now waving about, are ranked 11th in the nation.

Piyush said in a prepared statement (remember, the man does NOT sit for interviews in his home state; those are reserved for Fox News, CNN, the Washington Post and the New York Times as he rehearses for the national stage by throwing the National Republican Party under the bus) that the Quality Counts report illustrates that Louisiana’s education system “has gone from almost rock-bottom to number 15 in the country.”

Well, Piyush, we’re not sure in which parallel universe you reside, but if that truly is the case, you must realize that it all took place before your frilly, designed-to-benefit-your-contributors reform measures actually were implemented.

Could it be that the New Living Word School in Ruston, for example, with its lack of teachers, desks, books and classrooms, managed to pull off this dramatic surge in the natonal rankings in the past four months with its 150 vouchers approved by the Department of Education?

Or could this be just another bogus study to which the administration is clinging for some semblance of vindication in the weeks leading up to the 2013 legislative session?

After all the Piyush administration’s hyperbole over the StudentsFirst report, we are now loath to accept anything at face value that he or White distributes at Press Release Central, otherwise known as the Capitol press corps.

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As an indication of just how desperate Gov. Piyush Jindal, State Education Superintendent John White and Board of Elementary and Secondary Education President (BESE) Chas Roemer are to put a good face on their much-ballyhooed education reform, one need only read the glowing “news” story picked up by Press Release Central and dutifully reported by media outlets across the state on Monday.

The story (if one wishes to call it that), issued by Louisiana Believes, the Glass-is-half-full propaganda arm of John White’s Department of Education (DOE), sounded the news like the proverbial trumpet in Revelations that Louisiana ranks first in the nation for educational policies that prioritize the interests of children, according to a report by StudentsFirst, an organization founded by Michelle Rhee, who has come under withering criticism for suspicious scoring gains at Washington, D.C., schools during her tenure as chancellor.

The New York Times made an interesting point about the Rhee report:

“The ratings, which focused purely on state laws and policies, did not take into account student test scores.”

That prompted Mercedes Schneider, who has been tracking statistical analyses of Louisiana’s propensity to fudge school data, to comment wryly on the blog of Diane Ravitch, a leading authority on education issues, “Ironic, ain’t it?”

Ravitch, on her blog, said, “Rhee wants teachers to be evaluated and fired by test scores; she wants schools to be closed by test scores. But when she ranked the states, she didn’t look at test scores. If she had, her number-one state—Louisiana—would have been at the bottom of her rankings.”

And when one peels back the layers on Rhee’s metaphorical onion, it’s easy to see that the organization compiling those rankings, StudentsFirst, has a stake in the outcome—a very big stake. It has a dog in this hunt, as it were.

Also on Monday, the U.S. Department of Education may have thrown a damper on Piyush’s premature party with its own news release that shows Louisiana not faring so well in high school graduation statistics.

Louisiana, the U.S. DOE said in lobbing its own stink bomb, ranked sixth from the bottom in public high school graduation rate.

The state’s graduation rate of 71 percent is higher only than Alaska, Georgia, New Mexico, Oregon, Nevada and the District of Columbia. The D.C. graduation rate of 59 percent was lowest in the nation, followed by Nevada’s 62 percent. Iowa leads the nation at 88 percent.

The Louisiana Legislature passed legislation in 2009 mandating that the state’s graduation rate should be 80 percent by 2014, which means Jindal, White, Roemer, et al have their work cut out for them.

It also means that StudentsFirst report is mostly hogwash and the decision to release it reveals an administration desperate to prop up a failing policy heading into the 2013 legislative session.

StudentsFirst has poured money into the campaigns of four of Jindal’s hand-picked BESE members who support Jindal and White—$5,000 each to Holly Boffy, James Garvey, Kira Orange Jones and Roemer.

In addition, StudentsFirst received $5,000 from Future PAC, the political action committee of the Baton Rouge Area Chamber of Commerce. Future PAC in turn chipped in an additional $5,000 to Roemer’s campaign fund.

Future PAC also contributed $5,000 to the Alliance for Better Classrooms (ABC) which also received $27,000 from various Jindal/White/Roemer supporters, including Baton Rouge Business Report Publisher Rolfe McCollister ($2,000).

As a curious aside, in tracking the various campaign contributions and expenditures, LouisianaVoice discovered Innovative Advertising in Covington, a firm that caters almost exclusively to Republicans in its political advertising campaigns.

The firm’s web page boasts victories for Republican candidates in North Carolina, Mississippi, Texas and Louisiana.

The Alliance for Better Classrooms spent more than $272,000 with Innovative Advertising in 2011 alone and the Republican Party of Louisiana spent another $359,000 with Innovative in 2007 through 2011.

But back to the administration’s touting of the StudentsFirst report.

“This report confirms that Louisiana is now leading the nation in education reform,” Jindal pontificated.

“The report’s findings validate the courage and boldness of Louisiana’s policy makers, voters and educators,” added White in an effort to outshine his boss in perfunctory rhetoric.

Not to be outdone, Roemer chimed in: “We are moving forward in education in this state and contrary to what the status quo wants us to believe, the majority of Louisiana people are excited to see real reform at last.”

Sadly, none of those statements is accurate. The report confirms nothing and it validates nothing and it’s highly doubtful if the people of this state are truly excited at what this administration passes off as reform. The courts certainly are not as three separate courts have knocked down various aspects of the education reform measures.

The Louisiana Believes release noted that the report praises Louisiana’s teacher evaluation system; the state’s tying layoff and tenure to teacher performance; awarding tenure only to “highly effective” teaching in five out of six years and the potential to revoke tenure after one year of ineffective teaching; the state’s charter school program; publicly-funded scholarships (part of which was struck down by a Baton Rouge court); letter grades for schools and for “setting the standard” for state level intervention through the Recovery School District.

The news release described StudentsFirst as a “grassroots movement formed in 2010 in response to an increasing demand for a better education system in the U.S.

But the most ludicrous aspect of the news release remains its source: StudentsFirst.

Rhee, before founding StudentsFirst, served as head of the Washington, D.C. school system from 2007 to 2010, when she and her boss, Washington Mayor Adrian Fenty, both lost their jobs when Fenty was defeated for re-election.

During her tenure, student test scores improved dramatically but plummeted in 2011, particularly at one of the city’s award-winning schools after the principal tightened security on test score grading after accidentally discovering three school staff members late at night sitting in a room strewn with more than 200 test booklets.

Students had just completed a midyear practice version of the city’s annual standardized test and one of the adults was at a desk, holding an eraser with the other two sat at a table with open booklets before them.

One of Rhee’s more notable moves was converting the D.C. system’s annual standardized test into a barometer for teachers and principals meaning for the first time, their jobs and pay depended upon students’ scores increasing.

The district’s scores did increase, making a quantum jump, but in 2011, USA Today published an investigation that cast doubt on the validity of the test scores and about the effectiveness of Rhee’s reforms.

The newspaper story revealed an unusual number of wrong-to-right erasures on students’ answer sheets at more than 100 D.C. schools between 2008 and 2010.

The centerpiece of Rhee’s reform movement was Crosby S. Noyes Education Campus. Under her watch, the school went from being deemed in need of improvement to one of the district’s “shining stars.” In 2006, only 10 percent of Noyes’ students scored “proficient” or “advanced” in math on standardized tests mandated under the federal No Child Left Behind Law. Two years later, 58 percent achieved that level and the school showed similar improvement in reading.

Rhee rewarded Noyes’ staff twice in three years—in 2008 and again in 2010—by handing out $8,000 bonuses to each teacher and $10,000 to the principal.

During that same three-year span, however, most of Noyes’ classrooms had extraordinarily high numbers of erasures on the tests, with most of the erasures being that wrong answers were changed to correct ones.

In all, 103 public schools—more than half the D.C. schools—had erasure rates exceeding D.C. averages. In 2007-2008, six of eight classrooms taking tests at Noyes were flagged for the high rate of wrong-to-right erasure rates. The same pattern was repeated in the 2008-09 and 2009-2010 school years, when 80 percent of classrooms at the school were flagged by the CTB/McGraw-Hill testing company.

For the 2009 reading test, one Noyes seventh grade classroom averaged 12.7 wrong-to-right erasure rates, according to the USA Today story.

Thus, the chancellor of District of Columbia public schools presided over one of the biggest student test score cheating scandals in the nation and subsequently was forced out in 2010 only to establish the StudentsFirst grassroots movement “to mobilize parents, teachers, students, administrators and citizens throughout the country and to channel their energy to produce meaningful results on both the local and national level.” (Wonder if all that is on the organization’s letterhead?)

And now we are being asked to believe Jindal and White when they regurgitate a highly suspect report churned out by Michelle Rhee.

If still not convinced of the StudentsFirst shenanigans, you may wish to watch Frontline on LPB tonight (Tuesday) at 9 p.m.

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“The coalition of the status quo is going to say my plan hurts teachers and hurts public education. They are going to do whatever it takes to say reform is a bad idea. They are going to argue for the status quo. It’s just the opposite. That type of rhetoric is insulting to the people across this state demanding better schools.”

—Gov. Piyush Jindal, in his Jan. 17, 2011 address to the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry (LABI) during which he unveiled his sweeping reform package for public education. Piyush’s mean spirited rhetoric, in which he trashes teachers as a collective group, now takes on a sinister tone in light of last Friday’s shootings at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut.

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“We are going to create a system that pays teachers for doing a good job instead of for the length of time they have been breathing….”

That statement was contained in the rambling speech Gov. Piyush Jindal gave to the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry exactly 11 months ago today as he unveiled his education reform plan.

Well, Piyush, you no longer have to worry about Victoria Soto monopolizing your precious oxygen supply. You see, Ms. Soto, 27, gave up her life to protect her students, her children, in Newtown, Connecticut last Friday.

And Sandy Hook Elementary School principal Dawn Hochsprung, upon hearing gunshots, charged from a conference room and confronted shooter Adam Lanza. She lunged at him in an effort to protect her students—and paid with her life.

School psychologist Mary Sherlach also attempted to stop Lanza. She, too, was killed.

Mary Ann Jacob, a library clerk at Sandy Hook, was prepared to sacrifice her life as well. She herded her students into a restroom and locked the door and then told her students she loved them—just in case it was the last thing they ever heard. Fortunately, they survived.

“After three years, they are given lifetime protection,” Jindal said in his typically long-winded vilification of teachers to LABI almost a year ago. “Short of selling drugs in the workplace or beating up one of the business’s clients, they can never be fired.”

Piyush, you are a moron, a buffoon, an idiot and as a lifelong citizen of Louisiana, it profoundly embarrasses me to have you as my governor.

There. I’ve said it.

I deliberately postponed writing this for a few days so as to temper my emotions and to write more rationally and calmly. In retrospect, I’m glad; my words are more carefully chosen today.

You see, I’m a little too close to this story to be completely objective (though I have never really laid claim to objectivity). I have three grandchildren who are each six years old, the same age as 16 of those 20 precious children slaughtered last Friday by that monster. Two are twins and the other, their first cousin, is nine days younger. They all attend the same school and I have had nightmares since Friday.

I have close friends who attend my church who are elementary school teachers and they are all heroes. They love their students and their every action at their schools is carried out with sole intent of feeding their students’ fertile minds so as to help them learn and prepare themselves for productive lives. I don’t know a single one of those wonderful teachers who put tenure or themselves ahead of their kids.

My high school teachers likewise were heroes. Two, Charlotte Lewis and Maggie Hinton, somehow saw potential in my writing abilities early on and encouraged me to keep writing. Another was Earvin Ryland. I took three courses under him: U.S. history, civics and geography and he consistently pushed me to do better—and he did it without belittling me or calling attention to my many scholastic shortcomings. Morgan Peoples, Mary Alice Garrett, Coach Perkins, Ruth Johnson, Coach Garner, Coach Garrett—heroes one and all. If some nutcase like Lanza had invaded Ruston High School back then, Coach Moose Phillips would have taken him apart with his bare hands.

And those heroes produced more heroes. Katherine McBride Cox would go on to a sterling career as an educator/principal in her own right; Nancy Garrison would become a university president; Patricia Wells would become a performer with the New York Metropolitan Opera; Bill Higgs would become a world-renowned heart surgeon; Nancy Byrd became a leading pediatrician in Houston; Joel Tellinghuisen would help pioneer the development of laser surgery; Allen Carpenter would excel as a pilot, first in Vietnam and later as a trainer of other pilots. There were others: Jerry Hood, Robert Bretz, Sid Aaron, and Martha Kavanaugh, to name only a few. And those, except for two, are just the ones in my class—the class of 1961. Pat Wells and Nancy Byrd were a couple of years ahead of us.

And to hear this asinine governor disparage such an honorable profession and such noble human beings by telling those fawning LABI supporters that teachers are paid “according to how long they have been on the job, regardless of their performance”—all for the sake of political points—makes my blood boil.

But Jindal isn’t the only one. Jonathan Pelto http://jonathanpelto.com/ writes a political blog similar to LouisianaVoice in Connecticut. Much of his writing has been about one Paul Vallas, former superintendent of the Louisiana Recovery School District (RSD), and now a plague on Connecticut. But Pelto is also familiar with our own Piyush.

Pelto posted a blog today in which he cited politicians from several states, including Piyush, who have a nasty habit of running around attacking teachers for political gain.

A Rhode Island state legislator called teachers “pigs at the public trough.” Had he said such a thing in my presence, I would have done my best, even at age 69, to deck him. How dare he—a “pig at the public trough” in his own right—say such a thing!

New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie has verbally attacked teachers in that state and even in Connecticut, Gov. Dannel Malloy once said that all a teacher need do is “show up for four years” to be given tenure.

I wonder how Gov. Malloy feels today. I wonder if he would be willing to face the families of Victoria Soto, Dawn Hochsprung, Mary Sherlach or perhaps Mary Ann Jacob herself and make such an idiotic statement.

As much as I personally disagree with Louisiana Superintendent of Education John White on the so-called “reforms” he is attempting to implement, he at least had the decency to issue a statement about those horrific shootings last Friday:

“Today’s events in Connecticut are unspeakably tragic. There are no words to capture the grief all who know and love the victims must feel. They are also sobering reminders of the fragile nature of life, especially the lives of children. I urge that superintendents, principals, and school boards continue to be vigilant in maintaining crisis management plans and the preparations necessary to implement them.”

Likewise, U.S. Sen. Mary Landrieu offered her response:

“We are all heartbroken by the senseless shooting today in Newtown, Connecticut. The magnitude of this tragedy is incomprehensible, with so many innocent lives lost. To the families and community of Sandy Hook Elementary – we share in your grief, and hold you up in our prayers.”

Louisiana Association of Educators (LAE) President Joyce Haynes said this:

“As members of the education community, we are deeply concerned for everyone in the Newtown, Connecticut community. We join our entire nation in mourning the deaths of innocent children and educators due to violence.”

Additionally, LAE provided a web link to a guide on how to respond before, during and after such a crisis http://www.neahin.org/blog/school-crisis-resources.html.

As for Piyush and U.S. Sen. David Vitter?

Nothing. Nada. Zilch. Not a peep.

If either has uttered a single word of sympathy for the lives lost in that tragedy, I’ve not seen it. Nor could Google provide a clue to any statement by those two.

It can only be assumed that Vitter is keeping his mouth shut to placate his NRA supporters while Jindal, in his ongoing candidacy for the 2016 presidential nomination, is probably being interviewed by Fox News on how the National Republican Party ought not to be stupid.

Well, Piyush, to fully understand the sacrifices made by teachers—every day—all you need do is ask someone whose life has been changed for the better by a caring, giving teacher who puts the welfare of her students first—some of whom died last Friday doing just that—and others who took it upon themselves to encourage a below-average student 50-plus years ago.

Piyush, I shudder to think what action you would have taken in a situation like that of last Friday. I can almost visualize you quivering and whimpering under a desk, perhaps even wetting your pants, fearful that you won’t realize your dream of being president.

To fully understand stupidity, daft rhetoric and what it’s like to appear a fool, Piyush, you need only to stand in front of a mirror.

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