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Archive for the ‘BESE’ Category

BATON ROUGE (CNS)—LouisianaVoice has obtained a copy of a 72-page report on an investigation conducted by the Louisiana Department of Education (DOE) into allegations of abuse, sexual misconduct, neglect, and missing files at a New Orleans charter school run by a Texas construction and trading company affiliated with the Gulen movement, an offshoot of the Islamic faith.

The report’s five-page cover letter by Acting State Superintendent of Education Ollie Tyler to Penny Dastugue, president of the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE), claims DOE learned of the allegations surrounding Abramson Science and Technology Charter School in New Orleans on July 14, even though a state education official warned of problems at the school more than a year ago.

That official, Folwell Dunbar, was fired late last month along with his supervisor, Jacob Landry, who was director of the DOE charter office. The firings appear to be a classic example of the “shoot the messenger” mentality.

Abramson’s charter was revoked earlier this week.

The report does not address additional allegations by Dunbar of attempted bribery raised more than a year ago, nor does it explain how DOE officials only became aware of problems at Abramson despite a state audit dated June 10, 2010 which identified numerous deficiencies at the school.

Tevfik Eski, chief executive officer of Pelican Education Foundation in New Orleans, which ran Abramson until its charter was revoked recently by BESE, has denied any allegations of wrongdoing on a web page set up to address the accusations. He also claims religious bias in the reporting of the allegations.

Subsequent to the controversy surrounding Abramson, other complaints have surfaced with another Pelican-run school, Kenilworth Science and Technology Charter School in Baton Rouge.

Pelican is affiliated with Atlas Texas Construction & Trading of Houston. Atlas also operates 38 charter schools in Houston, Austin, Dallas, Fort Worth, Brownsville, El Paso, Laredo, Lubbock and San Antonio through Cosmos Foundatin under the collective banner of Harmony Public Schools.

Cosmos Foundation apparently is similar to Pelican Education Foundation in Louisiana.

A spokesperson for the Texas Education Agency (TEA) said Friday she was unaware of the problems being experienced at the two Louisiana schools and that the only complaints, which she said were groundless, were of alleged attempts by the schools to indoctrinate students in the Gulen faith.

She also said in an email to LouisianaVoice that TEA has “an ongoing financial audit” of Cosmos but there is no scheduled date as yet for its completion.

Complaints contained in the DOE report to BESE on Abramson included:

• Unsupervised students roaming the hallway;

• Students physically attacking teachers;

• Students leaving classrooms without permission;

• Students physically harassing other students during class;

• Sexual misconduct among students;

• School break-ins in which the only missing items turned out to be student files.

The DOE investigative team included Assistant Deputy Superintendent for Departmental Support Erin Bendily, DOE executive legal counsel Joan Hunt, and BESE Executive Director Catherine Pozniak, the report says.

One teacher reported an incident in which she caught two male students engaged in oral sex in a classroom.

There was a subsequent break-in at the school in which the only item reported missing was the file on that incident. Files on other such incidents were also reported missing in other break-ins, the report shows.

“The failure to fully investigate instances of alleged sexual behavior occurring on the school campus is alarming,” Tyler wrote in her report. She said school officials never interviewed a “para-professional” who assisted the teacher who discovered the two students. “They offered no explanation as to why they never interviewed her,” Tyler said.

In another case of an alleged sexual encounter between a boy and girl during a Saturday when they were supposed to be in class, administrators were questioned as to why one of the student’s teachers was not interviewed. An unidentified assistant principal explained to investigators that he “didn’t know” the teacher.

One teacher, Rachel Hobson, reported that her white board was on a wall shared with an adjacent computer science classroom and when she attempted to write on the board, she felt the board shake because bodies were being slammed against the wall on the other side. Once, when she investigated, she found the instructor at his computer wearing headphones while several middle school boys wrestled and shoved each other. “Students informed me that (their teacher) frequently called his wife (who lived elsewhere) during their class period.”

The report redacted both teachers’ names as well as the residency of the computer science teacher’s wife, although Hobson’s name was provided in Tyler’s letter to Dastugue.

Hobson, who taught at Abramson in the 2010-2011 school year, also said the principal’s wife was supposed to monitor a class during state testing but left “because of her religion” when students started watching an R-rated movie.

She also cited instances of cheating by students and teachers alike.

“…Whenever I sent students to take a test in the resource room, they turned in tests with identical answers,” she said. “Even questions that asked for extended response answers or student opinions would be exactly the same for each student. Often, the tests would be written in the Special Education teacher’s handwriting.”

Hobson said she was instructed to give a student with special needs a “D” letter grade because the special education teacher said, “He isn’t going to get a diploma but if he gets enough Carnegie credits (credit hours) he will be able to get a certificate.”

She also revealed in her report claims of Abramson’s issuance of false college admittances:

“Near the end of the year many students who had not previously been accepted to any college began announcing that they had been accepted into North American College,” she said. “Surprisingly, students who were failing their English and math classes and who would not graduate from Abramson on time were still being accepted to North American College. The principal (Cuneyt Dokmen) used these acceptances as proof that Abramson was successful.”

She added that Dokmen was scheduled to work at North American College this fall.

North American College is a private, non-profit four-year institution founded in 2010 and is located in northwest Houston. On its Facebook site it boasts that it offers a “high-quality education” that enables students to “acquire, analyze, interpret, and synthesize information and knowledge; to communicate effectively in writing and speech; to reason critically, symbolically, quantitatively, and scientifically; to recognize ethical issues, to appreciate diversity; to utilize information technology effective, and to develop latent artistic skills.”

Despite Tyler’s claim of only learning of Abramson’s problems in July of 2011, Dunbar, in a memo to department colleagues a year ago said that Inci Akpinar, vice president of Atlas Texas Construction & Trading, told Dunbar while discussing problems at Abramson, “I have twenty-five thousand dollars to fix this problem: twenty thousand for you and five for me.”

This was in addition to the June 2010 state audit which cited cases of classrooms being without instructors for weeks or even months at a time and of students who claimed their science fair projects had been done by their teachers.

More recently, DOE has launched an investigation into allegations of student mistreatment, wrongful termination of teachers at Kenilworth in Baton Rouge.

That investigation was initiated following the filing of a pair of lawsuits against the school.

Former Louisiana Superintendent of Education, under whose administration the Abramson and Kenilworth charters were issued, has been unavailable for comment on developments at the two schools.

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“Testing has become a ‘Saturday Night Live’ skit.”

Colorado teacher at the 5,000 teachers’ March on Washington, commenting on how teachers are expected to follow scripts for each lesson as a new strategy intended to boost scores on standardized tests.

“This has been a horrible decade for teachers. The next time you feel down or exhausted, please know there are millions of people behind you.”

Actor Matt Damon, whose mother was a teacher, speaking at the 5,000 teachers’ March on Washington on Saturday.

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The Washington Post was one of the few members of the media to cover a large, mostly unnoticed march on the White House by 5,000 teachers from all over the country on Saturday.

One of the organizers of the march was Katherine McBride Cox, a native of Ruston and a 1961 graduate of Ruston High School.

She recently retired after 35 years as an educator in Arizona where she served as a classroom teacher and a principal at the elementary and high school levels. As a teacher, she developed a nationally-recognized career education program for fifth and sixth graders called Window on the World.

For eight years, she taught a self-contained class for gifted students and later worked with at-risk middle school students. She also has served as an instructional coach for other teachers.

She shares her experiences as a school principal under No Child Left Behind on her website In the Trenches (www.inthetrencheswithschoolreform.com/).

Actor Matt Damon, whose mother was a teacher, was a featured speaker for the event. “This is has been a horrible decade for teachers,” he told the marchers. But even his appearance failed to attract media attention hoped for by organizers.

If the teachers’ march was largely ignored by the national media, it is somewhat understandable, considering the worldwide attention given to the national debt crisis and the accompanying gridlock that has gripped Washington.

The event was simply a victim of bad timing through no fault of the organizers, but that by no means diminishes the importance of the march.

The Washington Post, which did provide coverage of the event, featured a photo of marchers that would seem to bring the entire issue into focus. Featured prominently in the photo was a marcher carrying a sign that read, “Stop ALEC Now.”

ALEC is the acronym for the American Legislative Exchange Council. It is an organization of conservative legislators and business leaders who have formulated a lengthy laundry list of legislation on issues ranging from immigration to health care to deregulation of industry to union-busting to prison privatization to school vouchers and charter schools.

The organization is holding its national conference in New Orleans all this week and a new list of proposed legislation is almost certain to emerge after approval of ALEC’s corporate-dominated board which is represented by such companies as Koch Industries, AT&T, Wal-Mart, State Farm Insurance, Kraft, Johnson & Johnson, and Eli Lilly.

Gov. Bobby Jindal, the darling of the Republican Party until his disastrous response to President Obama’s State of the Union address in 2010, will be the guest speaker at the ALEC plenary lunch on Wednesday at 11:30 a.m.

It would be a mistake, however, for the media to concentrate on Jindal’s address and ignore events that take place behind the scenes. That’s where the delegates will get down and dirty with their legislative proposals and Jindal almost certainly will be paying close attention.

Typical of ALEC platforms is the attempt in 2010 by Rep. John Schroder of Abita Springs who introduced four separate bills aimed at abolishing the state’s civil service system. The effort failed but cropped up later that year when Wisconsin Governor-elect Scott Walker initiated efforts to abolish state employee and teacher unions.

A quick history lesson: Since 1950, the percentage of the U.S. work force represented by organized labor has dropped from 32 percent to 11.9 percent in 2010. Last year, there were 7.9 million public sector union members compared to only 7.4 million in the private sector, despite the fact that corporate America employees five times the number of wage-earners.

Because of the outsourcing of manufacturing jobs by American industry, there are fewer of those jobs left in this country. Outsourcing has cost this country literally millions of well-paying manufacturing jobs. Of course, not all jobs are outsourced overseas. In 1993, American Airlines decided to contract out its ticket counter jobs. The result was employees who were making $40,000 annually suddenly found themselves with a new employer who offered them their old jobs at $16,000 per year.

All organized labor has done for this country is to give American workers (blue-collar and white-collar alike) the eight-hour work day, the 40-hour work week, mandatory breaks, job safety, grievance procedures, minimum wages, workers comp, pensions, health care, paid sick days, vacation days, holidays, and an end to child labor.

None of that matters to ALEC, however.

Profit-driven to the core, ALEC and its corporate supporters have turned their full attention to unconditional support of charter schools and vouchers. As if in lock-step, Republican administrations across the country have cloned each other’s agendas and cloed ranks in attempts to dismantle public education in favor of more and more charter schools.

Cutting funding is one of the favorite methods of crippling public education. Transportation of private school students to and from school, for example, was once funded by the state. This year that responsibility was transferred to local school boards, already financially strapped after Jindal pulled federal funding intended for the local systems.

In Louisiana, public schools have state-mandated, uniform reasons for which a student may be expelled from school. Under those standards, a student may be expelled from a public school for only the most egregious transgression. With charter schools, those reasons vary from school to school. Lafayette Academy charter school, for example, can expel students for sleeping in class, failing to report to the office as directed, disobeying a teacher, cheating, lying or any other “disruptive, disrespectful or disobedient” conduct.

Abramson Charter School in New Orleans, which recently had its charter revoked, could expel students for not being in assigned seats before the tardy bell rings, not bringing pencils or books to class, or for not raising hands before talking.

Other charter schools may “disenroll” a student for being tardy five times or for not maintaining a 2.0 grade point average.

While public schools find it virtually impossible to expel students, the double standard between public and charter schools allows charter schools to rid themselves of the lower-performing students and thus to improve standardized test scores. This gives an unfair advantage to charter schools by creating an unlevel playing field that allows the charters to artificially inflate grades on standardized tests, the holy grail of No Child Left Behind.

Jindal has taken up the ALEC banner in his efforts to promote charter schools and to privatize state government agencies. His efforts are certain to intensify if he is re-elected in October and can carry his Republican majority in both the House and Senate over into his second administration. Those who cheer those efforts would do well to little consider the long-term effects of reducing state services through privatization.

Not that we’re making comparisons, but before these efforts are encouraged too enthusiastically, we should remember this: On May 2, 1933, in a brazen move to consolidate his political power, Adolf Hitler outlawed trade unions in Nazi Germany as a precursor to eliminating all opposition groups.

Certainly, Jindal should be astute enough to see that his agenda is not necessarily the best course of action for the state. The sale of prisons, for example, would be a move to obtain one-time revenue for recurring expenses, something to which he voiced his opposition when running for governor.

The privatization of the Office of Group Benefits would mean turning the most fiscally-responsible, most efficiently-run agency in state government over to a private entity whose only possible motive would be profit which necessarily must translate to higher premiums or benefit cutbacks. That’s the wrong reason to sacrifice the livelihoods of 149 dedicated state employees.

It’s also as wrong as wrong can possibly be to turn one’s back on the best interest of the state in favor of personal ambition.

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“Public schools meet all of the needs of all of the people without pleasing anyone. A better system (vouchers and charter schools) would foster education freedom and quality.”

American Legislative Exchange Council 1985 publication Education Source Book on improving education.

“I have twenty-five thousand dollars to fix this problem: twenty thousand for you and five for me.”

Inci Akpinar, vice president of Atlas Texas Construction & Trading which operated Abramson Science & Technology Charter School in New Orleans, speaking to Department of Education investigator Folwell Dunbar, who was looking into reported irregularities at the school. Dunbar recommended revoking the school’s charter. Dunbar was fired. Abramson’s charter has been revoked.

“It’s not just freshly painted walls and new textbooks that have Kenilworth Middle School parents talking – the curriculum and goals of the school are getting remodeled as well.”

Hype by Pelican Educational Foundation in Promising an educational revolution with the conversion of Kenilworth Middle School to Kenilworth Science and Technology Charter School in the same mold as Abramson in August of 2009.

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A ruling written specifically for the St. Landry School Board by the Louisiana Board of Ethics could have far-reaching repercussions for Chas Roemer should the ruling be applied to the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE).

Board of Ethics staff member Tracy Barker directed the ruling to Josie Frank, hearing officer for the 27th Judicial District Court in Opelousas.

Frank, also a member of the St. Landry parish School Board, requested a ruling on whether or not it was permissible for her to participate in votes on approval or disapproval of charter school applications submitted to the school board on behalf of a nonprofit organization on which her son serves as a board member.

She said in her request that her son receives no monetary benefit for his service on the organization’s board.

Barker wrote that Frank was not prohibited of participation in votes on charter school matters since her son does not have a substantial economic interest. “Since your son does not appear to have a substantial economic interest in the nonprofit organization, your participation on its charter school application is not prohibited by Section 1112B(1) of the Code” of Governmental Ethics.

“However, the board concluded that Section 1113A of the code would prohibit your son from appearing before the St. Landry Parish School Board on behalf of the nonprofit organization while you serve as a member of the school board,” she said. “Section 1113A prohibits a public servant, a member of his immediate family or a legal entity in which either owns a controlling interest, from bidding on or entering into a contract, subcontract or transaction that is under the supervision or jurisdiction of the public servant’s agency.”

Roemer represents BESE from District 6, which includes all or parts of the parishes of East Baton Rouge, Ascension, Livingston, Tangipahoa, and Washington.

His sister, Caroline Roemer Shirley, is executive director of the Louisiana Association of Public Charter Schools and the ethics board previously ruled that she could not appear before BESE on behalf of charter school matters pending before the board. She also was prohibited from interacting with the staff and Department of Education on matters under BESE jurisdiction.

The State Ethics Board, however, has never addressed the legal ramifications of Chas Roemer’s participation in discussions and votes affecting charter schools under the jurisdiction of BESE.

Section 1112B(1) specifically addresses the participation of a public servant or elected official in a vote on any matter in which a member or his immediate family has a substantial economic interest. “Section 1120 of the code provides that an elected official shall recuse himself when the vote would be a violation of Section 1112 of the code.”

Louisiana’s Charter School Law was enacted as Act 192 of 1995 as a pilot program to allow up to eight school districts to participate on a voluntary basis. The law was expanded in 1997 by Act 477 to establish BESE and local school boards as charter authorizers.

Act 477 defined five types of charter schools: Type 1, a charter with local school boards (new start-up); Type 2, charter with BESE (new start-up or conversion; Type 3, charter with local school board (conversion), Type 4, school board charter with BESE (new start-up or conversion), and Type 5, charter with BESE (pre-existing public school under the jurisdiction of the Recovery School District (RSD).

In 2003, Act 9 of the legislature created a new type of charter for the operation of pre-existing schools that were transferred to the jurisdiction of RSD.

RSD was charged to take underperforming schools and transform them in to charter schools. Since Hurricane Katrina in 2005, the number of public schools in New Orleans has dropped from 123 to four while the number of charter schools has ballooned from seven to 31.

Charter schools operate as independent public schools under five-year contracts granted by BESE or a local school board.

A review of minutes of BESE meetings for 2010 revealed that Chas Roemer often made motions on agenda items dealing with charter schools and then voted on those motions.

In December of 2010 alone, he made motions to approve charter school contracts of $50,000 and under, made motions to approve Crescent City School, the NET Charter High School, the Collegiate Academy Charter School, the Sarah T. Reed Charter Middle School, the ReNEW K-8 Charter School, The ReNEW Alternative High School, and in one case, made the motion to deny an application to commence operation of Joseph A. Craig Charter School in New Orleans.

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