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Archive for the ‘Education’ Category

Ron White of the Blue Collar Comedy Tour, arguably one of the funniest standup comics in America, once uttered the classic line, “You can’t fix stupid.”

The same might well be said of arrogance.

Case in point: Mitt Romney saying he was “not concerned about the very poor.” Even if true (which it probably is), it is arrogant to say it even privately, much less publicly.

Case in point: Gov. Bobby Jindal’s calling Louisiana Association of Educators Executive Director Michael Walker-Jones “arrogant” for Jones’s saying that some parents in poverty may not have the time or information to make a decision on their child’s education and suggesting that Walker-Jones resign.

That addressing poverty should be the key in seeking a solution to failing schools is a no-brainer to everyone except those who would gain political capital by bashing public education.

Walker-Jones made his comments in response to Jindal’s education reform plans that the governor unveiled before the annual meeting of the Jindal-friendly Louisiana Association of Business and Industry (LABI) as opposed to the more appropriate audience of those most affected by the proposed changes: teachers.

And therein, as Willie Shakespeare said, lies the rub.

Unveiling his plan at that particular venue was a touch of arrogance in itself, a breach of protocol. But look here for the real arrogance of this governor: http://gov.louisiana.gov/index.cfm?md=newsroom&tmp=detail&articleID=3197.

Here are some excerpts:

“…We are going to give (local school) districts more flexibility over their federal dollars….(and) We are going to reduce federal reporting requirements….”

One has to wonder if he has run this by the feds yet. It was Earl Long who asked civil rights opponent Leander Perez in the heat of the state’s battle over desegregation more than 50 years ago, “What’re you gonna do now, Leander? The feds got the A-bomb!”

Jindal, in attempting to apply the principle of teacher tenure to a hypothetical company in the private sector, said there is no accountability for job performance and “after three years of this, if they have survived, they are given lifetime job protection. Short of selling drugs in the workplace or beating up one of the business’s clients, they can never be fired.”

Implying that teachers can only be fired for selling drugs at school is arrogance in its purest form—and stupid beyond belief. By his standards, it must be fair to say that now that he has been re-elected, he can only be removed if he sells drugs in the House or Senate chambers. Certainly, that is a far-fetched and most unreasonable analogy—but no more so than his own remarks.

Case in point: “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.”

Does anyone know of a single instance in the history of mankind where someone has been paid for the length of time he or she has been breathing? Anyone? Anyone? Bueller? Bueller? Anyone?

We’re talking sheer arrogance here.

Perhaps Jindal should resign after making such an ass of himself.

In fairness, he did make one accurate comment to LABI: “Our system today often crushes talented teachers and it makes their jobs harder, not easier.”

At least he’s spot-on with that assessment.

Of course Jindal’s education reform proposals are drawn almost exclusively from the American Legislative Exchange Council’s sweeping agenda but it no doubt also draws heavily on a study done by Raj Chetty and John Friedman of Harvard and Jonah Rockoff of Columbia University.

Without going into too much detail, that study concludes that good teachers cause students to get higher test scores, which in turn lead to higher lifetime earnings.

Well, duh. How much was that grant? Bet we could’ve arrived at that conclusion for less.

But wait. Let’s look a bit more closely at the specifics of that study that has become the mantra of reform-minded governors like our own.

“Replacing a poor teacher with an average one would raise a single classroom’s lifetime earnings by about $266,000,” the New York Times quoted the study as saying.

Wow. $266,000? Really?

But let’s break that down a little further. Let’s say for simplicity that the average classroom has 26.6 kids and on average, those kids will become adults who will work, say, from age 25 to age 65. Forty years. So, we have $266,000 divided by 26.6, divided by 40 years. That comes to a whopping….$250 per year per student, about $20 per month or $4.81 per week.

But for all of Jindal’s disdain for teachers—Public Service Commission Chairman Foster Campbell recently opined that someone must have broken Jindal’s pencils when he was in school—and public education, nothing can quite compare to the arrogance, ignorance and convoluted logic of one Alabama state senator.

State Sen. Shadrack McGill (R-Woodville) recently spoke to a prayer breakfast in Fort Payne at which he justified a 62 percent pay raise for legislators while at the same time saying raising teacher pay could lead to less-qualified educators, according to the Fort Payne Times-Journal.

On the face of it, given his Biblical first name and the asinine statement, most readers might reasonably conclude that the story was straight out of the Onion, an on-line parody of news events. But the story is real and the speaker’s remarks were sincere if misinformed, misguided, and laced with idiocy.

The legislative increase, to be fair to McGill, was passed in 2007, before his election. It was approved by voice vote and later in an override of then-Gov. Bob Riley’s veto.

McGill said the pay raise—from $30,710 to $49,500 for legislators’ part time positions—better rewards lawmakers and makes them less susceptible to lobbyist influence.

“That (the old salary) played into the corruption, guys, big time,” he said. “You had your higher-ranking legislators that were connected with the lobbyists making up in the millions of dollars. They weren’t worried about that $30,000 salary they were getting,” he said, adding that legislators have to pay for their expenses out of pocket.

Legislators need “to make enough that (they) can say no, in regards to temptation,” he said.

Well, Mr. McGill, it may come as a surprise to you to know that members of Congress pull in about $180,000 per year and they are still very much susceptible to being swayed by lobbyists. Only a fool would argue that a salary of $49,500 would keep lobbyists at bay.

It may also come as a shock to you to know that we all pay expenses out of pocket—especially teachers, who regularly spend their own money for classroom resources.

For pure audacity, McGill, who home-schools his children, went on to say, “If you double what you’re paying (teachers), you know what’s going to happen? It’s a Biblical principle. If you double a teacher’s pay scale, you’ll attract people who aren’t called to teach.

“And these teachers that are called to teach, regardless of the pay scale, they would teach. It’s just in them to do. It’s the ability that God give ‘em. And there are also some teachers, it wouldn’t matter how much you would pay them, they would still perform to the same capacity.

“If you don’t keep that in balance, you’re going to attract people who are not called, who don’t need to be teaching our children. So, everything has a balance.”

First, of all, Mr. McGill, please direct us to the scripture in the Bible that admonishes us not to increase teacher pay. Please provide us with the specific chapter and verse.

And taking your logic to its ultimate conclusion, preachers should not be paid; it’s a calling. Instead of paying attorneys $250 per hour, they should accept $25 per hour since it’s a calling. And why pay firemen at all? Let ‘em volunteer. Same thing for police officers, judges and social workers.

Oh, and let’s not overlook legislators. It’s a calling, so let them forfeit all pay in exchange for the privilege of serving.

There you have it, folks. The contempt for teachers and public education, simply because they’re easy targets, is the most current and most popular trend in America. So, c’mon, jump on the bandwagon. The kids? They’re just an afterthought. It’s political hay and the harvest is ripe.

But one last thought: if you can read this, don’t forget to thank a teacher.

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“The idea that creating ‘competition’ for low performing schools (that in fact are serving high poverty communities) will somehow force improvement is wrong. It has not been shown to work anywhere in this country. Such a scheme is based on the assumption that low performance is caused by lazy or incompetent teachers and administrators. The reason for low performance is, to paraphrase Carville; It’s the poverty, stupid!”

–Michael Deshotels, executive director of the Louisiana Association of Educators, commenting on Gov. Jindal’s education reform proposals.

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A politically astute friend who shall remain nameless has been quick to challenge last week’s suggestion that Gov. Bobby Jindal may have lost his Midas touch. He described, in so many words, the notion that Jindal’s luck may have been pushed to the breaking point as about as realistic as Newt Gingrich’s chances of capturing the GOP presidential nomination.

“Don’t believe it,” our friend, longtime political observer, cautioned. “The governor got exactly what he wanted with the committee assignments in the House and Senate. Those (who) dared criticize him in the past have been removed from the money committees and banished to Labor or cultural Affairs and other backwater committees.”

Strong words indeed. But he wasn’t finished. “He has a hand-picked Education Committee in both chambers to do his bidding, not to mention the rubber-stamp BESE. And speaking of education, the governor finally announced his agenda for the 2012 session.”

He went on to say of that education plan released by Jindal on Jan. 17 that if people read it carefully and also read between the lines, they will understand that it is nothing more than a blueprint “to destroy public education in Louisiana.”

“If he can pull off even half of what he is proposing for education, it will be the most sweeping changes in the history of public education in Louisiana,” he said. Note that he never said that he thinks the plan is good.

“Teachers are going to be furious,” he said. His (Jindal’s) strategy to drive a wedge between superintendents, principals and school boards is ingenious. Divide and conquer!

“I’m not sure the public will see this plan for what it is: to destroy public education in this state and replace (it) with state-controlled charter schools and the like. I am not in favor of that but I’d say he has set himself up for a lot of success.

“The main problem is the teachers unions are their own worst enemies and I’m not sure they understand what approach they need to take to counteract the governor. If they set themselves up as simply opposed to any change just to be opposed to change, the governor will eat them alive. The public realizes that the education system is broken and they want change. Jindal will use that to get what he wants.”

Never one to be labeled as a one-trick pony, our friend dug the knife in a little deeper with his observations about the flare-up between Jindal, aka Booby Jihad, and Attorney General Buddy Caldwell, a flare-up that sputtered and died a quick death once Caldwell got a quick lesson in political realities.

Caldwell had earlier had the temerity to challenge Jindal’s decision to pay attorneys representing the state in the BP Gulf spill litigation a percentage of any recovery as opposed to an hourly rate favored by Caldwell.

Caldwell, supposedly the state’s top legal expert (excluding judges, who always have the final say), accused Jindal of interfering with his (Caldwell’s) handling of the case. Jindal further outraged Caldwell by signing off on a legal document in which Jindal agreed not to appeal any awards made for legal fees, and Caldwell, who doubles as a part time Elvis impersonator, said so.

You’ll just have to forgive us here, but Jindal thought Caldwell’s Suspicious Mind was Too Much and got All Shook Up. The governor, through an intermediary, sent Caldwell the message that it was all about the Money Honey and by the time it was over, Caldwell was singing Don’t Be Cruel.

Okay, that’s enough of that. In reality, our friend said, “Caldwell forgot a fundamental rule of politics: he who pays the fiddler calls the dance. Caldwell (and most of the other statewide elected officials) thinks he can do what he wants because is independently elected. But he forgot that the governor controls the purse strings (read: agency budget allocations). Oops!’”

Pension Plan Changes Proposed

On Wednesday of this week, Jindal released his plan to overhaul Louisiana’s state employee pension system that would increase retirement contributions for about 54,000 current employees while reducing benefits and extending the eligible retirement age for many of them.

Jindal also wants to move away from the present system for new hires, doing away with the monthly pension check to a lump sum retirement payment based on contributions and earnings. This would abolish the present defined benefits system in favor of a defined contribution one whereby employees no longer would be guaranteed a set monthly retirement payment but instead would make a guaranteed contribution to the pension system with no guarantee of return, much like a 401K program.

Oddly, Jindal’s proposal would apply only to the Louisiana State Employees Retirement System (LASERS), which has an unfunded liability of $6.45 billion. He exempts the state’s other three systems—teachers, school employees and state police. The Teachers Retirement System alone has a debt of $10.8 billion.

He said he prefers to leave teachers and school employees alone for the time being because of proposed educational changes on the horizon.

He said legislation will be pre-filed this week for consideration during the upcoming 85-day legislative session that opens on March 12.

Education Fight Looms

In his press conference last week, Jindal chose to unveil his education plans at the annual meeting of the Louisiana Association of Business and Industry (LABI), a virtual slap in the face to teachers, the group that he should have been addressing. But a virtual slap is probably appropriate considering his penchant for charter schools and virtual schools.

Just what is a virtual school anyway? Does it provide a virtual education? Do graduates get virtual jobs? Do they pay virtual taxes and give virtual campaign contributions?

Jindal, as is his custom, continues to paint all teachers with the same broad brush, a tactic that is patently unfair and grossly inaccurate. He talks about failing schools and poor teachers and giving students—the better students, to be sure—into better schools (read: charters).

To say a student fails because of a poor teacher is not only callous, but stupid. For example, in a class of say, 25 students, there are 23 students from poor economic backgrounds. Still, six of these students excel in classroom work and make top grades. Nineteen make Cs, Ds, and Fs. This same scenario is repeated throughout the school so the school is a failing school and the teachers are labeled as poor teachers and fired under Jindal’s plan.

But how does one explain those six students in that class who excel? Did they make top grades without the benefit of good teaching? No, Mr. Jindal, they did not, any more than the nineteen did poorly because of bad teaching. All 25 students were exposed to the same classroom material, had access to the same textbooks and took the same tests.

In my own school, Ruston High School, I sat in the same classroom with students who slept during class, never turned in homework assignments, never participated in classroom discussions, and consistently made D’s and F’s on tests. I also sat in the same classroom with Joel Tellinghusen who would go on to pioneer laser surgery, and Bill Higgs who would one day become an acclaimed heart surgeon in Mobile, Alabama. A couple of years ahead of me was Patricia Wells who would go on to a stellar career as a soprano with the Metropolitan Opera.

So, were the teachers at Ruston High School graded on the basis of those who did poorly or on the basis of the Joel Tellinghusens, Bill Higgs and Pat Wells? We will never know because that absurd method of grading schools wasn’t around then. They just let teachers teach. Wow. What a concept.

When kids come from poor economic backgrounds and parents take little or no interest in the children’s educational progress, kids generally reflect those demographics with poor grades. Motivated students listen to teachers, read assignments, do homework, and do well on tests. Period.

Yet, we have an outfit called Educate Now in this state that lists schools in New Orleans only by whether or not they are Recovery School District (RSD) schools or voucher-accepting private schools. The organization then lists the percentage of students who score above basic on English and math in grades 3-5.

That’s it. There is no attempt to take into account students’ prior achievement, no consideration of demographic variables like economic background, and no consideration of whether or not students are eligible for vouchers only if they had been attending a failing public school.

In short, there is no statistical analysis whatsoever—a pitiful method of judging the merit of voucher schools.

“The governor wants the new untested teacher evaluation program to form the basis for firing or demoting large numbers of teachers based on student test scores,” said Michael Deshotels, a retired educator.

“Never have I seen such a misguided and wrong-headed attempt to implement change in our educational system as was announced by Gov. Jindal on Tuesday,” he said. “If you study the governor’s proposals you can only come to the conclusion that he believes that the teaching profession in Louisiana is rife with incompetent or lazy teachers and administrators, and that if we simply fire and replace them our students will magically start doing much better on the state tests. Almost everything in the governor’s plan is based on this incorrect assumption,” he said.

Ron Clark, a teacher who started his own academy in Atlanta, had an interesting perspective on teaching and so-called failing schools: “It’s usually the best teachers who are giving the lowest grades because they are raising expectations. The truth is, a lot of times it’s the bad teachers who give the easiest grades because they know by giving good grades everyone will leave them alone. Parents will say, ‘My child has a great teacher! He made all A’s this year’ and the teacher (parents) are complaining about is actually the one that is providing the best education.”

The problem with Jindal’s plan for education, says Deshotels, is that “it is based upon an untested value-added model similar to one that is already failing in Tennessee and New York. In Louisiana the two chief architects of the new value-added model have resigned from their roles in the program, passing this potential monster on to other staff,” he added.

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Here’s a news flash: if you are Chas Roemer and you never inquire into the propriety of voting on issues that directly affect the financial well-being of your sister, you will most likely never be challenged for your obvious conflict of interest.

It’s all part of the regulations of the State Board of Ethics, regulations that Gov. Bobby Jindal holds up as the “gold standard” of ethics whenever he travels out of state for fund raisers or book promotions, which is quite often.

Roemer is a member of the Board of Elementary and Secondary Education (BESE) from District 6, which comprises 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 Louisiana Public Charter Schools.

The Board of Ethics, on April 21, 2010, issued a ruling on Docket No. 2010-222 concerning Ms. Shirley’s appearing before BESE on behalf of the association.

In that ruling, the board concluded that Ms. Shirley was prohibited from:

• appearing before BESE;

• representing the association in matters before BESE;

• discussing with individual BESE members matters or positions of the association, and

• interacting with the staff of the Department of Education on matters under the jurisdiction of BESE.

That opinion was a clarification of an earlier ruling issued on Feb. 15, 2008, in response to an inquiry from Chas Roemer. Because Roemer did not request an opinion on the legality of his voting on charter school issues, the one-page opinion did not address that issue.

Because his practice of voting on charter school matters has never been addressed, Roemer has continued to not only vote on those matters but has on occasion even made motions or offered seconds to motions concerning charter schools.

Louisiana Voice on Nov. 2 raised that question along with that of the legality of Jay Guillot’s serving on the board in light of state contracts worth nearly $17 million that his company, Hunt-Guillot & Associates, holds.

It turns out, apparently, that a Louisiana citizen/taxpayer/voter is unqualified to question the ethics of any state elected official. LouisianaVoice’s owner was deemed by the board to have “no legal standing” to seek an ethics ruling on either Guillot or Roemer.

Several attempts were made to contact ethics board staff attorney Stacy Barker, to whom the LouisianaVoice inquiry was assigned but she never returned phone calls. She took our call only after a fake name was given to the receptionist and thus confronted, said the board’s rules state that only someone who is directly affected by an action may seek an ethics determination.

Here are the verbatim procedures for requesting advisory opinions as contained on the Board of Ethics web page:

“Requests for advisory opinions must be in writing, signed and submitted by a person or governmental agency with a demonstrable and objective interest in the opinion requested (emphasis ours). The Board does not render advisory opinions with respect to past conduct, but can provide crucial advice on how to avoid problems in the future.”

The procedure for filing complaints is even more restrictive, requiring a vote of at least eight members to refer a complaint to investigation. A sworn complaint before a notary may be referred to investigation by a simple majority of the board.

The board is comprised of 11 members, seven of whom are appointed by the governor. Two each are elected by the House and Senate. On the surface, it would appear rather difficult to muster an investigation what with the governor holding a solid majority on the board.

If one of his appointees even acts like he is entertaining thoughts of independence, Jindal can pull a Donald Trump and fire them or at least apply sufficient pressure so as to force a resignation. That would not be an unprecedented move; he replaced four black members of the Board of Regents with white males a year ago. And one of his BESE appointees, Tammie McDaniel of Oak Ridge, resigned in February of 2010 after first resisting Jindal’s efforts to force her out.

Apparently one who resides in Roemer’s BESE district and who is concerned for the public schools that his grandchildren attend, is not qualified to seek an ethics ruling. It seems that only someone named Roemer or Shirley has a “legal standing” to request an opinion.

Don’t hold your breath for that request.

If this is an example of what Jindal calls a “gold standard” of state ethics, then the joke is on all of us.

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“If I’d been required to take those two tests when I was a 10th-grader, my life would almost certainly have been very different.”

–Orange County (Florida) School Board Member Rick Roach, who holds two master’s degrees, after taking–and failing–the Florida Comprehensive Assessment Test (FCAT).

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