Wednesday, July 14, 2010

Delivered at the 2010 Representative Assembly from Diane Ravich author of The Death and Life of the Great American School System

Thank you, John Wilson. Thank you, all my friends in the NEA. Thanks to all my new friends in Colorado and Massachusetts and California . Thank you so much, California . The first time I spoke about my book was before the NEA scholars group in October. But the first time I went public was in San Jose , California . Thank you.

Let me first thank you so sincerely for this honor. I accept it with humility, with gratitude, and with respect for the more than three million educators that it represents.

Next, I would especially like to thank Camille Zombro of San Diego . Without Camille and without her help and the help of teachers in San Diego , I could not have written chapter 4 of the book. Read it and you will see why.

Well, it's kind of amazing that this convention is being held in New Orleans . I was, just a few minutes ago, interviewed by documentary filmmakers who said to me, "Well, don't you know that New Orleans is proving a new model?" The new model consists of wiping out public education and firing the unions, and it's spreading across the country. And I said, "God forbid." I pointed out to them what we all used to know, which is that public education is the backbone of this democracy, and we cannot turn it over to privateers.

Since my book appeared in early March, I have started out on what I thought would be a conventional book tour, but it really has turned into a whistle-stop campaign. I have been to 40 different cities and districts. I have another 40 planned starting in September. I talked to union members, to school board members, to administrators, to left-wing think tanks, to right-wing think tanks. I have met with high-level White House staff. I have met with about 40 members of Congress. I would say that I have met so far about 20,000 teachers, and after today I think I am going to increase it to 30,000.

And in all of this time, aside from the right-wing think tanks, I haven't seen met a single teacher who likes what's happening? I haven't met a single teacher who thinks that No Child Left Behind has been a success. I haven't met a single teacher who thinks that Race to the Top is a good idea.

Wherever I went, I met teachers who understood that there is a rising tide of hostility to teachers, to the teaching profession, and to teachers' unions. You see it almost daily in the national media, in Newsweek magazine with its dreadful cover story about firing teachers, and Time magazine with awful columns, and in the New York Times and the Washington Post and all of the major media.

And as I talk to teachers, by the end of my talk, I hear the same questions again and again: What can we do? How can we stop the attacks on teachers and on the teaching profession? Why is the media demonizing unions? Why does the media constantly criticize public schools? And why does it lionize charter schools? Why is Arne Duncan campaigning with Newt Gingrich? Why has the Obama Administration built its education agenda on the punitive failed strategies of No Child Left Behind?

And teachers want to know, as you want to know, who will stand up for public schools and their teachers? At every appearance that I've made, teachers would come up to me afterward and they would say to me, "Stand up for us. Speak for us. Be our voice wherever you go." And I promised that I would, and I have.

I promised to speak out against No Child Left Behind. It's a disaster. It has turned our schools into testing factories. Its requirement that 100 percent of students will be proficient by the year 2014 is totally unrealistic. Any teacher could have told them that. Thousands and thousands of schools have been stigmatized as failing schools because they could not reach a goal that no state, no nation, and no district has ever reached. By setting an impossible goal, No Child Left Behind has delegitimized public education and created a rhetoric of failure and paved the way for privatization.

I will continue to speak out against high-stakes testing. It undermines education. High-stakes testing promotes cheating, gaming the system, teaching to bad tests, narrowing the curriculum. High-stakes testing means less time for the arts, less time for history or geography or civics or foreign languages or science.

We see schools across America dropping physical education. We see them dropping music. We see them dropping their arts programs, their science programs, all in pursuit of higher test scores. This is not good education.

I have been told by some people in the Obama Administration that the way to stop the narrowing of the curriculum is to test everything. In fact, the chancellor in Washington , D.C. , the other day announced she plans to do exactly that. That means less time for instruction, more time for testing, and a worse education for everyone.

In speaking out, I have consistently warned about the riskiness of school choice. Its benefits are vastly overstated. It undercuts public education by enabling charter schools to skim the best students in poor communities. As our society pursues these policies, we will develop a bifurcated system, one for the haves, another for the have-nots, and politicians have the nerve to boast about such an outcome.

Public schools, as I said before, are a cornerstone of our democratic society. If we chip away at support for them, we erode communal responsibility for a vital public institution.

Teachers are rightly worried about the Race to the Top. I pledged to keep asking again and again why a Race to the Top replaced equal educational opportunity. Equal educational opportunity is the American way. The race will have a few winners and a lot of losers. That's what a race means.

Race to the Top encourages states to increase the number of privately managed charters, to pass laws to evaluate teachers by test scores, to promote merit pay, and to agree to close or privatize schools with low scores or to fire all or part of their staff. All of this is wrong.

And thank you for passing a resolution expressing no confidence in Race to the Top. Why expand the number of charters when research shows that on average they don't get better results than regular public schools? Last year, a major evaluation showed that one out of every six charters will get better results, five out of six charters will get no different results or worse results than the regular public schools. A report released just a couple of weeks ago by Mathematica Policy Research once again shows charter middle schools do not get better results than regular public middle schools.

The National Assessment of Educational Progress, on whose board I served for seven years, has tested charter schools since 2003. In 2003, 2005, 2007 and 2009, charter schools were compared to regular public schools and have never shown an advantage over regular public schools. Charter schools, contrary to Bill Gates, are not more innovative than regular public schools. The business model and methods of charter schools is this - longer school days, longer hours, longer weeks, and about 95 percent of charter schools are non-union.

Teachers are hired and fired at will. Teachers work 50, 60, 70 hours a week. They are expected to burn out after two or three years when they can be replaced. No pension worries, no high salaries. This is not a template for American education.

If we pursue the path of privatization and deregulation, we better keep in mind what happened with the stock market in 2008. And to those who tout the benefits of vouchers and charters, I want you to point out this example to them, of Milwaukee , Wisconsin . Milwaukee has had charters and vouchers now for almost 20 years. Twenty years with vouchers, almost 20 years with charters.

They have seen a steadily declining enrollment in the public schools, and meanwhile research now shows that African-American students in Milwaukee, the supposed beneficiary of all of this choice, have test scores on the National Assessment of Educational Progress, test scores that are below those of their African-American peers in Mississippi and Louisiana.

There was no rising tide. Choice promoted no rising tide, and no boats were lifted. While all of this money was invested in choice, there were no benefits to the students.

The Race to the Top plan to use test scores to evaluate teachers is a very bad idea, badly implemented. Legislatures should not decide how to evaluate teachers.

SB6 was wrong in Florida . Thank you to the Florida Education Association and to all the parents and friends who stood with you who defeated that pernicious piece of legislation. And thanks to you for persuading Governor Charlie Crist to do the right thing by vetoing it. Now you have got to make sure that whoever is the next governor will veto it again if it dares to come back again.

191 is wrong in Colorado . Sorry to say that it was passed. It was signed into law, and the teachers may stand to be fired because the test scores didn't go up consistently. And these are matters that are, in many cases, beyond their control. Teachers should be judged by professional standards and not by a political process. Research does not support evaluating teachers by test scores.

Students are not randomly assigned to classes. Teachers' so-called effectiveness fluctuates depending on which students happen to be in a teacher's class. The single most reliable predictor of test scores is poverty, and poverty, in turn, is correlated to student attendance, to family support, and to the school's resources.

And perhaps we should begin demanding that school districts be held accountable for providing the resources that schools need. Just like No Child Left Behind, Race to the Top requires and pressures districts to close low-performing schools. The overwhelming majority of low-performing schools enroll students in poverty and students who don't speak English and students who are homeless and transient. Very often, these schools have heroic staffs who are working with society's neediest children. These teachers deserve praise, not pink slips. Closing schools weakens communities. It's not a good idea to weaken communities. No school was ever improved by closing it.

You know, a lot of teachers don't pay attention to the national scene. They are busy teaching kids. They don't pay attention to what's happening in Washington . But when the Central Falls staff, the entire staff, was fired without a single teacher having an evaluation, the message went out that there is a new game of punishing teachers. And the message also went out when this was endorsed by Secretary Duncan and then reaffirmed by President Obama. This is not a good message.

We should thank our teachers, not fire them, not threaten them, and not close their schools.

Merit pay is another of the useless fads of our time. Merit pay has nothing to do with education. It destroys teamwork. It incentivizes teachers to compete with each other for money instead of collaborating for each other for the benefit of children.

Teachers need to share what they know and work towards one common goal - helping children and young people grow and develop. Merit pay will promote teaching to not very good tests. It may or may not improve scores, but it definitely will not improve education.

I have spoken out repeatedly to defend the right of teachers to join unions for their protection and the protection of the teaching profession. Teachers have a right to a collective voice in the political process. It's the American way. I don't see the Wall Street Journal or the Washington Post or the pundits complaining about the charter school lobby. I don't see them complaining about the investment bankers lobby, or any other group that speaks on behalf of its members. Only teachers' unions are demonized these days.

Currently, there is a campaign underway to eliminate tenure and seniority. To remove job protections from senior teachers would destroy the profession. Supervisors will save money by firing the most expensive teachers. Imagine a hospital staffed by residents and interns with no doctors. Bad idea.

Instead of the current wave of so-called reforms, we should ask ourselves how to deliver on our belief that every student in this nation should learn not only basic skills, but should have a curriculum that includes the arts, history, geography, civics, foreign languages, mathematics, science, physical education, and health. But instead of this kind of rich curriculum, all they are getting is a heavy dose of high-stakes testing and endless test preparation. And as the stakes increase for teachers and schools, there will be more emphasis on test prep and not what children need.

Policymakers have been far too silent about the role of the family. Teachers know that education begins at home, and that when families take responsibility, students are likely to arrive in school ready to learn. We need, not a Race to the Top, but a commitment to provide greater resources for those children who are in the greatest need. Schools and school districts continue to vary dramatically in their access to resources. The role of the federal government in education is to level the playing field, not to set off a competition for money. Nor do we expect the federal government to tell states and districts how to reform themselves based on the Chicago experience.

Around the world, those nations that are successful recognize that the best way to improve school is to improve the education profession. We need expert teachers, not a steady influx of novices.

We need experienced principals who are themselves master teachers. We do not need a wave of newcomers who took a course called "How to be a principal." We need superintendents who are wise and experienced educators, not lawyers and businessmen.

The current so-called reform movement is pushing bad ideas. No high-performing nation in the world is privatizing its schools, closing its schools, and inflicting high-stakes testing on every subject on its children. The current reform movement wants to end tenure and seniority, to weaken the teaching profession, to silence teachers' unions, to privatize large sectors of public education. Don't let it happen!

So here's a thought for NEA. Print up four million bumper stickers that say, "I am a public schoolteacher, and I vote - and so does my family."

Do not support any political figure who opposes public education. Stand up to the attacks on public education. Don't give them half a loaf, because they will be back the next day for another slice, and the day after that for another slice.

Don't compromise. Stand up for teachers. Stand up public education, and say "No mas, no mas." Thank you.


Sunday, June 27, 2010

Race to the Top

Tweet from DianeRavitch
I have traveled the country since early March; spoke to maybe 20,000 teachers. None happy with "Race." In DC, they don't believe it.

This has been my experience also. Both of my sons are involved in politics and education. When I talk to their friends and colleagues who work in Washington DC they are genuinely surprised that I am unhappy with Obama's education policy and Race to the Top. As loud as we feel like we are screaming, we need to be louder!

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

emergency session for RTTT

The governor has called an emergency session and vowed to rush through California's application for Race to the Top funds by December 2. The first round of funding is in January. The teacher's union has worked hard to get the language changed, but it is still a sad day for education. I feel defeated and disappointed in our president and his choice for secretary of education. I will have to find something else to be thankful for tomorrow.

Monday, November 2, 2009

Crucial Turning Point - A Call to Action

Word on the street is that there is a buzz around the state capital and our legislators are BEGINNING to hear that the Race to the Top may not be a good thing. Now is the time to let our voices be heard, while they are listening. CTA has a link on their website or you can contact your representative yourself and let them know that lots of us in education DO NOT WANT California to enter the Race to the Top. Let our voices be heard!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

the race becomes a walk

California Teachers Association (CTA) has claimed responsibility for slowing down the Race to the Top. According to them all of the emails and testimony before the legislators as well as conversations with Arne Duncan have caused the Feds to slow down the process and rewrite some of the qualification requirements. Which is funny because I have heard that is not even completely written yet. Anyway this seems like good news. I hope it is.....

Saturday, October 17, 2009

The Silver Lining

OK California, there is always a silver lining in the Golden State. It has taken awhile, but I have found one. Although the whole merit pay for teachers is a horrible idea, the door is open and now we have to rely on our union to negotiate a reasonable way to handle it.

The silver lining is this:
With this issue removed we, as educators, can talk about the other problems in the Race to the Top and maybe people will listen to us. When the public hears "merit pay" I think they assume that we are protecting ourselves and they stop listening. Now, with that off of the table the other issues can be examined. The biggest problem with the Race to the Top is that we don't even know what it is yet. And what we do know is not good. The Secretary of Education (who, remember has never taught) has set out the following criteria:
1. Turn around low performing schools by firing the staff and putting in a new one. Does this sound similar to No Child Left Behind, maybe exactly like NCLB?????
2. No limit to the number of charter schools a district can have. So now parents who are involved can put their kids in a charter school (where parent involvement is required and students can be kicked out) and the neighborhood schools will be left with all of those kids whose parents don't care. Where would you rather teach? This sounds like a great way to help the disadvantaged.
3. Allow parents from low performing schools to send their children to a school of their choice. Again, No Child Left Behind. Now that low performing school is penalized monetarily for their test scores, is losing API money AND has to pay for the bus to send their best students somewhere else.
4. The money that you hear about is divided among all of the states that qualify. Half of it is mandated to set up a new data system to track those test scores and pay a person to oversee the system. The rest of the money (not much) is left for the governor to decide how to spend. You know, the one that just cut every single penny for education that he could get his hands on. Some of it by changing state laws that were voted in?????

This is what we have so far. Much of the criteria for the Race to the Top is either not even written yet, or has not been shared with legislators. So let's enter into something blindly for a few pennies..... The CTA has called it "budget dust".