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Newswire – November 11, 2019

FREEDOM ISN’T FREE.

We offer this special Veterans “Day” edition of Newswire, because it shouldn’t just be about a day. The federal holiday was celebrated differently from place to place, but how many of the thousands of schools that were open took time to explore what Veteran’s Day is all about. It’s not too late, of course, to teach and to learn. So this Newswire is dedicated to the millions of men and women who have worn our country’s uniform, especially the nearly 1,400,000 who perished while serving.

CER’s Newswire is about achieving educational excellence, and it occurs to us that the pursuit of that would not be possible but for the sacrifices of our armed forces in defending all of our freedoms.

So join us in taking a break from the education battles and in saying

THANK YOU AND GOD BLESS YOU

 

THE ARMY BEFORE THE ARMY.  Before the colonies won independence, the soldiers serving in the cause of freedom were known as “Continentals.” One of their first big tests came in August of 1776 when the British army landed on Long Island. George Washington’s general order of August 23rd said in part:

“The enemy have now landed on Long Island, and the hour is fast approaching, on which the honor and success of this army, and the safety of our bleeding country depend. ...And if this army will but emulate and imitate their brave countrymen in other parts of America, there is no doubt they will, by a glorious victory, save their country and acquire themselves immortal honor.”

The rest of the story and resources that Educators will find instrumental come from the Library of Congress.

PRESIDENT ABRAHAM LINCOLN gave the best remembered address honoring bravery in uniform at the dedication of Gettysburg cemetery. His words still resonate. After you read this, go back and read the full speech with your family, your school, your kids.

“...It is rather for us to be here dedicated to the great task remaining before us -- that from these honored dead we take increased devotion to that cause for which they gave the last full measure of devotion -- that we here highly resolve that these dead shall not have died in vain -- that this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom -- and that government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”

 

WORLD WAR I was America’s next large conflict. Perhaps the most moving commemoration of soldiers in that battle was actually written by a Canadian physician who also served in the Canadian Army.  His poem “In Flanders Fields” is considered a universal tribute, and is the reason that the red poppy is still used to symbolize support for veterans.

 
 

FRANKLIN ROOSEVELT was often eloquent, yet never more so than on June 6, 1944, when he addressed the nation to inform it of “the largest amphibious invasion force in history massed in the waters of the English Channel,” the D-Day landings.

“...in this poignant moment hour, I ask you to join with me in prayer:

“Almighty God: Our sons, pride of our Nation, this day have set upon a mighty endeavor, a struggle to preserve our Republic, our religion, and our civilization, and to set free a suffering humanity. Lead them straight and true; give strength to their arms, stoutness to their hearts, steadfastness in their faith...O Lord, give us faith. Give us faith in Thee; faith in our sons; faith in each other; faith in our united crusade…With Thy blessing, we shall prevail over the unholy forces of our enemy. Thy will be done, Almighty God.”

 

THE BOYS OF POINTE DU HOC. President Ronald Reagan’s speech on the 40th anniversary of D-Day to its surviving heroes and dignitaries, is legendary. Watch it for yourself

“...These are the boys of Pointe du Hoc. These are the men who took the cliffs. These are the champions who helped free a continent. These are the heroes who helped end a war. Gentlemen, I look at you and I think of the words of Stephen Spender's poem. You are men who in your ``lives fought for life . . . and left the vivid air signed with your honor.''

 

COMMEMORATE THE HOLIDAY. REMEMBER THOSE IT HONORS 

Source: US Army

 

 
 
 

Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education. We’re always delighted to hear from our readers...suggestions, questions and even the occasional complaint!

 

Newswire – November 5, 2019

US SCORES DROP AGAIN. The results of the 2019 National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) are nothing short of SHOCKING.  Scores in 4th and 8th grade reading math either declined or flatlined for most groups. Proficiency on the Nation's Report Card is defined as the ability to “demonstrate solid academic performance and competency over challenging subject matter.” The fact that more than half of American Students are performing below the Proficient Level is a travesty. Only 35 percent of 4th grade and 34 percent of 8th grade students performed at or above the proficient level in NAEP reading, and 41 percent of 4th grade and 34 percent of 8th grade students performed at or above the proficient level in NAEP math,” and that’s not reflecting the declining performance of historically low performers, precisely the students we should worry the most about. In what world are these acceptable results?

STATE BY STATE the numbers are disheartening at best.   We could fill books with words of exasperation from around the country about the numbers, but we’ll share just this one from Nevada Action for School Options, which points out that forget proficiency, more than a third of their kids are below BASIC competency in core subjects!  “For eighth grade students, scoring at “below basic” levels on NAEP is usually considered a distressing predictor that these students will fail to graduate high school on time.”  Oh education establishment?  Is anyone paying attention? 

PARENTS ARE FED UP.   Just one example among hundreds  courtesy of Chris “Citizen Ed” Stewart whose edupost.org brings what’s real to what’s wrong. These Nashville mothers and parents are fed up with no action from leaders whose zip code “boasts” some of the highest rates of incarceration in the nation.

Source: educationpost.org | Taneesha Peeples

 

MISS VIRGINIA GETS IT.  Virginia Walden Ford who became a national leader for educational options and the subject upon which the recently released motion picture Miss Virginia is based called the results “a wake up call about the urgent need to expand school choice.” The Nashville parents no doubt agree. 

WILL BETO – ONCE AGAIN – ALSO GET IT? A long time ago in a galaxy far, far away – well actually just a couple of years ago in Texas – Beto O’Rourke was a strong defender of charter schools while a Congressman from El Paso. Alas he sacrificed his beliefs on the altar of politics when he ran for President, changing his tune to be a faithful parrot for the unions.  Now that he has more time to spend at home, let’s hope he gets some instruction from his wife. Amy O’Rourke is a former charter school leader and currently sits on the board of CREED, a local education reform group that among other things supports expanding charter schools in El Paso. Beto, you should always remember that Mothers Knows Best! 

MICHIGAN’S GOVERNOR DOESN’T GET IT. She vetoed a legislative increase in funding for charters that doesn’t even bring them to parity, though it would have brought them closer to having what tax paying families who choose charters want for their kids - equity and results.  Just consider that students in the Motor City have scored the worst in the country among 27 urban districts rated by the NAEP.  Meanwhile, desperate for options, 46% of Detroit students attend charters that Governor Whitmer refuses to support.

AND DETROIT CHARTERS ARE AMONG THE 12 HIGHEST SCORING HIGH SCHOOLS IN THE CITY

LAKER STAR CREDITS HIS CHARTER.  L.A. Laker star Anthony Davis gives credit for his success to Perspectives Charter School in Chicago. If you’re looking for a feel-good, real life story, this is it.  The last sentence sums it up, “Davis is the Lakers’ next great hope, thousands of miles from where his playing days started, at a little school that didn’t even have a gym.” All because his low income parents had the freedom to choose what they thought was best for their child.  What a concept.

 
 
 
 

Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education. We’re always delighted to hear from our readers...suggestions, questions and even the occasional complaint!

 

Statement on Shocking Education Report

Assessment Finds Majority of U.S. Students Have Declined in Core Subjects

 

WASHINGTON D.C. (10.30.19) — The Center for Education Reform (CER), a national leader in the fight to achieve educational excellence in the United States, today issued a statement by CER founder and CEO Jeanne Allen regarding the new scores revealed this morning by the National Center on Education Statistics in the annual National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP), also known as “The Nation’s Report Card.” 

Key insights from the NAEP report include the following:

  • READING PROFICIENCY: National results have dropped in both grades, with the lowest performing students doing worse

  • MATHEMATICS PROFICIENCY: National results are mixed. Most states remained flat; National 4th grade scores rose 1 point, while 8th grade dropped a point, with the lowest performing students doing worse

  • White, black, Hispanic, and American Indian/Alaskan Native eighth-grade students all scored lower on reading in 2019 than in 2017

Statement by CER Founder & CEO Jeanne Allen:

“The NAEP proficiency scores announced today should be shocking to every family, employer, and policymaker. They demonstrate that the vast majority of our nation’s education systems are simply failing to meet the very basic educational needs of American students, threatening their dreams for the future.

“But while the nation’s overall scores are either flat or declined, there is extraordinary news from the nation’s capital, where the federal government and city leaders worked together to ensure that parents and educators have the power to design, manage, and innovate their schools.

“In DC where a majority of students are no longer confined to their zip code and almost 50% of students are in charter schools, students showed gains in almost every category. Student proficiency has now shown steady and consistent improvement since 1996, when the District’s charter school law first went into effect.

“Once ranked at or near the bottom by every measure, the District’s average is now close to the national average, and achievement in reading and math continues to grow at higher rates than almost every other jurisdiction, particularly among traditionally low-performing students.  

“Combined with data from states such as Arizona and Florida where a prevalence of educational options exist, this initial look at the NAEP data suggests that academic proficiency scores rise where educational choices are robust.

“But even this progress is not good enough. We need to fight to end the flatline of failure by removing the bureaucratic burdens and failed policies that keep students from getting the education they deserve. We need to fight to end the absurdity of systems like Chicago Public Schools, where for 10 days students have been kept out of school because adults think the system is about them. This is surreal and needs to stop. No longer should students’ futures be determined by their zip codes, anywhere.

“In equally shocking news, ACT released a report, The Condition of College & Career Readiness, showing that college preparedness in math and English are the lowest they’ve been in 15 years. ACT is one of the best barometers of student progress, and our college-bound kids are doing worse than they have in the ACT’s history. This report, along with the NAEP report, show a steady decline in proficiency, a future no one wants to see for the next generation of Americans.

“As CER Chairman Michael Moe argues, every individual should have the opportunity to participate in the future, and the path to that future is education. Without it, a bright future for millions is in peril.

“We need everyone involved in the education journey – parents, teachers, and students alike – to join us in this battle.”

 

Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education.

Newswire – October 29, 2019

POST NAILS IT. If you’ve been following Senator Warren’s attack on education opportunity, you’ll want to read the Washington Post today. People from all sides agree that  "Children are the losers in Edlizabeth Warren's plan for charter schools".

Speaking of which, if you didn’t see our CEO’s Fox & Friends appearance on same, you’ll want to watch it now.

DC OPPORTUNITY CRISIS. Shouldn’t everyone know by now that when kids cannot learn, we have a crisis?  Join us in doing something about it. If you’re within the D.C. metro area on November 14th you’ll want to attend A Major Citywide Call to Action in Support of DC’s Public Charter Schools, brought to you by the D.C. Association of Chartered Public Schools’ #EndtheList initiative and hundreds of schools, parents and DC leaders. The purpose is to open the doors and unlock opportunity for thousands of waitlisted families who could benefit from expanded offerings if the Mayor and city officials would just free up unused buildings. The first major coming together of all parties since the DC charter movement began, come hear charter school leaders, city officials, and special guests like Louisiana Senator Mary Landrieu ('97–'15) and civil rights activist Dr. Howard Fuller. Where? Atrium Hall of the Ronald Reagan Building, 1300 Pennsylvania Ave, NW, starting at 8:30 AM.  Rally round the flag of education opportunity. Be there.

STUDENT CONTEST.  More than $20,000 in prize money will be given out as part of the DC Public Charter School Student Excellence Competition held in conjunction with the above mentioned Call to Action. More than 100 students from 34 schools submitted artwork, essays, poems or music documenting what their charter school means to them. During the event, students will learn the winners, receive their prizes and their submissions will be on display at the Student Excellence Showcase. Additionally, a special cash award will go to the school with the largest number of attendees. Dozens of schools will be out in force to cheer on their friends. Join them. Charter schools can still RSVP to attend here. Buses provided for any school communities that need transportation.

IT’S NOT PROGRESSIVE TO PUNISH THE KIDS. Yet that is exactly what the Chicago Teachers' Union – “progressive” to a fault, and we do mean fault – is doing. As the strike nears the end of its second week, Chicago’s very progressive, pro-union Mayor Lori Lightfoot expressed her frustration that the CTU won't take "yes" for an answer. What gives? Under the city’s offer, the average Chicago teacher will see a $100,000 salary by the end of the contract’s lifespan. The deal breaker is the City’s contention that the CTU plan would cost the city $100 million that it doesn’t have. Meanwhile, Chicago’s 350,000 students fall further and further behind – apparently an unimportant afterthought to the CTU. All might want to read about the latest crisis resulting from overly-generous contracts agreed to under duress by school districts across the country that are causing hundreds of employee layoffs to keep the districts “solvent” – and then only in the most generous definition of that term.

NAEP RELEASE TOMORROW might give CTU pause to consider their stalling in accepting Mayor Lightfoot’s generous offer. The report on 2018 math and reading assessments from the “National Assessment of Educational Progress” (NAEP) on October 30th is likely to show declines in cities that have done nothing transformative to turn around failing schools.  The day-before-Halloween release might be apropos for this news, as the NAEP just delivers the hard facts of the progress, or lack thereof, for all states and most school districts and some of the results will most certainly be ghoulish.  CER’s rundown on prior year data is a handy review of what the NAEP covers and what the numbers mean. We’ll have a full NAEP rundown next week.

THE RIGHT WAY TO GET PERSONAL. Quick - what exactly does “personalized learning” mean?  Beyond the obvious that each child is an individual, how do educators get the most out of their students through such a regimen? What kind of person would write a “love letter to educators? Answers and many more insights for parents and students are discussed in this week’s Reality Check with Jeanne Allen podcast with guest Diane Tavenner, co-founder and CEO of Summit Public Schools.  You’ll find Diane’s insights engaging and thought provoking.

 
 

BLAINE BIGOTRY UPDATE.  Meet the xenophobe whose legacy will be reviewed for constitutionality (we think it’s not) in the Supreme Court this winter. A positive ruling in the case Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenuewould invalidate the odious, anti-Catholic “Blaine Amendments” currently in effect in 37 states. We’re digging into the dark side of a man for whom the amendments are named. Republican James G. Blaine is best known for his campaign’s use of “rum, romanism and rebellion” to appeal to non-Catholic voters, as well as anti-Chinese immigration laws to appeal to xenophobes of all stripes. A political satire magazine of the time, “Puck” magazine illustrated Blaine’s pomposity in its cartoons many times. Take a peek at one of the best below.

 
 
 

Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education. We’re always delighted to hear from our readers...suggestions, questions and even the occasional complaint!

 

Fox & Friends October 23, 2019

CER IN THE NEWS
Fox & Friends
October 23, 2019

 
CER Founder & CEO Jeanne Allen appeared on Fox & Friends for a segment on Elizabeth Warren's EdReform plan that wrongly attacks Charter Schools & puts special interests over parents’ rights.‬ Read her article from the Washington Examiner here.

Elizabeth Warren’s old-school education plan is a teachers’ union dream

CER IN THE NEWS
Washington Examiner
October 22, 2019

Elizabeth Warren issued a stark return to the past in her education plan released Monday. Much anticipated, the plan is more than reminiscent of the old initiatives that led the country to a massive decline in educational attainment that we’ve only recently begun to reverse.

Her leading supporters in the teachers' unions cheered. Randi Weingarten of the militant American Federation of Teachers called the plan boosting federal involvement in education and attacking charter schools “transformational.” Her praise is being rewarded with a visit by Warren to the Chicago picket lines where hundreds of public school teachers were forced to strike and 300,000 students have no choice but to be out of school.

But more than 95% of charter school teachers are not part of unions and they will not strike. Charter schools are public schools that are free from the oppressive bureaucracy that caused U.S. education to go from the envy of the world to near last place in virtually all international assessments. They give parents a choice over schools that are diverse in design, educational program, size, focus, and location.

Charter schools introduced the concept of making public education responsive and accountable to its constituents, requiring schools to attract families, rather than families having no choice but to attend their zoned public school.

Freedom and performance-based accountability are the hallmarks of charter schools, and those attributes were quickly copied by open-minded public school leadership who realized if they didn’t change, they’d go out of business.

Even Warren in 2003 recognized the ill fate of children whose families have no options when she endorsed not just public forms of school choice like charter schools but even more expansive choice for private schools. “Fully funded vouchers,” she said, “would relieve parents from the terrible choice of leaving their kids in lousy schools or bankrupting themselves to escape those schools.”

One would think that in the ensuing 16 years she would have seen first-hand how right she was, and that cities from Los Angeles to Washington to Boston have actually been transformed by new, innovative education models.

Harvard University professor Thomas Kane found that amid the empirical progress made by charter schools in Massachusetts just over one year, “the oversubscribed charter schools in the Boston area are closing one half of the Black-White achievement gap in math and roughly one fifth of the Black-White achievement gap in English.”

But no. Warren wants those schools to go out of business. Those charter schools have given low-income children opportunities for success their parents never would be able to afford and drawn middle-class families back to public education and communities they once fled. Warren’s plan takes us backward, to a time when our education system was described by the National Commission on Excellence in Education as a mile wide and an inch deep.”

“We might well have viewed it as an act of war,” said the same report in documenting the educational mediocrity of the day.

Warren says we need to investigate and regulate the very charter schools that turned mediocrity on its head. She says they need to be part of the failed district system, unionized and that we need to double the amount of federal funds we spend on education — to what end, we don’t know. Less than 50% of federal money ever actually reaches schools, and of that most doesn’t make it to the classroom, but that’s another article altogether.

How about investigating why the greatest country on earth still forces 80% of children to attend a public school based on their zip code, whether it’s working for them, whether it’s safe, whether it has failed, whether there is corruption — just because that’s the way we’ve always done it, no matter what that child needs, what kind of exceptionalities they have, and what would really help them build a great future.

The Warren Model looks like Chicago, where she will be on Tuesday, linking arms with a radical leftist labor movement that celebrates uniformity, squashes differentiation and merit, eschews innovation, and wants no freedom for anyone in education.

In 1987, Chicago was called the worst education system in the nation. There was no place to go but up. Dedicated leaders began tackling failing schools, but their efforts were fought at every turn by the teachers' unions who pushed back on performance pay for teachers, firing ineffective personnel, restructuring, and myriad other proposals that were met with union-driven legislative defeat year after year. Charter schools came to Chicago and gave educational innovators the tools they needed to show that all kids can learn. Achievement began to rise, but that didn’t stop the union from working overtime to unionize charters, taking away their autonomy to succeed.

Despite modest progress, Chicago students are less than 30% proficient in all core subjects. University of Illinois’ Steve Tozer says: “Our African-American students are well ahead of where they were a decade ago, but that we’re not seeing that level of growth sustained. ... There’s real concern ... about what do principals and what do teachers need to do to address this potential plateauing of African-American students.”

Concern? We should be horrified over an education system that has failed most of our children for decades. Educational opportunities have provided a lifeboat to millions of children whose states adopted bipartisan charter school laws and educational scholarship programs. Federal efforts to tie funding streams to performance reversed decades of federal subsidies for failure. Now Warren wants us to forget all the progress and ignore the intricate link between freedom and excellence.

Warren’s prescriptions are dated and will cause harm. She wants us to solidify one singular approach to education, while the research and science underscore the importance of diversity in teaching, pedagogy, and curriculum delivery.

That’s is how charter schools have contributed to the advancement of education and turned around decades of failure. They introduced us to what can happen when educators are free to innovate and able to be both responsive and accountable directly by the families they serve.

That’s why Elizabeth Warren wants charter schools gone. As long as charters exist, unions cannot wholly control the levers. If they and the rest of the education blob have their say, parents will not. The choice is that simple.

Newswire – October 22, 2019

 

WARREN’S PLAN...CHICAGO STRIKE. Elizabeth Warren issued a stark return to the past in her much-anticipated education plan yesterday. It’s more than reminiscent of the old initiatives that led the country to a massive decline in educational attainment that we’ve only recently begun to reverse.  The Warren Model looks like Chicago, where she will be today, linking arms with a radical leftist labor movement that celebrates uniformity, squashes differentiation and merit, echews innovation and wants no freedom for anyone in education. But Randi Weingarten of the militant American Federation of Teachers called the plan boosting federal involvement in education and attacking charter schools “transformational.” Her praise is being rewarded with a visit by Senator Warren to the Chicago picket lines where hundreds of public school teachers were forced to strike and 300,000 students have no choice but to be out of school. 

Read CER’s statement here.

 

NO FOR-PROFIT CHARTER SCHOOLS.  That’s because there’s no such thing! Sanders and Warren think this is a great talking point to corral people.  After all, no one should make money off the backs of kids, right? So teachers should not be paid? Providers of bus transportation, textbooks and technology should contribute their time and resources? Let’s be clear - this isn’t utopia and everything in life costs money. Non-profit charter schools like all other public entities can buy whatever resources they need to do the job, including companies who will hire, train and manage all their operational needs. So Warren wants to get rid of the ability for educators to do what every other social sector in the US can do - hire competent people. Good one.

IN THE EARLY DAYS, a charter in a few states could be awarded to a company or individual, and not just a non-profit. It is still permitted only in Arizona and California but rarely used. The unions, Sanders and Warren want you to believe that people in charter schools which outperform most public schools by every measure are out there making money while the reality is they are doing more with less. Charter schools are underfunded in every state between 10-30% of average revenues AND in most states do not receive any facilities support.

DEMS FOR EDREFORM also seem confused by the idea of business in education and misrepresents the reality. Shavar Jeffries the usually very astute leader of Democrats for Education Reform joined Warren’s cause, in part, though it’s unclear why.  As printed in Politico, "While we agree with the Senator that for-profit charters should be banned and that public charter schools should be held to high standards, limiting high-quality options that have been proven to increase equity within the public school system is the wrong plan for Democrats.” 

TIME TO VISIT MIAMI?  All of the above antagonists of this particular story on education opportunity need to take a road trip to Miami, where the city and state’s diverse provider-model charter schools are not only a major success story but they’ve dramatically impacted the growth of educational opportunities of all kinds throughout the Sunshine state and particularly in Miami. The incredible growth and success of education choice in Florida’s Miami-Dade county is attributed in part to the bright, aggressive and innovative Superintendent Alberto Carvalho who embraces transformational change rather than rejecting it to protect his turf. In this amazing analysis we learn how Carvalho’s leadership has resulted in the percentage of Miami-Dade students choosing their school rising from 35 to 61 percent among the district’s 70,000 kids.

MORE CONFUSED PEOPLE. From Education Next comes a study that reveals that - even though most got their start in charter schools -  “Teach for America alumni are 12 percentage points less likely to support the 'expansion of high-quality charter schools' compared to similar nonparticipants — suggesting an ideological gap between Teach for America management and its teachers.” 

Come on, folks. There would be no TFA without charter schools who embraced them when no one else would and whose supporters paid for their placement and institutes. And scores of TFAers went on to start their own.

‘DA BRONX.  A Teach for America corps member was inspired by what she saw as the unbridled potential of charter schools to make a difference in the lives of children.  She helped to found Brilla Public Charter Schools which outperform schools in their local district, New York City and New York state in ELA and math. As with most charters, Brilla serves a student population weighted toward minority and economically disadvantaged populations. They are not part of the district, which would change if Elizabeth Warren and the unions had their way, which of course, would result in their demise.  While the home town Yanks weren’t winners this year, this network always is!  

LIZ WARREN NEEDS A REALITY CHECK.  She probably won’t get it by listening to Jeanne Allen’s weekly “Reality Check Podcast”, but you can! Jeanne’s two most recent guests will “feed your head” - hat tip to Grace Slick. Mike Feinberg is co-founder of the  Kipp Public Charter Schools, a national network of over 200 K12 public charter schools and now a school venture fund entrepreneur. You can also hear about the millions of options currently afforded students in this week’s discussion with Andrew Campanella, the dynamic president of National School Choice Week, and author of the soon-to-be released The National School Choice Roadmap - 7 steps to finding the right school for your child.   

 

 As always, please drop us a line, with any input and suggestions.  

 


Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education.

CER: After Wrongful Attack on Charter Schools, Elizabeth Warren Should Skip Teachers’ Strike

Presidential candidate condemned by advocates for student-centered education for joining reckless teachers’ strike, threatening future-saving schools

 

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Center for Education Reform (CER) issued the following statement today by CER president and founder Jeanne Allen regarding today’s scheduled visit by U.S. Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-MA), a candidate for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination, to the Chicago Teachers Union’s strike in Chicago, IL, one day after the senator pledged to ban federal funding for new charter schools as part of her campaign’s education policy platform.

“This week is seeing Elizabeth Warren’s education stances go from disastrous to downright awful. Yesterday she released a plan filled with failed policies of the past that puts narrow special interests over parents’ rights and student’s opportunities to succeed. Today, she is going to stand with powerful union organizers against rank-and-file teachers who just want to do their job while children are out in the cold.

“Banning federal funding for charter schools and threatening the freedom they enjoy, especially under the false argument that they take away resources from underperforming schools, is bad enough, and would produce a devastating race to the bottom that our country cannot afford. But pledging to do so while linking arms with the same activists who are keeping schools closed by shamelessly moving the goal posts in their negotiations only adds insult to injury and sends a terrible message to students and their families all over America. 

“Warren’s attack is especially disturbing considering that her home state charter schools have done undeniable wonders for student achievement. Her plan is a direct attack on all of those student achievers. We will not allow truly progressive policies that improve education, and the lives of so many families, to be replaced in the name of radical politics. Charter schools give students the choice to pursue their dreams, regardless of race, religion, or hometown, and we should stand by any choice that enables students to succeed.”

 
 

As a non-partisan, nonprofit organization, CER does not endorse candidates or take political positions but will always recognize and applaud those who advance sound education policies, no matter what their affiliation.

Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education.

Newswire – October 15, 2019

 

THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CANCELLED COLUMBUS DAY but thank God the rest of America had a great time celebrating this weekend. In Pittsburgh the Italians marched with pride and thousands cheered as floats and representatives of all stripes passed by.  New York’s parade went off without controversy, which saw throngs of people of all nationalities lined up on 5th Avenue, and with support from Governor Cuomo.

 

PRESIDENT OBAMA ONCE PROCLAIMED: “On Columbus Day, we reflect on the moment the world changed.

BUT DC, having apparently solved all the urgent problems besetting D.C. – crime, poverty, traffic, homelessness, public schools that don’t educate, etc. –renamed Columbus Day as Indigenous Peoples' Day. No parade, no recognition of the great explorer. Now there will just be parties, like this one, without history or any lesson.

 

NATIONWIDE, most rational people whose various social media feeds, conversations and news reports quoted seemed willing to accept the idea that if there is cause for a new day, perhaps it doesn’t have to rain on a celebration of exploration of the new world, of modernization, and advancement. But there are those loud but small constituencies that don’t believe in paying tribute to progress.

LIKE THE NEA, the nation’s largest teacher’s union, which, if you wonder why CER is taking a stand you need only look at the lack of educational balance offered by this tweet:

 
 

WHY YOU SHOULD CARE. Agree or disagree, history is our future, and without knowing it, learning it, constantly reviewing it and debating it, we as a nation will fall into oblivion.  Our CEO’s oped in Real Clear Education yesterday apparently stirred the pot by offering views on this topic, but rather than engage thoughtfully, many “leaders” in DC summarily attacked that commentary.  Here’s more food for thought.

Shifting to something as fundamental to our future, we turn to just how people obtain a great education and not just to get jobs but to have the quality of education that allows them to reason, argue, debate and understand widely varying viewpoints, with respect, even when you disagree. 

PROTEST TO SUPPORT CHARTER SCHOOLS.  ​Will the DEBATE tonight be politics as usual? Not if these Dems have their way...Thousands of civil rights advocates who understand the importance of having power to decide the best education for their own families will be at the Democratic debate TONIGHT in Westerville, Ohio  (ironically near Columbus) to protest the negativism on charter schools and demand recognition for this critical, life saving reform.  Follow along with their progress on twitter at @SaveCharters

WHY SAVE CHARTERS?  Let’s start with their breadth , depth  and success. That’s enough. For now...

As always, please drop us a line, with any input and suggestions.  


Founded in 1993, the Center for Education Reform aims to expand educational opportunities that lead to improved economic outcomes for all Americans — particularly our youth — ensuring that conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education.

The District of Columbus Just Cancelled Columbus Day