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The Solution to the Teacher Shortage? Entrepreneurial Innovation

By Jeanne Allen

Across the country, states are implementing laws to address what has become reported as an international epidemic -- shortages of teachers not just in the US but in almost every country.  Not only are fewer people with state-required credentials not available to teach, but surveys suggest almost half are considering leaving the profession.

To address this, states are both lowering their hiring criteria and lowering standards altogether! According to the Kansas City Star Missouri districts have “been rehiring retired teachers, training counselors and coaches to teach and even putting unqualified teachers in classrooms.” The “shortage” is most severe in urban and rural areas, and districts are reporting lower than average applications.

In Illinois the “Governor JB Pritzker signed a law eliminating a requirement for teacher candidates to pass basic skills test to get an educator license.” 

The culprit, of course, is argued to be salaries, as surveys suggest evidence more than half are considering leaving the profession for both a lack of flexibility and pay. But is that the problem? Or is it a deficiency of the actual way the teacher profession is constructed, and the rules by which teachers work?

Says Swing Education, “At any given time, almost one-half of teachers are actively looking for a different job. Many teachers report that a lack of professional development and growth opportunities causes them to leave their positions. Even schools that have a reliable substitute teaching pool and budget for professional development may not take into account teachers’ individual growth and development needs. Ensuring teachers remain engaged is crucial to preventing burnout.”

Does engagement equate with money alone? Millions of people make much more than teachers, and many, many make less. Satisfaction -- and happiness -- is rarely correlated to income.Writing for The Atlantic, Liz Hicks interviewed leading University Education Professors. One confirmed what I’ve heard repeatedly over the years: “Higher pay doesn’t necessarily lead to a better retention rate, though. “[Some] studies suggest that teachers are more interested in working at schools where the conditions of work are good rather than in getting paid more,” Thomas Smith, a professor at Vanderbilt University’s education school also pointed to a study by the Benwood Foundation that offered teachers in Chattanooga large bonuses to go teach in lower-performing schools. The study found that few teachers were willing to move for this kind of offer. (In fact, according to Smith, the initiative had to be reengineered to offer bonuses to teachers already in those schools.)

The crux of the problem is, as As Richard Ingersoll of the  University of Pennsylvania put it, “Teachers in schools do not call the shots. They have very little say.”

The science on happiness underscores why many may be leaving - or not entering - the profession.  According to Arthur Brooks  based on research from the University of Chicago, “an external locus of control brings unhappiness,” which, in the case of teachers, is almost everything! They can not only not control the conditions that bring students to their classes or programs, but in a majority of schools and almost all traditional public, they have little say in what they do to improve those conditions. Says Brooks about a study regarding college students,  “an external locus is correlated with worse academic achievement, more stress and higher levels of depression.” And it applies to anyone whose daily lives are “occupied by events outside her control.” 

Those events center around precisely the other reason teachers do not relish returning to school every September anymore -- it’s because compared to other professions, teachers have the least flexibility, the most bureaucracy, and aren’t financially rewarded for the level of their work, the degree to which they work, the very EFFORT they make to perform better.  Not only is their pay uniform, set by pay scales that the states often prescribe, and that districts are given license to distribute in ways they see fit (with paid bureaucracy often taking precedent) but unions demand uniformity, “equality,” and that no factor of teaching merit higher salaries save for seniority and tenure!

The National Council on Teacher Quality argues reports that “decisions about teacher pay are often left to district discretion [discretion by the way that is largely pressured or created by teachers unions], every state can support districts in reforming teacher compensation. By directing or encouraging districts to strategically pay teachers, states have an opportunity to help ensure that teachers are meaningfully compensated for exemplary classroom performance, while simultaneously leveraging a powerful recruitment tool for hard-to-staff positions.”

That, however, is not what happens in most cases. Many point to other countries, where pay is higher, as the answer.  But those countries typically don’t have enormous districts. Look at Luxembourg and Switzerland, both of which afford their small “cantons” (districts) which have considerable flexibility, determining their own “school calendar, education structure, methods of teaching, and curricula, although there are agreements in place to coordinate the latter across the country.”

They also are highly performance driven in education.

And indeed that is the key to creating an effective and attractive education  profession -- and one that makes our educators happy -- driving both decisions and funds to the school level in order to ensure that decisions about the people who are around the students are made closest to them. That’s how entrepreneurs start and succeed, driven by localized and rapid decision making, able to change course when conditions warrant, able to derive joy from their own endeavors, able to grow what they start, and able to reap the rewards for success. 

In the same way, teacher compensation should be a reflection of the scope of the work a teacher performs, such as what they are able to create, how many students they teach and how often,  what other responsibilities they have. We might consider the value to the consumer of the school’s various programs. A music or fine arts-focused school pay a higher premium to the artists who come to teach, whereas a STEM-speciality school might want to incentive scientists to teach more than others. But differentiated pay is fought vigorously by teachers unions who believe paying more for doing more is somehow unfair!

Not only should we differentiate based on skills, needs, abilities and more, we should be considering innovative hiring solutions to improve the pool of people who stay or become part of the education sector. For example, retired baby boomers often have time to contribute and some have shared with me that they’d easily consider teaching at least three times per week in a specialty area or  to mentor and support a teacher. Educators or others who recently have had children might want to teach online from home and go into the classroom for limited hours. Many teachers might want the full eight-hour day and take on additional administration responsibilities throughout the entire year, warranting much additional pay.

While thousands of variations of employment like this exists in other sectors, none of these  potential innovations in work exist in education. Except for private schools or charter schools in states with highly flexible laws, teacher compensation is not set by schools but instead guided by years of cumulative state lawmaking and district mandates, which themselves are often determined by labor negotiations with unions. 

There are some encouraging signs of change, but they are baby steps toward the ultimate and necessary reformation of the profession. Some states, like Louisiana and Utah, have legislated that performance be taken into consideration when paying teachers.  North Carolina and Florida emphasize teacher effectiveness in determining pay scales. In Indiana, salary is based on numerous factors like teacher evaluation, education/experience, and student academic need. Teachers with more than two years of experience who produce subpar evaluations cannot be eligible for pay raises.

Ohio has set up grants to incentivize teachers working in high-need areas with competitive salaries. Other states, like Arizona and Tennessee, allow pay for differentiated positions. When need in a subject area is especially high (such as the STEM fields, for example) extra provisions in salary and grants can be made available to these teachers.

But these are small and modest measures compared to the enormity of the problem: that we hire, and expect teachers to perform work according to someone else’s plans, ideas, rules and requirements. Our educators do yeoman’s work despite the odds -- just imagine what they could if they had control!

America currently faces an annual estimated shortage of more than 100,000 teachers, and the deficit continues to grow. Internationally, it’s estimated to be in the tens of millions of teachers we will need to educate all our students. Our nation is full of people who can and would gladly be part of educating our kids, but they won’t enter a profession that is like a straightjacket, limiting the occupation to certain times of day, locations and uniformity over uniqueness.  And districts won’t hire people who don’t have the required credential, despite it rarely having anything to do with the quality of instruction a teacher can provide.

It’s time to turn education on its head and reboot the entire teaching profession. Give educators the opportunity to be experts as well as entrepreneurs, being as innovative or structured as they need, when they need it, to impart the wisdom they are hired to deliver, paying them for what and how much and how well they do what they do.  Give entrepreneurs the opportunity to join the profession, and give people from all walks of life the chance to engage in educating in a variety of ways. That’s how we will retain and attract the best we can offer. All other arguments and policy prescriptions about money, union demands and strikes in the name of equality are a disservice -- and a distraction -- to a critical and noble profession. And they won’t do anything to stem the tide of a shortage of high quality individuals needed to teach our youth.

 

Jeanne Allen is Founder and CEO of CER, the Center for Education Reform.



STRIKES AGAIN?

Dear Friends:

The Chicago Teachers Union is getting ready - it would appear with glee - at the prospect of another teacher strike.  A series of deliberate attempts to disrupt education planned by the AFT, you’ll recall that they walked out on thousands of kids for days at Chicago International Charter School, where they’d taken over some of the schools in years prior, only to settle for precisely what was originally offered, showing that this is about politics, not kids.

 

This tweet was the union’s response to Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s  comments Monday that she's still waiting for the Chicago Teachers Union to bargain in good faith before a strike starts. As kids might say, that’s pretty mature (not!)

It is way past time that we change the way the teaching profession is structured, as I argued in a recent oped I wrote about making all teachers entrepreneurs. We’ve also advocated that teachers who do well and earn additional skills and responsibilities should get compensated accordingly. But as long as we have an industrial factory model of teacher pay (to fit the industrial factory model of education), we will not solve the problem of teacher comp, union domination or the fact that most kids have to be the political pawns in this sinister game of chess.

CER is the only national organization that consistently - for TWENTY-SIX YEARS THIS WEEK! - challenges conventional wisdom and forcefully advocates for transforming the way we do education. We don’t simply weigh in on whether it’s right to negotiate. We take our battles and our credibility to the public, to lawmakers and to the media. That’s how we changed the education landscape to have the first charter and choice laws, and it’s how we will change policy so that all teachers who want to teach and achieve success in modern schooling will be the most capable and highest paid public employees we have.

Hope springs eternal here at CER. The CTU still has the opportunity to prove once and for all that it puts the welfare of Chicago’s many outstanding teachers and well-being of the city’s school kids at the top of their list. Short of that, however, we know we can succeed in the state halls - if you’ll help us.

Donate today and we’ll make sure every lawmaker in the country has a new model for how to deal with strikes, support teachers and ensure that every child in America has the opportunity that best meets their needs.

 
 
 

Union Strikes Again

CER IN THE NEWS
October 3, 2019

Read what we think of the actions by the Chicago Teachers Union, which is preparing once again to pull teachers out of classrooms and put kids on the street. From today’s Chicago Tribune.

Newswire – October 8, 2019

HOORAY FOR HOLLYWOOD.  If you are tired of jokers, adulterers and over the top political messages on the silver screen (not to mention paying $15 for the privilege), have we got a movie for you.  It is "Miss Virginia",  the eponymous heroine of which is Virginia Walden Ford,  an advocate for parent empowerment who fought the battle to bring opportunity to children in the District of Columbia and inspired thousands to follow suit around the country. It debuts on October 18th but you can see the trailer and hear from this remarkable woman by tuning into this week’s Reality Check with Jeanne Allen.  You’ll learn not only about the movie which stars Uzo Aduba, Emmy winner for “Orange is the New Black,” Matthew Modine, Niles Fitch and former Miss America Vanessa Williams, but also about how Virginia battled through adversity to win a significant victory in Washington.

THE CER TEAM IS PROUD of this alum, with whom we worked closely to mobilize parents in DC.  Her own authentic experience and tenacity is a great example of what one woman can do when she has a cause to rally around. All parents can draw from Virginia’s inspiration and engage in bringing about real live #ParentPower! It’s a must see for anyone who cares about kids.

CER team at the Miss Virginia movie premier with Miss Virginia herself.

OPPORTUNITY TO AZ’s UNDERSERVED.  2,500 miles away from D.C., Arizona could once again be the latest frontier for choice to serve a student population stuck in underperforming schools.  Arizona congressman Andy Biggs introduced a bill that offers vouchers to Native American students to diversify their educational options. Just like Congress has special oversight over DC’s education affairs, the lawmakers have oversight over Bureau of Indian Education schools, most of which have not served most Native American students well.  If enacted, the new program would provide an $8,000 deposit per year per student into an educational savings account to be used for cost of attendance at private schools, private online programs, tutoring, transportation and other educational services. These choices could be life saving… perhaps they need a screening of Miss Virginia to help them along!

TWENTY-FIVE PIONEERING YEARS. Happy Anniversary to Arizona’s charter schools, born June 17, 1994, thanks to a whole host of people, most notably then State Rep. Lisa Graham Keegan and State Senator Tom Patterson.  A diverse coalition of civic leaders, parents and educators stormed the Capitol to support the development of educational choices that would be tailored to the needs of students. The result? After only a quarter century, students in Arizona, particularly from low income and minority backgrounds are doing better than all other student groups.  “Students in Arizona charter schools score higher on state achievement tests than district students. In fact, they score better in pretty much all grade levels and every demographic and programmatic category for which scores are published and have done so for several years.”  No surprise that "The two highest growth schools in Arizona— Reyes Maria Ruiz Leadership Academy and Mexicayotl Charter School—are both high poverty public charter schools." The critics will keep on coming though, as we see right in our backyard in DC. No matter how great your results are, there’s always someone who believes that the status quo is just fine and is willing to fight you to stay in place.  That’s why we can’t join the celebration this week, but wish you the best for another 25 years of exponential impact!

BEANTOWN BEACON OF HOPE.  From Tufts University comes a new study showing that Boston-based charters result in “huge learning gains for the city’s special education students and English language learners.”  Can we see the hands of anyone surprised by this news? Nobody? Excellent – you are readers of great perspicacity.

“OYEZ! OYEZ! All persons having business before the Honorable, the  Supreme Court of the United States, are admonished to draw near and give their attention, for the Court is now sitting. God save the United States and this Honorable Court.”

Those words were pronounced yesterday as it was the first Monday in October, the start each year of the Supreme Court’s session. We believe (but we’re biased) that the most important case to be heard will be  “Espinoza v. The Montana Department of Revenue,” dealing with the legacy of one James G. Blaine, who in 1884 was dubbed the “continental liar from the state of Maine.” That’s when the illustrious New York Times broke its unblemished record of supporting Republicans for President,  ridiculing Blaine as “a prostitutor of public trusts, a scheming jobber and a reckless falsifier.” To lapse into legalese, the Blaine amendments are the epitome of fruit of the poisonous tree.

VOX POPULI.  If 97% of Americans think that public schools should be teaching civics ( who ARE those folks in the 3% who disagree? ) and 70% think it should be required for graduation, one might wonder why so few are taught. Only 39% of Americans can name the three branches of our government and 22% can’t name a single branch!  The National Assessment of Education Progress lays out a clear set of standards that all should be able to meet to be proficient  Check it out and ask those around you - kids and adults - if they understand their nation and its institutions in a way that allows them to truly engage as citizens.

 

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.

Expanding Education Opportunity in Rural America

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 the conditions are ripe for innovation, freedom and flexibility throughout U.S. education.

Newswire – October 1, 2019

BLAINE BIGOTRY UPDATE.  “Blaine, Blaine, James G. Blaine/the continental liar from the state of Maine.” James Blaine  got this label the old fashioned way - he earned it, though “bigot” would be as accurate as “liar.” In addition to the anti-Catholic virulence of his “Blaine Amendments,” he was also involved in the notorious “Chinese Exclusion Act” of 1882, signed into law by President Chester A. Arthur. Now where would such an odious idea come from? Support for the act was advanced during the 1880 Presidential campaign by...wait for it...James G. Blaine. Frightening to think that this man came within 1,047 votes of becoming President in 1884.

Learn more in this week’s Reality Check with Jeanne Allen, who interviewed former US Solicitor General Paul Clement, an expert in the Constitution who argued 95 cases in front of the US Supreme Court. Clement is the author of the Amicus Brief CER filed on behalf of a diverse group of parent, teacher and child advocates for great education. Espinoza vs. Montana, a case that will be heard by the Supreme Court in the coming year which could rid the state and potentially the nation of the bigoted Blaine Amendments that have been used as an excuse to stop educational freedom across the country.

REVAMPING RURAL ED. Schools in flyover country are often the forgotten stepchild in American education, witness this item from Montana.  And despite increasing attention in the field of rural education, little is changing. To truly transform rural schools there must be a whole new set of ingredients that combine the best of technology with an expanded review of education, from K through Career.  As CER argues in its latest R&E Issues Brief, Expanding Education Innovation and Opportunity in Rural America, “We believe that if we expand and enhance educational opportunities in rural communities and expose them to the best in ed-tech and innovation, we will improve the schools and restore the economic climates of increasingly desolate communities. We must take a ‘SWAT team’ approach to bringing educational innovations and technologies to communities that desperately need and want them by bringing together a diverse group of stakeholders eager to partner with rural communities.”  If you’re interested in joining us, just yell.

Source: Adobe Stock Photo

 

DON’T BLOCK SUCCESS. Whether in NYC where Eva Moskowitz is once again rallying families to fight the ridiculous block on giving children in charter schools space to grow, or Washington, DC, where a city council will convene tomorrow to malign charter schools and pin their failed system ideas on charter schools, we all must stand together to OPEN THE DOORS to opportunity.

A Rally for Success Academy in Queens by Georgett Roberts. Source: NY Post

NB Why isn’t the City Council holding  hearing on the $23 million school district deficit? 

CHICAGO- A TOTTERING, NOT TODDLING, TOWN.  In spite of what Ol’ Blue Eyes crooned, Chicago, specifically its education scene, is tottering on the brink of another education disaster.  The Chicago Teachers’ Union has authorized a strike as early as October 7, in spite of an exceptionally generous contract offerfrom the city and its very union-friendly Mayor. CER believes that good teachers should be well compensated, and last week we featured Jeanne Allen’s common sense  way to do that  - “autonomy, authority and salary”.  Barring that, the Chicago Tribune asks a most relevant question, “Firing bad teachers. Can we get that in the contract, Chicago Teachers Union?” We won’t hold our breath waiting for an answer.

BOLDER IN BOULDER.  We could fill every edition of Newswire just by listing the non-traditional public schools which receive various honors for excellence. While we can’t do that, we do try to highlight successes, and this week’s comes from the Summit Middle Charter School in Boulder, Colorado.  Summit was named a Blue Ribbon School by the U.S. Department of Education, one of just 362 schools nationally to earn that honor, and among 23 charter schools.  Kudos to all!

Source: Border Valley School District

 

BRAGGIN’ ON BRYAN.  We’re bursting with pride at the news that former CER intern (circa 1994) and State Rep Rob Bryan, the author of the state’s Scholarship program and Innovative Schools acts will fill a vacant North Carolina State Senate seat! He joins a legislature favorably disposed toward innovation in education but faces a Governor openly hostile to freedom and choice for kids. We’re so glad he’s back as a policymaker! And while we can’t promise all interns a state legislative career, we can promise a fascinating summer of learning about all facets of education.  If you know anyone interested in being an intern for us, please contact CER.

IN OTHER NEWS…. Since yesterday was International Podcast Day (yes we were surprised, too!) we thought we’d offer two of our favorite quotes from past episodes:

 “There is no Republican or Democrat way to teach a kid how to read, write or count.  We’ve layered the politics of education on top of ed policy. It isn’t what is best for kids. ” –  Kevin P. Chavous , Educator and former D.C. Councilman

“We’ve seen tuitions double for high ed and I don’t think anyone with a straight face can say that the quality of education has doubled in the last generation.” Steve Forbes  (@SteveForbesCEO ) .

 

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.

Newswire – September 24, 2019

TODAY IS NATIONAL VOTER REGISTRATION DAY. Hundreds of thousands of brave men and women have died to preserve this - perhaps the most basic of American rights. Don’t let their sacrifices be in vain.  If you don’t register you can’t vote. And if you don’t vote, don’t you dare complain about anything the election winners do.

 

RUM, ROMANISM AND REBELLION. You’ve no doubt heard it but do you know who said it first? James G. Blaine, the author of the now famous 19th century Blaine Amendments to state constitutions which were designed to suppress Catholic influences on America, which had the effect of banning any laws which could enable parents to use their tax dollars to send their kids to religiously affiliated education programs or schools. Blaine thought drinkers and immigrant Catholics - apparently one and the same - were a scourge on the nation.  So he pushed his amendment in the Congress, and failing there, went to the states with his scare tactics and won - 37 times!

Siding with Blaine, the bigotted Republican politician, is the teachers unions, who will go up against parents and rank and file citizens when the U.S. Supreme Court hears “Espinoza v. Montana Department of Revenue.”  CER has filed an Amicus brief arguing that a favorable ruling would be one of the most significant wins for education and parental rights in recent history. To help you get to know Mr. Blaine a little better, you might want to review last week's Newswire with one of the many illustrations of the xenophobe whose laws dictate the scope of our education system in this country.  

The Blaine Amendment:  [There shall be no] “direct or indirect appropriation or payment” of public monies “for any sectarian purpose” or to aid any institution “controlled in whole or in part by any church, sect, or denomination.”

 

SAME CHURCH, DIFFERENT PEW.  Students in New York are among those in 37 states that are denied access to better schools just because those schools are run by religious institutions. NY Catholic schools scores rose yet again, even as enrollments decreased, owing to parental inability to pay. Yet taxpayers keep funding traditional public schools in which fewer than half of all students can master basic reading and math!  But we’d rather honor a bigot whose big idea framed public education’s evolution, than allow kids to go to successful schools. As the kids would say, that’s real smart!

PRESIDENT deBLASIO? Phew, no. The New York Mayor – and self avowed “hater” of school choice and innovation – said last week that “it’s clearly not my time.” Perhaps now he can focus his attention on the scandalous situation we reported last week of  the Success Academy of Queens - with a waiting list of students – being denied access to vacant public school buildings with room for up to 725 kids.  Don’t forget that Success Academy parents, staff and students are holding a rally at Roy Wilkins Park in St. Albans, Queens, on Sept. 26.  Help them out if you can. For more information call the Academy at  347-602-4335.

TONIGHT IN DC. Washington D.C.’s charter schools consistently deliver education results far surpassing those of other public schools.  Yet some mis-informed and union-led parents are working with some in DC government to punish them.  Speak out at tonight’s forum and learn about the local jihad on education opportunity.

TEACHERS AS ENTREPRENEURS.  The path to solving the teacher shortage has never been more clear, says CER’s Jeanne Allen in The 74.  The article’s headline sums up the common sense solution, recommending making teachers “Entrepreneurs, with autonomy, authority and  salary to match.”

CENSORSHIP IN MILWAUKEE.  Milwaukee, which can rightly be called the birthplace of the modern school choice movement, is full of great charter schools, like the Howard Fuller Collegiate Academy to name just one.  But readers of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel would never know it. The papers’ education columnist purposely omitted test scores for those schools from an article about the scores from other public schools.  The story is a familiar one – charter students outperform other public schools students (depending on the measure in 29 out of 30 or 24 out of 30 categories) while costing substantially less money - $8,400  per pupil vs. $13,300 per other public school pupils. Shame on the Journal for a blatant act of censorship. 

 

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.

Amicus Brief Filed in Most Important Education Case in Decades

Newswire – September 17, 2019

MIRACLE AT PHILADELPHIA. September 17, 1787 has a strong argument for being the actual date that what we know as the United States came into being. That was the day that “We The People” formed a more perfect union by replacing the dysfunctional Articles of Confederation with our Constitution.

The famous painting above by  Howard Chandler Christy may show the greatest assemblage of brain power and character ever assembled in one room. If you’re like most of us it has been some time since you read the actual document. No matter what your politics, do yourself a favor and give it a look. It’s guided the greatest nation on earth through good times and bad for 232 years. If you’re interested in taking a deeper dive into the actual constitutional convention, highly recommended is the National Book Award Winner Miracle at Philadelphia.

 

WHY AMERICA WAS ASKED IN PHILADELPHIA. Happily the delegates came up with answers.  At CER we’re helping students ask the same question and have developed an extraordinary effort to ask -  and answer - “Why America?” on topics ranging from Women’s Suffrage to the origins of Elections. You can learn more here and if you’re interested in replicating in your community, just ask!  Pulitzer Prize winning author David McCullough said “You cannot love what you do not know.”  That’s why we do “Why America?”

 

THE CASE FOR CIVICS.  Surveys and assessments abound showing the sad truth about our collective understanding of civics, and the history and practices that have built this still new nation. Only two in five Americans even know our three branches of government! Next time you are unhappy with election results, remember that these people are voting.  They can’t love what they don’t know. You should take a look at the test given to applicants for U.S. citizenship. Read, share and get engaged to rebuild an informed and engaged citizenry.

 

ANOTHER CIVICS LESSON - NO RELIGIOUS DISCRIMINATION.  The 800 lb gorilla of parental rights cases will be before  the US Supreme Court next month in a challenge to so-called “Blaine Amendments” to state constitutions.  Blaine Amendments are 19th century anti-Catholic state laws forbidding parents from using the funds allocated for their education to access any religiously affiliated education. Thirty-seven states have them.  The case  centers around the constitutionality of Montana’s Blaine Amendment. A favorable, broad ruling in Espinoza vs. Montana Department of Revenue could open educational opportunities to millions of kids. CER is teaming up with organizations around the country to make our case on that. More to come.

“Blaine’s Teas(e)” 20 March 1880, by Thomas Nast for Harper’s Weekly. Source: UDel-Walfred.

 

OFFENDED BY THE CARTOON? That’s James Blaine, who before he went after Catholics, worked to exclude the Chinese, which the media was all over. That’s whose amendment will be up in front of the US Supreme Court this session!

 

COLLEGE LESSONS ON “WHY AMERICA?” - FOR FREE! - Michigan’s Hillsdale College offers free online courses, among which one of the best is a series on the Constitution and the foundations of the American Republic.  Courses offered are “Introduction to the Constitution”, “Constitution 101”, “Constitution 201”, “The Presidency and the Constitution”, and “The Federalist Papers.” Never too early to start or continue your learning!

 

BEST TYPE OF CIVICS LESSON - CITIZENS IN ACTION. The very appropriately named  Success Academy in Queens, New York has a waiting list of students and was promised space to expand by the  city Department of Education two years ago, was told last year that it would get space this year, and now is being stonewalled.  At least five public school buildings across Queens have ample room for the new school, with 450 to 725 empty seats each. But Mayor De Blasio’s educrats regularly invent excuses, and now have literally stopped returning calls from Success officials. Saying “enough is enough”, Success Academy parents, staff and students are holding a rally at Roy Wilkins Park in St. Albans, Queens, on Sept. 26.  Help them out if you can. For more information call the Academy at  347-602-4335.

 

MORE CITIZEN ACTION - OPEN THE DOORS AND LET THE KIDS IN! Last week’s Reality Check podcast focused on the absurd situation where D.C. public schools have empty buildings while thousands of kids are on a waiting list to get into charters. Citizen activists at End The List are holding an "Open Doors - Unlock Opportunity" event on November 14th at the Atrium Hall of the Ronald Reagan Building in downtown DC.  Help strike a blow for sanity - and civics - by attending the rally!

 

MICHAEL MOE - CIVICS IN ACTION. This week’s guest on Reality Check with Jeanne Allen is a walking, talking example of civic involvement helping all sectors - including education. GSV Founder Michael Moe discusses the future of learning; new advances  rapidly changing the workplace and the classroom alike, “How we get people the skills, the knowledge, the connectivity” to thrive in the 21st century,” and breakthrough alternative ways that people are learning and sharing ideas today. Listen for more on why both AI and China should be on the U.S. ed and tech world radar screens (and you can bet they make sure their kids know their civics!)

 

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.

Increased Assault on DC Charters

NEWS ALERT

TO: PEOPLE WHO CHERISH DC's KIDS
FROM: CER

Increased Assault on DC Charters

When forums are framed in deliberately misleading language, we know the intent isn't public information but harmful actions. That's why I'm writing to you right now, to bring to your attention that in the District, anti-charter forces are organizing community forums, clad in pleasing language like “transparency” and “accountability” but which in reality have as an ultimate goal the destruction of education choices for the children of DC. Those choices lifted a failed, mismanaged system out of disaster, lifted the achievement for thousands and the futures for tens of thousands. Thanks to charter schools, kids are learning, people are moving back to the city FOR those schools and the economy is booming.

The topic of DC’s public charter schools will be discussed at these two forums on 9/11 and 9/24:

6:30 p.m. Wed. Sept. 11
‘Bethel 21’: School Choice Forum

Hosted by Joshua Johnson, host of NPR’s 1A.

PANELISTS:  
Marco Clark, Richard Wright Public Charter School
Adam Harris, The Atlantic
Elizabeth Davis, Washington Teachers' Union

Metropolitan A.M.E. Church. 1518 M Street N.W.

RSVP HERE

6:30 p.m. Tues. Sept. 24.
City Paper Community Conversations- School Transparency

Moderated by Rachel M. Cohen,

PANELISTS:
Fritz Mulhauser, DC Open Government Coalition
Elizabeth Koenig, EmpowerED 
Rich Pohlman, FOCUS

Black Cat- 1811 14th St NW

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But that’s not good enough for the mostly newer entrants to the city who would not have dreamed of living here - like many of us do and did- before the hot bars and restaurants came along. They don’t move to Ward 7 or 8 but they want to thwart the parents living there from having the choices they have. Instead, they move to the more affluent sections where shopping is a hop, skip and a jump away, they enroll their kids in schools of choice - or buy in affluent neighborhoods where they can afford to be near  a great public school - and they think that the schools are great for their kids (when in reality their financial and neighborhood advantage starts their kids out at much higher levels and results in higher performing schools).

Yet across the city the more than 120 charter schools serving almost 50% of the city’s students are largely focussed on those for whom choice was anathema until charters came along. They are high performing highly accountable and highly in demand.

And except for one thing, the public would see evidence of this daily.  That one thing is, most of the parents whose children attend charter schools don’t have the luxury of time to show up at meetings to counter the atrocious and immoral allegations of these allegedly progressive parents (mostly white) who oppose charters and who are now influencing leading African American community members by making them feel that their choices  - or those of their neighbors - are somehow all a plot to help someone else.

No, parents of kids in charters and the thousands on waiting lists are working, struggling and sticking to their own business while these so called promoters of good public ed are holding forums, attending city council meetings and feeding bad media bad stories. The unions and their friends are funding this nonsense. It’s time to push back.

We urge you to take action now to push back on these ridiculous people and their damaging events.

Sign up for these events and share what you think.

Pass this onto others in your schools, your communities.

There is real danger for all who value great education. Speak out, get involved. Follow us on Twitter and Facebook and we’ll keep you informed there. Watch for our Doors for Opportunity across the city. And please share any events or things you hear that are being touted by these anti-education opportunity forces with us at opportunity@staging.edreform.com.