Wednesday, October 19, 2016

Current Education Reform Is a Fraud by Christopher Chase





“…Since 2001, when George Bush’s ‘No Child Left Behind’ policies were put into motion, we’ve experienced a nation-wide obsession with assessment, ranking, testing, measuring, and quantifying both students’ learning and teachers’ teaching. Teaching to the test and test preparation have become a national priority; while art, poetry, music, sports, creative projects, students inner lives and the professional expertise of teachers have not.

“In 2007, Presidential hopeful Barack Obama promised to change that, telling cheering members of the National Education Association during a televised campaign speech‘Don’t tell us that the only way to teach a child is to spend too much of a year preparing him to fill out a few bubbles on a standardized test. We know that’s not true. You didn’t devote your lives to testing, you devoted it to teaching! And teaching is what you should be allowed to do!’

“Obama had sought advice from Dr. Linda Darling-Hammond, a Stanford University education researcher, with expertise and knowledge of learner-centered practices and school reforms that had been successful with children living in poverty. With Darling-Hammond as his primary education advisor, Obama’s message was finely tuned, and in the 2008 election he was able to get the full support of America’s teachers.

“What professional educators and the American public did not realize at that time, was that whispering in his ear was Obama’s advisor Rahm Emanuel, whose many Wall Street connections included a group of hedge fund investors running a campaign financing organization called Democrats for Education Reform (DFER).

“From what we know now, it appears that they were using President Obama as a kind of Trojan horse, with a hidden agenda, more in line with President Bush’s administration than with the innovative education models that Prof. Darling-Hammond was familiar with, such as the Mission Hill School piloted by Dr. Deborah Meier or the Comer School Development Development Program developed at Yale.

“The goal of DFER’s Wall Street supporters was to ride into power under Obama’s wings, so that they could take control of the U.S. Department of Education, and then enact even more regressive policies than Bush had put in place, as part of the program Race to the Top (RTTT). Once in power they would set in place policies that used ‘rigorous’ standards, high-stakes tests, teacher assessments and other punitive practices to take away teachers’ local autonomy and reduce the number of public schools in America, while enlarging the role of centralized testing companies and increasing the opportunities for charter schools to make a profit.

“Their duplicity has been described in the book ‘Class Warfare’ by Steven Brill, and DFER’s director Joe Williams bragged about their success, in a document put out (behind the scenes) during Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign: ‘[Governors] of both parties nationwide have been empowered by the ‘cover’ that has come from a Democratic President who has been willing to embrace reforms that are not always in line with the priorities of the nation’s powerful teachers unions. The evidence of what this shift in a political messenger can bring is clear-cut. As a result of the RTTT competition, fifteen states lifted caps on the creation of new charter schools, and one state enacted a charter school law. Charter schools flourished more under three years of Obama than under eight years of George W. Bush. Funding for state charter school grants, for example, stayed between about $68 million and $81 million during Bush’s two terms, but jumped to $138 million during Obama’s first full budget year.’

“After (or perhaps before) Obama was elected, his Wall Street connected advisors convinced him to ‘throw’ education expert Linda Darling-Hammond ‘under the bus,’ as radio journalist Dr. James Miller put it, placing a non-educator charter school supporter named Arne Duncan into the top position of the Dept. of Education.

Duncan had aggressively supported punitive measures, public school closings, standardized testing and charter school expansion in Chicago. He is connected to a billionaire ‘venture philanthropist’ named Eli Broad, who had created a ‘leadership’ training school called the Broad Academy, that exists outside of education. Over the last decade, Broad has been able to put hundreds of pro-testing, pro-charter graduates in leadership positions as superintendents, education department staff and school principals across the nation.


“After Duncan was appointed as head of the U.S. Department of Education, a charter school investment executive named Joanne Weiss was put in charge of developing the Race to the Top program. Once this was in place, they were able to exert control over state and district public school systems, implementing policy changes rooted in greater testing, ranking, teacher assessment, school closings and other policies that would increase the flow of public tax funds into the pockets of testing service companies and charter schools’ private investors. This was done even though there are laws which prohibit the Federal government from controlling the nation’s educational policies.

Once in power, Duncan also teamed up with Microsoft’s Bill Gates, working with an organization called Achieve to create the Common Core standards by which all the children in America could be assessed, measured, ranked and compared to one another. These standards, amazingly enough, were not based on current research or innovative and successful practices in education, but instead re-booted a method of teaching from the Cold War era called ‘New Criticism,’ favored by David Coleman – the so-called ‘architect’ of Common Core.

“New Criticism’s pedagogy fit well with the Core’s testing agenda, as it emphasizes teaching with short excerpts from text, rather than through creative activities or reading entire books. In theory, teachers are encouraged to be creative and do interesting projects with students, but in practice they have been pressured not to, because of the introduction of punitive teacher assessments and rankings that came as part of the package state governments agreed to when they accepted money from Duncan and Obama’s RTTT grants. As the DFER document mentioned earlier explains:

“‘The politics of teacher evaluations changed instantly and forever when President Obama made improved teacher evaluations a cornerstone of his federal ‘Race To The Top’ initiative. ‘If we are honest with ourselves, we’ll admit that in too many places we have no way – at least no good way – of distinguishing good teachers from bad ones,’ Obama said, in unveiling the RTTT competition. ‘Let me be clear: success should be judged by results and data is a powerful tool to determine results. We can’t ignore facts. We can’t ignore data.’

“In states, Republican and Democratic governors such as New York’s Andrew Cuomo & Florida’s Jeb Bush, have lined up with the President’s objectives emphasizing testing, data collection and punitive assessments as well. Last March, Cuomo asked that student test scores count for 50% of a teachers assessment score and that the rest of the score be determined by outside observers, not the school principal.

“There are at least two major problems with these policies. First, with their jobs on the line, teachers are pressured to cut the arts, creative projects and other meaningful activities to focus instead on test preparation and practice. Second, most professional researchers who study these teacher evaluation methods that state governments are using have said they are not reliable or valid tools of assessment. They don’t really measure what federal and state officials claim they measure.

According to Dr. Edward Haertal, a leading psychometrician, careful analysis of the data has shown that individual teachers have only a small influence on student test scores, that there are many other factors such as family, poverty and peer pressure.

“In other words, if we take three teachers and rotate them among three schools differing by poverty, safety, financial resources and community/family support, the scores of students will be more related to SES and other contextual factors then which teacher they have. Rich children with parents who are professionals and go to schools that have more funding will perform much better on standardized tests than poor kids whose parents are working class or unemployed.

“What the Obama administration and nation’s governors are purposefully ignoring is the data and research which shows it is wealth and socio-economic status that accounts for test scores, not ‘good’ or ‘bad’ teachers. This is what most research experts believe, as the Nation reporter Dana Goldstein wrote in 2011: ‘The research consensus has been clear and unchanging for more than a decade: at most, teaching accounts for about 15 percent of student achievement outcomes, while socioeconomic factors account for about 60 percent.’

“Value-added assessments linked to student test scores that rank and punish teachers are not reliable or valid instruments. They do not measure what the president, secretary of education, governors and their financial backers claim they measure. This is a critical flaw (possibly even an intentional act of fraud) with current reform policies, which place more importance on questionable data collection and punitive measurements then on the professional expertise of educators, whose understanding is grounded in decades of slow and careful research.

“The goal of scientific research in the field education is to give us a deeper understanding of the complex factors (social, cultural, psychological, economic, etc.) impacting on students’ lives and learning. To ignore such knowledge, when it exists, in ways that are harmful to teachers and children should (in my professional opinion) be regarded as an act of negligence.

“The Obama administration and their wealthy corporate supporters are applying scientific methods in potentially destructive and inappropriate ways. When this is done in the field of medicine it is called malpractice. Teaching is an art form rooted in the wise and careful use of research and assessment tools. Teachers give tests, but they are trained to assess carefully, much as doctors and nurses learn to use care with needles and surgical knives.

When government policy makers and their corporate sponsors continue to implement evaluation methods that lack scientific validity and are criticized by education professionals they are embarking on a very dangerous nation-wide experiment. Focusing their attention on data collection, rigid standards and high-stakes testing creates the illusion of knowledge and control.

“It allows people who lack professional understanding and expertise in the field of education to assert that they have it. They are implementing a marketing strategy that treats children and teachers like employees or commodities, ignoring the fact that schools are not a market place, and that children are not data points on a sales chart. They are making fraudulent claims, misusing scientific measures, reducing financial support for what is actually most important and measuring what is not easily quantifiable with numbers.

When President Obama decided to ignore his anti-testing promises before the 2008 election and became ‘willing to embrace’ policies not ‘in line with the priorities’ and expertise of America’s teachers, he was getting into bed with shady Wall Street investors perpetrating what journalist David Sirota called in Salon magazine, September 12, 2011 the ‘Bait and Switch’ of the ‘Great Education Myth.’ As Sirota described it:

“‘The bottom line is clear: In attempting to change the mission of public education from one focused on educating kids to one focused on generating private profit, corporate leaders in the ‘reform’ movement are pursuing a shrewd investment strategy. Millions of dollars go into campaign contributions and propaganda outfits that push “reform,” and, if successful, those ‘reforms’ guarantee Wall Street and their investment vehicles much bigger returns for the long haul.’

“In order to do this successfully, our nation’s leaders and their wealthy supporters made a conscious decision to ignore the input and criticism of America’s education professionals. They began making fraudulent claims that had no evidence to back it up, manufacturing and cherry picking data that supported their agenda, ignoring decades of careful research and innovation that already existed in the field of education.

“‘We cannot ignore facts,’ the President said, and yet that is exactly what they have done, betraying America’s teachers, parents and students. Investing in money making schemes rather than the nation’s public education system. Betraying the hopes and dreams of the very people that helped get the President elected. If something is not done to change this situation soon it won’t be just education advisor Linda Darling-Hammond who was thrown under the bus, but an entire generation of American teachers and their students.”

—Christopher Chase


For the entire article, Fraud at the Heart of Current Education Reform by Christopher Chase, click here.


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