Archive for the ‘Race to the Top’ Category

Session Ends. Progress on ALT CERT but No k-12 Ed bill. Gov nixes Race to the Top submission

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

After a short special session on Monday to address the budget impasse, the 2010 legislative session ended without passing a k-12 Education bill. The coalition supporting ALT CERT can certainly claim a moral victory as it became one of the few critical issues for both houses in the final days and hours of the session. Most importantly, hearts and minds were changed about what true alternative pathways to teaching can do to help close the achievement gap.

Daniel Sellers of the Twin Cities Teach for America and Kelly Wolfe, a TFA alum, did a remarkable job in letting the legislature know the facts regarding TFA and the rigor of the proposed bill. A great coalition has been formed.  The fight to help Minnesota’s most underserved students continues.

Thanks to all.

11:00 am. Update.  Sadly, but not unexpectedly, the Governor just announced that because there were no real education reforms that passed the legislature this session, the state would not be reapplying for the $175 million in federal Race to the Top monies. See Star Trib article.

2:00 pm. Update. Ed Minn had its own press conference blasting the Governor for not submitting the RTTT package to the feds. Disingenuous is a word that comes to mind.   Of course all know it was Tom Dooher and the teachers unions single-handedly killing such close-the-gap reforms as alternative teacher certification. Brazenly, Dooher now uses the reformers language by saying his proposals close the achievement gap. Dooher was right, however, in suggesting that Pawlenty had eight years to deal with the achievement gap. Yes, what might have been. MPR News Q.

Now Minnesota almost stands alone in its recalcitrance.

  • Last week in Colorado, the state legislature passed one of the strongest education reform bills in the country, linking student achievement directly to teacher evaluations and allowing districts to rescind tenure from teachers after two “ineffective” evaluations.
  • Last week in New York, the state education department joined with the statewide teachers union to advance key areas in the state’s Race to the Top application. The proposal would establish a comprehensive evaluation system for teachers and principals based on multiple measures, with student test scores accounting for up to 20 percent of the teacher evaluation.
  • On March 29, 2010, Washington Governor Chris Gregoire signed into law a RTTT legislative package that improves the state’s lowest-performing schools to boost student achievement, sets better evaluation criteria for teachers and principals, and creates new opportunities for high-quality teacher preparation.
  • In Kentucky, the education commissioner is calling on the legislature to repeal their ban on charter schools in their upcoming special session.
  • Earlier this year the Massachusetts legislature passed a RTTT package that will double the number of charter school openings and provide superintendents with new intervention powers in the state’s most underperforming districts.

Education officials, lawmakers, promise to work together on education reform

Wednesday, April 21st, 2010

by Tim Pugmire, Minnesota Public Radio (photos by Charter School Partners)

April 20, 2010

St. Paul, Minn. — Key state lawmakers and teachers union leaders are pledging to work together on a second application for a federal “Race to the Top” education grant.

They started the process Tuesday during a joint House-Senate committee hearing on a package of proposed school reforms aimed at strengthening that application.

Teach for America Director Daniel Sellers outlining the alternative teacher certification proposal to the joint Senate/House Committee. ALT CERT is part of the the new Race to the Top package developed by Governor Pawlenty.

Teach for America Minnesota Director Daniel Sellers outlining the alternative teacher certification proposal to the joint House/Senate Committee. ALT CERT is part of the the new Race to the Top package developed by Governor Pawlenty.

Minnesota’s first-round failure to win a competitive grant prompted plenty of finger-pointing, as well as calls for bolder changes in state education policy.

Gov. Tim Pawlenty has blamed the state teachers union, Education Minnesota, for standing in the way of reforms he says are essential. The Republican governor wants teacher pay linked more closely to student performance, a rating system for teacher effectiveness, alternative teacher licensing and an end to the current form of tenure.

Pawlenty’s Education Commissioner Alice Seagren said Minnesota has to make up a lot of ground to compete in round two.

“My message is that we can’t be milquetoast. We have to really not be afraid to take this as far as we can in Minnesota,” said Seagren. “We’ve got the power, the will and the examples to do this. But I think we have to be very honest, that we are going to have to have a lot of points to be competitive.”

Minnesota could win up to $175 million over four years under the Race to the Top program. The round two application is due by June 1.

Rep. Mindy Greiling, DFL-Roseville, chair of the House K-12 Education Finance Division, said that application needs to balance the governor’s desire for boldness with the union’s willingness to change. Greiling said the points gained from changing state policy could be lost without teacher support.

“The main way to win no matter what, is if we come together on behalf of what is really good for our students,” said Greiling. “Closing the achievement gap, having all students have good teachers and succeed, and use research — not just whims of whatever anyone is asking us to do, including the federal government, that none of us think have all of the answers in the world for everything.”

Greiling is counting on the teachers union, as well as the governor, to show some willingness to compromise. So far, the union isn’t making any commitments.

Education Minnesota President Tom Dooher told legislators they should focus on creating a classroom environment where students succeed and the achievement gap narrows.

“We also have to distinguish between three things — meaningful change that will get things better; harmful change that will set us back; and meaningless change that will make people feel good but not help students learn,” Dooher said.

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Senator LeRoy Stumpf, Rep.Mindy Greiling, Education Commissioner Alice Seagren and Education  Minnesota President Tom Dooher at the joint Senate/House hearing on Race to the Top. According to MPR,

“In an unusual move for a witness at a legislative hearing, Dooher was literally seated at the same table as legislators. Sen. Geoff Michel, R-Edina, said he’s never seen a special interest group get such treatment. He called the seating arrangement awkward.”It’s either a very diplomatic effort by the Legislature to include a very powerful special interest group, or it’s a less-than-subtle reminder that there is one political power here that has ultimate veto authority over these topics and this discussion,” Michel said.

Tom Dooher said he had no idea where he would be sitting until he arrived at the meeting. He also denied that his organization has disproportionate influence on the debate.

Campaign finance reports show Education Minnesota spent roughly $860,000 on political activity in 2008. The union also ranks at or near the top in annual spending on lobbying at the State Capitol.

Pawlenty presents Race to the Top Package

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Governor Pawlenty outlined a new education reform package that includes education reform measures that would meet Race to the Top criteria. Alternative teacher certification is a key component of the package. Hearings begin today. MinnPost.com herePioneer Press here.

Per the Pioneer Press: “This is not Tim Pawlenty versus the (teachers’) union,” the governor said. “This is the work of every nonpartisan, bipartisan education group that’s forward-leaning in the country. … Embraced by the president. Embraced by (Education) Secretary (Arne) Duncan. Embraced by me. Embraced by most governors across the country, and now it sits before Minnesota. The challenge has been issued, and we’ve got to rise to the challenge.”


Race to the Top. ALT CERT. Time for Minnesota to Come Together?

Wednesday, April 14th, 2010

Remarkable really.  A liberal Democrat President laying out a tough educational reform achievement agenda. A conservative Republican Governor pushing for the President’s agenda. Moderate DFLers and the African American community in the state opposing the state’s most powerful union. The media and public opinion galvanized in support of real reform.

We hope it is now time for Minnesotans to come together and embrace change.

As one of the editorials below state:  Whether it’s for a federal competition or not, Minnesota should as promptly as possible:

  • Widen the path into teaching for qualified people from non-traditional backgrounds
  • Tie teacher evaluations to student achievement
  • Pay more for performance than for seniority
  • Place effective teachers in schools that especially need them
  • Find more ways to take advantage of what excellent teachers bring to the tableRevamp our post-secondary teacher preparation programs

News Stories

Star Trib. 4.13.10. Renew Push for Race to the Top money

Pioneer Press. 4.13.10. Public hearing on Minnesota’s quest for Race to the Top dollars set for next week

Star Trib. 4.12.10  Teacher union, DFLers feud over pensions, licenses. Failed Race to the Top application was flashpoint. “I think I just kissed my endorsement goodbye,” said a DFLer.

Star Trib. 4.10.10. Editorial:  Status quo is loser in Race to the Top. State leaders, Education Minnesota get a wake-up call on reform

Star Trib. 4.8.10. Pawlenty lays out what’s needed for Race to the Top. The governor said all of his key education proposals must be enacted for the state to compete in the next round for federal aid

Pioneer Press. 4.7.10 Race to the Top or get run over


Dooher, Ed Minn & Race to the Top. Next Steps

Saturday, April 3rd, 2010

From this morning: Pawlenty lays out what’s needed for Race to Top.

Race to the Top in the News

Tom Dooher’s and Education Minnesota’s opposition to education reform has clearly been the primary factor in the state losing $250 million in Race to the Top funds. The U.S. Department of Education confirmed this last week. It is no longer a debate.

As Minnesota reviews next options for the second round of RTTT monies, the alternative teacher licensing bill is still alive in the legislature and passing it would signal that Minnesota can buck Dooher and begin to make the case to be competitive for the next round of federal monies.

Here is a synopsis of some of these articles.

Star Trib, 4.3.10: Our $250 million weak spot: Weeding out poor teachers

Star Trib’s editorial, 4.1.10: Don’t give up on education funds

Politics in Minnesota, 3.31.10.  Teacher union blocks legislation that would allow unorthodox certification programs

Star Tribune, 3.29.10:  Why Minnesota lost Race to the Top

MinnPost, 3.18.10:  Some DFL’ers are bucking longtime ally, Education Minnesota, over a bill that opens up teacher licensing

Star Trib, 3.8.10:  As teacher unions dig in, it’s students that suffer

Race to the Top: Denial No Longer an Option

Wednesday, March 31st, 2010

Before the tattooed hordes came out of the woodwork to make a claim to her husband, there is little doubt that

Could the name Jesse James the first clue?

Denial no longer an option.

Sandra Bullock thought her rough and tumble beau was much-maligned but, at heart, truly a good guy. A better guy, even, than the other guys who are out there.

In much the same way, Minnesotans have stood by their state (check out today’s Star Trib editorial), believing in its reputation as one of the best states in the nation in terms of the quality of the education its schools and teachers provide to students despite persistent whispers about the existence of durable and egregious racial and economic achievement gaps, teacher and school quality issues, and a powerful teachers union that is out of step with what kids need and very much in step with protecting the interests of the adult members of its ranks.

Our state’s embarrassing performance in the federal Race to the Top competition, like a tattooed bimbo, forced us to confront a new reality: Minnesota is not the best state in the nation for education; in fact, we fall woefully behind other states in our willingness to address fundamental issues of educational quality and equity.

minnesotaAs everyone now knows, unless it gets its act together and puts together a better proposal with greater union support in the next round, Minnesota will effectively kiss hundreds of millions of dollars for our schools and their students goodbye. It’s confusing: we’re a state that traditionally puts our money where our mouth is in terms of school funding, so why did we bomb so badly on RTTT?

The application reviewers said it best: we lack the political will to do what it will take to close the achievement gap and truly make education the vehicle for social change in the state. In our application we actually codified, perhaps for the first time, our collective recalcitrance to address the miseducation of poor kids and kids of color hiding beneath our glittering scores on national assessments. Without meaning to, we told the truth about what’s going on in Minnesota: we are willing to talk and plan around the problem of fundamental educational inequity, but we’re not willing to really address it, spiritually or legislatively.

Apparently, it took reviewers who aren’t drunk on the myth of Minnesota’s educational exceptionalism to take us to task on several key areas of weakness for the state:

First, despite cursory nods toward the existence of alternative pathways to teaching in the application, it was obvious to anyone who is familiar with states that have robust alternative certification programs that Minnesota’s window dressing simply doesn’t substitute for a broad commitment to attracting the best and brightest to the field of teaching.

Anyone who has watched the state’s most powerful teachers union, Education Minnesota, play Goliath to Teach for America’s David during its pitched battles over alternative certification at the legislature this year and last has no problem believing that the application couldn’t gloss over the state’s inability to champion new pathways- even research tested pathways that outperform traditional ones- into teaching. Anyone who heard this same Goliath’s rhetoric in the superintendent of St. Paul’s decision to dismantle its selective alternative pathway program- the St. Paul Teaching Fellows, a program of The New Teacher Project- would understand that the reviewers just couldn’t figure how a state that would end this research-tested program just as it was beginning in the core of St. Paul, breaking its contract and squandering significant federal grant money in the process, could reasonably be perceived as on the side of new thinking in terms of teacher training and recruitment.

Teachers unions throughout the state expressed concern or refused to sign Minnesota’s RTTT application because of its requirement that teacher performance be measured and rewarded based on student performance. In their resistance, reviewers might have seen what many education leaders in Minnesota try to obscure in their wonky discussions about the impossibility of measuring teacher quality: they blame the kids for their own failure. They blame the kids for being poor, they blame their families for being uneducated and disenfranchised and this scapegoating, however gentled by rhetoric, is the toxic core of the arguments many in the state use to explain away a teacher’s responsibility to actually fulfill their basic obligation to leave a child with more knowledge and skills than they had before they sat in their classroom.

This hooey- that the kids coming into our schools are just too hard to teach- has been disproven by a host of national examples of schools and teachers that accept no impediments to any child’s, regardless of their family’s income or zip code, learning and performance. Being a teacher is one of the hardest jobs in the world but it is also easily the most important- MN’s kids, especially its most vulnerable kids, deserve teachers who embrace the difficulty of their task, have high expectations for every child, and assume the failure of any child as their own.

In its entirety, Minnesota’s application described a state that has not yet acknowledged the powerful truth that all students can and will learn in systems that won’t accept anything less. When a state and its citizens come around to this belief, the failure of any of its schools, whether housed in enclaves of wealth or poverty, is an urgent crisis. And our application simply did not suggest that critical stakeholders in the state believe there is a crisis in the state. If they believed it, and if they were truly invested in closing the achievement gap, how could they reasonably resist supporting the kinds of solutions RTTT suggests states that are on track to addressing their education equity crises are employing across the country?

It’s hard to wake up and realize that your idealized image of something you love, when held up to rigorous scrutiny, isn’t what you thought it was after all. Just ask Sandra Bullock. Minnesota is not the national leader in education. But it can be again.

Our RTTT failure should be a wakeup call for every one of us in the state who believe, as all good Minnesotans do and have for generations, that education is the single best hope for changing the quality and trajectory of a person’s life. RTTT has given our state a roadmap of what we need to do to respond to the current, urgent challenge the state faces: closing the achievement gap that has persisted in the state for decades.

State Loses Race to the Top. Ed Minn’s Dooher ‘Unavailable for Comment’.

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Well the Feds weighed in as to why Minnesota did not receive up to $250 million in Race to the Top monies, finishing in 20th place out of 41 applicants. Minnesota earned 375 out of 500 points, about 70 points behind second-place Tennessee, who will with Delaware, receive hundreds of millions of dollars for school innovation and achievement.

It’s no surprise that the Obama Administration’s Education Department cited Minnesota’s lack of support from the teacher’s union (Ed MInnesota) for such items as “alternative teacher certification”, a program encouraged by the President and his Education Secretary to get quality educators in high-need areas.

Seldom is Education Minnesota’s President Tom Dooher unavailable for comment, but he was not available yesterday. Instead his office issued a statement saying it was “unfortunate” that the state “missed the mark by such a wide margin”.

Could this clear message from the Feds awaken sleeping legislators who have in the past refused to cross Education Minnesota, particularly in an election year. Let us hope.

Here is the Star Tribune article from today.

ALT CERT 3: Reform-Minded DFLers Lead Efforts for Change

Saturday, March 20th, 2010

The Alternative Teacher Certification legislation passed two major hurdles this past week in both the Senate Education Policy Committee and the House K-12 Finance Committee. The Senate hearing in particular, which went for three hours, was heated and at times dramatic. Nervous Education Minnesota lobbyists attempted a series of last minute amendments by its Senate supporters, but were not successful.

This March 18th MinnPost article documents a dramatic development of an education reform movement within the DFL ranks; a core of moderate Democrats that are going against its longtime ally Education Minnesota in many areas of ed reform, including the Alternative Teacher Certification bill.  Here is the complete article.

Some DFLers are bucking longtime ally, Education Minnesota, over a bill that opens up teacher licensing

By Doug Grow | Thursday, March 18, 2010
Sen. Terri Bonoff

Sen. Terri Bonoff

There are times state legislators show up at the Capitol not wearing their party colors. And times they even break away from the interest groups that so often bind them.

For example, Tuesday morning, the Senate Education Committee passed a bill sponsored by Sen. Terri Bonoff, DFL-Minnetonka, that would open up teacher licensure in the state.

The bill’s House sponsor, Rep. Carlos Mariani, DFL-St. Paul, is chairman of the House Education Committee, which passed a bill that would change licensure. All Republicans on his committee supported the change, as well as a handful of DFLers.

Politically, this is as against the grain as it gets.Not only is alternative licensure a reform issue on Gov. Tim Pawlenty’s education agenda, but it’s also strongly opposed by Education Minnesota, the teachers union that is said to have such a powerful hold on the DFL.

One other important detail in the middle of this union/political/policy battle: Most believe that one of the major reasons the state flopped so miserably in the race for the feds’ “Race to the Top” dollars is the lack of alternative licensing procedures in the state. According to Bonoff, alternative licensing was worth about 21 points on the feds’ application and Minnesota probably got blanked in that category.

Trying again despite last year’s defeat
This is not a new issue for either Bonoff or Mariani. She successfully pushed the issue through the Senate last year, but it was lost in the House, despite the support of Mariani, who fears it will face a tough time again this year.

Rep. Carlos Mariani

Rep. Carlos Mariani

The political reality is that a number of DFL legislators, including House Speaker Margaret Anderson Kelliher, are seeking gubernatorial endorsement. Education Minnesota has not thrown its considerable weight behind any candidate yet. In other words, it’s not exactly the time that many DFLers are seeking a fight with a powerful union.

Bonoff wouldn’t comment on the impact of gubernatorial endorsement politics on this issue.

Mariani isn’t so sure that the governor’s race is behind House reluctance to buck the union.

“There are a lot of people who say, ‘These people have been our friends for a long time,’ ” he said. “It’s going to take some time. I think what’s happening is an evolutionary thing.”

But both say that work being done on this key education issue shows that many legislators still are attempting to do meaningful business in the midst of the partisan bickering that dominates the headlines.

“This is mainstream reform policy,” Bonoff said.

Said Mariani, “Most people here honestly are trying to do thoughtful work.”

Closing achievement is core issue
At the core of this struggle is the achievement gap that plagues schools nationally.

Supporters such as Mariani see opening up licensure as a way to bring new blood into the educational system.

“I support teachers,” he said. “The last thing I want to be seen as doing is bashing teachers, but … We have an aging teaching force. We have a mono-cultural teaching force.”

And we have ingrained systems that are failing kids of color, he said. He cited University of Michigan studies that show “persistent patterns. If you attend a low income school, the chances are that you are not being taught a higher strain of math.”

He looks at the studies, he looks at the gaps and he thinks of his conversations with kids of color in St. Paul.

“I talk to 15- and 16-year-old boys,” he said. “They’re wonderful young kids, but they’re lost. They have outsized dreams, compared to their educations.”

His conclusion: “We need changes.”

For her part, Bonoff is excited by the enthusiasm she has seen in young college grads who have entered the Teach for America program.

“They’re the best and the brightest students,” she said. “Only a small percentage gets in. They [Teach for America] are committed to recruiting teachers of color. It’s not a magic bullet, but it’s a great opportunity.”

The problem with current Minnesota law, she said, is the requirement of special waivers for districts that want to hire from the Teach for America pool or any other non-traditional pool. After two years, it’s almost impossible for teachers from the non-traditional pool to stay in school districts no matter how successful they’ve been.

Education Minnesota disagrees on best strategy
To be clear, Education Minnesota also said it’s keenly focused on closing the achievement gap. But the union insists that changing licensure is not the answer.

Tom Dooher

Tom Dooher

“The students who have the greatest needs need the most qualified teachers,” said Tom Dooher, head of Education Minnesota during Wednesday’s “Midday” program on Minnesota Public Radio.

He called the idea of allowing more access to classrooms to those from such programs as Teach for America or of reaching out to older people with professional experience in the sciences and engineering to teach such things as math “unproven” ways to close the achievement gap.

The proven way to improve student achievement is to lower classroom sizes, with a student teacher of 18 to 1 the ideal, Dooher tells anyone who will listen.

Likely, the fundamental union reason for not wanting to see more doors open to people from non-traditional backgrounds is that in these difficult times, the landscape already is littered with teachers who have been laid off because of cutbacks.

It makes no sense to hire “unproven” people at a time when there are so many “qualified” teachers in our midst, Dooher says.

So how is Education Minnesota dealing with these DFLers who are opposing them on what the union sees as a fundamental issue?

“In traditional ways,” said Mariani.

What’s that mean?

He picked his words very carefully.

“When you’re in the den with the lion, you don’t kick the lion,” he said, laughing.

In fact, Mariani said, he believes there’s been a little less intensity from the union this year than a year ago.

Bill’s sponsors getting lots of feedback
To be sure, Mariani and Bonoff received scores of phone calls and emails from teachers when their bills came up.

Bonoff was frustrated by many of those calls.

“I’d get calls and e-mails, ‘Don’t lower standards,’ ” she said. “But the fact is, our bill has rigorous standards.”

Mariani also was frustrated by some of the calls, but he said also felt the pain of teachers.

“There were a torrent of calls and messages from irate teachers from all over the state,” he said. “It’s always hard when someone is angry with you. But painful as that is, you do understand that it’s real people you’re dealing with, not just some policy. You always shoot them back a call and let them express their concerns.”

Bonoff said she has not met with Dooher, though she’s been trying to meet with him since last June.

Mariani, though, has had a couple of quiet conversations with the union leader. At one point, the legislator suggested that the union “should not get in a public relations battle with Teach for America. You cannot win that battle.”

Always, he said, he tries to bring Education Minnesota to the table with this message: “Look, help shape this or it’s going to get shaped without you.”

In time, he believes the union will change its position. And he’s certain more and more DFLers will stand up for the changes. Mariani believes that President Obama and his education secretary, Arne Duncan, have given Democrats “cover” to move away from traditional party-union positions.

Meantime, though, it’s a handful of DFLers standing with Republicans. That may not be enough to change a policy, but it can shatter some stereotypes.

Dooher, Education MN — The Moral Bankruptcy of the Status Quo

Tuesday, March 9th, 2010

An important decision for legislators as the alternative teacher certification bill moves through the legislature: saving inner city kids or protecting the adult members of teacher unions?

The powerful OpEd in this morning’s Star Trib by North Minneapolis African American leaders  Don Samuels (5th ward council member), Sondra Samuels, President of the Peace Foundation and Chanda Baker, Director of Strategic Partners for Pillsbury United Communities is a compelling argument  on the moral bankruptcy of the state’s teachers union and their opposition to ‘closing the achievement gap’ reforms touted by the Obama Administration, including alternative teacher certification.

ALT CERT is not the answer in closing the achievement gap but it is part of the answer. It is no coincidence that virtually every successful ‘close the achievement gap’ school and community nationally have been recipients of a broad alternative teacher certification policy that positively impacted their school or community.

Dooher, Education Minnesota Win. Minnesota Schools Lose.

Friday, March 5th, 2010

Tom Dooher, President of the state’s most powerful union, had publicly stated that he would rather lose the Race to the Top federal money than support any reforms and innovations that his union opposed — like merit pay or alternative teacher certification. He was successful yesterday.

To their credit, almost 90 percent of Minnesota’s school districts and charter schools, as well as 28 union locals, including Minneapolis and St Paul, supported the President’s innovations in Minnesota’s submission to Race to the Top. But it was not enough to override Dooher’s opposition.

Here’s the  Star Trib article and the Pioneer Press version.