Archive for the ‘New Orleans’ Category

Please join rally at Capitol for ALT CERT on Wednesday, May 5th!

Monday, May 3rd, 2010

To Charter School Partner Schools and Friends of CSP,

This Wednesday at 10:30 in Rm #125 in the Capitol Building, a press conference is being held to support passage for the Alternative Teacher Certification bill.

MN has struggled for too long to close the Achievement Gap with little to show for our efforts. We need to ensure that high quality organizations like Teach for America with a proven track record of success stay in MN and continue to offer high quality teacher talent for our charter schools.

There is a broad and diverse coalition supporting the ALT CERT legislation.  Minnesotans for Excellent Classroom Educators and Leaders is made up of community and minority organizations, urban school districts, and many foundations and businesses. These include:

Education Organizations

• Minnesota School Boards Association

• Hamline University

• Charter School Partners

Community Organizations/Foundations

• Northside Policy Action Coalition

Members include: PEACE Foundation, Northway Community Trust, West Broadway Coalition, Minneapolis Urban League, NorthPoint Health & Wellness Inc, Turning Point, Emerge Community Development, KMOJ Communications

• The Itasca Project

• Minneapolis Foundation

• The McKnight Foundation

• The Saint Paul Foundation

• The Robbins, Kaplan, Miller, and Ciresi Foundation for Children

• Minnesota Chamber of Commerce

• Minnesota Business Partnership

Community Corporations

• General Mills

• Medtronic

• TCF Bank

• Best Buy

• US Bank

• Allianz

Schools/Individuals

• Minneapolis Public Schools

• Brooklyn Center Public Schools

• Charter Schools:

o Saint Paul: Achieve Language Academy; Higher Ground Academy; Hmong College Prep Academy, College Prep Elementary

o Minneapolis: Harvest Preparatory and BEST Academy; Hiawatha Leadership Academy; KIPP: Stand Academy; Lighthouse Academy

Community Members

• Alberto Monserrate, CEO and President of Latino Communications

• Don Samuels, Minneapolis City Council Member, Fifth Ward

• Eric Mahmoud, President and CEO of SEED Academy and Harvest Preparatory School

• Sondra Samuels, President, PEACE Foundation

• Sheila Wright, Dean, School of Education, Hamline University

We need your support on Wednesday!  Please invite your parents, community members, and board members to come to the Capitol and join our rally to pass Alternative Certification.

Best Regards,

Al Fan

Charter School Partners - Executive Director

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

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.

Secretary Duncan and New Orleans: Tragically, it took a Katrina.

Monday, February 1st, 2010

New Orleans Blog 3.

Read the headline and thought ‘ouch’. Secretary Duncan and nervous aides spent time over the weekend clarifying the Secretary’s remarks regarding New Orleans.  In his interview with Roland Martin late last week, Duncan stated:

“I spent a lot of time in New Orleans, and this is a tough thing to say, but let me be really honest. I think the best thing that happened to the education system in New Orleans was Hurricane Katrina. That education system was a disaster, and it took Hurricane Katrina to wake up the community to say that ‘we have to do better.’ And the progress that they’ve made in four years since the hurricane is unbelievable. They have a chance to create a phenomenal school district. Long way to go, but that — that city was not serious about its education. Those children were being desperately underserved prior, and the amount of progress and the amount of reform we’ve seen in a short amount of time has been absolutely amazing.”

Duncan was quoted as saying KIPP CENTRAL CITY ACADEMY, one of six new KIPP schools in New Orleans

What struck us as we saw and analyzed the New Orleans turnaround was that it didn’t “just happened”. Like other successful public school turnarounds (New York City, for instance), there was a tremendous vision, focus and a strategy put together by state and local leaders to attract national (particularly) charter resources and leaders to serve in new high-achieving schools.  In addition, New Orleans developed several  charter support groups like New Schools for New Orleans, which is focused on improving the quality of New Orleans schools by recruiting strong school leaders,  improving teacher quality and having several other best practices that we at Charter School Partners are providing and encouraging for use in all Minnesota schools.

The New Orleans story, while a long way from Minnesota and different in so many ways, was a sober reminder that  closing one of the nation’s highest achievement gaps is going to take a lot more focus, resources and intentional implementation of best practices than we are presently putting toward the problem.  It also says, it can be done.

So, it’s been fun.  Signing off from New Orleans.

Al and Brian

Post Katrina New Orleans. 60% of Schools Now Charter

Wednesday, January 27th, 2010

Blogging New Orleans 2.

After a tour of KIPP’s Central City K-8 program (more later), I took a trip to the Lower 9th Ward. I was not really prepared for what is still the aftermath of Katrina. As a former Director of Planning and Economic Development for St. Paul, I was trying to put my arms and head around the scope of the ongoing challenge. Yes, many new redevelopment projects are ongoing and there is reason for hope, but here are some of the sights that one encounters.

The entrance to the now famous Lower 9th Ward.

The entrance to the now famous Lower 9th Ward.

And a whole lot of this

And a whole lot of this

In parts of the Lower 9th Ward, one gets the feel of almost an abandoned rural town. Then go two blocks in any direction and the landscape becomes more urban and busy.

Block after block have an abandoned feel.

Block after block have an abandoned feel.

Sometimes you see this. A new rebuilt next to what has to be a condemned house.

Sometimes you see this. A new rebuilt next to what has to be a condemned house.

New Orleans Public Schools (NOPS) was the New Orleans area  largest school district before Hurricane Katrina devastated the city in August 2005, damaging or destroying more than 100 of the district’s 128 school buildings. NOPS served approximately 65,000 students pre-Katrina. now it has approximately 35,000 students. For decades prior to Hurricane Katrina’s landfall, the New Orleans public school system was widely recognized as the lowest performing school district in Louisiana and even nationally. According to researchers Carl L. Bankston and Stephen J. Caldas, only 12 of the 103 public schools then in operation within the city limits of New Orleans showed reasonably good performance.

Here’s a USA Today piece on the success and improvement of the New Orleans district.

More later.

Brian.

Blogging New Orleans. Al & Brian

Monday, January 25th, 2010

Okay, Al and I are heading out. Yep, we’re bloggin’. Turning up Willy’s version of City of New Orleans real loud like and heading to The Big Easy.  No, not to seek revenge for the Vikings lost but to learn a little about  one of the most compelling transformations in the history of urban education. Check out this USA Today article on charter schools in New Orleans.

Specifically, The National Alliance for Public Charter Schools is conducting a “Master Class” on Charter School Closures, with some of the nation’s leading educators, charter school leaders and policy experts. We’ll also get a chance to visit some of the highest performing inner city schools in the country.

Okay, then. Al wanted to fly instead of hopping the freight — one of my sins from a youthful time not on my vitae (Oh God, I hope my son is not reading this).  So, stay tune.

In the meantime, for those who prefer Arlo’s version, here it is.

Brian.