A Subversive Guide To The Saturday Sessions

Conference attendees might be frustrated with the lack of balance in these Saturday sessions.  I volunteered to be on a panel, but TFA had no interest in giving me any sort of sanctioned platform.  Without counterpoint, these panels will leave off the other side of the story in these complicated issues.  This page (along with the comments.  Feel free to add your own.) will serve as a centralized place for people to come to if they are in a session or about to go to a session and want to learn what sorts of issues are related to these sessions, some background information that you won’t hear at these sessions, and even some potential questions you could ask the speakers during the Q and A periods.

Below I’ve listed the top 10 sessions that you should try to attend if you want to see a display of egotism and compulsive lying.  If you do go to any of these, would you please audio record them and email them to the gmail address.

As these 10 sessions happen it would be great if people tweeted some quotes to the @TFA25FactCheck twitter account and use the #TFA25FactCheck hashtag.  Also feel free to have discussions in the comments on this site.

Saturday Session 1 9:00 AM to 10:30 AM

Alumni Trailblazers’ Perspectives on the Path to One Day in Our Lifetime

This one has four of the biggest name in education reform, Dave Levin and Mike Feinberg are the founders of KIPP.  John White is the last remaining TFA alum that is leading a big state or city (Louisiana), and of course Michelle Rhee who was once the face of the reform movement, but is now keeping a very low profile.  At the 20 year event five years ago, Rhee was much more prominent, as she had just starred in Waiting For Superman.  About two years ago Rhee stepped down as the CEO of StudentsFirst and she hasn’t been heard from since.  John White has had a lot of controversy in Louisiana.  The data from the schools there is very opaque and White himself was caught saying once that he was deliberately ‘muddying the waters’ about the data there.  Check out Mercedes Schneider’s blog and also Crazy Crawfish to learn everything you could ever want to know about John White.  The new governor there wants White out but does not have the power to do so.  I doubt White will last very long there and I’m hopeful that after he goes there will be a huge audit of all the data he has been hiding.  Levin and Feinberg have also been pretty under the radar recently.  KIPP schools are not claiming to perform miracles anymore the way the new gold standard in charter schools, Success Academies is.  KIPP test scores are pretty mediocre in New York.  The thing they like to focus on is about the KIPP college rate.  You will hear that 32% of KIPP students graduate college and that this is 4 times the 8% rate for low income students.  The thing about that stat is that it is 32% of students who graduate from KIPP.  This ignores the fact that 40% of students who begin at a KIPP don’t complete it so they are excluded from that statistic.

Big Decision:  Why Corps Members Today are Making The Choice to Teach

The short answer to this, of course, is ‘they’re not.’  TFA recruitment is way down.  They had 6,000 new CMs two years ago and this year it was about 4,500.  Not only that, but the quit rate is up.  If asked about this they will say that the economy is better so people are not going into teaching across the board and also that lies about TFA are misleading people into staying away from it.  They will not admit that the teacher bashing by their biggest allies are the cause of the teacher shortages and their own recruitment problem.

Families:  Our Students’ Most Valuable Teachers

Don’t be misled into thinking that this one admits that out-of-school factors are the major cause of the achievement gap, despite the name.  On the panel is Tim Daly, former head of The New Teacher Project, which published the main ‘research’ paper called ‘The Widget Effect’ that reformers use to show that things like test score based merit pay is a good thing.

I will bet that this session will be more about parental ‘choice’ to go to charter schools and things like the ‘Parent Trigger’ where a group of parents are manipulated into voting to have their school taken over by a charter.  This has always been a disaster wherever it has been tried.

Moving the Entire System:  the Promise of Educators Shaping Education Policy

The thing to know about this one is that it features one of the most destructive TFA alums – turned policy maker, Michael Johnston.  I know Johnston for years and he was once a good guy until he fell in with the wrong crowd known as DFER (Democrats For Education Reform).  Now Johnston is the poster child for using a very inaccurate teacher evaluation system called ‘value-added.’  While most states use it for some percent, only Colorado, because of a bill he sponsored SB 10-191, weights it 50%.  I know teachers in Colorado and Johnston is not liked by them.

Two lies you can expect to hear from Johnston:

  1.  That 100% of the students at the school he was principal of went to college.  This is a lie.  The school had 75 tenth graders and then 45 twelfth graders two years later.  If all 45 of those went to college, that is not 100% of the cohort as he likes to pretend.
  2. That the teacher’s union supported his bill.  There are two teachers unions in Colorado.  The one that represents 95% of the teachers there was opposed to this plan while the one that represents 5% of the teachers supported it.

Saturday Session 2 11:00 AM to 12:30 PM

Voices Down the Hall:  Perspectives From Alumni Teachers on Education’s Most Controversial Issues

I volunteered to be on a panel and since I’m so ‘controversial’ you’d think this would be a good one for me to speak on.  But the teachers on the panel are not any reform critics that I’ve ever heard of.

What should we do when the whole school fails?

This panel has the only reform critic on all the panels that I know of, Steven Zimmer, president of the school board for Los Angeles.  It also has one of the most aggressive reform cheerleaders Chris ‘Citizen’ Stewart.  Stewart has accused me of being a racist time and time again every time I point out that some ed reformer has lied about how some school has gone from the lowest test scores to the highest in two years just because they fired their staff and replaced them with 22 year old TFAers.  This one should have some fireworks, I’m hoping.  I’m definitely not thrilled with the title of this since it is never the ‘whole school’ that fails, meaning 0% passing.

What Works and What Doesn’t in Education Policy?  Examining Recent Trends and their Impact on Students

The two panelists on this are Jon Schnur, who is known as the architect of Race To The Top.  I once met with Schnur at a restaurant and we had a nice two hour conversation.  Then he said he’d answer my ‘open letter’ to him but he’d need some time, but he never did so I’m not so impressed by him.  The other is Michael Johnston, the golden boy of education reform, who I wrote about in the morning session that he’s moderating.

These guys are slick.  They make it sound like they are so thoughtful and everything has two sides to it and everything is so complex we can’t commit all the way to one thing or another.  But when it comes down to it, they advocate for teacher evaluation to be based on 50% value added.

They are also the founders of something called ‘America Achieves’ and their big thing is that it isn’t just poor schools that are ‘failing’ but our wealthier schools are ‘failing’ too.  Don’t get wooed to much by these con artists.

Saturday Session 3 1:45 PM to 3:30 PM

Exploring the Role of Joel Klein as Mentor and Role Model:  A Case Study

Truly one of the most awful people in ed reform, Joel Klein mentored four of the most destructive TFA alumni who became leaders for a short period of time before resigning:  Michelle Rhee who got run out of DC, Cami Anderson who got run out of Newark, Marc Sternberg who got run out of New York City, and John White who is still in Louisiana, but hopefully not for long.

Klein knows absolutely nothing about education which is why after he left New York City he ran a billion dollar ed tech company, Amplify, into the ground and now is working as a lawyer for a big insurance company.  His mentees are generally out of the picture after their abrasive styles got them ousted.  Rhee is a has-been.  Anderson crashed and burned in Newark — I’ve never seen anyone hated by the community as much as her.

Amazingly, this panel is moderated than none other than Elisa Villanueva Beard, sole CEO of TFA.

Success Academy Charter Schools in New York:  A Case Study

Eva Moskowitz is the current darling of ed reform.  Her chain of charter school in New York City are known for their outstanding test results.  Actually their test results are so good they make other charter chains look pretty bad.

The thing is, and this probably won’t come up, Success Academy is known for making life miserable for families of kids who don’t conform to their ultra strict policies and this includes many special needs students.

A few months ago the New York Times revealed a leaked memo there a bunch of kids were on a list entitled ‘Got To Go.’  This has sparked an investigation and a civil rights law suit against them.

I actually know someone who had a special needs daughter in Success Academy.  She passed the 4th grade state test last year and her family all participated in her graduation ceremony in June to go to 5th grade.  Well, when the daughter showed up for school in September, expecting to be in 5th grade, she learned that she was put again into a 4th grade class.  Her parents wanted her switched into 5th grade since the girl was devastated to be in 4th grade again and Success Academy said that even though she passed 4th grade, they didn’t feel that she was ready for 5th grade and that if she transferred out she could be in 5th grade at another school.  They chose that option and they don’t go there anymore.  This shows the length that a school will go to to keep their gene pool pure.

The first ever Success Academy class had 80 kindergarteners.  Those 80 kindergarteners are now just 20 10th graders.  None of those students qualified for any of the specialized high schools in New York City despite it just being a standardized test that gains admission.

Success Academy is not a good place.  If you go to this, ask Eva about the civil rights lawsuit filed against her and watch her blame it on the mayor and the teachers’ unions.

An irony about the Success Academy / TFA relationship is that Success Academy will not hire new TFAers to be lead teachers at their schools.  Many Success Academy classrooms have two teachers and the new TFA corps members can only be the co-teacher.  Is not letting new TFA teachers be the sole teacher in a classroom something that the reformers think should be practiced in the pubic schools too?

Tennessee:  A Story of Change at the State Level brought to you by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

This is the actual title.  Tennessee was the first Race To The Top winner.  They hired TFA VP Kevin Huffman (Michelle Rhee’s ex-husband) to be commissioner and he hired Chris Barbic, another TFAer I know from my Houston days, to run the Achievement School District, a district that takes over schools in the bottom 5%, turns them into charters, in an effort to get them into the top 25% in five years time.

Tennessee had the most ‘gains’ in the national NAEP scores two years ago and though the recent NAEP wasn’t as much growth, they still have the most gains over a four year period in that test so you should expect to hear a lot about that.

The thing is that if you look at their state test scores, Tennessee’s reading scores have been dropping for 3 consecutive years.  And that ASD experiment, well of the initial 6 schools they took over, they are pretty much all still in the bottom 5% after 3 years.

Huffman resigned before he got fired by the new Governor.  Barbic resigned conveniently 2 years before he would have to admit that the 5 years to get from the bottom 5% to the top 25% was nothing more than a nice fund raising slogan.  And also on this panel, for some reason, is Matt Kramer, the former co-CEO of TFA who resigned last year because it would be good for the organization.

I think it would be fun to ask these guys, “Why did you resign if you were doing such a great job?”

5 thoughts on “A Subversive Guide To The Saturday Sessions

  1. Pingback: #TFA25FactCheck: Examining TFA’s Facade Cracks in Real Time | deutsch29

  2. Informed TN Mom

    Great stuff! Thank you for doing this!!!
    One correction: Huffman in TN didn’t resign “before he got fired by the new Governor” because we still have the same awful Governor we did before (Gov. Bill Haslam) that had appointed him. Huffman resigned right before the NAEP test scores became public, so people speculate he quit because TN’s results were flat, his facade was crumbling, and public outrage against him was growing. The Governor replaced Huffman with a softer personality, Candice McQueen, a woman from a private University that had promised her private school that they wouldn’t do Common Core like the commoners in public school. Nice, huh?

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  3. booklady

    Gary, You will have so much follow-up to do re TFA25FactCheck Twitter entries.
    Re several entries on Vanessa Rodriguez lines on your Sat twitter account, here are two items your readers can check
    1. Nj.com “Top Newark school official announces exit from district” Jan 12, 2016, Dan Ivers reports the Newark “School Advisory Board voted to recommend Rodriguez be fired over her alleged role in processing $12,115 in vacation and sick leave payments” to Tiffany Hardrick, who was concurrently working as Superintendent of an Arkansas district.
    2. V Rodriguez says they wanted money to support teachers BUT much more of Zuckerberg’s gift/matching $ was spent on consultants thru Foundation for Newark’s Future. See
    Bob Braun’s Ledger Dec 9, 2014 “Who says you can’t make big bucks in public education?” Bob notes consultants Alison Avera (former TFA) and Tracy Breslin (both Broad Academy) were paid $700K thru Foundation for Newark’s Future that school year to help 3 Renew Schools. The foundation spent token amount on grants for teachers innovations.

    Folks may be interested or infuriated to know that Foundation for Newark’s Future CEO was earning well over $300K to distribute Zuckerberg/matching $.

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  4. CO teacher

    “I know teachers in Colorado and Johnston is not liked by them.” How many teachers do you know exactly in Colorado? I’m curious, as you seem to use this sample to imply that all teachers in Colorado don’t like Senator Johnston, which is not accurate. As an actual teacher in Colorado that, I’d venture to guess knows more teachers here than you, I can attest to the fact that he is actually pretty well liked by many teachers.

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