Monday, August 03, 2015

HARRIS LIRTZMAN TELLS TEACHERS POLITICAL PROCESS IS DEAD END FOR THE MOST PART

Over at Perdido Street School, guest blogger Harris Lirtzman has a fascinating piece on teachers and the American political system that is required reading.  Basically, teachers have been left without a home as both major parties have pretty much abandoned the public schools and the teachers.  For example, New Jersey Governor and Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie wants to punch us in the face while almost all of the Senate Democrats, including the sainted Bernie Sanders, voted for the Murphy Amendment which Diane Ravitch said would intensify the federal test the kids and then punish the teachers accountability system in our schools.

Harris makes the case that we need to vote Democratic to preserve what little we have but focus our energies on rebuilding our unions in order to activate our members so that the politicians will have to pay real attention to us at some point.  Here is the final part of his informative essay.

Education progressives who have an understanding of practical politics in this country will recognize what most progressives learned in 2000. Any education progressive who says now that there is no difference between the Democratic and Republican Parties has not been watching what's been happening in this country since 2000 very closely.

The Republican Party, with whom teachers have aligned themselves on education policy issues, caught rabies in 2004. The Republican Party, wherever it has been able to, pursues an agenda that means death for every other thing that educational progressives support. Any educational progressive who is not a “single issue” radical will support the Democratic Party whoever its nominee is and abandon the insanity of the Republican alliance that will have returned education policy to the states, where progressive education policy goes to die its own death, in return for momentary relief from federal testing and accountability mandates.

Unfortunately, the story does not end will for educational progressives. Except in small parts of the country where individual Democrats care enough about educational progressivism to make it an issue, educational reformers will be able to pursue the same goals they have for the last two decades.
If the cost of political engagement for educational progressives is that we are forced in the end to make a “Sophie’s Choice” between our own progressivism and the fuller range of progressivisms that we support then I say let us leave politics behind.

Let us reform our unions, if we can. Let us fight to protect teachers who are able to survive the education reform movement in their workplaces. Let us preserve collective bargaining and dues check-off. Let us develop a robust range of mutual support capabilities to preserve teaching as a proud profession. Let us think about new strategies that the weakness of our political position demands—particularly building strong and vital alliances with other parts of the progressive movement, especially with people of color—and let us focus on the long, hard, unglamorous work that might turn the vast majority of apolitical teachers into education progressives.

Let us think about almost anything except how "educational progressives" can find a home in or be saved by the American political process.

Because we can’t and because we won’t. 



It is not a pretty picture that Harris paints but can anyone argue with the conclusion?

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

The Queens teacher who passed a high school student practically begging to be failed made a stunning admission Sunday — she did it because of the “tremendous amount of pressure” to just graduate kids.
William Cullen Bryant High School instructor Andrea McHale copped to the move the same day that The Post published a front-page essay by guilt-ridden teen Melissa Mejia lamenting how she received a passing grade in the teacher’s government class — even though she rarely showed up, didn’t turn in homework, and missed the final.
A minimum passing grade of 65 allowed her to graduate.
“It was not an ideal situation,” McHale acknowledged to The Post at her Queens home. “If we don’t meet our academic goals, we are deemed failures as teachers. There is a tremendous amount of pressure on us as teachers.”
“I thought it was in her best interest and the school’s best interest to pass her.”
In her essay, Mejia said: “I don’t like receiving what I would call a handout, but that’s what happened. New York City gave me a diploma I didn’t deserve.”
McHale’s acknowledgment that she pushed Mejia through appeared to confirm the worst fears about the city’s public schools — that even unsatisfactory students are routinely handed diplomas.
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Principal Namita Dwarka
Photo: G.N. Miller
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The teacher said she believes that her student spoke out because “I think she felt a sense of, ‘Why isn’t the standard higher?’ But if we set the bar higher, we would be a failing school.”
She explained that Mejia passed all her state Regents tests and had strong scores in the history exams.
“Her attendance was extremely poor, but she was a very intelligent student,” McHale insisted.
“There is a fairly consistent policy that if they pass their Regents, it is strongly suggested that they pass in the class,” the teacher said.
“She did pass her Regents exam, and it’s generally accepted that if a student passes their Regents exam, it suggests some kind of readiness for college.”
Mejia confirmed that she passed all five parts of her Regents exams by her sophomore year.
McHale missed the last month of school with a broken ankle but said she kept her bosses in the loop about passing the student.
“I did bring it to the attention of my supervisor, the assistant principal,” McHale said.
“The substitute teacher was also undecided in her case. I actually passed [Mejia], and her grade was not changed [afterward].”
Bryant High School Principal Namita Dwarka declined comment Sunday.
Department of Education spokesman Harry Hartfield said the situation will be investigated.

Anonymous said...

This is not news. It goes on all over.