From Ken Derstine in Philadelphia:
November 29, 2013
By Ken Derstine
November
29, 2013
By Ken
Derstine
“Truth is
stranger than fiction, but it is because Fiction is obliged to stick to
possibilities; Truth isn’t.” – Mark Twain
Further research
into the Broad Foundation’s role in corporate education reform in Philadelphia
It is
hard to believe that only a little over two years have passed since Arlene
Ackerman was bought out of her contract on August 22nd, 2011. The
changes in the Philadelphia School District have been so overwhelming and rapid
that it seems the events happened a much longer time ago.
In the past I have written about the role The
Broad Foundation is playing in corporate education reform in Philadelphia, in
particular in my February 24, 2013 article, which was published at the time by
Substance News in Chicago and is now on my blog, “Who is Eli Broad and why is
he trying to destroy public education?. http://www.defendpubliceducation.net/ In particular see the section The Broad
Superintendents Academy. Also see my June 3, 2013 article “ The 2013-14
“Doomsday Budget of the School District of Philadelphia: How Did It Come to
This”” http://tinyurl.com/kh2d9nw
In the
light of the passage of time and recent developments, I have done a
reexamination of the influence of the Broad Foundation in corporate education
reform in Philadelphia. My February 24th article went into some of this but did
not include the detail I give below, plus at the end of this article I detail a
new development.
In the February 24th article I detail
that Arlene Ackerman joined the board of the Broad Foundation on March 19, 2009
while she was Superintendent in Philadelphia. http://tinyurl.com/89sfrzv Prior to this on March 15, 2007 she was appointed the
first Superintendent in Residence of the Broad Superintendents Academy. This
article, Dr. Arlene Ackerman Intersects the
Worlds of Teachers College and the Broad Institute,
details her role at the Broad Superintendents Academy. It says,
Enter
Arlene Ackerman, the Christian A. Johnson Professor of Outstanding Educational
Practice, Organization and Leadership at Teachers College (TC), Columbia
University, who has just been appointed the first Broad Superintendent in
Residence. Based in L.A., the position—a first for the Broad Foundation—will
give Dr. Ackerman a highly visible role in directing, mentoring and serving as
executive coach in one of the nation’s largest urban school systems. She will
be in charge of advising an initial cohort of 14 aspiring superintendents, each
of whom will be given a faculty mentor, and guiding them in areas related to
governance, infrastructure, leadership. She will continue her work at Columbia
and use both positions to reinforce common goals.
Ackerman was appointed Superintendent in
Philadelphia on February 19, 2008. She had previously been Superintendent of
San Francisco schools where she resigned on September 6, 2005 when the School
Board voted unanimously to invoke the “compatibility clause” in her contract,
and bought out her contract for $375,000. http://tinyurl.com/m23j75q
She is listed on the Broad Foundation Board of
Directors in their 2009-2010 Annual Report (http://tinyurl.com/6w5sps2
Page 25).
She is not listed on board in the 2011-2012
Annual Report. (Sidenote: Ed Rendell is listed on The Broad Prize
Selection Jury in this report. Page 55 http://tinyurl.com/9wqv9um ) However, I want to make it clear, and the reason I did
this latest research, there is evidence that Ackerman was deeply involved with
The Broad Foundation during her whole time in Philadelphia whether or not she
was on the board of the Broad Foundation in 2011-2012.
When she
got into the dispute with Mayor Nutter and Dwight Evans over which charter
management company would be given management of Martin Luther King High School,
Mayor Nutter had Joan Markman, his Chief Integrity Officer, do an investigation
whose findings were published in the 26 page document Fact Finding Report to
Mayor Michael A. Nutter Concerning Charter Operator Selection Process At Martin
Luther King High School, September 21, 2011.
(If you
have never read this, it is very interesting and important reading. If you
have, two years later these events seem even more significant and it’s worth a
reread.)
On two
occasions, this report states that trainees from the Broad Superintendent
Academy were present during the interviews with Ackerman about the dispute.
Page 8
Evans
then attempted to convince Ackerman to reject the vote of the SAC (the parent
organization at MLK) in communications in the days before the March 16, 2011,
SRC meeting at which the SRC was scheduled to vote. In at least one telephone
call from Evans, she refused to do so. Her refusal was witnessed not only by
members of her staff, but at least one visiting fellow of the Broad
Superintendent Academy who was shadowing Ackerman during the week of March 14,
2011, and who was present in Ackerman’s office as she argued with Evans in a
telephone conversation the day before the SRC vote.
Page 13
(This takes place in the evening, after the March 16th, SRC meeting which approved
Mosaica for the management of Martin Luther King High School, which angered
Dwight Evans.)
The
meeting (between Evans and Porter of Mosaica) appears to have lasted for 20-30
minutes. Porter (John Porter, President of Mosaica Turnaround Partners whom
Ackerman was backing for management of Martin Luther King High School) - who
said he was “in shock” and whom Nunery described to us as “shaking” — left the
building and got into a taxi. Nunery went upstairs to Ackerman’s office, where
Ackerman was debriefing a second Broad Superintendent Academy fellow who was
shadowing her for the week. Witnesses who were present at that time, including
the Broad Academy fellow, recalled Nunery entering visibly shaken and saying he
had just attended a meeting that was like a scene from “The Godfather”.
After
Porter was pressured by Evans to withdraw Mosaica from management of MLK at
this March 16th meeting, Porter met with Ackerman that evening. There were later
differing explanations (see the report) from Archie and Ackerman about what
caused Porter to withdraw Mosaica from management of MLK the next day even
though it had just been approved by the SRC the day before. Once again,
however, this dispute shows the deep involvement with The Broad Foundation that
Ackerman brought to Philadelphia.
Page 18
Both
Ackerman and Porter told us that after Porter left in a taxi and Ackerman
learned from Nunery about the Evans meeting, she contacted Porter. Nunery,
Ackerman, and Porter described Ackerman as distressed to learn that Evans tried
to pressure Porter and Mosaica away from MLK. Ackerman had known Porter from
when she was an instructor and he was a fellow in the Broad Academy program
several years before. She and Porter then met at the Marriot Hotel restaurant
to discuss what had transpired at the meeting with Evans. The two discussed the
difficulties Mosaica might face operating MLK in the face of Evan’s hostility…
In this
research I have focused on the report written for the Mayor about the dispute
over MLK. These events took place on March 16th, 2011. Nutter is not mentioned
in the report, but SRC Chairman Robert Archie, who was appointed by Nutter, was
very involved and the report makes it clear that Archie intervened to support
Evans against Porter and Ackerman.
Nutter
apparently made a decision in late June that Ackerman must go when Ackerman got
into a public dispute with him over full day kindergarten announcing she was
moving funds to finance full day kindergarten from federal Title I programs
even as Nutter was lobbying Harrisburg for funding. She was given an infamous
$905,000 buy-out of her contract on August 22, 2011.
http://www.philly.com/philly/blogs/school_files/Arlene-Ackerman-is-out-as-Philly-superintendent.html
Note: The
report to Mayor Nutter about the March 16th dispute over MLK was
released September 21st, a month after Ackerman had resigned.
Since the Boston Consulting Group was brought
into the District shortly after Ackerman left, the District has been subjected
to one of the world’s top corporate raider firms. (See “Who’s Killing Philly
public schools?” http://tinyurl.com/o23eamd
) and “Who’s (still) killing Philly public schools?” http://tinyurl.com/k994xhp by Daniel Denvir.
Ackerman may have left, but she left behind many
representatives from The Broad Foundation in administrative positions, including
her successor William Hite, Broad Superintendent Class of 2005 http://tinyurl.com/l74njlh, who was appointed to carry out the BCG plans on June 29, 2012.
Recently,
William Hite appointed David Hardy as Chief Academics Support Officer in the
School District. His background from the Philadelphia Daily News, November 8,
2013 http://articles.philly.com/2013-11-08/news/43827137_1_hardy-brooklyn-universal-companies
Hardy
previously worked for the New Jersey Department of Education as head of a
regional education office that aimed to turn around underperforming schools in
Burlington and Camden counties.
Before
being hired for that position in August 2012, Hardy had been principal of the
Achievement First http://tinyurl.com/mgs3a8t East
New York Charter School in Brooklyn since its September 2009 founding.
Previously,
he worked as a principal-in-residence at another Achievement First school in
Brooklyn. Hardy was also a Teach for America volunteer in 2003 for Miami-Dade
County Public Schools in Florida.
That Hardy started his career with Teach for
America is significant. I do not know of documentation about the number of TFA
teachers in Philadelphia, but TFA has been deeply involved in Philadelphia since
2008. In an article on my blog, “Starved Schools Taken Off of Life Support” http://tinyurl.com/kkk8yxf, I wrote this about H.F. “Gerry” Lenfest, co-owner of
the Philadelphia Inquirer and Daily News and his support of TFA:
In 2009, H.F. Lenfest’s Lenfest
Foundation announced a $10
million matching grant to expand Teach for America in Philadelphia over ten
years. TFA said it was “the largest grant offer a regional Teach for
America program has ever received”. http://tinyurl.com/pg8wr8w
For
information about the origins of NJ’s Regional Achievement Centers, of which
Camden is one of seven and which Harding headed until he was brought to the
Philadelphia School District by Hite in mid-November, 2013, see this article
from the Jersey Jazzman blog:
Eli Broad
Buys News Jersey’s Schools (June 5, 2012)
Note: NJ
Education Commissioner Chris Cerf is a graduate of the Broad Superintendent
Academy Class of 2004. He was previously president and chief operating officer
of Edison Schools.
For a
graphic view of how Cerf has employed the Broad Foundation’s business methods
of “creative destruction” whose basic tenet is to starve the public schools as
the method of making charter schools appealing to parents, see this documentary
from Princeton Community Television about the destructive impact that Cerf and
the Christie administration have had in Trenton, New Jersey.
Getting
back to David Harding, look at this July 30, 2013 article by Jersey Jazzman:
Hardy is not mentioned in the article, but look
at the comments to the article! He has quite a reputation in NYC and New
Jersey! (Check out the comment with the NY Daily News link to “10-year-old
autistic boy, Brandon Strong, punished for behavior caused by his condition” http://tinyurl.com/l7z4dmv that shows Hardy is clueless about the needs of Special
Education students which is also mentioned in the comments to the Jersey Jazzman
article.)
Finally, Ackerman went to Santa Fe, New Mexico
after leaving Philadelphia where she became a national spokeswoman for school
vouchers and charter schools until her passing in February 2013. http://tinyurl.com/k8q4wh9
She
brought with her to Santa Fe Joel Boyd who had overseen the Promise Academies
Ackerman had set up in Philadelphia in 2008 as part of her Imagine 2014 plan.
http://www.sfreporter.com/santafe/article-6887-starting-over.html (Read the comments.)
To see
how his appointment as Santa Fe School Superintendent was viewed in Santa Fe,
see this August 24, 2012 article by a Santa Fe parent on the Parents Across
America website.
If any links are defective, this article can be
found at:
Knoxville is under the thumb of a Broad vampire.
ReplyDeletehttp://us3.campaign-archive2.com/?u=1e0c464fe9590a0fbf1227edf&id=7715bff38b&e=ba1041a30f
I met Arlene Ackerman in Oklahoma City when she was mentoring our new superintendent, John Q. Porter. It only took six months for Porter to drive the school system into the ditch.
ReplyDeleteAs of December, 2013 Santa Fe Public Schools have 53 open positions.
ReplyDeletehttp://atthechalkface.com/2013/12/12/teachers-fleeing-new-mexico-districts/