The KIPP damage control machine has not sprung into full action mode yet, but my recent sharing of a small clip from one interview with a former KIPP teacher has generated a number of comments here and here and here. (Note that anyone other than those forced into anonymity for security or safety reasons should include real names when posting comments at SM).
I include two responses below from two former KIPP students with very different perspectives on KIPP. The first one offers an unreserved endorsement of KIPP and all its practices, while the second one offers something quite different. Since the second one stated that she feared for her safety , any details that could be used to identify her have been deleted.
My comments follow each.
I include two responses below from two former KIPP students with very different perspectives on KIPP. The first one offers an unreserved endorsement of KIPP and all its practices, while the second one offers something quite different. Since the second one stated that she feared for her safety , any details that could be used to identify her have been deleted.
My comments follow each.
Response by Juanita Davis, "proud KIPP alumnus"
James Horn:
I was severely disappointed as I read your piece “KIPP
Forces 5th Graders to “Earn” Desks by Sitting on the Floor for a Week”. As a
professor of educational leadership at Cambridge University, I expected so much
more than what you failed to deliver.
This interview was partial. KIPP is an amazing
organization that places countless children who come from impoverished
communities into a mind frame that fosters success and accountability. Instead
of properly researching KIPP, this article fell prey to lazy journalism and
shock value.
Given your position as an educator and someone who
undoubtedly has influence through journalism, I can’t help but to feel let
down. Where were the news reporters when over sixty kids had to share one
partitioned room because the board of education wouldn’t fund us? Where was the
outrage when the board of education refused to provide us with books? In fact,
they even refused to provide us with desks. It was our KIPP teachers who went into
their own pockets to make sure we had the necessary tools for our education. It
was Dave Levin and Frank Corcoran who miraculously put together two classrooms
with the necessary resources we needed to learn. Where was the outcry then?
KIPP came from humble beginnings, much like the students
it serves. Even as an adult, I often look back to my KIPP years some 18 years
ago and continue to extract the life lessons instilled in me then. How many
schools put character first? If you want to tell a story, tell impassioned
narratives from people who truly understand what KIPP means. Your article
captured the opinion of one person who no longer works for our organization.
How could this educator possibly give a balanced assessment of KIPP when they
struggled to make it through the summer themselves, failing to understand the
life lessons that were instilled in these kids starting from these children’s
first day of school?
Why not interview KIPPsters such as myself? You don’t
want to hear the truth? You don’t want to hear that KIPP works? Will no one
read a four page article praising a charter school that helped to send Black
and Latino kids like me to boarding school on full academic scholarships? Is it
boring to hear that KIPP has an amazing post graduate network that sticks with
their alumni and offers SAT, SSAT, ACT, and LSAT prep for its alumni? Guess who
was front and center at my prep school graduation? KIPP. College books are
expensive. Want to know who paid for my college books? KIPP. Want to know who
has called me every month for the last ten years, at least, to make sure I am
okay and to ask if I need resume help or any type of tutoring if I want to
further my education? Mr. Martinez. Guess where he is from. You guessed it,
KIPP. I remember struggling with college math 2 AM frustrated as can be. I
picked up the phone, called my 8th grade math teacher, Mr. Corcoran, and he
spent 45 minutes on the phone helping me through my math problems. How many
students can do that? How many teachers are that dedicated? As a college
professor, do your students have this access to you?
No one tells the tale of countless minority children who
are murdered in the streets of the South Bronx and Chicago. We don’t see enough
articles detailing the failed public schools who have children reading and
performing mathematics below grade level. The inmates are getting younger and
their jail sentences are getting longer. What is the solution?
For many of us, the solution is KIPP. I am the first
person in my family to graduate college. I am the product of a teen mom and
immigrant father, neither who raised me. I grew up in foster care, battling my
surroundings. I battled poverty, abuse, neglect, and danger as I proudly walked
to school with my KIPP uniform with the big red words Knowledge is Power
written on back of my shirt. I didn’t know then what KIPP would mean to be now.
I can jot down facts like 95% of KIPP alums have
graduated high school, compared to the low income average of 70%. 89% of
students who completed a KIPP middle school five or more years ago have
matriculated into college, compared to the low income average of 41% and the
national average of 62%. A third of KIPPsters earned their bachelor’s degree,
compared to 8% of the low income average. I can give all types of statistics,
but, as a journalist, that is your job.
KIPP isn’t the problem. KIPP is the solution. Without a
doubt, KIPP isn’t for everyone. Not every teacher is cut out to be a KIPP
educator and not every family can handle the pressure of nurturing a KIPPster.
There is an outrage that students are made to sit on the floor to earn their
desks but there is no outrage when these same students, who walk through life
learning nothing of character, perseverance, and accountability are put behind
bars serving sentences to a society designed for them to fail. The cycle never
ends.
I remember not having books. I had photocopies from
books because no one would fund us. I remember not having enough desks and
chairs in the classroom. We shared. So what?! I remember wanting to learn and
having dedicated faculty nurture my desire to learn and helped me build on my
academics as well as my character. I am not upset about these children with no
desks. I am proud of them. Nothing is this world is given to you, it is earned.
It is amazing that these children extracted such a big lesson as such a young
age. They are already following the footsteps of so many KIPPsters before them
who have paved their way. Good for them. They are headed in the right
direction. From one KIPPster to another, I am proud of you. Always put your
character first, even when other people question it. Keep choosing the road
less travelled. It makes a difference.
My comments on Juanita Davis's remarks:
There is a documented phenomenon in the psychological
literature known as Stockholm Syndrome. From Wikipedia:
"Stockholm syndrome can be seen as a form of traumatic bonding, which does not necessarily require a hostage scenario, but which describes 'strong emotional ties that develop between two persons where one person intermittently harasses, beats, threatens, abuses, or intimidates the other.'
One commonly used hypothesis to explain the effect of Stockholm syndrome is based on Freudian theory. It suggests that the bonding is the individual’s response to trauma in becoming a victim. Identifying with the aggressor is one way that the ego defends itself. When a victim believes the same values as the aggressor, they cease to be a threat."
I would suggest Ms. Davis may be suffering from this
corrosive malady, for just as she seems to begin to tell us what KIPP means to
her as an adult, she launches into the standard public relations spin that KIPP
promotes on its website. Surely there is something more than this seemingly
autonomic response to faithfully spout KIPP propaganda.
The fact that Ms. Davis is not upset that 100 new 5th graders
were packed into a classroom to sit the floor for a week until they could
demonstrate total compliance says a great deal about how much she truly
identifies now with the KIPP organization, whose preference for gritty
callousness over empathic understanding provides the rationalization for
institutionalized child abuse masquerading as education.
Ms. Davis also notes that she and her fellow KIPPsters did not have enough desks or books when she was a student, and she obviously believes it was "because no one would fund us." She was never told, no doubt, that KIPP, Inc. has hundreds of millions in assets in its bank accounts on top of the per-pupil funding that KIPP receives from public sources.
Response from Anonymous former KIPP student:
I would like to say that unlike other
alums who I feel suffer from Stockholm syndrome, I thank you for this article.
. . just know that the ill treatment of students is at the core
of the KIPP motto. These kinds of actions against students were
common and worse in the beginning with Mr. [David] Levin himself. The alums who
feel that this is not an accurate depiction are delusional.
Yes KIPP had great qualities, but it's
far from perfect. Kids can learn without
being abused psychologically. KIPP broke you down as a person and made you
think you needed them and [that] you were damaged goods.
As I write this I struggle with myself.
I feel grateful to KIPP as they afforded me many opportunities. But I also feel broken by them.
Don't believe the hype, those who
condemn your article just aren't ready to face the facts of what actually went
on in those schools.
I would like to remain anonymous as I
currently ________ at a KIPP school (my way of trying to . . . break
the cycle of abuse). And am still in
close contact with alumni so, I fear for my safety. . .
I just wanted the writer to know I thank
him.
My comments to Anonymous
I have received many anonymous comments from former teachers, and some from former students. Perhaps soon the cycle of fear and intimidation will be broken, and we will learn the full story of what happens at KIPP schools on a regular basis, rather than what happens when outside visitors are paraded through during well-orchestrated visits to take pictures of children and teachers trained to smile when called upon to do so.
What is happening today under Common Core is not new nor is the method. ESEA School Improvement Amendments of 1988, specifically designated the "effective school research" as the official method for teaching and restructuring American education. Two compatible bills H. R. 2460 and S. B. 1141, introduced in Mary, 1991, are "cited as the America 2000 Excellence in Education Act, and they also cite the "effective school research" to be used for this purpose. See (Effective School Research on the web). It is based on the theory of behavioral psycholigy as proposed by Pavlov and B. F. Skinner. The Method coupled with system management PPBS/TQM is now used extensively in ALL school in the USA and probably world wide. In the research (on the web and other data) note such terms as "unfreezing", "behavioral changes" and "change agents". Poor and minority children have been experimented with for several generations using classical, operant and modeling conditioning. Check out "Education Program that Work" going back to 1978 for documented proof. Why don't people call this what it actuall is?
ReplyDeleteIf you truly want to know what goes on at KIPP. ..... go there and find out yourself!!! I'm a mother of two graduates from KIPP and have never been prouder!!! Coming from a Catholic school educational background, I find that KIPP is the village that many youth of today need and I thank God, my family is apart of the KIPP village.
ReplyDeleteI tried to visit KIPPs in Memphis, but I was denied access. What do they have to hide. Ask your handlers, and see what they say.
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