Funded by Bill Gates and started by corporate school darling Michelle Rhee, The New Teachers Project has a big role in my book Hoosier School Heist. And this corporate consulting/temporary teacher group is at it again, this time with help from the Indiana State Board of Education.
On Wednesday, February 4, the state board will meet to determine whether or not it will take TNTP’s recommendations from the group's report done over the last two months on Indiana teacher evaluations for the state board, and there’s a very good chance it will, since TNTP has been a part of the school privatization movement in Indiana for years now.
Since TNTP has partnered
with SBOE board member Dan Elsener’s Marian University, so we know he's onboard with the agenda. And just a
few days ago, Eli Lilly agreed to hand out $3.4
million to the Mind Trust to expand TNTP and Teach for America in Indiana.
TNTP’s CEO, Ariela Rozman, is a Mind-Trust board member. In
2013, Rozman made over $300,000 in total compensation (page
7). That same year, TNTP made almost
$4.8 million in government grants (page
9). TNTP, then, was active in 30 cities and
created 1652 teachers for its organization (page
30).
As noted in TNTP report to the Indiana SBOE, The New Teacher Project doesn't like local control and finds it
a problem that 90 percent of the teachers in Indiana have been rated good,
which makes firing them and hiring temporary recruits from TNTP and Teach for
America more difficult and slows down school privatization.
Reporter Megan Trent summarizes
TNTP’s recommendations, one of them being test scores:
The New Teacher Project recommendations include
setting a range for teacher evaluations. For teachers specializing in an
area covered on ISTEP tests, 33% to 55% of the teachers’ evaluations would be
based on student test scores. Educators that teach subjects not covered on
ISTEP would have a range of 25% to 40% of their evaluations based on test
scores.
Praising the evaluation system set up four years ago and criticizing the “obstacles” (like Glenda Ritz?) to implementation that have occurred (see page 8-9), TNTP, of course, wants the SBOE (minus Glenda Ritz as its chairperson, no doubt) to have a major role in
the new plan, and this may require new laws (see page
26). If adopted, TNTP's teacher evaluation plan for Indiana will begin in 2016.
Filled full of corporate language like “stakeholders,” the
plan, no doubt, seeks to further dismantle teachers in Indiana. Hoosiers need to find out how much TNTP was paid to do the SBOE report and if any taxpayer money was used and how much.
For TNTP’s recent and secret school privatization teacher
preparation goals at the University of Memphis (which was hidden from department of education professors), read Jim Horn’s piece here.
They pushed out an evaluation survey for teachers to take, but it was so poorly constructed and had so many questions where none of the answers matched my experience that I abandoned it. I wonder how much NTP was paid for that.
ReplyDeleteThanks for letting me know this, Susie. Hope you are well.
DeleteThey are here in ky and our teacher union leadership is compromised, the State Department of Education has all been replaced with pro charter/privatizers. We are screwed.
ReplyDelete