August 30, 2015
The most recent link update at the end of the article September 18, 2015.
“Whenever I
see the school and the ruins, I wanna break into tears,” wrote Jacob Rodriguez,
17, who attended Fairhill from kindergarten through eighth grade.
Kiara
Villegas, 15, wrote on the wall: “They closed our school, for what reason
though?”
Pencil statements of students from
the closed Fairhill School in North Philadelphia in an art exhibit about the
closing of 31 public schools in 2012.
*****
“Fernando Gallard, a spokesman for
the school district, said, “We completely understand the feelings of the
students and their community that something that was part of their community
was closed.” He said Fairhill was chosen for closure because it was
low-performing and was in poor physical condition.”
Art Show Captures the Wrenching Effects of Closing a School
The New York Times – August 28, 2015
The New York Times – August 28, 2015
____________________
Unlike New Orleans after
Hurricane Katrina, where a natural disaster was turned into a man-made disaster to advance a neoliberal privatization agenda, Philadelphia public
schools have been undergoing a completely manmade disaster since the state
takeover of the School District in 2001.
Contrary to the claim of school
district officials, the 24 schools closed in 2013 were not closed due to “declining enrollment”. The
schools were losing students due to a starve the public schools, feed the
charters policy that began with the state takeover in 2001 and has accelerated since 2008.
This was a deliberate policy promoted by a series of administrators from The Broad Foundation, and by ALEC-affiliated legislators in the Pennsylvania capitol of Harrisburg.
School District spokesman
Gallard’s statement that schools were closed because they were “in poor
physical condition” is an indictment of every SRC since the state takeover in 2001. Maintenance and repair of these schools was
neglected and two new school facilities built during this period were quickly
turned over to charters. After their closure, the SRC invested millions in the closed buildings for repair in hopes of sale
to real estate interests or demolition even as the classrooms in Philadelphia
public schools continued to be starved for resources.
In addition, the SRC has
been balkanizing the district, closing or contracting out support services to
private interests. Most school libraries have been closed. Counselors are
part-time in elementary and middle schools. The entire substitute teaching
staff has been privatized based on a bogus claim of a substitute shortage. The SRC is preparing to privatize school health services.
The summer of 2015 has seen
the ramping up of policies for the expansion of privatization. In what one
parent at the August 20, 2015 meeting of the SRC describes as “a slow moving train wreck”, the conditions are being created for a major
expansion of charter schools in Philadelphia. School Superintendent William
Hite (Broad Superintendents Academy Class of 2005) and the SRC have been developing the infrastructure
for the “turnaround” (the tactical replacement of school closures) of
Philadelphia public schools to private charter management companies.
On July 8th, Hite
announced a massive reorganization of the entire School District and new hires to carry out his Action Plan 3.0 which will focus on Renaissance turnaround schools as the means to
charter growth. On August 25, 2015, Hite announced the expansion of his
administration by adding eight new positions at a cost of $1.2 million. Most of the appointments are careerists who
hold positions for corporate education interests for a year or two before
moving on to their next district to “reform”.
In a
recent article in the Philadelphia Inquirer Philadelphia
City Council President Darrell Clarke expressed frustration that Hite is using money to
expand his administration. He has threatened to hold $25 million that
City Council promised until he is assured that the money will be
specifically allocated for classroom use, and won’t be used to outsource jobs.
On August 26, 2015, the SRC employed its
latest tactic by inventing a new term: "a
turnaround of a turnaround". Young Scholars, the
charter company given management of the Frederick Douglass Elementary School in
2010, ceded control to Mastery. In violation of state rules and its own
by-laws, the SRC allowed this passing of the baton without a single public
hearing.
Mastery runs fourteen charter schools in Philadelphia.
In addition, it is expanding its role in the state-run Camden, NJ
schools with the opening of five “hybrid”
(blended learning) Renaissance Schools that are the first step to privatizing
these schools.
At the end of June, Mastery
complimented Hite’s 3.0 Action Plan with its own Mastery 3.0 plan. Mastery
acknowledges there are signs their students that go to college are having
trouble staying with the course work just as happened with low-income students
in public schools. Whatever magic Mastery claims to possess, the privatization
of public schools does not address the underlying social conditions that
children in low-income communities must struggle with. The signs are that the
entire corporate reform agenda is a house of cards built on quicksand!
Regardless, at its August 20th
meeting, the SRC voted to accept $300,000 from Mastery (from the taxpayers or philanthropists?) in
partnership with the William Penn Foundation to spread its magic “to pilot a coaching program that targets an underserved
population of District teachers and builds informal leadership capacity within
schools to increase the opportunity for professional growth for all teachers.”
(SRC Resolution A-4)
In the words of Lisa Haver
of the Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools testifying at the August 20th
SRC meeting,
“Resolution
A-4 proposes to take professional development from the teachers and educational
leadership at three unnamed schools and give it to an outside provider, in this
case Mastery charter district. What it doesn’t say is why. Who decided that
unknown employees from a charter company know more than SD teachers? Given that
all SD teachers are certified but only some of Mastery’s, and that test scores
from district schools are consistently higher than those of charters, how does
this make sense?”
Haver continued,
“The
SRC is going to allow an outside company to compile and analyze data of
teachers and students to whom they are not accountable in a school they don’t
work for? No explanation of who collects it and how it would be used or how
much control the actual teachers would have over it. Of course,
without a contract, those pesky issues would disappear.”
On May 15, 2015, The Broad Superintendents Academy announced that Scott Gordon, CEO of Mastery Charter Schools,
had joined its latest cohort of trainees. The press release stated that the
latest cohort is made up of ten trainees who are “passionate,
proven leaders to transform America’s urban school systems so every student
receives a world-class education.” Also joining the trainees is Paul Kihn,
former Deputy Superintendent of the School District of Philadelpia, who
resigned
in July from the SDP in Hite’s latest administrative shuffle. Kihn returned to
the Washington D.C.-based McKinsey
and Company, “a global management consulting firm”. In 2011, Kihn
coauthored Deliverology
101: A Field Guide for Educational Leaders, with Sir Michael
Barber,
chief education advisor for the British testing company Pearson.
The expansion of charter
schools in Pennsylvania received a major boost on August 27, 2015 with the ruling by Commonwealth Court that school districts do not have the right to place
limits on charter school enrollment.
Underwriting this expansion
of privatization is the Philadelphia School Partnership (PSP). At Fredrick Douglass, for example, it has
given $1.5 million for its “turnaround of a turnaround”. PSP came on the scene with
corporate and philanthropy funding from such local philanthropies as the
aforementioned William Penn Foundation. PSP has become part of Education
Cities ,“a non-profit network of 31
city-based organizations in 24 cities” who work as “harbormasters” for the privatization of public schools in their
city. Partners include corporate education reform organizations such as Bellwether, Center for
Reinventing Public Education (CRPE), Public Impact, Fordham Institute, and
Kingsland Consulting. Funders include The Broad Foundation, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, The Walton
Family Foundation, and Michael and Susan Dell Foundation.
When the Philadelphia School
Partnership was created in 2010, the focus of the SRC was on closing “low-performing” schools based on low standardized test scores. Recently,
however, the SRC, with the assistance of PSP, has begun “turnaround” of schools
not having low standardized tests scores based on unknown criteria. As Coleman
Poses, a researcher for the Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools, recently
noted in his article “An Analysis of How Philadelphia School Partnership
Has Implemented Its Mission”,
“Charter
schools became a part of the Philadelphia educational landscape in 1998 as a way to block what some observers believed to be
a monopoly of the Philadelphia School District over public
schools. Since the advent of the Great Schools Compact, however, Philadelphia
School Partnership has worked to create and maintain a cartel of charter and
parochial schools, while diminishing the role of district schools in the City.
PSP has accomplished this objective by providing economic supports to specific
schools and programs based upon non-existent criteria. It has also financially
supported the removal of teachers without cause from schools deemed to be
successful. Finally, educators, parents, politicians, and the general public
have received misleading information from PSP that has stymied efforts to
determine the best way to educate children in Philadelphia.”
Ever since the state takeover in 2001,
the School District of Philadelphia has been like a medieval town increasingly under
siege from an invading army. Treating the District like a foreign enemy being
set up for takeover, basic resources have been embargoed to weaken the schools.
Outside interests have been laying the conditions to take the education of the
children of Philadelphia from the community and make them available for
exploitation for the profit of corporate education interests.
Organizations like Philadelphia School
Partnership have been burrowing under the foundations of the School District encouraging
its ultimate collapse. What they envision is a two-tiered School District as outlined by SRC member Bill Green when he served as a Philadelphia City Councilman. Green
proposed a statewide system of charter schools with a selected population of
students and teachers segregated from a public school system to be made up of
children, mainly from low-income families, left behind in under resourced
schools with low paid teachers.
The problem for the side supporting
public schools as basic to a functioning democracy is that we are leaderless in
fighting the attack on public education. Whether it is Democratic Party
politicians or union leaders, all have bought into the neoliberal corporate reform
education agenda first promoted during the presidency of Bill Clinton. Randi Weingarten, President of the American
Federation of Teachers, has for years promoted collaboration with The Broad Foundation and The Gates Foundation.
The Philadelphia Federation of Teachers
has confined defense of its members almost
exclusively to court battles,
particularly the one over cancellation of its contract by the SRC on October 6,
2014. The SRC's action was subsequently ruled illegal, but they have
appealed the case to the PA Supreme Court. PFT members have been working
under the old contract, which expired June 30th 2013. There has been a
four-year freeze on wages, and the SRC's vote to eliminate some collective
bargaining rights while the courts decide on the SRC can abolish the PFT contract
has meant no step increases or compensation for additional degrees or
certifications. It has also resulted in elimination of some seniority
rights. Negotiations have been stalled by the district's cancellation of many
negotiation sessions.
Nor have the AFT or PFT supported the Opt-Out movement
against standardized testing which, combined with the Common Core, is the main
tool of corporate education reformers for privatizing public schools.
Chicago principal Troy LaRaviere, who is under attack by his District, and where Chicago faces a similar attack as Philadelphia on its public
schools, says what must be done:
“We don’t need heroes, and we don’t need saints. We
need a movement. A movement of hundreds of thousands of people across this city
who stand together to retake it from the grips of the corrupt and inept elected
and appointed officials who hold the reigns of power. The hero we need is the
public itself, awakened and ready to change our collective reality; ready to
serve as examples to our children—examples of citizens who come together to
work and change our city for the better.”
Also
see:
An Analysis of How
Philadelphia School Partnership Has Implemented Its Mission
Coleman Poses @ Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools – August 25, 2015
Talking Back to Mark Gleason
Defend Public Education! – April 19, 2014
Mark Gleason is the Executive Director of the Philadelphia School Partnership
Coleman Poses @ Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools – August 25, 2015
Talking Back to Mark Gleason
Defend Public Education! – April 19, 2014
Mark Gleason is the Executive Director of the Philadelphia School Partnership
LA teachers planning campaign
to oppose charter expansion
August 26, 2015 – LA School Report
August 26, 2015 – LA School Report
Chicago Public Schools may be
‘broke’, but CEO Forrest Claypool increased his bureaucracy at great cost …
Substance News – August 28, 2015
Substance News – August 28, 2015
GHS alumni celebrate
shuttered school’s centennial
Philadelphia Newsworks – August 31, 2015
Philadelphia Newsworks – August 31, 2015
Report on Systematic Crushing
of Local Control
Curmudgucation – August 30, 2015
Curmudgucation – August 30, 2015
Looking for a few thousand
substitute teachers
Philadelphia Inquirer – August 31, 2015
Philadelphia Inquirer – August 31, 2015
Also
see: “Cutting Substitutes Pay For
an Alleged Substitute Teacher Shortage?”
The Teacher’s Lens – August 9, 2015
The Teacher’s Lens – August 9, 2015
Darrel Clarke’s School
District Power Play
Citified – Philadelphia Magazine – September 1, 2015
Citified – Philadelphia Magazine – September 1, 2015
A “Love Letter” to Chicago’s
Teachers
Troy LaRaviere’s Blog – September 2, 2015
Troy LaRaviere’s Blog – September 2, 2015
Troy LaRaviere’s statement to
the City Club of Chicago about the Chicago schools budget crisis
The new charter school
scheme: This is how GOP and privatizers have bled Pennsylvania schools
Salon – September 8, 2015
Salon – September 8, 2015
Sub troubles stress out many Philly schools
Philadelphia Inquirer – September 13, 2015
The first week of privatization of substitute teachers in Philadelphia public schools has been a disaster.
Philadelphia Inquirer – September 13, 2015
The first week of privatization of substitute teachers in Philadelphia public schools has been a disaster.
Building booms over classrooms
Philadelphia Inquirer - September 14, 2015
Philadelphia Inquirer - September 14, 2015
In a rare corporate media
investigation, many Philadelphia charters are found to be in financial trouble.
September 15, 2015
A radio interview with Chicago principal
Troy LaRaviere.
The trajectory is the same in Newark.
ReplyDeleteAbigail Shure