Hey, Mom! Talking to My Mother #735 - Devos' Hard Line on New Education Law Surprises States
Hi Mom,
Overdue for some political content, and this caught my eye.
I love that the students at Bethune-Cookman University booed and turned their backs on Devos when she attempted to speak at their graduation on May 10th: WASHINGTON POST. Much like the Notre Dame students who walked out on Mike Pence: TRIBUNE.
In other news...
Students from for profit schools are suing Devos.
Stuff like this makes me sick, which is the theme, right? I was disgusted about something else yesterday, and now I am disgusted by this vile woman who has no business being head of the Department of Education finding herself in that important position.
This article discusses mixed signals from Devos' office. Could that be because she has not clear vision and doesn't know what she's doing?
Friday, July 7, 2017
DeVos’s Hard Line on New Education Law Surprises States - The New York Times:DeVos’s Hard Line on New Education Law Surprises States
Education Secretary Betsy DeVos, who made a career of promoting local control of education, has signaled a surprisingly hard-line approach to carrying out an expansive new federal education law, issuing critical feedback that has rattled state school chiefs and conservative education experts alike.
President Barack Obama signed the Every Student Succeeds Act in 2015 as the less intrusive successor to the No Child Left Behind law, which was maligned by many in both political parties as punitive and prescriptive. But in the Education Department’s feedback to states about their plans to put the new law into effect, it applied strict interpretations of statutes, required extensive detail and even deemed some state education goals lackluster.
In one case, the acting assistant secretary for elementary and secondary education, Jason Botel, wrote to the State of Delaware that its long-term goals for student achievement were not “ambitious.”
“It is mind-boggling that the department could decide that it’s going to challenge them on what’s ambitious,” said Michael J. Petrilli, the president of the conservative-leaning Thomas B. Fordham Institute, who worked in the Education Department under President George W. Bush. He called the letter “directly in opposition to the rhetoric and the promises of DeVos.”
After more than a decade of strict federal education standards
and standardized testing regimes, the Every Student Succeeds Act was to return
latitude to the states to come up with plans to improve student achievement and
hold schools accountable for student performance.
It sought to relieve states
from the federal pressures of its predecessor, which required that 100 percent
of the students of every school reach proficiency on state tests or the school
would face harsh penalties and aggressive interventions. Unlike No Child Left
Behind, the new law does not set numerical achievement targets, nor does it
mandate how a state should intervene if a school fails to reach them. The law
does require that states set such benchmarks on their own.
Proponents, especially congressional Republicans and
conservative education advocates, believed that a new era of local control
would flourish under Ms. DeVos, who pointed to the new law as illustrative of
the state-level empowerment she champions.
But her department’s feedback reflects a tension between
ideology and legal responsibility: While she has said she would like to see her
office’s role in running the nation’s public schools diminished, she has also
said she will uphold the law.
“All of
the signals she has been sending is that she’s going to approve any plan that
follows the law,” Mr. Petrilli said. “And when in doubt, she’s going to give
the states the benefit of the doubt.”
Mr.
Botel defended the department’s feedback, saying it was measuring state plans
against federal statutes — including a requirement that plans be ambitious.
“Because
the statute does not define the word ‘ambitious,’ the secretary has the
responsibility of determining whether a state’s long-term goals are ambitious,”
Mr. Botel said.
In the
department’s letter to Delaware — which incited the most outrage from
conservative observers — Mr. Botel took aim at the state’s plan to halve the
number of students not meeting proficiency rates in the next decade. Such a
goal would have resulted in only one-half to two thirds of some groups of
students achieving proficiency, he noted.
The
department deemed those long-term goals, as well as those for English-language
learners, not ambitious, and directed the state to revise its plans to make
them more so.
So far,
16 states and the District of Columbia have submitted plans, and more states
will present plans in the fall. Delaware, New Mexico and Nevada were the first three to be
reviewed by Education Department staff and a panel of peer reviewers.
State
education officials in Delaware said they had spent a year engaging the
community on their plan and would resubmit it with clarifications.
But
Atnre Alleyne, the executive director of DelawareCAN, an advocacy group that
helped draft the plan, agreed with the department’s findings.
He said
that his group had challenged the state about accountability measures, such as
setting firm goals and consequences for failing to meet them, and found that
“there was a lot of fear about being bold or aggressive” after No Child Left
Behind.
“Ultimately
this has to be about every student succeeding, so to say that one-third are
going to be proficient in 10 years, the department is right to call that into
question,” Mr. Alleyne said. “A lot of people thought it was just going to be a
breeze. I was glad to see it was a push.”
Since
Ms. DeVos was confirmed, civil rights and education advocates have expressed concern that state plans
would get assembly-line approval and states would be allowed to skirt
responsibility for low-performing and historically underserved students.
For all
of its flaws, the No Child Left Behind Act was praised for holding schools
accountable for performance data. Under the law, a school was considered
failing if all of its student groups, including all racial and ethnic groups,
English-language learners and students with disabilities, did not meet annual
achievement targets. By the end of the law, more than half of the nation’s
schools were considered failures.
But
even after the first round of feedback, the advocates would like the department
to be more aggressive and reject any state plan that lacks specifics on how
they will account for the performance of historically underperforming and
underserved student populations.
“Pushback
and feedback in and of themselves are of no interest and of no value,” said Liz
King, the director of education policy at the Leadership Conference on Civil
and Human Rights.
Chad
Aldeman, a principal at Bellwether Education Partners, who led an
independent examination of state plans, said that some states, like
Louisiana, New Mexico and Tennessee, had innovative plans to improve student
achievement.
But Mr.
Aldeman agreed that many state plans reflected “process without specificity”
when it came to the two most important parts of the new law — identifying how
schools will account for the performance of all students, and how states plan
to intervene in low-performing schools. And Ms. DeVos and Republican lawmakers
were partly to blame.
“The
administration has signaled that they’re willing to take plans that are
half-baked, and we’re seeing plans that aren’t finished and are not complete,”
Mr. Aldeman said.
Christopher
Ruszkowski, the acting secretary for the New Mexico Public Education
Department, said the idea that the new law would yield total state control was
merely “rhetoric from the Beltway.”
“I
think a lot of the euphoria over return to local control was an overpromise,”
he said. “What this signals is that U.S.D.E. will continue to play the role
they’ve always played in the years ahead.”
In
feedback for five more states — Connecticut, Louisiana, New Jersey, Oregon and
Tennessee — the Education Department avoided criticizing the ambitions of the
state plans. But it did maintain its scrutiny.
For
example, the department noted that Tennessee neglected to identify, as the law
requires, languages other than English spoken among its student population
because it considers itself “an English-only state.” According to the state’s
population profile, nearly 50,000 students speak English as a second
language.
And in
Connecticut’s plan, the department pointed out that the state discussed ways to
identify schools that had “consistently underperforming” student groups, but
did not actually define what that meant.
The
state was also criticized for its use of an alternative system for measuring
academic performance instead of more standard “proficiency” measurements on
state tests, as the law requires.
Such
feedback signaled that the department “appears to be resorting to very
traditional and narrow ways of interpreting student and school performance,”
said Laura Stefon, chief of staff for the Connecticut State Department of
Education.
Connecticut
was also among a handful of states faulted for including science as a subject
for measuring achievement, even though the law allows the use only of reading
and math. This feedback was widely criticized by academic groups, including the
National Science Teachers Association, who said the department was interpreting
the law too literally.
State
leaders said they believed they were all but promised their plans would be
approved. Instead, Chris Minnich, the executive director of the Council of
Chief State School Officers, said some aspects of the Education Department’s
feedback were “overzealous” and could undermine community involvement.
“It’s
going to be really hard for a state to go back and say, ‘I know I told you we
were doing all of this, but we’re going to change it because the federal
government told us not to,’” Mr. Minnich said.
Correction: July 7, 2017
A
version of this article misstated the fraction of students that could achieve
proficiency under a Delaware education plan. It was one-half to two thirds, not
one third to one half.
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Reflect and connect.
Have someone give you a kiss, and tell you that I love you.
I miss you so very much, Mom.
Talk to you tomorrow, Mom.
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- Days ago = 737 days ago
- Bloggery committed by chris tower - 1707.11 - 10:10
NOTE on time: When I post late, I had been posting at 7:10 a.m. because Google is on Pacific Time, and so this is really 10:10 EDT. However, it still shows up on the blog in Pacific time. So, I am going to start posting at 10:10 a.m. Pacific time, intending this to be 10:10 Eastern time. I know this only matters to me, and to you, Mom. But I am not going back and changing all the 7:10 a.m. times. But I will run this note for a while. Mom, you know that I am posting at 10:10 a.m. often because this is the time of your death.
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