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MEDIA WATCH: How big a lie did Arne Duncan tell The New York Times? Ask 13 state education commissioners

[Editor's Note: More than a century ago, a British politician uttered the famous saying: "There are lies, damned lies, and statistics" (or something like that). Five years ago, Substance ran a major story under the headline "Duncanian Duplicity" about the lies being told in Chicago by then Chicago Schools CEO Arne Duncan. Sadly, because of the declining state of Chicago's mass media — turned into stenographers for those in power by the capitalist system — Duncan's lies in Chicago were allowed to grow and grow. Pinocchio cartoons couldn't depict them even before Barack Obama decided that Duncan — and Duncan's policies — represented the true audacity of hope for public education in the USA. (Those of us who read the book knew what was coming, since Obama was a market zealot and privatization supporter from the day he took his first campaign contribution from the Pritzker or Rodgers families, but that's another story. Today's big ones are coming from Arne Duncan, as we reported on May 5 after The New York Times gave Duncan a megaphone for another whopper. The following commentary originally appeared at Jim Horn's "Schools Matter" blog and is being reprinted here at www.substancenews.net with permission. You can read more of Jim's material at Schools Matter (www.schools,matter.com) and find the following precisely at http://www.schoolsmatter.info/2010/05/whoops-duncans-public-opposition-more.html

Three years ago, in January 2007, Chicago Schools Chief Executive Officer Arne Duncan helped the Bush administration celebrate the anniversary of No Child Left Behind by staging a media event for then U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings at Chicago's Noble Street Charter School, where the above photograph was taken. Both Duncan and his predecessor were proponents of the massive privatization of public schools through charter schools for a long time. Substance photo by George N. Schmidt.Whoops! Duncan's Public Opposition More Than Zero

It may be fun to find out how big of a lie Arne Duncan told the Times yesterday when he described his public opposition as "Zero." Here is a good starter, a letter from 13 state education commissioners from around the nation in clear opposition to Duncan's RTTT (my bolds). If you have others, please send them along:

April 27, 2010

The Honorable Arne Duncan

Secretary, U.S. Department of Education

400 Maryland Ave, SW

Washington, D.C. 20202-0008

Dear Secretary Duncan,

We wish to extend our sincere appreciation for the time you spent with us Monday, April 5 on the phone to further explain what we see as the issues facing rural states. Your candor, support and understanding are invaluable to us moving forward both as states and as a country, and we are grateful.

In following that conversation, we wanted to summarize our key concerns and proposed solutions regarding the issues of rural states and districts. We see opportunity for flexibility and alternatives regarding the School Improvement Grant (SIG) turnaround models for our lowest performing schools, broadband access, requirements facing State Education Agencies (SEAs) and districts, and the criteria for competing in the Race to the Top (RTTT). We look forward to additional interactions on potential broadband access opportunities from the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), flexibility around school improvement interventions for the lowest performing schools, and the proposed $1.8 billion in community and school engagement funds.

As we discussed, the extreme rural nature of some of our districts makes any of the four turnaround models required under SIG difficult if not impossible to implement. In Montana, following intense interaction, the state was able to get all five identified districts to sign a preapplication agreeing to carry out the components of the transformation model. Yet U.S. Department of Education (USED) staff pushed back on the state because their application did not look like what other states submitted. We ask your department to recognize the efforts of our SEAs and to move away from seeking uniformity and checked boxes as a method of decision making.

It is clear, based on the Round I awards and the parameters set in the RTTT application, that our rural states face significant challenges when it comes to being competitive with other states. In the area of charter schools alone, you have made it clear that states without charter schools start out behind in the race. Also, several states do not have the resources to hire grant writers to apply for RTTT, in some cases even expending further energy and money seeking private donations to do so. Could this really be the best use of an SEA’s time, when the demands and challenges facing our schools are unprecedented and they need our help day-to-day more than ever?

Regarding the focus on charter schools for both SIG and RTTT, states face a conundrum. Charter schools are defined by their freedom from many federal and state regulations that apply to traditional public schools. Yet several states have articulated their inability to pass charter school legislation, or to garner public support, and in some cases are actively opposed to them. One option is to remove the restrictive federal regulations from existing public schools, fostering a charter school movement utilizing our existing facilities, faculty and resources.

As we explained in our call with you recently, many of our districts are considered frontier1. We articulated challenges faced by districts in the remote areas regarding recruitment and retention of principals and staff. The challenges of these lowest performing districts do not rest solely on the backs of their principal, and we struggle to find quality administrators willing to take the helm of a school in such dire circumstances. Further, the idea of firing half the staff at these schools and finding replacements is a virtual impossibility. We are asking for flexibility for intervention programs that work in the specific communities that can truly address the roots of the issues our students face, such as extreme poverty, isolation and lack of quality services.

Our rural states, like all of America, have been hit hard by this recession. Our state agencies budgets were already small, but with recent further cuts, we have lost significant portions of our staffing, and school budgets continue to shrink. By forcing our already stretched agencies to participate in such a rigorous competitive grant application, Race to the Top is detracting from the very real issues that need our immediate attention, and actually takes away from the services our students and schools need and deserve.

We want one thing to be perfectly clear. We rural states are NOT trying to shirk our responsibilities or avoid being held accountable. Quite the opposite: We know that if we do not fight for access and opportunities for our students at this critical time in our nation’s history, no one else will. Therefore we will continue to press your administration to truly consider what is best for all students, across America, rural and urban, regardless of what competition their SEA wins.

This May we will be getting together with CCSSO President Gene Wilhoit to develop policy solutions to guide the reauthorization of ESEA. We would welcome any opportunity to meet with you to further explain our suggestions.

Sincerely,

Armando Vilaseca, Commissioner, Vermont Department of Education

Denise Juneau, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Montana Office of Public Instruction

Virginia M. Barry, Ph.D.Commissioner, New Hampshire Department of Education

Dr. Wayne G. Sanstead, Superintendent of Public Instruction, North Dakota Department of Public Instruction

Diane Debacker, Interim Commissioner of Education, Kansas Department of Education

Kathryn Matayoshim, Acting Superintendent of Education, Hawaii Department of Education

Susan A. Gendron, Commissioner of Education, Maine Department of Education

Larry LeDoux, Commissioner of Education, Alaska Department of Education and Early Development

Lillian M. Lowery, Secretary of Education, Delaware Department of Education

Thomas R. Luna, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Idaho Department of Education

Roger D. Breed Commissioner of Education, Nebraska Department of Education

James McBride, Superintendent of Public Instruction, Wyoming Department of Education

Tom Oster, Secretary of Education, South Dakota Department of Education and Cultural Affairs

1 As defined by the U.S. Census Bureau matrix, based on population per square mile, and distance and travel time to services.



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