Sections:

Article

The rise to power of Broad Fellow and Chicago protegé Hosanna Mahaley-Johnson-Jones... Some ugly details about the Daley - Duncan - Obama connection

(January 16, 2012) It is not my custom to spend time on an article from American Thinker, a conservative publication whose political editor brags about appearances on the Dennis Miller show, but "Unsolved Mystery: D.C. Public Schools Cheating Scandal" by M. Catharine Evans and Ann Kane is informative and important. I'm interested not so much in the D. C. cheating scandal as I am in the exposure of "Chicago connections"--the connections and what they mean for the rest of us. For me, their article was mislabeled. For me, it is not so much a a story about the D. C. cheating scandal as it is a story of the corporate connections that grease one person's career path. Hosanna Mahaley Johnson (at the time, that was her name) at the April 26, 2006, meeting of the Chicago Board of Education, after her arrival at Chicago Public Schools following an unusual stint at City Hall under then Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. Despite the fact that Mahaley-Johnson had no teaching experience in Chicago (an alleged couple of years teaching in California), she became one of the first MBAs (Northwestern) to move straight into the executive ranks at CPS. This was during the years Arne Duncan (who also had no Chicago teaching experience) was "Chief Executive Officer" of CPS. For a few months, Mahaley-Johnson was "Chief of Staff" under then Board of Education "Chief Education Officer". Within a year, she had moved to the "Office of New Schools", in charge of privatizing as many public schools as possible and turning their buildings over to charter schools (at leases which usually cost $1 per year). Substance photo by George N. Schmidt.And the real story is missing here. The real story is the Chicago teachers whose careers were ruined and the neighborhoods that lost their community schools so the mayor could have some areas of gentrification. The real story is who is next in line to be engulfed by Wireless Generation.

New York Times, USA Today, and Washington Post take note: Investigative pieces in Substance News, whose masthead is Defending the Public Schools for More than 30 Years, are sourced several times by Evans and Kane. While the Chicago Sun-Times and Tribune were running puff pieces on the Mayor Daley-Arne Duncan school reform, Substance was at the board meetings and in the schools telling the real story.

The focus in the American Thinker article is on Hosanna Farr Mahaley Johnson Jones, but the "Wireless Generation" connection is mentioned. My website offers lots of info and outrage on this Murdoch-owned data delivery system that's taking over the education world. In 2009, Jay Spuck in Texas and I in Vermont summed things up to that time, giving a detailed account of the Mahaley Johnson-Wireless Generation togetherness in Connecting the Dots. [The URL is http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=580]

Please note then-Senator Barack Obama's role here. Few people remember that he sat on the Senate Education Committee, where he could have done some good, had he chosen to do so.

He didn't. Inviting Hosanna Mahaley to speak provides one more specific example of whose pocket he was — and is — in.

Yes, we've read most of this before — in bits and pieces. But here, we get a timeline on Hosanna Farr Mahaley Johnson Jones that is well worth studying. And remember: not the least of it is that Wireless Generation connection in Chicago.

Hosanna Mahaley Johnson Timeline

Above, at the May 24, 2006 meeting of the Chicago Board of Education, Hosanna Mahaley-Johnson was seated in the "power seats" reserved for the school system's highest-paid and most powerful executives. To the left above was then "Chief Administrative Officer" David Vitale, a banker put into office at CPS by Arne Duncan and then Chicago Mayor Richard M. Daley. Five years later, in May 2011, Vitale was appointed President of the Chicago Board of Education by Daley's successor Rahm Emanuel. Substance photo by George N. Schmidt. BS in History, Marquette; K-12 teaching credential, California State University; MA in Education Leadership, University of Illinois--Chicago; Executive MA in Business Administration, Kellogg School, Northwestern.

1999: summer intern in Mayor Daley's office. From here, her career (and salary) soars.

2001 Deputy Chief of Staff, Chicago Public Schools

2003 Chief of Staff for Chicago Public Schools CEO, Arne Duncan

2005: Still Duncan's chief of staff, Mahaley Johnson becomes executive officer of New Schools in Chicago. She was part of Duncan's $100,000 Club, staff receiving well over $100,000 in pay.

2006: Chicago Public Schools signs a no-bid contract with Wireless Generation.[The URL is http://www.cps.edu/About_CPS/The_Board_of_Education/Documents/BoardActions/2008_07/08-0723-PR16.pdf]

2007: Then-Senator Barack Obama invites Mahaley to testify [The URL is http://help.senate.gov/imo/media/doc/Mahaley%20Johnson.pdf]on NCLB Reauthorization Act before the Senate Education Committee on which he sits. Here's the context in which a bulletin from the Feb. 12, 2007 National Council of Teachers of Mathematics Legislative & Policy update described it [The URL is http://www.nctm.org/uploadedFiles/Research,_Issues_and_News/Legislation/Legislative_Update/LegUpdateFeb1207.pdf">:

HELP Committee Holds NCLB Roundtable Discussion While the House of Representatives held numerous hearings on the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) during the 109th Congress, last Thursday's Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee roundtable discussion titled "NCLB Reauthorization: Strategies that Promote School Improvement" marked the first official Senate action. Roundtable discussions are intended to be more informal than a hearing, with panelists and Senators sitting around a large square table together and engaging in more of a dialogue than strictly timed questions and responses.

Opening the discussion, Chairman Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) spoke of NCLB's indisputable impact and said that hearings and roundtables will be utilized in order to gather information on how best to allocate federal resources and improve existing law to turn around struggling schools. "Obviously we must do better, fortunately we know we can," stated Kennedy. Ranking Member Mike Enzi (R-Wyo.) concurred with Kennedy's thoughts and added that NCLB "...has provided a strong framework" and:

1) there is a need to learn more about what's working to turn around schools and disseminate the information; 2) Congress should support school improvement activities that are authorized in NCLB; and 3) improvements can be made within the current NCLB structure to improve teacher training and professional development.

In addition to Kennedy and Enzi, participating in the roundtable were Senators: Jack Reed (D-R.I.); Barack Obama (D-Ill.); Sherrod Brown (D-Ohio); Lisa Murkowski (R-Ark.); Pat Roberts (R-Kan.); and Wayne Allard (R-Colo.).

Representing educators from the school, district and state levels, the eight panelists included:

* Dr. Martha Barber, Alabama Reading Initiative Regional Principal Coach, Birmingham, Ala.;

* Dr. Yvonne Brandon,[The URL is http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_atrocities.php?id=3544] Associate Superintendent for Instruction & Accountability, Richmond Public Schools; [her message to the Committee seemed different from the one she gave NPR [The URL is http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_atrocities.php?id=2520] one month earlier.]

* Richard Coleman, Sr., Director, An Achievable Dream Academy,[The URL is http://susanohanian.org/show_atrocities.php?id=8650] Newport News, Va.;

* Michael P. Flanagan [The URL is http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=1093], State Superintendent of Instruction, State of Michigan;

* Hosanna Mahaley Johnson, Executive Officer, Office of New Schools, Chicago Public Schools;

* Kimberly Johnson, Principal, Briggs Chaney Middle School, Silver Spring, Md.;

* Alana Dale-Turner, Teacher, Easton High School, Easton, Md.; and

* Paul Reville, [The URL is http://susanohanian.org/show_atrocities.php?id=5255] President, Rennie Center for Education Research & Policy. There's ton's more; it is significant beyond words that Kennedy would invite Reville.] For starters, see here and here [The URLs are http://susanohanian.org/outrage_fetch.php?id=648 and http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_stories.php?id=48]

While news headlines across the country still ring of negative impressions and implications of NCLB, each panelist discussed the law and its impact in positive terms.

You can read everybody's testimony here. [The URL is http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-110shrg33366/pdf/CHRG-110shrg33366.pdf]

Mahaley Johnson Bio Continued

On Feb 28, 2007, the Chicago Board of Education issued this resolution honoring Johnson. [The URL is http://www.cps.edu/About_CPS/The_Board_of_Education/Documents/BoardActions/2007_03/07-0228-RS1.pdf]

2007: Leaves Chicago to become president of Atlanta Education Fund [The URL is http://atlef.org/page/about-the-aef], where she formed alliance with the business community and Atlanta Schools Superintendent Beverly Hall, funneling millions from the Fund into Atlanta schools (Most notably $22 from General Electric). Hall was forced to resign in 2011 when USA Today articles touched off an investigation showing that 178 teachers and principals in 44 schools were involved in cheating on standardized tests.

2007: Named by The Aspen Institute [The URL is http://www.substancenews.net/articles.php?page=2414] and NewSchools Venture Fund as Fellow for inaugural class of the Entrepreneurial Leaders for Public Education Fellowship Program [The URL is http://www.aspeninstitute.org/leadership-programs/aspen-institute-newschools-fellowship-entre] [Larry Berger, CEO of Wireless Generation, was in this same class, as were Russllynn Ali, Chris Barbic, Richard Barth, Michael Bennet, Phoebe Boyer, Susan Colby, Gretchen Crosby-Sims, John Deasy, Lauren Dutton, James Forman, Jr., David Harris, Kaya Henderson, Kristen Kane, Dan Katzir, Jeremy Nowak, Dr. Anthony (Tony) Recasner, Ref Rodriguez, Jon Schnur, Jim Shelton, Elisa Villaneuva Beard, and Joanne Weiss]

2009: Named Vice-Chair National Association of Charter School Authorizers (NACSA) Board of Directors

2009: Joins Wireless Generation as Executive Director, Social Justice and District Innovation

2009: Named Broad Superintendent Academy fellow [The URL is http://www.broadacademy.org/asset/411-090114tba2009class.pdf]

2011: Named State Superintendent of Education, Washington D. C. Public Schools [The URL is http://osse.dc.gov/page/about-osse]

NOTE: Previous D. C. State Superintendents: Deborah A. Gist--June 2007--April 2009, then became Rhode Island superintendent of schools. [The URL is http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_atrocities.php?id=3874] Former Senior Advisor on Education to President George W. Bush.

Kerri Briggs: from April 2009 to Sept. 2010; formerly assistant secretary for elementary and secondary education. Texas native had been working in Department of Education since 2001. After superintendency, she became Director for Education Reform at the George W. Bush Institute [The URL is http://www.bushcenter.com/about-Us/about-the-bush-center#stay]

Feb. 2011: NACSA President and CEO Greg Richmond testified before the District of Columbia City Council in support of Hosanna Mahaley's confirmation as State Superintendent of Education

Dec. 2011: Hosanna Mahaley missed five out of nine D.C. State Board of Education meetings since taking office Jan. 10, including four of the past five.--Bill Turque, D.C. education agency's progress questioned, Washington Post [The URL is http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/dc-education-agencys-progress-questioned/2011/12/02/gIQAnpyNZO_story.html]

The Dec. 1 Washington Post contained this snippet: State Superintendent Hosanna Mahaley, who just married, has been out of town on her honeymoon. Board member Mary Lord (Ward 2) said she admires Mahaley but adds: "You can't find who's in charge of anything. It's been a disaster." She said Mahaley has "been getting colossally bad advice."

So maybe she missed the meetings because she was on her honeymoon.

Or maybe she was at lunch. Item from Washingtonian Dec. 2011:

At a luncheon recognizing Washington's most powerful women, each honoree was invited to bring a guest--someone with talent and tenacity to watch in the future. PricewaterhouseCoopers sponsored the event at DC's St. Regis hotel.

Or maybe she was in Brazil. . . on a Pearson paid-for jaunt for superintendents. [The URL is http://www.nytimes.com/2012/01/02/education/inquiry-into-school-officials-travels-paid-for-by-pearson.html?_r=1&ref=michaelwinerip] (See Associated Press Wire, Oct. 13, 2011, where besieged Kentucky superintendent says Mahaley was there too.)

Or maybe looking for second job to make up for the "salary adjustment announced to staff by the mayor March 18, 2011: Mahaley's went from $185,000 to $179,096, Schools Chancellor Kaya Henderson makes $275,000.

Alternate theory: Maybe Hosanna Mahaley is too busy working on her resume to attend meetings.

Unsolved Mystery: D.C. Public Schools Cheating Scandal

By M. Catharine Evans and Ann Kane

American Thinker [The URL is http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/01/m-unsolved_mystery_dc_public_schools_cheating_scandal.html]

The Washington, D.C. school system's failure to hold higher-ups accountable for their 2008-2010 test cheating scandal has led to more speculation that some are intentionally stonewalling attempts to get at the truth.

According to the Washington Post, D.C. 's Office of the State Superintendent of Education (OSSE), headed by Hosanna Mahaley, issued a December 23 press release [The URL is http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/class-struggle/post/are-dc-school-officials-hiding-test-data/2011/12/24/gIQAjoP2IP_blog.html] after months of dodging Freedom of Information requests by journalists.

In September, a spokesman for OSSE told the Post's Jay Mathews that the "data was ready and I would get it after Mahaley returned from a trip to Brazil." Mahaley, who was attending a Pearson Foundation conference [The URL is http://www.nytimes.com/2011/10/10/education/10chartwinerip.html] (one of the largest educational publishers in the nation) in Rio de Janeiro in October, has a reputation for governing in absentia. For example, OSSE had set up six town hall meetings [The URL is http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/dc-schools-insider/post/state-superintendents-office-hit-for-bungling-nclb-town-halls/2011/11/29/gIQAvnsr8N_blog.html] for November as part of a requirement by the federal government to "engage diverse stakeholders and communities in the development of its request" for a waiver from No Child Left Behind rules. On the first advertised date, only one person showed up, and that didn't include anyone from the OSSE. Subsequent town halls were canceled until the new year.

Sloppy scheduling may be forgivable, but viewing that along with political maneuvers to hide test scores shows a pattern of questionable behavior.

Finally, a day before Christmas Eve, Mahaley's office responded to inquiries. But instead of releasing the anticipated erasure data concerning wrong-to-right answers (WTR) for 2011, OSSE announced a "Request for Proposal soliciting vendors to assess and investigate individual classrooms." The RFP came after an advisory committee of "national experts" convened to determine the best way to deal with test security.

The stall tactics didn't go over too well, and on December 31, Mahaley's office publicly released [The URL is http://www.washingtonpost.com/r/2010-2019/WashingtonPost/2011/12/31/Education/Graphics/answer_change_report_to_OSSE_07-15-11.pdf] their "DC Comprehensive Assessment System Wrong-to-Right Changes Report" dated July 15, 2011. The nine-page document indicated that 128 classrooms, 3% of schools tested, had high WTR erasures, down from 253 schools in 2009. Although CTB/McGraw Hill named the flagged schools and teachers, they were purposely omitted from the OSSE report.

Tamara Reavis, Mahaley's director of assessments and accountability, stated that erasures "are only one data point to flag classrooms." In fairness, an outside firm will be hired to measure the results "in conjunction with other information."

Mahaley and Reavis, along with DCPS chiefs and Mayor Gray, seem determined to drag this scandal out. Why not just produce an in-depth analysis of answer sheet erasures for 2008-2011 and question all of those at the helm? Why are top D.C. officials still calling for "vendors" to make recommendations for tighter security measures?

Why not rip the Band-Aid off and get it over with?

With the obvious delay tactics and suppression of findings, it appears that the campaign to keep parents, teachers, and journalists in the dark marches on. Why all the obfuscation when former players like Michelle Rhee and Mayor Adrian Fenty are no longer in power? Is the wrongdoing so egregious that it can be quashed only through a monotonous dribs-and-drabs strategy?

Last March, a USA Today investigation [The URL is http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2011-03-28-1Aschooltesting28_CV_N.htm] showed a huge amount of wrong-to-right answer sheet erasures at more than half of D.C. schools; their inquiry didn't include charter schools.

In July 2011, it was revealed [The URL is http://washingtonexaminer.com/local/dc/2011/05/dc-schools-investigate-security-breaches-2011-tests] that only one agent from the D.C. inspector general's office had been assigned to the investigation. By comparison, the Atlanta cheating scandal involved 50 investigators who conducted 2,100 interviews "and examinations of more than 800,000 documents." The Georgia investigation ended in the resignation of Superintendent Beverly Hall [The URL is http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2011-07-08-dc-standardized-test-scores_n.htm], and evidence that 178 teachers and principals in 44 schools were involved in cheating on standardized tests.

Under pressure from parents, teachers, and reporters, a spokesman for the D.C. general inspector's office confirmed the U.S. Department of Education's involvement in securing "a top-notch investigation" in July. However, Mayor Vincent Gray and schools chancellor Kaya Henderson, Michelle Rhee's successor, both expressed surprise at the limited scope of the inspector general's office.

Henderson [The URL is http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2011-07-08-dc-standardized-test-scores_n.htm] vowed to "move expeditiously" if "confirmed cases of testing impropriety" came to light, but she stated that she was not about "to fire people or yank licenses or whatever on conjecture." Back in 2008 she also demonstrated reluctance to get to the bottom of the miracle test scores when she was Rhee's second-in-command.

2008: OSSE Director Deborah Gist

During that time the OSSE, headed by Deborah Gist, recommended that test scores at particular schools, like the highly touted Noyes Education Center, be investigated due to huge gains in proficiency rates.

Noyes math scores alone increased from 22% for the fourth-grade class in 2007 to 84% in 2008. Gist eventually asked McGraw-Hill to conduct an erasure analysis in 2008. McGraw-Hill flagged the most extreme cases of wrong-to-right erasures. Out of 96 schools flagged, eight campuses were the recipients of more than $1.5 million in bonuses from Rhee for high test scores. None of the schools flagged were investigated in 2008.

D.C. public school officials resisted Gist's efforts to validate the scores. Documents obtained by USA Today [The URL is http://www.usatoday.com/news/education/2011-03-28-1Aschooltesting28_CV_N.htm] showed that the chancellor's office, headed by Rhee and Henderson, was reluctant to investigate. Rhee's data and accountability officer employed stall tactics as well, ostensibly so DCPS could "be confident in the data provided" because of "the disruption and alarm an investigation would likely create."

Gist wrote to area schools requesting that they conduct their own examination of test anomalies. She eventually resigned in April 2009. Her successor, Kelli Briggs, who served a short term, dropped Gist's recommendations.

After more schools were flagged by McGraw-Hill in 2009, OSSE reneged and hired a Utah firm, Caveon Consulting, to conduct interviews with teachers and principals. Caveon didn't conduct its own data analysis but somehow exonerated all but one of the eight schools chosen by OSSE for the audit.

2011 to 2012: OSSE Director Hosanna Mahaley

DCPS and OSSE both oversee the Washington, D.C. schools. In 2008, the DCPS avoided coming clean while OSSE tried to uncover it. Now, in 2012, the OSSE is playing the avoidance game along with DCPS.

In May 2011, The DC Examiner reported [The URL is http://washingtonexaminer.com/local/dc/2011/05/dc-schools-investigate-security-breaches-2011-tests] that OSSE ordered an investigation into 18 classrooms for the year 2011 that showed "a suspicious number of incorrect answers in 2010 testing." A spokeswoman for Chancellor Kaya Henderson stated only two classrooms demonstrated "possible testing irregularities" and one "had a confirmed case of testing impropriety."

OSSE Superintendent Mahaley used the 2011 probe that cleared 15 schools to "confirm our belief and support for the overwhelming number of students, teachers and staff that work hard and play by the rules."

Oddly enough, in the same May article, Mayor Gray took the opportunity to reference Michelle Rhee's tenure in D.C. Gray suggested that the investigations "do nothing to tarnish former Chancellor Michelle Rhee[.] ... We're not looking to continue or detract from her legacy ... the results speak for themselves."

Rhee built her reputation on improving test scores in D.C. and is currently criss-crossing the country pushing education reform. Did Gray suggest a motive for the cover-up?

Could it be entrenched interests? Chancellor Kaya Henderson's and Michelle Rhee's relationship goes way back to Teach for America and the 1997 non-profit New Teacher Project, so there's little mystery surrounding Henderson's loyalty to Rhee.

What about Mahaley, who took over in December of 2010? She promised [The URL is http://osse.dc.gov/release/osse-announces-enhanced-test-security-measures-dc-public-schools-and-charters] to take cheating "seriously" and "to send a strong message to all those involved in educating our children" that they would be held accountable.

But upon closer examination of Mahaley's political and corporate connections, her failure to be open and above board is not surprising. In fact, with Mahaley at OSSE, it's a good bet that this investigation is going nowhere.

Hosanna Mahaley Bio

According to online bios [The URL is http://www.dcogc.org/sites/default/files/evid_appointee_resumes1_110902.pdf]Hosanna Farr Mahaley Johnson Jones (all names linked to her profile) went from a three-year stint as a math teacher in Oceanside, California to earning her executive MBA from Northwestern University.

In 1999 she began her public service career in the office of Chicago's Mayor Richard Daley as a summer intern. She quickly became his education adviser and, in 2001, was named deputy chief of staff of the Chicago Public Schools.

In 2002 she was promoted to chief of staff of the chief education officer and began the famous Renaissance 2010 Initiative to replace underperforming schools with charters.

Coincidentally, Mahaley's Chicago ties are alive and well in the D.C. state superintendent's office today. In August of 2011, six months after Mahaley went to Washington, D.C.'s Mayor Gray commissioned [The URL is http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/education/dc-commissions-a-schools-analysis/2011/08/17/gIQAwqJdOJ_story.html] Illinois Facilities Fund, a Chicago non-profit firm heavily involved in the charter school movement, to study which D.C. facilities should be closed. An executive director of an organization which works for improvement in school facilities in D.C. questioned Gray's choice of IFF regarding its ability to define the District of Columbia's particular issues.

It just so happened that in 2004, when Mahaley worked under Arne Duncan, IFF worked on her fledgling Renaissance 2010 project. In 2007 the firm received a $10-million federal grant to finance charters in Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, and Wisconsin. Mired in Chicago education reform as a Daley loyalist, Mahaley became chief of staff to Chicago Public Schools CEO Arne Duncan in 2003.

In 2005, while still functioning as Duncan's chief of staff, she took on the role of executive officer of New Schools in Chicago, where she pressed for more public funding of charter schools.

In 2007, then-Senator Obama requested Mahaley's presence at the Senate Committee hearing on the No Child Left Behind Reauthorization Act. Mahaley talked about her Urban Teaching Residency program and told Senate committee members [The URL is http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/CHRG-110shrg33366/html/CHRG-110shrg33366.htm] that she was "happy to see Senator Obama here — and he knows a lot about the program." Indeed, Obama did know a lot about Chicago education initiatives. He had been working on education issues since Bill Ayers named him to chair the Chicago Annenberg Challenge, a school reform organization, in 1995. Even his wife, First Lady Michelle Obama, worked with young people in Chicago — first as an assistant to Mayor Daley in the early 1990s, and later as the executive director of Public Allies Chicago, a nonprofit dedicated to hooking up Chicago students with various community activist organizations.

Mahaley, like Daley's other famous ex-employee Michelle Obama, hit the big time. As part of Arne Duncan's exclusive $100,000 club [The URL is http://www.substancenews.com/04-06_issue.pdf], she was making $132,000 for "privatizing and charterizing as many Chicago schools as possible." Almost 1,000 education officials were making over 100 grand working for CPS at the time. And while he was handing out hefty salaries to public-sector employees, Duncan went before the Illinois General Assembly to moan that the school system faced a $300-million deficit.

After Mahaley left Chicago in 2007, she headed for Atlanta. Since 1999, Atlanta had earned national fame for a miraculous turnaround in test scores. Under highly paid Superintendent Beverly Hall, the Georgia capital became a mecca for education entrepreneurs. It was this special relationship [The URL is http://www.substancenews.net/articles.php?page=2447] between the business community and Hall which helped keep the "test score Ponzi scheme" under the radar until it surfaced in the summer of 2011.

Mahaley's Chicago experience with the private sector served her well in Atlanta, where she became president of the newly formed Atlanta Education Fund{The URL is http://atlef.org/page/about-the-aef] [AEF]. In this position, she directed [The URL is http://www.substancenews.net/articles.php?page=2447] tens of millions of dollars from investors into Superintendent Hall's education reform — most notably $22 million from the General Electric Foundation for science education. GE's vice-chairman, John Rice, became "one of [Beverly] Hall's closest confidantes."

After two years, she resigned from AEF and managed to escape scrutiny for her debatable role in "accelerating student achievement" when an 800-page government investigation exposed a culture of intimidation and corruption under Beverly Hall. A Blue Ribbon Commission of 15 business leaders failed to convince Georgia Governor Perdue that Hall was an innocent do-gooder. Perdue's own investigators concluded that the "cheating was widespread and systemic."

Representative Edward Lindsey (R-Atlanta), who supported partnerships between businesses and educators in his district, regretted that leaders from both areas were so desperate to keep the city from "spiraling downward" that they failed to recognize obvious signs of cheating.

"We were so enamored with the perception," said Lindsey, "that we didn't see the reality."

The Atlanta scandal wouldn't hit the mainstream until 2011. In the meantime, Mahaley went to work for Wireless Generation[The URL is http://www.wirelessgeneration.com/pdf/press-releases/WG_Hosanna_Johnson_Press_Release_01.pdf], an education company which builds large-scale data systems centralizing student data. Wireless currently serves 200,000 educators and 3 million students.

Back in 2006, when Mahaley was Duncan's chief of staff, Chicago Public Schools signed a [The URL is http://www.cps.edu/About_CPS/The_Board_of_Education/Documents/BoardActions/2008_07/08-0723-PR16.pdf]no-bid contract with Wireless for $1.3 million. The company renewed the contract for $2.3 million in 2008. Mahaley had met Wireless Generation CEO Larry Berger when both were inaugural fellows of the Aspen Institute's New Schools Venture Fund Entrepreneurial Leaders for Public Education Program [The URL is http://www.aspeninstitute.org/leadership-programs/aspen-institute-newschools-fellowship-entre]. [Look at participant bios here [The URL is http://www.newschools.org/files/Fellows.Bios.2007.pdf.]

Berger praised Hosanna as a "rising star" in the reform movement. In 2009, the rising star had arrived. She was named a Broad Superintendent Academy fellow [The URL is http://www.broadacademy.org/asset/411-090114tba2009class.pdf], joining other anointed superstars like Michelle Rhee. The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation heavily funds the education reform movement, including Rhee's programs in D.C. Broad, who once declared he knew nothing about how to operate a school, has placed his brand of education engineering in school systems across the country.

The elite club of edu-reformers is a tight-knit group. Self-interests and covering for each other abound. That can't be good for the 50 million K-12 students the club uses as trading cards — their value rises and falls according to the latest business deal or political posture. Are the journalists' and interested parties' suspicion about a major cover-up in the D.C. cheating scandal much ado about nothing? If there's no real issue there, why not lay all the facts on the table?

Atlanta's highly publicized, massive cheating scandal should serve as a cautionary tale to those who think that kicking the can down the road will make the story go away.

[ American Thinker, 2012-01-14 The URL is: http://www.americanthinker.com/2012/01/m-unsolved_mystery_dc_public_schools_cheating_scandal.html]



Comments:

Add your own comment (all fields are necessary)

Substance readers:

You must give your first name and last name under "Name" when you post a comment at substancenews.net. We are not operating a blog and do not allow anonymous or pseudonymous comments. Our readers deserve to know who is commenting, just as they deserve to know the source of our news reports and analysis.

Please respect this, and also provide us with an accurate e-mail address.

Thank you,

The Editors of Substance

Your Name

Your Email

What's your comment about?

Your Comment

Please answer this to prove you're not a robot:

2 + 1 =