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Connections between Eli Broad, the Parent Union (aka Parent Revolution, the creators of the "Parent

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tonysam Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 09:50 AM
Original message
Connections between Eli Broad, the Parent Union (aka Parent Revolution, the creators of the "Parent
Revolution, the creators of the "Parent Trigger"), and Green Dot

Originally conceived in Los Angeles by Steve Barr’s (of Green Dot) Los Angeles Parents Union, and largely funded by the Broad Foundation, the "Parent Trigger" has spread east, and here and here. This is an initiative where if enough parents can be convinced, pressured, and tricked to sign a petition, a school will be closed down and replaced with a charter. On each Form 990 from 2005 to 2008, Steve Barr is listed as the CEO/President of the LAPU board.

Eli Broad contributed nearly 50% of the funding for the launch of the LAPU (formerly the Small Schools Alliance, aka the Parent Revolution). The money he supplied helped pay for the propaganda to make it seem like the movement is being generated by "the people," when in fact it is a carefully planned, targeted marketing campaign designed to wipe out the public schools.
The most important thing to know is that this organization is not grassroots; it's astroturf!

An absolute lie is being spread that it was "developed by the grass-roots group Parent Revolution in the Los Angeles Unified School District.’ The lie is that group was not a grassroots group by any means. Danny Weil explains its true astroturf nature. Community members in LA have even stated that they were offered monetary compensation in exchange for their signature on a petition. But when a potential buyer for the LA Times is Eli Broad, who would there be to investigate?

Broad-supported State Senator Gloria Romero, in the running as State Superintendent of Public Instruction, has been the main pusher at the California state government level.


More

Like a cancer, the venture philanthropists continue to spread their vile philosophy all over the body of public education.
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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 09:56 AM
Response to Original message
1. real estate developers love charter schools, even the public run ones because they need a place
to operate.
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mzteris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 02:04 PM
Response to Original message
2. a good article on the formation of "The Parent Union"
Education Sector Reports
L.A. Story: Can a Parent Revolution Change Urban Education's Power Structure?
By Joe Williams and Tom Mirga
Author: Joe Williams
Publication Date: July 25, 2006

". . . to persuade the politicians, bureaucrats and union leaders who run LAUSD to reorient its 858 schools around six principles—small, safe schools with no more than 500 students, high expectations and a college-preparatory curriculum for all students, local control with extensive professional development and accountability, more dollars directed into the classroom, parent participation and keeping schools open later for community use.

. . . LAUSD remains plagued by a host of problems. Gary Orfield of the Harvard Civil Rights Project calls the city's high schools "dropout factories." He estimates that less than half of LAUSD's incoming freshmen graduate four years later. The Latino graduation rate is even worse: just 39 percent. And the newspaper Education Week recently published figures pegging the district graduation rate even lower than Orfield's. Moreover, an estimated three-quarters of LAUSD ninth-graders read below grade level, a clear indication of troubles in the district's elementary and middle schools.

Latino and other minority students bear the brunt of the system's problems. The University of California Los Angeles' Institute for Democracy, Education and Access, for example, found in 2004 that 60 percent of the city's schools with a majority Latino and black enrollment lacked qualified teachers. The comparable figure for majority-white schools was 25 percent.

. . . During their time in school students also endure severe overcrowding because of LAUSD's failure to build enough schools. Average class sizes in middle and high schools exceed 35. By one 2005 estimate, there were 165,000 more students in LAUSD schools than there were available seats.

. . . Many LAUSD educators apparently disagree with Duffy, however, and are voting with their feet. All but one of the 10 principals and assistant principals Green Dot hired to lead the five new schools were recruited from LAUSD. Those administrators, in turn, hired most of their 35 teachers from the district.

http://www.educationsector.org/research/research_show.htm?doc_id=385886
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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 02:17 PM
Response to Reply #2
4. mz. tetris's PR sheet, as always, funded by the usual suspects:
The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation
The Broad Foundation
Doris & Donald Fisher Fund
William T. Grant Foundation
The Joyce Foundation
KnowledgeWorks Foundation
Lumina Foundation for Education
Charles Stewart Mott Foundation
The Philanthropy Roundtable
Smith Richardson Foundation
The Spencer Foundation

http://www.educationsector.org/whoweare/whoweare_show.htm?doc_id=336558


and packed with charter school promoters:

Board of Directors

John Chubb
Founder, senior executive vice president for new product development, and managing director of The Edison Learning Institute.

Ira A. Fishman
Managing Director of the National Football League Players Association.

Paul Glastris
Editor-in-Chief of The Washington Monthly

Bill Hansen

President of Scantron Corporation


Rebeca Huffman
Vice president at the National Association of Charter School Authorizers (NACSA).

Hosanna Mahaley Johnson
Johnson is executive director of strategic alliances for Wireless Generation.

Margaret (Macke) Raymond
Chair of Education Sector's Board of Directors and Director of the Center for Research on Education Outcomes at Stanford University.

Kim Smith
Co-Founder and Chief Executive Officer of the NewSchools Venture Fund


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mzteris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 02:16 PM
Response to Original message
3. LA charter public school performance:
Los Angeles Unified School District:
L.A. charter schools flex their educational muscles: Enrollment is up, and overall, standardized test scores outshine those at traditional campuses.
January 10, 2010|By Mitchell Landsberg, Doug Smith and Howard Blume

". . . Charter schools now are challenging L.A. Unified from without and within. Not only are charter school operators such as Green Dot Public Schools and ICEF Public Schools opening new schools that compete head-to-head with L.A. Unified, but the district's own schools are showing increasing interest in jumping ship by converting to charter status.

In the most recent example, Birmingham High School in the San Fernando Valley neighborhood of Lake Balboa broke free from the district last summer after a wrenching battle among members of its teaching staff. Under state law, a school can apply for charter conversion if a majority of its tenured teachers petition for the change.

Charters are taking students not just from traditional public schools but also from private schools. Particularly as the economy has soured, many parents see no reason to pay for school if they believe that a charter might offer a similar education without tuition.

. . . Even now, there are those who believe that charter schools are private (they aren't), that they are run by for-profit companies (rarely in California), that they primarily serve affluent communities (the opposite is true) and that they are better than traditional public schools.

. . . Overall, L.A. charter students score significantly higher on standardized tests than their counterparts in traditional schools. But even some of the most strenuous charter advocates are wary of a blanket assumption that charters are superior, in part because they are so different from traditional schools and from one another.

Citywide, charter performance is so mixed that speaking broadly about it is like talking about the quality of fish. What kind of fish? Salmon? Goldfish?

Nearly 9% of Los Angeles public school students now attend charters, which offer great variety. Ocean Charter, a predominantly white, middle-class school on the Westside, emphasizes "experiential learning" based on the Waldorf model. The Alliance for College Ready Schools, whose 16 schools south and east of downtown mostly serve low-income black and Latino students, use a strict and structured adherence to state curriculum standards.

They include small, scrappy operations like New Los Angeles Charter, a 150-student middle school that carved space out of a church in the mid-Wilshire area, and institutional behemoths like Granada Hills Charter High School, a former L.A. Unified school that is probably the largest charter school in the nation, with more than 4,000 students.

There are charters dedicated to learning through dance, through science, even through German language and culture. Most, however, offer a fairly traditional curriculum -- more traditional, in many ways, than regular public schools.

Critics of charters tend to focus on three main arguments: Charters "cherry pick" the best students from traditional schools; kick out students who do poorly; and serve far fewer special education students and non-English speakers than traditional schools. Such practices could give charters a boost in standardized test scores, the primary gauge by which schools are judged.

. . . By law, charter schools are required to enroll any interested student or use a lottery, but even some charter operators allow that the schools tend to attract families who are especially motivated. And although charter administrators generally say that they rarely, if ever, expel students, staff at traditional schools say they periodically receive troubled students who have been counseled out of charters.

In fact, classes of motivated, focused, non-disruptive students are a drawing card for charters, as are their small size and apparent safety.

. . . Although much of the focus on charters has been on the high fliers that are outstripping the performance of regular district schools, others have struggled.

Even a sophisticated charter organization like Green Dot achieves mixed results. With 18 schools and a comprehensive headquarters staff, Green Dot is practically a district unto itself. But although its campuses typically outscore nearby traditional schools, fewer than 5% of students at several of its campuses scored at the "proficient" level in math last year.

Green Dot would argue that the scores are low because it is taking students from the most academically deprived parts of the city, which is undeniably true. It took over Locke High School in South L.A., which had become a poster child for the failings of L.A. Unified.

. . . Consider College Ready Academy No. 4, an Alliance school where 97% of the 325 students qualify for subsidized meals, a poverty indicator.

This year, the school had an Academic Performance Index score of 846, more than 200 points higher on average than schools that the state deemed similar, based on the students they serve. Only four of 132 high schools in Los Angeles had higher scores, and two of them are charters. . . "All of it is about hard work and being clear about what you're trying to accomplish, having clear, high expectations for kids and working to accomplish what it is you said you were going to do without having to suddenly do something new because somebody new is in charge," she said.

. . . Others see a future in which students have a choice of high-performing charter, magnet or traditional schools. Already, Los Angeles Unified is developing a new breed of traditional schools intended to have charter-like flexibility.

-more - (above snips from six page article)

http://articles.latimes.com/2010/jan/10/local/la-me-charters10-2010jan10
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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 02:32 PM
Response to Reply #3
5. "Charters "cherry pick" the best students from traditional schools;
Edited on Mon Mar-01-10 02:36 PM by Hannah Bell
kick out students who do poorly; and serve far fewer special education students and non-English speakers than traditional schools. Such practices could give charters a boost in standardized test scores, the primary gauge by which schools are judged.

There is at least anecdotal evidence to support all three claims, although there is hard data only to back up the third -- that charters enroll fewer disabled and limited-English students."



According to the Office of the Independent Monitor report, students with special needs made up 11.2 percent of LAUSD's population in the 2008-2009 school year while they made up 7 percent of the population at charter schools.

The report also found that students with severe disabilities only make up 1 percent of the total enrollment at charter schools - within LAUSD they make up 3 percent - and the largest number of those students can be found at dependent charter schools, which are still managed by LAUSD.

For example Birmingham High School in Van Nuys had a program for deaf students for several years but after it converted to a charter school, special education teachers and aides were not rehired for that program, Howell said.

"Although families were not told to enroll at another school, they felt compelled to leave their current school in order to receive services," Howell said.

"This required the district to open new classes at Taft High School and provide transportation for these students."

Howell also said that at Washington Prep High School in South Los Angeles, the population of students with disabilities rose from 11 percent to 20 percent when Locke High School was converted to a charter...

http://www.dailynews.com/breakingnews/ci_14134651


When I use the term “apartheid” school I am discussing schools that are within one percent of the kind of absolute segregation that South Africa’s apartheid laws and those of the seventeen states with de jure segregation produced. Prof. Douglass Massey and other leading demographers have used the term to describe much less extreme segregation. These schools are not the product of a law but they are just as isolated from the rest of the society and there are an astonishing number of them among charter schools.

http://74.125.155.132/search?q=cache:R_upPt7JvPcJ:education.nationaljournal.com/2010/02/are-charter-schools-a-civil-ri.php+los+angeles+charter+schools+percent+special+ed&cd=12&hl=en&ct=clnk&gl=us


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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 03:43 PM
Response to Original message
6. I posted this to social bookmarking sites LINKS to vote up:
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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Mon Mar-01-10 03:52 PM
Response to Reply #6
7. realty mogul funds fake parent group to back charter schools: lol.
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yurbud Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-02-10 12:18 PM
Response to Reply #7
8. concise & blunt gets people's attention
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Hannah Bell Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-02-10 01:45 PM
Response to Reply #8
9. i liked it.
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mzteris Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Tue Mar-02-10 02:27 PM
Response to Reply #8
10. not when you're iggy -
:rofl:
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