Showing posts with label Detroit Public Schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Detroit Public Schools. Show all posts

Monday, March 23, 2020

Michigan Schools Should Close Because The Emergency Managers Sucked All The Money From The Students

It really does not matter because Detroit Public Schools suck.

Just ask Betsy DeVos or me.

People always forget about the Detroit Public Schools Emergency Managers.

https://beverlytran.blogspot.com/search?q=detroit+public+schools

Vitti: State K-12 schools should close for rest of school year

FILE -- Detroit School Superintendent Nikolai Vitti is interviewed outside the Potter Stewart U.S. Federal Courthouse in Cincinnati Thursday.
Nikolai Vitti
Detroit — The superintendent of state's largest school district is proposing that K-12 schools in Michigan be closed for the rest of the school year, that online learning continue at home and that measures are taken to ensure that high school seniors can graduate this spring.

In an open letter to education leaders in Michigan, Nikolai Vitti, superintendent of Detroit Public Schools Community District, says K-12 school should be declared closed and districts should be required to develop an online learning platform within a reasonable amount of time in response to the coronavirus pandemic.

Vitti says school districts need guidance to determine how to best leverage limited resources to support students.

Educators are asking how to make up lost instructional days, whether the extended closure means an extended year into the summer, or if the district should salvage the rest of the school year by shifting all resources to an online learning platform.

"If we project our future based on trends in other countries that have been battling COVID-19 for a longer period of time, then we must come to realize that we will be fortunate if degrees of societal normalcy return by June," Vitti said in the letter. "With that said, it is best to officially close schools until next school year. Other states have already made this decision. How can we possibly justify opening earlier if other states have closed schools? "

Continuing education at home, Vitti said, would need to include distributing laptops with internet access to families.

"(This will require the flexibility to use federal and state education funds differently and support from the business and philanthropic community.) Lessons can be prerecorded via video and posted online by grade level and subject area," he said.

Districts should continue to get full funding from the state for the rest of the school year to allow them to develop and implement online learning platforms and to feed students, Vitti said.

Current seniors should be able to graduate based on the number of credits that are required minus their last semester, he said.

"School districts, through teachers and parents, should decide which students are promoted to the next grade based on their academic status prior to closure," Vitti said.

The Detroit superintendent says school districts should be required to offer courses through summer school in subsequent years if a student or parents would like to make up credits or courses that were planned to be taken during this past semester.

"I appreciate the time you have taken to read this open letter. It is written to offer you practical solutions to real problems that we are all responsible for solving," Vitti said. "Our State is facing unprecedented challenges, and our students, teachers and families are looking for decisive answers."

DPSCD educates more than 50,000 students. Last week the district began handing out food, school supplies and other supports to families after the schools were ordered shut down through April 5. That order has been extended to April 13 by Gov. Gretchen Whitmer, who issued a statewide stay-at-home directive effective at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.

Michigan is one of more than 45 states that have closed schools temporarily in response to the coronavirus. Only two states have shuttered schools through the end of the school year: Kansas and Virginia.

According to the American Federation of Teachers, 53 million of the nation's 57 million schoolchildren are shut out of their schools for the next several weeks.

Last week the Michigan Department of Education issued a memo stating that online learning done at home will not be counted as instructional time. Whitmer said she was "dismayed" by the decision, which got mixed reviews from superintendents and other education stakeholders.

The governor also said the MDE memo does not mean that school work done during the mandatory school closure won’t "count" toward grades, credits, or graduation.

Whitmer added that she "will be working in the coming days to ensure our seniors graduate and that no child is held back" as a result of the COVID-19 school closures.

Meanwhile on Monday two members of the Michigan State Board of Education urged state superintendent Michael Rice to issue waivers from the state's seat time requirements — that each district provide at least 1,098 hours and 180 days of pupil instruction — to all districts that submit a plan to continue educating their students with online learning.

Tom McMillin and Nikki Snyder, both Republican members of the board, said the Michigan Department of Education’s instruction that online classes will not count is the wrong approach during this crisis.

"We need to have a 'can-do attitude' and right now so many teachers and administrators are stepping up to the plate and figuring out how to continue providing instruction to their students," Snyder said. "That needs to be encouraged, not squashed.”

McMillin said state law allows seat-time waivers to be issued by Rice for innovative programs for up to one year.

McMillin and Snyder said they both understand there are equity concerns for districts where internet connectivity is a problem, but districts that can continue educating with distance learning should be able to do so.

"Why would we stop educating 80% of public school students, just because 20% can’t connect to the internet? That doesn’t make any sense,"  McMillin said. "For those who can’t get instruction during this time, for whatever reason, we trust there will either be innovative ways developed in the coming weeks or months or there will be ways to compensate when this crisis is over, through summer education or other forms of additional instruction."

MDE officials issued a statement from Rice in response to the call for him to issue seat time waivers.

“Teachers, support staff, and administrators are doing a terrific job of supporting our children and families during this crisis. I applaud their efforts. To the extent possible, they should continue to support the education of all children from a distance," Rice said.

"That said, the legislature needs to consider these days as instructional days so that local school districts know that they will have the funding to pay all school employees,” he said.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Monday, October 21, 2019

Can Brian Banks Help Sherry The Sleuth To Find Out Who Demolished Her Nonprofit's Home?

Brian Banks & Sherry "The Sleuth"
This is Brian Banks.

Sherry "The Sleuth" is his friend. 

M.L. Elrich is on fire.

We should ask Brian Banks if he can help Sherry "The Sleuth" Gay Dagnogo find out who demolished her blighted nonprofit's home she got from the Detroit Land Bank Authority.
Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Detroit Public Corruption In The Best Interests Of The Children

The worst part of this public corruption is not that it exists in every level of government, our institutions and NGO operations, but the simple fact that these people try to justify it, citing the cultural doctrine of "in the best interests of the child".

"The Elected Ones" remain silent because they are part of the problem.

This is strictly personal.

On a mission...

Stay tuned and get your popcorn.

Corrupt ex-DPS principal loses federal appeal

tdndc5-6w0cfws42slj8vd268t_original
Josette Buendia
A former Detroit principal convicted in a widespread corruption scandal lost her appeal Tuesday and will continue serving a two-year federal prison sentence.

A lower court judge correctly concluded that evidence of how Josette Buendia spent kickbacks from a school vendor supposedly on school expenses was irrelevant, according to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.

A three-judge appeals panel also rejected Buendia’s challenge of evidentiary rulings, saying various challenges did not warrant overruling U.S. District Judge George Caram Steeh.

Buendia, 52, of Garden City, was convicted by a federal jury in December 2016 of federal program bribery in a $2.7 million kickback scheme in connection with Detroit Public Schools vendor Norman Shy and 12 other district officials. The former Bennett Elementary School principal was accused of pocketing more than $40,000 in bribes and kickbacks and spending some of the money on massages.

Buendia’s lawyer told the jury her client was a victim of DPS’ broken system and she used the money from Shy for her students and “. . . regardless of how Buendia might have eventually spent the kickback money, she ‘corruptly solicited’ it because, by awarding contracts to Shy in exchange for kickbacks, she subverted the normal bidding process in a manner inconsistent with her duty to obtain goods and services for her school at the best value,” the panel wrote.

Buendia is serving the sentence at a federal prison in Alderson, West Virginia.

The prison is known as “Camp Cupcake” because of its low security, mountainous setting and perks, including microwave ovens, curling irons and cosmetology areas where inmate-to-inmate pedicures and manicures are allowed. Former Detroit Councilwoman Monica Conyers and TV personality Martha Stewart served time at the prison.

Buendia is scheduled to be released in June 2019.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Friday, June 10, 2016

Michigan Senator Curtis Hertel, Jr. Speaks On Detroit Public Schools Funding Failure

Detroit Public Schools may be the only school district in the state without certified teachers and deplorable school buildings.

I have seen CPS remove children for lesser safety offenses, yet, the state will do nothing to protect the children.

But, fear not, there is a plan and thy name is privatization.

What is even scarier is that not one of "The Elected Ones" has spoken out upon privatization.

The Governor will sign the Bill and we shall watch the end of Public Schools as we know it because Michigan is the socio-economic policy experiment of the nation.


Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Sunday, January 10, 2016

Detroit Public Schools Has An Educational Plan For Improvement

It was not long ago I weighed in on the dysfunction of elected leadership in addressing the failures in operations of Detroit Public Schools.

I was quite disturbed that the Michigan delegation advocating for the autonomy of DPS was absolutely clueless on the plans for education in the nation's failing school districts as Michigan has always been a test market for experimental socio-economic policy models.

Michigan, or rather, Detroit was a target on the Walton Family Foundation list to implement the strategic plan to privatize education and monetize through Medicaid billing in poor communities, which of course are historically classified as economically disadvantaged, but the plan was scrapped when there was a legislative impasse.

So as to ensure the efforts of everyone in leadership, advocating for the best interests of Detroit children's education and their future lives as productive adults are not quashed by the ignorance of policymaking, again, here is one of the old proposals for DPS where the state invested $1 billion in charter schools a few years ago.

And to think they were just going to dust off the old model and use it again because "The Elected Ones" were too busy doing photo ops.

Now, I wonder with what proposal "The Elected Ones" are going to counter with?

Walton Family Foundation to Invest $1 Billion in Charter Schools

The Walton Family Foundation has announced plans to invest $1 billion over five years in support of new and existing charter schools.

Based on lessons it has learned from its more than $1 billion investment over two decades in K-12 education reform, the foundation argues in its 2015-20 K-12 Education Strategic Plan (8 pages, PDF) that "cities need to create environments that support choice" so that all students have high-quality educational options, including charter schools. "This means creating enrollment platforms, equitable transportation access, fair funding, and readily accessible, current information on schools and student performance for families and other(s)."

To that end, the foundation's strategic plan prioritizes four initiatives — investing in cities, supporting the high-quality choice movement, innovation, and research. According to the document, the foundation's city-level investments will be focused on partnerships with school districts and support for charter and private schools; the recruitment and training of more effective educators; the development of systems that ensure easy access to school options; advocacy around policies that promote school choice; and community organizing. The foundation also plans to support national education reform organizations and invest in awareness building, novel school models, citywide enrollment models, and innovative ways to assess student success beyond test scores, including assessing non-cognitive attributes.

The foundation's investments in education will be focused on places where it already has ties and on creating new schools and developing "pipelines of talent," Marc Sternberg, a former high school principal who directs education philanthropy for the foundation, told the Associated Press. "People in poverty need high-performing schools," said Sternberg. "Our goal is that all families...have better schools. To be the rising tide to lift all boats."
How quaint.  "Those of limited means" have suntans.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Monday, June 29, 2015

2 charged with embezzling from Detroit school program

And people wonder why Detroit children do not fare well in school.

2 charged with embezzling from Detroit school program

Detroit — The Wayne County Prosecutor's Office has charged a high school principal and a nonprofit chief operating officer with embezzling money that was targeted toward at-risk students at Detroit schools.

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy charged Western High School principal Rudolfo Diaz and Esperanza Detroit COO Cecilia Zavala with stealing money from Esperanza Detroit.

The agency provides services and in-house counselors to at-risk students at Western International High School and other Detroit public schools.

According to Worthy, in April 2014, the DPS' Office of Inspector General noticed irregularities with some checks issued by the organization.

A member of Esperanza Detroit took an internal audit and turned findings over to the Detroit Police Department, which then turned it over to the prosecutor's office.

It is alleged that from November 2011 until May 2014, Zavala, 35, of Wyandotte, embezzled more than $100,000 from Esperanza Detroit for her own personal use, including using the organization's credit and debit cards without authorization to pay for restaurants, jewelry, a car and stays at hotels.



From October 2013 through May 2014, it is alleged that Diaz, 35, of Lincoln Park, received checks totaling $10,400 written on the Esperanza account and used it for his personal use. It is also alleged that he aided and abetted Zavala in embezzling money from the nonprofit.

Zavala has been charged with embezzlement more than $100,000, embezzlement more than $1,000 (nonprofit) and embezzlement more than $1,000.

She has also been charged with conspiracy embezzlement, using a computer to commit embezzlement more than $100,000.

Diaz has been charged with embezzlement more than $1,000, conspiracy embezzlement, embezzlement more than $1,000 (nonprofit) and conspiracy to embezzle.

"The allegations in this case reveal a complete disservice to and disregard for the students and the community as a whole," Worthy said in a statement.

Zavala and Diaz are expected to be arraigned at 10:30 a.m. Tuesday in 36th District Court.

Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Michigan Education Silent Variables Take The Stage

Here we have a report of poor attendance in Detroit Public Schools where public discussions have mitigated plausible variables with silence.  This is a fancy way of saying the comments are only focused on slinging dung on the same old tired effigies of teachers, unions and poverty.

Now comes the debut of one of those silent variables: zero tolerance in schools.

Charter schools are known for not providing special needs services to students which, in turn, puts a burden on DPS.  The burden is so significant many of these students who are put out for being incorrigible are done so without ever getting an Individualized Education Program (IEP).  Mental health is another one of those silent variables excluded from the public discussion on education.  If a kid is acting up in the classroom, you would think he is in need of services.  Unfortunately, to get proper mental health services for many children in Michigan, you have to catch a Child Protective Services case to access funding and resources.  Public schools are not equipped to provide mental health services but there have been recent discussions, as dearth as they may be, addressing the needs of this school population,

With the introduction of new legislation to pool resources of mental health and drug abuse we see there is movement to better improve the quality and delivery of services in the state, but this type of reformation has yet to trickle down to the public education administrative model, so it is a start to control another one of those silent variables in public education.

Mental health is not strictly assigned to cognitive and psychological developmental disabilities, it can also be temporal.  Some public schools are so distressed that students have to bring their own toilet paper to school.  I recall having to go to the girls room in Denby High School.  It was locked.  A group of girls told me to go to the first floor and find the guard.  The guard had to come and unlock the bathroom.  There were no doors on the stalls and the handicapped toilet was laying on its side.  The bathroom was relatively clean as you could see the students made a conservative effort to put the discarded paper toweling in a pile in the corner because there were no trash receptacles.

How would you feel if you had to be in an environment like that for 8 hours a day?  I'm guessing you would not want to be there.

Then there are the walks and bus rides to school.  Some of the neighborhoods are so distressed that it is not safe for students to walk to the bus stop or the school.  How would you feel looking over your shoulder every morning and coming home from school.

How would you feel to know that if you have no chance of graduating and if you do your chances of finding a job are slim to none in Detroit.  Unemployment is over 50% with no low skilled employment opportunities.  Depressing, wouldn't you say?

I am a big fan of alternative education because I know it works from first hand experience.  It's time we focus on maximizing the potential of each student's individual strengths while meeting the needs of identified weaknesses.

Make school an all year, wraparound environment for the entire family.  It's called an investment in the best interests of the child to garner a profitable adult.  Simply put, reinvest in human capital to reap the rewards of a productive, taxpaying citizen when they grow up.  This is what the output of our education equation should be.



Voting is beautiful, be beautiful ~ vote.©

Saturday, March 24, 2012

Education Fraud Is Child Welfare Fraud

This is not cheating.  This is not mismanagement.  This is fraud.  For those who are still lagging behind in heeding my advice, this is also Medicaid fraud.  Special school services are billed under Targeted Case Management.  This is more than special education.  This is public corruption.


Even more so shocking is the fact, and  yes, I stated fact, is that most of the false claims of test scoring deals with foster children.  If there was not an iron curtain of secrecy in child welfare, one would find that cognitively and psychologically disabled teens are passed through the education system to demonstrate on paper to justify the filing of cost reimbursements to be fictitious.  How else can a child welfare organization stay afloat if the truth was told.


The publishing of academic achievement results of this kind is nothing more than propaganda.  If a newspaper can identify suspicious activity, then why can't the States?  After all, the States are the ones responsible for oversight of subrecipients.


In the Detroit Metropolitan region, or RESA, it is worse than you can even imagine.

Suspicious school test scores found nationwide


ATLANTA — Hundreds of school systems nationwide, including Detroit’s, exhibit suspicious test scores that point to the possibility of cheating, according to an investigation by the Atlanta Journal-Constitution.

I encourage everyone to watch the video.  Great journalism.

The newspaper examined test results for 70,000 public schools and found high concentrations of scores in school systems from coast to coast.

The analysis doesn’t prove cheating. But it reveals that scores in hundreds of cities followed a pattern that, in Atlanta, indicated cheating in multiple schools.

The AJC reported in 2008 and 2009 about statistically improbable jumps in test scores within the 109-school Atlanta Public Schools system. Those reports led to an investigation by Georgia officials, which found that at least 180 principals, teachers and other staff took part in widespread test-tampering in the 50,000-student district.

In Sunday’s editions, the AJC reports that 196 of the nation’s 3,125 largest school districts had enough suspect test results that the odds of the results occurring naturally were less than one in 1,000.

For 33 districts nationwide, the odds of their test scores occurring naturally were worse than one in a million.

Standardized test scores have been at the forefront of national and local efforts to improve schools. Test performance was the centerpiece of the federal No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, which demanded higher classroom accountability. Tougher teacher evaluations that many states are rolling out place more weight than ever on the tests.

But the new report found that the sweeping policy shifts rely on test results that may be unreliable.

While the federal government requires states to use standardized testing, it does not require educators to screen scores for anomalies or investigate those that turn up.

“If we are going to make important decisions based on test results — and we ought to be doing that — we have to make important decisions about how we are going to ensure their trustworthiness,” said Daria Hall, director of K-12 policy with the nonprofit Education Trust. “That means districts and states taking ownership of the test security issue in a way that they haven’t to date.”

In nine districts — Atlanta, Baltimore, Dallas, Detroit, East St. Louis, Ill., Gary, Ind., Houston, Los Angeles and Mobile County, Ala. — scores careened so unpredictably that the odds of such dramatic shifts occurring without an intervention such as tampering were virtually zero, the newspaper found.

In Houston, test results for entire grades of students jumped two, three or more times the amount expected in one year, the analysis showed. When children moved to a new grade the next year, their scores plummeted — a finding that suggests the gains were not due to learning.

“These findings are concerning,” U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan said in a statement after being briefed on the AJC’s analysis. He added that “states, districts, schools and testing companies should have sensible safeguards in place to ensure tests accurately reflect student learning.”

Many school district officials contacted by the AJC disputed any conclusion that cheating was to blame for the swings.

Some school leaders attributed steep gains to exemplary teaching. But experts said instruction isn’t likely to move scores to the degree seen in the AJC’s analysis.

Cheating is one of only a few plausible explanations for such dramatic changes in scores for so many students within a district, said James Wollack, a University of Wisconsin-Madison expert in testing and cheating who reviewed the newspaper’s analysis.

“I can say with some confidence,” he said, “cheating is something you should be looking at.”

In each state, the newspaper used statistics to identify unusual score jumps and drops on state math and reading tests by grade and school. Declines can signal cheating the previous year. The calculations also took into account other factors that can lead to big score shifts, such as small classes and dramatic changes in class size.

The newspaper also developed a statistical method to identify school systems with far more unusual tests than expected, which could signal endemic cheating similar to what occurred in Atlanta. In its approach, the score analysis used conservative measures that highlighted extremes. The methodology is more likely to overlook possible indications of cheating than to suggest problems where none exist.

The newspaper’s methodology was reviewed by outside experts.

The AJC’s analysis suggests that tens of thousands of children may have been harmed by inflated scores that could have kept them from getting the academic help they needed.

In 2010 alone, the grade-wide reading scores of 24,618 children nationwide — enough to populate a mid-sized school district — swung so improbably that the odds of it happening by chance were less than 1 in 10,000. Experts said the findings warrant deeper investigation at the local level.

Statistical checks for highly improbable scores are like medical tests, said Gary Phillips, a vice president and chief scientist for the large nonprofit American Institutes for Research, who advised the AJC on its methodology.

“This is a broad screening,” he said. “If you find something, you’re supposed to go to the doctor and follow up with a more detailed diagnostic process.”


Monday, September 26, 2011

Selling Chattel: The Oldest Form Of Survival

This particular piece is a bit long winded, but it conveys the message I have been promoting for some time now.  That message is this:

Child welfare propaganda promotes revenue-mazimization schemes.

We have all seen the propaganda.

Poverty is the crime of child abuse as failure to provide for the necessary needs of the child.

This is why the recession is responsible for child abuse.  Beyond all this, take a look at the child actor with the Hollywood photo make-up for a black eye.

This is the emotional marketing of the propaganda which campaigns vie for more and more money to be pumped into the system.

When a person does not water a plant, the plant dies.  Think of communities as plants.  The roads and bridges are crumbling in the inner cities.  Foreclosures have devastated communities.  Public Schools have failed any semblance of anything close to an institution of education.  Communities have become grocery deserts without a mass transit system to go shopping.  Pollution and heavy metal fall out have produced such a severe impact on cognitive and psychological development, we are in the second generation of dying communities.

These dying communities have been led to walk off the cliff to its death by the likes of prominent community leaders.

For decades, churches have sat back and prospered from Faith Based Funding.  The only use much of this money went into was for the building of mega churches.  In exchange, these mega churches promoted child welfare propaganda.  Nothing was done for the community but these pastors wear diamonds and drive fancy cars.

These were the individuals who spearheaded and profited by the revenue-mazimization schemes in child welfare.  These are the same individuals who continued to ask for more money for these programs when the people running the programs could not shove the federal dollars in their pockets fast enough to put into the campaign funds to allow these individuals to keep asking for more money.

Instead of creating more programming to do what it is already suppose to do and of pumping more money into costly mismanaged ancillary programming which continues not to meet is goals, perhaps someone should stand up and make the current system do what it was suppose to do.

For those of you who are occasional fans and first timers, allow me to explain a few things.  I live in Michigan, the pilot state for national social policy.  I also live in Wayne County, one of the most corrupt counties in the nation.  I also live in Hamtramck, an enclave of Detroit.  I know what is going on.  I know these community leaders.  I know the the religious hypocrisy in order to make a dollar.  I know about the liquor store and corner church which is only there for some form of child and youth programming scheme.

What upsets me the most is the fact that you now have these same community leaders standing up and complaining because their gravy train dried up.  What is happening is corporations are getting into the game because these community leaders fucked up and allowed children to suffer at the hands of the state due to the codification of poverty, all the while, these same individuals were making money instead of listening to the cries of the people who put them in power in the first place.

As everyone was wielding their weapons of name dropping, in a psychotic frenzy of political backstabbing, these community leaders were led right of the cliff by a dangling dollar.

There is a shift to merge the funding streams into a singular source but the plan of implementation in Michigan sucks because it does not exist.

It is generational desperation which has promoted the sunken cost mentality of child welfare propaganda.  It is the oldest form of survival for the desperate: selling chattel.


Regna Lee Wood is Director of Statistical Research for The National Right to Read Foundation. Her work has appeared in National Review, Destiny, Network News & Views, a publication of the Hudson Institute, and Oklahoma Council of Public Affairs (OCPA) Perspective. Dr. John Silber, Boston University Chancellor, says she is "...a major national resource because of her brilliant analyses of illiteracy..."








Oklahoma taxpayers will provide nearly 600 million in local, state, and federal tax dollars this year for two unsuccessful remedial education programs in which nearly 40 percent of Oklahoma’s public-school students are now enrolled. Both programs depend on the continuing failure of instructors to teach many normal children to read.
Meanwhile, some state leaders are pushing a rigorous core-subject high-school curriculum, even though there aren’t enough qualified teachers to teach it or pupils to learn it. Both cart-before-the-horse endeavors fail to see that reading comes first. Until we teach kindergartners and first-graders to match spoken sounds with the letters that spell them, Oklahoma’s education woes will persist.

Trillion-dollar remedial education shams

Fearing that U.S. Department of Education testing would lead to a national relative-values school curriculum, Congressional conservatives recently defeated President Clinton’s proposed "world class" 4th and 8th grade reading and math exams. Though 1992 and 1994 National Assessment of Educational Progress test scores indicated that three-fourths of the nation’s 4th and 8th grade students could not even read a world-class test, the debate over who should design and administer these tests to one out of four students in those grades was prolonged.

Others, believing that national unions and federal bureaus are major reasons for America’s public school failures, have decided to fight the influence of both with competition. Hence, they promote school choice with tax vouchers. They collect millions in private funds to send a few thousand inner-city children to private schools. In several states they can and do form charter schools — public schools with fewer government controls. Thousands teach over one million children at home.

Meanwhile, everything associated with the nation’s two largest K-12 public school programs — cost, size, and federal control — has exploded. Title I or Chapter I remedial reading, math, and language classes for the economically "disadvantaged" and Special Education remedial reading, math, and language programs for the physically, mentally, and emotionally "disabled" have grown like monsters in a horror movie.

In 10 years, the cost and enrollment for Title or Chapter I remedial classes have more than doubled. Annual Title I expenses — paid largely with federal dollars — have soared from $4 billion in 1988 to an estimated $10 billion in 1998. Title I enrollment has ballooned from 5 million participants in 1988 to 10.5 million participants in 1998.
The numbers of Title I employees have increased from 150,000 in 1988 to an estimated 350,000 in 1998. About half are teachers; nearly half are teacher aides; and others are professional support personnel.

In just five years, the numbers of school-wide Title I schools have zoomed from 2,773 in 1993 to 14,000 in 1997 to an estimated 16,000 in 1998. About one in five of the nation’s public schools are now school-wide Title I schools. In big-city districts nearly all schools can be exclusively Title I because Congress changed the requirements for "school-wide Title I" designation. Before 1994, three-fourths of the children in such schools were from low-income families. Today only half of the children in school-wide Title I schools must be economically disadvantaged.

Since 1988, the annual cost of implementing IDEA (Individuals With Disabilities Education Act) with Special Education remedial programs has nearly tripled — from $19 billion in 1988 to an estimated $55 billion in 1998. State and local school districts pay 92 percent of these expenses.

Special Education school enrollment has climbed from 4.3 million in 1988 to 5.5 million in 1998. According to definitions in the IDEA legislation, just one million have handicaps defined as physical or mental disabilities. And 4.5 million with normal sight, hearing, and intelligence are in learning disability, language impairment or emotional disturbance categories.

The numbers of Special Education employees have increased from 500,000 in 1988 to 800,000 in 1997 to an estimated 850,000 in 1998. About half are teachers, a fourth are teacher aides, and a fourth are professional support personnel — psychologists, therapists, audiologists, etc.

In short, an incredible remedial education army of 1.2 million Title I and Special Education teachers, aides, and professional supporters — approaching the size of the U. S. Armed Forces — is trying to teach remedial reading, math, and language arts to 16 million supposedly disadvantaged and disabled students, who comprise 36 percent of the nation’s 45 million public students. And though the 1998 price for their remediation services will probably exceed $65 billion, they are not succeeding and they have never succeeded.

A final and an interim report on two large Congressionally mandated Title I studies, both published by the U.S. Department of Education in 1993, reached the same conclusions:
  • Title I remedial reading, math, and language arts instruction has not given children with low-income parents the academic advantages that children with more affluent parents receive.
  • The disparity in academic performance between children from high-income and low-income families increases the longer the disadvantaged students stay in Title I classes.
  • The level of educational achievement for disadvantaged children in Title I classes and disadvantaged children not in Title I classes is the same.
The final report is called Reinventing Chapter I because present Chapter I or Title I procedures have failed. The interim report, called Prospects: The Congressionally Mandated Study of Educational Growth and Opportunity, is a seven-year study of 40,000 Title I students in three grades.

Interim reports on a Congressionally commissioned ten-year school exit survey, called the National Longitudinal Transitional Study of Special Education Students (NLTS), are even more alarming. NLTS findings and exit information published in the 15th and 16th Annual Reports to Congress on the Implementation of IDEA reveal these troubling facts:
  • An astonishing 95 percent of the IDEA enrollees stay in Special Education remedial programs until they leave school. Only 7.5 percent of the Special Education students graduate with regular diplomas, and 40 percent drop out of high school.
  • Emotionally-disturbed Special Education students have the worst record: 6 percent graduate, 55 percent drop out, 50 percent are arrested within two years after leaving school, and 60 percent are arrested within three to five years after leaving school.
  • Welfare workers, prison and parole officers, employers of the handicapped, parents or guardians, and a few institutional personnel are supervising four out of five former Special Education students three to five years after they leave school. Though 80 percent of the Special Education participants have no physical or mental handicaps, only 20 percent are fully independent.
Yet in spite of these grim student performance records, Congress has reauthorized these distressing programs with nearly unanimous votes every four to six years since 1965. In 1988, only one in the House and one in the Senate objected to Title I reauthorization. In 1997, only four out of 535 in Congress declined to reauthorize IDEA Special Education.

Such irrational votes are incomprehensible. Also puzzling is the strange willingness of state legislatures and school boards to pay an astounding $460 billion out of $500 billion spent on Special Education since 1975, apparently without questioning participants and personnel or auditing the bankrupting Special Education expenditures.

If they had been just slightly curious, perhaps one legislator or one school board member in some state might have discovered the awful truth. The major job security for legions of Special Education and Title I remedial teachers and their support personnel is the continuing failure of regular instructors to teach millions of normal children to read.

If regular instructors succeed in teaching normal first-graders to match spoken sounds with letters that spell those sounds — as we know they did until the mid-1930s (because millions of military tests prove it) — then 15 million with no physical or mental handicaps, of the current 16 million Special Education and Title I remedial students, would be in standard classes doing grade-level assignments in a traditional curriculum. Obviously remedial teachers are unnecessary if regular teachers do their jobs. As Dr. Rudolph Flesch understood in his 1955 classic Why Johnny Can’t Read, "There wouldn’t be any remedial reading classes if we started teaching reading instead of guessing in the first grade."

Americans are paying billions of tax dollars to nearly 600,000 largely graduate-degree Title I and Special Education remedial reading and math instructors after they have paid billions of tax dollars to 600,000 bachelors-degree primary grade reading and math teachers. And they are doing this 15 years after Congressionally mandated NAEP testing proved that neither regular nor remedial reading and math teachers were succeeding.
This could be the trillion-dollar scam of the millennium if any group had intentionally committed this crime. But they didn’t.

The so-called "greedy teachers," "godless liberals," "right-wing bigots," and "arrogant bureaucrats" — those usually charged with producing the worst schools in all developed and most developing countries — are paper scapegoats. The real perpetrators are the senators, representatives, school board members, foundation scholars, university deans, network commentators, and news editors. Since 1950, these decision makers have ignored overwhelming evidence of rocketing illiteracy among school children who are not poor, retarded, or physically handicapped.

When a stunned Congress learned that the U.S. Army was rejecting hundreds of thousands among Korean War military registrants with years of schooling because they couldn’t read orders, maps, or road signs, they didn’t ask school superintendents in their home districts and states why their high-school graduates couldn’t read. Instead, they chided the Defense Department for being too choosy.

In 1988, when President Reagan’s Secretary of Labor, Anne McLaughlin, declared that only 80 percent of the American workers (with an average 11 years of school attendance) could read, the announcement did not make the evening news. Apparently, the network commentators didn’t know that 90 percent of the Mexican labor force were literate.

Today, 36 percent of our public school students are doing primary lessons in Title I or Special Education remedial classes, 70 percent of our high-school students can’t read 9th grade assignments; 30 percent of our 12th graders can’t read 4th grade lessons; and 50 percent of the American citizens are disenfranchised because they can’t read propositions on ballots — or newspaper articles explaining propositions on ballots. Nevertheless, a Republican Congress and a Democrat President both think that lack of money is the greatest obstacle to a college education.

Neuroscientists, using some of the billions the 1990 Congress appropriated to see how the human brain works, discovered that brain cells do not process words or sentences by seeing them in print over and over again. They do not recognize words by the overall shape of the letters. Brain cells process words by matching spoken sounds with letters that spell those sounds. The scientist concluded that children must learn English spelling rules or they can’t read.

But for the last half-century, American children who have learned to read have done so in spite of the reading instruction they received in school. They were not taught to associate letters with spoken sounds. This is the reason the U.S. literacy rate has plunged from 97 percent in 1940 to 77 percent in 1990 and is well on the way to 70 percent in the year 2000. It’s the reason that the U.S. and Haiti may well be the only two of 40 nations in the Western Hemisphere with adult literacy rates below 70 percent by the year 2001.

It is time for the decision makers to do their homework. When they do, they will reach these conclusions:
  • Reading comes first. Instructors can’t teach anything to illiterate students of any age except how to read. The horse comes before the cart.
  • Second, the argument about reading methods is over. Flat-earth proponents had little to say after ships came back to Spain by sailing west all the way. The empirical and physiological evidence that reading students must learn to spell sounds is just as overwhelming.
  • Third, everyone must focus on all the carrot-and-stick ways to persuade reading teachers — whether in public or private schools, libraries, prisons, or industry — to teach beginning readers how to match sounds with letters that spell them. If they don’t, this country’s highly touted "bridge to the 21st century" will be a dead-end tunnel.

Core curriculum concerns

Oklahoma’s governor and state school superintendent, Oklahoma University’s president, seven Oklahoma State University deans, and others are currently promoting an old fashioned core-subject high-school curriculum. They want students to complete four years of English and three to four years of math, science, and social science or history before graduating.

Fine. They deserve crowns for identifying a worthy goal. But they’re mistaken in thinking that Oklahoma legislators can initiate such a curriculum by passing laws.

Laws will not produce qualified core-subject teachers. Laws won’t furnish high-school students prepared to take and pass core-subject courses.

In 1990, the Oklahoma legislature passed the highly publicized HB1017 school reform act. One HB1017 stipulation required foreign-language instruction for nearly 300,000 fifth through twelfth grade students in around 1,800 public schools.

If state legislators had looked at yearly tabulations of Oklahoma college and university degrees — published annually by the Oklahoma Regents for Higher Education about two years after graduates receive them — they surely would have noticed a dearth of college-degree foreign language teachers. One graduated in 1988 and six in 1989. And maybe they would have realized that video foreign-language instruction for both students and untrained teachers would produce few bilingual high-school graduates. If so, Oklahoma legislators could have saved the state 70 to 80 million dollars.

Similarly, if core-subject boosters would look at the Regents’ degree tabulations, they would surely see the futility of legislating a "4 by 4" or "4 by 3" high-school core-subject curriculum with incredibly few qualified core-subject teachers. For 28,700 of nearly 30,000 who received education degrees in the seven years before 1996 did not major in a core subject.

These are seven-year Oklahoma education degree totals in round numbers and percentages:
  • 50% (15,000) majored in general, preschool, elementary, secondary, and adult education.
  • 11% (3,300) earned mostly graduate degrees for teaching Title I and Special Education remedial reading and math classes.
  • 10% (3,000) majored in non-core subjects: music, vocation-technical, art, business, physical education, etc.
  • 8% (2,400) earned graduate degrees in administration.
  • 6% (1,800) earned graduate degrees required for psychologists, testing specialists, and counselors.
  • 4% (1,300) majored in core subjects: English, math, science, social science, or history.
  • <1% (45) majored in a foreign language.
  • 11% (3,300) majored in unspecified subjects.
And here’s some more interesting core-subject curriculum information. In seven years, virtually all 430 science education graduates majored in "general science." Only two majored in high-school science (1 in physics, 1 in chemistry). Furthermore, seven years of degree tabulations published by the Regents do not list even one core-subject education degree for six of Oklahoma’s 12 public universities (Cameron, East Central, Langston, Oklahoma Panhandle, University of Science and Arts in Oklahoma, and Oklahoma State).

Further, though over half of Oklahoma’s high-school graduates have completed the ACT core curriculum since 1993, about 37,500 of 62,400 public college freshmen (60 percent) took required no-credit remedial math, English, reading, and science courses during the 1996-97 academic year. More than half of these remediation freshmen, who made unacceptable scores on at least one ACT section, were high-school core-curriculum graduates.

Also of interest: between 1991 and 1996, the numbers of Oklahoma’s black high-school students completing the ACT "4 by 3" core curriculum rose by 11 percent, yet the average ACT score for Oklahoma black students fell.
Oklahoma’s four- and two-year public college graduation rates of 34 percent and 13.5 percent — versus 46 percent and 36 percent for the nation — are stunning proof that the current high-school core curriculum and college no-credit remedial courses are not the answer to Oklahoma’s grim education problems. And neither are Title I and Special Education remedial reading and math courses for 150,000 students in all grades.

The U. S. Education Department reading tests show that two-thirds of the nation’s high-school students cannot read well enough to do 9th-grade lessons. Because Oklahoma ACT scores and college graduation rates are below the national average, probably two-thirds of Oklahoma’s 9th graders cannot do high-school assignments. In 1989, nearly 40 percent of Oklahoma’s high-school students were doing primary grade lessons in Title I and Special Education classes. This explains why the state has so few core-subject teachers and over 6,000 remedial reading and math teachers.

These figures, along with those from Special Education and Title I, tell us that the most important core curriculum for Oklahoma is a "2 by 1" curriculum for kindergarten and first grade. This is two years of teaching children to hear, pronounce, and spell 44 English sounds in the most common ways. If beginners learn to read in two years, a grade-school core-subject curriculum will be in order. Then all normal high-school students will be able to take and pass a real secondary core-subject curriculum.
-------------------------

Research Notes

Enrollment:
  • Title I - The Annual Evaluation Report of Federally Funded Educational Programs for FY 1989 gives the 1987, 1988, and 1989 Title I enrollment. The 1990, 1991, and 1992 Oklahoma School Testing Program reports give Title I enrollment for those years, as a percentage of total enrollment. The Oklahoma Office of Accountability annual reports give the 1993, 1994, and 1995 Title I enrollment as a percentage of the total enrollment. The 1997 Oklahoma Office of Accountability report (for 1996) does not mention the Title I data, though the U.S. Department of Education sent Oklahoma $85,198,000 for state Title I programs.
  • Special Education - State-by-state Special Education enrollment counts are in the Annual Reports to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). TheOklahoma Office of Accountability reports Special Education enrollment as a percentage of enrollment or in numbers of teachers plus average Special Education teacher/student ratios.
Teacher and teacher-plus-support-personnel counts:
  • Title I -1987, 1988, 1989 counts are from the FY Annual Evaluation of Federally Funded Educational Programs. Later figures are from State Chapter I Participation and Achievement Information, 1991-1992, and State Chapter I Participation and Achievement Information, 1993-1994, edited by Westat, Inc. and published by the U.S. Department of Education.
  • Special Education - Annual Reports to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act and Oklahoma Office of Accountability (only number of teachers in 1997).
Expenditures:

  • Title I - Annual state-by-state Title I allocations in the yearly Digest of Education Statistics, compiled by the National Center for Education Statistics for the U.S. Department of Education.

  • Special Education - Annual Reports to Congress on the Implementation of the Individuals With Disabilities Education Act gave totals plus local, state, and federal sources for 1987 and 1988. These reports also gave state-by-state federal allocations plus the federal percentage of the total national Special Education expenses for subsequent years (through 1996). The Oklahoma Department of Special Education finance office supplied the 1993 and 1995 figures.
  • Thursday, June 30, 2011

    DOJ Busts Detroit Public Schools Kiddy Kickback Racket

    Shout out to Barbara McQuade:
    Image may contain: one or more people, people standing and suit
    Barbara McQuade

    You go, girl!!!!!!

    Detroit Businesswoman Convicted of Defrauding the Detroit Public Schools 
    A federal jury in Detroit returned guilty verdicts yesterday against a Detroit businesswoman for conspiracy to defraud the Detroit Public Schools (DPS) of $3.3 million and money laundering conspiracy, announced United States Attorney Barbara McQuade.
    Ms. McQuade was joined in the announcement by Special Agent in Charge Andrew G. Arena, Federal Bureau of Investigation, and Special Agent in Charge Erick Martinez, Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation.
    Found guilty was Sherry Washington, 54, a partner in an entity doing business as “Associates For Learning.” The jury deliberated for about one hour and 20 minutes before returning the guilty verdicts after a two-week jury trial conducted before United States District Judge Paul D. Borman.
    “These defendants exploited the Detroit Public Schools system and essentially stole $3 million that could have been spent on school children,” McQuade said. “We hope that this prosecution will discourage others from taking money that is intended to benefit students.”
    According to the superseding indictment, Associates for Learning contracted with Stephen Hill, the former Executive Director of the Risk Management Department at DPS, to facilitate a wellness program for DPS employees, despite the lack of any bidding process or a written contract, in violation of DPS policies. The original proposal was for $150,000 for a six month pilot program. However, in 2005 and 2006 Associates for Learning submitted three inflated, fraudulent invoices to DPS, each for approximately $1 million, which DPS paid by electronic wire transfers. As part of the conspiracy, Hill was paid five percent cash kickbacks by members of Associates For Learning. Washington was also convicted of money laundering in an attempt to conceal the kickbacks.
    Seven others charged in this case have all pleaded guilty for their roles in the conspiracy to commit program fraud by submitting fraudulent invoices to DPS for services and thereafter participating in making kickbacks to Hill. Those include Gwendolyn Washington, Marilyn White, and Sally Jo Bond, who were business partners of Sherry Washington’s; Duane Polk, Valerie Polk, Thomas Ray Taylor, and Stephen Hill The original indictment, returned on April 18, 2010, had also named former DPS Risk Management executive Christina Polk-Osumah, who died of natural causes on September 2, 2010.
    Sentencings for the defendants are set for July and August.
    The case was investigated by special agents of the FBI and IRS with the cooperation of Detroit Public Schools, Office of Inspector General. The case is being investigated and prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney J. Michael Buckley of the Public Corruption Unit.