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Re: Fwd: First Look at a NEW Bold Approach to Education
- To: ca-resisters@interversity.org
- Subject: Re: Fwd: First Look at a NEW Bold Approach to Education
- From: Rich Gibson <rgibson@pipeline.com>
- Date: Tue, 10 Jun 2008 13:23:54 -0700
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- In-reply-to: <26EF3F11-36B0-11DD-8688-000A95E4AD80@igc.org>
- References: <26EF3F11-36B0-11DD-8688-000A95E4AD80@igc.org>
Nice piece of evidence that liberals are the
Charons to Hades, the rowers to hell, the people
who pave the way for fascism by stripping people
of their ability to reason just why it is that
children do not have health care, food, parents
with jobs that pay, good schools, etc.
The reason is capitalism. It requires not just
inequality, but un-reason, which is primary in
capital's schools that, depending on birth class,
mainly teach degrees of obedience and loyalty,
the ethics of slaves (note that 1.5 million
troops have been to Iraq or Afghanistan, some of
them four or five times, with little
resistance---about 24 million kids in school now
are draft-eligibly in the next 4 years).
The crisis at hand is very real. A collapsing
economy, a very true promise of perpetual war
from both political parties, a military exposed
as strategically and tactically incompetent and
cowardly, rising jingoism, religious
superstition, racism, calls for a powerful
leader, a near perfect merger of government and
corporations, and rising imperial competitors
every bit as desperate for that oil, cheap labor
and markets as the US ruling classes, means that,
absent a real fight based on class solidarity,
things will grow much worse, probably quickly.
The silly platitudes in this 3/4 page ad in the
NY Times will only divert people from the battle
that does need to be taken up.
That this list of signers unites the shabby work
of Meier, the reactionary Susan Neuman, the
thug-school-bosses Rudy Crew and Arne Duncan,
should serve as a heads up to those who think the
demagogue, Obamagogue, is going to do anything
but serve as headman for the giant sucking pump
of profits that is the system of capital itself.
Original Message -----
> From: Lisa Guisbond
>
> A major new education initiative echoes a lot of what the Whole Child
> Campaign, CARE, Citizens for Public Schools, FairTest and others have
> been talking about in terms of a broader approach to looking at school
> quality and improvement. It also brings together a star-studded list
> of prominent educators and others, some coming from seemingly
> disparate perspectives, e.g., Richard Rothstein, Pedro Noguera, Linda
> Darling-Hammond and Deborah Meier, on one hand, and Tom Payzant,
> Robert Schwartz (Achieve) and Susan Neuman (who worked to push NCLB
> for the Bush administration but has recently had second thoughts) on
> the other. Worth reading their full statement at the web address below
> and then you can choose to sign on, if you wish.
>
> Lisa G.
>
> http://www.boldapproach.org/
>
>
>
> A Broader, Bolder Approach to Education
>
>
>
> The Broader, Bolder Approach to Education is the product of
> deliberation by leaders with diverse religious and political
> affiliations, and experts in the fields of education, social welfare,
> health, housing, and civil rights. The statement examines areas that
> research shows must be addressed if we are to keep our promises to all
> ofAmerica's children.
>
> More than a half century of research has documented a powerful
> association between social and economic disadvantage and low student
> achievement. Weakening that association is the fundamental challenge
> facingAmerica's education policymakers.
>
> The nation's education policy has typically been crafted around the
> expectation that schools alone can offset the full impact of low
> socioeconomic status on learning, a theory embodied in the No Child
> Left Behind law, which passed with bipartisan support in 2001 and is
> now up for reauthorization. Schools can ameliorate some of the impact
> of social and economic disadvantage on achievement. Improving our
> schools, therefore, continues to be a vitally important strategy for
> promoting upward mobility and for working toward equal opportunity and
> overall educational excellence.
>
> Evidence demonstrates, however, that achievement gaps based on
> socioeconomic status are present before children even begin formal
> schooling. Despite impressive academic gains registered by some
> schools serving disadvantaged students, there is no evidence that
> school improvement strategies by themselves can substantially,
> consistently, and sustainably close these gaps.
>
> Nevertheless, there is solid evidence that policies aimed directly at
> education-related social and economic disadvantages can improve school
> performance and student achievement. The persistent failure of
> policymakers to act on that evidence ? in tandem with a schools-only
> approach ? is a major reason why the association between disadvantage
> and low student achievement remains so strong.
>
> Read the full statement
>
> Read news release
----------
At 10:43 PM 6/9/2008, you wrote:
Im not sure how Broad or Bold this is, but its a
baby step in the right direction: away from
blaming schools and toward ameliorating
poverty... Some good people have signed it
(Debby Meier, Rich Rothstein) and some baddies
(Arne Duncan, Chicago Sup?oh sorry, I meant CEO).
Susan
Begin forwarded message:
From: Lawrence Mishel <lmishel@epi.org>
Date: Mon Jun 9, 2008 6:00:31 PM US/Pacific
To: susanharman@igc.org
Subject: First Look at a NEW Bold Approach to Education
Reply-To: lmishel@epi.org
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