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‘Education Reform’ Category

  1. “Climate Crime” On the Curriculum?

    January 8, 2014 by Tunya

    Freedom is precioius.  Once lost, it is hard to regain.  But, it might be regained with such a vigor as to ensure that vigilance is not just an empty word, but a constant.  Cicero said it so long ago:

    “Freedom suppressed and again regained bites with keener fangs than freedom never endangered.”

    Environmentalism, sustainability, global stewardship — these are bywords by which school curriculums are being steered in the "transformations" underway in K-12 schools.  

    Hopefully balance will prevail and that discussion and school work will provide for counter positions.  

    The movie "Climate Crime" tries to show how welll-intentioned environmental initiatives can actually be more harmful to the areas involved than expected.  

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5igyXyJKL_0

      

     

     

     

     


  2. Withholding Report Cards — Immoral, Illegal

    January 7, 2014 by Tunya

    Parent Rights Endangered in BC’s Teacher Strike (2011-12) 

    1,  Parent rights bargained away

    Parents were not at the table when their rights were bargained away.  No one spoke up or objected to their rights being used as a bargaining chip.  It’s like having a father sell his wife or a parent sell a child.  It’s as bad as that!

    2.  Parents deprived of a comparative report  —  graded

    The right lost to parents was not being able to receive their first progress report card this Fall.  Three such graded report cards are to be sent to parents and that is specified in the School Act.

    3.  Withholding reports is illegal

    Parents not receiving these cards according to the School Act makes this illegal.  Parents could sue.

    4.  Parents obtaining private assessment should be able to charge back.

    Since parents are supposed to receive such a progress report card which would help them compare if the child is at grade level, below, or above.  Surely then if they obtain such a assessment privately, shouldn’t the fee be chargeable to the school board?

    5.  The rule of law is being held in contempt

    What’s the use of legislation and laws if people ignore them?

    6.  Reports are tools for parents for making informed decisions

    With a report card parents are better able to decide if they have made a good decision in enrolling their child in that school.  If the parent is dissatisfied, they are well-equipped to either advocate for better services or withdraw to another setting  —  another school or home education.

                The suspicion is that people in the system – unionized teachers AND admin, etc  —  don’t mind keeping parents in the dark, so that they are handicapped from removing students too easily.  Keep the kid in the seat above all else, for the full dollar.

    7.  Not receiving the report card is equivalent to having a contract broken.

    The quid pro quo of contracts is I do something, you do something.  I enroll my child, you provide me with a report of how they’re doing.

    8.  With the strike continuing indefinitely, the next two reports are also unlikely.

    It’s way too late for parents to make alternative arrangements so late in the year.  A whole year could easily be wasted.  Private schools say they receive a good number of new enrollments in January.

    9.  The new replacement procedure makes parents beholden to the teachers.

    The onus is now on the parents to initiate communication by email, phone or other means and any meeting must be in school hours.  Working parents would find this difficult.

    10.  This shift seriously undermines the authority of the parents in relation to government schools.

    Instead of public schools being seen as accountable to parents, it is now the parents who are seen as the supplicants or petitioners to the central government.

    11. All the points above serve to erode the centrality and primacy of the family in education of the young. Undermining the role of the family in education is a serious affront to the health of civil society.

    12.  All of the  points above add further fuel to the arguments for having more publicly-funded alternatives to the public school system so that families have more elbow room to help accommodate their children’s educational needs.  We live in a free society, don’t we?   Vouchers, charters, School based management…

    13.  With the messaging from some union leaders that the strike could go on “indefinitely” and one pres, Karpuk from Kamloops saying, “we should stay here forever”  I really wonder if keeping parents domesticated and “begging” for feedback, and principals getting punished by overwork and sick leaves, and teachers (workers) in charge of the workplace, is probably what these progressives want anyway ….


  3. Parent Involvement & The Political Principle

    January 5, 2014 by Tunya

    Book Review:

    Parental Involvement and the Political Principle — Why the Existing Governance Structure of Schools Should be Abolished, Seymour B Sarason, 1995 Jossy-Bass Pub

    Sarason was a psychologist whose many books about education reform leaned heavily on motivations for people's actions.  

    From the cover of the book:  "For school to change, not only must a new school governance replace the old, it must also confront and answer the question: Governance for what educational purpose?"

    Those of us in the trenches of ed reform bemoan, tear our hair out, and wail: the system runs for the conveneince of "the system", for those who run the system and exploit it for their own vested interests.

    In Economics this is various called producer capture, provider capture, or elite capture.

    I will provide a lot more material on the book's important insights later as this site, and the Parent Tribal Memory project gets rolling along.


  4. Back to the basics

    January 4, 2014 by Tunya

    In Defense Of “Salt-of-the-earth-parents”

    As a descendant of prairie pioneers and further back yet of Russian peasants and serfs — I am keenly self-conscious of highbrow town folk talking down.

    To tell a parent to lay off “the basics” is the ultimate put down.

    I would hazard this projection — universally, EVERY parent in the world knows what he or she means when they say they want “the basics” for their kid in school.

    It’s not just town folk but the teacher establishment that can make a well-meaning trustee feel “inferior” and put-down.  When our new Minister of Education, Peter Fassbender, was announced after the last provincial election, it wasn’t long before a “JOB” was done on him — a reminder of who’s who in the zoo, so to speak.

    As a 70s trustee Fassbender was caught up in the “back to the basics” movements of the time when “fads and frills” started creeping in.  Reminders of that time when “status quo” won over reform efforts are brought up to this day.  If you read the story, note one parent comment — “As for Fundamental Schools…they are going strong in Langley and are no longer a joke but have looooooooong wait lists and once you do get in … well, you have pretty contented families.”

    http://blogs.vancouversun.com/2013/06/09/peter-fassbender-and-the-back-to-basics-education-movement-in-the-70s/

    I can say that what parents mean by “the basics” is why early schooling — in most areas of the world —  to this day is either called “primary”, “elementary” or “fundamental”.  It’s seen as a foundation, the crucial first building block.  When will “the system” commit to this?

    This is the Wikipedia take on the topic:

    “The major goals of primary education are achieving basic literacy and numeracy amongst all pupils, as well as establishing foundations in science, mathematics, geography, history and other social sciences.”

    I simply cannot understand why teacher unions object to our “Foundation Skills Assessments” in BC and why all teachers can’t commit to “the basics”.


  5. Edcamps For Parents ?

    January 3, 2014 by Tunya

    Parent resistance is something no edationist wants to see.  Their worst fear is that parents will find alternatives to their public subsidized schools