Monday, September 27, 2021

In Case You Missed It – September 27, 2021

Here are links to last week's articles receiving the most attention on NEIFPE's social media accounts. Keep up with what's going on, what's being discussed, and what's happening with public education.

Be sure to enter your email address in the new Follow Us By Email box in the right-hand column to be informed when our blog posts are published.

THIS WEEK

We ought to have a separate section set aside each week for Peter Greene's Curmudgucation Blog. For the second week in a row, he has two articles among our top reads. This week he writes about the waste of time that is standardized testing, specifically, the SAT, and how schools and school boards are being attacked for "teaching Critical Race Theory."

We also link to articles on how the Indiana General Assembly is discussing lowering the bar on teacher licensing to solve the problem of teacher shortages (which is, to a large extent, a problem of their own making), a unique approach to representation on charter school boards, public schools as a "public good," local economic development in EACS, and some thoughts about the pandemic.

AN AVERAGE DOESN'T ALWAYS MEAN WHAT YOU THINK IT MEANS

Almost unlocking a mystery of SAT scores

Standardized test scores are overused, misused, and misunderstood in the best of times. During the pandemic, they are worst than useless. It's time to let them go.

From Curmudgucation
We've spent years marketing the SAT's flagship product to all students (in some states, we've snookered the government into requiring it), so as we add students who might not have been inclined to take the test to go ahead and take it, the average score is affected. That's how the results for every sub group can go up even as the overall average goes down.

Now throw in a pandemic year in which students who are having a rough time just don't take the test, leaving it only to those who are well-buffered from the pandemic (and whose buffering is the same sort of socio-economic background that is an advantage on the test) and voila!! Instant increase in average score.

What we have here is just one more example of why test scores from the pandemic are not worth a thing. They can't be compared to any year, they can't really be normed accurately, and they just kind of mean nothing. But we're still going to be subjected to stories that can't manage to draw a line between two data points.

CENSORSHIP BASED ON "CRITICAL RACE THEORY" IS HERE

Critical Race Theory Panic Continues To Widen Its Aim

Coming (if not already there) to a school board near you -- racist and ignorant ranting and protesting.

From Curmudgucation
There's way more in the list of 31 objectionable books. Spanish and Creole words might be "confusing for children." A fictional Civil War book is naughty in part because it depicts "out of marriage families between white men and black women." Someone objects to a book about Galileo because there is no "HERO of the church" to contrast with their mistakes in persecuting the astronomer. Also, there's too much sexy picture of sea horse mating in a sea horse book.

This is right on par with the York, PA district that "froze" the use of some books (not a ban, nosirree) including books like I Am Rosa Parks by Brad Metzler, a really well-done children's book about her work (he's got a million kid biographies--you can see his work on the PBS Xavier Riddle series). I've read this book to the Board of Directors at least a zillion times, and there seems little to be upset about unless you find it objectionable that a couple of white people are depicted as being mean to her. After student protests (and lots of bad press), York's all-white board reversed the ban.

But this appears to be where we're headed. Anything that parents or random citizens don't like, anything at all, can now be protested or reported to the authorities. Just say the magic words ("critical race theory"). We're talking broad, wide, stormtrooper-caliber aim, and it would be funny if these wild shots weren't hitting real targets, actual live students and teachers.

INDIANA LEG MAKES TEACHING MORE DIFFICULT, THEN COMPLAINS THAT THERE AREN'T ENOUGH TEACHERS

The state or districts? Indiana lawmakers weigh who should have the authority to license teachers

After decades of neglecting, belittling, and doing everything in their power to damage the teaching profession in Indiana, legislators wonder why there's a teacher shortage. Their solution? “Let’s water down the teacher requirements.”

From Chalkbeat*
...John O’Neal, a policy researcher and lobbyist for the Indiana State Teachers Association, warned during public comment that having Indiana’s nearly 300 school districts act as their own licensing bodies could lead to confusion, a lack of uniform standards, and problems with reciprocity across districts.

A teacher looking to move to another district in the state may find their locally issued license invalid, O’Neal said, adding that medical professionals and attorneys are also licensed through a central body.

“We would agree on local control on most issues,” O’Neal said. “When it comes to licensing, there should be one entity.”

Asked by Goodrich if having just one department available to process licenses was slowing down hiring and contributing to shortages, O’Neal said it was likely a minor factor in comparison to others.

“There are other reasons causing a shortage, like pay and benefits, and other things like working conditions … and professional respect that are probably more of a factor influencing those teachers’ job decisions than how fast the process is,” O’Neal said.
INCLUDE ALL STAKEHOLDERS IN DECISIONS

The sacred and the profane: A former D.C. charter school board member calls for change

Here's an interesting call for equitable representation on charter school boards.

From the Answer Sheet
After untold millions of dollars of investment and the creation of scores of schools — there were 128 operating this year — it is time for us to admit that this experiment is not working as it should.

So what must be done?

The District must rethink its charter schools, and more specifically, charter schools must be integrated. “Chocolate City” has been replaced by a city where upper-income White residents and a more diverse spectrum of Black residents exist in equal numbers.

One of the few scalable policies that dramatically improved academic outcomes for Black students was the integration of American public schools in the 1970s and ’80s. The Performance Management Framework that ranks the quality of each charter school should ensure that schools reflect the demographics of the city as it is today, particularly given that charter schools are not constrained by neighborhood boundaries that enforce segregation in traditional public schools.

EACS LOOKS AT SPURRING DEVELOPMENT

EACS pondering backing TIF district

From the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
The East Allen County Schools board will soon decide whether to support a tax increment financing district proposed in southeast Fort Wayne.

The Fort Wayne Redevelopment Commission approached the school system about creating a residential TIF district at the northeast intersection of Tillman and Hessen Cassel roads.

TIF districts work by capturing property tax revenue generated in a certain area. The funds are then used for improvements in the district, including sidewalks and other public works projects.

Kirby Stahly, an EACS administrator, said the redevelopment commission believes the unimproved land won't be developed for residential housing without the proposed TIF district, and officials further believe more housing in that area of Fort Wayne would spur commercial development.

PUBLIC ED

Public schools 'a common good'


Vouchers for private schools and charter schools drain public money from the public schools. The concept of the "common good" which has been the basis of the nation's public schools has disappeared. In this short editorial, an Indianapolis parent writes about her decision to give up her private school voucher and send her children to public schools.

From the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
I try to get parents to understand that if we defund, undermine or privatize public schools, we're doing a disservice to the majority of parents for whom private schools are not an option. I try to help them see what I finally did: that the decisions we make when it comes to our own children have an impact on everybody else.

All those years ago, that woman at the community meeting warned that we were drifting dangerously away from the idea of a common good. At the time, I couldn't understand what she meant. I do now.

PANDEMIC CHALLENGES STUDENTS

COVID measures straining students: Quiet lunchrooms showing rising need for mental health

Fort Wayne Community Schools works to overcome the disruption and damage caused by the pandemic.

From the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
Experts say social connectedness is important to mental health, which is a main priority in the U.S. Department of Education's 2021-22 guide for K-12 schools.

“To create a strong foundation for students' academic success we must prioritize their social, emotional and mental health,” the Return to School Roadmap said.

The challenges children, teens and young adults have faced during the pandemic include changes in routine, disruption of education, missed significant life events and lost security and safety, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

“Beyond getting sick, many young people's social, emotional, and mental well-being has been impacted by the pandemic,” the CDC said. “Trauma faced at this developmental stage can continue to affect them across their lifespan.”

LACK OF TRUST EXACERBATES PANDEMIC DAMAGE

What do vaccine and mask deniers do when they get sick?

Who should you trust for information?

From Live Long and Prosper
You need to choose who you're going to believe.

Lack of Trusted Authority is Why Covid-19 is Kicking Our Butts The US has only 4% of the world population but nearly a quarter of all Covid cases.

That’s not a coincidence.

In large part, it’s because we don’t know how to combat the virus because we don’t know who to trust.

And the resulting credibility vacuum has enabled unscrupulous politicians, agents of chaos and other charlatans to position themselves as experts.

*Note: Financial sponsors of Chalkbeat include pro-privatization foundations and individuals such as Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, EdChoice, Gates Family Foundation, The Walton Family Foundation, and others.

**Note: The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette has changed its online access and is now behind a paywall. Digital access, home delivery, or both are available with a subscription. Staying informed is important, and one way to do that is to support your local newspaper. For subscription information, go to fortwayne.com/subscriptions/

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Monday, September 20, 2021

In Case You Missed It – September 20, 2021

Here are links to last week's articles receiving the most attention on NEIFPE's social media accounts. Keep up with what's going on, what's being discussed, and what's happening with public education.

Be sure to enter your email address in the new Follow Us By Email box in the right-hand column to be informed when our blog posts are published.


THIS WEEK

You probably won't be surprised to learn that COVID and mask mandates are on our list of articles again this week.

A group of Northwest Allen County Schools parents is suing to end the mask mandate in their district, and Fort Wayne Community Schools, the only Allen County district to begin the year with a mask mandate, is working hard to provide services during the pandemic.

We learn that charter operators are making money from selling their schools (built by taxpayer dollars, by the way), and, in the first of two articles, Peter Greene (Curmudgucation) wonders why children are still carrying their "backpacks full of cash" from one private school entity to another.

Florida is changing their testing operation, but not really ending high-stakes testing, and in the second article from Curmudgucation, we learn that nearly anything taught in a public school can be considered "controversial" by someone.

ALLEN COUNTY NEWS

NACS parents sue over mandate

It's probably not in the purview of the courts to determine if wearing masks to slow the spread of COVID-19 is scientific or not, but it's interesting that the suit claims that it's "unscientific" yet the actual people who do science say it is.

The suit also states that young people are safer from the deleterious effects of the disease, which, based on our current knowledge is true, but nothing about how those same children can unknowingly pass the disease on to others for whom it might be deadly...like their parents and grandparents.

From the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
Parents whose children attend schools in Northwest Allen County filed a lawsuit in Allen Superior Court alleging that state and local school officials are foisting “an endless state of emergency” on students, teachers and staff because of COVID-19 restrictions, and they want it to end.

“Students remain subject to arbitrary, irrational, and unscientific rules regarding face masks, contact tracing, and quarantines – measures that serve no legitimate government purpose at this stage beyond foisting an endless state of emergency on K-12 students, teachers, and staff,” said the suit, filed Monday.

FWCS making vaccine strides

The number of vaccinated students in FWCS has increased and the administration urges patience.

A free article from the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
Fort Wayne Community Schools began the fifth week of classes with 26% of middle and high school students fully vaccinated – a significant increase since early August, when the rate was 4%, Superintendent Mark Daniel told the board.

The district of almost 30,000 students and about 4,000 employees continues to battle COVID-19, however.

Student and employee COVID-19 cases totaled 537 in only four weeks, representing 36% of the district's 1,499 cases last academic year, Daniel said Monday. He noted 80% of the cases were among students, and 92% were among unvaccinated individuals.

The cumulative number of students quarantined has exceeded 3,600, Daniel added.

“When I say we're still in a pandemic and a crisis,” he said, “we are still in a pandemic and crisis.”

MONEY AND PRIVATIZATION

Education, Inc.

It's interesting that those who are profiting from selling and buying schools are the same folks who made political donations to Republicans...who in turn promoted school "choice" in Indiana.

From the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
It's now been two decades since Indiana's charter school law was passed. It's tough to say the state's first foray into school choice transformed public education for the better, but it certainly has bolstered some private business enterprises.

The Network For Public Education reported recently that National Heritage Academies, which operates the Andrew J. Brown Academy in Indianapolis, is selling 69 of its 90-plus schools to a new corporation created expressly for the acquisition. Charter Development Co., a real estate arm of National Heritage, will receive the payout from a sale that requires nearly $1 billion to finance.

The founder of National Heritage and owner of Charter Development Co., J.C. Huizenga of Grand Rapids, Michigan, has made close to $200,000 in campaign gifts to Indiana Republicans and a political action committee that pushed school choice legislation in Indiana.

Backpacks Full Of Cash

Isn’t it long past time that we stop thinking of our children as money mules?

From Curmudgucation
Jeanne Allen's magical phrase, turned into a rhetorical weapon against her and other free market choicers, never seems to quite go away, perhaps because all sides find it an apt description of free-market choice. Right now they're getting ready to load up more backpacks out in LA. Allen was sure that this was a great portrayal of the awesomeness of choice, but I'm not sure we ever thought it through.

After all, in this vision of school, students are couriers. Their job is to carry backpacks full of cash to various vendors and business operators like little pack animals. The backpacks full of cash image unintentionally focuses on what many fans of the free market model are very interested in--easily moved, largely unguarded cash. We could as easily describe students as little foxes or minks, important mostly for the valuable pelts that they carry with them (and from which they will eventually be separated).

One of the great tricks of free market choicers has been to hide their primary focus in plain sight, and the focus is not education or even choice, but in free marketizing public education.

And yet, for years, few people stop to ask, "Hey, wait a minute. Why does school choice have to involve market forces? Why do we have to strap money to the backs of children?"

TESTING IN FLORIDA -- NOT GOING AWAY

Florida says it’s ending year-end, high-stakes standardized testing. Here’s what it’s really doing.

"Cindy Hamilton, co-founder of the Opt Out Florida Network, who has long criticized the state’s testing scheme, put it this way: 'The Florida Department of Education has made it clear that these stakes are not going away. School grades, teacher evaluations, placement decisions, third-grade retention, those things are all still going to happen. With these stakes attached, the test becomes less about the student and more about the punitive consequences.'”

From the Answer Sheet
Here’s what DeSantis said he is doing:

The governor announced Tuesday that he would ask the Republican-led legislature (which will do pretty much anything he wants) to end the Florida State Assessment (FSA) system, which tests students in reading and math and other subjects at the end of each school year.

Those tests — and others like them used in every state for years — are given at the end of each academic year, virtually always after significant test prep that eats up days of instructional time. Scores are not available until after the school year ends, and teachers don’t know which questions students got wrong.

The new Florida Assessment of Student Thinking, DeSantis said, will give three short exams to monitor student progress in fall, winter and spring, giving teachers more time to teach as well as real-time data to target instruction — and will cost less money. He said the exams would be individualized, which would mean online adaptive tests that some Florida districts already use for progress monitoring.

“We will continue to set high standards, but we also have to recognize it is the year 2021 and the FSA is, quite frankly, outdated,” DeSantis said. “There will be 75 percent less time for testing, which will mean more time for learning.”

Many educators like progress monitoring for the reasons the governor enunciated: that it helps them measure growth in their students and adapt instruction in real time. But under the new plan, the state will decide which assessments are used, taking that choice away from districts and teachers.

CONTROVERSY IN THE CLASSROOM

What's Too Controversial for the Classroom

“The missing factor in all of these "teacher leaves the classroom" stories is an administration with a backbone.”

From Curmudgucation
But that's the academic area. It gets trickier when, like Wallis, and like too many students, you are dealing with topics that are not merely academic. For some non-zero number of parents, a teacher who simply walks into the classroom delivers an unspoken message of "I'm gay and I'm free to walk around and be a teacher in a school" and that message is controversial enough. A non-zero number of parents will find it too controversial is a Black teacher lives their Black life in the classroom in front of students.

This is the problem with "don't be controversial" directives, pleas to "just teach facts" and "don't push your opinions"--they too often mean "just be in the classroom in the same way you would if you were a heterosexual white person."

**Note: The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette has changed its online access and is now behind a paywall. Digital access, home delivery, or both are available with a subscription. Staying informed is important, and one way to do that is to support your local newspaper. For subscription information, go to fortwayne.com/subscriptions/

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Monday, September 13, 2021

In Case You Missed It – September 13, 2021

Here are links to last week's articles receiving the most attention on NEIFPE's social media accounts. Keep up with what's going on, what's being discussed, and what's happening with public education.

Be sure to enter your email address in the new Follow Us By Email box in the right-hand column to be informed when our blog posts are published.
THIS WEEK

Two Allen County school systems, NACS and EACS, have decided to ignore the science (and their respective educational leaders) and stay mask "optional." See this article for information on masks in school, from last week's In Case You Missed It.

We also have articles about former Secretary of Education Arne Duncan who wants to increase class sizes for "the best" teachers, and the continued privatization of America's public schools.

FORT WAYNE AREA SCHOOLS -- SPLIT ON MASKS

2 districts turn down masking mandates: Emotions high as EACS, SACS boards defy leaders

Bowing to threats of pressure from vocal anti-mask patrons, the school boards of East Allen County Schools and Southwest Allen County Schools have chosen to ignore the science and risk COVID-19 outbreaks among their students and staff.

The two other public school systems in Allen County -- Fort Wayne Community Schools and Northwest Allen County Schools -- are currently under mask mandates.

A free article from the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
Masks remain optional in two Allen County districts despite superintendents' efforts Tuesday to reinstate mandates.

The proposals at East Allen County Schools and Southwest Allen County Schools were in reaction to Gov. Eric Holcomb's action last week that loosened quarantine rules for symptom-free students, teachers and staff in close contact with a positive COVID-19 case – but only if schools mandated masks.

SACS board's authority disputed: County health leader: Can't alter state quarantine rules

The Governor released new rules earlier this month to incentivize masking. Southwest Allen County Schools has tried to manipulate those rules without invoking a mask mandate.

A free article from the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
The Southwest Allen County Schools board does not have the authority to create less stringent quarantine rules than the state, the county's highest public health official said Wednesday.

Dr. Matthew Sutter, the Allen County health commissioner, was reacting to the five-member board's decision Tuesday to adjust quarantine rules while maintaining a mask-recommended policy. In a 4-1 vote, the board agreed close contacts won't have to quarantine if both the exposed person and infected person were wearing masks during the exposure.

“Since the quarantine rules are set at the state level, neither the local school boards nor local health departments have the authority to create less stringent rules than the state,” Sutter said in a statement. “We are actively engaged in discussions on this issue and will continue to work toward consistency in following state requirements.”
ARNE DUNCAN TALKS ABOUT EDUCATION

Arne Duncan and Pedagogical Badger Hats

Arne is still “at it.” This time he's on TV touting a plan to have "the best teachers" -- the "Albert Einstein algebra teachers," for example -- teach 10s or 100s of thousands of students virtually. Class time with a real person, apparently a lower-paid, non-Albert Einstein-type person, would be used for tutorials and small groups. This, Curmudgucation (aka Peter Greene) says, is a dumb idea. "It's not a new idea--reformsters have dreamed of this world where we pay fewer teachers to teach more students."

The rest of this piece is a must-read. Duncan and Zakaria, two non-educators with no teaching experience, talking about how to teach during "normal" times would be bad enough. During these more difficult-for-students-and-teachers-to-cope times, it's ridiculous.

From Curmudgucation
Arne Duncan was at it again, popping up on Fareed Zakaria's CNN show to talk about post-covid education (looking kind of Herman Munster-ish on his Zoom screen).

Much of his shtick was predictable. Students are months behind (which actually means, of course, scores on the Big Standardized Test are down, we think). We have to meet their social emotional needs, as we accelerate learning (just, you know, teach faster, because teachers have been holding back all these years).

Zakaria says/asks, the "digital economy" did awesome in most sectors, but in education learning-through-a-screen didn't really deliver. Howcum?

DISRUPTION THROUGH VOUCHERS -- NEW HAMPSHIRE

New Hampshire: Republicans Laud New Voucher Program While Ignoring International Evidence

New Hampshire's new voucher program is part of a "Shock-Doctrine-esque" privatization increase brought on by the global COVID-19 pandemic including a substantial increase in Indiana's "investment" in private schools*. "Disaster Capitalism" is playing out as we watch.

From Diane Ravitch
Jeanne Diestch, a former Democratic state senator in New Hampshire, recently wrote about the attention showered on the state’s new voucher program by Republican conservatives like Mike Pompeo, a likely Presidential candidate, and Betsy DeVos. Republicans took control of the New Hampshire legislature until 2020; its Governor, Chris Sununu, is a Republican, and he appointed the state’s commissioner of education, Frank Edelblut, who homeschooled his children. Republicans wasted no time in passing a sweeping voucher bill.

US Conservatives Eyeing NH Vouchers

Diestch wrote in her newsletter...

*Note: Financial sponsors of Chalkbeat include pro-privatization foundations and individuals such as Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, EdChoice, Gates Family Foundation, The Walton Family Foundation, and others.

**Note: The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette has changed its online access and is now behind a paywall. Digital access, home delivery, or both are available with a subscription. Staying informed is important, and one way to do that is to support your local newspaper. For subscription information, go to fortwayne.com/subscriptions/

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Tuesday, September 7, 2021

In Case You Missed It – September 7, 2021

Here are links to last week's articles receiving the most attention on NEIFPE's social media accounts. Keep up with what's going on, what's being discussed, and what's happening with public education.

Be sure to enter your email address in the new Follow Us By Email box in the right-hand column to be informed when our blog posts are published.
THIS WEEK

The fights about the pandemic and masks are still going on. Truthfully, it sounds suspiciously like the "Am not! Are too!" arguments on the third-grade playground.

Mask supporters say the science is in and it is clear that masks help to stop the spread of COVID-19. Those who deny the efficacy of masks do so because they don't believe the government or the science community. Fortunately, the vast majority of Americans support mask-wearing. Meanwhile, the anti-mask state of Texas leads the country in child COVID deaths with 59.

GETTING SCIENCE WRONG

Research Finds Masks Can Prevent COVID-19 Transmission in Schools

Here's the science. Believe it.

From Duke Today, a hub for news produced around Duke University
The widespread use of masks in schools can effectively prevent COVID-19 transmission and provide a safe learning environment, two Duke scholars said Wednesday.

Danny Benjamin, M.D., and Kanecia Zimmerman, M.D., were co-chairs of the Duke-led ABC Science Collaborative, which issued a new report Wednesday showing that North Carolina schools were highly successful in preventing the transmission of COVID-19 within school buildings.

The report found in part that masks effectively prevented COVID-19 transmission even without physical distancing in schools and on buses.

Benjamin and Zimmerman spoke to reporters Wednesday in a virtual media briefing. Watch the briefing on YouTube. Read a news story about the collaborative's findings on Duke Health's website.

Quarantine rules eased by governor

Governor Holcomb has provided an incentive to school boards to use mask mandates to keep schools open. That way, local school board members get the threats from crazy anti-maskers instead of the governor.

From the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
Gov. Eric Holcomb on Wednesday loosened quarantine rules for symptom-free students, teachers and staff in close contact with a positive COVID-19 case – but only if schools mandate masks.

The new approach provides a key incentive to districts struggling with the mask question while also not being a mandate. Fort Wayne Community Schools and Northwest Allen County Schools have mask requirements while East Allen County Schools and Southwest Allen County Schools have mask-optional policies.

Holcomb issued a new executive order running through September, and the Indiana Department of Health also issued a COVID-19 control measure. It says schools and day cares with mask requirements “consistently followed throughout the day” do not have to quarantine students, teachers and staff who are close contacts and aren't showing COVID-19 symptoms.

NACS reinstates mask mandate

Northwest Allen County Schools fights back against the minority who want to threaten students (and their families) with COVID-19. It was ugly.

From the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette**
An unruly audience on Monday criticized the three school board members who voted to reinstate Northwest Allen County Schools' mask mandate. The requirement takes effect Wednesday.

“Revote! Revote! Revote!” mask mandate opponents chanted after two hours of public comment.

Member Steve Bartkus, who opposed the mandate along with President Kent Somers, was game.

“Let's just revote then,” Bartkus said to cheers.

His attempts to rescind the measure supported by Vice President Liz Hathaway and members Kristi Schlatter and Ron Felger weren't successful.

...Dr. Matthew Sutter, the Allen County health commissioner, issued an advisory last week encouraging school boards to revise optional masking policies. He recommended universal masking in K-12 schools.

Some Indiana schools aren’t reporting COVID cases as pediatric hospitalizations spike

So if we don't report any COVID cases does that mean we don't have any?

From Chalkbeat*
More than 1,200 of Indiana’s nearly 2,200 schools are not reporting their COVID-19 cases to the state this school year, health officials said Friday, as positivity rates and hospitalizations for children rise across the state.

In a news conference, State Health Commissioner Kris Box emphasized that these schools are out of compliance with Indiana code, which requires institutions like schools to report cases of COVID-19 in group settings.

This helps the state determine the number of students who need to be quarantined in order to reduce transmission of the disease.

GETTING HISTORY WRONG

We know just enough history to get it wrong

Diane Ravitch reprised this post by Steve Hinnefeld. She commented, "Frankly, it’s astonishing to hear enemies of public health compare themselves to courageous fighters for justice and equality."

From School Matters
At a central Indiana school board meeting last week, an anti-mask parent said, “This is our Martin Luther King moment to say no,” a reporter tweeted. It wasn’t clear what he meant, but it seems unlikely King would have downplayed the seriousness of a virus that’s hit Black Americans especially hard.

At the 1963 March on Washington for Jobs and Freedom, King famously talked about his dream that someday his children would “not be judged by the color of their skin, but by the content of their character.” Today, Republican legislators – in Texas and elsewhere – twist those words to try to prevent students from learning hard truths about America’s racial history, which they label “critical race theory.” They say that teaching about race is “divisive” and could make white children uncomfortable.

But Martin Luther King Jr. wasn’t the person they make him out to have been. He engaged in repeated acts of nonviolent civil disobedience and was jailed 29 times. He spoke out against racism, poverty and violence. Three-fourths of the American public disapproved of him, especially after he brought his anti-racism campaign to the North and began speaking against the Vietnam War.
Image by Tumisu from Pixabay

PA: The CRT Flap Continues To Metastasize

While the COVID-19 mask wars are going on, there's still the problem of the people who don't want to acknowledge the history of America. As Peter Greene shows in this Curmudgucation piece, school boards are hoping to soon be able to ban the teaching of anything they don't like.

From Curmudgucation
Clarion County, despite containing a state university, is a mighty conservative place. Back in March, the County Commissioners, for no particular reason, declared themselves a "Second Amendment County." Now, one of the county's school districts has let itself get played by the "critical race theory" flap.

Parents showed up to complain about the possibility of that race stuff sneaking into schools, supporting the board's newly-minted policy. The policy follows the usual template, borrowing language that is being used in these policies all across the country, such as
The teaching concepts which impute fault, blame, a tendency to oppress others, or the need to feel guilt or anguish for persons solely because of their skin color, race, sex, or religion are prohibited in the district as such concepts violate the principles of individual rights, equal opportunity, and individual merit underpinning our constitutional republic and therefore have no place in training for administrators, teachers, or other employees of the district
That same language was adopted by the Mars School District, located just a bit north of Pittsburgh (and in California, and Alabama, and so on...). While the basic policy seems to be getting copied and pasted all across the US, folks feel free to add some details as well. In Mars, there was an addition of patriotic patriotism ("We will teach our children to honor America..."

Because these policies also come with a built-in "This is totally not saying that teachers can't teach controversial stuff, but only, you know, factual stuff and only all sides presented," there's also a list of Stuff That Can't Be Taught.
Further, this policy shall ensure that Social Justice and unsubstantiated theories of any kind, including but not limited to Holocaust Denial Theory, 9/11 Theory, The 1610 Project, and Critical Race Theory, are not advocated or presented to students as part of any curriculum unless approved in advance by the board.

LEFTOVERS FROM LAST WEEK - GETTING TESTING WRONG

While colleges go test-optional, Indiana juniors prepare for a new SAT requirement

What constitutes a high enough score on the SAT for a student to graduate from high school? We don't know that information because passing scores -- cut scores which are arbitrary -- haven't been "determined" yet.

Tests do not represent what students have achieved in high school. Tests are a reflection of a student's family background more than their achievement. Colleges around the country are finally beginning to understand how tests are poor instruments in determining school success. Indiana should, too.

From Chalkbeat*
Under the new graduation framework, the state will meet its federal accountability requirements through the SAT, chosen for its utility to college-bound students, according to the architect of the changes, Rep. Bob Behning.

But students who don’t meet the still-undetermined benchmarks have other pathways to graduation, such as completing an approved apprenticeship or demonstrating proficiency on a military aptitude test.

The state Department of Education will determine passing score rates — or cut scores – next summer.

Preparations are already underway for students and teachers ahead of the March test date in schools and through a bootcamp run by Purdue University’s GEAR UP, a federally funded program designed to provide students a path to college.

The latter offered a bootcamp to about 500 Indiana teachers last month to train them to prepare students for the test.

*Note: Financial sponsors of Chalkbeat include pro-privatization foundations and individuals such as Bloomberg Philanthropies, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, EdChoice, Gates Family Foundation, The Walton Family Foundation, and others.

**Note: The Fort Wayne Journal Gazette has changed its online access and is now behind a paywall. Digital access, home delivery, or both are available with a subscription. Staying informed is important, and one way to do that is to support your local newspaper. For subscription information, go to fortwayne.com/subscriptions/

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Saturday, September 4, 2021

Labor Day 2021

Due to the Labor Day Holiday, In Case You Missed It will be delayed by one day. See you on Tuesday, September 7, 2021.

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