Partnership for Educational Justice

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Michael Mulgrew and AQE Should be Ashamed

August 8, 2014

Mona Pradia,  Rochester parent & Wright v. New York plaintiff:

Mona Pradia (right), a Rochester parent and plaintiff in the case of Wright v. New York, stands with her daughter Adia-Jendayi Pradia (left) on the steps of New York City Hall.

“As a parent, I am appalled that union-funded groups are trying to use personal attacks on Campbell to distract from the fact that our kids are not getting the education they deserve. Our children’s personal experiences and grievances are constantly being ignored. We should remain focused on the problem at hand, the experiences our children are facing in classrooms.”

 

Stefan Friedman, Partnership for Educational Justice spokesman:

“Yesterday we have the leader of the UFT threatening to punch people and today we have the union’s paid attack group offering up Campbell’s kids as fodder for personal attacks. Meanwhile, the defenders of the status quo remain silent on the parents of public schools students who have actually filed the lawsuit in the desperate hopes of getting their kids receiving a decent education. Michael Mulgrew and AQE should be ashamed.”

Filed Under: Blog

Rochester Business Journal: 86% of Readers Oppose N.Y. Tenure System

August 8, 2014

“More than 85 percent of RBJ Daily Report Snap Poll respondents oppose New York’s tenure and seniority protections for teachers.

The battle over teacher tenure moved to New York last month. In a pair of lawsuits, parents backed by advocacy groups challenged the state’s tenure and seniority protections for teachers, arguing that these are the product of outdated laws that effectively deny students’ constitutional right to a sound basic education.

The New York suits were filed in the wake of a June decision in which a California judge struck down that state’s laws on tenure and seniority. Among the plaintiffs in the latest New York case, filed last week, are parents of two Rochester schoolchildren.

The plaintiffs argue that New York’s education system protects “ineffective teachers well above what due process requires and at the direct expense of their students’ constitutional rights. … Cumulatively, these laws make it nearly impossible to dismiss and discipline teachers with a proven track record of ineffectiveness or misconduct.”

School districts statewide typically grant tenure to new teachers after a three-year probationary period and after only two years of performance review, which “is inadequate to assess whether a teacher has earned the lifelong benefits of tenure,” the suit maintains.

In addition, the plaintiffs contend that under New York’s “LIFO (“Last In First Out) Statute,” school districts conducting layoffs for economic reasons “must fire junior, high-performing teachers (while) senior, low-performing and more highly paid teachers continue to provide poor instruction to their students.”

In response, New York State United Teachers president Karen Magee described the suit as “a politically motivated attack against every dedicated teacher in New York.” She said tenure “ensures that teachers have the freedom to teach effectively and the liberty to oppose policies or cuts that harm students,” adding that the seniority system “guards against abuses by those who would use ‘layoffs’ as another way to terminate those who advocate too fiercely, are older or are at the top of the pay scale.”

Roughly 875 readers participated in this week’s poll, conducted Aug. 4 and 5.

Do you support or oppose New York’s tenure and seniority protections for teachers?

Support:  14%
Oppose:  86%”

 

Read More

Filed Under: In the News

Education Reform Is Becoming A Celebrity Cause

August 8, 2014

By Juana Summers | NPR Education

https://twitter.com/npr_ed/status/497740959040688128/photo/1“Celebrities are becoming a prominent fixture in the debate over K-12 education.

This week Whoopi Goldberg used her platform on ABC’s The View to speak out against teacher tenure.

“To me, bad teachers don’t do anybody any good. So the union needs to recognize that parents are not going to stand for it anymore,” she said.

Goldberg followed up with a YouTube video, responding to the backlash she’d received after making those statements. Her mother, she notes in the video, was a teacher, and Goldberg describes herself as “all about teachers.”

“I like great teachers. I don’t like bad teachers, so I don’t think bad teachers should be given the gift of teaching forever — badly,” she says.

Goldberg follows Campbell Brown, the former CNN anchor, into the tenure debate ignited by the California lawsuit. David Boies, the high profile trial lawyer known for his role in the legal challenge that overturned California’s gay marriage ban, also recently joined Brown’s group, the Partnership for Education Justice.”

Read More

Filed Under: In the News

Inside City Hall: Campbell Brown & Keoni Wright Discuss Teacher Tenure

August 6, 2014

Inside City Hall

NY1 VIDEO: Campbell Brown, founder of the Partnership for Educational Justice, and Keoni Wright, a NY Parent who is a plaintiff in the Wright v NY lawsuit against the state, joined Inside City Hall with Errol Louis to discuss their call to change New York’s teacher tenure rules.

NY1 Clip Here

Filed Under: Blog, In the News

Citizen Stewart Blog: Who Does Campbell Brown Think She Is?

August 6, 2014

Citizen Stewart

“Campbell Brown is white. She has money. She’s married to a man. By any objective standard, she is pretty.

I know these truths about her because I read Twitter, and that medium is ablaze with traffic from a bazillion teacher unionists who are appalled that Ms. Brown would dare touch the third rail of teacher tenure.”

Read More

Filed Under: In the News

Huffington Post: ‘The View’ Hosts Apparently Love Teachers, Hate Tenure

August 6, 2014

By Rebecca Klein | The Huffington Post

“Hosts of “The View” caused a stir in the education world this week after sounding off on teacher tenure on Monday’s show.

As shown in the clip below, “The View” co-hosts, including regulars Whoopi Goldberg and Jenny McCarthy, and guests Nicolle Wallace and Kayleigh McEnany, appear to stake out positions unfriendly to teacher tenure rules protecting job security.”

Read More

Filed Under: In the News

Boies and Olson are Challenging Teacher Tenure as a Student Civil-Rights Issue

August 5, 2014

By Debra Cassens Weiss | ABA Journal

“The lawyers who joined to fight California’s ban on gay marriage are united on another issue: the civil-rights implications of teacher tenure.

Ted Olson was among the lawyers who challenged teacher tenure laws in California. In a June ruling, a judge found the tenure laws violate students’ right to equal protection under the state constitution. The plaintiffs in Vergara v. California had argued the tenure laws keep ineffective teachers on the job, and these teachers are disproportionately assigned to poor and minority schools.”

Read More

Filed Under: In the News

Campbell Brown: Teachers Should Be Evaluated on Performance Like Any Other Profession

August 4, 2014

The Washington Free Beacon

“Campbell Brown, head of the new Partnership for Educational Justice, said Monday on Morning Joe that her challenge of New York teacher tenure laws stemmed from her desire to treat teachers like other professionals who are evaluated based on their performance.”

Read More

Filed Under: In the News

Hot Topic: Teacher Tenure

August 4, 2014

ABC’s The View 8/4/14

On heels of big lawsuits, teacher tenure looms as a likely 2016 presidential issue.

http://http://abc.go.com/shows/the-view/video/PL5554876/_m_VDKA0_argfks56

Filed Under: In the News

Hardball with Chris Matthews: Should Teacher Tenure Laws be Overhauled?

August 4, 2014

Hardball with Chris Matthews 8/4/14
MSNBC

There’s a new movement to overhaul strong teacher tenure laws which make it difficult to fire bad teachers. Campbell Brown and David Boies from The Partnership for Educational Justice join Chris Matthews to discuss.

MSNBC Clip Here

Filed Under: Blog, In the News

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