Amazing  what a  discretionary grant program can accomplish in terms of changing state  educational policies, with no research backing, as the National   Academy of Sciences warned, to be doled out from a $4 billion slush  fund, without   Congressional authorization and possibly illegal  .
According Alexander  Russo, a US Dept. of Education memo shows NY as one of 13 states  changing laws on charters; and one of 16 states changing their laws on  teacher evaluations, linking them to test scores or removing the firewall on  doing so.
There are only seven  states on both lists: Connecticut , Delaware ,  Illinois , Indiana , Louisiana ,  Tennessee , and of, course New York 
Whether or not we get these funds, our public schools will be feeling the after-effects of these policies for years to come.
I'd like to see a political analysis of why these particular states succumbed while others did not; and an accounting of how much the Billionaire’s Boys Club and the hedge fund operators spent, lobbying legislators to change these laws, through their foundations, the “non-profits” and think tanks they control through their funding, direct contributions, and their allied political action committees.
 
 
 
 
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment