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BREITBART TEXAS CRACKS THE BOOKS AT SXSWEDU 2014

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AUSTIN, TEXAS–Every year, the education and technology communities converge in Austin for the SXSWedu conference. It is a four day series of speakers and seminars that their website calls “the platform for education’s most energetic and innovative leaders from all backgrounds of the learning landscape including teachers, administrators, university professors, business and policy leaders.”

Breitbart Texas was at this year’s conference, March 3-6 to report back on some of the technocrats and education reformers. We went into sessions where the achievement gap, equity/educational equality/equalization, social and emotional learning, accountability, big data, advocacy, policy, and STEM were among the revolving themes of the day.

Leading the pack of prominent progressives were education historian Diane Ravitch; architect of the Common Core ELA standards and College Board president David Coleman; and American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten. PBS, Teach for America, and CASEL (Collaborative for Academic, Social and Emotional Learning) sent their people.

Former Superintendent of Indiana and Florida schools Tony Bennett was also on hand to address the pros and cons of the Common Core with former Texas Education Commissioner Robert Scott. Other highlighted Texans included Thomas Ratliff (Vice Chairman of the State Board of Education); Representative Jimmie Don Aycock, and Senator Wendy Davis, the Democratic challenger to Republican favorite Greg Abbott, currently the Texas Attorney General. Local educrats featured were UT Chancellor Francisco Cigarroa, UT Austin Ph.D. David Yeager, Austin Community College president Richard Rhodes and Austin ISD superintendent Meria Carstarphen.

SXSWedu 2014 sponsors included all the familiar names of Fed Led Ed — Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Google, Dell,  Pearson and the Pearson Foundation, the College Board, Scholastic, Amplify, inBloom, Samsung, McGraw Hill Education, Cengage Learning, connectedu,  Lumina Foundation, Xerox, among others. Local sponsors included Educate Texas, a public-private initiative of Communities Foundation of Texas; University of Texas at Austin; and the Texas Tribune.  TASA (Texas Association of School Administrators) and the Austin Chamber of Commerce were listed as event supporters.

SXSW, which is short for South by Southwest is a series of events held in Austin’s downtown. It kicked off with SXSWedu 2014, March 3-6, and then continues through March 16 with music, film and interactive festivals.

Follow Merrill Hope on Twitter @OutOfTheBoxMom

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One “Ratliff” Down and One To Go!!

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Matt Rinaldi

Bennett Ratliff

 

Texas HD #115, what a great victory it was!  Moderate incumbent Bennet Ratliff was defeated by conservative Matt Rinaldi.    Congrats Matt! 

Bennett is the son of former Lt. Gov Bill Ratliff and brother to “Bully” State Board education member Thomas Ratliff. All the Ratliffs have had their within the policies of Texas Education.

The following facebook post verify’s Bennett Ratliff is not a conservative.

morgan

One “Ratliff” down and one to go. Our next job will be Thomas Ratliff removed from the SBOE. Grassroots activist are working to remove the Microsoft lobbyist due to due being a lobbyist and serving on the SBOE is against the law. Thomas has no respect for the law and will not step down. His term is up in 2017 and I can assure him we will have someone to replace him.

Today I found the following tweet by Thomas Ratliff. I find his tweet to show such unethical behavior for an elected official.  But I would like to say to Thomas, it is so!

 

Thomas Ratliff

 

SAY IT AIN'T SO!

                                                                                                                                             VoteGingerRussell.com

 

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COMMON CORE CRITICS ATTACKED IN TEXAS

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 2014-03-01_12-40-50

http://www.breitbart.com/Breitbart-Texas/2014/02/26/Common-Core-Critics-Attacked-in-Texas

 

“Common Core Critics Attacked in Texas”

by MERRILL HOPE 1 Mar 2014, 7:46 AM PDT 

 

TEXAS–Concerned suburban Dallas dad Andrew Bennett spent the past three months raising questions about Common Core materials coming home from the Northwest Independent School District (NISD) middle school. 

 

Although Texas did not adopt the Common Core State Standards Initiativeit shares textbooks and other learning materials with Common Core participating states as Texas Commissioner of Education Michael Williams told Breitbart Texas in a recent interview.  Among those books is the Sadlier Vocabulary Workshop, a product aligned to the Common Core, stating so on the front cover.  As a parent who was under the impression that Texas had no ties to the Common Core, Bennett was concerned. He was also troubled by a vocabulary question that read:

 

“There is quite a contrast between the FILL-IN-THE-BLANK administration that now runs the country and the ‘do-nothing’ regime that preceded it.”  Bennett took these concerns of bias to the middle school teacher who then sent him to the principal.

 

Bennett said, “The principal told me that this vocabulary book is part of the Springboard supplemental materials used by the district.”  The principal, who Bennett spoke of fondly and described as always cooperative and helpful, also told him that Springboard was aligning to the Common Core.

 

Breitbart Texas contacted Tidwell Middle School assistant principal Steven Parkman for additional clarification but our call was not returned.  It remains unclear if this is or is not a supplemental product. Springboard is listed as in use on the district’s website as a curriculum product without any identification of supplemental status.

 

“Not getting answers is frustrating,” said Bennett, who has asked questions about other content.  He also created Northwest ISD Parents and Teachers against the Common Core on Facebook to reach out to other area parents with similar educational concerns.  According to Bennett, he began attending school board meetings to become more engaged. 

 

“It’s very intimating,” Bennett stated about NISD Parents and Teachers Against Common Core being  slammed as fringe group by local parents.   According to Bennett, the parent making false accusations is Kim Burkett, a PTA executive board member.  Bennett claims Burkett has accused outspoken parents with creating fear and confusion in the community. 

 

Breitbart Texas spoke with Burkett, who asked to be identified as a NISD parent and not as a PTA member.  She claims she has only spoken on her own and not as a PTA spokesperson.  Burkett told Breitbart Texas that she did not accuse Bennett or his local parent group of creating fear and confusion.

 

She said, “My words were clear, I indicated outside political activists with an extreme agenda are taking advantage of our NISD parents by promoting confusion and fear within our district.” 

 

Burkett alleges that outside “interlopers” have infiltrated Mr. Bennett’s Northwest ISD parent group and she claims they do not reside in NISD.”  She clarified that these are the activists she referred to as the fringe group, believing they are forces who are taking advantage of NISD parents by spreading misinformation to create confusion and fear in our community.”

 

According to Bennett, Burkett’s claims are incorrect.  He said that the core local group is from the school district, although he included a few trusted friends on the social media site.

 

Burkett insists that the school district adheres to the TEKS and not Common Core Standards.  Given that information, Breitbart Texas asked her then why was it a problem for this parent to question Common Core materials?  Burkett restated her belief that this local concerned parent group has received bad information from outside political activists skirting around the original question: why was it a problem for a concerned parent to ask about Common Core materials being used in the school district? 

 

According to Burkett, Texas PTA does not have a position on Common Core Standards.  Texas PTA, however, is affiliated to PTA National.  PTA National supports the Common Core on their advocacy web page. Burkett blogs for Educate for TexasAlthough Burkett did not want to affiliate herself with the PTA in addressing the matter with Bennett, she has done so in the past.  In October 2013, she wrote on her blog,”I love the fact that Wendy Davis is ‘a trusted friend’ to Texas PTA.” 

 

Davis is the Democratic challenger to the favored Attorney General Greg Abbott in the Texas gubernatorial race.

 

Previously in Texas, the Vice Chair of the State Board of Education, Thomas Ratliff seemingly sought to silence dissenting opinion. In 2010, Watchdog Wire Texas reported that Ratliff “might also be considered a foe of citizens trying to obtain public records.” This article referred to Ratliff’s lawsuit against the Austin area Eanes School District in 2007. According to Watchdog Wire’s report, he did so “saying its practice of responding to voluminous open records requests was an illegal expenditure of public funds,” claiming that a small group of residents made nearly 1,000 requests for about 100,000 pages of record. The lawsuit alleged that the cost of complying with those requests had exceeded $500,000. The publication cited Austin American-Statesman as a source in saying, “Ratliff…once pushed unsuccessfully for a bill that would have limited the amount of information that people could request from government agencies.”  

 

Again, in 2013, Ratliff filed two back-to-back ethics charges against Dallas area mom activist, Alice Linahan. Fox News originally reported this story in which they said Linahan had been outspoken about the controversial Texas Common Core-like product called CSCOPE and was educating parents by setting up communications teams. Ratliff accused her of behaving like a lobbyist although the Texas Ethics Commission rejected the ethics charges. Linahan was not a lobbyist.  She was a mom activist who sat in a non-paid board position at Women on the Walla citizen advocacy group engaged in Texas education issues. Linahan also hosts a weekly conference call that connects grassroots activists throughout the state, and a weekly blog talk radio show. Women on the Wall also held community meetings to address Texas specific education issues. Linahan participated as an unpaid volunteer.  Ratliff, according to a Watchdog Wire Texas, is a paid Microsoft lobbyist

 

“I was just a mom trying to get the word out to other parents about what was going on in Texas education,” Linahan told Breitbart Texas.

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51 Million for Garland ISD Technology!

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Garland ISD Superintendent, Dr. Bob Morrison known as a bully to local taxpayers, parents and some teachers are asking for his firing. Morrsion along with other superintendents have signed up for the progressive “Future Ready Superintendents” agenda called “Creating a New Vision“.

 

Garland ISD 2013-2016 Technology Plan. I was shocked to find that the Infastructure & Technology plan is budgeted for $51, 200,000.00. Unbelievable!! Morrison came to Garland ISD from Manfield ISD where he drew up a two seperate technology plans (see below) for years 2011/2012 & 2013/2014. There is a difference of 25104 students but the technology budget increase form Mansfield to Garland ISD is over 40 Million.

It is no wonder our teachers are not paid well.

garland ISD

mansfield

mansfiled 2

 

Below you will see the number of Garland ISD employees that are making over 110,000.00 for the last three school years. There has been a budget increase of

 

 

garland budget

 

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Five Pillars of Islam taught by Texas ISD’s!

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5 PILLARS

Thanks Donna Garner. I wanted to share this with everyone, as you may need it too.
Subject: UPSET FATHER — NORTHWEST ISD, FT. WORTH, TX. — SON TAUGHT 5 PILLARS OF ISLAM, LITTLE ABOUT CHRISTIANITY — 2.11.14

VIDEO – 2.51 minutes — Andrew Bennett — Upset Father – Northwest ISD, Ft. Worth, Texas – 5 Pillars of Islam and Common Core in Texas

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4Yq8ERrxzx8&feature=youtu.be (video below)

Published on Feb 10, 2014

Northwest ISD Parents and Teachers Against Common Core, address school board regarding the heavy focus of Islam, while just briefly touching on primary religions. Common Core is in Texas, just by another name — College and Career Ready, CSCOPE, Springboard, 21st Century Learning Skills…

========
To read through the Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) for Social Studies, please go to the following link:http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter113/index.html

The World History Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills (TEKS) start at:
§113.42. Notice that Islam is only one of the many elements that Texas students are to be taught:
(23) Culture. The student understands the history and relevance of major religious and philosophical traditions. The student is expected to:
(A) describe the historical origins, central ideas, and spread of major religious and philosophical traditions, including Buddhism, Christianity, Confucianism, Hinduism, Islam, Judaism, Sikhism, and the development of monotheism; and
(B) identify examples of religious influence on various events referenced in the major eras of world history.

Donna Garner
Wgarner1@hot.rr.com

 

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United Nations Changing Texas Education

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un

 

 

 

I once thought Texas School Superintendents worked for the district they were hired in. Not the case today. Texas Superintendents seem to be busy traveling across the country and the state working  to transform Texas Education unbeknownst to local parents and taxpayers.  School Board members elected by the voters no longer answer to their constituents and are beholden to the superintendent and his agenda. Sad for our children and our country your superintendent now is  working on implementing a Marxist teaching philosophy in every school district across the state of Texas. For years parents and taxpayers had been left in  the dark when it came to the controversial curriculum Cscope, used by their local school districts. Cscope, based on the same philosophy of the national curriculum Common Core  and Project Based Learning with the use of technology, assessments, etc .. was intentionally keep a secret by Texas Education Service Centers and Superintendents in their plan of transforming Texas education. Since the discovery of Cscope I have found that educators across the state are working with liberal organizations outside the state of Texas to further implement the transformation. Unfortunately the United Nations agenda has made it’s way within our Texas Education Service Centers and school districts. Consortium for School Networking (COSN)  is a organization in Washington DC promoting technology and progressive education practices in school districts across Texas and the country. COSN works with the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) to further implement their agenda. 

 

cosn 21st       COSN UNESCO

 

In 2012 COSN held a symposium with UNESCO in Washington DC.  

 

 

Unesco symposium

 

The Texas Chapter of Consortium of School Networking is called Texas K-12 CTO Council.  It states perfectly what their agenda is in the yellow highlighted part below.

 

CTO Instruction

      Link to Texas CTO Clinic Think Big

 

 

 

Texas Education Service Center 11 show their affiliation with different businesses and association, one being CoSN.

 

ESC !!

 

 

 

 

You will find different Texas School Districts that are institutional members of Consortium of School Networks.

 

Lewisville ISD partners with CoSN.

lewisville isd

waddell cosn

orbaugh

 

 

Who is protecting Texas Children from this? Gov. Perry has been AWOL.

 

 

 

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COMMON CORE 101: WHAT IS IT AND HOW DOES IT AFFECT OUR CHILDREN?

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breit

 

by MERRILL HOPE

Outraged parents. Fleeing teachers. Anxiety-ridden and medicated students. Fuzzy math. Crazy history assignments posted on

Facebook. Longitudinal databasesSilenced community members at school board meetings in YouTube footage. Newfangled public

school pathways of college and career readiness under the banner of “STEM” (science, technology, engineering and math) on a wild,

21st-century, technocentric highway that’s littered with stakeholders who are up in arms over federally mandated testing, national

curricula alignment, data collection, and questionable content packaged into one-size-fits-all education.

classroom There’s yelling and screaming from all sides of the political spectrum about the educational mandate known best as the Common Core State Standards Initiative (CCSSI). It raises a  lot more than emotions; it’s a nationwide debate. Proponents tout CCSSI as the greatest achievement since the Enlightenment, while opponents compare it to the Dark Ages,  a deliberate dumbing down of America, as Charlotte Iserbyt would say. Iserbyt was the Reagan admin whistleblower who struck a major blow to the technological forerunner to  the tracking and data-mining age.

So what is Common Core?

Common Core is federally-led education introduced in the Obama administration’s 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (“stimulus package”) through a contest called    Race to the Top (RTTT). States could apply and compete for federal grant money. Four billion in federal taxpayer dollars were offered with a catch:

  Awards in Race to the Top will go to States that are leading the way with ambitious yet achievable plans for implementing coherent, compelling, and comprehensive        education reform. Race to the Top winners will help trail-blaze effective reforms and provide examples for States and local school districts throughout the country to follow   as they too are hard at work on reforms that can transform our schools for decades to come.

Out with the Bush administration’s “No Child Left Behind (NCLB),” criticized for its “high-stakes” strategy of always teaching to the test. In with the Common Core, a uniform set of standards and curricula that, according to their critics, ratchet up the role of government in education, as well as student data collection, teacher evaluations, and NCLB “empathetic” learning. The result is a Fed-led ed cocktail constructed on the premise that our public schools are low performing, broken, and lacking the kind of rigor necessary for students to compete in the global marketplace.

Forty-five states and the District of Columbia jumped onboard with CCSSI, intent to raise the roof beam high on rigor to meet international benchmarks.

Best perk? A student could be in Ohio on Tuesday. Wednesday, the family moves to Nevada. Theoretically, he’d pick up in math on the same next page. Wow, sign me up for that! And the online tech tools – they’re brilliant. Click on a standard. ProQuest K12 from SIRS (Social Issues Resource Series) takes you to scrubbed content from premier education provider of the Common Core, Pearson, the London-based conglomerate. Only problem is the info’s on the school-sanctioned and cyberlocked iPad.

Common Core has raised a valid concern: what exactly are they teaching the children?

Common Core was well pitched as state-led and “voluntary.” Even according to the US Department of Education (DOE), public education is described as “…primarily a state and local responsibility in the United States… it is states and communities, as well as public and private organizations of all kinds, that establish schools and colleges, develop curricula, and determine requirements for enrollment and graduation.”

Yet it’s the DOE’s actual role in education that prompted opponents like Diane Ravitch, a two-year veteran of the education department (1991-93) under Lamar Alexander and author of Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools, to call the Common Core “NCLB 2.0.” Translated: No Child Left Behind on steroids.

Ravitch lashed out at DOE chief Arne Duncan, contrasting him with now-Sen. Alexander, whom she characterized as “scrupulous about not interfering in local decision making. He used his bully pulpit, as all cabinet secretaries do, but he never tried to influence the choice of local leaders. He respected the principle of federalism. Apparently, Duncan missed the class on federalism.”

Duncan’s not the only target of CCSSI critics. Robert Holland, senior fellow at the Heartland Institute, suggested in a Baltimore Sun interview that one reason Common Core “[has] attracted so much opposition from both the right and left is that it was developed in elitist fashion, bankrolled by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, presented as a fait accompli without public hearings and then pushed hard by the Obama administration…”

Back in June 2010, CCSSI released the English Language Arts/Literacy and Mathematics standards with promises of next-generation Science standards by 2013 and Social Studies standards by 2017. Esteemed educators handpicked to sit on the ELA and math validation committees, Drs. Sandra Stotsky and James Milgram, didn’t sign off on the standards, labeling them as inferior.

Stotsky, who developed one of the nation’s strongest sets of K-12 academic standards and licensing tests for prospective teachers, is now an outspoken staple on the “Stop CCSSI” circuit. Recently, in a Breitbart News interview, she discussed the spin machine surrounding the standards, saying, “Everyone was willing to believe that the Common Core standards are ‘rigorous,’ ‘competitive,’ ‘internationally benchmarked,’ and ‘research-based.’ They are not.”

Common Core is like the convoluted plotline of a daytime drama, impossible to explain in 25 words or less. That’s why so many bloggers, news organizations, and talk radio personalities cover it in manageable bites. Ultimately, it lives up to the unfortunate axiom coined by Nancy Pelosi when speaking about Obamacare in 2010: “We have to pass the bill so you can find out what’s in it.” We have, one worksheet at a time.

In school work that comes home, we see how foundational math, taught in a spiral fashion to build on concepts from grade to grade, is gone. This is replaced by math lattices, ladders, and linguistics-based long-winded division and distributive property word problems loaded up with social issues, like the “heroin habit” high school math homework that made the rounds. This is only the tip of the iceberg and one reason that critics like Michelle Malkin call it “Rotten to the Core.”

When Common Core was originally introduced, the National Governor’s Association (NGA) was its “front man,” only these governors weren’t governors of any states. NGA is a private non-profit with the Center for Best Practices that co-owns the Common Core State Standards copyright with another non-profit, the Council of Chief State School Officers (CCSSO).

Yes, CCSS is copyrighted; its content cannot be changed. Teachers cannot write their own content. Proponents say there is no content, but there are assessments. These must be testing something, and it stands to reason that whoever controls the tests controls the curricula, and whoever controls the curricula, one fine day, controls the country.

For now, many deem Fed-led ed a failure – not good for the kids, not good for the teachers. States like New York and South Carolina lead the pack in efforts to shut down the test; they join Wisconsin and Indiana parents and teachers who stand against centralized education, preferring individual state standards.

Big business and big bucks abound in Big Ed, though. CCSSO boasts a wow-list of corporate partners on its website topped off by Microsoft, Prometrean, Scantron, K12, Metametrics a.k.a. Lexile, Scholastic, Pearson Education, Apple, and Amplify. Also on the list are the familiar philanthropic and educratic faces: Bill & Melissa Gates (Foundation), Eli Broad, Jeb Bush, Linda Darling-Hammond, Bill Ayers, Achieve, Microsoft, SmarterBalanced Assessment Consortium, PARCC (Partnership for Assessment Readiness for College and Careers), Pearson, InBloom, and the Annenberg Foundation. There was Mike Huckabee. He was for the Core, but now no more, he says.

One on NGA’s massive corporate fellows list is McKinsey & Co., whom David Coleman, president of the College Board, consulted prior to creating think tank Student Achievement Partners, LLC. Although Coleman’s never taught a class K-20, he’s busy aligning every high school assessment for college (including high school equivalency GED) to CCSSI, with SAT alignment to follow in 2016. Coleman’s credited as CCSSI architect along with cronies math professor Jason Zimba and Education Analyst/Curriculum Specialist Susan Pimentel.

They say nothing comes from nowhere. Common Core’s no exception.

Flashback to November 11, 1992, before the Clinton Administration’s Y2K “Improving America’s Schools Act,” to an 18-page “Dear Hillary” letter that resides in the Congressional Record. Penned by Marc Tucker,  president of the National Center on Education and the Economy (NCEE) to then-First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton, this letter may well be the blueprint for the Common Core.

The letter was written one week after Bill Clinton was elected president. Hillary served with Tucker on the NCEE board. In it, Tucker outlined to Hillary the transformation of the entire American system into “a seamless web that extends from cradle to grave” and is the “same system for everyone,” coordinated by a “system of labor market boards at the local, state and federal levels” where curriculum and job matching will be handled by counselors “accessing the integrated computer-based program.” The mission of schools would change from “teaching children academic basics and knowledge to training them to serve the global economy in jobs selected by workforce boards” in an outcome-based system “guided by clear national standards of performance,” set to “international benchmarks” that “define the stages of the system for the people who progress through it.” In this “new system of linked standards, curriculum and pedagogy will abandon the American tracking system.” Best of all, college loans debt will be forgiven for “public service.” Sound familiar?

Tucker understood the need for community buy-in to sell the plan. He recommended to Hillary that “…legislation would require the executive branch to establish a competitive grant program for these states and cities and to engage a group of organizations to offer technical assistance to the expanding set of states and cities engaged in designing and implementing the new system.” Can you say Race to the Top?

Tucker described the roll-out plan: “[As] soon as the first set of states is engaged, another set would be invited to participate, until most or all the states are involved. It is a collaborative design, rollout and scale-up program.” The endgame was to “parallel the work of the National Board for College Professional and Technical Standards, so that the states and cities (and all their partners) would be able to implement the new standards as soon as they become available…” The result was that the whole apparatus would be operational in the majority of states within three years from “the passage of the initial legislation.” Common Core implementation began in 2010.

In the “Elementary and Secondary Education Program” portion of the letter, Tucker speaks directly to Hillary: “so we confine ourselves here to describing some of those activities [to restructure schools] that can be used to launch the Clinton education program,” noting that early childhood education “should be combined with quality day care to provide wrap-around programs that enable working parents to drop off their children at the beginning of the workday and pick them up at the end.” Universal daycare, preschool to pre-kindergarten?

Congress passed every one of the “Dear Hillary” letter ideas. Signed by President Clinton in 1994, the Goals 2000 ActSchool-to-Work Act, and the reauthorized Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) were all funded through federal taxpayer dollars and according to many are the very legislation that drives the education machine’s mandates at a federal level today.

Goodbye 3R’s. Hello socially engineered education.

Very long story short, this is the Common Core.

 

 

 

 

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TEXAS…Engage2Learn… Warning!!

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Consulting firm Engage2Learn has partnered with Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA) in promoting their progressive/liberal agenda of transforming Texas Education. This new program is called Creating a New Vision for Public Education in Texas.   Texas superintendents have been actively working in creating the new vision and now they are hiring Engage2Learn to come into their school districts to hold community “consensus” meetings. They already have their agenda and plan in place and want the community to have the impression that their input is needed. With the use of the DELPHI TECHNIQUE public input is controlled. These meeting are a waste of time and taxpayers money.  Learn how to diffuse the Delphi Technique here. 

 

Now who runs Engage2Learn. Husband and wife team Shannon & Clark Buerk. Shannon worked for Coppell ISD and worked with Keith Sockwell @ Cambridge Strategic Services. More on Mr. Sockwell HERE.

Shannon’s goal is to transform Texas Education to a progressive/liberal one with Project Based Learning (PBL). PBL implement a collaborative learning style where absolute truth and American Exceptionalism isn’t taught. Students work on computer and in collective groups.

 

Be on the look out for Engage2Learn community meetings in your local school district

 

 

engage2learn

 

The following slide is from a powerpoint presentation that Shannon had used at a conference pushing her agenda.

students say

 

 

texas supers

future ready

engage2

PBL RHC

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TEXAS WARNING! Is your school trying to pass a school bond?

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I find it amazing how many former Texas high school coaches have climbed their way up the ladder in  Texas Education. Former Coach Keith V. Sockwell started out as a coach in Plano in the 60’s prior to going into administration. From administration he climbed his way into the ranks of the “BIG BOYS” when is comes to dealing with millions of dollars through Texas school districts. TAXPAYER MONEY!!

sockwell

                                                                                                                                         Keith Vernon Sockwell

Mr. Sockwell has been actively involved in the TRANSFORMATION of Texas Education through Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA’s) Creating a New Vision.

Now let me get this straight. Keith Sockwell and his company SHW Group are corporate partners &  financially support Texas Association of School Administrator (TASA). Sockwell worked with Texas Superintendents to come up with a new progressive/liberal plan for Texas Education called Creating a New Vision. Then Sockwell has outside consulting groups and companies that he sells services to your local school district to further implement the transformation or sells architectural services to build you a new school building like New Tech in Coppell. More times than not if a local School district has a bond on the ballot the SHW group is the architecture company mentioned in the Bond.

vsockwell

 

conceivedbackground

 

 

corpor


Viewpoint

 

 

Superintendent of Coppell ISD, Dr. Jeff Turner hired the architectural services of SHW Group in building New Tech High School. Remember Dr. Turner works with Keith Sockwell on TASA’s New Vision as well serve together on the Board of Directors of C-Learning.

 

 

2014-01-28_22-40-38

clearning

In 2001 Kyle Bacon Re-Registered the SHW Group as a LLP.

llc

Texas Secretary of State Certificate of Formation for C-Learning

Texas Secretary of State Certificate of Formation of Initiatal of SHW Group

Texas Secretary of State SHW Group Articles of Conversion

n2

n2 doc

Something does not look right or smell right with any of this. !

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The Destruction of Texas Education! PARENTS WAKE UP!

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shattered

Across the state of Texas there is a movement by Texas Superintendents and others to totally transform Texas Education. This transformation is not in the best interest for our children or our country. With millions of dollars from the Obama stimulus packages, Dell and Gates Foundation there are numerous liberal/progressive groups working unbeknownst to many in transforming the way students will be taught. A traditional education where “absolute truth” and American Exceptionalism is taught is quietly being eliminated in you local school with the implementation of Project Based Learning (PBL) with the use of technology & the elimination of text books.  Project Based Learning has established roots in the United Nations. Please read more about it here.

 

The following 35 Texas Superintendents (mostly x coaches who know nothing about education)  originally got together and came up with “Creating a New Vision for Texas Public Education“.

participating

 

TASA has created the group Future-Ready Superintendents Leadership Institute. The institute is working hand in hand with ENGAGE2LEARN, a consulting firm to further implement the progressive/liberal transformation. Clark and Shannon Buerk run Engage2Learn and Shannon’s goal is education TRANSFORMATION. Engage2Learn will be invited by your superintendent to come to the district to hold community meetings using the Delphi technique, which actually controls the group discussion  giving the impression the groups input is valid and needed. The superintendent and Engage2Learn already have their plan in place and this meeting is nothing more than a consensus meeting.

More on the Delphi Techique Here and how to diffuse it.

 

Before Shannon Burke started Engage2Learn she worked with Cambridge Strategic Services (another consulting firm) working to transform education as well. Those involved in most of these consulting firms originally worked with local school districts and the education service centers. They have found ways to break away and continue to make money off of the local school districts. Education is big business. There is so much financial corruption and no accountability at all levels

 

Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA) and Texas Association of School Boards (TASB) and just two of many associations that are funded with through local school districts with a progressive agenda. Why are taxpayers funding these two groups is beyond me. Superintendents do not work for the district any longer the are indebted to the TASA and TASB agenda.

 

Parents and Taxpayers are the only thing that is going to make a difference. Please spread the word and inform others of what is happening with Texas Education.

 

naked communist

 

hitler

 

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K12, INC. AND TEXAS VIRTUAL ACADEMY EXPOSED

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http://www.educationviews.org/k12-texas-virtual-academy-exposed

 EXPOSED

http://www.educationviews.org/k12-texas-virtual-academy-exposed 

[1.20.14 — Darcy Bedortha (high-school English teacher with a Ph.D) has recently been a teacher in K12, Inc. Her article is an expose´on what really happens in a K12, Inc. which is a virtual school.  Students “attend” this school by e-mail, interactive/online instruction, and telephone contact with the teacher — no face-to-face time between the teacher and the student — EducationWeekis a well-respected publication and vets its contributors.

 

Unfortunately, Texas Virtual Academy uses K12, Inc. as its curriculum:   http://www.k12.com/txva/curriculum/3-8#.Us62e9JDtac    

 

This article written by Darcy Bedortha, a teacher in K12, Inc. and published in EdWeek, is a “must read” for anyone who is considering signing his children up for the Texas Virtual Academy/K12, Inc.  Darcy’s article should also be a “must read” for the Texas Legislature, Governor’s office, Lt. Governor’s office, Texas Commissioner of Education, and the Texas Education Agency.

 

I remember when the political forces jammed through the Texas Virtual Academy, and I feel sure many of the same people named in this article were responsible for selling their false premises to Texas.   – Donna Garner]

 

===========

 

1.6.14 – EDWEEK.ORG

 

“15 Months in Virtual Charter Hell: A Teacher’s Tale”

 

http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/living-in-dialogue/2014/01/15_months_in_virtual_charter_h.html?cmp=ENL-EU-NEWS2

 

By Anthony Cody on January 6, 2014 6:12 AM

Guest post by Darcy Bedortha

EXCERPTS FROM THIS ARTICLE:

In late August, 2012, I took a job in a school that is part of the largest virtual charter school chain in the nation. While I had misgivings about the nature of the school, I thought perhaps if I were diligent, I could serve my students well.  In November 2013 I decided I could no longer continue as a teacher. This is my story.

 

 

Some Background on K12 Inc.

K12 Inc., the virtual-education company, was founded in 1999 by the one-time “junk bond king” Michael Milken and the hedge fund banker Ronald Packard. The company’s original board chairman was William J. Bennett, who had been the U.S. Secretary of Education under President Ronald Reagan

My Life as a Virtual Teacher

I became a teacher because I am an advocate for youth and social justice. However, this purpose was hard to fulfill working in a K12 Inc. school. With the kind of technology, systems and process management needed to keep the enrollment machine running (and the machine is priority), there is never much time to actually teach. In my former [K12, Inc.] school, each class met for 30 minutes in an interactive-blackboard setting one day each week. Fewer than 10 percent of students actually attended these “classes.” Other than that time and any one-on-one sessions a teacher and student might set up (which, in my experience, almost never happened), there is no room for direct instruction.

Given the extensive needs of the students, this set up does not serve them well. Most of my contact with students was by email, through which I answered questions about everything from login issues and technology glitches to clarifying of assignments, and even that communication was only accessed by a very small percentage of students.

In addition, because students continuously enroll, no one was on the same assignment at the same time. I taught high school English. In a given day in mid-November I would grade introductory assignments, diagnostic essays and end-of-semester projects, and everything in between, for each course (this month I had 30 separate courses). I found it to be impossible to meet the learning needs of my students in that situation.

For most of last year I was Lead Teacher at the school, which required me to attend national staff meetings each week….In my experience, the conversation was never about how our students were struggling, how we could support those who were trying to learn the English Language, how we could support those who were homeless or how we could support those with special needs. It was never about how we could support our teachers. It seemed to me like the focus was often about enrollment, about data, about numbers of students who had not taken the proper number of tests, about ranking schools and ranking teachers. And there was marketing: how to get more children enrolled, how to reach more families, how to be sure they were pre-registered for next year, how to get Facebook pages and other marketing information “pushed out” to students.

Teachers who work for K12 Inc. are not well compensated for all their scrambling. At my former school, teachers are paid based on the number of students on their rosters. With 225 students they are still part-time (at .75 FTE), for which the pay is $31,500 a year. With 226 students they become full time employees, and will then be paid $42,000.

Some full-time teachers now carry loads of well over 300 students. Even considering other expenses (but noting that these schools have no building or transportation costs), it is clear to me that K12 is generating considerable profits from the student/teacher ratio and compensation scheme.

My first month of teaching exhausted me, and there was never a moment in 15 months to catch my breath (many of us taught summer school, with no extra compensation, per employment agreement). Teachers are responsible for setting up courses, due dates, course pathways, etc. in connection to an extensive and ever-changing digital curriculum which is fraught with technical glitches and system-level errors. Teachers are also required to be available to students during the day, late into the evening and on weekends. In addition, they must contribute to “special projects”.

Courses and students are added daily, so there is continuous juggling, all happening during the first month of school (and beyond) while students (and teachers) are trying to learn how the system works. Granted, the first months of school are difficult for any school, but teachers at my school were putting in 40, 50, and 60 hour weeks in September 2012 while being paid only for the students on their roster, which for me hovered around 100 by the end of the first month. I think my first two-week paycheck, given the 75 students on my roster in the beginning, was about $300. Students are enrolled and drop out daily throughout the year (enrollment pauses only in December and May-June) so numbers change constantly and part-time teachers are never sure of their income.

Serving Disadvantaged Students Poorly

I believe K12 Inc. targets poor communities and economically struggling regions; they are easily influenced because they are desperately seeking alternatives to devastatingly under-funded schools. These financially strapped schools are being further bled by the exodus of students who are lured by what I now see are empty promises of marketing experts at K12 Inc

Luis Huerta of NEPC and Teachers College, Columbia University cites K12 Inc.’s explicit strategy  of targeting the least-supported population of students. He states that the corporation has an established practice of going after students who are “at risk” because of their tendency to not engage in school or expect much, if anything, from their educational experience, thereby creating a greater profit margin for K12 Inc. If a student is not active in school or demanding a quality education, he or she does not take as much of a teacher’s time; fewer questions are asked, less work needs reviewing and less interaction is required. By targeting these students for enrollment, K12 Inc. is able to push a higher student to teacher ratio: fewer teachers equals less expense, more students equals more income, fewer expenses in conjunction with greater income equals greater profits. This is a core issue with for-profit education management organizations.

The majority of students at the school are the kinds of kids whose histories and current realities cause concerned adults to keep eyes open for signs of trauma, those that haunt the dreams of educators and social workers. My students were survivors – of suicide attempts, of bullying, of abuse, of neglect, of the attempted suicides of siblings or best-friends or boyfriends. Some of them battle addictions and destructive habits; some self-harm, isolate themselves, or even run away.

I was an English teacher, so my students would write. They wrote of pain and fear and of not fitting in. They were the kinds of young people who desperately needed to have the protective circle of a community watching over them. They needed one healthy person to smile at them and recognize them by name every day, to say “I’m glad you’re here!”  Many of my former students do not have that.

The last thing these young people needed, I came to realize during my time with K12 Inc., was to be isolated in front of a computer screen.  A week or two or three would often go by without my getting a word from a student. They didn’t answer their email, they didn’t answer their phones. Often their phones were disconnected. Their families were disconnected. My students also moved a lot. During my first year at the school I spent days on the phone trying to track students down. This year I struggled to not simply give up under the weight of it all.

In the fall of 2013, 42 percent of our high school students were deemed “economically disadvantaged.” I had a number of students who were not native English speakers. I cannot wrap my head around how to serve a student who is unable to read or comprehend the language that the virtual curriculum is written in, let alone learn the technology (when it is functioning) without sitting beside them in the same space. Many of my non-native speakers had parents who did not speak English at all. These students often struggled for a very short time, and then I never saw their work again. They dropped out, moved on.

in early December, nearly 80 percent of our students were failing their classes.  At that time there were 303 students (12 percent of the school) enrolled in special education programs – and 259 of them were failing while 17 had no grade at all. Eighty-two percent of the 9th graders were failing. This kind of failure is in no way limited to this school; it is system-wide, reigning throughout the virtual-school world, explicitly true for K12, Inc. and its national network of online schools.

According to a July 2012 report published by the NEPConly 27.7 percent of K12, Inc. schools met the Annual Yearly Progress goals, as compared to 52 percent of brick and mortar public schools (Miron & Urschel, 2012).

Similarly, the same study calls attention to the fact that only 37.6 percent of students at full-time virtual schools graduate on time, as compared to the national average of 79.4 percent for all public high school students

In addition, CEO Ronald Packard was named in a 2012 class action complaint citing his alleged false statements regarding student performance and K12, Inc.’s “aggressive tactics” to recruit and enroll students in effort to cover up the 40-60 percent turnover rate (the parties reached a tentative $6.75 million settlement agreement in March 2013).

For a month I had 476 students on my rosters, in 30 different classes. In my classes, my students were writing narratives, argumentative and research papers and poetry – all of which I was committed to reading. I had students who struggled to find their way through the course pages to the assignment they wish to work on, and in their frustration they often emailed for direction. I had students who were struggling to find their way through life….

Each of these situations and many others required individual attention. How does anyone offer anything close to personal attention for over three-hundred students, most of whom you never see? Practices such as excusing (eliminating) assignments were the norm at the school. K12 Inc. calls it a “proficiency model” but it amounts to an easy route to course completion. Even the students who were more or less on pace were not learning deeply; they were often merely filling out digital worksheets as quickly as they could. The most motivated of my students regularly finished more than a dozen assignments in a day.  What kind of depth of learning could that offer? That kind of workload for K12 teachers created fertile ground for practices like minimizing curriculum or sending essays to India to be graded.

Last year I had a student who never showed up to class, never turned work in, skimmed by on gaming the system with a phone call every few weeks, just enough to keep from being dropped from the rosters. She called me three days after my final grades were submitted in June, desperate to find a way to graduate. I apologized, said my grades had been submitted, and offered information for the summer school we were holding. A week or so later, when I arrived for graduation an administrator pulled me aside to tell me that this student had passed “by the proficiency method” and would be graduating. Our graduation rate was so low that this was not a surprise to me, not after the year I had spent working in this system. I was learning how things worked. Similar things have happened elsewhere. In Tennessee an email was discovered at a K12, Inc. school directing teachers to delete poor grades.

The July 2012 NEPC report concludes that virtual schools are not adequately meeting the educational needs of students.“Children who enroll in a K12 Inc. cyberschool, who receive full-time instruction in front of a computer instead of in a classroom with a live teacher and other students, are more likely to fall behind in reading and math,” the authors state “These children are also more likely to move between schools or leave school altogether – and the cyberschool is less likely to meet federal education standards.”

 

Donna Garner

Wgarner1@hot.rr.com

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Education Dollors: Golden Goose for Administrators!

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thief
“Education Dollars: Golden Goose for Administrators”
by Donna Garner
1.18.14

It seems to me that the following are examples of how careless school administrators and personnel can be with other people’s money (i.e., taxpayers’ hard-earned dollars).

Herman G. Wilks, who was the director of the workers’ compensation claims administration for the Texas Association of School Boards (TASB), pleaded guilty on 1.8.14 to federal charges of embezzling more than half a million dollars ($514,400) from TASB covering a period of April 2008 to March 2013. Wilks did this through the TASB Risk Management Fund by creating a bogus company (Medco Implantable Supply) and then submitting fraudulent workers’ group claims for various services and products that were never ordered or executed. Wilks faces 20 years in federal prison because of the 10 counts of mail fraud; he is presently out on bond while he waits for his sentencing. TASB is working with its crime insurance carrier to try to regain some of the funds and says the TASB Risk Management Fund and TASB are still financially sound. [It is amazing to me that the TASB administration could miss such a bogus scheme that was taking place right under their well-paid noses.]

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On Jan. 8, 2014, Beaumont ISD Finance Director Devin Wayne McCraney and the former BISD Comptroller Sharika Baksh Allison were indicted on 18 counts that gained them over $4 Million. They set up a bogus company and diverted wire transfers from BISD accounts into a fake bank account controlled by McCraney/Allison. Then they would write themselves checks. [Again, how could BISD have let such a scheme operate right under their watch?]

==========

Jerome Oberlton, Dallas ISD Chief of Staff under Dallas ISD Supe Mike Miles, resigned back in May when it was discovered that he had been indicted in Georgia for taking kickbacks while in charge of technology in the Atlanta Public Schools. Oberlton has since pled guilty and will serve 41 months in prison.

(My summary taken from Texas Education News, 1.20.14)

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UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS PROMOTES COMMON CORE

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One thing you can rest assured of is, if an initiative is funded by the Bill and Melinda Gates foundation a liberal left leaning progressive agenda is in play. Such as the Common Core State Standards which are destroying the education of America”s students nationwide. Though Common Core was not officially adopted in Texas the education establishment has been working behind the scenes on implementing Common Core in Texas Schools under the name Cscope,  as well as other names such as Project Based Learning (PBL) etc.  The University of Texas’s Charles A.. Dana Center funded greatly by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation  actively promotes and works at implementing Common Core.  The similarities between Cscope and Common Core are identical (Assessments, classroom walkthroughs, Vertical Alignment Docs,etc). The Dana Center was behind the specificity of Cscope’s vertical alignment documents (see photo below).

Due to the work of the Dana Center and other education establishments implementing common core, Cscope and project based learning good teachers are frustrated and leaving the profession and our children are suffering academically. The progressive left are no longer with educating students but creating a workforce. Equity  (socialism), Diversity and Globalization are the goals behind this radical transformation of Americas Education System.

dana photo

dana center tool kit

cscope

Tool

 

 

victoria dana

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Cscope, Yes we are still talking about it! ESC’s not to be Trusted!

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cscope slide 1

Yes we are still talking about it. Cscope is the Marxist curriculum that was found to be in 80% of Texas School Districts. Cscope came under heavy scrutiny in the 2013 Texas Legislative session, after finding it riddled with controversial material.  The ESC’s made an agreement with Senator Dan Patrick to pull the Cscope lessons only to put them into the public domain and exploring any and every avenue possible to keep the lessons in the school district. ESC 13 has sold zip drives of Cscope lessons to school districts. See photo below of Gorman ISD check register:

Cscope Flashl

 The passage of SB 1406 called for putting the Cscope lessons under the purview of the State Board of Education and the passage of SB 1474 calling for new curriculum or new management systems to be put through a formal process of adoption before implementation. The ESC’s are not to happy with the legislative actions and hired a law firm  Walsh, Anderson, Gallegos, Green and Trevino, PC, (paid with tax dollars, must be nice) and attorney Haley Turner   put together the following power point. For me the power point only solidified the arrogance of the ESC directors and their determination in transforming Texas Schools and keeping Cscope within the Texas School System. (I thought Cscope was to be known as TEKS Resource System?)

sb1474

Mason Moses, chief communications officer with ESC 13 sent me the following email below. Though I question some of his statements knowing this particular law firm is in bed with the ESC’s and the progressive Texas Education Industry.

mason moses

I found the following video on ESC 13’s website confirming the ESC were involved in this. Ed Vera from ESC 13 introduces Haley Turner.

 

haley

 

 

 

 

 

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Texas Warning: Transformation of Public School using Marxist Philosophy

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Texas Schools are going through radical transformation and not for the better. Students are suffering with low grades and good teachers are frustrated and leaving the profession or going to private schools. Districts along with outside associations like Texas Association of School Administrators (TASA), Texas Association of School Boards (TASB), Texas Education Service Centers and others have been working on implementing Project Based Learning (PBL), built on constructivism. Individual achievement is no longer emphasized and students are now working in groups in hopes of creating diversity, equity and globalization. American Exceptionalism is no longer taught.

 

Aransas County Independent School District is getting ready to hold a community meeting in regard to their district progressive transformation. This meeting will be a Delphi meeting giving the public the opinion that your opinions will be valued and taken into consideration after the meeting. Appearances can be deceiving. The district administration already has a plan in place and this meeting is nothing more than a consensus meeting designed to further support the plan giving the appearance that the community was involved in designing or approving their plan. Here is an explanation of the Delphi Technique. 

aransas

 

 

 

Working to expose the corruption I hear from teachers and others across the state venting their frustration with their district. These individuals do not want to be identified out of fear of losing their job. I asked one individual was was the major complaint with their district and the responded with the following…….

coppell 1

 

 

Combating the mind manipulation of the Delphi Technique

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TEXAS: CSCOPE vs PEG LIST

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“The Day of Reckoning: CSCOPE vs. PEG List”

By Donna Garner

1.10.14

 

The Texas Education Agency has just released the list of 892 Texas public school campuses that have been identified as low performing because of poor test scores or unacceptable ratings under the Public Education Grant program (PEG):

 http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/peg/2013/peg_list_2014-15.pdf

 

Below is the list of CSCOPE school districts/school systems as of 8.25.12:   http://nocompromisepac.ning.com/profiles/blogs/cscope-list-of-texas-school-districts-school-systems-as-of-8-25?xg_source=activity

 

By comparing the two lists posted above (PEG vs. CSCOPE), the public should be able to  determine generally whether CSCOPE is helping or hindering the academic performance of Texas students.

 

The following chart tells what the abbreviations found in the far right-hand column on the PEG List mean.

 

Reasons for Identification:
R

The STAAR/TAKS passing rate inReading/English Language Artswas 50 percent or below for the tested grades at the campus (2011, 2012, 2013).

W

The STAAR/TAKS passing rate inWriting was 50 percent or below for the tested grades at the campus (2011 or 2013).

M

The STAAR/TAKS passing rate inMathematics was 50 percent or below for the tested grades at the campus (2011, 2012, 2013).

C

The STAAR/TAKS passing rate inScience was 50 percent or below for the tested grades at the campus (2011 or 2013).

S

The STAAR/TAKS passing rate inSocial Studies was 50 percent or below for the tested grades at the campus (2011 or 2013).

AU

The campus was ratedAcademically Unacceptable (2011), or Improvement Required (2013).

 

 

More information about the methodology used to prepare the PEG List can be found at:   http://ritter.tea.state.tx.us/perfreport/peg/2013/method_exp.pdf

 

 

 

 

Donna Garner

Wgarner1@hot.rr.com

 

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TEXAS KATY ISD & COMMON CORE STANDARDS

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katy

 

This week Katy ISD has contracted with the public consulting firm K12 Insight  to improve their public image. Let me get this right. School districts are hiring outside firms using tax payers money to improve their public image. Seriously? What a scam this is.

Katy also held a technology symposium this past October working on transforming education as we know it. Though Common Core standards are illegal in the state of Texas Katy seemed to have no problem educating and promoting common core for those in attendance.  Technology is playing a key part in transforming education today. It isn’t a matter of having a computer class or key board class. Education today is being promoted at all levels of online activity. Globalization, Diversification and Equity is the motive for this transformation. Parents you must wake up to what is going on in your local school.
katy ISD

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TEXAS EDUCATION, DATA MINING, CSCOPE & COMMON CORE

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TEXAS ED

 

Texans need to be aware that Texas has fallen in line with the same radical progressive agenda as those using Common Core in other states.   Yes, Texas did not officially adopt Common Core but the philosophy, assessments and data mining behind Common Core are being used here in Texas as well. CSCOPE is riddled with assessments that do not align with the TEKS and students are subjected to them throughout their school year for the purpose of data mining. Texans need to wake up as to what is transpiring in your local school district. Educators try to intimidate you with words like, 21st Century Learning, Rigor, College and Career Readiness, Project Based Learning (aka Common Core & Cscope). Please don’t let them fool you. Please review the following information and educate yourself as to what is taking place in your local school district. COMMON CORE AND DATA MINING

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Austin School Casey Elementary Principal goes AWOL!

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casey

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TEXAS ESC EMPLOYEES ARE SPEAKING OUT!!

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THE DISCOVERY OF THE CONTROVERSIAL CURRICULUM CSCOPE THAT THE ESC’S HID FROM THE PUBLIC HAS OPENED UP A HUGE CAN OF WORMS. ESC’S ONCE AN OBSCURE ENTITY IS NOW UNDER PUBLIC SCRUTINY AS THEY HANDLE MILLIONS OF TAX PAYERS DOLLARS.

TEXAS EDUCATION SERVICE CENTER EMPLOYEES ARE STARTING TO COME OUT OF THE WOODWORK AND EXPOSE THE CORRUPTION FROM WITHIN. MANY EMPLOYEES KNOW THERE IS SOMETHING DEFINITELY WRONG AND WANT TO BE HEARD.  I RECEIVED THE FOLLOWING STATEMENT FROM AN ESC EMPLOYEE THIS WEEK.

 

STATEMENT

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