Monday, October 19, 2015

TED school in Adana, Turkey

This is the strategic mission "letter from the president" of the Turkish Education Association, thought I would post it here for consideration:

Our great leader and the first President of the Turkish Republic Ataturk lit the torch of the Turkish Education Association in 1928, and since then we have always felt committed to pursue our mission, one of which is supporting the education of successful students in financial need by providing countrywide scholarships. However scholarship means nothing if it is not accompanied with healthy social, cultural training and moral support. Students who are awarded TED scholarships benefit not only from financial means to continue their education but also from the support provided by specialists for their healthy social and psychological development, as well as enjoying the assurance that they are a member of the large TED family. This is ho more than 48,000 young torches so far have all developed a strong sense of belonging to Ataturk's principles and to our country, which is an inevitable effect of being a member of TED family.

From the short time I spent at the school today, I appreciated the wrap around services the school offered. Generally there were 300 students (its been in operation a few short years, up to middle level) the kids attend from 9-5 which includes after school activities (soccer, dance for example) and the teachers also receive rides from the buses that take students to and fro. Some simple pictures below and more soon to come.










Monday, September 21, 2015

Jesse Hagopian speaks at Fighting Bob Fest 2015



Here is a speech by educator, activist, and author Jesse Hagopian on the heels of the successful Seattle Teachers Association job action. Jesse recounted some of the stories of that momentous event as well as reading passages from his book More than a score. Documented by Phil Haney and Todd Alan Price, this Fighting Bob Fest 2015 keynote in Madison, Wisconsin on September 19, 2015, set the tone for a day of progressive politics. We will be forwarding a companion article to this video shortly.

Friday, February 27, 2015

Right to work for le$$



The right-to-work-for-less legislation was roundly opposed by citizens and others protesting as government overreach. 

Tuesday, January 27, 2015

Senate Bill 1 Public Hearing at the State Capitol, Madison, Wisconsin January 27, 2015

Greetings Senator Farrow and the Education committee,

My name is Todd Alan Price, Director of Policy Studies at the National College of Education in National Louis University. As an Associate Professor in Educational Foundations and Inquiry I’ve had the opportunity to conduct some modest research in Chicago public schools and I was one of the research assistants on the original Milwaukee Parental Choice Program (MPCP). I’m a parent in Kenosha, Wisconsin.

If we are students of history and policy, and I remain one of both I imagine, we should know that the punitive measures of No Child Left Behind set in stone an untenable political position that we as a nation could focus on greater “accountability” but ignore chronic underfunding, growing inequality and nagging poverty, as if there were not enough testing already. It is as if, as Congressman Fatah from Philadelphia was to say, that we tests kids in swimming but while some students have an Olympic sized pool, other kids have a pool with no water.

Since No Child Left Behind has largely failed, we as a nation, Wisconsin school officials, seem to be “Racing to the Top” or what I characterize as “running for the money”.

I graduated from Tremper High School. My children attend two great Kenosha neighborhood public schools, Grewenow Elementary and Roosevelt Elementary respectively. Roosevelt has an accelerated program that my oldest attends and my youngest is plugging along, making his parents proud, on a field trip today. My wife is now teaching as a substitute teacher and supporting the mission of the school district.

Which is to say my family and our Kenosha families have effective teachers, dedicated principals, caring support staff, and a school district that is focused on moving the curriculum forward, moving best practices forward, and improving student outcomes together. I know this as an educator who attends the teacher-parent meetings and support the community engagement events. As Reverend William Barber a great advocate for our public schools among other things says Forward Together.

Kenosha is moving forward, a great school district, and latest reports are that high school graduation rates are climbing. Yet poverty remains a nagging problem, and there remain struggles. The Kenosha School District voluntarily submitted to an audit a few years past. Two key findings from the audit:

Formative and summative data are not available to evaluate all courses taught, and data use for key functions such as planning, curriculum management, professional development, program evaluation, budgeting and facility management is not in place to improve the design and delivery of services that impact student achievement.

Evaluation processes have not been established to guide the district in adopting, implementing, and analyzing instructional programs for cost benefits or for their effectiveness in meeting the system’s desired outcomes for student achievement.

Now talking with a school board candidate, he bemoaned that the budget is tight and largely fixed, and it is very hard to put in place what this audit called. Which is to say audits are fine, yet AUDITING solutions require resources. As do children.

WE as a state should support promising initiatives such as co-teaching, universal design for learning, and we could be supporting school districts to improve their practice by examining new promising pedagogies, including flipped classrooms and blended learning. We could be investing in teaching as a career ladder, using teacher leader programs. Instead we are placing public schools under increasing audit measures.

S.B. 1 doesn't help move these measures forward much, nor help these schools much, it just seems to once again place more “accountability” on top of all of the other accountability mechanisms that teachers and principals and school board members are already laboring under.

If this committee, if this state government wanted to help children in Wisconsin’s schools, you could start by really supporting our neighborhood, public schools. There are so many ways, proven, to do this. Beyond SB 1 auditing, more funding really should be made available for professional development, to support teacher leaders, to grow universal design for learning, environments, and to create less completion, not more of it, through co-teaching, through flipped classrooms (why keep the information secret) and to acknowledge the value of blended learning. All of these measures work, they can move children incredibly forward, as my one time student Diana would say. This bill doesn’t seem to do that, but presents nonetheless, an interesting opportunity to discuss policy, as well as to review history.

Sincerely,

Todd Alan Price

National Louis University

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Assembly Bill 1 Public Hearing at the State Capitol, Madison, Wisconsin January 14, 2015

Rep. Thiesfeldt, Rep. Kitchens, and legislative members of the Education Committee,

My name is Todd Alan Price. I’m Director of Policy Studies at National Louis University, speaking for myself. If we really want to be responsible to the 860,000 public school children we would be crafting solid policy initiatives that improve student engagement. If we wanted improved accountability let’s provide the funds/resources available to hire more educators, provide bonafide career paths with better compensation (like teacher leader programs, part of the RESPECT initiative from the federal government), and support the persons on the frontlines who do the teaching, collect the data and retool the curriculum and instruction as needed to be able to make an impact on the student outcomes.

Equally important from a scientific measure, rather than a faith-based one, we should use diagnostic assessments to identify the point at which a child is struggling; we should use formative assessments, which are ongoing and immediately useful to the teacher to move the child incredibly forward.

But the resources are few and far between. I know my colleagues would be very supportive of your committee examining what does it specifically cost to support each and every child in the state of Wisconsin to be fully ready to be successful, to have the tools in place to be able to learn?  If we as a state did that, then we could have an honest and robust conversation around choice in education, which would take at its starting point, equal opportunity.

If this committee wanted to help children in underperforming schools, you could start by working to improve our neighborhood public schools so every child has a good public school to attend, no matter where they live or what their family circumstances are. I agree parents are the first teacher and I am one too. My children go to two great Kenosha neighborhood public schools, Grewenow and Roosevelt Elementary respectively. They have great teachers, and dedicated principals, support staff, and they are focused on moving the curriculum forward toward best practices and improved student outcomes, I know this as a parent who attends the teacher-parent meetings and support the community engagement events.

A.B. 1 doesn't help these schools much, just seems to place more “accountability” on top of all of the other accountability mechanisms that teachers and principals and school board members are laboring under. WE should support promising initiatives such as co-teaching and universal design for learning, and we could be supporting school districts to improve their practice by examining new promising pedagogies, including blended learning. Instead we are seemingly placing schools with AB 1 under increasing audit measures.

Since we know that schools that do well on the Report Cards are in communities with engaged parents, well-trained and experienced teachers, a vibrant economy, and schools that have resources to provide every child with the opportunity for a great education - why aren't we writing a bill that would require the Legislature and State of Wisconsin to TAKE RESPONSIBILITY for providing those same resources and opportunity to every community school in the state? Parents in Kenosha to the rest of the state of Wisconsin would appreciate, I’m certain, excellent schools. Let’s begin that conversation, thank you for your time.