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madfloridian

(88,117 posts)
Tue Sep 10, 2013, 05:34 PM Sep 2013

TFA alums launch campaign against group's role in privatization of schools.

From The American Prospect:

A Break in Teach for America’s Ranks

Last month, TFA alumni and members critical of the organization joined students, parents, and community activists at Chicago's Free Minds/Free People education conference for a summit titled “Organizing Resistance to Teach for America and Its Role in Privatization.” (The Education for Liberation Network, which runs the conference, works with organizers but does not control the outcomes of summits.) It was the launch of the first national campaign against TFA and the first national-level convergence of dissident TFA rank and file.

While debate over TFA traditionally revolves around the effectiveness of its teaching model—recruits receive just five weeks of pre-service training and commit to only two years of teaching—organizers are focused on TFA’s broader political impact. With formidable corporate funding and partnership, TFA is part of a market-oriented reform movement that involves expanding charter schools to compete with district schools, pegging teachers' job security to students' standardized-test scores, and churning in fresh teachers while weeding out those who “underperform,” regardless of experience. These moves purport to enhance student outcomes; they also increase teacher turnover and destabilize school systems.

Summit participants raised issues with TFA at its many points of impact, from teaching to reform politics. Some who had gone through the program said the fast-track training had left them underprepared for the classroom and with little opportunity to voice their concerns. Others came from teacher and parent activist groups that champion critical pedagogy, student voice, and other goals that don't necessarily jive with TFA's emphasis on the role of singular teacher-leaders in mitigating poverty. Of these, some came from Chicago—ground zero for school closings, charter expansion, and mass teacher firings—and described TFA's continued growth in the city as the blunt edge of Mayor Rahm Emanuel's drastic overhaul of district schools.


The group is part of a push to do away with teachers' unions. That is an unfortunate part of the education reform movement led by Arne Duncan. The laying off of career teachers is a tragic part of this reform trend. These experienced teachers are being replaced by graduates with 5 weeks training.

Teach For America's Civil War

TFA’s resources are enormous. The organization’s total assets for the 2011 fiscal year topped $350 million. That includes eight-figure support from the Broad, Walton, and Gates Foundations, leading bankrollers of campaigns to privatize school districts and ramp up standardized testing. The TFA orbit is also growing. It now has more than 10,000 corps members in 48 regions, as well as more than 32,000 alumni. Districts pay thousands in fees to TFA for each corps member in addition to their salaries—at the expense of the existing teacher workforce. Chicago, for example, is closing 48 schools and laying off 850 teachers and staff while welcoming 350 corps members. After Hurricane Katrina, New Orleans cut 7,500 school staff, converted the majority of its schools to charters, and, between 2005 and 2010, saw its share of black teachers drop from 73 percent to 56 percent. Over the past five years, TFA expanded its Greater New Orleans corps from 85 teachers to 375.

For districts, charter schools and fast-tracked teachers are attractive alternatives to public schools staffed with unionized labor—especially under the well-financed push that TFA supports. As the organization grows, it cultivates leaders who align themselves with its pro-charter slant. Leadership for Educational Equity’s alumni resources, as well as its biggest names, trend toward a particular politics. The 11,000 alumni who attended TFA’s 20-year anniversary summit in 2011 got to hear from charter boosters ranging from Harlem Children’s Zone CEO Geoffrey Canada and StudentsFirst CEO Michelle Rhee to U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan and Colorado State Senator Michael Johnston. TFA alums are principals at half of KIPP charter schools—which two alumni founded—and the majority of Achievement First schools. Of the corps members TFA claims remain in education after their two-year stint (a hotly contested figure), administrators and extracurricular leaders are included.


It appears that Teach for America is A way to replace experienced, higher-salaried teachers

That will lead to teaching becoming a temp job.

On top of failing to make a dent in poverty, Teach for America actually detracts from social justice by hurting real teachers. Teach for America students take low, entrance-level pay while also receiving a government subsidy for their salary in the form of Americorps stipends. Schools lay off teachers and then hire Teach for America teachers to fill positions that real teachers would otherwise be filling. Teach for America teachers are undercutting the wage needs of real teachers and causing them to be laid off as a result.


And some background on the founders:

Marcello Stroud sent me TFA’s 990 for fiscal 2008. It shows that TFA had revenues of $159 million in fiscal year 2008 and expenses of $124.5 million. CEO and founder Wendy Kopp made $265,585, with an additional $17,027 in benefits and deferred compensation. She also made an additional $71,021 in compensation and benefits through the TFA-related organization Teach for All. Seven other TFA staffers are listed as making more than $200,000 in pay and benefits, with another four approaching that amount.

It’s also interesting to look at the 990 for the KIPP Foundation, the charter school chain led by Richard Barth, a former Edison vice president and TFA staffer who also happens to be Kopp’s husband. Barth made more than $300,000 in pay and benefits, bringing the Kopp/Barth household income to almost $600,000 for their work with TFA and KIPP. (In a 2008 article, the New York Times dubbed Kopp and Barth as “a power couple in the world of education, emblematic of a new class of young social entrepreneurs seeking to reshape the United States’ educational landscape.”)


A lot more than meets the eye to TFA.
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TFA alums launch campaign against group's role in privatization of schools. (Original Post) madfloridian Sep 2013 OP
Well, the tweets are appreciated very much. Adding an EduShyster post. madfloridian Sep 2013 #1
thank you MadFloridian for continuing to shed light on this. liberal_at_heart Sep 2013 #2
KnR. nt tblue37 Sep 2013 #3
k&r Starry Messenger Sep 2013 #4
Thanks for writing this...eom Kolesar Sep 2013 #5
Thanks for the TFA info. Mc Mike Sep 2013 #6
Thanks for that. madfloridian Sep 2013 #7
Your posts are always worth tuning into, Mad. Mc Mike Sep 2013 #8
Thanks, I had missed that. Common Core is Bill Gates big idea. madfloridian Sep 2013 #9
Greed beyond disgusting, Mc Mike Sep 2013 #10

madfloridian

(88,117 posts)
1. Well, the tweets are appreciated very much. Adding an EduShyster post.
Tue Sep 10, 2013, 11:54 PM
Sep 2013

This really dropped quickly.

Found this post about TFA and Chicago most interesting.

An internal TFA document shows plans for a dramatic charter expansion in the Windy City

TFA Chicago’s response
I shared the document with TFA Chicago’s executive director, Josh Anderson, both to ensure that it is authentic (it is) and to give him an opportunity to respond. Here’s what I asked Anderson:

This information raises some serious questions about the nature of TFA’s role in the growth of the charter sector in Chicago at the expense of traditional public schools, especially as TFA has contracts to provide corps members to teach in some of the same schools that are expanding. As you no doubt know, the opening of 52 additional charters will certainly mean more school closures. Can you explain TFA’s specific role in the push to open these charters? What I find most troubling about this is that TFA appears to have a “seat at the table” in determining the future shape of Chicago’s schools, yet parents don’t.


The response from TFA is a non-response, but the comments are great.

Mc Mike

(9,114 posts)
8. Your posts are always worth tuning into, Mad.
Wed Sep 11, 2013, 06:26 PM
Sep 2013

I'm happy to have an informative alternative to the pro-TFA post currently being kicked around, here.

The discussion of Broad, Gates, Walton funding reminded me of this recent truthout piece on Morna McDermott's chart of corporate connections pushing Common Core (in case you missed it):

http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/18442-flow-chart-exposes-common-cores-myriad-corporate-connections

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