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Wednesday, June 18, 2025

School Choice without equity is cover for inequality in our public schools



 Dr. Robert Cotto from Trinity College talking "School Choice" with Dr. Jesse P. Turner Literacy Professor Emeritus, and Readman: Truth to Power Hour host on 103.5 FM New Haven on Friday 6/6/25. 



Dr. Cotto and I see school choice as smoke and mirrors for the status quo of inequality in Connecticut, and around the nation. It gives cover to legislative leaders for inequality in our schools, leads to massive declines in local public school populations, and takes away funding from community public school schools. School choice has not desegregated our schools, they have actually increased racial isolation for Black and Brown children. 

If you like a quick look at the desegregation failure of School Choice programs? Here is a link to UCONN Today link https://today.uconn.edu/2022/06/understanding-segregation-and-school-choice/# 

Come listen to our discussion on School Choice today on the air, link https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RO7GAi3AAzQ  Be informed. 



If you like to listen to the song that inspired me today, its Joe Bataan "Poor Boy" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jIB2av7TvN4&list=PLJLAdjFrCeXq_MwhyveDIJPyfyv7D69Nn&index=4

The more things change, the more they remain the same



The new Attack on Public Schools in Communities of color

 

Just saying if they really cared

"More than 50 years of research across more than 60 studies show that students with access to well-resourced school libraries with certified librarians consistently perform better academically and score higher on standardized assessments. While underserved students see even bigger gains from robust library services, they are less likely to have access to these resources. Meanwhile, information literacy is becoming increasingly important in an age of misinformation and disinformation. Yet since 2000, there has been a nearly 20 percent drop in school librarian positions, which translates to 10,000 fewer full-time school librarians across the country. While more than 90 percent of schools in the United States have school libraries, only about 60 percent have full-time librarians, according to a 2019 report from the American Library Association (ALA). Read on to see the trend of closing school libraries and the damage being done. https://www.americanprogress.org/article/investing-in-school-libraries-and-librarians-to-improve-literacy-outcomes/

Moving beyond the endless same old same old, the test scores are falling 

Rather than talking about the low scores of Black children, we should talking about the decline in funding for school libraries in Black and Brown communities. One of the most harmful trends in America’s public schools in poor communities of color is cutting librarians and media specialist in these schools. Not to mention the total defunding of libraries in poor communities.

If your aim is to ban books, nothing bands truth like closing libraries.

Trust me Connecticut is not immune from this trend.

So, before you start talking low scores, let talk underfunding the very places that provide access to large selections of book to Black and Brown families.

Expect a 103.5 FM New Haven Readman: Truth to Power show in August on this issue.

6 decades of research point to the libraries and access to books as one of the best ways to improve test scores.

Tell it on every street corner,

whisper it in every alley,

Shout it at every school board meeting,

Tell it on every mountain,

Leadership that defunds and closes school libraries in poor communities does not care about all children.

I will be silent,

Dr. Jesse P. Turner

Professor Emeritus of Literacy, Elementary, and Early Childhood,

Host of The 103.5 FM New Haven Readman: Truth to Power Hour



The song the inspired my morning walk today is Public Enemy "Don't Believe the Hype" https://music.youtube.com/watch?v=jfxvYcen4KI



Friday, May 9, 2025

Mr. President 880,000 TRIO Trafromative Voices beg to differ

 

Today, as the President talks of cutting TRIO programs from his budget, 4 TRIO Program voices from 1974 to 2025 spoke up for future TRIO students. 


                                                   We are the voices of TRIO hope. 

President Trump wants to end TRIO Programs at our colleges and universities.

Today, on the Readman: Truth to Power Hour, at 11:AM EST on 103.5 FM

New Haven Community Radio.

We paid homage to Rev Allen, my Equal Opportunity Grant College advisor. He loved wearing bow ties. He was the director of a TRIO College Program at Saint Peter's College. EOP was a place where a kid who had the heart but not the means to pay for college was given an opportunity. Rev Allen, we say TRIO opened the door, but you have to run with it. I expect to see you all on graduation day.

Today I interviewed Julio Muniz from Academic Affairs, Teacher Prep Coordinator, and a former TRIO Graduate like me. He is bringing two TRIO students as well.

We talked about the TRIO story from At Risk to Resiliency. We did not call the President out.

We shared our TRIO voices of hope to help him understand that these programs are the things that give hope to the American dream.  We simply share our stories, hoping to persuade him to change his mind. 

Amanda Gorman in her Inaugural Poem "The Hill We Climb" opening words:

" When day comes,

We ask ourselves,

Where can we find light in this never-ending shade?

The loss we carry,

A sea we must wade. We’ve braved the belly of the beast,

We’ve learned that quiet isn’t always peace,

And the norms and notions of what just is, isn’t always justice.

And yet the dawn is ours before,

We knew it,

Somehow, we do it,

Somehow, we’ve weathered and witnessed a nation that isn’t broken,

But simply unfinished. "

When she said these words for President Biden's Inaugural, I felt as if she was reaching into the hearts of all TRIO students.

This one is for all our millions of TRIO sisters and brothers,

This is the link to our show and a summary as well. 

https://www.facebook.com/NewHavenIndependent/videos/909040844636312 

The Readman Truth To Power Hour: Trio Promise: "At Risk To Resiliency"

May 9, 7:52 am, 58 min

"The discussion on "The Readman Truth To Power Hour: Trio Promise: 'At Risk To Resiliency'" highlighted the transformative impact of the TRIO program. Dr. Jesse Turner and guests, Ericka Alfred, Angel Diaz-Salgado, and Julio Muniz, shared personal stories and the program's benefits. TRIO supports students from middle school to graduate levels, helping over 880,000 annually. Ericka and Angel emphasized the program's role in fostering community, academic success, and personal growth. Julio underscored the program's holistic approach, including mental health and career guidance. They urged policymakers to recognize TRIO's importance in promoting education and social justice." 

If you like to listen to the tune that inspired my show today, it is Scoot Huron: The Revolution Won't Be Televised https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vwSRqaZGsPw 

Fight the power,

Dr/ Jesse P. Turner 


Amanda Gorman 








Where did the magic go in literacy?

 



Just a child in the library, sitting on the floor next to my grandfather. He was reading the Irish Independent from the International Papers section. I said Grandad what am I supposed to read. 

His face lit up, his mind started turning, he said wait here, ask the librarian for a copy of Don Quixote by Miquel Cerventes illustrated by Gustave Dore. It was big, old, but something about the leather bonding attracted me to this book I could not yet read, but try I would. 

Of course, it open new Grandad/Grandson connections. He took the book out, gave it to me. We renewed that book over and over again for a year. That would set us off on hours of adventure, reading, laughing, imagining, and of course acting it out. There is this magical space between books and people, that literacy researchers overlook. They love to study how teachers teach reading, but ignore the magical stuff. 

My grandfather was a World War I veteran who never finished elementary school. But, had the largest home library of any man I have met. He loved Cervantes, Hugo, Tolstoy, Dumas, Dickens, Swift, Wells, and all the Irish and Spanish poets. He could quote from any of them on demand. My dream back then was to read all he read. I am just about caught up to the old man these days. His books keep his memory strong in me. I cannot go to sleep with opening a book, finding that magic hidden in the pages of that magical stuff. 

Many Literacy Researchers inform my thinking, but few understand, it is less about how we learn to read and more about why children should become readers. A story comes to life not from the print, but from the mind reading it. The imagination gives reason to reading, not the printed word. 

Frank Smith, who sadly no one is reading anymore, always talked about inviting children to join the Literacy Club. He said: "It is infinitely more useful for a child to hear a story told by a person than by a computer. Because the greatest part of the learning experience lies not in the particular words of the story but in the involvement with the individual reading it". My Grandad was a master reader, who was an expert in creating invitations to read. 

It would be wise for literacy experts to revisit Frank Smith, spending more time thinking about creative and innovative ways to invite children into the Literacy Club.

Just saying the magic is not on the page, but in the reader. Of course, Louise Rosenblatt told us that in 1978 in her book "The Reader, the Text. the Poem: The Transactional Theory of the Literary Work. She is another seldom-read expert these days. She is not a Podcast, she is a lifetime study for any researcher interested in literacy. 

I am inspired by old voices and books,                                                                                                         Dr. Jesse P. Turner                                                                                                                                Professor Emeritus of Literacy                                                                                                         Just another Literacy Club Kid

If you are wondering what tune inspired my writing today, it's I. Don Quixote from Man of La Mancah 
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-UUDguFEa5E <

Where would I be without libraries

 

In this day of Trump's war on everything public, how long before he notices that libraries educate people?

When my father abandoned us, we were homeless for nearly 2 years. My mother worked from 9 to 4, serving tables. The rule was after school I would spend my time in the library.


Homeless kids are the quiet ones. We don’t want to bring attention to us. There is a shame with being homeless that leaves deep wounds. I was not special, not more gifted, but blessed by kind hearts. God sent me angels when I needed them most. Not special, but blessed by others.

Everyday for those two hard years, Mrs. G greeted me with cookies and hot chocolate. She knew without asking. She would always give glowing reports to my mother when she came to pick me up. She did not judge my mother, she understood - there go I, for the grace of God.

Her kindness, her humanity, and her choice of The Count of Monte Christo held me strong. She fed my hunger without asking. Her humanity fed my soul.
Where would I be without a public library?
Dead or in prison. If you are wondering what tune inspired me today....it's Deseree's You Gotta be >
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WRUwSk9UTrA <

CNN's Danny Freeman came to our CCSU Literacy Center to talk about the sinkholes of illiteracy

In the movie, The Wizard of Oz Dorthy's dog Tota pulls back the curtain on the Great OZ.
" If you were really great and powerful, you'd keep your promises!” cries Dorothy, stamping her foot in outrage saying: "But the man behind the curtain is just a man. There is no other wizard but him."
 Dorothy offers an inside view of how policymakers, people in power, and our legislators hide behind the curtains of endless failure. There are people in power behind the curtain of America's Public Schools.  The cracks and the giant sinkholes of public schools in America are a direct result of their failures to give every child an equal education. In America, the quality of your education depends upon your Zip Code, the Color of your skin color, your economic status, or your immigration status. 

Time to return to the tragic story of Young Brave Aleysha Ortiz, the girl who fell into one of our public school's sinkholes. 


CNN Dan Freeman asked if this story about high school graduates who can't read is common or uncommon? My answer is yes and no. We would spend the next two hours discussing her tragic story, the broader issues of literacy, and the roles states and the federal government play in helping America's children learn to read. First a look at this courageous young woman who dared to share what most non-readers would never share.  She opened up to tell the whole world her story. 



The Alisha Ortiz case

"In recordings shared with the CT Mirror, made from March through June of this year, district officials acknowledged that in 12 years, Ortiz never received reading instruction or intervention. The CT Mirror also reviewed Ortiz’s educational records, including her recent IEPs and other documents." The link to the Connecticut Mirror Story:
> https://ctmirror.org/2024/09/29/cant-read-high-school-ct-hartford/ <   

I have reviewed her story and examined the details in the press. I find my thoughts thinking Groundhog Day 100 years. I would be remiss in not pointing out that children spend only 13% of their time in school. What about the other 87% of the time? Literacy is not just a school affair; it is a family affair, a community affair, and a national affair. When a child graduates high school unable to read and write, I understand there is plenty of blame to be shared. Who is responsible? Everyone is responsible. However, two groups always get a pass, but in my professional opinion, they are the most responsible. They love to call out others, but never look at themselves. Like Pontius Pilate they are forever washing their hands, claiming innocence. Who are these hand washers? They are the one who hold the purse strings, legislators and policy makers. 

Pontius Pilate

Link to time spent in school numbers: > https://www.naesp.org/sites/default/files/resources/2/Principal/2004/S-Op6.pdf  <

Behind these public education policy sinkholes

Of course, the Hartford Public Schools failed Ms. Ortiz, according to the story, literacy intervention services were non-existent for a non-reader for 12 years. Yes her school played a role. However, the state of Connecticut played a bigger role. We all played a role in her story.

In Bob Dylan's "Who Killed Davy Moore" song has six "Not I" verses  "Who Killed Davy Moore is about a boxer who died in the ring.

  1. 1. " Not I said, the Referee, 
  2. Not I said, the Angry crowd,
  3. Not I said, the cigar-puffing manager,
  4. Not I said, the gambler, 
  5. Not I said, the sports writer,
  6. Not I said, the man whose fists laid him low."

Not I said, the Connecticut Supreme Court