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Thursday, November 19, 2015

Try a little tenderness

Try a little tenderness!
Awarding plastic gold medals to children for reading chapter books is the only data that really matters here. It is November, and 28 out of 32 children have now read new chapter books. The other 4 are close to finishing their first chapter books.
We don't use rigor,

We don't even ask for SBAC data.
We could care less about the Common Core,
You won't find CC standards on our boards.
However on any given day you'll find children and teachers working hard.
On any given day you will find empathy, humanity, and hope in every teaching and learning moment.
We don't need a standardized test to tell us how our children are doing.
Kid Watching gives us all we really need to know.
We don't follow the data.
We follow the child.

There is the data that matters, and the data that really matters.
The data that matters to policy makers, politicians, and education deformers are test scores. That data does not inform us about the learning potential of our children. It does not drive learning, but it does drive the failing education policies only they love.
The data that really matters is the data gather while teaching. Every other piece of data is pretty much useless to children and teachers.
Plastic Gold medals are my smiles, and those smiles are my data.
Respectfully,
Dr. Jesse Patrick Turner
CCSU Literacy Center Director


Want to know what this walking man was listening to this morning on his walk? It's Ottis Redding singing "Try A Little Tenderness ".
>https://search.yahoo.com/search;_ylt=As4Ry0qaZ..S8.EuHF0Jh36bvZx4?p=youtube+try+a+little+tenderness&toggle=1&cop=mss&ei=UTF-8&fr=yfp-t-901&fp=1 <

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Change always begins with the number 1



In a world where our public schools are seen as testing factories, and where standards without humanity rule.
We find students, parents, teachers, administrators, and community activists in an intense struggle to save our public schools.
You may say what can one person do?
I often ask myself that very same question every morning I rise.

Some days I walk for justice,
Some days I march justice,
Some days I hold a sign justice,
Some days I speak truth to power for justice.

Some days I comfort a parent whose child is struggling,
Some days I help a child in need of hope find it,
Some days I listen to a fellow teacher who needs a friend.
Some days I blog,
Some days I post a hopeful image,
Some days I write letters to editors,
Some days I call legislators and policy makers asking where is the humanity,
Some days I tweet out truths.

Every day I just teach with a heart full of love.
Every day I teach I learn from those I teach,
Every day empathy and humanity drive my learning and teaching,
Every I see children not test scores.
Some days I am just a good husband, good father, good brother, or good neighbor,
What I have come to realize is doing something positive matters.
The people who change the world are always doing something positive.
One person always matters. Change always begins with one person.
Trust there is immense power in the number one.

Today let us all be that one person,
Jesse The Walking Man Turner


If you like to hear what this walking man was listening to on his walk over the mountain this morning.  It was Eric Clapton's "Change the world"
https://youtu.be/x11NA63gLDM?list=RDx11NA63gLDM

Thursday, November 12, 2015

Mr. President, we want equity, empathy, and humanity not Common Core Standards



Is the above our new image of segregation in the Twenty-First Century in America?

The 14th Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren concluded in our nation's 1954 landmark Brown Vs the Board of Education: "Segregation of white and colored children in public schools has a detrimental effect upon the colored children. The impact is greater when it has the sanction of the law, for the policy of separating the races is usually interpreted as denoting the inferiority of the Negro group...Any language in contrary to this finding is rejected. We conclude that in the field of public education the doctrine of ‘separate but equal’ has no place. Separate educational facilities are inherently unequal. 
61 years later, 22,462 days later I find our public schools more segregated than ever, not only by race, but by poverty. 22,462 days later I find 50 states and my nation compromising on equality at every step, and committed not to equality in our public schools, but to scams that harm our nation's children, their parents, their communities. Chief Justice Warren was clear: "We conclude that in the field of public education the doctrine of 'separate but equal' has no place." I view high-stake assessments and the Common Core State Standards as clear evidence that we as a nation are in violation of the law, and more importantly of our moral obligation to our nation's children. I see no evidence that thousands of new charter schools have done anything to desegregate our public schools. I would even argue that their creation has increased segregtion in our public schools.



Common Core Standards do not differentiate instruction for individual learners.
Common Core Standards do not valued our rich linguistic, racial and cultural diversity in America.
Common Core Standards cannot adjust for poverty.
Teacher licensure examinations cannot measure a teacher's ability, willingness, and competence to differentiate learning for all learners.
In reality any set of standards that limit themselves to benchmarks of performance without understanding that learners drive learning not bench marks become examples of intolerance.
Any set of standards that are intolerant to the natural diversity within our communities, schools, and classroom are:
1. Inherently bias against learners with special needs,
2. Inherently bias against multilingual learners,
3. Inherently bias against learners living in poverty, and
4. Inherently bias against immigrants and children of color.
Any teacher licensure examination cannot measure a teacher's ability, willingness, and competence to differentiate learning for all learners is not work the paper it is written on!
Any set of standards that promise to save our public schools without requiring equity in our public schools are not worth the papers they are written on!
No education reform without equity for all is not worth researching.
No education reform that fails to affirm our nation's rich tapestry of diversity is rooted in bias against the very nature of who we are as a nation.

We will know genuine education reform by the only standard that really matters EQUALITY in our public schools.
We will know genuine education reform that affirms children, parents, and teachers by the standard ensuring we lift every voice.
We will know genuine education reform that affirms children with special needs by its empathy, its humanity, and its love for all children.
We will know genuine education reform that affirms all learners by its efforts to provide wrap around services not for some schools, but for all schools.
We don't want your Common Core Standards.
We want equity, empathy and humanity.
If your education reform can't begin with these, than you cannot claim to value all children.
Silence and apathy are not acceptable,
Dr. Jesse Patrick Turner

If you like to know what song I was listening to on my walk this morning, it's Sweet Honey and the Rock's "eye on the prize". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D_tcZAqQUAg