Supt Atksinson’s Teacher Pay Wedding Cake Copies ESSA Compensation Tiers – #NCGA #NCed

StuffAtkinsonSaysEarlier in February, Supt. Atkinson rolled out her latest big campaign agenda item.

That item is Teacher Pay increases.

This is not a new item for Atkinson, she’s repeatedly mentioned this since the legislature flipped to a  Republican majority. That’s not a bug, but a feature of her narrative.

In this blog post by Atkinson, she rolls out her 4 tier  ‘Wedding cake‘ strategy.

Mind you, nowhere in her blog post or outline of her Wedding cake plan does she mention how to pay for it.  Also bear in mind, Atkinson has been bemoaning the legislature and budget cuts being the cause of literally every item that snaps back at her.

Now, that Wedding cake’s four points looked awfully familiar to me. I was not alone and Common Core Diva shows us that these steps Atkinson uses are nearly identical to that of the compensation tiers in latest reauthorization of No Child Left Behind called the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).

essatiers - Atkinson vs ESSA - CCDIVA

So is Atkinson using the federally informed and driven ESSA as her template to direct teacher compensation in North Carolina? Looks like it to me. The legislature should be made aware of this.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), EDUCATION, ELECTIONS, June Atkinson | Tagged | Comments Off on Supt Atksinson’s Teacher Pay Wedding Cake Copies ESSA Compensation Tiers – #NCGA #NCed

Chair of State Board of Ed Goes All In For… Kasich. – #NCpol

Over at Jones and Blount, there is a story up about NC Board of Education Chairman, Bill Cobey, going all in for John Kasich in the Presidential race.

/headdesk

Yes, go work for Mini-Jeb! That makes total sense for someone who is allegedly a conservative.

When was the last time we saw a sitting state board of education chair endorse a political campaign, much less work for one?

Seems to me that with the Teacher Screening scandal going on right now and the fact he and Atkinson got their hands caught in the cookie jar misappropriating funds from the Excellent Public Schools Act, that perhaps he already has enough on his plate already?

The Jones and Blount article details how Cobey worked with Kasich in Congress. The article also mentions that Cobey was Huckabee’s campaign chair in North Carolina when Huckabee ran in 2008 and in 2016. Gee, guess Cobey needed to find a new ship to hop on after Huckabee dropped out – again.

Reminder: Holly Grange is running for the NCGA against True Conservative, Tammy Covil. Grange has aligned herself with the GOPe and Cobey. Grange even touted him coming to fundraise for her.  Go read the latest on this race over at Daily Haymaker.

kasich internet campaignReminder: Kasich is a squish. He has zero respect for parents in his state or in any state who are fighting Common Core and has never missed an opportunity to insult them.

Kasich and Huckabee both seemed to like smearing parents on Common Core, by the way.

In fact, Kasich went to South Carolina in 2015 and mocked parents fighting Common Core by saying their complaints were ‘just a runaway internet campaign’. Maybe that’s why Cobey likes him so much.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), ELECTIONS, NC Board Of Education, POLITICS NC | Tagged , | 4 Comments

Fireworks At #NC48 Debate Hosted By Hendersonville Chamber of Commerce

A debate was held this past Tuesday in the race to fill the seat of retiring Senator Apodaca.

Squaring off were Lisa Baldwin and Chuck Edwards and apparently Baldwin might have set off some fireworks.

Citizen Times:

Baldwin elicited an angry response when she accused Edwards of sending a letter to then-U.S. House leaders Nancy Pelosi and John Boehner in 2013 “to push for what became the Obama amnesty.”

“I would enforce immigration laws on the books,” she said.

Edwards called the accusation “totally outrageous.” He said he had sent the letter as chairman of the Henderson chamber and that he had not supported amnesty.

Oh dear. Baldwin dropped the A-word.

The Citizen Times didn’t include the letter Baldwin was referencing which was apparently written in 2013 when Edwards was Chair of the Henderson Chamber of Commerce.

Remember that 2013 is the year that the Gang of 8 was all the rage. You remember the Gang of 8? It’s what’s killing Marco Rubio in the current presidential race.

 S. 744 was the Gang of 8’s bill, which basically was defacto amnesty for 11+ million illegals, handed the H1-B program to the Dept. of Labor to bungle and the Chamber of Commerce and unions got the visa worker program that they wanted.

Well, I’ve got a copy of the letter below but first a quick few notes about the very last line.

The last line is where “pro-growth immigration” is mentioned and one might wonder what he means by .

I’ve seen that phrase applied to growing the Republican party by reaching out to people whose first act was to break our laws.  I’ve also seen it applied to the economy by policy wonks saying a fast increased in population growth will mean a fast GDP growth.

“Pro-growth” is another D.C. buzzword, frankly.

Neither of those applications of  “pro-growth” tells you who it really helps. I can tell you who it doesn’t help — the over 95 million unemployed legal American citizens.

Having said all that, Edwards’ letter is probably a carbon copy of letters sent by Chamber of Commerce chairmen from all over the country at that time.

Here’s the letter:

Dear Speaker Boehner and Leader Pelosi,

The undersigned organizations urge the United States Congress to enact legislation that would bring meaningful reforms to critical components of our nation’s immigration system. Reform of an outdated, broken immigration system is essential if we are to achieve a fully revitalized economy that provides rewarding and lasting jobs and opportunities for all Americans.

Thought leaders from across the ideological spectrum agree that enacting Immigration reform now will accelerate U.S. economic growth at a critical time when it has struggled to recover, and will help to enable sustained growth for decades to come. Done right, reform will also serve to protect and complement our U.S. workforce, generating greater productivity and economic activity that will lead to new innovations, products, businesses, and jobs in communities across the United States.

We deal with an immigration system that is now in its third decade and completely incapable of being responsive to an ever-changing national economy and hypercompetitive global marketplace. Today, the problems with our immigration system have grown and multiplied to become an emerging threat to the current and future productivity, ingenuity, and competitiveness of key sectors of our economy, including agriculture, housing, manufacturing, retail, hospitality, tourism, engineering and technology.

We are united in the belief that we can and must do better for our economy and country by modernizing our immigration system. We already have been engaged with many members of Congress Republicans and Democrats on numerous components of a modern immigration system and we urge that you not let this momentum slip and progress vanish.

Failure to act is not an option. We cannot afford to be content and watch a generation-old immigration system work more and more against our overall national interest. Instead, we urge Congress to remain mindful of the clear benefits to our economy if we succeed, and work together and with us to achieve real, pro-growth immigration reform.

Sincerely,

Henderson County (NC) Chamber of Commerce

Chairman Chuck Edwards

 


Related Reading

Posted in ELECTIONS | Tagged | 2 Comments

Here Come The Election Year Op Eds – #StuffAtkinsonSays

Over at EducationNC, Superintendent Atkinson has an Op Ed telling us what her vision of the future of education is in the year 2025.

The long and short of Atkinson’s vision of 2025:

  • Schools won’t teach those ‘old methods’.
    Old methods — You know, like the ones that sent men to the moon?
  • Kids will learn everything by ‘doing’.
    Like kids have since the dawn of time but aren’t being allowed to anymore under Common Core, especially in K-3?
  • Kids will all have their own ‘educational coach’.
    Yeah, that’s called a PARENT. You know, those folks you routinely dismiss?

That vision of Atkinson’s doesn’t include is saying the words “Common Core”. That doesn’t mean that isn’t what she’s really talking about.

It’s an election year. She’s running. Common Core is toxic and she is THE most responsible party for the catastrophe it has been in North Carolina. Do the Common Core math, people. Our media won’t hold her accountable or make her say it, so citizens have to.

I nearly spit my coffee out reading the final two paragraphs.

Emphasis added is mine:

So how do we get there? First, educators need professional development to help them transition from the way we teach today to the way students will learn in the future. Our path to 2025 also should include the move to extended employment for teachers. Educators are professionals. Many other professions offer employees extensive paid training, development, and advancement opportunities. Teaching should be no different.

And finally, society must accept that the traditional pieces of education that so many are familiar with today are becoming irrelevant and will eventually fade away. Grades, segmented courses and seat time will soon join the film projector as things of the past. The real question is not when all of these changes will come but instead, how can we start preparing today so that teachers, schools, and this state will be ready for the exciting things on the horizon?

You know what’s irrelevant? Educrats. How about we get them to fade away?

These closing paragraphs are so hilariously condescending in the face of the grade of “F” given to NC’s screening of problem teachers, not to mention insulting ‘society’ for their rejection of Common Core.

More #StuffAtkinsonSays…

StuffAtkinsonSays

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION, ELECTIONS, June Atkinson | Tagged | 1 Comment

ICYMI – What Matters For Friday, February 12th

In Case You Missed It — I joined Chad Adams on his show, What Matters, last Friday.
You can find the segment I’m in at around the 35 minute mark.

Quick rundown of what we talked about:

Next, Chad speaks to LadyLiberty1885, AP Dillon. They delve into the issue of Common Core. Dillon shares the Trump “un-tweet” after his win in New Hampshire where he first stated he was against Common Core and later said it was great. Chad says the way to get under Trump’s skin, from what he’s heard, is to ask him the details of his policies. Andrea says the groundswell of support for both Trump and Sanders has come from Americans overall dissatisfaction with established politicians. Chad asks why she thinks DPI won’t drop the curriculum. Andrea says DPI and Superintendent Atkinson have bought into the idea full scale. She tells Chad two lawmakers have said the commission who looked at removing mathematics from the Common Core curriculum said Supt. Atkinson told them the issue would be addressed again in March. Chad asks if the hesitation is a fear of not receiving federal money. Andrea says the lawmakers need to take a long look at Common Core and get the spine to eliminate it. She tells Chad perhaps lawmakers should be changed as frequently as a baby’s diapers. Very nice!

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), POLITICS NC | Tagged , | Comments Off on ICYMI – What Matters For Friday, February 12th

USA TODAY Report Gives NC an “F” in Screening Teachers

On February 13th, USA Today posted a lengthy article titled, NC fails in screening for problem teachers.   

I read it. All of it. I also watched the embedded videos. It’s horrifying for a laundry list of failure to protect our children.

Let me say that I was not in the least bit surprised about what USA Today found about teachers slipping through the system.

whoisteachingyourchildI’m not surprised because for quite some time, I’ve been following this national trend of teachers having sex with students, physically abusing students and teachers being arrested for various reasons.

I’ve noted Carolina Plotthound’s reporting on the topic. I’ve followed Instapundit’s tracking of it.

I’ve even chronicled some of it myself, but stopped because it was just so damn depressing. I just might have to take it up again though.  This is a topic that no one seems to want to talk about, yet if it were a Priest abusing a young boy, there would be wall-to-wall coverage on all major networks.

What I did find surprising was the way state educrats and officials tried to rationalize it by blaming the atmosphere after a State Board of Ed member was murdered and of course, the ever popular blamestorming excuse of ‘budget cuts’:

“The State Superintendent of Public Instruction received the report along with the State Board of Education and it was exactly at the time the most severe cuts in the recession came to our agency and we to date have not recovered from those cuts and additional resources would need to be appropriated from the General Assembly,” Cornetto said.

“With respect to the fingerprinting in particular, the State Board would need legislative authorization to be able to do the fingerprinting from the state level.”

But in the six years that have passed, the department has done little to generate support for an issue that it recognized as a problem.

SIX. YEARS.

But wait, there’s more — Apparently, poor screening is excusable because ‘districts are hungry for teachers’ and it would cause ‘delays’ in hiring:

Carol Vandenbergh, executive director of the Professional Educators of North Carolina, was also a task force member and said she has some concerns about the recommendations. Among them, she said, is if background checks at the state level take too long, it could hamper already beleaguered schools by delaying the arrival of needed educators.

“I’m kind of mixed about all this, because yes, I think it’s positive when you have a little bit of a more rigid system, so you are ensuring the right people are in the classrooms around these children,” she said. “But yet I know we have such a problem recruiting and retaining teachers that any barriers you put on getting teachers into the classroom is something that will be difficult for us to accept.”

These excuses are all beyond the pale and should be fed back to those making them. Ms. Vandenbergh’s statement arguably might be worse than Cornetto’s.

I can already see Dr. Atkinson with her usual go-to response of,  ‘It’s the General Assembly’s fault’.

Let me cut her off at the pass — No ma’am. It’s yours. This happened on your watch. You are responsible for the safety and welfare of our state’s students.

Excerpt, emphasis added:

In reviewing states, the USA TODAY NETWORK handed North Carolina an F, ranking it among the worst states in the country for screening teachers.

The Citizen-Times found education officials throughout the state – including in Asheville and Buncombe County– have long recognized the system for screening prospective teachers is antiquated and should be streamlined, but flaws have not been addressed to better protect students.

The North Carolina Department of Public Instruction years ago assembled a statewide task force to address the issue, but failed to push its concerns to state lawmakers, who were needed to pass legislation on some measures.

If this ‘fell through the cracks’ of DPI’s task force, then that is one helluva crack. It was not the General Assembly’s job to do YOUR job.

More:

On the national level, and particularly among Southeastern states, North Carolina is known as a “cesspool,” welcoming questionable educators other states have rejected, said Bob McGrattan, former assistant superintendent of human resources for Asheville City Schools.

Shortly before his retirement, McGrattan headed the task force, and in 2010, the group’s two dozen members issued a report with 15 recommendations to strengthen the system and bring it in line with best practices in other states.

Many of the recommendations called for centralizing oversight at the state level, rather than across North Carolina’s 115 school districts, which are now charged with backgrounding teacher candidates.

None of the recommendations were implemented.

[…]

“We found out in the task force that it’s much harder to get a license to be a Realtor or a fireman or a cosmetologist than it was to be a teacher,” said McGrattan, who retired in 2012 after 25 years with Asheville city schools. “But it basically went nowhere because it involved money. Some states are very diligent about that whole process. If you’re allowing a person to teach in the state of North Carolina, North Carolina should be able to say, ‘This person meets our requirements.’ Currently, that’s not the case.”

That’s an incredible set of admissions about the people who spend the majority of the week with out children.  Having said that, I am sure the vast majority of our teachers are upstanding individuals who are likely as outraged by this report as everyone else.

If you continue down the article, there is a section where USA Today lays out the strengths and weaknesses of each state’s background checks on teachers.

For North Carolina, it breaks down like this:

Strong: “Strong mandatory reporting of teacher misconduct” and “Detailed information online about teacher disciplinary actions”

Weak: “Many teachers’ misconduct not shared with other states” and “Weak screening, left to local school districts”

Now, if there is such strong mandatory and detailed reporting going on and we know just from reported news stories in North Carolina that there is a big problem here, then there is a huge question to be asked: Why hasn’t anyone revived the recommendations of the DPI taskforce for background checks??

The article makes the point that nationally the way problem teachers are tracked is “fragmented”.  However, that does not excuse North Carolina from what is clearly negligent behavior with regards to teacher screening.

I am sure there will be more to come on this topic. Watch for the DPI spin machine to kick into high gear.

Posted in EDUCATION, June Atkinson, NC Board Of Education, NC DPI | 3 Comments