Pearson Is Everywhere: New Mexico Bid-Rigging Lawsuit Is Still On

PearsonWelcome back to Pearson Is Everywhere!

Last time, we looked at Pearson’s spying on students on Social Media and how Colorado is trying to protect ‘student data privacy’ in Colorado — from groups like Pearson.

Today, we’re reminded by Truth In American Education that the bid-rigging lawsuit filed in New Mexico is still going on.


Truth In American Education reported:

The lawsuit that was filed in New Mexicoaccusing the state of bid-rigging when it chose Pearson as a test developer for PARCC still has life.

AP reports that it could halt PARCC in New Mexico:

A legal challenge by a Washington-based testing company may halt a controversial assessment exam in New Mexico that has sparked school walkouts and anger from parents and teachers.

A Santa Fe judge is scheduled to hear arguments Tuesday in an appeal by the American Institutes for Research. The company is fighting the state’s granting of a potentially multi-year contract for Common Core testing to Pearson.

[…]


 

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#DM7 Article: Are You Ready For Hillary’s Emails?

This is a reposting of my weekly Da Tech Guy column:  Are You Ready For Hillary’s Emails?

 

By A.P. Dillon

Last week, we learned that Hillary Clinton is following in the transparency footsteps of the Obama administration.  The revelation that Clinton had been using a personal email account hosted out of her home led to a media firestorm, culminating in Clinton being forced to hold a press conference this week.

The President and the White House Press Secretary have been sending mixed signals on his knowledge of Clinton’s email situation. In an interview on March 7th, the President implied he ‘never got an email’ from Clinton. On March 9th, Josh Earnest said the President did get email from Clinton’s private account.

It bears mentioning that the Clinton press conference was apparently difficult for the media to gain access to. Access will become a key issue, as the AP has fired off a lawsuit, suing Clinton for access to her records.

Clinton tweeted out that she wanted the people to see her emails, yet in her press conference she admitted she deleted a large portion of them, claiming they were ‘personal’ in nature.  Clinton also admitted at the presser that she deleted the emails after the State Department requested her emails.

Why Mrs. Clinton would be using an email account for both personal and official email is an unresolved question.  It also bears mentioning that Clinton appears to have unilaterally had control over what was deleted and what was kept. See: Clinton Claims 60,000 Emails Were Sent To State Department And “About Half Were Work Related”

Apologists defended her having the lone private email account by saying she was ‘too old’ to have two email accounts.

Ah, ageism? She’s too old for two emails but young enough to run for President and to have been Secretary of State.  Yes,  that was really the claim — MSNBC’s Ed Schultz led that talking point charge.

For those interested, there is a wealth of video out there on the subject of Clinton’s email debacle. Everything from security to excerpts of Clinton’s press conference. Below are a set of videos that are just a sampling of what is out there.

MSNBC’s Lawrence O’Donnell made the point that Clinton’s Email “Was Not In Compliance With” State Dept. Regulations. Also not within regulations was her choice of devices, who used unauthorized iPads and iPhones according to Judicial Watch.  Clinton was apparently warned about using these devices, but did so anyway.

Not to be missed was ABC’s Job Karl nailing the big picture: Clinton decides what you see.


Overall, it appears Mrs. Clinton is in the practice of working the way that is ‘convenient’ for her regardless of protocol and then asking for forgiveness later. Sounds familiar.

DM7 small LL1885A.P. Dillon resides in the Triangle area of North Carolina and is the founder ofLadyLiberty1885.com.
Her current and past writing can also be found at IJ Review, StopCommonCoreNC.org, Watchdog Wire NC

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885) | Tagged , | 1 Comment

Pearson Is Everywhere: Spying and Student Data Privacy Edition

PearsonWelcome back to Pearson Is Everywhere!

Last time we looked at Pearson being selected to create the PISA 2018 tests.

Today, we’ll be checking out how Pearson is spying on students using social media and Pearson’s claims about student data privacy in Colorado.


 

THE SPYING

A blogger named Bob Braun obtained a copy of an email indicating that Pearson was monitoring the social media of students in New Jersey taking the Common Core PARCC test. The email was sent by Elizabeth Jewett, Superintendent of Watchung Hills Regional High school district.

Superintendent Jewett’s letter notes the NJ Dept. of Education was aware of the ‘social media monitoring’ by Pearson and  seems to infer the NJ Dept. of Education was also monitoring social media of students.

View the Superintendent’s email courtesy of Missouri Education Watchdog:

Missouri Education Watchdog’s article also has a lengthy Facebook post by Braun and documentation that Braun’s website encountered a Denial of Serve attack right around the time the story on Pearson started to go viral.  Missouri Education Watchdog also has a follow-up statement from Superintendent Jewett.

Diane Ravitch also picked up on the attack on Braun’s site.

As for myself, I noticed an article recommended to me on Facebook. It was about Pearson and Social media apps/software used to track people, companies, trends , etc.  When I clicked the link, the article had been removed:

Yeah, but I’m not an internet newbie. Cached page, baby.

See the Tracx page with graphics
See the Tracx page with text only – note the date of the article, March 14th, 2015.

This Tracx app/software isn’t mentioned in Pearson’s Social Media policy that Diane Ravitch also posted on her blog.

Some of the Pearson policy says that students sharing ‘too much information’ is a form of ‘malpractice’.  There are ‘penalties’ for violating Pearson’s social media policy, of which no parent or student has ever signed:

We have an obligation to investigate any case where there is the suggestion that you’ve acted improperly. If you are found to have broken the rules, you could face one of the following penalties:

  • a warning
  • the loss of marks for a section, component or unit
    disqualification from a unit, all units or qualifications
    a ban from sitting exams for a set period of time

Got that?
Pearson Is Watching INGSOCPearson’s “obligation” is protecting their product and bottom-line by any means necessary, including watching your child on Twitter.

Is it against the law? No.
Is it invasive at a level that is creepy and Orwellian? Yes.

Pearson has the right to track your child via social media and determine if they have violated any portion of their social media policy. Then they can punish your child and from the looks of it, your local department of education is assisting them.

Mercedes Schneider encapsulates this power Pearson has more poetically:

Those calling the testing shots hold all of the power cards. We know as much because any avenue of free choice and open communication on the part of the one with lesser power– the child– has been publicly countered by policy, legislation, litigation, and other consequences.

Their tools are bribery, threats and guilt.

Indeed; those are also the tools of the Common Core  supporters and ‘education reformers’ in general. By the way, the Smarter Balanced Test Is Spying on Children too.

THE DATA PRIVACY

In Colorado, legislators have advanced a bill to protect student data from third-party vendors — like Pearson.  According to the Coloradoan.com, Senate Bill 15-173 seeks to do four major things:

Selling student information;
Using student information for targeted advertising;
Using student information to create profiles unrelated to school purposes;
Revealing student data unless specific requirements are met.

Money quotes from Coloradoan.com:

“Really you have to question a company’s motives when they’re preying on school-age kids to make money,” said Trevor Timmons, director of technology for the Weld RE-4 School District. “Granted, I think most of them are not in that position, but this (legislation) would ensure that the companies we’re dealing with as a school district have to uphold the same restrictions that we do.”

[…]

“We are not in the business of selling personally identifiable student data or permitting its use for targeted advertising,” Pearson said in a statement to the Coloradoan. “Student data privacy is of utmost importance to Pearson. We care deeply about protecting the privacy of students, teachers and customers.”

Yes, Pearson cares so deeply student Pearson’s data privacy.


 

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The Common Core Weekend Reads – 03-15-15

Pearson Is Watching INGSOCThese are the Common Core Weekend Reads for March 15, 2015.

This is a review of the past week of news on Common Core nationwide and in North Carolina.

Articles are organized by category.

Prior Edition of Weekend Reads: 03-08-15


NC Academic Standards Review Commission (ASRC) Updates:

NC ASRC Site 
Next ASRC meeting: March 16th, 1-5 pm.

ALERT: Dr. Sandra Stotsky and Dr. James Milgram will be presenting at the March 16th meeting. If you make it to only one ASRC meeting, this one is it!

Related ASRC Articles:  

NC UPDATES:

QUOTES OF THE WEEK:

“I think there’s a legitimacy to tying (Common Core assessments and teacher evaluations) together, but process always matters,” Zimpher said. As SUNY’s representative, Zimpher said she is interested in sitting at the table to work on piecing out a plan for teacher evaluations.
Poughkeepsie Journal, 
VIDEO: SUNY Chancellor touts more funding, Common Core*

*So sayeth the SUNY Chancellor who formed “Higher Ed for Higher Standards”, a Pro-Common Core Higher-Ed shill group. Poughkeepsie Journal didn’t mention this group at all.
See: http://www.nystateofpolitics.com/2014/06/suny-chancellor-forms-pro-common-core-coalition/

*****

“​When did ESEA begin to evolve in the opposite direction of what its sponsors intended (i.e., to provide federal funds for supplementary services to poor children)? It did so when federal policy makers first required tests in the name of accountability—the conceptual catalyst for changes in ESEA’s focus. Test-based accountability came into being when the Clinton administration added the requirement of one test at each educational level (elementary, middle, and high school) in the 1994 re-authorization of ESEA.​”​
-Missouri Education Watchdog, Definition of Insanity in ESEA Re-Write

​*****
Funding for EdReports.org comes from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, which played a major role in the development and promotion of the Common Core, as well as several other philanthropic organizations, including the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation and the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust.​”
-Washington Post, New ‘Consumer Reports’ for Common Core finds learning materials lacking

 

LEGISLATIVE/LEGAL:

POLITICAL/PROTESTS:

HIGHLIGHTED ARTICLES:  Pearson Spying Edition

THE WEEKEND READS:

TESTING UPDATES:

VIDEO OF THE WEEK:

TWEETS OF THE WEEK:

 

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NC Chamber Letter Passed To ASRC By Professional Lobbyist

In case you missed it this week, The NC Chamber of Commerce sent a letter to the Co-Chairs of the Common Core Academic Standards Review Commission pushing for a Florida-like rebrand.

Co-Chair Tammy Covil replied, which prompted the NC Chamber’s Gary Salamido to play the game of trying to get the last word in by sending another letter. The second letter was a case study in condescending tunnel-vision.

Well, I took a look at the FOIA for the first letter again. It was not sent directly by Gary Salamido, but instead by a professional lobbyist name Andrew Meehan.

 The email came from an email account at “Meehan Strategy”, yet Meehan signed it at the bottom with the moniker, “Hire Standards, NC”.   “Hire Standards” is the coalition set up by the NC Chamber’s education foundation to push Common Core.

It looks like the NC Chamber is using a political/public relations strategy group to do their bidding.

Some Quick Facts About Mr. Meehan

He was a professional lobbyist for Captrat for a number of years. Records indicate he was terminated in 2014, which coincides with the formation of Meehan Strategy according to Meehan’s LinkedIn profile.
Clients included Common Core testing giant, Pearson and Bill Gates foundation backed NC New Schools. View Meehan’s Lobbyist Record with NC Secretary of State.

Meehan was paid well. The most recent “zero principal” filings in 2014 located at the NC Secretary of State showed that Meehan made $84,000 as a Pearson lobbyist via Capstrat, along with colleagues John Peterson and Anna Marshall Wilson.

Meehan and his ‘strategy’ company are also listed in BEST NC’s “2020 Vision Initiative” as a “Stakeholder participant”.  Read more about who is involved in BEST NC’s ‘initiative‘.

 

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EXCLUSIVE | Tagged , , | 1 Comment

Jeb Bush’s 2016 Strategery: Insult Millions of Parents

In New Hampshire, Jeb Bush unveiled his new ‘strategery‘: Insult millions of parents.

 

Interesting.

Mr. Bush thinks those opposing Common Core have ‘no backbone’? Let us know how that line of attack works out for you.

The Hill reported on the ‘backbone’ quote while subtly pointing out the hypocrisy in saying the Federal government should have no role, yet Common Core was federally incentivized:

Jeb Bush was defiant on Friday in defending his support for Common Core, arguing that he wouldn’t back down from his support for the education standards just because political winds have turned against him.

“You don’t abandon your core beliefs, you go try to persuade people as I’m doing now,” Bush said at a Nashua Chamber of Commerce business roundtable in New Hampshire. “I think you need to be genuine. I think you need to have a backbone.”

Bush said it was “wrong” for the federal government to offer money to states to get them to adopt Common Core, “but that doesn’t mean the standards are wrong.”

He also argued that the federal government should play no role in creating the education standards.

“Put a big iron fence around it, bury it, over and out,” Bush said.

Politico also had a bit from Bush in New Hampshire; promoting his brother’s failed Federal law, No Child Left Behind:

Jeb Common CoreWhen asked to name the biggest misconception about Common Core, he said, “That it’s a federal takeover of education.”

He then called on Congress to reauthorize No Child Left Behind, the law championed by his brother’s administration, and praised limits the law sets on the federal government’s influence over educational standards and the content of curricula.

Posted in A.P. Dillon (LL1885), Common Core, EDUCATION, ELECTIONS, GOP | Tagged , | 4 Comments