Sep 16, 2017

I Will Be Taking Several Weeks to Attend to Matters In Behalf of My Mom--- Please Read Bountifully While I Am Away and Watch My Television Show Every Wednesday at 6:00 PM


Especially since my readers have become accustomed to a heavy output of articles on this blog, I want you to know that I will be traveling from Minnesota to Dallas, Texas, on Sunday, 17 September, to attend to matters in behalf of my mom and for several weeks will not be making any posts.

 

In the course of the last several weeks, I have written many articles of great pertinence to the K-12 revolution, detailing an energetic plan of action in the run-up to the school board elections in November 2018.  Please use this pause in my prolific production to read especially carefully the 25 or so most recent posts.

 

Then, for commentary and information on a great bevy of matters of relevance to K-12 education, please read as many of the 500 articles posted on this blog as possible.  I research, think through, and write every article that I post on this blog with utmost care.  Every article brings ideas and information of high interest to those with a serious interest in K-12 education.  

 

Also, for incisive commentary of the same heft and importance, tune in each week to my television show, The K-12 Revolution with Dr. Gary Marvin Davison (Wednesdays at 6:00 PM, Minneapolis Telecommunications Network [MTN] Chanel 17 in Minneapolis).  The show may be seen on television or accessed streaming in real time at the MTN website.

 

May all of you be blessed with each step you take, and in the months to come let us move forward together to bring excellent education to the precious young people of the Minneapolis Public Schools.

 

Sep 15, 2017

To Overcome Their Current Abysmal Ignorance, Juniors and Seniors Will Be Reading >Fundamentals of an Excellent Liberal Arts Education<, by Alternate Universe MPS Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison

In order to provide juniors and seniors with the knowledge that they have not received throughout the dozen or more years with which they have been inflicted with the abysmal education of the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS), these students nearing graduation will be reading Fundamentals of an Excellent Liberal Arts Education, by Alternate Universe MPS Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison.

 

This is the book that I wrote for the most immediate benefit of my students in the New Salem Educational Initiative and then, by extension, for all of those people, essentially the entire populace of the United States, who have been subjected to public education in this nation.

 

My students all come to me from the Minneapolis Public Schools.  Our relationship and my instruction then becomes a constant in their lives:  I follow them wherever they go;  many of my students have moved to other schools within MPS, others have gone to St. Paul, others to Brooklyn Park or Columbia Heights or Coon Rapids or other near suburbs, some have moved out of the Twin Cities Metro and even out of state.  I continue to provide weekly instruction to my students or, in the case of those few who move out of the state or more than 60 miles beyond Minneapolis-St. Paul, continued mentorship.  My students are all on free/ reduced price lunch, most are at the bottom of the income scale in Minnesota, and one family in particular is the poorest that I have ever encountered in my 45 years of providing education to the poorest of the poor.

 

I feel a sacred responsibility to continue to provide my students with weekly instruction, because in the two hours that they spend with me they learn more than they learn in 33 hours of class time endured in the wretched schools of Minneapolis.

 

Increasingly, students come to me on the academic trail of older siblings, so that I have known them all their lives and provided weekly instruction since they were in kindergarten.  But for those who do still come to me in, say, the third or seventh or eleventh grade, their knowledge base is nearly empty.  These academic refugees from the classrooms of the Minneapolis Public Schools typically, to provide just a few examples, do not know the following:

 

>>>>>    that the year 1776 was in the 18th century (invariably failing to recognize the significance of the year as that of the Declaration of Independence and most often incorrectly placing 1776 in the 17th or even some more inaccurate century);

 

>>>>>    that the Civil War spanned the years 1861-1865, involved a war between the Union, representing the United States of America (USA), of mostly northern states, and a Confederacy (Confederate States of America) of southern states that had declared secession from the USA;

 

>>>>>    that the Civil War was followed by a period called Reconstruction that ended with the Compromise of 1877, devolving into the Jim Crow system in which the 14th and 15th Amendments to the United States Constitution  were controverted, with the legal sanction of the Supreme Court in Plessy v. Ferguson;

 

>>>>>    any of the meanings of the terms liberal, conservative, socialist, communist, capitalist, democracy, republic, absolute monarchy, constitutional monarchy, or parliamentary system;

 

>>>>>    any sense of the identity or the defining concepts of the great psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud, the eminent behaviorist B. F. Skinner, or the influential humanist Abraham Maslow;

  

>>>>>    any sense of the identity or the defining concepts of the towering figures of science:  Copernicus, Galileo, Kepler, Newton, Darwin, Einstein;

 

>>>>>    any sense of the meaning of the economics terms GDP, recession, depression, deficit, debt, or the three great economists Adam Smith, Karl Marx, and John Maynard Keynes;

 

>>>>>    any sense of the contrasting approaches to betterment of the African American condition offered by Booker T. Washington, Marcus Garvey, and W.E.B. DuBois;

 

>>>>>    any comparative understanding of the dramatic works of Lorraine Hansberry, Arthur Miller, Tennessee Williams, August Wilson, or Ntozake Shange.

 

And so it goes.

 

…………………………………………………………………………

          

I got tired of having to give lectures on all of the terms and subject matter that would have to be understood to grasp the meaning of any reading of substance.

 

So I wrote my now nearly complete book, Fundamentals of an Excellent Liberal Arts Education, used as a text for assignments and reading with my students, a powerful tool for providing them with the education that the terrible classes of the Minneapolis Public Schools do not. 

 

My students now have firm grasp of the essentials of economics, psychology, political science, world religions, world history, American history, African American history, world and English literature, English usage, fine arts (visual and musical), mathematics, biology, chemistry, and physics;  and ancillary knowledge of an array of other social and natural sciences.

 

Younger students whom I serve as Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools are already receiving the complete benefits of the grade by grade knowledge-intensive curriculum of which I have written in articles as you scroll on down this blog.

 

Now eleventh and twelfth grade students for whom I have responsibility as Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools will be able not only to receive that same benefit in their current coursework;  they will also be able to receive what they did not receive before I took the position of Alternate Universe Superintendent and instituted the new knowledge-intensive curriculum.  They will now go across the stage at graduation to claim a piece of paper that actually signifies a high school diploma.  Their brains will be alive in the wonderful world of knowledge.  They will be fully prepared to move on to colleges, universities, or the practice of remunerative trades.  They will be culturally enriched with a knowledge-intensive education in the liberal, technological, and vocational arts;  civically prepared to vote knowledgeably or to participate actively in the political system;  and academically positioned for lives of professional satisfaction.

 

............................................................................



Within a year, this excellence of education will sweep in from the Alternate Universe to grace the lives and families of students now confined to the conventional universe of Superintendent Ed
Graff and the conventional MPS Board of Education. 



The K-12 Revolution is in motion.

 

Excellent education will soon be a reality not only for students in the Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools: 

 

Students and families now languishing in the academic miasma of the MPS conventional universe are about to peer into the brighter futures for which they have been waiting a very long time.

 

Sep 14, 2017

Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education Authorized by Alternate Universe MPS Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison, with Priority Given to Defeat of Rebecca Gagnon, Nelson Inz, and Don Samuels in November 2018 Election and Ongoing Assessment of the Jenny Arneson and Siad Ali Candidacies


As Alternate Universe MPS Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) I have authorized the formation of the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education, the first major activist initiative of which will be the defeat of Rebecca Gagnon, Nelson Inz,  and Don Samuels in the November 2018 Election.  The Committee will also be conducting an ongoing assessment of the Jenny Arneson and Siad Ali candidacies.

 

Most school reform efforts involve individuals and groups who have no clear definition of an excellent education, very little idea of what constitutes the excellent teacher, or any organizational ability to achieve change.  This is true of Michelle Rhee’s nearly moribund StudentsFirst and the Minnesota-based entities MinnCAN and Generation Next.

 

I have authorized the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education to proceed with the organization lacking in these entities, toward the recruitment of candidates for the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education who embrace my definitions of educational and teaching excellence, and the three main purposes that I have identified for K-12 education.

 

Remember, then, the following:

 

An excellent education is a matter of excellent teachers imparting a knowledge-intensive, skill-replete curriculum in the liberal, technological, and vocational arts in grade by grade sequence to students of all demographic descriptors throughout the K-12 years.

 

An excellent teacher is a professional of deep and broad knowledge, with the pedagogical ability to impart that knowledge to students of all demographic descriptors.

 

The three great purposes of an excellent K-12 education are cultural enrichment, civic preparation, and professional satisfaction.

 

                                      ……………………………………………………………………………………



Five members of the current Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education will be up for reelection in November 2018:  Rebecca Gagnon, Nelson Inz, Don Samuels, Jenny Arneson, and Siad Ali.

 

Priority will be given to the defeat of Rebecca Gagnon and Nelson Inz. 

 

By November 2018, Gagnon will have served on the MPS Board of Education for eight years.  She has served as chair of the finance committee and is currently the chair of the MPS Board of Education.  Gagnon is a master of the system as it is, with deep knowledge of public school finances, but she is deeply connected to the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers (MFT) and the Democrat-Farmer-Labor (DFL) Party. 

 

The MFT is affiliated with Education Minnesota, which invariably opposes change in K-12 education and is the most powerful lobby funding DFL politicians.  Accordingly, DFL politicians Al Franken, Amy Klobuchar, Keith Ellison, Bobby Joe Champion, and Jeff Hayden---  while better than their Republican counterparts on most issues--- are all bought and paid for on education issues, always acting as retrograde opponents of changes that could move us toward excellence in K-12 education.  Politicians of the DFL can always be counted on to do the bidding of the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers and Education Minnesota.

 

And so Gagnon also does the bidding of the MFT and Education Minnesota.  Gagnon is weak in her knowledge of pedagogy and philosophy of education.  She frequently mouths the shibboleths of the MFT and Education Minnesota.  She did the dirty work of those two entities in working to defeat Tracine Asberry in the school board elections of November 2016;  Asberry, who represented District 6, was the foremost advocate for change and the most persistent critic of the MPS administration for the district’s abysmal academic performance.   

 

Similarly, Nelson Inz is firmly connected to the MFT, Education Minnesota, and DFL establishments.  He also did the bidding of these entities by working to defeat Josh Reimnitz, who had stunned the MFT by winning without the endorsement of that organization in November 2012.  Inz endorsed the candidacy of Bob Walser, who is the silliest and most frivolous school board member I have ever witnessed, opposes objective measurement of student performance, and serves as a willing mouthpiece for the most harmful notions of the MFT, Education Minnesota, and those campus low-lifes known as education professors.

 

Don Samuels is disappointing for different reasons.  He is a member of the DFL but did not run for a seat on the school board with the endorsement of that party or with the backing of the Minneapolis Federation of Teachers.  Samuels is given to bombastic statements but is lazy in his preparation, weak on matters of educational philosophy and pedagogy, and ineffective as an agent of change.  His defeat in November 2018 is a secondary priority behind only the defeat of Gagnon and Inz;  his replacement with a candidate backed by the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education would greatly abet the journey of the Minneapolis Public Schools toward educational excellence.

 

                                      …………………………………………………………………………………………………


The Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education will also be monitoring the positions of candidates Jenny Arneson and Siad Ali.  By November 2018, Arneson will have served eight years on the MPS Board of Education;  thus, she bears much responsibility for the terrible academic performance of the district.  She is also intimately connected to the MFT, Education Minnesota, and the DFL Party.  But she was adroit in her conduct of meetings during her tenure as MPS Board of Education chair, presiding over the tumultuous gatherings covering the two-phase search for a superintendent from spring 2015 into winter2016.  There is also something in Arneson’s demeanor that gives me and the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education some hope that she can be moved to embrace our definitions of educational and teaching excellence, according to the defined purposes of K-12 education.  But that hope may prove forlorn;  if so, we will also work for the defeat of Arneson as a tertiary but definite priority.

 

The candidacy of Siad Ali is also problematic.  He is a strong advocate for the Somali community and for immigrant communities and English Language Learners in general.  He frequently engages me in conversation and seems open to my message.  But he actually works professionally for the DFL and is strongly tied to the MFT and Education Minnesota.  He must distance himself from these entities and openly embrace my definitions of educational and teaching excellence and K-12 purpose that guide the work of the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education---  or face our opposition to his candidacy in November 2018.

 

                                ……………………………………………………………………………………………….

 

Keep these identifications in view as you work with the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education to overhaul the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education in November 2018:

 

>>>>>   


Rebecca Gagnon will be running again citywide as an At-Large candidate.



Nelson Inz will be running again for the District 5 seat, geographically covering
South Minneapolis east of I-35.

 
These two are prioritized for defeat in November 2018.
 


>>>>>    Don Samuels will be running again citywide as an At-Large candidate.

 

His defeat is a secondary but definite priority, behind only the defeat of Gagnon and inz.





>>>>>   


Jenny Arneson will be running again for the District 1 seat;



Siad Ali will be running again for the District 3 seat.


These two will be given a chance to embrace our definitions of educational excellence,the purposes that we have identified for K-12 education, and the five-point program that we are advancing for bringing education excellence to the Minneapolis Public Schools;  failure to embrace these positions will result in our working for their defeat in the elections of November 2018.

 

                                     ………………………………………………………………………………………………………



The on-the-ground movement for education change that I am advancing via the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education at the level of the locally centralized school district is unprecedented in the United States.  For that matter, inasmuch as change in the United States must occur according to the nation’s stated preference for local control, our movement has no precedents in those nations that feature the best systems of public education, all of which are centralized at the national level.  

 

The K-12 Revolution in the United States will thus begin with overhaul of the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education in November 2018.

 

With the victory of candidates backed by the Committee on Knowledge-Intensive Education in that November 2018 election, we will then have a majority of members on the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education who embrace educational and teaching excellence and the great purposes of K-12 education.

 

At that point the changes that I have already made via my five-point program articulated and implemented as Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent will move into the universe of conventional reckoning, thereby transforming K-12 education in the United States.   

 

Sep 13, 2017

Associate Superintendents and Curriculum Specialists Among Those Cut by Alternate Universe MPS Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison in Paring 400 Positions at the Davis Center: Clear Focus is on Academic Achievement and Professionalized Teacher Corps

In paring  400 positions at the Davis Center (central offices of the Minneapolis Public Schools [MPS], 1250 West Broadway), I (Gary Marvin Davison) am as Alternate Universe MPS Superintendent signaling our clear focus on academic achievement with a now professionalized teaching contingent.
 
I have already indicated in a previous article that I am eliminating the Office of Black Male Achievement, the Department of Indian Education, and the Department of College and Career Readiness;   former heads of those MPS central office enclaves have been invited to apply for positions that will make better use of their skills, should they be selected to fill the newly defined positions.
 
The Davis Center will now have a greatly slimmed staff of 150 people, a major shift from the 550-650 staff members that have typically filled the halls of the building housing the MPS central bureaucracy.  Inside the new Davis Center administration, the emphasis will be on programming emanating from the Department of Academic Achievement.  Staff in this department will focus on designing knowledge- intensive, skill-replete curriculum to be implemented in grade by grade sequence throughout the K-12 years;  and the teacher training program necessary to impart such a curriculum.   As detailed in a previous article, the new curriculum will carefully observe the Minnesota Department of Education academic standards, with major reference also to grades K-6 subject area information generated by the Core Knowledge Foundation of E. D. Hirsch and by the K-12 curriculum that I detail in the August 2014 edition of Journal of the K-12 Revolution:  Essays and Research from Minneapolis, Minnesota.
 
My Davis Center staff cuts are made in the context of the greatly professionalized teaching force that will result from the rigorous new teacher training program.   Teachers will now all hold legitimate academic masters degrees and will emerge from their years of training and internship with a full grasp of the curriculum that they are to impart.  Prospective principals will be required to meet the same academic degree requirements as teachers in their buildings, so that they, too, will have a deep understanding of the new knowledge-intensive, skill-replete curriculum.
 
In this context of teacher and principal academic professionalization, we will have no one on staff bearing the titles of Curriculum Specialist or Associate Superintendent.  Teachers themselves will be masters of curricular matters.  Principals, previously mentored ineffectively by Associate Superintendents, will now meet the same rigorous academic standards as teachers, and they will serve year-long internships before gaining consideration for employment.   In their roles as site-based administrators, they will handle managerial details while recognizing great authority for professionalized teachers and Family Relationships and Resources Program staff members to assume responsibility for fulfillment of the duties for which they have been highly trained.
 
With site-based staff positions now occupied by professionalized teachers, principals, and family resource specialists, we will be reversing the previous central office- school building staff relationship:

Curriculum will be articulated and staff training will be provided by those operating at the central level;  the same rigorous, knowledge-intensive, skill replete curriculum will be implemented across the district of the Minneapolis Public Schools, according to standards and training emanating from the Davis Center.   But with common curriculum and district-wide standards clearly understood, great authority will be invested in site-based teachers, administrators, and family resource specialists to impart excellent education to students of all demographic descriptors.
 
With site-based academic and family resource staff properly trained according to standards and programs overseen by members of the Department of Academic Achievement, the greatly reduced central office staff at the Davis Center will otherwise focus on legal, financial, operational, maintenance, security, and food service matters.
 
Hence, as Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools, I am highly centralizing academic standards and staff training while then giving great authority to site-based professionals to implement our rigorous academic program.  Paring of the central bureaucracy will mean a reduction of approximately $30 million in total expenditures for Davis Center salaries, abetting my plan to increase salaries for the newly professionalized teaching force, from the current $64,000 median to a median of $85,000.
 
In implementing my five-point program of knowledge-intensity, teacher training, tutoring and academic enrichment, family relationships and resources, and reduction of the central office bureaucracy, I am signaling a clear focus on academic achievement and respect for a professionalized staff trained to provide truly excellent education to students of all demographic descriptors.   

Sep 7, 2017

Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison Initiates New Family Resources and Relationships Program, As He Pares 400 Positions at the Davis Center (MPS Central Offices, 1250 West Broadway)

As Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools, I am today initiating a new Family Resources and Relationships Program that will fulfill the fourth of my five programmatic components for carrying this iteration of the locally centralized school district toward excellence in education.  I have in the three articles that next appear in succession as you scroll on down this blog described the programmatic initiatives that I am taking for the first three components, those of

1) knowledge-intensive curriculum,  2) teacher training, and 3) academic remediation (tutoring) and enrichment.  The other two components of my program for academic excellence are 4) family resource provision and referral and 5) paring of the central bureaucracy at the Davis Center (1250 West Broadway).  The latter point will be the subject of my next article;  the former is the subject of this exposition.

 

Actually, this article also foreshadows the looming exposition on bureaucratic paring by making clear this aspect of the new Family Relationships and Resources Program:  I am forthwith eliminating 400 positions at the Davis Center while creating 350 new positions in the Family Relationships and Resources Program.

 

Only one of these new positions, bearing the title Family Relationships and Resources Coordinator, will have an office in the Davis Center;  the others will all be located at school sites, with roughly 5 positions in each of the approximately 70 schools of the district.  The prime responsibility of each of these positions, to be called Family Resource Specialists, will be to develop relationships with students at their respective school sites and with the families of those students.  These specialists will follow a sequential pattern of developing relationships with students, counseling students in the event of behavioral infractions, communicating with families as to student needs and responsibilities, developing relationships with family members in each student’s residence, and serving as resource agents for meeting the needs of families directly or with the assistance of external agencies.     

 

Both the coordinator and the specialists will be a part of the new Department of Academic Achievement, in which most Davis Center positions will now be located.  Coordinator and specialists will communicate to students and families the philosophical thrust of the school district under my leadership, with paramount focus on knowledge intensity and excellent teaching.  Those serving in the Family Relationships and Resources Program will explain to all students and parents the importance of knowledge and skill acquisition, the absolute dedication of all school staff to the provision of an excellent education according to my clear definition, our absolute dedication to the academic present and futures of our students, and our willingness to help in any way that we can to meet the needs of students and families so as to prepare every young person to receive the knowledge that we will impart.   

 

I envision a future for the Minneapolis Public Schools in which all students and families embrace and are prepared to receive the excellent education that we will be providing.  In such an atmosphere, most behavioral problems will abate, School Resource Officers will be phased out, and all focus will be directed to the accumulation of knowledge and skills delivered in grade by grade sequence throughout the K-12 years.  Students and families will be thoroughly engaged in the magnificent world of knowledge, focused on the great purposes of K-12 education (cultural enrichment, civic engagement, and professional satisfaction), thrilled with the post-secondary preparedness of our graduates, and convinced of our mutual friendship and common mission to promote the academic and therefore life success of our students, their offspring, our agents of a better world.

 

Successful programs and organizations move forward on the basis of firm prime principles.

 

I have been clear as to the philosophy that guides my programmatic initiatives. 

 

Let me further clearly offer the following:

 

I love young people.

 

I am alive in the world of knowledge.

 

I thrill at connecting the young people whom I teach to the wonderful world of knowledge.

 

I believe in ethical conduct, modeling ethical conduct, and nurturing young people and adults so that they act in ethical and loving ways.

 

These principles will suffuse the Family Relationships and Resources Program and all aspects of the Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools. 

 

In the months to come, the Alternate Universe MPS Family Relationships and Resources Program and the other initiatives that I have articulated will via the K-12 Revolution supplant the innervated structures now crumbling around conventional MPS Superintendent Ed Graff and the conventional MPS Board of Education.  

 

Sep 6, 2017

Aggressive New Skill Remediation (Tutoring) and Academic Enrichment Program Inaugurated by Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison


Students for whom I have responsibility as the Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools will progress in the K-5 years through a sequence of skills in math and reading that I have identified for grade by grade acquisition in the August 2014 edition of Journal of the K-5 Revolution: Essays and Research from Minneapolis, Minnesota, summarized in detail as you scroll on down to the immediately following articles on this blog;  the skills identified for acquisition are identified with careful attention to Minnesota state academic standards and with curriculum generated by the Core Knowledge Foundation.

 

In math during the K-5 years, students need to progress through skill acquisition that includes pre-math positional terms (up, down, under, over, and the like), time telling (analog and digital), units of money, the four basic operations (addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division), fractions, decimals, percentages, ratios, proportions, data representation (graphs, charts, tables), and introductions to geometry and algebra.


In reading during the K-5 years, students need to progress through alphabet recognition, phonemic awareness, vocabulary of ascending syllables and degrees of abstraction, sentence construction and recognition, paragraph construction and comprehension (with use and understanding of topic sentences), and reading of a variety of fictional and nonfictional works of thematic variety and topical diversity, allowing for an expanding and ever-richer vocabulary.

One hour a day will be set aside for K-5 students to work on enrichment activities connected to the skill level that each student is manifesting:

For students who have mastered grade level skills, this will mean working on advanced material that challenges students to solve intriguing math problems or read for the enhancement of literary appreciation or knowledge acquisition.

For students who are lagging below grade level, this will mean working one on one with a well-trained tutor until the necessary math and reading skills are acquired.   Work with a tutor should be viewed as an opportunity to master important math skills and to read an array of interesting and high quality fictional and nonfictional material.  Students should receive positive feedback for progress made;  tutors should convey a sense of joy in learning and delight in the opportunity to spend time with the young person.


Over time, most struggling students will gain the basic skills that they need in the course of remediation during the K-5 years.  But tutoring will most certainly continue at the middle school (grades 6-8) and high school (grades 9-12 levels) also, and at those levels the new rigorous curriculum that we are implementing will provide the enrichment opportunities manifest in subject area specialized courses, Advanced Placement, and the array of world languages that will be available in the curriculum that I have detailed.   Via continued skill remediation and the rigorous and engaging curriculum, students will ascend to academic challenges either for mastery at grade level or advancement from already secured grade level position.


Except for those facing particularly severe learning challenges, all students will be provided masterful instruction in Advanced Placement courses;  they will conduct research, engage in specialized study of topics of driving interest, and gain training of the type needed for success on ACT and SAT exams.  For those students who do face particularly elevated learning challenges, standards will be high and encouragement will abound for these students to reach their maximum learning potential in our knowledge-intensive, skill-replete curriculum.   


The programs for skill and knowledge enhancement will under my leadership as Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools be administered in the spirit of challenging students to know all that they can know and to become all that they can be.


Such a program of academic remediation and enrichment will necessitate well-trained teachers of the type that I have specified in my academic journal and in articles as you scroll on down this blog. 

The program will also require a great increase in the number of tutors and very careful training of these tutors.

An aggressive program of volunteer solicitation will secure high quality talent among college students, workaday professionals, and academically astute and pedagogically adept parents and retirees.  We will train and integrate any tutors that have come to us from the conventional universe via Generation Next, Community Volunteers, Elementary Literacy Tutor Program, Adult Education Volunteers, Math Corps, Reading Corps, City of Lakes Americorps, and VISTA. 

 

But expansion of professional staff hired for the express purpose of tutoring will also be necessary.

Academic enrichment (advanced and remedial) will be a budgetary priority of the Minneapolis Public Schools.

 

This will make the dramatic central bureaucratic paring that I have indicated as a priority all the more imperative.

 

………………………………………………………………………………………….

 

As in the case of the knowledge-intensive curriculum and teacher training discussed in the next articles on this blog, I will be swiftly and efficiently implementing the skill remediation and enrichment programs as Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools.  I and my Alternate Universe MPS Board of Education will in doing this be preparing for that time in the months to come that we supplant conventional universe MPS Superintendent Ed Graff and the conventional universe MPS Board of Education, providing the vision and the leadership that these ineffective non-decision-makers have failed to provide.    

 

Sep 5, 2017

Professional Development Terminated in Favor of Rigorous Teacher Training Under the Leadership of Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison

Professional Development, as that weak feature of locally centralized schools district has been known, is now terminated under my (Gary Marvin Davison) leadership as Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS).
 
In accord with my five-point program to bring excellent education to the Minneapolis Public Schools, we will now acknowledge that the training received by prospective teachers in departments, schools, and colleges of education is woefully inadequate.  We recognize that K-5 teachers arrive severely unprepared to deliver knowledge-intensive curriculum to MPS students.  We further observe that teachers of students in grades 6-8 and 9-12 lack the necessary field specialization to impart knowledge-intensive curriculum at the secondary level, so that requirements for teachers at those levels have been greatly upgraded.
 
Under my leadership, we will be delivering the same curriculum to all students during the K-5 years, also providing during those years daily hour-long sessions giving opportunities to explore personal interests and to meet personal needs via academic enrichment and remediation (tutoring) as appropriate.  During their K-5 years, students will amass strong knowledge sets in the liberal arts areas of mathematics, natural science, history, economics, psychology, high quality literature across the world and of many ethnicities, and fine arts across a similar human spectrum.  All K-5 students will equitably be the beneficiaries of the same rigorous curriculum while also having the opportunities provided in daily hour-long sessions for exploring personal interests and to meet personal needs via academic enrichment and remediation (tutoring) as appropriate.   Curriculum pertaining to the K-5 years will logically extend into the grades 6-8 and 9-12 years, with expanding opportunities for specialized knowledge and skill acquisition in the liberal, technological, and vocational arts.
 
This rigorous curriculum will require knowledgeable teaching contingents at all levels. 
 
Master’s degrees in departments, colleges, and schools of education will no longer be accepted. 
 
Instead, K-5 teachers will now all be required to earn a Masters of Liberal Arts degree articulated and overseen by myself and my staff in the Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools.  We will invite professors in the fields of mathematics, biology, chemistry, physics, history, political science, psychology, literature, music, and visual arts to provide one full academic year of instruction to all teachers aspiring to teach K-5 students.  Sessions for each subject are will last two to six weeks, depending on the temporal demand for field mastery.  Prospective K-5 teachers will master fundamental college level biology, chemistry, physics, world history, American (by definition including general and ethnically specific) history, English and world literature, music theory and history, visual art practice and history, and mathematics through calculus.
 
Prospective K-5 teachers will thus devote an entire academic year running 33 weeks of actual instructional time (allowing for holidays and short breaks), at the end of which they will be tested for mastery in the given fields.  Upon successful completion of exams, prospective K-5 teachers will then research and write a 50-page or more master’s thesis on a topic in a field of their option, under the guidance of an appropriate professorial expert.  Upon successful completion of the master’s degree, all K-5 teachers will then serve a full academic year internship working under the best experienced teachers available;  realistically, not all professionals under whom prospective K-5 teachers serve will be master teachers, but I and my staff will be making frequent observations in all classrooms and offering advice and resources for maximizing the quality of the internship experience.
 
As in the case of prospective K-5 teachers, master’s degrees in departments, colleges, and schools of education will no longer be accepted for teachers proposing to teach at the grades 6-8 and grades 9-12 levels.  Teachers at these levels must earn a field-appropriate master’s degree in a college or university department such as mathematics, economics, English, music, or fine arts.   Prospective grades 6-8 and grades 9-12 teachers will upon earning their field-specific master’s degree then serve a full academic year internship in the manner of prospective K-5 teachers.
 
Only after successful completion of these rigorous master’s degree programs and a full academic year of internship will prospective teachers be evaluated for employment in the Minneapolis Public Schools.
 
The newly academically professionalized teaching force of the Minneapolis Public Schools will thenceforth be given sabbatical and research opportunities in the manner of college and university professors, along with temporal space to meet with colleagues for discussion of matters pertinent to subject area knowledge and pedagogy.
 
The new Alternate Minneapolis Public Schools system of teacher training will be introduced during this academic year of 2017-2018, with requirements applying to all prospective teachers from academic year 2018-2017 forward.
 
In time, we will bring this professionalized teacher training program into the conventional universe of the Minneapolis Public Schools, via the force of the K-12 Revolution.

Sep 4, 2017

Alternate Universe MPS Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison Sets Clear Philosophical Direction for the Minneapolis Public Schools

In accordance with the five-point program that I (Gary Marvin Davison) have established in my role as Alternate Universe Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools, I have set a clear philosophical direction for this school district.

 

Remember that members of the Alternate Universe Board of Education and I will be operating from a philosophical stance that defines an excellent education, the excellent teacher, and the purposes of K-12 education   as follows:

 

An excellent education is a matter of excellent teachers imparting a knowledge-intensive, skill-replete curriculum in the liberal, technological, and vocational arts in grade by grade sequence to students of all demographic descriptors throughout the K-12 years.

 

An excellent teacher is a professional of deep and broad knowledge with the pedagogical ability to impart that knowledge to students of all demographic descriptors.

 

The three major purposes of an excellent K-12 education are cultural enrichment, civic preparation, and professional satisfaction.

 

Thus, all staff and community members should understand that the Minneapolis Public Schools constitutes a locally centralized school district that considers the duty of providing students with a knowledge-intensive education to be paramount.  All other considerations must serve that ultimate goal.  We want our students to go forth across the stage at graduation with brains full of knowledge in the liberal arts areas of mathematics, natural science, history, economics, psychology, high quality literature across the world and of many ethnicities, and fine arts across a similar human spectrum.

 

We will deliver the same curriculum to all students during the K-5 years, also providing during those years daily hour-long sessions giving opportunities to explore personal interests and to meet personal needs via academic enrichment and remediation (tutoring) as appropriate.

 

During the grades 6-8 and 9-12 years, students will continue to receive the same rigorous and engaging curriculum in the liberal arts areas given above.  All students will continue to be challenged and engaged with curriculum in the areas of mathematics, natural science, history, economics, psychology, high quality literature across the world and of many ethnicities, and fine arts across a similar human spectrum.  All students except for those facing truly unusual learning challenges will prepare throughout their years in the Minneapolis Public Schools to study through to Advanced Placement Calculus, Biology, Physics, English, World History, and American History.  And expectations for those students facing significant learning challenges will also be very high.

 

At the grades 6-8 and especially at the grades 9-12 levels, there will be abundant opportunities for students to take specialized courses in the given liberal arts areas, world languages, other social sciences, the technological arts, and the vocational arts.  Thus, in addition to mastering the same rigorous curriculum, students will have a range of electives in courses such as Chinese and other Asian History and Literature, Latin American History and Literature, African American History and Literature, and Native American history and Literature, and language courses in Spanish, French, German, Chinese, Japanese, and Arabic.  They may opt for courses such as computer technology and design, graphic arts, auto mechanics, welding, and plumbing.  Given the now prevailing circumstance that students at all levels K-12 will be given a knowledge-intensive education, students will be well prepared to continue a commonly challenging curriculum  and to meet personal interests via enrichment experiences at K-5 and specialized course at grades 6-8 and grades 9-12.

 

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According to the philosophical direction of the Minneapolis Public Schools as articulated by alternate Universe Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison, there will be no reference to shibboleths common to education professors and those members of the education establishment whose intellects they have demeaned.  There will be, for example, no reference to critical thinking, lifelong learning, and social and emotional learning.  The latter will be assumed and subsumed in our five-point program for knowledge-intensive, skill-intensive replete curriculum;  knowledge-intensive  teacher training;  academic enrichment and remediation;  outreach to families of all demographic descriptors;  and great trimming of the central bureaucracy at the Davis Center (1250 West Broadway).  Critical analysis, love of learning, and deep respect for all  human beings will be embedded deeply in our system and culture, rather than mouthed as mere excuses for failure to provide an excellent education.

 

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Knowledge attainment will be our paramount goal in the Alternate Universe Minneapolis Public Schools led by Superintendent Gary Marvin Davison.  This is the philosophical clarity that you will never get from MPS Superintendent Ed Graff in the conventional universe but that you will get from me, time after time.