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.