I have become
fascinated by the World’s Best Workforce (WBWF) committee of the Minneapolis
Public Schools (MPS) and the motivations of constituent members. The Davis Center connection for the World’s
Best Workforce committee is the staff of Chief Eric Moore in the MPS Department
of Research, Evaluation, Assessment, and Accountability. This is an ironic association, given that
Moore’s department is one of the few bright lights of this struggling school
district: The membership of the
committee is not as impressive as Moore and his staff.
The WBWF committee is
chaired by Victoria Balko, whose children attend schools in the Robbinsdale
district: In a conversation that I had
with her back at a winter meeting of the committee, Balko indicated to me that
her motivation for serving on this committee was to address the flaws at the
Minneapolis Public Schools that induced her to send her own children elsewhere.
But
Balko is a mediocrity, overseeing a committee membership of like quality. This
committee has potential to be the academic committee that is a puzzling
omission among those that abide at the Minneapolis Public Schools, given that
academics constitutes the core mission of any locally centralized school
district. With the tentative exception
of Co-Chair David Weingartner, though, I am not impressed with the committee. But the potential for academic advocacy
abides in the World’s Best Workforce Committee if a membership upgrade could replace
the meager preparation and analytical ability of current World's Best
Workforce participants.
During the 2017-2018 Academic
Year, the composition of the WBWF/2020 Advisory Committee was as follows:
The 2017-2018 MPS WBWF Advisory Committee
Co-Chairs:
Victoria Balko
David Weingartner
Members:
Sheri Beck
Elizabeth Campbell
Kimberly Caprini
Peggy Calrk
Erin Clotfelter
Lynne Crockett
Kenneth Eban
Sara Etzell
Graham Hartley
Tara Kennedy
Greg King
Margaret Richardson
Collin Robinson
Julie Sabo
Elizabeth Short
Heather Walker
Deacon Walker
Liaisons:
Kim Ellison --- Board Liaison
Jennie Zumbusch --- Staff Liaison
In Part One:
Facts, I included a complete copy of a letter that this group sent to
Superintendent Ed Graff as an annual report that focused on the draft then
available of the MPS Comprehensive Design.
The letter and the report are rambling, philosophically inconsistent,
and maladroit in making substantive recommendations for improving the academic
program at the Minneapolis Pubic Schools.
…………………………………………………………………………....
At a meeting of this committee on 24 April
2019, teachers Stephanie Bales, Tara Ferguson, Hillary Klick, Paul Klym,
Nahfeesah Muhammad, and Sharon Rush manifested deep compassion and refreshing
candor, despite the minimal competence of chair Victoria Balko and other
members. The meeting was ill-run by Balko but was
ultimately surprisingly good due to the participation of these teachers who are
clearly dedicated and refreshingly candid concerning the deficiencies of
academic leadership at the Minneapolis Public Schools that leaves classroom
teachers of reading, literacy, and English needing to make things up as they go
along.
Participants included the following:
Stephanie
Bales (Kindergarten Developmental Dual Language Teacher, Andersen
Elementary)
Tara
Ferguson (English 10 and International Baccalaureate Teacher, Edison High
School)
Kathy
Gretsch (Literacy Specialist, Andersen Elementary)
Hillary
Klick (Reading Teacher, Northeast Middle School)
Paul Klym
(Career Development Coordinator, Career and Technical Education)
Nahfeesah
Muhammad (English Teacher, North High School)
Sharon
Rush (English/Reading Teacher, South High School)
Gretsch
gave appearance of Davis Center (MPS central offices, 1250 West Broadway)
connections that have obscured her ability to bear witness to the deep academic
failures of the Minneapolis Public Schools.
Her comments were murky and full of jargon.
But Bales,
Ferguson, Klick, Klym, Muhammad, and Rush manifested deep compassion for their
students and spoke with refreshing candor concerning the deficiencies of
academic leadership at the Minneapolis Public Schools that leaves classroom
teachers of reading, literacy, and English needing to make things up as they go
along.
This dedicated group
of teachers triumphed over Balko’s minimal competence: They presented a vision of what the
Minneapolis Public Schools could be if curriculum were to be overhauled for
knowledge intensity and teachers were trained to deliver such a curriculum. Increasing reading ability of students is a
matter of giving students grounding in phonics and phonemic awareness at preK
through first grade, then imparting a broad liberal arts curriculum emphasizing
history, government, economics, psychology, mathematics, literature, English
composition, and the fine arts throughout the preK-12 years (with abundant
career and technical options introduced during middle school and high school).
Despite the
questionable constituency of the MPS World’s
Best Workforce Committee and the failures of academic leadership at the Davis
Center, the elevated intellectual and moral quality of teachers Stephanie
Bales, Tara Ferguson, Hillary Klick, Paul Klym, Nahfeesah Muhammad, and Sharon
Rush provides evidence of a core of teachers ready and able to make the
improvements needed to bring knowledge-intensive, skill-replete curriculum to
students at the Minneapolis Public Schools.
…………………………………………………………………………………………
The
World’s Best Workforce Committee saliently symbolizes the low quality of public
participation in matters pertinent to preK-12 education. Citizens have the same lack of historical and
philosophical grounding as is the case with members of the Minneapolis Public
Schools Board of Education. They are
susceptible to the frequently feel-good, pseudo-culturally-sensitive jargon fed
to them by administrators and teachers who themselves have not thought very
deeply into educational philosophy and have poor historical grounding--- but can at length and with great frequency
spout the verbiage imbibed from education professors.
Citizen
participation in processes pertinent to preK-12 education tends to be
episodic: People show up when a reading
curriculum is found to have certain elements that can be construed as racist; when cops in the schools become an
issue; or when some shift in
transportation, grade alignment, or location of programming affects the school
of the person’s own child. There is very
little concern for the Minneapolis Public Schools as a whole, for children
beyond one’s own. When citizens do
commit to participate in some longer term or ongoing endeavor, such as those on
the World’s Best Workforce Committee, views expressed are ill-researched and
tend to parrot rhetoric currently in the conversational ether or, ironically,
the jargon of the very education establishment that is in grave need of
overhaul.
Inasmuch
as the overhaul needed at the Minneapolis Public Schools and other locally
centralized school districts cannot be led by those of the education establishment
comprised of education professors and those they have ruined, citizens are
going to have to become better informed.
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