The Corrupt
Post-Secondary Context in Which Superintendent Ed Graff; Interim Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS)
Senior Academic Officer Aimee Fearing; Associate Superintendents Shawn
Harris-Berry, LaShawn Ray, Ron Wagner, and Brian Zambreno; the 22 Staff Members of the Department of
Teaching and Learning; Michael Walker and the Office of Black Student
Achievement; and Jennifer Simon and the Department of Indian Education Academically Abuse MPS
Students
Ed Graff, Aimee Fearing, Shawn
Harris-Berry, LaShawn Ray, Ron Wagner, Brian Zambreno, the 22 staff members of
the Department of Teaching and Learning, Office of Black Male Student Director
Michael Walker, and Department of Indian Education Director Jennifer Simon
abuse the students of the Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) every day their feet
hit the ground.
I have detailed the specific
culpability of this intellectually corrupt group in my 595-page book, Understanding the Minneapolis Public
Schools: Current Condition, Future
Prospect, now in circulation physically and available to readers of my blog
who scroll back to blog entries for winter-spring 2019-2020.
In Article #1 of the current series I
explained the corrupt national and state context in which officials at the
Minneapolis Public Schools dwell. The
demise of No Child Left Behind (NCLB), the ineffective bromides of the Every
Student Succeeds Act (ESSA), the cynical ruse that is the Minnesota State
Department of Education’s North Star Accountability System indicate that change
in pre-kindergarten and K-12 education will never in the United States, with
citizen mantras of local control, emanate from government at the national and
state levels. Change at the local level then
becomes the paramount goal for proponents of change, making imperative that we
jettison inept staff members now embodied by Graff, Fearing, Harris-Berry, Ray,
Wagner, Zambreno, Walker, Simon, and staff members at MPS Department of Teaching
and Learning,
Further corrupting the context in
which these errant decision makers and implementers dwell are corrupt officials
at institutions such as the University of Minnesota (UM), Hamline, Augsburg, St.
Thomas, and UM Mankato. Teacher training
mills at these institutions are cash cows that generously fill the coffers of
the ever-financially needy institutions of post-secondary education in the
United States.
Are these and the other academic
abusers of our children clueless, in denial, or outright corrupt?
They live their lives in one or more
of those conditions, yielding the same result whatever the combination: an abysmally educated citizenry and ongoing
suffering for families living at the urban core.
Given the inefficacy of national and
state officials, the intellectually corrupt ideology and vacuous pedagogy
inflicted upon prospective public school teachers and administrators by
education professors becomes the chief culprit in the system that denies a
knowledge-intensive education to our students and the citizens they become. University of Minnesota President Joan
Gabel, her predecessors, and all decision-makers at UM either look the other
way or are ignorant of the abuse heaped on those who train under education
professors in the College of Education and Human Development (CEHD). And since this is the case, post-secondary
administrators and the education professors that they tolerate become the core
culprits responsible for the abysmal level of education inflicted on our
students by the Minneapolis Public Schools and other locally centralized school
districts.
The corrupt national, state, and
post-secondary institutional context in which locally centralized school
systems dwell make imperative that we end the tenures of staff such as Ed
Graff, Aimee Fearing, Shawn Harris-Berry, LaShawn Ray, Ron Wagner, Brian
Zambreno, Michael Walker, and Jennifer Simon.
We must be strategic in working to
oust such inept officials.
The strategy must come through
persistent activism catalyzed by the wealth of detail on the corruption at the
Minneapolis Public Schools detailed in Understanding
the Minneapolis Public Schools: Current
Condition, Future Prospect and attention to the necessity of electing on 3
November 2020 Sharon El-Amin, Adriana Cerrillo, and Michael
Dueñes as new
board members willing to challenge the system that for many decades has abused
the students of the Minneapolis Public Schools.
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