Feb 28, 2023

The Power of K-12 Education to Elevate the Human Experience

Humankind is very young. 

 

The universe banged into existence almost 14 billion years ago, expanding in those processes that created the earth almost 10 billion years later.  Simple cells took life comparatively quickly, just under a billion years after the earth formed, but not until 500 million years ago did fish swim in the sea.  Amphibians crawled onto the earth about 360 million years ago, and reptiles roamed some 60 million years after that;  then about 200 million years ago mammals moved across the surface of this planet.  Birds flew across the skies at about 150 millions years ago, and flowers bloomed some 20 million years thereafter.  But not until 60 million years ago did the earth know primates, and the Great Apes did not make their terrestrial entrance until another 40 million years had transpired.  

 

Not until 2.5 million years ago---  tens of millions of years after the appearance of those Great Apes---  did creatures of the genus homo appear, and life ensued another million years before representatives of that genus walked upright.  Our more immediate progenitors, of the genus homo and the species sapiens, trod the expanses of East Africa for the first time only about 200 thousand years counting backward from this year of 2023.

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

 

So we are very young. 

 

No wonder that we’ve made so many mistakes in this trial and error of a process called life.  We are, as the Lord Hamlet tells us, “a work of art,” “noble in reason,” “infinite in faculty.”  But we are still learning how to shape ourselves into the works of art that will make us worthy as the “paragons of the world,” to use our reason for creating conditions of peace, to call upon our faculties to be all that in our enormous potential we can be.

 

We have been so cruel to each other.

 

Even as we created marvelous works of early civilization---  the Pyramids of Egypt, the Hanging Gardens of Babylon, the Great Wall of China, the temple complex at Angkor Wat, the Colossus of Rhodes, the aqueducts of Rome---  we beat up on each other, calling Alexander and others “Great” for doing so. 

 

Even as we asked searching questions and as compassionate thinkers conceived of philosopher kings, enlightened beings, a King of Peace, we---   those same beings---  slaughtered each other by the millions.  We fell before the legions of Caesar, the armies of the Great Khan, the banners of white and red roses, the marauders of the Aztec empire, the invaders of European colonizers, the ship captains of the Middle Passage, the despotic purveyors of genocide in Germany and Cambodia, the lynchers posing as citizens in what otherwise we have claimed to be the greatest democracy on earth.  

 

But we have also done much good.

 

We have created alphabets, aesthetically pleasing written characters, presses that produce books.  We have imagined ourselves at our best---   in prayer, meditation, and good works.  We have made peace after war and established institutions for promoting human understanding.  We have sought the truth of earth’s place among the planets, revealed the laws that govern motion and light and sound, discovered the relativity of time in space.  We have probed the depths of our own mental processes and built machines that see into our very brains.  We have made such technological advances that at any instant in this year of 2023 we can call forth facts on any given subject of our whim.  We communicate with our fellows in a multiplicity of ways.

 

Now we must learn to communicate with as much quality as we do quantity.

 

We must go to work on ourselves.

 

We do that through education. 

 

Any worthy endeavor begins in one place and spreads to others.  So let us make Minneapolis the place and the curriculum presented herein the basis for creating a more culturally enriched, civically engaged, professionally satisfied human being:

 

When people have a thorough knowledge of mathematics, they think more logically and reason with greater acuity. 

 

When people have read the works of literary masters, their neural pathways are alive with rhythms, symbols, and ideas that elevate the quality of their own thoughts and the beauty of their personal expression. 

 

When people command a thorough understanding of history;  and evaluate the actions of the human past in the manner of its wisest philosophers, theologians, and religious teachers;  they have a much stronger sense of what is right and what is wrong among behavioral options. 

 

When women and men have a thorough grasp of the natural sciences, they are better able to live with a sense of appreciation and wonder at the sheer majesty of the universe, the celestial bodies, the earth, human beings themselves. 

 

And when people come to understand the beauty, insight, and imagination embodied in the works of great painters, sculptors, architects, and musicians, they glimpse into the art forms that they themselves can be.

 

Let us make of ourselves works of artistic beauty through the power of education.  Let us understand the religion of the other, the psychological motivations of our fellows, the history that may give evidence of misunderstanding, discord, and separation but that we can use to comprehend, to empathize, to unite.

 

Through the power of education we can know ourselves more thoroughly and walk more confidently into any arena of life:

 

We are culturally enriched, so we have a depth of appreciation for the artistry of humanity anywhere we go. 

 

We are civically prepared, so we understand the nature of citizenship, and we dedicate ourselves to actions that improve our individual lives and the circumstances of our fellow human beings. 

 

And because our brains are filled with knowledge and skills in magnificent array, we walk confidently and adeptly into the workplace with results that contribute to our personal wealth, the material wellbeing of our natal families, and the economic advancement of our society.

 

If we create ethically better and economically more prosperous people in Minneapolis

by revolutionizing K-12 education, our approach to curriculum moves centrifugally into other places where K-12 education is imparted.  So do movements grow, ideas spread, and a revolution change the very basis of the way we live our lives.

 

By creating the well-rounded individual, alive in the world of knowledge and anchored in a firm sense of the ethical, we establish that paragon toward which others cast an upward gaze.  What once was local becomes national, then international, and as people across the world become well-educated, the terror that haunts too many human beings in their one chance on earth ends and existence worthy to be called “life” begins.

 

We do this by believing in the potential of every single human being. 

 

We do this by enriching with knowledge the brain of every student in the Minneapolis Public Schools. 

 

When we send young people forth thusly into the world, brains buzzing with information, bodies bursting with intellectual and physical vitality, we maximize the chances that these precious specimens of humanity will live happily, respect their fellows, and make high-quality contributions to the local and national economies. 

 

High school graduates will be prepared to matriculate at and graduate from the best colleges and universities in the land, even as some of them opt for the training available in practical skills pertinent to the vital trades on which so many of our contemporary lives depend.  Whatever postsecondary training these young people pursue, they will share a rich knowledge base that will serve as their basis for mutual understanding, engaged citizenship, and confident interaction wherever their paths cross.

 

These will be young people prepared to live life to the fullest, and to lead humanity in the creation of a much better world.

 

When we send young people forth thusly into the world, brains buzzing with information, bodies bursting with intellectual and physical vitality, we maximize the chances that these precious specimens of humanity will live happily, respect their fellows, and make high-quality contributions to the local and national economies.  They will be prepared to matriculate at and graduate from the best colleges and universities in the land, even as some of them opt for the training available in practical skills pertinent to the vital trades on which so many of our contemporary lives depend.  Whatever postsecondary training these young people pursue, they will share a rich knowledge base that will serve as their basis for mutual understanding, engaged citizenship, and confident interaction wherever their paths cross.

 

These will be young people prepared to live life to the fullest, and to lead humanity in the creation of a much better world. When we send young people forth thusly into the world, brains buzzing with information, bodies bursting with intellectual and physical vitality, we maximize the chances that these precious specimens of humanity will live happily, respect their fellows, and make high-quality contributions to the local and national economies.  They will be prepared to matriculate at and graduate from the best colleges and universities in the land, even as some of them opt for the training available in practical skills pertinent to the vital trades on which so many of our contemporary lives depend.  Whatever postsecondary training these young people pursue, they will share a rich knowledge base that will serve as their basis for mutual understanding, engaged citizenship, and confident interaction wherever their paths cross.

 

These will be young people prepared to live life to the fullest, and to lead humanity in the creation of a just, empathic, compassionate, world full of human beings embracing the full potential of Life on this one earthly sojourn.

 

Thus will our Supreme Gift to the world be these precious specimens of humanity, exemplars of the Good, our treasured young people who themselves have received the gift of an exquisite life experience through the power of education.

 

Feb 24, 2023

Books Read Since Autumn 2022 >>>>> An Indication of the Knowledge that Underpins My Work as Teacher, Activist, and K-12 Revolutionary

I have been on a lifelong quest for knowledge that gains acceleration with each passing day.

Having such a deep and broad knowledge base allows me to provide information to my students in the New Salem Educational Initiative whenever the need arises in any subject for grades spanning preK-12 and university at both undergraduate and graduate levels.

The following represents the reading that I have done from autumn 2022 onward.  Such reading occupies just a part of my daily activity, which typically begins at 6:00 AM and concludes at 12:00 midnight.  On most days, including weekdays and Sundays from afternoon into the evening, I teach three or four academic sessions, after spending mornings in reading, research and writing.

All of this knowledge and teaching provides extraordinary weight and ballast for my work on the second edition of Understanding the Minneapolis Public Schools:  Current Condition, Future Prospect and for my advocacy for knowledge-intensive, skill-replete education at the Minneapolis Public Schools.

Perpend  >>>>>

Books Read Since Autumn 2022

  

Books on Taiwan or Pertinent to the Brutality of the People’s Republic of China Under Xi Jinping

Shelley Rigger, The Tiger Leading the Dragon:  How Taiwan Propelled China’s Economic Rise (London:  Rowman and Littlefield, 2021)

>>>>>   Makes a convincing case that Taiwan’s investment in the People’s Republic of China during the early 2000s was a prime determinant of the latter nation’s rapid economic rise.

Shelley Rigger, Why Taiwan Matters:  Small Island, Global Powerhouse (London:  Rowman and Littlefield, 2011)

>>>>>   Provides an excellent, up-to-date summary of Taiwan’s past and present;  but typically uncourageous in stating the frank case of and for independence.

Vern Sneider, A Pail of Oysters (Manchester, United Kingdom:  Camphor Press, 1953)

A novel that, like George Kerr’s Formosa Betrayed, found a publisher only with great difficulty and got tremendous push-back in the era of the China Lobby and McCarthyism;  focuses on an engaging cast of characters who ran afoul of the Guomindang in the early 1950s and on an American journalist who gradually grasped the intensity of the brutality.

George H. Kerr, Formosa Betrayed (Manchester, United Kingdom:  Camphor Press, 1965/1997)

>>>>>   A seething but fact-laden account of the brutality of the Guomindang during and after the February 28th Incident--  and the culpability of the United States in backing Chiang Kai-shek’s regime.

Peng Ming-min, A Taste of Freedom:  Memoirs of a Taiwanese Independence Leader (Manchester, United Kingdom:  Camphor Press, 1971/1998)

>>>>>   Another book that found difficulty in finding publication and a fascinating assertion of the case for Taiwan’s independence by a Taiwanese Presbyterian from extreme southern Taiwan who came to the United States upon release from prison and then returned to run as the first Democratic Progressive Party (DPP) candidate in a free presidential election, against Lee Teng-hui in 1996.

Sean R. Roberts, The War on the Uyghurs:  China’s Internal Campaign Against a Muslim Minority (Princeton and Oxford:  Princeton University Press, 2020)

>>>>>   This is a magnificent, fact-heavy book that provides much historical background on the Uyghurs, details shifts in policy over time, and ultimately exposes the genocidal policies of the Xi Jinping regime.

Michael Van Walt Van Praag and Miek Boltjes, Tibet Brief 20/20:  Rights, Legal Status, History, State Responsibility, Sovereignty (New York:  Outskirts Press, 2020)

>>>>>   Unrelenting as with the Roberts book on the Uyghurs, this is also an invaluable tutorial of international law as pertains to the nation state.

Books Pertinent to My Waging of the K-12 Revolution

John Kukla, Patrick Henry:  Lion of Liberty (New York:  Simon and Schuster, 2017)

>>>>>     This one might otherwise be placed in the category of my quest for historical and multisubject knowledge, but I was specifically impelled to read this volume when the Minneapolis Public Schools Board of Education voted to approve a committee that will submit names to replace the appellation for Patrick Henry High School in North Minneapolis;  reinforced my view of Henry that is similar to that I hold of Thomas Jefferson and James Madison, brilliant architects of republican democracy who knew that slavery was wrong but took a pragmatic view of their personal economic wherewithal and never released their human bondspersons.

Natalie Wexler, The Knowledge Gap:  The Hidden Cause of America’s Broken Education System---  and How to Fix It (New York:  Avery/Penguin Random House, 2019)

>>>>>   An application of the ideas of E. D. Hirsch specifically to reading skill acquisition, in the context of advocacy for the “Science of Reading” that is now all the buzz;  read this twice before going with my new bestest buddies at the Minneapolis Public Schools to attend a conference based on a  knowledge-intense, fundamentals-plus-subject area, information-heavy approach:  the author of the work of note spoke, as did Science of Reading podcaster Susan Lambert, at the conference.

Muhammad Khalifa, Culturally Responsive School Leadership (Cambridge, Massachusetts:  Harvard Education Press, 2018) 

>>>>>   A terrible, education-professor-jargon-infested work that does the noble theme no favors for its intellectual vacuity.  The assertions made in this book have slim evidential backing, many of them made on the basis of observations at an academically insubstantial alternative school that no longer exists.

Books Pertinent to My Quest for Historical and Multi-Subject Knowledge

Nikole Hannah-Jones, Caitlin Roper, Ilena Silverman, and Jake Silverstein, eds., The 1619 Project

(New York:  One World/The New York Times Company, 2021)

>>>>>   Flawed as a work of history but a needed addition to the history of the African American experience in the United States;  this is the work that has caused such a stir nationally, especially among proponents of Critical Race Theory (CRT) and those for whom CRT is a matter of fear and loathing. 

Nafissa Thompson-Spires, Heads of the Colored People (New York:  37Ink/Atria/Simon and Schuster, 2018)

>>>>>   Thompson-Spires authors a short story included in the Nikole Hannah-Jones, et al, work noted above;  and offers here a riveting set of short stories that in many cases is an explication of the difficulty that middle class African Americans have in finding a place in an American society that is neither middle class white nor urban core Black.  I have begun an energetic email correspondence with Thompson-Spires, who is a professor at Cornell University.

Christopher Daniell, A Traveller’s History of England (New York:  Interlink Books, 1991)

>>>>>   Plucked this one, long viewed as a planned read, off my personal library shelf;  added a bit to my knowledge of the history of England (emphasized but also necessarily with reference to Scotland, Wales, and Ireland).

Books That Have Been Made Into Movies I’ve Seen

Honore de Balzac, A. J. Krailsheimer, transl., Pere Goriot (Oxford:  Oxford University Press, 1991, reissued 1999 and 2009 as Oxford World’s Classics Paperback)

>>>>>   Read this one after Barbara and I saw the cinematic Lost Illusions; will also be reading the latter work and Balzac’s Eugenie Grandet.  The latter work and Pere Goriot are volumes listed from Balzac’s prolific novelistic output that appear in a book that I have that reviews the key literary masterpieces of mostly Western authors.   Pere Goriot is an intriguing look at the pretentions of aristocratic Parisian society while examining the poignant circumstances of the 69 year-old namesake character, a former vermicelli (yes, that particular pasta) merchant whose self-made fortune is squandered on supporting two society-ascending aspirant daughters who by novel’s end have treated they daddy in manner much in the fashion of Goneril and Regan in King Lear

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Books Read Very Recently

Reading the first two of the following books are part of my ongoing effort to gain a comprehensive understanding of Native American history specifically and a broad grasp of the entirety of American and United States history  >>>>>

Daniel J. Silverman, This Land Is Your Land:  The Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the Trouble History of Thanksgiving (New York:  Bloomsbury Publishing, 2020)

This is a very scholarly rendering of the facts pertinent to the meal shared by certain members of the Wampanoag people and protestant colonists from Great Britain in autumn 1621.  

Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, An Indigenous History of the United States Land Is Your Land:  The Wampanoag Indians, Plymouth Colony, and the Trouble History of Thanksgiving (Boston:  Beacon Press,  Publishing, 2014)

Dunbar provides a fact-laden alternative to conventional renderings of American and United States history.  

John Goudsblom, Fire and Civilization (London:  The Penguin Press, 1992)               

Goudsblom traces the impact of fire on humanity, from discovery of how to produce fire through the human uses of and experiences with fire over the centuries.                                                                                                                        

Books Read This Week

I have given particular attention to East and Southeast Asian of late, refreshing and updating my knowledge of the histories of the region  >>>>>

Patricia Buckley Ebrey, The Cambridge Illustrated History of China [Third Edition] (Cambridge:  Cambridge University Press, 2023)

Ebrey has been a major force in Sinology since YSM and I were in graduate school at the University of Iowa in the late 1970s;  she eventually made her career at the University of Washington as a specialist is gender and cultural issues while also writing admirable generalist tomes.  Her first edition of the indicated work was written thirty years ago.

Xiaobing Li, The History of Taiwan [Greenwood Histories of the Modern Nations Series] (Santa Barbara, CA:  Greenwood Press/ABC-CLIO, 2019)

The Li book is quite a discovery, good enough as another concise update on Taiwanese history but even more as a work among sixty-four (64) such books in a Greenwood Histories of the Modern Nations Series about which I had not known until my poking around landed the Xiaobing Li catch.  I already have on order the comparable works on Korea and Somalia and project that these books, at approximately 250 pages each, will be invaluably efficient resources for my aspirations for comprehensive knowledge of world history and as additional sources for writing the ethnic histories as resources for teachers at the Minneapolis Public Schools.

Eugene Y. Park, Korea:  A History (Stanford, CA:  Stanford University Press, 2022) 

I have already been in communication with Park, praising his exhaustive detail (he thanked me and asked me to write a review on Amazon [I haven‘t yet]);  he is among many in academia, working in all manner of fields, with whom I am keeping in touch.

Feb 23, 2023

Students Enrollment Figures for the Minneapolis Public Schools, 1937-2021

 Students Enrollment Figures for the Minneapolis Public Schools, 1937-2021

 

Year      Number of Students Enrolled

       (nearest thousand)

 

1937                    80,000

1941                    67,000

1945                    65,000

1949                    63,000

1953                    70,000

1957                    72,000

1961                    70,000

1965                    73,000

1967                    73,000

1969                    72,000

1973                    55,000

1977                    40,000

1981                    37,000

1985                    40,000

1989                    42,000

1993                    45,000

1997                    50,000

2000                    50,000

2001                    49,000

2005                    35,000

2008                    34,000

2009                    37,000

2013                    39,000

2015                    40,000

2017                    39,000

2019                    34,000

2021                    28,000

Feb 16, 2023

ACT Results for Academic Year Ending in 2022 >>>>> Minneapolis Public Schools

 

ACT Results for Academic Year Ending in 2022

                           Minneapolis Public Schools

 

         Number   Mean   Standard      Median  

         Tested                   Deviation

 

FAIR                   51         20.0          5.2                19

 

Edison             104         18.3          5.8               17

 

Henry               88         17.5          4.2                17

 

Roosevelt       133         19.0          5.6                18

 

South               169         21.5          6.2              20

 

Southwest      363         22.1          6.1               22

 

Washburn      326          22.0          5.8              22

 

North                38          14.8          4.2              14

 

Heritage            20          13.3          2.1             12

 

Takoda Prep       5          15.4          1.5              15

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

Totals           1,301          20.6           6.1             20

Feb 6, 2023

Process Must Go Forward to Extend the Contract of Interim MPS Superintendent Rochelle Cox; Brenda Cassellius Must Discontinue Her Campaign to Be Superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools

Former Minnesota Education Commissioner Brenda Cassellius must terminate her campaign to become superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools.  

Cassellius was Minnesota Commissioner of Education from January 2011 to January 2019.  In 2018 the staff under her direction established the North Star Accountability System to meet the requirements of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA).  The Minnesota Department of Education (MDE) is an intellectually corrupt institution whose slack oversight of World’s Best Workforce (WBWF), Achievement and Integration (A&I), American Indian Education (AIE) was detailed in a report issued by Minnesota Office of Legislative Auditor (OLA) in March 2022.  

These programs serve only to meet the legalistic requirements of ESSA and the state response to ESSA known as the North Star Accountability System.  Like an MDE prototype, the Multiple Measurement Rating System (MMRS), the North Star Accountability System shifted emphasis from objective assessments of student performance to identify struggling students and schools to an approach that merely included objective assessments---  along with graduation rates and annual progress toward goals---  to rate school performance and identify those schools to receive assistance in meeting academic targets. 

The North Star Accountability System relies heavily on putative Regional Centers of Excellence (RCEs) to address academic skill deficiencies of students in Minnesota.  Most RCE staff members have been teachers certified and operating within the same system that has produced such wretched proficiency rates (just 46% in reading and 53% in mathematics for white non-Hispanic students, with achievement gaps of 37, 30 and 29 percentage points between non-Hispanic white students and their American Indian, African American and Hispanic peers, respectively).

There are only 57 total staff members at the six RCEs (located in Sartell, with 11 staff members; Mountain Iron, 10; Thief River Falls, 10; Rochester, 15; Marshall, nine; and Fergus Falls, six). The Minneapolis Public Schools and St. Paul Public Schools supposedly receive direct MDE support similar to that provided by the RCEs. There are more than 2,100 traditional and charter schools in Minnesota with a total of 843,404 students. Considering that RCE staff members total only 57, this means that there is one staff member for every 37 schools and for every 14,797 students. Given the establishment qualifications of RCE staff members and those high ratios, the notion that RCEs can address lagging student proficiency rates in Minnesota is preposterous. 

Cassellius and MDE staffer Michael Diedrich, a key figure in the rollout of the North Star Accountability System, knew from the beginning that the new system was a sham, with no hope of addressing the skill deficiencies of Minnesota students.  And they knew that they would be doing little follow-up to determine the efficacy of North Star and other MDE programs.  As the Minnesota Office of the Legislative Auditor (OLA) stated frankly in the report of 2022, MDE oversight of programs with the stated purpose of addressing student skill deficiencies so to move toward educational equity is slim;  as the OLA report conveys, the MDE does little besides receiving the reports and reporting in turn to the Legislature.  No follow-up in terms of investigating program effectiveness ever occurs.

Brenda Cassellius has been campaigning aggressively, utilizing her many connections to the Minnesota education establishment, to prevail on current members of the MPS Board of Education to set processes in motion that would lead to her becoming the next superintendent of the Minneapolis Public Schools. 

 

Cassellius would be a terrible selection for that position. 

 

……………………………………………………………………………

 

Rather, current MPS Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox should the board’s selection of long-term superintendent.

Cox has created a substantially new cabinet that includes an entirely new contingent of associate superintendents who have been given a directive carefully to monitor academic programming and results at the specific schools for which each is responsible.  There is a new math curriculum (Bridges/Number Corner) that for the first time in recent memory will be implemented across all grade levels at all schools.  And for reading/language arts, a similar uniformity of implementation will be guided by the primary curriculum (Benchmark Advance), with students facing particular struggles at schools that have confronted such challenges for years receiving highly intentional skill development on the basis of programs known as Groves, PRESS (“Pathways to Reading Excellence”), and LETRS (“Language Essentials for Teachers of Reading and Spelling”).  High dosage tutoring will be provided by the firms of Carnegie and Axiom. 

At the behest of Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox, Senior Academic Officer Aimee Fearing, Deputy Senior Academic Officer Maria Rollinger, and Director of Strategic Initiatives Sarah Hunter are leading an effort to bring subject area substance to grades pre-K through 5, so that student verbal skills will be developed, as they should be, in the context of logically sequenced readings in history, government, geography, multi-cultural literature, and the fine arts;  accordingly, students will develop vocabulary across a multiplicity of subjects that lie at the core of advanced reading development. 

Regular business and Committee of the Whole meetings of the MPS Board of Education for the first time in my eight and one-half year observation have a firm focus on academics, particularly on addressing the skill acquisition of students languishing far below proficiency in mathematics and reading.

This is an interim superintendent and staff with a chance to provide an unprecedentedly high quality of education for students at a locally centralized school district, particularly those facing challenges born of a brutal history that has created and maintained conditions of cyclical familial poverty for many decades at the urban core.

………………………………………………………………........

Events at the 17 January 2023 Minneapolis Public Schools (MPS) Board of Education Superintendent Search strongly suggested that board members (now comprised of holdovers Kim Ellison [At-Large] and Ira Jordain [District 6], both of whom have been closely tied to the DFL/Minneapolis Federation of Teachers [MFT] cohort;  independent holdovers Adriana Cerrillo [District 4] and Sharon El-Amin [District 2 {North Minneapolis}];  and new members Fathia Feerayare [District 3 {DFL-endorsed}], Abdul Abdi [District 1 {DFL-endorsed}], Collin Beachy [At-Large {DFL-endorsed}], and Sonya Emerick [independent/non-endorsed]) had come to realize the superior administrative talent that they had witnessed in Rochelle Cox.   

Four superintendent search firms (J. G. Consulting, BWP Associates, Minnesota School Board Association [MSBA], and GR Recruiting) made presentations.  The Board narrowed the selection of firms to BWP and MSBA, specifying that the amount of any proffered contract would not exceed $40,000).

The board then turned attention to Chair El-Amin's amendment to resolution language concerning the tendering of a contract to BWP, now calling for contracted services to start no earlier than September 2023:

This would require another year of service from an interim superintendent, with everyone understanding that El-Amin had already been in discussions with Interim Superintendent Rochelle Cox concerning a one-year contract extension.  The vote outcome was 6-3 in favor of El-Amin’s resolution.

A third vote was taken on the overall resolution to establish a contract with BWP no earlier than September 2023, at an authorized maximum $40,000 amount, as amended by Chair El-Amin's language;  the resolution passed on a 5-4 vote.

A separate vote will be needed to approve another contract for Rochelle Cox.

The MPS Board of Education should now move assertively in extending that contract to Cox. 

The official vote on offering the now-necessary additional year to an interim superintendent, will most likely come at the Tuesday, 14 February, meeting of the MPS Board of Education.

But a Special Superintendent Search meeting of the board will take place this evening (Tuesday, 7 February 2023) and will reveal any success that Cassellius has had in insinuating herself into the process.

Those interested in the future of the Minneapolis Public Schools and the need to address the stark failures of the district should be wary of any sign of Cassellius’s campaign and lend their firm support to Rochelle Cox, recognizing her superior leadership of the district and looking to the board to extend her contract.

 

Feb 4, 2023

Front Matter and Contents >>>>> >Journal of the K-12 Revolution: Essays and Research from Minneapolis, Minnesota< >>>>> Volume IX, No. 8, February 2023

Volume IX, No. 6                                          

February 2023

 

Journal of the K-12 Revolution:

Essays and Research from Minneapolis, Minnesota        

 

Minneapolis Public Schools

Student Academic Proficiency Rates

Academic Years Ending

2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018,

2019, 2021, and 2022

 

A Five-Article Series         

 

A Publication of the New Salem Educational Initiative

Gary Marvin Davison, Editor     

 

Minneapolis Public Schools

Student Academic Proficiency Rates

Academic Years Ending

2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018,

2019, 2021, and 2022

 

Copyright © 2023

Gary Marvin Davison

New Salem Educational Initiative

 

Contents

 

Introductory Comments                                                                                                 

Minneapolis Public Schools

Student Academic Proficiency Rates

Academic Years Ending

2014, 2015, 2016, 2017, 2018,

2019, 2021, and 2022

 

Article #1                                                                                                                             

Student Academic Proficiency Rates

MPS Elementary Schools

 

Article #2                                                                                                                             

Student Academic Proficiency Rates

MPS Middle Schools

 

Article #3                                                                                                                             

Student Academic Proficiency Rates

MPS High Schools

 

Article #4                             

Student Academic Proficiency Rates                                                                                      

MPS Alternative Schools

 

Article #5  

Student Academic Proficiency Rates                                                                         

MPS Specialized Programs