Posted on 04/28/2003 1:32:16 AM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
And nearly all of these mayors have set their sights on the one workplace protection that teachers have held central for more than 100 years: tenure.
The unions say many of the fixes embraced by the mayors are trendy ideas without evidence that they help children learn. Instead, they allow politicians to appear as if they are making improvements without having to confront the profound problems of urban schools, labor leaders say.
We dont want to have honest conversations about poverty and segregation and race and class, all those other sorts of ills, said Karen Lewis, president of the Chicago Teachers Union. Those are really tough issues. So this gives them an excuse to focus on something else.
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There is, however,a larger issue: not only is what Schaefer Riley says true about why black studies should be closed down, but her statements could also be easily extended to many fields in the social sciences and humanities. The vulnerability of the campus on this issue is why the Chronicle chose the unseemly and totally inappropriate device of censorship. It was so willing to placate its audience of ideological leftists massing with pitchforks in hand that it inadvertently gave Riley's exposé on black studies far and away more visibility than it would otherwise have achieved."..............
Those are among dozens of recommendations from a state legislative committee that spent the past year and a half looking into why the state's minority youth are less healthy, have lower test scores and are more likely to be incarcerated than other young people.
.....Assembly Select Committee on the Status of Boys and Men of Color, led by Assemblyman Sandré Swanson, D-Alameda, will introduce more than 50 pages of policy and legislative recommendations...
......[Swanson] plans to ask Assembly Speaker John Pérez to appoint a new chair so the committee can continue its work next year, and see whether lawmakers should create a state commission on the status of boys and men of color.
Here is a sampling of recommendations from the state Assembly's Select Committee on the Status of Boys and Men of Color:....."
.....Duncan, in 2010, dramatically announced that the Dept. of Education (ED) will be issuing a series of guidance letters to school districts and postsecondary institutions that will address issues of fairness and equity. We will be announcing a number of compliance reviews to ensure that all students have equal access to educational opportunities, including a college-prep curriculum, advanced courses, and STEM classes. We will review whether districts and schools are disciplining students without regard to skin color. African-American students without disabilities are more than three times as likely to be expelled as their white peers. African-American students with disabilities are over twice as likely to be expelled or suspended as their white counterparts. Those facts testify to racial gaps that are hard to explain away by reference to the usual suspects.
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.....But the most scathing criticism came from Commissioner Todd Gaziano. He is very familiar with the Obama administrations penchant for unequal enforcement of civil rights laws, having battled Attorney General Eric Holders stonewalling of the New Black Panther voter intimidation case that the USCCR tried to conduct.
Gaziano wrote, As Deputy Assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights Ricardo Soto explained in his statement to the Commission, the Departments regulations prohibit race-neutral policies, practices, or procedures that have a disparate impact on the basis of race, color or national origin. Although this phrasing has been part of the executive branchs lexicon for some time, it is still worth pausing a moment on the Orwellian doublespeak of anything having a disparate impact on [a] basis to show how hard the Department must strain to use some of the words of the statute in service of the opposite of what they provide. Because a disparate impact is usually understood as an unintended effect, and may include many unintended effects, this formulation awkwardly attempts to equate unintended impacts with the actual basis (or ground) for the action. Putting aside this nonsensical use of the English language, Sotos testimony accurately described the Departments disparate-impact theory
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