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The New Math of the NYT education columnist Richard Rothstein: 2 + 1 = "2" (and not "3")
The NYT ^ | June 20, 2002; June 19, 2002 | summer; Richard Rothstein

Posted on 06/20/2002 7:47:40 AM PDT by summer

The New Math of the NYT education columnist Richard Rothstein: 2 + 1+ = 2 (and not "3")

By summer -- a former Dem, now an independent and a FL certified teacher

"Florida has two school voucher programs" declares Richard Rothstein in the opening sentence of his June 19, 2002 NYT column on education, below.

"Two" voucher programs? Wrong, Richard. Florida has THREE voucher programs.

Maybe you never had a teacher who taught you simple addition, prior to becoming a regular columnist at the NYT. I will try to help you see why: 1 + 1 + 1 = 3. And: 2 + 1 = 3

Of course, first you have to be able to count all the way up to 3 to understand this. Let's count together, Richard. And, together we'll find out just how many voucher programs FL actually has, since the premise of your entire column depends on the correct sum here:

First, the voucher program included in FL's "A+ Plan" for education. That would be ONE voucher program. (1)

Second, the voucher program you mentioned in your column, for disabled students in special education. That would make TWO voucher programs. (1) above in A +. And (1) here for disabled students. How many voucher progams so far? Two. Because 1 + 1 = 2

Let's keep that sum (2) in mind as we continue.

Now it gets much harder, as I am going to disclose to you, Richard, the third voucher program FL has, which you pretended throughout your column does not exist. Here it is:

Third, FL has a voucher program paid for by a corporate tax credit, and these vouchers are only available to LOW INCOME students.

Yes, Richard: LOW INCOME students. Consequently, that means:

2 voucher programs you named + 1 voucher program you omitted = 3 TOTAL voucher programs

In short: 2+ 1= 3. "3" is the correct total sum. Not "2" as you erroneously told the world, Richard.

But, I understand why you made this "mistake" in your article: Had you included FL's 3rd voucher program, your entire premise would be shot down, because your big premise is this:

FL's voucher programs exist only to finacially subsidize the "relatively affluent," "better off" and "well-to-do" students in FL.

However, it's pretty tough to sell that idea to readers if you bother to include the fact FL's 3rd voucher program is only for LOW INCOME students.

When the FL GOP gov creates one voucher program solely for LOW INCOMEstudents, isn't that news "fit to print" about Florida -- and how the state seeks to help its most vulnerable citizens? And, if that's not news "fit to print," why not???

The rest of your column sounds just as bogus as your first incorrect sentence.

To support your false claim FL's voucher program exists only for the "wealthy" you make mention of merely one private school, located in West Palm Beach, which has raised its tuition -- requiring some voucher students to look elsewhere. Richard, I know this will be a shock to you, but according to the Orlando Sentinel, eleven new private schools recently opened to accommodate all the LOW INCOME students in the 3rd voucher program - the one you assert, by your silence, does not exist.

Also, you fail to mention Gov. Bush's voucher programs always provide school choice - the parent can choose a private school OR a different PUBLIC school.

Why do you pretend in your column that FL is steering every student into the 'private' school system when better public schools are also an option for any parent utilizing FL's 3 voucher programs? A parent of a disabled student, for instance, can get a voucher for a student to attend a special education program in a better public school. Why is that choice of better public schools a fact nowhere to be found in your column?

Finally, your column continuously and falsely implies: THE SECRET PLAN OF FL'S GOP GOVERNOR IS TO ELIMINATE ALL EDUCATION EXCEPT FOR THE WEALTHY IN PRIVATE SCHOOLS.

Frankly. I don't know where you went to school, Richard, but here in FL -- in both public and private schools: 2 + 1 = 3. No matter what new math you invent and publish in the NYT.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------





LESSONS

June 19, 2002

Voucher Program Flunks Special Ed

By RICHARD ROTHSTEIN

WEST PALM BEACH, Fla. -- Florida has two school voucher programs. One, small but widely publicized, pays private tuition for students who abandon public schools that have low test scores. Students from 10 Florida schools, all in low-income areas, can get vouchers next year; experience suggests that few will use them.

Less well known is a bigger program open to all special-education students. Any child whom a public school has identified as learning or physically disabled or otherwise in need of special help can get a voucher for private tuition.

Across the nation, voucher advocates say private choices should be extended to disadvantaged children, like the poor or those with disabilities, whom public schools have failed. But critics suspect that vouchers are really intended as a step toward privatizing education for the benefit of the well-to-do.Florida's special-education program gives plenty of ammunition to those critics.

Special education certainly needs reform. Some children get special education when what they really need is extra help in regular classes. Even when students do have special needs, the school often does a poor job of setting goals for them, and does even worse at checking to see that those goals are met.

When Florida's program began in 1999, it seemed like a smart response to special education's failures. A child with disabilities who was not meeting a public school's goals could get a voucher whose value was equal to state aid that would otherwise go for that child (about $4,500 a year for a student with mild learning difficulty). Children could go to any private school that took them, and the school had to take vouchers as full payment.

But one aspect of the plan raised eyebrows. Although students were eligible if they did not meet their public school's special-education goals, private schools accepting those students were not required to monitor their progress ever again. Indeed, private schools with voucher students did not have to offer any special-education services at all.

Then, last year, Florida made changes that further compromised the program's integrity. First, it said a voucher could go to any parent who believed a special-needs child would benefit. Evidence of unmet goals was no longer needed.

Second, private schools were allowed to charge tuition on top of the voucher. Many religious schools that offered no special services continued to take vouchers as full payment. But schools with good special-education programs could not provide them for the amount of the voucher, so they added fees. Now, while any child with a disability can get a voucher, only better-off families can afford schools offering special education. Consider what happened in West Palm Beach.

To enter the voucher market, one company, Educational Services of America Inc., bought a private school, the Progressive School, and shifted its focus to special education.

Its fifth-grade class, for example, had only eight students this year, making it small enough to accommodate the children's needs. The teacher, Jennifer Fall, repeatedly praised a socially isolated child until others found prestige in befriending him. When a child with mild Tourette's syndrome shouted out, he was not penalized, as others would have been. Ms. Fall gave an A to a student with attention deficit disorder as a reward for staying on task, although similar work by another would have earned a lower grade.

Attending the district's regular schools in prior years, these children did not get the individual attention they required. Ms. Fall herself taught classes of 40 at a public school last year. "I almost swore off teaching," she said.

The Progressive School took vouchers as full payment this year. But it can no longer afford to do so, and will add fees in September. Although its costs are low - its top teacher salary is $38,000, compared with $56,000 in nearby public schools - special needs cannot be met with a $4,500 voucher. Next year, parents of children with mild disabilities will pay an extra $2,500, parents of those with greater disabilities more.

One child who will not stay is Logan Marsh. His mother, Ramona, earns $14 an hour as a fire dispatcher. Ms. Marsh says that Logan gained intellectual confidence this year but that she cannot afford the new tuition. She will use his voucher at a church-run school whose large classes make no special accommodation for his learning disabilities.

Under other circumstances, the Florida voucher program might have put to the test the notion that private schools can improve special education. But the state never made even a pretense of comparing students' progress in private and public schools. It has permitted vouchers to become only a subsidy for the relatively affluent.

And by highlighting the impossibility of providing special services for what public schools spend, the program also advertises how drastically Florida starves public special-education programs of adequate financing.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: 2ndamendment; education; fl; florida; jebbush; nyt; richardrothstein; vouchers
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To: summer
You're right on target, and highlight not only the bias of the newspaper editors who allow their journalists (or opinion writers) to get away with writing blatantly biased or inaccurate stories, but the education establishment who then run with the stories as FACT.

Good catch.

141 posted on 06/21/2002 4:07:53 PM PDT by Gophack
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To: Gophack
Thank you, Gophack! And, I would like to emphasize: the conservative view is always relegated only to the level of mere OPINION. That's it. If you are a conservative writing about education, that's all you can have, according to the NYT: just an opinion. NOT ANY FACTS. Thanks again. I am curious what others say, not because I hope everyone agrees with me, but, because I truly thought about this for awhile today.
142 posted on 06/21/2002 4:09:36 PM PDT by summer
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To: Gophack
And, just to show others what you and I both meant -- while Education Week summarized Rothstein in the "Best of the Week round up without any notation of "opinion," look at how clearly Education Week marked an editorial, below [from the same link, posted in my post #133]:

From the Boston Herald:
Reading History Teacher Honored
Survey Finds Playgrounds Around State Still Unsafe
School Counselor Charged In Molest Case
Opinion: Bilingual Change Coming

143 posted on 06/21/2002 4:16:00 PM PDT by summer
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To: summer; Khepera
Khep, I know you homeschool your children, but let's be honest - that is not a realistic option for a lot of folks. I like what summer is doing here, holding the public education establishment accountable. Well, trying to, anyway.;^)

Keep up the good work summer!

144 posted on 06/21/2002 5:20:12 PM PDT by Dakmar
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To: Dakmar
Thanks, Dakmar. :)
145 posted on 06/21/2002 5:21:48 PM PDT by summer
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To: summer
Bump! to come back to #136 in da moanin' to review and comment!
146 posted on 06/21/2002 5:30:34 PM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: summer
Not "2" as you erroneously told the world, Richard.

Excellent post as usual, summer, but may I offer some unsolicited advice?
Please don't take this clown Rothstein or the paper he works for too seriously. Nobody reveres the Gray Old Whore anymore, and nobody turns to Rothstein for credible reporting.

You are correct, of course, that Rothstein ignored information which would be detrimental to his "premise" and therefore detrimental to his agenda, which is to smear Jeb Bush. You know as well as anybody that Florida is a hotbed of teachers union scum, and Rothstein no doubt went to them for his "background".

But no matter. It is also well established these days that the Gray Old Whore is nothing more than a not-too-sneaky arm of the DNC. And Rothstein - - who is Rothstein, and who cares?

Regards,
LH

147 posted on 06/21/2002 6:23:35 PM PDT by Lancey Howard
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To: Lancey Howard
LH, Thanks so much for your post. I appreciate it.

If you have time, please also see post #136 and share your thoughts in response. I would very curious as to your take on it, as a FR poster submitted this post to the Media Research Center, which then raised a whole new question here...
148 posted on 06/21/2002 6:29:43 PM PDT by summer
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To: Lancey Howard
I would = I am...
149 posted on 06/21/2002 6:30:38 PM PDT by summer
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To: summer
BIAS BY PLACEMENT.
Yes, you make sense--but you are in a house of mirrors, so sense is also nonsense.

Inside the house of mirrors, there is a distinction between "objective journalism" and opinion. In law, the First Amendment protects opinion whether or not it masquerades as objective fact.

Inside the house of mirrors, you have an iron-clad case of "bias." Outside the house of mirrors, what you have is: no ability to constrain The New York Times to live up to what you think it is guaranteeing. They sell the "sizzle" of putative truth, but the "steak" they actually deliver is herd-mentality group-think. If the piece isn't contradicted by other journalists, they insist that you believe them rather than your own "lying" eyes.

Look, my own daughter was stunned to learn that I used to listen to "News Radio" whenever I was in the car. I did that religiously for years on end. Then I saw something that made me question . . . and Reed Ivine's "Accuracy In Media" (AIM) report completely convinced me that journalism was consistently tilted left. And by the time my daughter was clearly aware of things, I was listening only to talk radio, and had begun treating news broadcasts like you treat commercials for a product you wouldn't buy on a bet.

The only thing I didn't understand was why journalism was "biased." Wasn't there competition? Sure, there is competition, but within rules of a game which assures a leftist tendency. There's competition but also, de facto, a lot of "cooperating and graduating."

I understand that it's only human to succumb to the blandishments of journalism's propaganda campaign; I myself was conned by it for about 40 years. I also understand that it's only human not to want to admit to yourself that you have been conned. That's why I suspect that it will be some time before you decide that my diagnosis is essentially correct. If indeed you ever do. But, I try . . .


150 posted on 06/21/2002 6:33:58 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: conservatism_IS_compassion
Yes, you make sense--but you are in a house of mirrors, so sense is also nonsense.

I enjoyed reading your analysis -- and, you described it very well too: a house of mirrors. That's what it is. Thanks.
151 posted on 06/21/2002 6:37:37 PM PDT by summer
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To: summer
GREAT ARTICLE SUMMER!! GLAD to see YOU are on top of things!!

Do you have this guys email address? I'd like to tell him 2 + 1 = 3..hahah

152 posted on 06/21/2002 6:49:19 PM PDT by Sungirl
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To: summer; Joe Brower; floriduh voter
Did I make any sense here?

Complete sense.....that is exactly how the NYT & most newspapers run by liberals (which is alas the majority) operate.

Another tactic they use is to NOT publish articles that say anything laudatory about conservative candidates...e.g. SHT has not printed the AP article about the sucess of Jeb's One Florida and how his former critics are now behind his plan.

The Naples News on the other hand prints pro-Jeb articles. In the past when I confronted the SHT editor on the ommission of various pro-Jeb articles that have appeared in the Naples News...the response is.....the decision to print certain articles is made by different editors every day & determined by space availability.

BUT there always seems to be plenty of space to print negative artcles about Jeb & Katherine Harris!

So we must resort to writing our (size limited) 'letters to the editor' to inform readers of the facts that the liberal editors 'censure' by picking what to print from the many AP, UPI & Reuters articles that are written each day.

SHT reprints many articles by NYT staff writers while claiming to be independent of NYT control....frustrating indeed but I am persistent!

153 posted on 06/21/2002 8:47:07 PM PDT by JulieRNR21
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To: summer
bump!
154 posted on 06/22/2002 2:04:46 AM PDT by MeekOneGOP
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To: summer
BTTT!!!!
155 posted on 06/22/2002 3:25:56 AM PDT by E.G.C.
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To: summer
you described it very well too: a house of mirrors.

That's what it is.

I once read a description of life in the USSR which went like this:
- Someone close to you, who you know is no threat to the existing order, gets sent to the slave-labor camps.
- You don't dare to complain--just one more grief in life. End of story. OR:
- You take your story of justice wronged to the germane bureaucrat and plead the case of your loved one/highly respected friend.

- You find that you need to take the information to a different or higher department.

- You take your story of justice wronged to the germane bureaucrat and plead the case of your loved one/highly respected friend.

- You find that you need to take the information to a different or higher department

- You take your story of justice wronged to the germane bureaucrat and plead the case of your loved one/highly respected friend.

- You find that you need to take the information to a different or higher department.

Eventually:
- You don't dare to complain further--and go home sadder but wiser (and quieter). End of story. OR:

- You are sent to the Gulag where your complaints aren't much problem.

It's not as if Americans were sent to a literal gulag--but if you complain loud and long enough you will become classified with Rush Limbaugh and the rest of the "vast right wing conspiracy". Kooks, don'tcha know . . .

And they won't miss you, 'cause there's a sucker born every minute . ..

156 posted on 06/22/2002 4:06:51 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: summer
I understand that it's only human to succumb to the blandishments of journalism's propaganda campaign; I myself was conned by it for about 40 years. I also understand that it's only human not to want to admit to yourself that you have been conned. That's why I suspect that it will be some time before you decide that my diagnosis is essentially correct. If indeed you ever do. But, I try . . .
And, as a teacher it's only too possible that in all good faith you have taught as fact things that I claim are not to be taken for granted. Having done so would make you all the more reluctant to believe that what you taught was anything less than the Gospel Truth.

And, were that so, it would only be human of you to take offense at my pointing that out. As long, that is, as you can stand being inside that house of mirrors . . .


157 posted on 06/22/2002 7:26:11 AM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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To: summer
Rothstein is being "politically" "mathematically" correct:

2 = 1 number
1 = 1 number
one number (2) plus another number (1) = "2" numbers.

158 posted on 06/22/2002 8:03:53 AM PDT by Consort
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To: summer
The interesting question is whether the Times editors understand that they sell left-wing opinion as fact, or whether they themselves are blind to the bias.
159 posted on 06/22/2002 7:53:43 PM PDT by maro
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To: maro
Your question answers itself when you consider that The New York Times is the very heart of the "blue zone"; as far as they are concerned there is no such thing as "left wing."
160 posted on 06/23/2002 1:36:10 PM PDT by conservatism_IS_compassion
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