http://jerseyjazzman.blogspot.com/2012/01/once-again-tom-moran-doesnt-do-his-job.html? spref=tw
It is definitely worth reading. I’m not sure if it suggests that the media or at least some in the media purposefully choose to help bolster the Governor’s education “reform” plan by distorting the facts or if it merely reflects editorial in competency. I’ll leave it to you to decide.
Below the article I have listed a link to a video that I am sure you will find enlightening. It clearly demonstrates the lengths to which those advocating education “reform” will go to achieve their goals (It’s also got some humor in it). Take a look! “
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"I will protect your pensions. Nothing about your pension is going to change when I am governor.” - Chris Christie, “An Open Letter to the Teachers of NJ” October, 2009 Sunday, January 29, 2012
Once Again, Tom Moran Doesn’t Do His Job I have tried - no, really, I have - to back off of Tom Moran and the editorial pages of the Star-Ledger. But I just can’t let this one pass: In a typically insouciant editorial about the problems with one of Chris Christie’s “reform” schemes, the S-L writes: But it’s not just school buildings that are needed. The instructional programs in the Camden schools are disastrous failures, too. At Camden Street Elementary, just 10 percent of third-graders read at grade level. At Camden High School, fewer than 17 percent of juniors are proficient in math. [emphasis mine]
Here’s the problem: Camden Street Elementary is not in Camden. As the Camden City Public Schools website shows, there isn’t a school even remotely named Camden Street Elementary. (It took me all of 30 seconds to find this through Google, Tom).
I happen to know that Camden Street Elementary is in Newark. Why? Because I wrote about how the school that was bad-mouthed by a child advocate group and the superintendent of Newark’s schools, Cami Anderson. And then Bruce Baker shared some further graphs about Camden Street Elementary, which really got me angry about how the staff was being treated publicly.
You see, Tom, Camden Street Elementary is a school whose specific mission is to serve children who have autism, cognitive disabilities, and behavioral disabilities:
Branch Brook Elementary is the highest-performing elementary school in Newark; is it any wonder why Camden Street’s wonderful and deserving children don’t do as well as Branch Brook’s in standardized tests? From the school’s website: Camden [Street Elementary]’s special needs program houses approximately two hundred students. These students live throughout the City of Newark, and are transported to Camden by bus. Opportunities for integrating classified students into a least restrictive environment are accomplished through inclusion and mainstreaming. Our goal is to meet the various needs of all. To accomplish this task, we provide students with whole group and individual learning experiences. Academic success is the mission of Camden Street Elementary School’s staff. The strategy used to achieve this goal is through high expectations and realistic goals. High expectations are communicated to the students by the teachers letting them know specifically what they are expected to learn, and that they can learn. [emphasis mine]
So let’s review:
Tom Moran wrote that Camden Street Elementary was in Camden; it is in Newark. Tom Moran bemoaned the poor showing of Camden Street’s third graders on standardized tests. Tom Moran showed no sign of knowing that Camden Street serves special needs students. This is lazy, indifferent, who-gives-a-s*** journalism that demeans the difficult work that both the educators in the City of Camden and the educators at Camden Street Elementary in Newark do every day .Moran owes them all an immediate correction
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Video worth watching -
“Paid to protest?” video
http://www.wgntv.com/videogallery/67610540/News/paid-to-protest
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