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Jeff Jena |
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Smartman
MUSA Citizen Joined: Jun 14 2008 Status: Offline Points: 299 |
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Posted: May 03 2009 at 8:45pm |
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Mr. Jena is right on of his assessment. He mentions the money paid to Glen Singleton. It is a substantial amount, and it is board approved! Google Glen Singleton and see what I mean.
The entire board needs to go! The voted to approve the funds, even Auntie Ann's boys!
Jeffrey Jena: Questions for Dr. Price on equity program2:11 PM Friday, May 1, 2009Irony is my favorite type of humor. Let me give you a great example. Last Sunday (April 26), I opened my Middletown Journal, and on the front page was an article about our school system’s graduation rate. From the headline (“Middies grad rate a work in progress”) and the happy photo, you might think the rate was getting better. But if you read the article, you would have discovered that it had actually declined in the past year. Then you turn to the editorial page and read a thousand words by Dr. Steve Price, our superintendent, letting us all know about “cultural equity training.” Actually, only about 600 of the words were from Dr. Price; the rest of the article is an alleged testimonial of the program from an anonymous teacher. One thing that all administrators, in any profession, are good at is obfuscation. Dr. Price proves his worth as an administrator in his opinion piece. He published an article which took the better part of a full page of the paper and in essence said nothing. If you didn’t happen to see it or read it, let me paraphrase it for you: There could be a lot of problems in schools keeping kids from reaching their potential but those things would be unimportant if our teachers were more culturally sensitive. We don’t have any data to support my claims. In fact, most of the test data since we started this program shows our schools getting worse instead of better. So you’ll just have to believe me. If you don’t believe me, here is a report that a teacher wrote about the program right before we were going to be discussing her employment for the next year. So now leave me alone and let me get back to running this school district into the ground. Dr. Price doesn’t show any evidence from any source to support his claims that cultural sensitivity increases learning. He does not defend his policy of allowing problem students to continue disrupting the education of students who have come to school prepared and ready to learn. He offers no alternative to giving outrageous amounts of our money to his dubious friends in California. He offers only worn-out platitudes from failed pedagogies of the past. If our schools were a corporation and Dr. Price its CEO, he would have been shown the door long ago. I was having a discussion with a college education professor in the basement of our church recently. He tends to see the world as Dr. Price does but one thing we agreed on is that our schools need to teach children more critical thinking skills. If a reader of Dr. Price’s missive had some training in critical thinking that person might ask the following questions: Since the equity program has been in place for several years, why has there been no significant rise in achievement scores among our minority students? What results has this program thus far yielded, besides lowering the morale of staff? Does lowered teacher morale have a greater effect on learning than culture? How long before this program will close the achievement gap? If culture is a big factor in learning, why don’t Asian students (especially new immigrants from Korea and China) have trouble learning from teachers of any race? If the teacher who wrote the glowing review of Dr. Price’s program is so happy, why not identify this teacher? Do African-American students who are taught by African-American teachers do significantly better in school than those taught by white teachers? Are there ways that the money spent on “equity training” could be better spent to improve our schools? For example, by hiring more teachers and reducing class size? Why did our school district hire Pacific Educational Group and Glenn Singleton, author of “Courageous Conversations About Race” and a controversial figure at best, and not continue with the University of Illinois? Mr. Singleton’s program was used and dumped as ineffective by school districts as liberal as Madison, Wis., and Seattle, and as conservative as Arlington, Va. Why are we not using other programs which have proved more effective in closing the achievement gap? Perhaps Dr. Price might answer some of our questions in this forum. The final question I pose is perhaps the most important: How much longer will the voters of Middletown continue to allow the school board and administration to spend our money on this nonsense that yields no results?
Jeffrey Jena is a stand-up comic, actor, writer and former teacher who is from Middletown. |
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Pacman
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jun 02 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2612 |
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When Steven Price was hired as superintendent of Middletown City Schools in Ohio six years ago, he was charged with three tasks: raise academic achievement, fix dilapidated buildings, and address the district’s diversity issues. He’s been pretty successful. Middletown’s report card grade has risen from a performance index score of 71.4 to 82.5, resulting in a jump from “Academic Watch” to “Continuous Improvement,” under No Child Left Behind. And Price hopes for an “Effective” grade. On the building front, the district demolished in 2003 and slowly rebuilt its elementary schools, with the last one reopening earlier this fall. But addressing Middletown’s diversity has become anongoing process, and it has led to a paradigm shift in dealing with race not only in Middletown but throughout Ohio. Middletown is one of 21 urban districts in Ohio and suffers from declining enrollment: Families once brought to Middletown by the allure of steel factory work are relocating to places where the economy isn’t forcing businesses to close. About 24 percent of the district’s students are minority students, nearly 70 percent of whom receive free or reduced-price lunches. With that diversity has come a gaping achievement gap not unlike those seen in other urban areas. To Price, achievement gaps are in part the result of an inherent discomfort in identifying race—not just economics—as the heart of educational inequity in the United States school system. “Advocates recognize that the achievement gap is persistent. But rushing to solutions like we’ve done has not solved anything,” says Price. “Great conversations about the achievement gap are about identifying the root causes that are uncomfortable to talk about.” Closing the Gap, Opening Discussion
In 2007, Price and educators from districts across Ohio—including Butler Tech, Fairfield, Lacota, Mason, and Talawanda—and the Ohio Department of Education, in association with Miami University, collaborated to create the Consortium on Racial Equity in K-12 Education, which aims to eliminate the racial predictability of achievement while raising the level of achievement for all students by teaching teachers to better understand (and in some cases, admit) their racial biases, and to break through barriers in the classroom attributed to how teachers—and students—view race. “People want to talk about cultural language, barriers, poverty—but race, we have to be brave enough to confront,” says Price. Stephen Price
Superintendent for 6 years Middletown (Ohio) City Schools Age: 53 Salary: $121,000 Students: 6,500 Staff and faculty: 900 Web address: www.middletowncityschools.com The consortium is led by a group of nationally recognized professionals dedicated to addressing racial inequity in education: Glenn E. Singleton, a professor, coauthor of Courageous Conversations about Race, and founder and president of Pacific Educational Group, which provides support to school districts striving to meet the needs of students of color; and Circe Stumbo, president of West Wind Education Policy, which provides policy analysis, knowledge building, and systemic equity leadership development promoting a K12 education system that overcomes what the organization calls “historic inequities” in learning. Participants also include the Ohio Leadership Forum. “When I first came, the focus was in a very broad senseon diversity,” says Price. But after working with Singleton and Stumbo, his sitessharpened to race and equity. Through “equity teams” comprised of teachers, administrators, staff members, and a board member, the consortium helps Price give Middletown a guideline for confronting the issues of race and culture in the classroom. Ideas are as simple as changing how teachers refer to racial achievement gaps, and evaluating the differences between “underachieving” and “underserved” students. Price continues to help Middletown shift from discussing “achievement gaps” to “racial disparities.” Five-Year Forecast
According to the Middletown Journal, Ohio’s Department of Education stated that black teachers made up 6.2 percent of Middletown’s teaching staff in the 2005-06 school year—more than double that of any local school—and still employs the highest number of black teachers across the county. Price attributes the district’s consortium involvement as a carrot that helps attract more teachers and administrators of color. He proudly promotes Middletown’s participation in the consortium at conferences such as the National Conference on Student Assessment, and this fall’s Summit for Courageous Conversation. Similar consortiums are being considered by school districts in Indiana, Connecticut and Minnesota. If the current models prove successful, Price hopes to work with the Department of Education to make the consortium model national. “What a great legacy” it would be, he says: “Strong for Ohio, and for the nation.” Jennifer Chase Esposito is a contributing writer for District Administration. |
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When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
Thomas Jefferson |
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Pacman
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jun 02 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2612 |
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Glenn Singleton’s Racism and the Arlington Public Schools Posted By Hans Bader On December 12, 2007 @ 3:50 pm In Legal, Personal Liberty, Politics as Usual, Sanctimony | Comments Disabled Earlier [1], I wrote about the racist “diversity” consultant Glenn Singleton, who is hired by school officials, like the Arlington [2], Virginia schools [3], despite his long record of promoting offensive racial stereotypes, such as claiming that minority students are “emotional” and not “intellectual” or “task-oriented.” What is commonly overlooked about Glenn Singleton’s racist approach is who his real victims are: America’s minority children. The Maoist [4] indoctrination by Singleton that civil-rights historian and professor David Beito recounts here [5] and here [6] is no doubt humiliating and uncomfortable for the white teachers and professors forced to undergo it, especially given Singleton’s claim that racism is “ubiquitous [7]” among whites, and his assertion that white teachers are to blame for minority students’ bad grades. But the biggest losers in the long run from Singleton’s approach will be minority students, not the white teachers that Singleton [8] scapegoats [7] for poor performance by minority students. Being subjected to Singleton’s “diversity” training won’t cost white teachers their jobs, and if such “diversity” training gets too abusive, they may even be able to sue Glenn Singleton or their school system for it, since a federal court ruled in Hartman v. Pena (1995) that a man could sue for discriminatory harassment after being subjected to a humiliating 3-day diversity training seminar. But Singleton doesn’t just humiliate white teachers. He also promotes stereotypes about minority children that could aggravate the minority achievement gap. Singleton claims that “white talk” is “verbal,” “intellectual” and “task-oriented,” while “color commentary” is “emotional” and “personal.” [7] See, e.g., Vincent Carroll, “On Point: The Whiteness Trap,” Rocky Mountain News, May 10, 2006, at page 34A. That’s exactly the sort of racist stereotype that contributes to the poor performance of some minority students, who believe that studying is “acting white.” The fact that Singleton puts a superficially positive spin on this negative stereotype (by claiming that whites’ fous on achievement is coldly “impersonal” and “task-oriented”) makes it all the more seductive to those minority students who already perceive studying as “acting white” and being a “grind” (and who taunt studious classmates of their own race by referring to them as “schoolboy,” “schoolgirl” and “little miss perfect”). Singleton is hired for big bucks — a “six-figure fee [7]” — to conduct diversity training seminars in order to supposedly remedy the minority achievement gap. But the truth is that his own teachings aggravate and reinforce the minority achievement gap. And America’s minority students will be the losers. For that reason, I was especially saddened to learn in a November 28 letter from Arlington Schools Superintendent Robert G. Smith that Singleton was supposedly hired to remedy “the disparity in achievement between white students and students of color.” Hiring Singleton to reduce the minority achievement gap is like hiring a flat-earther to teach astronomy and biology. In his letter, Dr. Robert Smith admitted that Singleton’s bizarre racial theories are “provocative.” Provocative, indeed. Singleton’s racial theories resemble those of the infamous racist Leonard Jeffries, who was belatedly removed from his position as head of the black studies department at the City University of New York, after he decided to go beyond promoting racism to preaching antisemitism. His racial claims, too, were described as “provocative [9].” But in Jeffries v. Harleston [10] (1995), the federal appeals court upheld his removal from his administrative position because of his bigotry. Glenn Singleton’s racial theories closely parallel those of Leonard Jeffries. Jeffries taught that whites were cold, individualistic, competitive “ice people [9],” while minorities are warm, “communal [9]” “sun people [9].” Similarly, Singleton claims that “white and Asian students are more competitive and individualistic,” while minorities have a “collective,” communal orientation (see Vincent Carroll, “On Point: ‘Culture of Whiteness,’” Rocky Mountain News, October 19, 2005, at page 37A). And he claims that whites are “impersonal,” “verbal,” “intellectual” and “task-oriented [7],” while minorities are “non-verbal, personal” and “emotional [7].” (See Vincent Carroll, “On Point: The Whiteness Trap,” Rocky Mountain News, May 10, 2006, at page 34A). Ironically, Asian students end up being classified [11] as as “majority students [12]” in school systems advised by Singleton, because they have the temerity to succeed academically in a predominantly-white society. Why Singleton continues to be hired by school systems (like the Arlington County schools) is a mystery, given how much public embarrassment he has caused some of them. Perhaps white school officials harbor so much politically-correct racial guilt that they fixate on his anti-white rhetoric and thus lose sight of how damaging his racial stereotypes are to minority children. Anti-white rhetoric is sometimes rewarded, as Leonard Jeffries showed by obtaining tenure and administrative authority at CUNY as a result of his flagrantly racist “scholarship” and writings. Singleton recently embarrassed California Superintendent of Public Instruction Jack O’Connell. This year, he was hired by the gullible O’Connell to give diversity training. O’Connell then was publicly ridiculed [13] after he repeated an offensive stereotype voiced by Glenn Singleton: that blacks, as a people, are loud [14], and need to have their loudness accommodated in the schools. (In fact, many minority students express dismay [15] about how loud and disorderly their classes are, finding that to be a major impediment to learning. They want “simple, elusive quiet [16]” so they can study. My Asian, Hispanic, and black relatives are not loud and noisy). The head of San Francisco’s NAACP has demanded an apology [13] from O’Connell for spreading this unfounded racial stereotype. Singleton also embarrassed the Seattle Schools [2] in a landmark Supreme Court case. But Singleton himself continues to be hired, probably because of his anti-white rhetoric. A case in point is the enthusiastic reception that speakers from the anti-white Nation of Islam receive on campus. At both of my alma maters (Harvard Law School and the University of Virginia), a Nation of Islam speaker, Abdul Alim Muhammad, received an enthusiastic reception from predominantly-black audiences, even though he said things that were antisemitic, not just racist. He got away with his anti-semitism as a reward for his anti-white racism. Anti-white racism apparently excuses all sins. No student newspaper would even criticize the bigoted Nation of Islam speech at U.Va. on November 15, 1990, which lasted for four hours, featured an enthusiastic audience of 600 students, and was filled with racial hatred and antisemitism. Nor would any individual journalist criticize it (except for me), until a Muslim minority student from Bangladesh (Arshad Rahman) publicly condemned the speech on November 28 as a “heretical expression of race hatred.” That broke the politically-correct taboo among journalists against criticizing anti-white racism, and suddenly, guilty whites began to gingerly criticize the speech, although they focused not on its racism but on its antisemitism and one arguably antigay remark made by the speaker. Article printed from OpenMarket.org: URL to article: URLs in this post: [1] Earlier: http://www.openmarket.org/2007/12/03/exporting-racism-to-canada/ [2] Arlington: http://www.openmarket.org/2007/11/20/arlington-schools-hire-race-baiting-diversity-consultant/ [3] schools: http://www.arlingtonva.us/Departments/CountyManager/citizen/CitizenMain.aspx#courage [4] Maoist: http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/24232.html [5] here: http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/27257.html [6] here: http://hnn.us/blogs/entries/25726.html [7] ubiquitous: http://ww2.scripps.com/cgi-bin/archives/denver.pl?DBLIST=rm06&DOCNUM=11200 [8] Singleton: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/11/12/MNH8T5LTC.DTL [9] provocative: http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,157721,00.html [10] Jeffries v. Harleston: http://caselaw.lp.findlaw.com/cgi-bin/getcase.pl?court=2nd&navby=docket&no=937876 [11] classified: http://www.openmarket.org/2007/11/16/embarrass-your-employer-while-getting-rich-off-of-diversity-scams/ [12] majority students: http://www.discriminations.us/2006/05/race_and_education.html#comment-27721 [13] publicly ridiculed: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-gap18nov18,1,7329571.story?coll=la-headlines-california [14] are loud: http://www.latimes.com/news/education/la-me-gap18nov18,1,7714914.story?coll=la-news-learning [15] express dismay: http://isteve.blogspot.com/2007/11/my-new-vdare-column.html [16] simple, elusive quiet: http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/11/15/BAC6TCFRK.DTL |
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When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
Thomas Jefferson |
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VietVet
MUSA Council Joined: May 15 2008 Status: Offline Points: 7008 |
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Excellent overview and questions presented by Mr. Jena. The CEO comment about Price being shown the door long ago has been mentioned several times by individuals. I was at a levy rally years ago with my wife. We were sitting by ourselves away from the rah-rah group of supporters. When Price opened the floor for questions, I produced a copy from the Journal and asked Price to explain why Midd. schools was once again on the bottom of the proficiency testing scores. He gave some double talk answer. When I said that if the Midd. school district was a corporation and it was producing low quality (test scores) and had high cost (levies-wages-building upkeep) and had a low return for the major stockholders (citizens), it would be out of business as these are the three deadly sins causing business deaths. He said " well I don't see it that way" and walked back to his supporters. So much for Price being in touch with reality. The equity thing is another attempt to avoid addressing the real issues as is his habit.
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Pacman
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jun 02 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2612 |
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Seattle Schools, where diversity = Blame whites for everything (and make some money)Sure, I know that is a loaded title, but every time I turn around the Seattle School district is getting dinged for its diversity in which the focus is less on equality and opportunity then it is on blame shifting and rationalization. Just recently I blogged about their latest manifestation:
The problem is that these conferences begin with a faulty premise and operate under no other possibilities, making the whole thing less about diversity and more about indoctrination of racism.
Well, Orbusmax had a few links up with flashback to this whole history, and some of the darker aspects of this are much clearer, so here is a much broader look at the racism in Seattle, and the implication that the people behind it are as much selfish and greedy as they are altruistic.
But despite this loss and waste of money, the man behind it continues, unabated:
And that is something no one wants to admit: That race baiting is an industry. The agitators have a lot invested in creating racial hostility and distrust. In short, yes, I am accusing many racism activists of intentionally creating more racism and racial distrust, in order to give themselves a plank on which to make a living. As I noted above, the Seattle School District adopted a fairly gross policy, then quickly took it down. Parts of it were PC but not bad, but some aspects were fairly inflammatory. Well, it was saved as a cached page, so here again, to celebrate Thanksgiving in Seattle, is racism, Seattle Style.
Note that the “definition assumes that only whites are racist, and only non whites are victims. Strangely enough the Dictionary is less specific: 1. a belief or doctrine that inherent differences among the various human races determine cultural or individual achievement, usually involving the idea that one’s own race is superior and has the right to rule others. 2. a policy, system of government, etc., based upon or fostering such a doctrine; discrimination. 3. hatred or intolerance of another race or other races As you see a real definition only concerns itself with describing what it is, not who does it. If the meaning holds any value, racism is a product of anyone hatred or policy, regardless of race.
Note that they interject subconscious behavior, which allows you to be racist even though you think you are not.
Again, the assumption is made about whites being the problem. Since the definition of racism is so slanted and tainted the continued use of it just further corrupts it.
Here comes affirmative action:
My challenge: Take this list and compare many of the words to a normal dictionary, and you determine if the choices of definitions servers to promote disharmony, inequality and distrust, or if they promote tolerance, acceptance and harmony. There is no argument that American History is an uncomfortable read. We have a serious history of bad behavior. But in theory we are growing and learning. So, how does it help to tell white people, you were racist, so you still must be, and only you can be, and you cannot even help it. You can’t stop it. Under such terms, why would any white person care about being racist or not? If they are by your definition racist regardless of their actions, regardless of their values and regardless of their beliefs, then are you really encouraging them to not be racist? That’s what I see happening, the agitators want to subconsciously encourage racism, in order to keep the flames burning. The most racist people these days are the activists and politicians who fan the flames of hatred for profit and power. Particularly when they do so to a new generation of kids who should be learning to transcend racial boundaries. |
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When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
Thomas Jefferson |
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Pacman
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jun 02 2007 Status: Offline Points: 2612 |
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Funny how the Journal once again does not pick up on the controversy surrounding Glenn Singleton and his program.
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When the people fear their government, there is tyranny; when the government fears the people, there is liberty.
Thomas Jefferson |
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Middletown News
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Apr 29 2008 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 1100 |
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I agree with Jeff Jena 100%.
Price knows he needs to go. That's why he is looking hard for a new job. Funny thing, he is way better than Driscol. Why can't Middletown get a good superintendent? It's like Mike Brown is making all the hiring decisions for Middletown Schools. Not good, lol. Bottom line, we need a change in leadership. A uniter not a divider. Someone who can reach across the aisle.... wait a minuter, where have I heard this before? |
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spiderjohn
Prominent MUSA Citizen Joined: Jul 01 2007 Location: United States Status: Offline Points: 2749 |
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I am stunned to hear that Mr.Fiora and Mr.Sauter voted to hire this consultant.
I would love to hear or read their explanation for doing so. Nothing seems to have changed since their addition to the current school board.
Hopefully Mr.Jena decides to run for school board(Is he a resident?)?
YA KNOW---IF WE ALL UNITE TO SUPPORT ONE CANDIDATE IN EACH ELECTION(WARDS AND SCHOOLS) , and ONLY VOTE FOR THAT ONE CANDIDATE, and not for two on school board, we may very well be able to begin changing our governmental landscape.
jmo
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John Beagle
MUSA Official Joined: Apr 23 2007 Location: Middletown Status: Offline Points: 1855 |
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I'm not sure he is a resident. I think his wife is a Minister at First United Methodist Church.
Also, I think he is a comedian and owns the Funny Bone in N. Kentucky. |
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tomahawk35
MUSA Resident Joined: Nov 18 2008 Location: Middletown Status: Offline Points: 223 |
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Well, He would fit right in since this board is nothing but one big joke.
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