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	<title>Comments on: BHS science/equity debate &#8212; the latest</title>
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	<description>News and notes on our city</description>
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		<title>By: Listen live now to BHS science flap on KQED &#8211; Berkeleyside</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-783</link>
		<dc:creator>Listen live now to BHS science flap on KQED &#8211; Berkeleyside</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 13 Jan 2010 17:10:42 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-783</guid>
		<description>[...] dominated by science issue [12.17.09]The BHS science flap — the ripples are spreading [12.30.09]BHS science/equity debate: The latest [1.06.10]Next on the BHS agenda: Meeting with superintendent [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] dominated by science issue [12.17.09]The BHS science flap — the ripples are spreading [12.30.09]BHS science/equity debate: The latest [1.06.10]Next on the BHS agenda: Meeting with superintendent [...]</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Next on the BHS agenda: meeting with superintendent &#8211; Berkeleyside</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-753</link>
		<dc:creator>Next on the BHS agenda: meeting with superintendent &#8211; Berkeleyside</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 12 Jan 2010 00:03:22 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-753</guid>
		<description>[...] BHS science/equity debate: The latest [1.06.10] [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] BHS science/equity debate: The latest [1.06.10] [...]</p>
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		<title>By: laura menard</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-692</link>
		<dc:creator>laura menard</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Jan 2010 20:56:29 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-692</guid>
		<description>&quot;So most of the rhetoric comments I read here do not connect to the reality of BHS politics, culture or climate.&quot;

Deidre

I should have edited but I took time out while busy repairing the plaster walls in this dilapidated crack house I bought years ago. 
I meant rhetorical, google for definition, if read in context it is obvious my meaning, and NO I have no problem with disagreement or debate, just little tolerance for abstraction that  have no relation to the facts. I have been deep in the school issues for years and the person behind several reforms, including a major role in forcing compliance in school governance procedures.

Go back and read the Express spring story about the redesign and you will see that Slemp latest attack is not random nor a budget issue, it is pure retaliation, the smoke screen is clearing.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;So most of the rhetoric comments I read here do not connect to the reality of BHS politics, culture or climate.&#8221;</p>
<p>Deidre</p>
<p>I should have edited but I took time out while busy repairing the plaster walls in this dilapidated crack house I bought years ago.<br />
I meant rhetorical, google for definition, if read in context it is obvious my meaning, and NO I have no problem with disagreement or debate, just little tolerance for abstraction that  have no relation to the facts. I have been deep in the school issues for years and the person behind several reforms, including a major role in forcing compliance in school governance procedures.</p>
<p>Go back and read the Express spring story about the redesign and you will see that Slemp latest attack is not random nor a budget issue, it is pure retaliation, the smoke screen is clearing.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: deirdre</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-691</link>
		<dc:creator>deirdre</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Jan 2010 19:28:14 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-691</guid>
		<description>&quot;Rhetoric comments&quot; = comments with which one does not agree ... ?</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>&#8220;Rhetoric comments&#8221; = comments with which one does not agree &#8230; ?</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>By: Thomas Lord</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-686</link>
		<dc:creator>Thomas Lord</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Jan 2010 02:41:44 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-686</guid>
		<description>In contrast, I appreciate your background on the history of double period science.  As I pointed out in the other thread, I&#039;m strongly of the opinion that 6 periods is plenty, even for the highest achieving students.  A five-course load, including some four-hour courses, should be plenty.    I don&#039;t much care if there is an 8-period bell schedule - that&#039;s fine with me.   But there is no obvious reason why core curriculum, including AP prep, can&#039;t fit into a 6-period, trimester schedule -- leaving lots of room for the other aspects of education.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In contrast, I appreciate your background on the history of double period science.  As I pointed out in the other thread, I&#8217;m strongly of the opinion that 6 periods is plenty, even for the highest achieving students.  A five-course load, including some four-hour courses, should be plenty.    I don&#8217;t much care if there is an 8-period bell schedule &#8211; that&#8217;s fine with me.   But there is no obvious reason why core curriculum, including AP prep, can&#8217;t fit into a 6-period, trimester schedule &#8212; leaving lots of room for the other aspects of education.</p>
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		<title>By: Thomas Lord</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-685</link>
		<dc:creator>Thomas Lord</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 07 Jan 2010 02:36:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-685</guid>
		<description>Ms. Menard, you write: &quot;Berkeley activists prefer to blame institutional racism as the primary reason for the achievement gap contrary to an enormous body of research identifying literacy, kindergarten readiness, neighborhood, and poverty as primary factors.&quot;

You ought to understand that, from the perspective of us &quot;activists&quot;, what you have said there could be paraphrased as &quot;[you activists] prefer to blame institutional racism as the primary [problem] contrary to an enormous body of research identifying the consequences of institutionalized racism as primary factors.&quot;

I&#039;ll tell you what, though: if you have a plan for fixing the kindergarten readiness of any student who will enter BHS in the next 10 years, I&#039;ll be first in line to nominate you for Nobel prizes in physics and peace!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Ms. Menard, you write: &#8220;Berkeley activists prefer to blame institutional racism as the primary reason for the achievement gap contrary to an enormous body of research identifying literacy, kindergarten readiness, neighborhood, and poverty as primary factors.&#8221;</p>
<p>You ought to understand that, from the perspective of us &#8220;activists&#8221;, what you have said there could be paraphrased as &#8220;[you activists] prefer to blame institutional racism as the primary [problem] contrary to an enormous body of research identifying the consequences of institutionalized racism as primary factors.&#8221;</p>
<p>I&#8217;ll tell you what, though: if you have a plan for fixing the kindergarten readiness of any student who will enter BHS in the next 10 years, I&#8217;ll be first in line to nominate you for Nobel prizes in physics and peace!</p>
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		<title>By: laura menard</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-679</link>
		<dc:creator>laura menard</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 2010 20:54:36 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-679</guid>
		<description>BHS double period science program was designed by UCB and taught at BHS for 65 years until 2001/02 when Supt Lawrence reduced the school day to 6 periods.  The program is based on direct instruction with regular feedback to students via assessment, which is why it is so valued by students, teachers and parents. In order to complete the plan for &quot;wall to wall&quot; small schools advocates felt they had to dismantle the dept based governance structure hence the attack on the science dept.  By reducing the school day to 6 periods they automatically cut double period science and created the O and 7th period lab schedule augmented with BSEP parcel tax funds.

PTA Council leaders worked with the science teachers to develop alternative scheduling options. Supt Lawrence nor the board would discuss the proposals. We had a fiscally viable schedule which maintained the  7 periods day, with double period science, split lunch closed campus (reducing truancy and increasing BUSD budget, currently general food subsidizes the food court while students eat downtown) more electives available in a four year program, and most important a resource period scheduled into the school day. This resource period could solve the current need for an advisory period which is the primary motivation to redesign the school day.  

For the newcomers and those without a kid in the fight, all I can say is what school board member Joaquin Riveria told me before my 1st kid attended BHS
&quot;BHS is a different animal&quot;. So most of the rhetoric comments I read here do not connect to the reality of BHS politics, culture or climate. 

Relevant commentary and the research on Direct Instruction:
Achievement Gap / Ignoring what works in exchange for more handwringing. 

Research-
http://www.cogtech.usc.edu/publications/kirschner_Sweller_Clark.pdf
Why Minimal Guidance During Instruction Does Not
Work: An Analysis of the Failure of Constructivist,
Discovery, Problem-Based, Experiential, and
Inquiry-Based Teaching

http://www.tnr.com/currentissue/story.html?id=3a0cdac1-44a1-461b-b676...
&quot;Direct Answer&quot;
John McWhorter,  The New Republic  Published: Wednesday, January 14,
2009

A solution for the reading gap between black and white children was
discovered four decades ago. So, why aren&#039;t we taking advantage of it?

One does not expect to see New York&#039;s school Chancellor Joel Klein on
the same stage as Reverend Al Sharpton. Klein is infamous for his
emphasis on test scores and shutting down schools that fail to measure
up. Not so long ago, Sharpton was in the barricades with Russell
Simmons protesting mayor Michael Bloomberg and Klein&#039;s plan to cut New
York City&#039;s education budget.

Yet these days the two are teaming up for the Education Equality
Project, which seeks to close the achievement gap between white and
black kids in public schools. And at the New York City Department of
Education&#039;s kickoff in a series on the topic last week, Klein and
Sharpton agreed on most issues. Sharpton, who in his &quot;reformed&quot; guise
has decided that education is a key civil rights issue, actually spoke
up for vouchers and mayoral control of the school board.

The forum was a typical one on race and education, as ritualized as a
religious service. First, an introducer recites the latest dropout
statistics. Then, discussants and audience questioners flag the usual
terms--Low Expectations, Parental Involvement, Vested Interests,
Resources, Accountability--each greeted with knowing murmurs and
applause. A tacit assumption is always that the grievous intersection
of these factors explains why poor children, especially black and
Latino ones, tend to trail so far behind white ones in reading skills--
a maddening gap that persists in National Assessment of Educational
Progress reports year after year.

Yet a solution for the reading gap was discovered four decades ago.
Starting in the late 1960s, Siegfried Engelmann led a government-
sponsored investigation, Project Follow Through, that compared nine
teaching methods and tracked their results in more than 75,000
children from kindergarten through third grade. It found that the
Direct Instruction (DI) method of teaching reading was vastly more
effective than any of the others for (drum roll, please) poor kids,
including black ones. DI isn&#039;t exactly complicated: Students are
taught to sound out words rather than told to get the hang of
recognizing words whole, and they are taught according to scripted
drills that emphasize repetition and frequent student participation.

In a half-day preschool in Champaign-Urbana they founded, Engelmann
and associates found that DI teaches four-year-olds to understand
sounds, syllables, and rhyming. Its students went on to kindergarten
reading at a second-grade level, with their mean IQ having jumped 25
points. In the 70s and 80s, similar results came from nine other sites
nationwide, and since then, the evidence of DI&#039;s effectiveness has
been overwhelming, raising students&#039; reading scores in schools in
Baltimore, Houston, Milwaukee, and other districts. A search for an
occasion where DI was instituted and failed to improve students&#039;
reading performance would be distinctly frustrating.

Still, at this forum you would never have known Project Follow Through
existed. Key moment: A teacher reminded us to keep &quot;creativity&quot; in
mind as a teaching tool, with coos and scattered applause from the
audience, and Sharpton milking it by chiming in. Indeed, schools of
education have long been caught up in an idea that teaching poor kids
to read requires something more than, well, teaching them how to sound
out words. The poor child, the good-thinking wisdom tells us, needs
tutti-frutti approaches bringing in music, rhythm, narrative, Ebonics,
and so on. Distracted by the hardships in their home lives, surely
they cannot be reached by just laying out the facts. That can only
work for coddled children of doctors and lawyers.

But the simple fact of how well DI has worked shows that &quot;creativity&quot;
is not what poor kids need. At the Champaign-Urbana preschool, the
kids--poor kids, recall, and not many who were white--had a jolly old
time with DI, especially when they found that it was (hey!) teaching
them to read.

In 2001, third-grade students in the mostly black Richmond district in
Virginia were scoring abysmally in reading. But once a scientifically
proven reading program similar to DI was brought in, by 2005, three-
quarters of black students passed the third-grade reading test.
Meanwhile, out in wealthy Fairfax County, where DI was scorned as
usual, the black students taking that test--despite ample funding--
were passing it at the rate of merely 59 percent.

The saddest thing about the blithe neglect of Engelmann&#039;s findings is
that they are the answer to the problems people at forums like these
find so challenging. It&#039;s as if you&#039;re listening to people discuss the
merits of moving a two-ton load of grain into a barn by spreading the
ground between the load and the barn with cooking grease and heaving-
ho. The solution&#039;s &quot;creative,&quot; alright--but hasn&#039;t Engelmann already
invented the wheel?

Arne Duncan, Barack Obama&#039;s appointed Secretary of Education, happens
to be a signatory to Klein and Sharpton&#039;s Education Equality Project
to bring &quot;equity to an educational system that, 54 years since Brown
v. Board of Education, continues to fail its highest-needs students.&quot;
In Washington, Duncan might consider taking the blinders off and
forcing America&#039;s urban school districts to teach poor kids to read
with tools that we have known to work since the Nixon Administration.

Otherwise, all we will have is the likes of the audience at the Klein-
Sharpton event coming away thinking the event was &quot;great&quot; because
Sharpton is a jolly presence and everyone got to clap upon hearing
terms like Low Expectations and Resources. I submit that this is a
distinctly thin basis upon which to translate our President-Elect&#039;s
call for hope into action.

John McWhorter is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and the
author of Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue: The Untold History of
English.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>BHS double period science program was designed by UCB and taught at BHS for 65 years until 2001/02 when Supt Lawrence reduced the school day to 6 periods.  The program is based on direct instruction with regular feedback to students via assessment, which is why it is so valued by students, teachers and parents. In order to complete the plan for &#8220;wall to wall&#8221; small schools advocates felt they had to dismantle the dept based governance structure hence the attack on the science dept.  By reducing the school day to 6 periods they automatically cut double period science and created the O and 7th period lab schedule augmented with BSEP parcel tax funds.</p>
<p>PTA Council leaders worked with the science teachers to develop alternative scheduling options. Supt Lawrence nor the board would discuss the proposals. We had a fiscally viable schedule which maintained the  7 periods day, with double period science, split lunch closed campus (reducing truancy and increasing BUSD budget, currently general food subsidizes the food court while students eat downtown) more electives available in a four year program, and most important a resource period scheduled into the school day. This resource period could solve the current need for an advisory period which is the primary motivation to redesign the school day.  </p>
<p>For the newcomers and those without a kid in the fight, all I can say is what school board member Joaquin Riveria told me before my 1st kid attended BHS<br />
&#8220;BHS is a different animal&#8221;. So most of the rhetoric comments I read here do not connect to the reality of BHS politics, culture or climate. </p>
<p>Relevant commentary and the research on Direct Instruction:<br />
Achievement Gap / Ignoring what works in exchange for more handwringing. </p>
<p>Research-<br />
<a href="http://www.cogtech.usc.edu/publications/kirschner_Sweller_Clark.pdf" rel="nofollow">http://www.cogtech.usc.edu/publications/kirschner_Sweller_Clark.pdf</a><br />
Why Minimal Guidance During Instruction Does Not<br />
Work: An Analysis of the Failure of Constructivist,<br />
Discovery, Problem-Based, Experiential, and<br />
Inquiry-Based Teaching</p>
<p><a href="http://www.tnr.com/currentissue/story.html?id=3a0cdac1-44a1-461b-b676.." rel="nofollow">http://www.tnr.com/currentissue/story.html?id=3a0cdac1-44a1-461b-b676..</a>.<br />
&#8220;Direct Answer&#8221;<br />
John McWhorter,  The New Republic  Published: Wednesday, January 14,<br />
2009</p>
<p>A solution for the reading gap between black and white children was<br />
discovered four decades ago. So, why aren&#8217;t we taking advantage of it?</p>
<p>One does not expect to see New York&#8217;s school Chancellor Joel Klein on<br />
the same stage as Reverend Al Sharpton. Klein is infamous for his<br />
emphasis on test scores and shutting down schools that fail to measure<br />
up. Not so long ago, Sharpton was in the barricades with Russell<br />
Simmons protesting mayor Michael Bloomberg and Klein&#8217;s plan to cut New<br />
York City&#8217;s education budget.</p>
<p>Yet these days the two are teaming up for the Education Equality<br />
Project, which seeks to close the achievement gap between white and<br />
black kids in public schools. And at the New York City Department of<br />
Education&#8217;s kickoff in a series on the topic last week, Klein and<br />
Sharpton agreed on most issues. Sharpton, who in his &#8220;reformed&#8221; guise<br />
has decided that education is a key civil rights issue, actually spoke<br />
up for vouchers and mayoral control of the school board.</p>
<p>The forum was a typical one on race and education, as ritualized as a<br />
religious service. First, an introducer recites the latest dropout<br />
statistics. Then, discussants and audience questioners flag the usual<br />
terms&#8211;Low Expectations, Parental Involvement, Vested Interests,<br />
Resources, Accountability&#8211;each greeted with knowing murmurs and<br />
applause. A tacit assumption is always that the grievous intersection<br />
of these factors explains why poor children, especially black and<br />
Latino ones, tend to trail so far behind white ones in reading skills&#8211;<br />
a maddening gap that persists in National Assessment of Educational<br />
Progress reports year after year.</p>
<p>Yet a solution for the reading gap was discovered four decades ago.<br />
Starting in the late 1960s, Siegfried Engelmann led a government-<br />
sponsored investigation, Project Follow Through, that compared nine<br />
teaching methods and tracked their results in more than 75,000<br />
children from kindergarten through third grade. It found that the<br />
Direct Instruction (DI) method of teaching reading was vastly more<br />
effective than any of the others for (drum roll, please) poor kids,<br />
including black ones. DI isn&#8217;t exactly complicated: Students are<br />
taught to sound out words rather than told to get the hang of<br />
recognizing words whole, and they are taught according to scripted<br />
drills that emphasize repetition and frequent student participation.</p>
<p>In a half-day preschool in Champaign-Urbana they founded, Engelmann<br />
and associates found that DI teaches four-year-olds to understand<br />
sounds, syllables, and rhyming. Its students went on to kindergarten<br />
reading at a second-grade level, with their mean IQ having jumped 25<br />
points. In the 70s and 80s, similar results came from nine other sites<br />
nationwide, and since then, the evidence of DI&#8217;s effectiveness has<br />
been overwhelming, raising students&#8217; reading scores in schools in<br />
Baltimore, Houston, Milwaukee, and other districts. A search for an<br />
occasion where DI was instituted and failed to improve students&#8217;<br />
reading performance would be distinctly frustrating.</p>
<p>Still, at this forum you would never have known Project Follow Through<br />
existed. Key moment: A teacher reminded us to keep &#8220;creativity&#8221; in<br />
mind as a teaching tool, with coos and scattered applause from the<br />
audience, and Sharpton milking it by chiming in. Indeed, schools of<br />
education have long been caught up in an idea that teaching poor kids<br />
to read requires something more than, well, teaching them how to sound<br />
out words. The poor child, the good-thinking wisdom tells us, needs<br />
tutti-frutti approaches bringing in music, rhythm, narrative, Ebonics,<br />
and so on. Distracted by the hardships in their home lives, surely<br />
they cannot be reached by just laying out the facts. That can only<br />
work for coddled children of doctors and lawyers.</p>
<p>But the simple fact of how well DI has worked shows that &#8220;creativity&#8221;<br />
is not what poor kids need. At the Champaign-Urbana preschool, the<br />
kids&#8211;poor kids, recall, and not many who were white&#8211;had a jolly old<br />
time with DI, especially when they found that it was (hey!) teaching<br />
them to read.</p>
<p>In 2001, third-grade students in the mostly black Richmond district in<br />
Virginia were scoring abysmally in reading. But once a scientifically<br />
proven reading program similar to DI was brought in, by 2005, three-<br />
quarters of black students passed the third-grade reading test.<br />
Meanwhile, out in wealthy Fairfax County, where DI was scorned as<br />
usual, the black students taking that test&#8211;despite ample funding&#8211;<br />
were passing it at the rate of merely 59 percent.</p>
<p>The saddest thing about the blithe neglect of Engelmann&#8217;s findings is<br />
that they are the answer to the problems people at forums like these<br />
find so challenging. It&#8217;s as if you&#8217;re listening to people discuss the<br />
merits of moving a two-ton load of grain into a barn by spreading the<br />
ground between the load and the barn with cooking grease and heaving-<br />
ho. The solution&#8217;s &#8220;creative,&#8221; alright&#8211;but hasn&#8217;t Engelmann already<br />
invented the wheel?</p>
<p>Arne Duncan, Barack Obama&#8217;s appointed Secretary of Education, happens<br />
to be a signatory to Klein and Sharpton&#8217;s Education Equality Project<br />
to bring &#8220;equity to an educational system that, 54 years since Brown<br />
v. Board of Education, continues to fail its highest-needs students.&#8221;<br />
In Washington, Duncan might consider taking the blinders off and<br />
forcing America&#8217;s urban school districts to teach poor kids to read<br />
with tools that we have known to work since the Nixon Administration.</p>
<p>Otherwise, all we will have is the likes of the audience at the Klein-<br />
Sharpton event coming away thinking the event was &#8220;great&#8221; because<br />
Sharpton is a jolly presence and everyone got to clap upon hearing<br />
terms like Low Expectations and Resources. I submit that this is a<br />
distinctly thin basis upon which to translate our President-Elect&#8217;s<br />
call for hope into action.</p>
<p>John McWhorter is a senior fellow at the Manhattan Institute and the<br />
author of Our Magnificent Bastard Tongue: The Untold History of<br />
English.</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: laura menard</title>
		<link>http://www.berkeleyside.com/2010/01/06/bhs-scienceequity-debate-the-latest/comment-page-1/#comment-677</link>
		<dc:creator>laura menard</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 06 Jan 2010 19:28:06 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.berkeleyside.com/?p=2080#comment-677</guid>
		<description>Roots of Reform/Redesign movement

-Glenn Singleton diversity consultant
-BayCES 
-BHS Diversity project members who morph  as needed into new organization
for political leverage: UIA, PCAD, 2020 Vision, BOCA etc

Huyett created an Equity Initiative as Supt in Lodi which is why the BUSD board hired him

check out two blogs from Illinois school communities critical of Singleton &quot;unique&quot; perspective of equity. There lies the conflict, Berkeley activists prefer to blame institutional racism as the primary reason for the achievement gap contrary to an enormous body of research identifying literacy, kindergarten readiness, neighborhood, and poverty as primary factors. 

It is a sad day when conservatives advance social justice principles  better than so called progs.

http://owneducation.blogspot.com/2009_10_01_archive.html
http://www.theactivistnextdoor.com/component/content/article/1-blog/14-draft.html
blog with some background on Singleton&#039;s concept of racial predictability (embraced by UIA and 2020 planning group)</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Roots of Reform/Redesign movement</p>
<p>-Glenn Singleton diversity consultant<br />
-BayCES<br />
-BHS Diversity project members who morph  as needed into new organization<br />
for political leverage: UIA, PCAD, 2020 Vision, BOCA etc</p>
<p>Huyett created an Equity Initiative as Supt in Lodi which is why the BUSD board hired him</p>
<p>check out two blogs from Illinois school communities critical of Singleton &#8220;unique&#8221; perspective of equity. There lies the conflict, Berkeley activists prefer to blame institutional racism as the primary reason for the achievement gap contrary to an enormous body of research identifying literacy, kindergarten readiness, neighborhood, and poverty as primary factors. </p>
<p>It is a sad day when conservatives advance social justice principles  better than so called progs.</p>
<p><a href="http://owneducation.blogspot.com/2009_10_01_archive.html" rel="nofollow">http://owneducation.blogspot.com/2009_10_01_archive.html</a><br />
<a href="http://www.theactivistnextdoor.com/component/content/article/1-blog/14-draft.html" rel="nofollow">http://www.theactivistnextdoor.com/component/content/article/1-blog/14-draft.html</a><br />
blog with some background on Singleton&#8217;s concept of racial predictability (embraced by UIA and 2020 planning group)</p>
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