Mamie Till Mobley

"There was an important mission for me, to shape so many...young minds as a teacher. God took away one child but...(gave) me thousands. And I have been grateful for the blessing." Mamie Till Mobley

Wednesday, March 3, 2010

Ravitch returning to her roots

When I was a doctoral candidate at the University of Buffalo in the 1980s, Diane Ravitch was  a must reading for the neophytes in the history of American public education from the perspective of  a revisionist historian.  An article in the New York Times, on Tuesday, March 3, 2010, described her as making a u-turn  about educational reform of the American public school system. Once a staunch advocate of standardized testing, merit pay,  charters,  and  privatization, the research  project in Pakistan's education system she conducted in 2005, "convinced her that protecting the United States’ public schools was important to democracy." 
 http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/03/education/03ravitch.html?pagewanted=1&em
photo credit: O Muhammad, NYT

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Whitney Tilson (3rd background)

Whitney Tilson (3rd background)
"Let’s be honest: we need a lot more well-off, well-educated white folks with a personal stake in both charter schools and education reform in general if we’re going to take reform to the next level, both politically and operationally.Whitney Tilson, hedge fund manager and major funding angel for the school privatizing Democrats for Education Reform, thinks there’s not enough rich, educated white folks.( Preaprez) click photo to his blog.

Arne Duncan

Arne Duncan
U.S. Secretary of Education, click photo