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“Blame em,” Klein is urged about teachers union in latest emails

The latest internal Department of Education emails to come to light are mostly dark: The 228 pages released today contain large swaths of blacked-out text.

But between redactions, a few messages stand out — including one in which charter operator Eva Moskowitz speedily outlines an agenda that became the driving focus of former Chancellor Joel Klein’s last year in office.

Urging Klein to be “SUPERAGGRESSIVE in [the] standard of excellence” for schools’ academic performance, Moskowitz wrote, “If folks criticize you for having the bar way too high, you know you are inching closer to success.”

The emails were part of the yield from a massive Freedom of Information Law request filed by the United Federation of Teachers. The union wanted to see the communication exchanged between the city Department of Education and charter school supporters during a period when legislators were under pressure to lift the cap on the number of charter schools in the state. That cap was raised in May 2010.

Hundreds of emails between Klein and charter advocates were released last month, showing that Klein kept careful tabs on the legislative action and was quick to connect advocates with support.

The latest batch of emails — all from December 2009 — are mostly among department officials. The emails that are not redacted — a minority of those included in the release — show that Klein was in the loop on everything from suspicious odors at elementary schools to pitches about new partnerships.

Many of the emails have nothing to do with charter schools but instead reflect the department’s broader policy initiatives, such as the use of data and technology-infused teaching. In one, then-Deputy Chancellor John White pushed another official to secure philanthropic funds for a new data management program called ARIS Local, saying, “If we reduce private ask, I don’t like public procurement we would need to do given exposure on ARIS.”

In another message, after education entrepreneur Tom Vander Ark pitched White on a fully online school, Klein said, “Keep me in the loop on this.” (That school folded before opening.) And when Roland Fryer, the Harvard sociologist who conducted experiments about student behavior in city schools, offered his assistance upon his move to New York City, Klein suggested that Fryer look at an individualized learning program called Time To Know that would be rolling out in city schools.

Charter school advocates do make appearances in the emails — usually to discuss fraught space-sharing arrangements. Backers of Girls Prep, a Lower East Side school, and PAVE Academy in Red Hook, Brooklyn, both kept Klein up to date on their schools’ space crises. And Michael Duffy, then the head of the department’s charter schools office who now runs a charter network of his own, urged Klein to let two schools in the Icahn network remain in public space until the network had constructed a new building.

But no other charter operator or advocate had as many suggestions for Klein as Moskowitz, a former City Council education committee chair who runs the Success Academies Network. Their relationship is no surprise: In 2010, the New York Daily News obtained emails between Moskowitz and Klein that showed frequent communication in 2008 about space-sharing, the teachers union, and charter school politics.

The single email from Moskowitz to Klein included in today’s release — sent Sunday, Dec. 20, 2010 — is barely redacted at all. The subject is “Greetings,” but Moskowitz wastes little time on niceties before launching into a pair of suggestions for the chancellor.

The first suggestion was to raise the bar on what the city considers success — and to close more schools that don’t meet it. “Academic bar and school closures. Want to urge you to be even more aggressive,” she wrote. “Whatever number pick as reasonable double.”

The next spring, the United Federation of Teachers won a lawsuit to halt 19 school closures. But the following fall, Klein’s last as chancellor, he placed 26 schools on the chopping block, far more than in any previous year.

The second suggestion was to take on the teachers union over the issue of the Absent Teacher Reserve, the pool of teachers who are paid but do not have permanent positions. The pool was created under the terms of the city’s 2005 contract with the UFT.

“Would go hard on reserve rooms and unions, showing victiims [sic] kids and talented teachers,” Moskowitz wrote. “Blame em. Every hour of the day.”

In February 2010, a leaked list of the city’s contract demands showed that being able to fire teachers in the ATR pool was a top ask. Klein made the issue the topic of his last message to principals before leaving the department in December 2010.

The city has not won that right in the year and a half since. Last month, Chancellor Dennis Walcott announced that the city would instead offer retirement and resignation incentives to teachers in the ATR pool — something the union had long requested. City and union officials met to negotiate that change for the first time this week.

Moskowitz’s email also presages a personal policy shift. Before 2009, she had focused her network’s school-creation efforts on low-income neighborhoods. But in 2010, she sought space on the Upper West Side, which has more middle-class families.

In her email to Klein, Moskowitz offers one reason why she might want to bring her brand of school reform to the Upper West Side — and, this fall, to middle-class areas in Brooklyn. “Recently visited a high performing traditional public school to see teaching and was utterly appalled,” she wrote to Klein. “The scores are decent bc kids come in well-educated. The teaching was incredibly mediocre and noone minded.”

“If going to leave nyc a fundamentally better place given schools not only in poor neighborhoods but even in more affluent neighborhoods, the bar will have to be SO much higher,” she advised.

Moskowitz’s complete email to Klein is below:

XXXXXXXXXXX

Before I do wanted to broach two topics

1)Academic bar and school closures. Want to urge you to be even more aggressive. Whatever number pick as reasonable double. Whatever bar pick make it higher by at least a factor of 2. Bottom 10-15 percent is NOWHERE near enough. It will take another century if we do not name the standard. Have 4 years — really 3 in politics. If going to leave nyc a fundamentally better place given schools not only in poor neighborhoods but even in more affluent neighborhoods, the bar will have to be SO much higher. Recently visited a high performing traditional public school to see teaching and was utterly appalled. The scores are decent bc kids come in well-educated. The teaching was incredibly mediocre and noone minded.

The way I look at it this is the last chance to be SUPERAGGRESSIVE in standard of excellence. Use all of talk surrounding reform and global economy (being known as chancellor w high academic standards–in addition to taking on system) to pump up that ante. If folks criticize you for having the bar way too high, you know you are inching closer to success.

2) Teaching fellows. Get massive cuts etc. And political heat. But cannot afford (for children’s sake) to crank up talent machine and let that go to waste. Would go hard on reserve room and unions, showing victiims kids and talented teachers. Blame em. Every hour of every day. Pr offensive. Never seen your team do and this is a great issue. Everyone is on your side except union bosses, assuming you make argument. This wld be win win. Set doe up to address reserve issue and help charters w critical talent need. Make it campaign to not let talented people go just bc of intransigence of unions. Obviously I say this bc believe right thing to do but also it will be hard to open up so fast high performing schools wo a system wh really doesn’t care where talent goes if it helps kids get an excellent, free public ed

Have been meaning to reach out on these but got swamped.

  • limpia

    Moskowitz is unbelievably arrogant, and her policy so wrongheaded. Failure is the result. Lies are attempted to cover up failures. What did she do for a living? Prior to having this power position. Why aren’t  the best of the older, experienced teachers consulted for direction?I can do better than she has.

  • http://perdidostreetschool.blogspot.com/ reality-based educator

    Two Questions:

    First so Mistress Eva actually is mayor already?

    Who knew…

    And second, who does the redactions at the DOE?  Yossarian?

    Love some of those emails where everything is redacted.

  • Pogue

    Eva Moskowitz – an educational privatizing profiteering “hussy”.

  • cj

    Of course these are released on Friday afternoon; might make the Saturday papers but by Sunday, they’ll all be gone and by Monday, well nobody will follow up.  What a piece of slime, however, it shows Klein to have been (although most knew it all the while) and so is Eva.  And we all knew too what a piece of garbage Mr. White was and look what it got him, the ability to destroy the Louisiana schools.  Sad.  But we’ll see how Mulgrew will follow up.

  • http://profile.yahoo.com/F5DPKZAH5YZWI4GP3PNH3VG33M Lost in Space

    Review of Recent Major Revelations:

    1) Athletes use steroids
    2) Wall Street lies
    3) Mitt Romney is filthy rich
    4) Klein is an incompetent fraud
    5) Moskowitz is a manipulating fraud
    6) Evidently, cheaters prosper.

  • Tim

    The juxtaposition of the serious, substantive complaints about issues at traditional public schools that were forwarded by Klein without comment to his deputies vs. the seemingly unlimited access and time he gave to charter chit-chat with Merriman and Moskowitz is pretty appalling. 

    But Eva’s attempt to shorten her emails by slavishly omitting subject pronouns that are 1-4 letters in length is pretty amusing. 

  • bee

    SUPERAGGRESSIVE EVA. Bitter laugh. This is so very disturbing.
    New Urban dictionary definitions:
    SUPERAGRESSIVE Eva $ucce$$  : Of or pertaining to narcissistic, super aggressive exploitation and hostile takeovers of public school communities, a state of obsessive- compulsive solipsism on steroids.
    Joel Klien : An Eva enabler, a tabloid manipulator and lackey to the kings of commerce.

  • Larry Littlefield

    Are their any mentions of school and program cuts due to 25/55 and other pension enhancements?  Any at all? 

    Did Klein never put any of those discussions in writing as Chancellor, and then suddenly start writing op-eds about the situation after he left?

    Or did the UFT comb though all the e-mails and specifically avoid releasing information on that subject, as part of a propaganda effort following a fishing expedition?

    This reminds me of the sudden interest in the rare cases of sex offenses by teachers.  The real issue is the UNSAID.  Neither side in this boxing match on the titanic want to talk about the elephant in the room.

    I’d like to see the e-mails from 2007 and 2008, to see if Klein raised any objections to the final deal, the 25/55 that passed in early 2008.  He certain complained after he left office.

  • I noticed that…

    Eva is the “harlot” of the charter school movement, where she’ll prositute the values of true education to receive her ill-gotten salary.

  • Pogue

     Bloomberg and Klein are guilty of myriad bad decisions to complain about.  How on God’s green earth did this mayor ever deserve and get a third term?

  • bee

     He bought it.

  • cj

    …because the UFT, believing Bloomberg could not be beaten, refused to support his opponent.  If they had, Bloomberg would have long since been history.

  • Michael Fiorillo

    “Blame ‘em. Every hour of the day.”

    And thus does politically juiced, insider lobbying become policy, not that Klein had to be instructed to attack the union.

    When are the teachers unions going to realize that this is not a question of waiting out the current executive – who, in our case, Randi Weingarten twice gave dictatorial control of the schools to, passively allowed to bribe his way to a third term, and then stood by and let him be re-elected in the deluded hope of getting a contract – but a life-and-death struggle against their 1% antagonists?

    This is what class warfare looks like in the education arena, and as Warren Buffett indiscreetly but accurately pointed out in 2006, the 1% is winning.

    Every public school closing or turnaround, every charter school takeover of public facilities, every time a teacher is arbitrarily denied tenure because of a political agenda, is a sortie in what has so far been a one- sided struggle for control of the schools and the destinies of the children in them.

    How much longer are teachers and parents going to allow this vicious and destructive process to continue? They (Bloomberg, Gates, Broad, The Waltons, Obama/Duncan, et. al.) have already gone a long way toward laying down the infrastructure of a parallel, privatized system; if allowed to continue much longer, their shock doctrine policies of smash and grab will be nearly impossible to reverse, which is exactly what they and their courtiers are panting for.

  • Larry Littlefield

    Under the circumstances, and given the big increase in school funding to unprecedented levels, I would consider a choice of a parallel system to be a wonderful thing.  In fact, in addition to charter schools, I wish they would eliminate Mayoral control for HALF the other schools, so there would the THREE competing systems teachers and parents could choose among.

    But thanks to pension underfunding it is all moot. The parallel system is going to be high cost private schools for the rich (with the parochial school system, which actually bothered to educate the children of the non-college educated over the past 60 years collapsing under financial pressure) and homeschooling for those who can.  Nothing for those without those personal or financial resources.  Just like in the 1970s.

  • Mr. Flerporillo

    Possibly against my own best interests, I sometimes wish that all charter schools were shut down immediately, if only to remove this canard from the debate about education spending.  The public schools would have to find spots for 60,000 additional general education students, although this could be simplified somewhat by having the charter students who are co-located stay in the buildings they’re in now.  To pay for the cost of these 60,000 new students, the DOE would have the $800 million that it would have spent on them next year in charter schools. That’s about $13,200 per student, or about $3,000 less than the IBO estimated last year that the DOE spends per student in non-charter general education.  

    Note that because these students would be in the same gen-ed boat as the rest of NYC gen ed public school students, my spending estimate strips out the value of “in-kind” services that some charter school students benefit from (such as facilities, transportation, etc.), which the IBO has included in its spending comparisons in the past.  But if you prefer, you can keep those dollars in the estimate even though it makes no sense.  It doesn’t really matter — it’s only a question of whether adding these students would make a bad situation marginally worse or whether it would be a wash in terms of expenditures and overcrowding.  Either way, if you shut down every charter school tomorrow, classroom spending is going to keep getting squeezed year in and year out. 

    The way I see it, everybody who doesn’t want more attention on pension and healthcare costs in the DOE should thank God every day for Eva Moskowitz.

  • Mr. Flerporillo

    Presumably the UFT limited its FOIL request to emails between the DOE and charter boosters.  The 25/55 emails are certainly out there, although probably with six attorneys cc’d on each one.

  • Michael M. (parent still)

     Re “The public schools would have to find spots for 60,000 additional general education students…”

    As if those 60,000 are currently seated off-site, rather than co-located, and in smaller class sizes to boot.  Sheesh.

  • Mr. Flerporillo

    Not sure what you’re trying to say, Michael. Although I got the “sheesh” part.

  • AJ

    I would think that if many texts have been blocked out, so as to not allow anyone to be able to read them something should be done. It would seem to me that the initial lawsuit would not allow the D.O.E. the ability to black out and or delete aspects of conversations which may be troublesome. If the Judge agreed to that I would believe an appeal is warranted.
     

  • Joseph Moses

    What is Eva Moskowitz talking about when she refers to “reserve rooms”?  I was a member of the Absent Teacher Reserve (ATR) for three years and was never given a special room to sit in, not to mention a special hook for my coat.  I taught in classrooms, did lunch duty in cafeterias, spent my prep periods in teachers’ rooms, and relieved myself in the men’s room.  

  • Michael M. (parent still)

    I don’t see what point you are trying to make. Those 60k kids are already in NYCDOE buildings. Hard to sink my teeth into anything deeper when the starting point is baffling.

  • Jeff Friedman

    I am so happy to have gone to school in NY when I did – decades ago! It appears to have gone straight down the crapper since I attended.

  • Mr. Flerporillo

    I’ll try it again. I believe that one-third of charter schools are not in DOE buildings, but we can ignore that for the sake of clarity.  So assume that all 60,000 students attending charter schools are in DOE buildings.  They’re not in DOE classrooms, though.  They’re down the hall, or on floor above, and they’re taught by charter teachers and charter staff, in programs run by by charter admins.  Shut down all the charters and fire all the charter teachers, staff, and admins.  Now you have 60,000 students in empty classrooms.  

    In other words (if other words are necessary), everything is the same as it is now, minus the charter school staff.  The school that lost its art room when the charter school moved in doesn’t get its art room back, unless it can find a way to cram all the charter students into the classrooms that were set up in the old configuration.  And you now need to hire a lot of new teachers and staff to replace the charter school teachers and staff.  It might not be easy, assuming the charter teachers were less expensive than union teachers.  On the other hand, maybe you wouldn’t need to replace all the staff, and you wouldn’t need to hire replacement principals (in the co-location scenario).  You get $800 million to do this, or about $13,200 per student.

    The point I’m trying to make is that it’s not clear to me that you could do this for $800 million without having class sizes increase, or at best remain stable.  And it seems to me that, when you factor in the one-third of charter schools that are not co-located, overcrowding in DOE facilities would get even worse if charters were shut down. 

    But you’ve probably done more thinking about these issues than I have, so if you disagree and think it’s obvious that class sizes could be reduced and overcrowding could be lessened while absorbing all these students, by all means show me how.  This is the question I’m always trying to get an answer to here, and so far nobody’s made a serious attempt to answer it.

  • nycdoenuts

    Right. That’s the point. All the funding goes back to traditional schools, who pay less staff less money, don’t pay a leader upwards of 1/2 million per year and don’t have protection from city funding auditors for 5 years at a clip.

  • Mr. Flerporillo

    I understand that’s what some people think.  What I don’t understand is whether it’s true.  Can nobody demonstrate it? This involves basic math and references to reported data.

    Anybody?

  • cj

    BTW please note; there hasn’t been a single word about this stuff in any of the newspapers and won’t be on Monday.  Unless Mulgrew brings it up and one doubts that he will.

  • Ken Hirsh

    I hope Flerp asks these questions every time a commenter suggests that charter schools are financially short-changing traditional public school students.  

  • Jjkemp

    Flerporillo:  I don’t know the answer to your question, but I appreciate the time and effort you took to frame what looks like the $64,000 (or $800 million?) question. 

  • Mr. Flerporillo

    I’m not sure how much use it is, though.  Although it is interesting that nobody here appears to know whether charter schools are a net negative or positive for the DOE budget. 

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