New Math Education Blog

It is called Rational Mathematics Education. The author is Michale Paul Goldenberg. Here is the start of the first post:

Announcing the Rational Mathematics Education blog
The time has come, the Walrus said, to get to the bottom of the idiocy that passes for analysis of mathematics education in the United States and elsewhere. The ‘Net is flooded with videos, blogs, and what I view as hate lists and web sites all attacking progressive reform methods, tools, technologies, pedagogies and, most especially, text books in mathematics (although the onslaught against progressive science education is on its way, and the current focus on mathematics education reform was preceded by the still on-going war against “whole language” and related ideas in literacy education.

This blog has been created to provide direct replies to entries on other blogs where the blogger invites feedback but refuses to post negative responses, critical comments, uncomfortable questions, etc., of ANY kind, regardless of how polite they may be. What do such people fear, I wonder? That their lies, distortions, misinformation, and conscious disinformation will be put under the harsh spotlight of reality? That their perversions and conflating of such important ideas as constructivism, cooperative learning, discovery learning, guided discovery, progressive education, child-centered classrooms, and many others will be exposed as either gross misunderstanding or willful inaccuracy?

Thomas J. Mertz

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Another casualty of Wisconsin’s broken school funding system

I want to clarify the facts about the Madison School Board’s decision on private school busing.

This is a financial budget change with no hidden agenda. This is not about “us versus them.” This is not about Madison schools being “afraid of diversity.” We embrace diversity. Visit any of our schools and see for yourself. This is not about the board wanting the private school children to bring in $13,000 of additional funds per child (an inaccurate number, by the way). In our deliberations, the School Board never discussed any of these topics.

This is, sadly, a matter of a state budget system that does not allow school districts in Wisconsin to provide adequately for their students … across the board.

Due to state-imposed revenue caps, the Madison Metropolitan School District has made substantial budget cuts each year since 1993. We are at a point when no cut is good.
This year the board’s Finance and Operations Committee closely examined areas of our budget that have high dollar expenditures. Transportation was one of these areas. The cut to the private school transportation was recommended as were cuts to busing for some of our middle schools.

State law permits the district to offer Parent Contracts to the private schools (payments to parents) when the cost of busing is more than 1.5 times the district’s average cost of busing. The private school families will be reimbursed about $453 per child for driving their children to school. The public school families do not receive such reimbursement.

People state that we are unfairly targeting the private schools in our budget cuts. This is simply not true. This year we have cut special education services, student support services, and programs. We have increased class sizes at all levels. The list of cuts is quite lengthy. At a recent board meeting we had the horrible task of approving the layoff of teachers due to budgets cuts.

People state that we “owe them” because they pay property taxes. The public schools in Madison benefit the entire community. Good schools are the cornerstone of a thriving community. Providing options for children, developing a well educated work force and bringing new businesses to Madison are some of the benefits schools bring to all of us. In addition, good schools = good home values = good investment. Our schools benefit the MMSD community irrespective of whether or not your child attends one of our schools. It’s the big picture.

The MMSD administration has told the diocese of our willingness to work with them to lessen the impact of these changes. We have offered to manage bus routes and provide information necessary to make alternative plans. It would require the diocese to pay part of the costs. I hope they will consider this seriously.

There is not one of us who feels comfortable with the level of cuts we now have to make each year. As a community, we have to work together to convince our legislators that we need a new system to fund our schools.

Our children, irrespective of where they attend school, deserve adequate funding.

Arlene Silveira, president, Madison School Board

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Memorial Spring Art Sale

Memorial Spring Art Sale is coming!

Thursday, May 31st and June 1st in the CRC. Artwork by professional artists, Memorial faculty and students. Ceramics, jewelry, fabrics, photography and more!
This is a great opportunity to find some marvelous artwork at fair prices.

The sale is an excellent resource for purchasing artwork for your home, for friends, college students, upcoming weddings,…
Students play an important role in the execution of this sale. A percentage of each purchase goes towards replacing the 30+ year old drawing tables in the Memorial Art Complex.

Come and check out our ‘Silent Auction’ where you can bid on wonderful artwork.

As always, the Art Department thanks you for your support and interest.

posted by Janet Morrow

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Everyone has a stake in the schools.

Mary Conroy: Make business pay fair share of taxes (excerpts), the Capital Times, May 22, 2007

Every year, Madison’s School Board gets a tsunami of suggestions on balancing the budget. And that’s as it should be: Everyone has a stake in the schools. It doesn’t matter if you have children, hire graduates or pay property taxes. It doesn’t even matter if you live in Madison.

Far-fetched? Not at all. Public schools are the building blocks of democracy. They are the foundation of our economy. They foster the curiosity that leads to discovery, the creativity that sparks new ideas, the social skills that build strong communities.

But our public schools are now in peril. Statewide, we’ve had one referendum after another. School districts have taken drastic measures, from slicing staff to slashing class offerings, from selling property to shutting schools. Citizens and school boards alike have initiated unusual ways to save money.

We need to take school budgets off the property tax rolls. Currently, our property taxes are so high that people on fixed incomes can’t afford to stay in their homes, even though they’ve already paid their mortgages. It’s not that older residents are against paying school taxes. Some of us on fixed incomes, including me, have never voted against a school referendum. But we may have to if Wisconsin legislators don’t act soon.

For quite some time, Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce has pressured the legislature to lower the total tax burden on corporations. If corporations here paid taxes at the national average, we’d have almost $1 billion in extra funds, according to a recent analysis by Jack Norman, research director at the Institute for Wisconsin’s Future.

Consider these facts:

In 1977, homeowners paid 50 percent of all property taxes. Now they pay 70 percent, because businesses pay so much less.
Twenty years ago, the corporate income tax produced 10 percent of state revenue. Now it pays about half of that.
Most Wisconsin corporations pay no corporate income tax, according to the Department of Revenue.
The worst thing is that the state Legislature has enabled businesses to avoid paying their fair share of taxes. It exempts some businesses from sales taxes. It gives tax credits for research, development and investment in “development zones” (including some areas in which developers would build anyway). The Legislature also exempts manufacturing equipment and business computers from the property tax.

Even ATM machines qualify as computers for that exemption.

Who’s making up for what corporations are too cheap to pay? Lower- and middle-class residents are. As a result, they can’t afford to send their kids to college.

It’s not enough to ask state legislators to make corporations pay their fair share of taxes from now on. It’s time for corporations to pay more than the rest of us do. After all, they’ve been paying less than we have for far too long.

So write to your representatives. Tell them to stop being puppets of the business lobby. Ask them why you should meet your tax duty while corporate Wisconsin gets away with murder.

Mary Conroy is a Madison-based freelance writer.

Thomas J. Mertz

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School Board Names Commitee Chairs and Members for Upcoming Year

The Madison Metropolitan School Board named their standing committee chairs and members for the 2007 – 2008 school year. They are:

Communications Beth Moss, Chair Carol Carstensen, Member Lawrie Kobza, Member

Community Partnerships Maya Cole, Chair Lucy Mathiak, Member Johnny Winston, Jr., Member

Finance and Operations Lucy Mathiak, Chair Carol Carstensen, Member Maya Cole, Member

Human Resources Johnny Winston, Jr. Chair Lawrie Kobza, Member Beth Moss, Member

Long Range Planning Carol Carstensen, Chair Lucy Mathiak, Member Beth Moss, Member

Performance and Achievement Lawrie Kobza, Chair Maya Cole, Member Johnny Winston, Jr., Member

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Good News from JFC

The Joint Finance Committee dealt with some education matters today and the news is mostly good. The Special Education categorical aid increase proposed by Governor Doyle advanced intact, as did the SAGE funding. GOP attempts to make the revenue caps more draconian, via a permanent annual increase limited to $100 failed. Much more at WiscPolitics, including this from Madison’s own Mark Pocan:

Rep. Mark Pocan, D-Madison, mocked the Republicans’ budget cutting proposals, saying their “rhetoric on taxes” and “zeal to reduce government” is at odds with the priorities of the people of the state.

“You’re like a teenage girl who sees Brad Pitt, but in your case it’s when you see Grover Norquist,” Pocan said.

The reality of the Republican proposal is it will lead to school closings and consolidation, larger class sizes, and program cuts, he said.

“This is a cut in education no matter what way you try to paint it,” Pocan said.

I’m proud to say that he is my Rep.

Other “good” news is the Republicans Luther Olsen and Alberta Darling sided with Democrats on key votes. Olsen and Darling are not my favorites, but they were both members of the Special Joint Committee to Review the School Aid Formula and they heard and listened to the realities created by our broken system. They might not “get it” all the way, but their heads are out of the sand.

The letters, emails, calls, visits all helped. Keep the pressure on!

Thomas J. Mertz

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ABC Madison Meeting, 5/16

ABC Madison is the group that has emerged from the state funding advocacy work of the BOE Communication Committee. We will be meeting on Wednesday May 16th at 6:30 PM in the Doyle Building, rm 103.

Please join us and spread the word.

Thomas J. Mertz

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Free Speech in the Classroom

This reporting gives ample space to a very important issue facing every teacher in the classroom today: free speech. I was fortunate enough to have met Deb Mayer on a couple of occasions here in Madison while her appeal was wending it’s way through the court system. What you can’t glean from this article is the kind of person Deb is; kind-hearted, thoughtful, almost understated. Certainly not of a strident nature. And yet this school teacher’s blandly stated “I honk for peace,” has slowly become a foundation for further appellate decisions throughout the country. A teacher rep. summarizes this issue cogently, “”If I were a public school teacher, I would live in fear that some innocuous remark made in the classroom in response to a question from a pupil would lead to me being terminated” under such a ruling.” As Deb Mayer says, “My free speech is not for sale at any price.”

Robert Godfrey

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Part of the problem

This reporting below is symptomatic of a larger issue that we have been unsuccessful at conveying to our state legislators so far, the need for fundamental school finance reform. It’s not a question of taking money from one school and giving it to another. It’s about funding all our schools adequately. This issue really comes down to a question of our future priorities as a society. The quicker we get the dialogue shifted to a new level of discourse, the quicker we will see real and sustainable reform.

A legislative resolution calling for school funding reform by July 2009 is purely politics and won’t get to a vote in the Assembly, a North Woods legislator said Friday.

State Rep. Dan Meyer (R-Eagle River) said school funding reform is such a difficult issue that little progress will be made until the governor’s office makes it a priority.

“The problem is that we’ve got 99 Assembly people who are all representing different school districts,” said Meyer. “I’d support it if my district got more money, but then we’d be taking from someone else. Do you think Milwaukee will jump up and down and support it? Not if they are going to lose money.”

The statements came in response to Assembly Joint Resolution 35 and Senate Joint Resolution 27, which call upon legislators to reform the school aid formula by July 1, 2009. They were co-authored by Sen. Roger Breske (D-Eland) and Rep. Sondy Pope-Roberts (D-Verona).

The resolutions say that the present funding system is not working, problems are aggravated by declining enrollment, more and more referenda are being held to exceed revenue limits, and it is the job of the Legislature to change it.

Meyer, who sits on the powerful Joint Finance Committee, said budget hearings across the state have attracted teachers and school administrators who all have the same message: The formula needs to change and they need more money.

“A lot of that testimony came from educators in areas of the state where they get a lot more aid than schools in my district,” said Meyer. “The problem is, none of the schools are happy even though more than 50 cents of every state tax dollar goes to education.”

Robert Godfrey

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Joint Finance Vote – Act Now!

The Joint Finance Committee is scheduled to vote on school funding issues Tuesday, May 15. Now is the time to email or call. Talking points here; email addresses here; contact info here. Much more under School Finance and Take Action.

Thomas J. Mertz

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