THE GLUE Official Publication of the Kenosha Education Association Teachers Substitute Teachers Education Support Professionals Painters Carpenters Noon Hour Supervisors Interpreters “We Will Because We Can” is a Bad Motto By Juan Jimenez, Acting Executive Director It is the middle of May and everyone is starting to feel it – there’s a feeling of spring and the promise of summer just a few weeks away. The KEA membership deserves a break, and that right soon, as the year has been a tumultuous one for us. We have struggled with the KUSD administration all year long. From the Employee Handbook, to payroll deduction, to the negotiations of the Salary and Welfare Agreements for all employee groups, to the WILL lawsuit, to the departure of Superintendent Hancock, to the Curriculum Audit (which verified the concerns KEA members have been pointing out for years), the list keeps going. The KEA has been busy doing what is necessary to protect the interests of our membership, and we will continue to do so, vigorously. The office staff, including myself, however, cannot do it alone. It is YOU, the members, who make the KEA strong. When situations arise, we cannot sit back and hope for someone else to speak up. Ask yourself this: if a student in our classroom was having a concern, would we not encourage and support that child in speaking up? If you answer yes, then ask yourself why you hold back from speaking up when an issue arises. It is imperative for all of us to point out the inconsistencies, the misrepresentations, the blatant attacks aimed at us as teachers, educational assistants, hearing interpreters, substitutes, and carpenters and painters. “Divide and conquer” only works if we allow it. If we stand alone, we are easy to push over. If we stand as a group, we can become as immobile as a mountain. There are those who claim that the KEA is against anything that helps children in the classroom. Imagine where this District would be without the intervention of KEA over the years. Think about the CDO debacle. Without the intervention of Joe Kiriaki and Steve Urso, this District would have lost millions of dollars – dollars that are scarce and needed desperately to help all students succeed. Vol. 42, Issue 32 Think about the Curriculum Audit. KEA members were at the forefront of pointing out concerns with the Transformation Plan and how it was not helping children learn. There were those in administration, including Superintendent Hancock, who made the argument that the KEA was just anti-administration and anti-change. When the Curriculum Audit came out, the findings echoed the concerns that the KEA had been raising the entire time. It was interesting to see how people switched from pro-Transformation Plan to anti-Transformation Plan within seconds of the Audit being made public. The KEA is made up of educators – educators committed to the success of this District and the students they serve. To say the District can do it alone is a laughable suggestion. The handbook gave a glimpse of what this District’s motto will be if it is left to its own devices – “We will because we can.” It is difficult to find any forethought in their actions. The District wanted to move away from Arena Staffing, stating it was cumbersome, too slow, and that, “No one liked it anyway.” www.nea.org www.keanow.com During the negotiations of the 2013-2014 and 2014-2015 Salary and Welfare Agreements, Arena Staffing was taken out of the contracts and an “apply and interview” process was put in its place. Many of you have already seen the email sent by administration regarding this new process. With Arena Staffing, the District offered the open positions known at the time, people were reviewed by their qualifications, and seniority was the tiebreaker if more than one person had the same or similar qualifications. Once people are selected to fill the open positions, they give up their previous position. Now, there is a new grouping of open positions for which internal candidates must be provided an opportunity to apply and interview. The District should not be moving to external candidates prior to allowing all internal candidates the opportunity to transfer. Already, it is more cumbersome and slower than Arena Staffing. We tried to tell administration the pitfalls; now they are seeing we were right. www.dpi.state.wi.us Continued on Page 2 May 16, 2014 How Bad Are Waste and Fraud at Charter Schools? This Bad. “To understand why there are so many problems in the charter industry, one must understand the original purpose of charter schools...” Story on Page 3 Continued from Page 1 Educator Effectiveness is another area for which the District is not using forethought. We have been offering two sessions since the end of April. The first is a general overview of the Educator Effectiveness System. The second is the opportunity for members to come together and go through Module 2 of the DPI Training. So far, the District has only focused on one part of the Educator Effectiveness System and, as I understand it, not even fully described it. The attendees at the KEA’s first session have had their eyes opened to what the System actually is and the purpose behind it. Feedback has been extremely positive with regard to the information garnered and, for members, the documents provided on the flash drive. The KEA had offered to partner with the District on Educator Effectiveness, as we have people in our membership who are extremely knowledgeable about the System and can help provide training in that regard. When the KEA requested that the District forward an invitation to all users for our sessions, with the dates and website listed, the District claimed they could not do it due to the lawsuit. What was in the email that caused the District to react that way? The KEA, again, is at the forefront of pro- the foundation of the Educator Effectiveness System is “trusting relationships.” Even State Superintendent Tony Evers focused on the importance of trusting relationships between administration and staff to the success of this program. Yet again, without forethought, the District pushes away a key partner to the success of this program. So much for “trusting relationships,” I guess. The more you share information about all aspects of District operations, the more you raise concerns when issues arise – the more we stick together – the stronger the KEA is to ensure you are working in a place where you are respected and valued. Just as you respect and value the contributions of every single child in your classroom, so should you be respected and valued by the administration and the Board of Education for all your contributions. I have mentioned the things our members do in their interactions with children for a reason – children look to us to see how to behave. We must lead by example. We must stand strong and be ready to stand side by side with our colleagues. We all sacrifice and work towards the betterment of this District because we are investing our lives every day to make this District shine in the face of adversity. We know it’s teamwork and trusting relationships fessional development for its members. It was which will bring this District back to the days willing to partner with the District. The District when it was hailed as a model school district in thinks, however, that it can do it alone, again the state. showing their motto to be, “We will because How long before the administration will we can.” It’s a poor motto for an educational recognize that we are right on this point as institution to have. It is especially poor when well? The Glue Page 2 Calendar of Events KEA Elections Fri., May 16 - Mon., May 19 Memorial Day Mon., May 26 Joe’s Retirement Party Fri., May 30 (5:00 p.m., Roma Lodge) Regular School Board Meeting Tues., May 27 (7:00 p.m., ESC Board Room) KEA Proposed Budget Approval Meeting Thurs., June 5 (4:30 p.m., KEA Office) KUSD Standing Committee Meetings Tues., June 10 (5:30 p.m., ESC Board Room) End of Year for Students Thurs., June 12 Teacher Workday Fri., June 13 Regular School Board Meeting Tues., June 24 (7:00 p.m., ESC Board Room) NEA Representative Assembly July 1 - 6 (Denver, Colorado) May 16, 2014 This article appeared on the NEA website and WEAC encouraged its contents being shared. Please note that this critique is targeted toward non-instrumentality charter schools – not those of the type we have in KUSD. S.F. By Edward Graham, Guest Writer Lax oversight and limited accountability have led to a shocking misuse of taxpayer funds by charter schools nationwide, according to a new report from the Center for Popular Democracy and Integrity in Education. “We expected to find a fair amount of fraud when we began this project, but we did not expect to find over $100 million in taxpayer dollars lost,” said Kyle Serrette, the Director of Education Justice at the Center for Popular Democracy. “That’s just in 15 states. And that figure fails to capture the real harm to children. Clearly, we should hit the pause button on charter expansion until there is a better oversight system in place to protect our children and our communities.” While many of the instances of fraud and abuse noted in the report resulted from charter suggests? For starters, establishing an office school administrators pilfering funds and mis- dedicated to managing and overseeing charters representing their successes—a comparatively on the state level will help maintain perfor- small number when compared to the national mance standards and temper instances of fraud total of charter schools—it should be pointed and abuse. Greater transparency on the part of out that limited oversight has helped foster an charters, including independent audits available atmosphere where these kinds of problems are to the public and easy access to the charter more commonplace. And much of this hands- agreements and other pertinent documents, off practice stems from the way charter schools have evolved over the ensuing years since their initial conception. “To understand why there are so many problems in the charter industry, one must understand the original purpose of charter schools,” the report says. “Lawmakers created charter schools to allow educators to explore new methods and models of teaching. To allow this to happen, they exempted the schools from the vast majority of regulations governing the traditional public school system.” So even as the number of charter schools increases, along with the funding that they re- The report, “Charter School Vulnerabilities to Waste, Fraud, and Abuse,” examined representative charter school data from 15 states ceive, accountability measures have been slow to keep pace. “Despite rapid growth in the charter school and found instances of charter operators using industry, no agency, federal or state, has been charter funds for personal use; school revenues given the resources to properly oversee it,” the being used to illegally support charter operator report noted in its introduction. “Given this in- businesses; mismanagement that put children adequate oversight, we worry that the fraud and in potential danger; charter executives illegally mismanagement that has been uncovered thus inflating enrollment to boost revenues; and far might be just the tip of the iceberg.” charter operators mismanaging their schools. laws and oversight methods that the report So what are some of the common-sense will create a sustainably open atmosphere. And expanding many of the requirements for public schools to charter schools, including nondiscrimination and transparency requirements, will narrow the divide in terms of oversight. “Our school system exists to serve students and enrich communities,” says Sabrina Stevens, Executive Director of Integrity in Education. “We need to have rules in place that can systematically weed out incompetent or unscrupulous charter operators before they pose a risk to students and taxpayers.” If so-called reformers are so determined to tout charter schools as a panacea for traditional public schools, then at the very least they can be held to the same standards of accountability, oversight, and scrutiny that public schools must take for granted. “School funding is too scarce as it is; we can hardly afford to waste the resources we do have on people who would prioritize exotic vacations over school supplies or food for children,” Stevens adds. “We also can’t continue to rely on the media or isolated whistleblowers to identify these problems.” Three KEA Scholarships Awarded The KEA Scholarship Committee received over 40 applications this year for their annual scholarships. The applications submitted were from students of very high caliber, and the selection process was very competitive. Three student applicants, who are planning to attend four-year degree programs, were awarded $1,500 scholarships: Kaeli Hanssen, Indian Trail – University of Florida; Biological Sciences Melissa Mutchler, Tremper – University of Wisconsin-La Crosse; Biomedical Science Melissa Weyand, Indian Trail – Alverno College; Nursing Thank you to this year’s readers: Roberta Akalin, Melinda Duford, Scott Farnsworth, Jill Riddile, and Julie Kerkman (chair). The Glue Page 3 May 16, 2014 ANNOUNCEMENTS VOTE TODAY, MAY 16, THROUGH MONDAY, MAY 19 – ELECT KEA LEADERS All Active members will receive a ballot delivered by your AR. After marking your ballot place it in the ballot box immediately. ARs are asked to return the ballot box to the KEA office by 5 p.m. on Monday, May 19, so tabulation may be completed. ARs are asked to carefully follow all procedures for balloting and assist in tabulation at the KEA office. KEA GLUE Editor and Webmaster Positions Posting The KEA pays a modest stipend for individuals serving as our GLUE Editor and Webmaster. The duties of these positions are outlined in the KEA Policies, 4100 - Communication Guidelines, Sections B and C. The guidelines also require the posting of these positions in the GLUE on an annual basis. From the KEA Policies: The GLUE Editor serves a one-year annual appointment, July 1 through June 30. The GLUE Editor is responsible for formatting the newsletter and making grammatical and punctuation corrections when necessary. The GLUE Editor will submit the layout in an appropriate editable format for printing. The GLUE Editor will submit a weekly editorial for each issue of the GLUE during the regular school year. From the KEA Policies: The Webmaster serves a one-year annual appointment, July 1 through June 30. The Webmaster is responsible for designing, maintaining, and archiving the website at the direction of the Executive Director and President. The Webmaster will maintain an online calendar of Association events. The Webmaster will post the position and opinion of the KEA Officers, the Board of Directors, the Association Representatives, and the members concerning specific issues or problems faced by education and educators at the local, state, and/or national level. The Webmaster will post all KEA press releases online. The Webmaster will submit a monthly report to the Board of Directors and the Association Representative Assembly, including usage statistics and monthly update information. Persons interested in serving as the GLUE Editor or Webmaster should contact the KEA office, 262-6542127, or apply to KEA President Anne Knapp at [email protected]. Questions may be directed to the KEA office or KEA President Anne Knapp, 262-654-2127, ext. 13. The GLUE is published weekly (except during Thanksgiving, winter, spring and summer recesses) by the Kenosha Education Association (KEA), 5610-55th St., Kenosha, WI 53144; Ph. 262-654-2127; email [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected]. GLUE submissions must be received in the KEA office by Monday, 5:00 p.m., the week of publication. All submissions are subject to editing policies established by the KEA. Ads now appear on the KEA web page; submit your ad by visiting www.keanow.com. Executive Director: Joe Kiriaki * Assistant Executive Director: Juan Jimenez * President: Anne Knapp * Vice-President: Scott Farnsworth * Treasurer: Rebecca Velvikis * Staff: Scott Farnsworth (Editor), Kathy Lusiak (Webmaster), Jan Studey and Marge Wennerholm (Staff Assistants), Kendra Koeppen (Communications Specialist Intern) The Glue Page 4 May 16, 2014
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