The Business of Education
Government money spent on Literacy research,
assessment, and programs in the USA and Europe.
THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION IS RUN BY APPOINTED - NOT ELECTED -
ENTREPRENEURS WHO ARE FRIENDS OF THE ELECTED POLITICIANS LOOK FOR THE WAYS TO DIVERT MONEY FROM THE PUBLIC COMMONS TO PRIVATE BUSINESS INTERESTS.
THEY STEAL FROM THE PUBLIC. THEY DON'T CARE ABOUT GIVING ANYONE AN EDUCATION. THE PUBLIC GOOD IS SACRIFICED TO THE GREED OF THOSE WHO HAVE THE POWER TO SIPHON TAX PAYERS MONEY INTO THEIR THEIR POCKETS.
If the President can lie, why shouldn't everyone? It's an epidemic. From Wall Street down to Main Street. The truth is for losers, and the connected ( Wall Street, University, Government ) they conspire to get away with it, and do.
Years before Phil Gramm was a McCain campaign adviser and a lobbyist for the USB Swiss bank at the center of the housing credit crisis he pulled a sly maneuver in the Senate that helped create today's subprime meltdown.
President Reagan and his staff between 1981-1989 broke the unions and brought on deregulation.
Law exists for two reasons, to take your money or your land. Corporations exist for one reason, take your money.
With no regulations and no oversight to protect the commons, the common wealth, or the people, the Church of
Corporate Greed went wild.
Because of the swap-related provisions of Gramm's bill—which were supported by Fed chairman Alan Greenspan
and Treasury secretary Larry Summers—a $62 trillion market (nearly four times the size of the entire US stock
market) remained utterly unregulated, meaning no one made sure the banks and hedge funds had the assets to cover
the losses they guaranteed.
The Digital Diploma - Business of
Education
Digital Diplomas and Knowledge based industries an elaborate web of interlocking directorates between corporate
and academic boardrooms and the foundation of joint lobbying efforts epitomized by the work of the
Business-Higher Education Forum.
Prescott Bush, George W. Bush's
grandfather, was a director and shareholder of companies that profited from and collaborated with key
financial backers of Nazi Germany.
George Bush - Prescott's money and connections launched George's career.
G. W. Bush's brother Neil Bush profits from the Reading Frist which defauds the public.
TEXAS SCAM - Reading First Program owned by President Bush's brother Neil Bush is a Fraud - Follow the Money!
BUSH'S FAMILY PROFITS FROM 'NO CHILD' ACT READING FIRST AND VOYAGER EXPANDED LEARNING
Our Tax Money didn't go to Reading First it went to Ignite! and Voyager Expanded Learning Neil Bush's business'
1999 Putting Public Funds into Private Pockets - Neil Bush and the the people who ushered in those reforms, were politicians, millionaire businessmen or big-time attorney-lobbyists, with no history in education. Passport, Voyager Expanded Learning, Ignite!, Inc., A lot of that money came from Texas Education Agency,Title I funds and direct federal grants under No Child Left Behind.
Ex US Secretary of Education Bill Bennet and
President Bush's brother Neil Bush.
Bill teamed with a Virginia company backed by the education firm Knowledge Universe that is
Michael Milikin's money to start up k12.com his home / cyber learning for profit school which is also
commodisizing educational products.
Bill managed to cut a deal with the previous Governor Ridge of Pennsylvania to be allowed into the state and
because of his political connections has managed to secure business relationships with several other states.
Michael Milkin
Milkin, of junk bond fame, re-appears in 2006 as an investor in Ignite! whose original investors include
Neil's parents and "Neil Bush had raised about $23 million from more than a dozen
outside investors, including Mohammed Al Saddah, the head of a Kuwaiti company, and Winston Wong, the head of a
Chinese computer firm.
Now, after five years of development and backing by investors like Saudi Prince Alwaleed Bin Talal and onetime junk-bond king Michael R. Milken, Neil Bush aims to roll his high-tech teacher's helpers into classrooms nationwide.
http://www.truthout.org/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/65/23011
http://www.truthout.org/cgi-bin/artman/exec/view.cgi/65/23315
[ EDUCATION INC. ]
Education is a Business, Big Business as
only Merrill Lynch Research can show.
RESEARCH - LITERACY AND GOVERNMENT
QUESTION:
What do bogus reading programs actually cost the country when the student can't pass the state
exit exam from high school. Answer
QUESTION:
What can so-called fuctionally literate adults actually do? Answer
The Game:
Yes this is how it all really works and why America can't read with our Ph.D Higher Ed supply
chain system in place over the last 50 years. Big publishers definitely have a leg up on smaller reading
companies.
Follow the Money:
The business of reading vendors, publishers, and how they awarded the government's (tax paper) money and
conflicts of interest. The legal questions AND organizational conflicts of interest.The goal is to prevent
contractors and subcontractors from providing technical assistance for products in which they have a direct
interest.
BUSH'S FAMILY PROFITS FROM "NO CHILD" ACT http://www.latimes.com/news/education/la-na-ignite22oct22,1,4882017.story?track=rss&ctrack=1&cset=true
READ THE Bill Bennett BACKGROUND STORY ABOUT NEIL BUSH'S COMPANY
With investments from his parents, George H.W. and Barbara Bush, and other backers, Neil Bush's company,
Ignite! Learning has placed its products in 40 U.S. school districts and now plans to market internationally. At
least 13 U.S. school districts have used federal funds available through the president's signature education
reform, the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001, to buy Ignite's portable learning centers at $3,800 apiece.
Most of Ignite's business has been obtained through sole-source contracts without competitive bidding.
The Washington Times Foundation, backed by the Rev. Sun Myung Moon, head of the South Korea-based
Unification Church, has peppered classrooms throughout Virginia with Ignite's COWs Curriculum on Wheels
(the portable learning centers resemble cows on wheels) under a $1-million grant. Oil companies and Middle
East interests with long political ties to the Bush family have made similar bequests. Aramco Services Co., an
arm of the Saudi-owned oil company, has donated Ignite products to schools, as have Apache Corp., BP and Shell
Oil Co.
A company headed by President Bush's brother and partly owned by his parents is benefiting from Republican
connections and federal dollars targeted for economically disadvantaged students under the No Child Left Behind
Act.
The law provides federal funds to help school districts better serve disadvantaged students and improve their
performance, especially in reading and math.
But Ignite does not offer reading instruction, and its math program will not be available until next year.
The federal Department of Education does not monitor individual school district expenditures under the No Child
program, but sets guidelines that the states are expected to enforce, spokesman Chad Colby said.
Ignite executive Tom Deliganis said that "some districts seem to feel OK" about using No
Child money for the Ignite purchases, "and others do not."
Neil Bush said in an e-mail to The Times that Ignite's program had demonstrated success in improving the
test scores of economically disadvantaged children. He also said political influence had not played a role in
Ignite's rapid growth.
"As our business matures in the USA we have plans to expand overseas and to work with many distinguished
individuals in Asia, Europe, the Middle East and Africa," he wrote.
Interviews and a review of school district documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act
found that educators and legal experts were sharply divided over whether Ignite's products were worth their
cost or qualified under the No Child law.
The federal law requires schools to show they are meeting educational standards, or risk losing critical
funding. If students fail to meet annual performance goals in reading and math tests, schools must
supplement their educational offerings with tutoring and other special programs.
Leigh Manasevit, a Washington attorney who specializes in federal education funding, said that districts using
the No Child funds to buy products like Ignite's would have to meet "very strict" student
eligibility requirements and ensure that the Ignite services were supplemental to existing programs.
Known as COW, for Curriculum on Wheels (the portable learning centers resemble cows on wheels),
Ignite's product line is geared toward middle school social studies, history and science. The company says
it has developed a social studies program that meets curriculum requirements in seven states. Its science
program meets requirements in six states. Most of Ignite's business has been obtained through sole-source
contracts without competitive bidding. Neil Bush has been directly involved in marketing the product. In
addition to federal or state funds, foundations and corporations have helped buy Ignite products.
Bush's parents joined Neil as Ignite investors in 1999, according to U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission documents. By 2003, the records show, Neil Bush had raised about $23 million from more
than a dozen outside investors, including Mohammed Al Saddah, the head of a Kuwaiti company, and Winston Wong,
the head of a Chinese computer firm. Most recently he signed up Russian fugitive business tycoon Boris A.
Berezovsky and Berezovsky's partner Badri Patarkatsishvili.
Barbara Bush has enthusiastically supported Ignite. In January 2004, she and Neil Bush were
guests of honor at a $1,000-atable fundraiser in Oklahoma City organized by a foundation supporting the Western
Heights School District. Proceeds were earmarked for the purchase of Ignite products. Organizer Mary Blankenship
Pointer said she planned the event because district students were "utilizing Ignite courseware and
experiencing great results. Our students were thriving." However, Western Heights school Supt. Joe Kitchens
said the district eventually dropped its use of Ignite because it disagreed with changes Ignite had made in its
products. "Our interest waned in it," he said.
The former first lady spurred controversy recently when she contributed to a Hurricane Katrina relief
foundation for storm victims who had relocated to Texas. Her donation carried one stipulation: It had to be
used by local schools for purchases of COWs.
Texas accounts for 75% of Ignite's business, which is expanding
rapidly in other states, Deliganis said. The company also has COWs deployed in North Carolina, Virginia, Nevada,
California, the District of Columbia, Georgia and Florida, he said. COWs recently showed up at Hill Classical
Middle School in California's Long Beach Unified School District. A San Jose middle school also bought
Ignite's products but has since closed. Neil Bush said Ignite has more than 1,700 COWs in
classrooms.
But Ignite's educational strategy has changed dramatically, and some are critical of its new
approach. Shortly after Ignite was formed in Austin, Texas, in 1999, it bought the software developed by another
small Austin firm, Adaptive Learning Technology.
Adaptive Learning founder Mary Schenck-Ross said the software's interactive lessons allowed teachers
"to get away from the mass-treatment approach" to education. When a student typed in a response to a
question, the software was designed to react and provide a customized learning path. "The original concept
was to avoid 'one size fits all.' That was the point," said Catherine Malloy, who worked on the
software development. Two years ago, however, Ignite dropped the individualized learning approach. Working with
artists and illustrators, it created a large purple COW that could be wheeled from classroom to classroom and
plugged in, offering lessons that could be played to a roomful of students. The COWs enticed students with
catchy jingles and videos featuring cartoon characters like Mr. Bighead and Norman Einstein. On Ignite's
website, a collection of teachers endorsed the COW, saying that it eliminated the need for lesson planning. The
COW does it for them. The developers of Adaptive Learning's software complain that
Ignite replaced individualized instruction with a gimmick.
"It breaks my heart what they have done. The concept was totally perverted," Schenck-Ross said.
Nevertheless, Ignite found many receptive school districts. In Texas, 30 districts use COWs. In Houston, where
Neil Bush and his parents live, the district has used various funding sources to acquire $400,000 in Ignite
products. An additional $240,000 in purchases has been authorized in the last six months.
Correspondence obtained by The Times shows that Neil Bush met with top Houston officials, sent e-mails and left
voice mail messages urging bigger and faster allocations. An e-mail from a school procurement official to
colleagues said Bush had made it clear that he had a "good working relationship" with a school board
member. Another Ignite official asked a Texas state education official to endorse the company. In an e-mail,
Neil Bush's partner Ken Leonard asked Michelle Ungurait, state director of social studies programs, to tell
Houston officials her "positive impressions of our content, system and approach."
Ungurait, identified in another Leonard e-mail as "our good friend" at the state office, told her
superiors in response to The Times' inquiry that she never acted on Leonard's request. Leonard said he
did not ask Ungurait to do anything that would be improper. Houston school officials gave Ignite's products
"high" ratings in eight categories and recommended approval.
Some in Houston's schools question the expenditures, however. Jon Dansby was teaching at Houston's
Fleming Middle School when Ignite products arrived. "You can't even get basics like paper and scissors,
and we went out and bought them. I just see red," he said. In Las Vegas, the schools have
approved more than $300,000 in Ignite purchases. Records show the board recommended spending $150,000 in No
Child funding on Ignite products.
Sources familiar with the Las Vegas purchases said pressure to buy Ignite products came from Sig Rogich, an
influential local figure and prominent Republican whose fundraising of more than $200,000 for President
Bush's 2004 reelection campaign qualified him as a "Bush Ranger." Rogich, who chairs a foundation
that supports local schools, said he applied no pressure but became interested in COWs after Neil Bush contacted
him. Rogich donated $6,000 to purchase two COWs for a middle school named after him. Christy Falba, the former
Clark County school official who oversaw the contracts, said she and her husband attended a dinner with Neil
Bush to discuss the products. She said Rogich encouraged the district "to look at the Ignite program"
but applied no pressure.
Few independent studies have been done to assess the effectiveness of Ignite's teaching strategies. Neil
Bush said the company had gotten "great feedback" from educators and planned to conduct a "major
scientifically valid study" to assess the COW's impact. The results should be in by next summer, he
said. Though Ignite's products get generally rave reviews from Texas educators, the opinion is not
universal. The Tornillo, Texas, Independent School District no longer uses the
Ignite programs it purchased several years ago for $43,000. "I wouldn't advise anyone else to use
it," said Supt. Paul Vranish. "Nobody wanted to use it, and the principal who bought it is no
longer here."
Many of the videos were shot at Del Valle Junior High School near Austin, where school district officials
allowed Ignite to film facilities and students. Lori Anderson, a former teacher and now Ignite's marketing
director. Ignite says Anderson was simply role-playing. In return for use of its students and facilities, a
district spokeswoman said Ignite donated a free COW. Five others were purchased with district funds.
District spokeswoman Celina Bley acknowledged that regulations bar school officials from endorsing
products. But she said that restriction did not apply to the videos. "It is illegal for
individuals to make an endorsement, but this was a districtwide endorsement," Bley said in an e-mail.
"READING FIRST UNDER
FIRE"
University of Oregon - home of DIBELS' insistence on frequent testing is the
subject of annoyance for many teachers, who charge that the need for ongoing assessment overwhelms time needed
for instruction. In some circles, it has earned the derisive nickname “dribbles.” “It's an assessment
tsunami,” said a Reading First consultant in Colorado. “It's the dibelization of
America. Everything is being dibbled.” Charlotte Postlewaite, a Kentucky schoolteacher, tracked the
early implementation of Reading First in 2003. As part of her efforts, she interviewed the
author of DIBELS, Roland Good, an associate professor of school psychology at
the University of Oregon. In an e-mail Postlewaite shared with the Monitor, Good explained that “the
level of interest” in the test was on the rise: 2,020 schools were actively using DIBELS data
across 32 states and Canada. He predicted that those numbers would triple by the spring of 2004. “All in all,
DIBELS is becoming very widely used,” he said. Something about the exchange irked Postlewaite.
“He told me business was booming,” she said. “Well, it ought to have been, because states told me that if they
didn't put DIBELS in their applications, they didn't get funded. I thought it was a bit disingenuous
that he pretended not to know why use of the test was growing by leaps and bounds.” States are forced to utilize
DIBELS assessments.
Joan Taylor(775) 687-9131
Silbert had worked with Carnine at NCITE, but said he knew little of DIBELS prior to his work with RMC, and
certainly had no link to the test. Dimino, on the other hand, is listed on the DIBELS Web page as a
trainer.Silbert said he can't remember exactly what was said, but didn't recollect specifically pushing
DIBELS. “I can't say what the exact words were, but normally when I dealt with states I just told them what
the various options were,” he said.Dimino, incidentally, was the same consultant and DIBELS trainer who drew the
ire of state officials in Kentucky. His behavior there sparked a spirited letter from Gene Wilhoit,
Kentucky's commissioner of education. “Kentucky's team members have expressed to me their understanding
that it became quite clear that [choosing DIBELS] was an expectation in order to funded,” Wilhoit said in the
Jan. 2003 letter. “We subsequently learned that one of our technical assistance members, Joe Dimino, is, in
fact, a trainer for DIBELS, which we believe raises serious issues concerning conflicts of interest. Section
9526 of NCLB, which prohibits ED from mandating state or local curriculum. Furthermore, the developer of DIBELS,
Roland Good, is a member of the Reading First Assessment Committee.
1 STORY
2 The Assessment Team Chart
3 Reading First State Monitoring Reports
More about Testing and Assessment
From: U.S. Department of Education April 8, 2003
Contact: David Thomas (202) 401-1576
NEW INTERNATIONAL STUDY COMPARES FOURTH-GRADE READING LITERACY IN U.S. AND 34 OTHER
COUNTRIES
Government Agenda http://208.241.98.182/litweb/WebList_40.asp
Original Message From: U.S. Department of Education
Sent: 2003 April 08, Contact: David Thomas (202) 401-1576
For further information on International Comparisons in Fourth-Grade Reading Literacy:
Findings from the Progress in International
Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS) 2001 The PIRLS report can be ordered 1-877-433-7827, TTY/TTD
1-877-576-7734
customerservice@edpubs.org;
http://www.edpubs.org.
A new international study of reading literacy, International Comparisons in Fourth-Grade Reading
Literacy: Findings from the Progress In International Reading Literacy Study (PIRLS)
of 2001, was released today by the U.S. Department of Education's National Center for Education Statistics
(NCES). This report compares findings about U.S. fourth-grade reading literacy with those from the 34 other
countries that participated in PIRLS.
"The results from this study indicate that U.S. fourth-graders performed well on many
reading tasks, but there is room for improvement," said Grover "Russ" Whitehurst, director of
the U.S. Department of Education's Institute of Education Sciences. "In the United States there are
significant gaps in reading literacy achievement between racial/ethnic groups, between students in high
poverty schools and other public schools, and also between girls and boys."
International Comparisons in Fourth-Grade Reading Literacy provides information on a variety of reading
topics, but with an emphasis on U.S. results: comparisons of average scores across the 35 countries on two
reading subscales and a combined reading scale; and achievement broken out by sex internationally, and by
race/ethnicity, by public and private schools, and by poverty levels of the school within the United States. The
report also presents information on reading and instruction in the classroom and explores the reading habits of
fourth-graders outside of school.
- Christy Gullion National Institute For Literacy Policy Update contact
- OERI Testifies on Budget March 20, 2000 PDF Page 10 COSSA Updates Office of Educational Research and Improvement
- U.S. Dept of Education -
Research and Statistics 1-800-USA-Learn
They do not have information about Dialect Speakers because there are no federal funds. Funds are only for ESL~EFL~TSOL etc. - State Takeover, School Restructuring,
Private Management, and Student Achievement in Philadelphia
It didn't help. "Schools in Philadelphia have shown strong improvement that has been reflected widely across the district," said Jolley Christman, a co-author of the report. "But our findings show the investment in private management of schools has not paid the expected dividends." - Education Commission of the States
(ECS) Promising Practices database which includes about 25 Reading programs that have shown evidence of success.
- The Literacy Information and Communication
System (LINCS) at the National Institute for Literacy
- The Center for the Improvement of Early Reading Achievement
- The National Institute for Literacy (NIFL)
A federal organization that shares information about literacy and supports the development of high-quality literacy services so all Americans can develop essential basic skills. Phone 202-233-2025
Mailing List
- Office of Educational Research and Improvement
- U.S. Dept of Education - Research and
Statistics 1-800-USA-Learn
They do not have information about Dialect Speakers because there are no federal funds. Funds are only for ESL~EFL~TSOL etc. - Teaching Children to Read: The fragile link
between science and federal education policy. by Gregory Camilli, Sadako Vargas, Michele Yurecko
National Institute for Early Education Research and Rutgers University (May 8, 2003). Education Policy Analysis Archives, 11(15).
Abstract:
Teaching Children to Read (TCR) has stirred much controversy among reading experts regarding the efficacy of phonics instruction. This report, which was conducted by the National Reading Panel (NRP), has also played an important role in subsequent federal policy regarding reading instruction. Using meta-analysis, the NRP found that systematic phonics instruction was more effective than alternatives in teaching children to read. In the present study, the findings and procedures leading to TCR were examined. We concluded that the methodology and procedures in TCR were not adequate for synthesizing the research literature on phonics instruction. Moreover, we estimated a smaller though still substantial effect (d = .24) for systematic phonics, but we also found an effect for systematic language activities (d = .29) and tutoring (d = .40). Systematic phonics instruction when combined with language activities and individual tutoring may triple the effect of phonics alone. As federal policies are formulated around early literacy curricula and instruction, these findings indicate that phonics, as one aspect of the complex reading process, should not be over-emphasized. - What is Content-Based Language Teaching through Technology (CoBaLTT) ?
Using New Technology to Teach Native American Languages.
Diane Tedick, Associate Professor of Second Languages and Cultures Education, College of Education and Human Development, University of Minnesota Content-Based Instruction CBI--has been defined as "...the integration of particular content with language teaching aims" (Brinton et al., 1989, p. 2). It is based on the principle that successful language learning occurs when students are presented with target language material in meaningful, contextualized forms with the primary focus on acquiring information and knowledge. Content is the organizing principle, and other aspects of language (linguistic structures, vocabulary, functions) are presented as needed (Snow et al., 1989). In order to emphasize the communicative nature of language and to acknowledge that language has meaning only within social and academic contexts, educators must view the target language "largely as the vehicle through which subject matter content is learned, rather than as the immediate object of study" (Brinton et al., 1989, p. 5). To do so requires rethinking language curricula in ways that make content themes and performance tasks the organizing principles and allow language structures to emerge from those themes and tasks. - Teaching Children to Read: The fragile link between science and
federal education policy
Abstract:
Teaching Children to Read (TCR) has stirred much controversy among reading experts regarding the efficacy of phonics instruction. This report, which was conducted by the National Reading Panel (NRP), has also played an important role in subsequent federal policy regarding reading instruction. Using meta-analysis, the NRP found that systematic phonics instruction was more effective than alternatives in teaching children to read. In the present study, the findings and procedures leading to TCR were examined. We concluded that the methodology and procedures in TCR were not adequate for synthesizing the research literature on phonics instruction. Moreover, we estimated a smaller though still substantial effect (d = .24) for systematic phonics, but we also found an effect for systematic language activities (d = .29) and tutoring (d = .40). Systematic phonics instruction when combined with language activities and individual tutoring may triple the effect of phonics alone. As federal policies are formulated around early literacy curricula and instruction, these findings indicate that phonics, as one aspect of the complex reading process, should not be over-emphasized.