Showing posts with label NJEA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NJEA. Show all posts

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Your Vocabulary Lesson for the Day

   

    Once again, Gov. Chris Christie appeared on national television to spread his idiosyncratic version of history.  Appearing in an interview on ABC with Diane Sawyer, he said, 
    "I believe the teachers in New Jersey in the main are wonderful public servants that care deeply. But their union, their union are a group of political thugs." 
     He said the New Jersey Education Association refused to negotiate on a salary freeze last year. 
"They should have taken the salary freeze. They didn't and now, you know, we had to lay teachers off."
"They chose to continue to get their salary increases rather than be part of the shared sacrifice," he said.
     Dismissing objections to his blunt talk, Christie said, 
"We're from New Jersey and when you're from New Jersey, what that means is you give as good as you get."
    Christie is also suggesting a dramatic change in the state's tenure program, forcing tenured teachers to undergo a yearly review and face removal from tenure if they're found to be ineffective.
    thug   [thuhg] –noun
1. a cruel or vicious ruffian, robber, or murderer
    But here is what the Newark Star Ledger has to say about Christie's remarks:

     When Christie told ABC TV’s Diane Sawyer, in an interview aired Wednesday night that New Jersey teachers “should have taken a salary freeze. They didn’t, and, you know, we had to lay teachers off,” it’s incorrect.
And he knows it.
     Even if all school districts had agreed to freeze pay and contribute 1.5 percent of salary toward health premiums, it would have covered only 22 percent of Christie’s proposed education cuts. 
    Christie still would have had to cover $849 million in cuts, according to a report by the non-partisan Office of Legislative Services.
    In other words, even if the unions had caved, thousands of teachers still would have lost their jobs — 

which is why the New Jersey Education Association advised local unions against accepting the freeze.
bul·ly-    [bool-ee]noun, plural -lies, verb, -lied, -ly·ing, adjective, interjection–noun
1. a blustering, quarrelsome, overbearing person who habitually badgers and intimidates smaller or weaker people.

Saturday, February 26, 2011

Cerf's Up!!! What's Up with That?

  In the seemingly never-ending saga of Chris Christie versus the teachers and the New Jersey Education Association (NJEA), their union ,  the Governor has mounted a frequent, and often bitter attack on the educators in the state. 

   To hear him tell it, the teachers are responsible for the budget deficit in the state, as a direct consequence of their pensions and health benefits.  Why, the primary obstacle to budget reform must be NJEA and its central tenet, teacher tenure.  Abolish both, and not only would the deficit disappear-- POOF-- but also all the problems of low student performance would instantaneously disappear as well.  We could have more charter schools, vouchers to improve school choice, and a sudden jump in student achievement all over the state.

  Never mind that many of the schools in New Jersey already rank among the best in the country, with high achievement, high student graduation rates; these he never mentions.   Only the failing schools, in places like Newark, Camden, and Jersey City -- which by coincidence also seem to be failing cities in so many measures.


   With that as background, we turn now to the latest savior of public education in New Jersey, currently Acting Commissioner of Education,  Christopher Cerf.  In the wake of the Christie foul-ups that led to the loss of $400 million in Race to the Top funds, Christie got rid of Bret Schundler, then Commissioner of Education, and nominated Cerf, whose background included a variety of political appointments, as well as time with the New York city schools chancellor's office.  As of late Feb. 2011, his appointment has not been confirmed by the Legislature-- and in light of recent revelations, that may never occur.

   See, it's this way:  in February, the Newark Star Ledger revealed that Cerf's home address in Montclair, New Jersey, was on record as the location of an educational consulting firm that just happened to be recommended for work on reforming the Newark school systems.  Faster than you can say, "Conflict of Interest?",  Cerf started spinning:

Cerf acknowledged Tuesday that he had a hand in the creation of the firm, but said he was no longer connected with it. He said he is now merely lending his address to the consulting firm because it needed a New Jersey mailing address. 

  "When this little consulting company [Global Education Advisors] was formed, I was part of the creation of it," he said. "I severed my relationship to it literally right after its formation. I have never received any compensation from it."

   He said he never did anything with the company. "I have no presence or association with it. I have never taken a nickel from it," he said. "I never actually did anything with it, so I’m not in any way, shape or form related to it."

   He asked The Star-Ledger not to publish this story because he said he did not think it was very important.
  Even though Cerf didn't think it was very important, he immediately sat down with the Star Ledger in an attempt at damage control.

   What is particularly curious about this kerfuffle is that it isn't the first time Cerf has not been as "pure as Caesar's wife."  When he was working for the NY chancellor, it was revealed that Cerf had not disclosed his equity in the for-profit Edison School Ventures, as required by law.

   Little is known about Global Education Advisors, despite their obvious talent for procuring a consulting contract.  According to Cerf, the company is run by Rajeev Bajaj, who also seems to be president of Sangari Global Ventures, which lists Cerf's brother, Randall, as its CFO.  And most of the work of SGV has been delivering instructional materials in Latin America.



   So, to return to the question in the title, Mr. Cerf, What's Up with That?

  

    

Saturday, February 19, 2011

It's About Mr. Bluster

   It's this way:  Chris Christie is the governor of New Jersey, and if you listen to the talking heads on various television programs, you'd think he walks on water.  He is Da Man who is slashing taxes and budgets in the State of New Jersey, standing up to the Teacher's Union, an compassionate champion of education, a friend of big business, and an all around good guy.

   If you look carefully, however, and give his career a thorough examination, you quickly conclude that while he has many strengths, there is plenty of room to be skeptical.


   And even if you love him, really love him, his behavior, rhetoric, style, and demeanor should be cause for concern.  Because the more you know about him, the more you realize that he is a bully, a big bully.

   So welcome to this exploration into the real Big Thing from the Garden State.



   Facts, stories, and opinion pieces about the Big Man from New Jersey, who makes confrontation a daily habit, and has ambitions for bigger things.   It's a Big Thing.