Is Obama's Education Pick the Sarah Palin of the School System?
http://www.alternet.org/story/115093/
Education advocates say Arne Duncan's qualifications are slim. SAN
FRANCISCO -- When President-elect Barack Obama recently named Chicago
Schools Superintendent Arne Duncan as his choice for secretary of
education, the reaction was a chorus of praise in the national media
for a man they hailed as a true reformer and passionate educator. The
consensus was that Duncan was great at building consensus, tough on
the teachers' union, and committed to the kids. And, incidentally, he
was pretty good on the basketball court.

Among community, parent and youth organizers in Chicago, however, the
response to Obama naming his good friend and sometime basketball
partner as education secretary was not unanimously positive.


"I was on black talk radio last night and people who called in were
almost heartsick about it. Their candidate making a pick like this is
an enormous disappointment," said Julie Woestehoff , director of
Parents United for Responsible Education. "People are concerned he
doesn't have the educational background and that he's not even
qualified for the position he's in. It's really a slap in face."


Duncan, 44, was just 36 when he was appointed to replace Paul Vallas,
who left Chicago to head Philadelphia's public schools. He served as
Valla's deputy but had no prior credentials as an educational
administrator. Duncan's seven years as Chicago schools' chief earned
mixed grades, advocates say. While most agree that Duncan was sincere
about education reform, they also say he stumbled badly in enacting
school reforms and in relations with the African-American and Latino
communities most affected by his plans. Many also said he was
hamstrung by Chicago's strong-mayor political system and unable to
enact his own reforms. Several of those interviewed said they would
not make negative criticism of Duncan on the record because of their
concerns that it could hurt them and their organizations. "We all
want
to do business with him," said one Chicago organizer who asked to
remain anonymous.


Duncan's record has been shaped by his avid support of charter
schools
and by Mayor Richard M. Daley's Renaissance 2010 initiative to close
hundreds of schools and reopen them as new and improved after a year
of building renovation and complete staff renewal. Duncan inherited
the plan and has pursued it enthusiastically but without planning for
the impacts or doing outreach to communities.


"They did that to a handful of schools," said Woestehoff. "Then we
were able to stop that by quoting research that it's not good to move
kids around, that it sets them back."


Woestefhoff noted that Dodge Academy, where Obama announced his
choice
of Arne Duncan, was one of the reformed schools that was closed for a
year. "When it reopened, few of the original kids were there," she
said. "It has 400 kids now. Only 12 of the original kids are there in
its second year of turnout."


One of the biggest battles was in the predominantly black Kenwood
Oakland neighborhood where Duncan in 2004 announced the closing of 20
of its 22 schools. "We were involved in quite a heated battle to keep
our schools open," said Jay Travis, director of the Kenwood Oakland
Community Organization. "We pushed for better engagement with the
community on some of these issues. Our recent experiences with Arne
have been more positive."


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