(Note: this is my very first blog post. Please bear with me as I learn to navigate blogspot.)
My daughter is a
foodie. She’s only 14 but she loves to watch cooking shows. Two of her
favorites are:
Chopped where “four
chefs compete before a panel of expert judges and turn baskets of mystery
ingredients into an extraordinary three-course meal. Course by course, the
chefs will be ‘chopped’ from the competition until only one winner remains.
They have seconds to plan, and 30 minutes to cook an amazing course with the
basket of mystery ingredients given to them moments before the clock starts
ticking.”
And...
Cutthroat
Kitchen, which “hands four chefs each $25,000 and the opportunity to spend
that money on helping themselves or sabotaging their competitors. Ingredients
will be thieved, utensils destroyed and valuable time on the clock lost when
the chefs compete to cook delicious dishes while also having to out-plot the
competition. Nothing is out of bounds when money changes hands and we see just
how far chefs will go to ensure they have the winning dish.”
My favorite is
Jersey’s own Cake Boss
about a big, loving, Italian family that, along with a dedicated staff, creates
amazing edible works of art. Fourth generation owner, Buddy Valastro, has
carried on the family’s tradition of excellence and expanded Carlo’s Bakery
from its flagship store in Hoboken to a state-of-the-art production facility
and satellite stores throughout the Garden State. Watching the show, it’s clear
that Buddy cares deeply about the people he employs, the products he sells and
his customers. He strives for excellence, trains and treats all his staff like
family and makes the necessary investments to ensure they have the best
ingredients and equipment with which to work their culinary magic.
When I attended
Newark mayoral candidate Ras Baraka’s education policy
press conference on Presidents Day, visions of these three shows danced in my
head. You see, the good, the bad and the ugly of teaching and education
‘reform’ are found in all three.
For teachers, the first day of school is
like an episode of ‘Chopped’. We have 180 days to use our best skills and
knowledge to create the very best students possible. Whether we teach in
Mendham or Newark, we really don’t know what we have to work with until we open
that mystery basket. Teachers in the suburbs generally get an abundance of high
quality ingredients, giving them a better shot at ‘winning’ the teacher
evaluation competition. While in high poverty districts like Newark, that
mystery basket may contain more than its fair share of bruised or damaged goods,
but far too often those teachers are ‘chopped’ because their apple pie or
strawberry shortcake is not exactly the same as that teacher’s from Mendham.
Unfortunately schools, students, teachers, budgets and resources are all sabotaged when the
‘Cutthroat Kitchen’ education ‘reformers’ come to town and throw around—and
pocket—a lot more than $25,000. Need more staff training for that new
evaluation system? Too bad for you, public school, we’re opening a charter
school down the street and you just lost a whole bunch of funding! Gearing up
for PARCC testing? Uh-oh, looks like you’ll have to lay off staff to pay for
that technology upgrade. You want to start an after school music program? Fuggeddabout
it ‘cause we’re closing your school!
As principal of
Central High School, Ras Baraka has proven that Newark teachers and students
need more ‘Cake Boss’ schools run by inspiring education professionals who care
about their employees, the ‘products’ they create, and the value of a connected
community. He’s raised the graduation rate, extended the school day to include
new classes and new ways to engage students, and taken faculty to view best
practices at schools around the country (none of which included school
closings, co-locations or mass firings of teachers). He knows that “strong
schools are the lynchpin of communities”, that closing schools disrupts
families and neighborhoods, and while every school may not be able to work with
the very best ingredients, those ingredients are worthy of the very best
attention and care. He knows that Newark’s children need more, not less to
succeed. His ‘chefs’ must be able to work creatively in an environment that
reflects research based—not ideologically based—best practices.
Baraka knows that
education policy should be written by educators, not ‘innovators’ or business
people. And he’s assembled an all-star cast to do just that:
·
Antoinette Baskerville-Richardson: Lifelong
Newark resident, 30-year Newark educator and Chairperson of the Newark Board of
Education.
·
Dr. Janice Johnson Dias: Tenured Professor of
Sociology at CUNY/John Jay College whose research focuses on impoverished
mothers and children.
·
Dr. Lauren Wells: Educator with 15 years of
experience in educational program design and implementation, educational policy
and analysis, strategic planning, community partnerships and organizing, and
grant writing. Her research and practice centers on the intersections of
structural inequality, policy, pedagogy, community engagement and opportunity.
Like Buddy
Valastro, he knows that education excellence is built on a solid foundation.
It’s not something that can be bought with financial gimmicks, ‘competition’ or
corporate ‘churn’. There are no mass firings or school closings to be found in
his policy. Instead, he lays out a plan that includes quality ingredients and
investments of time and money for training and maintaining a loyal and
appreciated staff because, unlike Carlo’s Bakery, great schools cannot—and must
not—toss out the less than perfect ingredients who arrive on their doorstep in
September. Baraka knows that, like the Valastros, great public schools are like
great families: they work together to raise generations of students to be the very
best they can be—not what some billionaire thinks they should be. He knows that
an investment in great community public schools is an investment in future
generations of citizens who will give back to and help stabilize communities.
Newark is the
epicenter of education ‘reform’ in New Jersey, and this is why Newark needs Ras
Baraka. As the mountains of research disproving their policies grows, the ‘reform’
cover is being blown. Educators have been fighting it for years. More and more
parents and community members are now rejecting it. The madness must end. New
York City has Bill di Blasio. Newark—and all of New Jersey—needs Ras Baraka.
It takes a creative teacher to construct such an apt and beautiful metaphor. Thanks, Marie!
ReplyDeleteThank YOU for your comment. I'm still trying to figure out how this whole format works, so the home page will be in a constant state of flux for a bit.
DeleteSo glad to see you blogging! We need more people of intelligence spreading REAL information in the world. Good Lord knows the "media" no longer can do the job. Bought and paid for they are.
DeleteLove the blog. GREAT JOB MARIE! Congrats and keep up the great work. I am a certified chef, dad and advocate for public education. I connected to your 1st blog in many ways. Thanks so much!
ReplyDeleteThanks for commenting, Frankie. Chef, parent & public ed supporter—you hit the trifecta!
ReplyDeleteMarie, thank you for sharing this blog. Mr Baraka has done some amazing innovative things in Newark. While during his tenure as Principal of Weequahic HS, My sister was a student there and had the chance to witness the change he was making. He was able to get the students and Staff to buy into his programs. More importantly the community bought into it also. I wish Mr. Baraka all the best.
ReplyDelete