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Item 4: Reformers must highlight incompatible social tenets.

The purpose of a reform movement is to change something in a substantial way. This means that reformers will inevitably encounter resistance from people who are comfortable with the current situation or uncomfortable with the idea of change. This item is a strategy for dealing with that resistance. It has its roots in the philosophical pragmatists’ ideas about what forces us to revise our beliefs, and accept that something which we have considered to be true should not be considered as false. William James, for example, argued that we want to revise our beliefs as little as possible, and so we are only likely to do so if we recognizing that holding on to the particular belief in question will force us to discard a larger number of other beliefs. It is only when we become acutely aware of the contradiction between two beliefs that we are inclined to make the effort to revise one in order to keep the other.

I say acutely aware for a reason. It’s not enough to just point out an inconsistency the way you might correct an error in arithmetic or a faulty step in a geometry proof. Human beings are pretty good at glossing over such inconsistencies if they have a vested interest in doing so. The inconsistency has to be brought home in a visceral, emotional, personal way so that the contradiction is too powerful to ignore, and the path of least resistance changes from letting the status quo remain to removing the contradiction. This is what the African American civil rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s accomplished. Americans who had turned a blind eye to Jim Crow could not do so when the pictures of brutality to protestors started filling newspapers, magazines and TV screens. I do not think that it is a coincidence that as the immediacy of those images fades from the public consciousness, it has become easier for opponents of the safeguards enacted in that period to weaken them today.

There are at least two dimensions on which a school can adopt this element of the reform model, and both are very challenging. The first is to highlight incompatible social tenets for students. This happens to a certain degree in normal circumstances. Anyone who has spent any time around young people knows that many of them are particularly skilled at identifying hypocrisy in authority figures. For it to be effective in the context of a reform movement school, that skill needs to developed consciously. Students need to reflect on and try to articulate the implicit ideals in our culture, our politics, and our social structures.

This can be done in a number of different disciplines. History or civics students can talk about the ideals of the Enlightenment and the American founders. English students can examine the virtues and aspirations presented in literature of the past and present. Science students can discuss the importance of the open exchange of information toward scientific progress. Foreign language students can compare how different languages articulate similar concepts and ideals. The staff and students of the school would have the responsibility to fully develop a plan and make sure it was part of the school’s identity.

Once these ideals and tenets are identified, students would also have to observe the world and find examples of behavior or social structures that seriously compromise those ideals. This is not the only thing that students should spend their time doing, of course. For one thing, confronting all of this cognitive dissonance is a pretty exhausting thing to do, and it needs to be balanced with consideration of the “success stories” of contemporary society. This way, identifying the contradictions can be framed as an exercise in making a good thing better, rather than one that points out how everything is lousy and there is no reason to try to improve or believe in anything. The school should be trying to inculcate a reforming spirit, not a cynical one.

Another reason why this needs to be carefully done is that the larger community may not be happy that the school appears to be introducing a destabilizing force by encouraging students to question authority, existing social norms, and the overall status quo. In a world where we are still arguing over the cultural legacy of Christopher Columbus, there will be people who believe that the reform movement school is radicalizing students against the very society that the education system is supposed to support. Especially if the school is part of a public school system, the school is going to have to have a strong base of support along with the ability to explain how the action of highlighting inconsistency is meant to strengthen society, not destabilize it.

This is particularly important because of the second dimension I alluded to. The students and staff at the reform movement school can not be insular if they want to be effective reformers. They must aim to share their work and their unfolding understanding with the community around them. (This is something that I am going to discuss in more detail in other parts of the model, so I will be brief here.) So the school will not just be trying to make the students and staff acutely aware of inconsistencies. They will be trying to do it for the public at large as well, and this is almost certain to encounter resistance.

We can see elements of this behavior in the students and educators who work through social media, community organizing, and other methods to speak out about the inconsistency of unequal school funding with the notion that education ensures that Americans have equality of opportunity, or in those who point out that emphasis on standardized test scores de-emphasizes the virtues of creativity and independent thought that are integral to America’s claimed entrepreneurial spirit. And we can see the resistance to this challenge presented by those who argue for more tests, more standards, and so on. If an entire school is going to make reform activity like this art of its essential identity, it needs to be prepared for the opposition it will encounter. If there is any aspect of the model that I think needs to followed carefully in a school environment, it is this one. But I am equally sure that it is an element that can not be ignored.

School for Society 3: State Your Ideals

Posted July 3, 2013 By Dave Thomer

Item 3: Reformers must clearly articulate their goals and ideals

I originally included this in the model because in order for a movement to be successful, it must grow beyond its original core. During this process, some people may get involved with the movement who do not understand the goals and methods that the movement has chosen. Indeed, they may be opposed to the methods but believe that the movement presents an opportunity to achieve a shared goal. Leaders like Gandhi and Martin Luther King, Jr. attracted supporters who were not necessarily committed to nonviolence in their pursuit of justice. When this happen the movement can begin to suffer from infighting or a muddled image. So I believed that it was important for a movement to state and then constantly reiterate its core beliefs, not just about its goals but about the process that it intended to follow.

I think this is even more important in the case of democratic reform school. For one thing, there is a constant turnover of members of the movement. Each year a new group of students enters the school, and even during the year there can be transfers. There is probably at least some turnover in staff as well. And an entire corps of student leaders, who have had years to shape and adopt the school’s goals, moves on to other activities. A school constantly renews itself, so it must constantly renew its commitment to its purpose.

Furthermore, if democratic education reformers are correct, then a school based on democratic education principles will be successful in the ways that the larger population conceives success for a school. A high school, for example, would develop a reputation for safety, for the engagement of its students, and for the academic and personal successes of those students after they graduate. Many parents and students are going to want to be a part of such a school regardless of their interest in democratic theory or a long term project to reform democratic society. But if people try to join the community solely to benefit from its results without buying into the culture and ideals that make those results possible, that effort could prove self-defeating.

Depending on the structure of the school, there may be some possibility of addressing this situation during the admissions process. If there are more students who want to be part of the school than the school can fit, the school could use an interview process to talk to prospective students and their families about the schools’ overall mission and how they envision themselves being part of that community. This may not always be possible, depending on how the school is structured and what larger admissions requirements might be imposed by local laws or district mandates. And at some point, the school is going to want to reach out to people who are not already committed to its overall methods, because that is the only way to change people’s minds and grow the number of people who support you. So this communication and reinforcement needs to be a constant part of the school’s activity.

Now, many schools today have a mission statement or a declaration of core values or something similar. But to meet this requirement of the model a democratic reform school has to go farther. It needs to make sure that the values are stated in a clear and meaningful way, not as a bland collection of buzzwords or statements that are so vague and abstract that no one would disagree with them because anyone can impose their own meaning on them. It needs to make sure that the school’s daily activities and culture reflect and model those values. It needs to explicitly mention and reinforce the values on a consistent basic. And it needs to build in major events that celebrate and reinforce the values.

So far I have been vague about what those values should be. On one hand this entire series is my effort to articulate a set of values, but I don’t think that they would necessarily work as a school mission statement. And each school community needs to put together its own mission, so I do not want to suggest that I aim to create a handy list ready to be cut and pasted. But here are some of the principles that I think are really important.

The school should be committed to the idea that true understanding requires seeing the possibilities for the future contained in the subject at hand and how to realize them.

The school should strive to help every member of the community understand and engage with the world as it is today through study, reflection, and action.

The school should strive to help every member of the community develop all of his or her interests, not just those of traditional academic subject matter.

The school should strive to help every member of the community become a more informed citizen, which includes understanding the positions and perspectives of other member of the community.

These are lofty goals, and there are going to be times when students do not want to hear about high-minded principles of democratic activism and they just want to know what the teacher wants them to do for the next assignment and how many points is it going to be worth toward the final grade. There are going to be times when teachers don’t want to think about how their lesson plan connects with current problems of wage inequality and just want to figure out how to get the concept of buying stocks on margin across to the students. But that’s where the idea of a school as a community comes into play. The members of the community are going to have to pick each other up when they are down and continually reinforce the principles of the school. Otherwise it will cease to be a force for reform.

Gazing at Toad the Wet Sprocket’s New Constellation

Posted July 2, 2013 By Dave Thomer

In my memory of 1993, four albums stand out as the essential soundtrack: R.E.M.’s Automatic for the People, Matthew Sweet’s Girlfriend, dada’s Puzzle, and Toad the Wet Sprocket’s fear. (Anti-capitalization was apparently a big thing in 1993.) I would play my cassettes of those albums over and over on my Walkman as I rode the bus or walked to school; the CDs had a priority spot on my CD tower. If you could find the DNA of my musical taste, you’d probably see those four albums smack at the center. I followed all four artists through the ’90s and into the 21st century.

Well, in Toad’s case, I had to follow the band’s component parts into the 21st century, because the band broke up in 1998. Lead singer Glen Phillips started a solo career and did a number of side projects with other musicians. (Way back in the early days of Not News, we even had a thread on our forum about his work.) Guitarist/singer Todd Nichols started a new band called Lapdog, at first with Toad bassist Dean Dinning and then with Toad drummer Randy Guss. The four have reunited for concerts numerous times over the years, and released a compilation of re-recorded versions of a lot of their most popular songs. But there hasn’t been a full new album from the band since 1997’s Coil.

Until now.

The group decided that they were ready to write and record new material together, so they started putting together an album. They also decided they wanted to stay independent, so they would try to use Kickstarter to raise money to promote the album that they planned to release in September.

They started the campaign in early June, and backers over a certain level were promised an early download of the album when the Kickstarter met its goal, which the band expected/hoped would happen in early August.

Instead, it happened in roughly 36 hours.

So it took a couple of weeks before the band could get everything together and send out codes to download New Constellation, but in the end they delivered. And in the week that I’ve been listening to the album, I can definitely say that I got my money’s worth. I had already been streaming the title track and lead single for a few weeks, in part because its energy and exuberance were very helpful in getting me through to the end of the school year. “Get What You Want” and “Is There Anyone Out There” have a similar up-tempo catchy energy.

Many of the songs are slower, lending support for the introspection and contemplation of the lyrics. It seems like a recurring thread in Toad songs is our inability to get out of our own way. That’s a feeling I can definitely relate to, so when those lyrics get matched up with the right piece of music, it’s a beautiful thing. “The Moment” is a great example of this; I really appreciate Phillips’ reminder that “for every door you don’t kick open there’s a million more to try,” even if I sometimes mourn the truth that “for every path you follow there’s another left behind.”

There’s still time to support the Kickstarter and get the album early, along with four bonus tracks. These are definitely not throwaways; the tracks are just as good as the 11 that made the “regular” album. I particularly like “I’m Not Waiting,” with lead vocals from Nichols. And back to that theme of getting out of your own way, the deluxe edition closes out with Toad’s version of “Finally Fading,” a song from Phillips’ solo album Winter Pays for Summer. When the chorus hits, and Nichols’ and Phillips’ guitars are playing off each other as Dinning, Nichols, and Phillips sing that “the voices trailing doubt are finally fading out,” I can’t help but cheer.

Welcome back, Toad. Hope you stick around for a while.

School for Society 2: It’s Gonna Take Time

Posted July 2, 2013 By Dave Thomer

Item 2: Reformers must adopt a generational time frame.

If we accept the idea that we need to change our educational system to give more students the skills and perspectives they will require in order to be active citizens in a robust democracy, then we have accepted the premise that many of the schools in that system do not prepare their students for such citizenship. If schools were already doing this, we would not need to change them. Furthermore, if people were developing these skills outside of the educational system, we would not be worried about trying to make sure the educational system can develop them. The inevitable conclusion is that many of the citizens in America today lack either the skills or the mindset to take an active role in creating and maintaining a democratic society. We can argue about the degree and how easy this would be to fix, but we have to acknowledge that the status quo is substantially lacking in significant ways.

So if this is true, how do reformers correct this? I argued that this project must be viewed in terms of generations. To be sure, there are things that we need to fix in the short term. But the process of changing an educational system and the democratic society that it supports is going to require a lot of two-steps-forward-one-step-back compromises, and sometimes one-step-forward-two-steps-back might be the best thing you can achieve in a specific situation. Reformers have to accept that they’re in it for the long haul. Partial victories should be celebrated as foundations for further progress; setbacks should be viewed as learning opportunities and motivations to keep working. Reformers need to be the change that they want to see in the world, but they can’t stop if they don’t see the world changing to meet them right away. Knowing the scale of the project and accepting the length of time that success will take can help keep the project growing. If I plant an acorn today I shouldn’t give up the project when I don’t have an oak tree by October.

In one sense, this is another easy item for a reforming school to adopt. After all, the whole purpose of a school is to teach the next generation. In Democracy and Education, Dewey argues that education (inside and outside of classrooms) is the way that a society decides which parts of itself to pass along to the next generation. A very stark example is segregated education under Jim Crow – this was a major way that the culture and attitude of segregation was passed on to the next generation, until the federal government acted to make sure that it would not be passed along any further. When people argue about what texts to read and which to leave out of the curriculum, they are arguing about what legacy we should leave to the future citizens. Anyone involved in education should recognize and embrace the stakes involved.

But even though educators will not see the full fruits of the work that they do today for years, we are also confronted every day with the immediate consequences of our schools’ successes and failures. There is an urgency to the fight against things like the excessive use of standardized tests and corporate influence over education. It is likely that a reformist school, if started from scratch, would attract staff, students, and families that are on board with the vision of the school, which will help the school community avoid conflicts on the local scale. But ideally, this would allow the school community to engage with the larger struggle about education and democracy. For example, students could study the legislative process in order to understand how the budgeting process works, and then use that insight to devise campaigns to change the school funding system.

Once engaged in the democratic process, the school community needs to be prepared for the highs and lows of that engagement. It will be very important for the staff to keep that in mind, so that students do not form unrealistic expectations of their democratic involvement. If those expectations are not met, disappointment can lead to cynicism and disengagement, which are precisely the things that a democratic reform school should not try to pass on to the next generation.

School for Society 1: Change Attitudes

Posted July 1, 2013 By Dave Thomer

Item 1: Reformers must prioritize reform of attitudes over changing policies.

The main point of this item is that reformers frequently get caught up in particular policy goals, and don’t do enough to change the way that the public thinks about an issue. That makes the policy successes vulnerable if the public officials who enacted them change their minds or are no longer in office to defend them. I’m not dismissing the importance of policy changes and successes. I’m just saying that reformers need to keep one eye on the long game and build up support.

For example, when Ed Rendell was governor of Pennsylvania, he did a lot to increase funding for education. That was an important policy success. But no one really did much to make the Pennsylvania voters share that commitment to education, or to change the attitudes that a lot of voters in central and upstate Pennsylvania have toward Philadelphia. So as soon as Rendell was out of office, his successor undid a lot of those policy moves. If it’s possible, that’s something that reformers should try to avoid.

On one hand it would seem pretty easy for a school to fulfill this element of the framework. After all, schools don’t really spend a lot of time lobbying politicians to pass specific laws. They spend time teaching students, and in teaching students, schools influence their attitudes. But what attitudes are they trying to instill?

In The Public and Its Problems, Dewey argues that the “essential problem is that of transforming the action of [individual] hands so that it will be animated by regard for social ends” (PP 286, emphasis added). This does not mean that the individual sacrifices himself or herself for the group. It means that the individual’s actions always take place in a social context, and individuals should consider how their choices will affect that context. If I were to spend all of my time on this blog insulting everybody who isn’t exactly like me, then sure, I would be promoting my individuality. In the process I would destroy the audience which is the point of posting to a blog and not just ranting at my wall. So we definitely want to encourage students to look beyond themselves, and the staff at a democratic reform school should be doing the same thing. As a teacher, I should be asking myself if the way I teach a class makes it harder or easier for my colleagues to achieve their goals. I should be asking if the policies and structures of the school promote the building of a community that supports its members. And I should be doing that in a public way that lets my students see that this is an example of citizenship.

There’s another important element of a robust democracy. If we are all going to be inquiring citizens, we need a common framework to share our claims, proposals, and evidence. This is why Dewey and other pragmatist philosophers put so much emphasis on empiricism over faith or rationalism. (By rationalism I mean the philosophical idea that I can figure out important truths just by using logic and reason without testing those conclusions by investigating the sensible world.) A democratic school should be promoting this empiricist attitude.

Again, I am not saying here that schools should force one particular attitude or point of view on all of their students. We all come to the world with a unique perspective that is the result of our own lived experience. Indeed, one of the virtues of democracy is pluralism – the idea that there can be more than one valid way to look at a situation, and that we can benefit from sharing these different perspectives. But it should be possible to broaden one’s perspective through the checks and balances of a community of inquirers, inquirers who can speak in a common language with one another because they can appeal to a collection of empirical investigations that are shared throughout the community. Rather than use a priori reasoning or religious tradition to discover an ideal structure and then try to graft it onto the actual world, we should turn to the actual sensible world to discover what structure it will best accommodate.

There are people who are going to have a problem with that idea. Frankly, there are a lot of Americans who do not embrace empiricism or pluralism. If a school explicitly and consistently promotes and exhibits these traits, there are going to be people who accuse the school of indoctrinating students or violating parents’ rights to instruct their children. Now, I don’t think that you can communicate anything without taking a stance on the world, and I don’t think a community can exist without norms to guide it. If a student or a student’s family have beliefs that somehow conflict with the values of democracy, then a democratic reform school is not going to be able to accommodate them. So the staff of such a school needs to be prepared to defend this approach and speak to the larger community to build support. Already it should be obvious that being part of a democratic reform school is going to require a commitment beyond the commitments educators make during and after school hours. The benefit is that in the process, everyone involved is building a more robust kind of citizenship that has its own rewards.

For my doctoral dissertation, I constructed a ten-point model framework for a democratic reform movement. My goal was to take John Dewey’s vision of a robust democratic culture and try to come up with some specific principles that people should follow if they wanted to make that vision more of a reality. I deliberately tried to be general in my discussion of what form such a movement could take, but in my conclusion I did throw out the idea that a school could be good locus for such a movement. Now that I’ve been teaching in high schools for four years, I want to focus on that idea more. So over the next few weeks, I’m going to go through the ten points of my model and talk about how a school might be able to fulfill them. It should help me clarify and reflect on my own goals and practices in teaching, and hopefully it will also be a resource for those who want to discuss exactly what education should accomplish in a democratic society.

I’ll use this post as a table of contents; as I discuss each point, I’ll link to that post here.

  1. Reform of attitudes must be priority over reform of policies.
  2. Reformers must adopt a generational time frame.
  3. Reformers must clearly articulate their goals and ideals.
  4. Reformers must highlight incompatible social tenets.
  5. The reform movement itself must be democratic.
  6. Reformers must use new technologies to build community ties.
  7. Reformers must operate at local level.
  8. Reformers must target economic structure.
  9. Reformers must understand and contribute to the artistic and cultural community.
  10. Reformers must contribute to the base of social knowledge.

In Texas Filibuster, How Is Democracy Served?

Posted June 30, 2013 By Dave Thomer

Wendy Davis’ filibuster in the Texas state Senate has been a great story from the perspective of democratic theory because it requires people to really think about what’s fundamental in a democracy. If you haven’t been following the story, here’s a link to the Dallas Morning News story from the day after. The basics of the story are:

  1. The Texas legislature wanted to pass Senate Bill 5, a bill that introduced several severe restrictions to abortion rights. The Republican majority in the state Senate easily had enough votes to pass the bill.
  2. The rules of the state Senate required that the Senate needed to pass SB5 before midnight, when the session ended. So Democratic state senator Wendy Davis attempted to filibuster for 13 straight hours in order to run out the clock on the session.
  3. The state Senate’s filibuster rules are much stricter than those in the U.S. Senate. With about two hours to go before the midnight deadline, the chair (Texas’ lieutenant governor, David Dewhurst) ruled that Davis had violated the rules three times and that therefore she had lost the floor.
  4. Other Democrats in the state Senate tried to draw things out by raising points of order and debating whether Davis really had violated the rules three times, but with about fifteen minutes left before the deadline they appeared to have exhausted all avenues. As Dewhurst prepared to conduct the vote, the crowd in the gallery began chanting and cheering so loudly that no one could hear the roll call.
  5. Dewhurst tried to get the vote finished by midnight by calling legislators up one by one to record their vote, and claimed that the bill had been passed.
  6. However, after the Senate’s own website showed that the vote was originally recorded after midnight – and then backdated to show that it made the deadline – Dewhurst had to declare that the bill had failed.

There is a lot more detail that’s worth reading, but one thing I find fascinating about the story is that for every step of the process, you could make an argument that the action was pro-democratic or anti-democratic.

Let’s start at the beginning. The pro-democratic argument for the Republicans is pretty straightforward – a majority of senators wanted to pass the bill. Governor Rick Perry, who was elected with a majority of votes, wanted to sign it. So if this bill is what the people, through their duly elected representatives, want to pass, then it should pass.

On the flip side, the pro-democratic argument for Davis’ filibuster is that even in a democracy, certain individual rights must be protected against a tyranny of the majority. Senate Bill 5 severely restricted women’s access to abortion, and therefore interfered with their basic right to make decisions about their own health care and indeed their own bodies. So respect for individual rights must trump respect for majority rule, and Davis was protecting democracy by acting to block the bill. Furthermore, by attracting news coverage of the issue, she enabled the public to become more aware of the bill and the Senate procedures involved, and a more informed public is also a major good for democracy.

(Let me make a quick side note here that is separate from the proceedings in Texas. In the United States, the judicial system can act as another check on the majority in order to protect the rights of the individual citizen. Pro-choice groups have filed lawsuits in other states that passed laws similar to SB 5, and would presumably do so in Texas if SB 5 ultimately passes. I’m moving that issue to the side here for two reasons: 1) Judicial review is a different, although worthwhile, topic to discuss in democratic theory, and 2) I don’t want to bet much on what the current Supreme Court would rule.)

Obviously, whether access to abortion is such a fundamental right that it supersedes the default respect for majority rule is an unsettled question in our democracy. As an individual, I agree with Davis. But a democratic society simply can’t function if any one person gets to impose his or her belief about what is right on the rest of the public. So you can defend Dewhurst and the Republicans for using points of order to try to derail the filibuster by saying that, while a filibuster might be acceptable in extreme cases, it should be onerous and difficult enough that it is only used in extreme circumstances. Thus, if Davis can not follow the accepted rules, then deference to majority rule should come into play.

The efforts by Davis’ Democratic colleagues can be defended on similar lines as the original filibuster, but the final fifteen minutes when the gallery effectively blocked the passage of the bill is an entirely different case. Here you have an example of the citizens literally using their voices to affect legislation and be involved in the process beyond the simple procedure of electing representatives, which points to a more vibrant and participatory vision of democracy.

However, there is no way of knowing if the crowd in the gallery was in any way representative of the people of Texas. The Republicans in favor of SB 5 clearly did not think so. So at the end of the day, if Davis’ filibuster had not persuaded them, it makes sense that they would try to carry out the vote that they had believed fulfilled the democratic process from day one. And even if the vote concluded at 12:02 AM rather than 11:59 PM, isn’t it worth allowing for some human flexibility so that we can follow the spirit of the rules rather than get trapped by the letter?

But in the end, we have rules and procedures to ensure that both sides of a debate can be fairly heard, and they are an important safeguard. So by highlighting the violation of the rule, the people who took screenshots of the website and shared them on social media were performing an important role in the functioning of a democratic government.

In the end, I am relatively comfortable with how the story has played out. SB 5 has only been delayed, not stopped altogether. Governor Perry has already called for another session of the legislature. If the attention mobilizes a group of voters to put pressure on the legislature, that might stop the bill. Or it is possible that this story might galvanize voters who make changes in the composition of the Texas government – there is already a movement on Daily Kos to draft Davis for a gubernatorial run. If none of that happens, then we have to assume that Davis and the gallery crowd were only speaking for a passionate minority. Again, I will not personally approve of the result, but being in a democracy requires accepting policy outcomes you don’t like. In those cases, you have to hope that everyone made their choices after careful thought and with as much information as possible. At the moment, I think the events in Texas have made that more likely than not.

Laid Off and Almost Back Again, But What Next?

Posted June 23, 2013 By Dave Thomer

On Friday, June 7, the School District of Philadelphia mailed layoff notices to 3,783 employees. That afternoon, one of my colleagues used our school email list to suggest that teachers offer to freeze wages next year in order to provide money to save some of these jobs. I replied to the list that I did not think that was a good idea. My primary logic was that there would be nothing to stop the district from coming to us again next year and making the same threat, but I did not want to get into a detailed discussion on a school district email list. I figured I would take the weekend, write up my thoughts on the blog, and then share them with my colleagues.

On Saturday, June 8, this became a moot point when I went to my mailbox and found out that I was one of the 3.783.

I am fortunate in that my layoff has since been rescinded, although the story’s not over yet. And I don’t want to overdramatize my situation. Thousands of employees, students, and families are going to be affected by the resolution of this funding crisis, and in the big picture that is far more significant than one person’s on-again off-again job status. But that big picture is made up of all of the individual stories, which the website Faces of the Layoffs is doing such an effective job of showing. So I figure it is worth it to share my story and think about where we go next.

I will say I am proud of myself that I did not change my mind about the idea of a wage-freeze petition. I did not want my colleagues, who already make so many sacrifices in the course of doing their jobs, to have to bear the responsibility for saving my job. They are professionals, who do an essential job and deserve to be compensated accordingly. My colleagues are not the state legislators who cut hundreds of millions of dollars from education funding over the last two years. My colleagues are not the city officials who have proven unable to collect delinquent property taxes that should have been supporting the district. My colleagues are not the school board members who failed to exercise oversight and awarded lavish contracts to district administrators. So why should they be the people responsible for cleaning up the mess made by those decisions?

That does not mean I do not think teachers should be willing to make a sacrifice to improve conditions. I just have a different idea of what that sacrifice should be. Before, during, and after my layoff, I believed that if the city and state government did not fix the situation, then the teachers of the district should go on strike when the Philadelphia Federation of Teachers’ contract expires this summer. Without secretaries, counselors, and support staff, our schools simply can not provide our students with the environment and the resources that they need. The district and the PFT have recognized this in the past by, for example, requiring a certain number of counselors in the buildings.

If the district can not or will not provide this basic minimum level of support, then I think that teachers should refuse to cooperate. We should not help the district try to limp along. We should not validate the idea that we can somehow do “more with less,” as though we had been withholding something that we can now pull out of reserve. We should stand up for and with our students, and demand that they have the opportunity to get the education that they deserve.

I hope it doesn’t actually come to that. I hope that we are in the process of seeing the budget theater play out over the next week or two, and that many of these layoffs and cuts will be reversed before we get too far into July. But even if they are, damage has been done, and that damage needs to be repaired.

From the moment I got my layoff letter, some of my energy had to be diverted into thinking about my immediate future. My family relies on my job for our health insurance, so even if I had money saved up for the summer, I would need to figure out how to replace that insurance. (It’s one thing to go without health insurance when you’re a single 22-year-old doctoral student. At 37 with a wife and daughter, it’s not an option.) I had to start looking at other jobs and other districts, even thinking about moving. Meanwhile, students would talk to me about next year, and I had to be as noncommittal as I could, because I did not want to make a fuss if I could get back, but I did not want to lie either.

I had to spend time working through the paperwork to make sure the district knew about my second certification in English. I had made the mistake of thinking that when the state approved my certification, it would also be reflected in the district’s records. Fortunately, with a lot of help from people in the district office, I got that paperwork sorted out, but that took time. Once the paperwork was processed and my second certification was on record, my layoff was rescinded. My overwhelming feeling was relief, but I also tried to feel empathy for the people who are still waiting to hear that news. I hope that there is not a teacher somewhere in the district who got a layoff letter this week to take my place on the list, and if there is I hope that person finds a path to security quickly. And as all of this was going on, I had to read newspaper editorials and cartoons arguing that the teachers had to find a way to solve this mess, which seemed so backward I wanted to scream. I still gave my best every day, but teaching is a job that requires concentration and energy. Anything that pulls you in a different direction makes the job harder.

And I am one of the lucky ones. I still have a job, although as I write this it is unclear whether or not I will be able to return to Parkway Center City, where I have taught for four years. At my daughter’s school, at least one English teacher has had to give up his position, at least temporarily, in spite of all that he does in and out of the classroom. My daughter’s music teacher, who has conducted the school choir for years, chose to retire in the hope of saving someone else’s job. And while that is noble and laudable, how many future students have now lost the opportunity to benefit from his years of experience? How many other teachers have decided to leave a district that seems not to value them? How many of us will come back in September and spend the year waiting for the shoe to drop once again? How many young adults will spend the summer checking out real estate listings in suburban districts because they can not take the uncertainty?

This can not go on, and yet, unless we the citizens reflect and chance, it will go on. And then where will we end up?

Probably Overthinking Things

Posted May 23, 2013 By Dave Thomer

So it’s late at night, the rain woke me up, and instead of going back to bed I’m trying to cull from a bunch of resources to find a way to present information about the culture and religion of the Roman Empire to my students. These are the moments that really test my decision to move away from a textbook. I can’t figure out if the approach I’m taking is an improvement over the textbook or not. I feel like it’s good to have more control over the pacing and sequence of topics, and have the ability to sacrifice a little breadth to get depth. I think I’m presenting materials that are, overall, a better fit for my students than the district-assigned textbooks. But there are times when I feel like I’m exhausting myself to make a slightly better wheel. I’m really looking forward to having the chance this summer to reflect on all the things I’ve put together this year and figure out how to build on it, and feed into some more independent investigation and authorship for the students.

Into Gray: The Moral Murk of the New Star Trek Movie

Posted May 22, 2013 By Dave Thomer

So over the weekend I got a chance to see Star Trek Into Darkness. I don’t want to do a full-fledged review here, but I will say that I felt about this movie much the same as I did about the first rebooted Trek movie in 2009: It looks great, the writers and actors really seem to get the core of the original characters, and a lot of the dialogue and character interactions are sharp. But the plot and the ideas don’t hold together very well, and as soon as you start asking yourself why A happened, you’re very quickly questioning B, C, and D. Now, a movie isn’t a logical argument, so I had a good time watching each movie despite whatever holes I found in the plotting.

But one thing has been bugging me about the new movie. I can’t figure out the basis for the moral or ethical conflicts that underpin a lot of the character conflicts. So I’m going to talk some of them out here. Needless to say, spoilers ahead.

Image Source: www.startrekmovie.com All Rights Reserved by ParamountThe movie opens with the Enterprise on a mission to survey a strange new world. Starfleet’s Prime Directive demands that the crew do nothing to interfere with the planet’s pre-spaceflight civilization, but Spock has figured out that a set of volcanic eruptions is about to wipe out said civilization. So he and Kirk put a complicated plan into motion to lure all of the natives away from the volcano while Spock sneaks in and detonates a device that will render the volcano inert. The plan mostly succeeds, but Spock winds up trapped in the volcano. Due to [insert technobabble here] the only way that the Enterprise can use the transporter to get Spock out of the volcano is to come out of their hiding spot and be seen by the natives. Spock tells Kirk to stay put and follow the Prime Directive, even at the cost of his life. Kirk refuses, saves Spock, and lies about it in his captain’s log. When Spock makes an honest report, Kirk gets demoted and Admiral Pike delivers a lecture about how Kirk is arrogant and unprepared for the captain’s chair.

What I can’t figure out is, where is the grave error in judgment? Was it in trying to save the people in the first place? Are we really supposed to accept the idea that it’s better to let an entire civilization be wiped out rather than take responsibility for interfering with it? Are we supposed to think that Kirk is a hothead because he cares about saving innocent lives?

OK, so maybe the initial interference is OK because they’re going to keep it a secret. But then things go wrong and Kirk has to choose: let his friend and crew member die, or let his ship be seen by people who aren’t yet aware that they’re alone in the universe. Now, Spock thinks he should go for the first option. He’s going to follow the rules, no matter the cost. But Kirk goes for the second option, and then lies about it. Now, he did break a rule, so I guess that’s the sign that he’s not ready to be a captain. And there’s a part of me that sympathizes with that to a point – society has rules for a reason, and if everyone decided to ignore them whenever they felt like it there would be trouble. But sometimes rules come into conflict, and you have to decide your priorities. I know that in the world of Star Trek, the idea of noninterference is called the Prime Directive for a reason. But it seems to me like saving everybody’s life deserves to be a higher priority.

Then again, other characters in the film don’t seem to share that view. The plot moves along with a Starfleet officer accepts an offer from Khan to cure his daughter of a fatal condition. In exchange, the officer mu knowingly set off an explosive that destroys a Starfleet facility. I say knowingly because the officer sends his superior a message right before he causes the explosion explaining his actions. I take it we’re supposed to feel bad for the officer and the impossible situation he was in, and at least understand what he did even if we don’t approve. But the guy knowingly killed dozens of people, if not more, to save his daughter. He did this even after he already had the cure. He did this without trying to find some way to tip people off, or give someone an opportunity to stop him, or even warn someone of what was happening. I just can’t get myself into the head of someone who would say, “Well, this guy just saved my daughter’s life. Guess I’ll go murder a bunch of my coworkers now because he asked me to!”

This attack, and a subsequent attack in which Khan is somehow able to get up close and personal to a meeting of Starfleet’s top officers, provide Kirk an opportunity to get back his command and bring Khan to justice. But through [insert technobabble here], Khan has hidden himself away on the Klingon homeworld. So gung-ho Admiral Marcus tells Kirk to go fire a bunch of super-duper proton torpedoes at the Klingon homeworld and kill Khan. Kirk is willing to do it, but Spock and others urge him not to. So he changes his mind and instead orders a landing party to go to the planet and get Khan themselves.

OK. There seem to be two main objections to firing the torpedoes. The first is that killing Khan without a trial violates his rights. I get that, and I can appreciate that the capture option eliminates that problem. But the other objection is that firing the torpedo is an aggressive action that might lead to war with the Klingons. So instead . . . Kirk violates the treaty with the Klingons, invades their territory, and kills many of them (with Khan’s help). How was that a better option? It seems like the only way that could work better is if Kirk’s team had captured Khan without being detected. And that’s not only a long shot, it implies that the ethical problem isn’t the action of violating the treaty, but instead is the action of getting caught. (Which would seem to justify Kirk’s attempt to hide his violation of the Prime Directive at the start of the film, by the way.)

I could handle some of my confusion here if I felt like it were part of a worthwhile character arc, but for the life of me I can’t figure out what Kirk has learned or what makes him a better captain at the end of the film than at the start. He’s still willing to break rules. He’s still willing to trust his gut instincts. He’s still fiercely loyal to his crew and friends. He’s humbled by circumstances when he meets some enemies he can’t outshoot or outthink, but I don’t see where his attitude changes. So the lack of a clear ethical position seems to contribute to the lack of a clear story, and that’s unfortunate.

Now, it’s entirely possible that I am overthinking this. It would not be the first time. So if you have a take on the movie, especially the ethical problems its characters face, I’d love to hear your thoughts.