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yurbud

(39,405 posts)
Tue Feb 25, 2014, 07:00 PM Feb 2014

A Teacher’s Advice to Bill Gates

An awesome letter to the one of the biggest financial backers of the corporate take over of public education.

Dear Mr. Gates,

“I don’t know many business leaders who are satisfied with America’s schools. In fact, just about every CEO I know is worried that this country simply isn’t producing enough graduates with the skills they need to compete globally.” – Bill Gates


I find it ironic that you opened your notes with this remark just prior to a story was published about two hundred wealthy and famous Wall Street figures to the Kappa Beta Phi dinner in New York City. It consisted of a group of wealthy and powerful financiers making homophobic jokes, making light of the financial crisis, and bragging about their business conquests at Main Street’s expense. The reporter who witnessed this dinner didn’t mention any CEO’s worried about the plight of the American schools.

As a 7th grade middle school Social Studies teacher in Carmel, NY, I never thought about the need to satisfy business leaders. I focus on teaching students to value American History and to question the choices that have been made in the past. Since the Industrial Revolution, business leaders have been given enormous opportunities in this country and throughout the world. The technology has made American lives remarkably more convenient but certainly at a price to our environment and to economic equality.

As a teacher, I am worried that this country simply isn’t producing enough CEO’s with the moral and ethical skills they need to create a sustainable future. The news is constantly reporting on chemicals being leaked into drinking water or how the CEO of McDonald’s makes $8 million a year compared to his employers making minimum wage and yet nothing gets done to make it better. The Common Core Standards do not address how our future CEO’s will be prepared to make compassionate and ethical decisions that will benefit all of humanity.

The public is skeptical about Common Core because they see the individuals who are backing this privatization of education. The public views the standardized testing and modules being produced by Pearson Corporation as products that Americans are being forced to purchase. These tests will not produce the leaders with the collaborative and innovative skills to solve the problems of the 21st century. The public views Common Core as a marketing scheme designed to make a few CEO’s and the shareholders billions of dollars. Your foundation money has bought off our elected officials and teacher unions but the public outcry remains.

http://dianeravitch.net/2014/02/23/a-teachers-advice-to-bill-gates/
19 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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A Teacher’s Advice to Bill Gates (Original Post) yurbud Feb 2014 OP
fuck yeah phantom power Feb 2014 #1
Bill, no point in being an engineer if you are outsourcing those jobs on point Feb 2014 #2
Great letter. Thanks for posting it. nt Chef Eric Feb 2014 #3
amen. demigoddess Feb 2014 #4
As an educator......... MyOwnPeace Feb 2014 #5
Probably was relying Mr.Bill Feb 2014 #7
the opening paragraph (not the quote) seems to be missing a word, or something... magical thyme Feb 2014 #16
What is really sad, Hoppy Feb 2014 #6
being a teacher now is like being a doctor who can only give treatments dictated by quack remedy yurbud Feb 2014 #12
Good analogy. LuvNewcastle Feb 2014 #17
Thanks for posting. DamnYankeeInHouston Feb 2014 #8
Schools aren't creating enough graduates with the skills they need? abelenkpe Feb 2014 #9
and Americans who "don't have those skills" have to train those imported workers. yurbud Feb 2014 #11
An outstanding post Jake2413 Feb 2014 #10
Amen, sister! nt raccoon Feb 2014 #13
As someone once said . . . markpkessinger Feb 2014 #14
and Wall Street doesn't mind taking lives. yurbud Feb 2014 #15
Those who can't teach become reformers. clg311 Feb 2014 #18
the rest are either afraid or failing the Milgram experiment. yurbud Mar 2014 #19

on point

(2,506 posts)
2. Bill, no point in being an engineer if you are outsourcing those jobs
Tue Feb 25, 2014, 07:20 PM
Feb 2014

You provide a disincentive to study for the technical degrees you say you need every time you outsource those jobs or bring in an h1b1 resource at less than the going rate just because you don't want to hire existing unemployed engineers

It is all a big corp scam

MyOwnPeace

(16,909 posts)
5. As an educator.........
Tue Feb 25, 2014, 09:05 PM
Feb 2014

I'd be sure to proof something that I was going to send out to the public:

the CEO of McDonald’s makes $8 million a year compared to his employers making minimum wage and yet nothing gets done to make it better.

That should be "employees."

Mr.Bill

(24,217 posts)
7. Probably was relying
Tue Feb 25, 2014, 09:36 PM
Feb 2014

on a Microsoft program of some kind to automatically correct the grammar errors.

 

magical thyme

(14,881 posts)
16. the opening paragraph (not the quote) seems to be missing a word, or something...
Thu Feb 27, 2014, 02:30 PM
Feb 2014

"just prior to a story that? was published"

I turned off my inner proofreader after that. But was relieved the letter is from a history teacher as opposed to, say, English.

ooooh, noooo...I just read the whole letter. On 2 occasions, the writer uses an apostrophe with a plural 's,' e.g. CEO's.

Luckily he hasn't sent it to Mr. Gates, but instead hopes that somebody on the internet will send it to him. Hopefully whoever forwards it along will first give it a final pass proofreading and edit.

 

Hoppy

(3,595 posts)
6. What is really sad,
Tue Feb 25, 2014, 09:26 PM
Feb 2014

is to watch teachers who were happy to be in classrooms and now, can't wait for retirement.

The school day consists of meetings, meetings, tests, meeting to discuss the tests, tests, more tests, meetings.

I got to retire when this bullshit was escalating under McChimp. Can anyone figure out how the dumbest person in the country was supposed to lead us to educational excellence? But then came Arnie Duncan.

I was labeled "Highly Proficient" in conjunction with the labels applied to teachers by Bush's program so it wasn't sour grapes. But it still was and is, bullshit.

yurbud

(39,405 posts)
12. being a teacher now is like being a doctor who can only give treatments dictated by quack remedy
Wed Feb 26, 2014, 04:34 PM
Feb 2014

companies.

If it doesn't profit the copper bracelet, magnet in the shoes, or healing crystals company, you can't do it.

DamnYankeeInHouston

(1,365 posts)
8. Thanks for posting.
Tue Feb 25, 2014, 09:45 PM
Feb 2014

I had to retire from the public schools to teach. I now have the world's smallest preschool at my house. I am in heaven, but I am scared about the future of America's schools, the future of an uneducated America and the future of my pension.

abelenkpe

(9,933 posts)
9. Schools aren't creating enough graduates with the skills they need?
Tue Feb 25, 2014, 10:02 PM
Feb 2014

Oh, baloney. That lie was started to give corporations an excuse to lobby for more visas and offshore more work, both done to undermine workers in the US and bring down the cost of labor. Then corporations get to profit on the other side too getting paid to 'reform" our schools according to their standards. Are we supposed to believe if we create enough engineers those jobs will return to the US?

 

clg311

(119 posts)
18. Those who can't teach become reformers.
Fri Feb 28, 2014, 11:56 PM
Feb 2014

Every teacher I know is concerned about pretentious "reformers" who know nothing about teaching.

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