For the last week of August.
The education blogger called Teacher in a Strange Land has some thoughts about why they need this in addition to the 50 million from a federal i3 grant.
She quotes from an email a colleague got from Whitney Tilson, strong charter school advocate.
Whitney Tilson, Banana Republic & Public EducationSo--a colleague of mine just got a friendly e-mail from Whitney Tilson, urging him to buy some new khakis and support Teach for America in the process. Here's what the e-mail said: "I helped Wendy Kopp start Teach for America just after I graduated from college in 1989, so I wanted to pass along this win-win offer: you can save 30% at any Banana Republic, Gap or Old Navy store this Thursday through Sunday (August 26-29) and Teach For America gets 5% of what you spend. To date, this campaign has raised over $800,000 for TFA. Just print the coupon at..."
Who's Whitney Tilson, you may be wondering? And why would Teach for America be needing extra bucks, seeing as how they just got $50 million through a federal i3 grant--to "grow the talent force to ensure all our nation's students have access to a quality education?" And just how, precisely, is this a win-win? Who are the two winners? Teach for America and Old Navy? Because it sure isn't our nation's students.
Tilson is a hedge fund manager who raises funds for TFA and charters from his hedge fund buddies.
I first became acquainted with Whitney Tilson when he pitched a virtual fit over Obama's choice of Linda Darling-Hammond as his education adviser during the campaign, saying Darling- Hammond was "as bad as it gets in terms of education reform." Presumably, this is because Darling-Hammond was one of the first serious critics of Teach for America (although she later modified her stance, given changes in TFA programming that included actual training for the corps members), and has used her incisive research analysis skills to ask many hard questions about market-based policies popular with both Republican and Democratic administrations.
What Tilson has done here--tapping his hedge fund manager buds and Yale alumnae network for a pet cause--happens all the time. Even in public education-- the Chicago Public Schools Foundation, for example, supported lots of Arne Duncan's favorite initiatives, in his days as CEO. A little extra philanthropy--it's all for the kids. Drop a little cash, get a new bomber jacket, plus a warm glow in knowing that while you're looking stylish, another Ivy Leaguer gets a two-year resume-building position in a lousy public school.
There's an interesting story about Tilson at the
Perimeter Primate....gives a look at his personal attitudes.
Periodically I’ll take a look at Whitney Tilson’s blog. The first time I became aware of Tilson was when word went out about his account of Ben Chavis’ verbal attack on New York City Council Member Charles Barron at Sharpton’s National Action Network EEP forum. Chavis, Oakland’s notorious and poorly-behaved American Indian Public Charter School founder, had been invited to sit on the panel.
According to Tilson, Chavis approached Barron and said, “You're a mother f-ing black pimp, you're f-ing our kids. Come to the reservation and I'll beat your ass. You want our kids to take Home Ec? YOU should wear a dress!"
For those of us in Oakland who have been experiencing Chavis for years, hearing something like this was nothing new. But then there was Whitney Tilson’s enthusiastic response of, “I LIKE this guy!”
I like this closing comment from the Teacher in a Strange Land article.
While Whitney Tilson's pals are investing in TFA, colleagues in my neighborhood school are trying to decide how to spend the $1300 they got from the Target Community Giving program (a .5% return): copy machine paper or library books?
The rich get richer; so it goes. And so much for equity. Who wants to organize a teacher boycott?