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April 18, 2012

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Ariel Sacks

Whoa, this is crazy. Thank you for looking into it and writing such a clear and compelling criticism of this strange and expensive program.

Lisa Yanchek

My school and district are involved in this program. Your criticism does not refelct what the program truly entails. First of all, there is no competition among teachers. The whole basis of Darden's program focuses on collaboration, PLC work, and a dedication to true student learning. If these tenets are in place, increased test scores are a natural result. I highly encourage you to further research this program. Our staff has never been more cohesive and focused on students. I do speak from first-hand experiece with Darden, as I attended a 3-day teacher leader retreat with my principal, 2 other teachers from my building, and representatives from 7 other buildings in my urban district.

Bill Ferriter

Lisa wrote:

My school and district are involved in this program. Your criticism
does not refelct what the program truly entails. First of all, there is
no competition among teachers. The whole basis of Dardens program
focuses on collaboration, PLC work, and a dedication to true student
learning.

_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _

Im really glad to hear that, Lisa -- but heres the thing: My comments were based on direct quotes from the Bloomberg Businessweek article linked in the post...and posting teacher scores in the faculty room in an attempt to hold them accountable -- a practice the principal cited in the piece boasts about -- is definitely competitive.

That means that either the program is being applied differently by different principals -- something that is completely possible -- or that the program was really poorly portrayed by Bloomberg.

In the end, I hope that the latter is true because if schools are really spending $75K to get principals to learn practices that shame teachers and place the emphasis of a buildings work on raising standardized test scores, Dardens lessons arent worth a dime.

Does this make sense?
Bill

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    Bill Ferriter teaches 6th grade language arts in North Carolina, where he was named a Regional Teacher of the Year for 2005-2006.

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