IPS official reacts badly to memo
The memo from the state Department of Education was innocuous. It simply announced an upcoming community meeting to talk about several IPS schools that for more than a decade have been heading toward a potential state takeover.With assistance from the Indianapolis Urban League, the memo was sent to a wide range of community activists and neighborhood leaders. It said a goal of the meeting would be to devise "processes to inform and communicate with parents" while learning from those in attendance "how you have been or might plan to be involved in supporting the schools."
The reaction to the memo from one of Indianapolis Public Schools' top officials, though, was fierce, and it underscores a serious problem within a district that sometimes treats those it considers to be outsiders as enemies intent on destroying public schools. It also provides an example of the bunker mentality often found among the district's top officials.
"This is very serious," IPS Associate Superintendent Li-Yen Johnson wrote, referring to the upcoming meeting. "We have to take an active stand on this and speak up for ourselves. DOE is trying to keep the African Americans hooked and quiet so they can go ahead and turn IPS into mayoral control and/or (have) IPS schools taken over by charters and takeover entities."
We'll forgive for now the grammatical struggles within Johnson's writing. The e-mail, after all, was clearly not written in a moment of calm reflection. Consider this next passage:
"Please be outspoken to all the people you know about this conspiracy!" she wrote. "Lies people will tell about us have to stop! We cannot be silent!"
Johnson, who as the district's third-highest-ranking administrator is in charge of curriculum, apparently doesn't realize the debate over education reform is not about race. After all, thousands of white and Hispanic children attend district schools. The goal is to ensure that students of all races have better schools.
One of the most frustrating parts of the e-mail is that Johnson's fury appears aimed at defending the IPS bureaucracy. She uses words such as "us" and "we" in her bizarre message. But you won't find the words "children" or "students."
The district clearly understands how awful this e-mail looks. District spokeswoman Mary Louise Bewley said the e-mail included "very unfortunate language" and was a mistake.
It's nice to see the district distance itself from Johnson's message. But anyone who has followed IPS shouldn't be shocked by her words. The district has long tried to stifle important options such as charter schools, and some education bosses are extremely upset about the package of reforms state lawmakers are debating. Johnson wrote that those reforms "will set IPS back for 30 years."
Former Indianapolis Public School Board member Kelly Bentley said Johnson's e-mail, sent through a district account, was more than embarrassing. It was another reminder of how difficult it will be to make the sweeping changes needed to improve academic performance in Indianapolis.
"It is very disturbing that a senior IPS administrator would send out such an inflammatory, paranoid e-mail," Bentley wrote. "Principals, teachers, parents and communities should be free from this type of craziness and be allowed to get on with the work of educating children."
Reach Matthew Tully at (317) 444-6033 or via e-mail at matthew.tully@indystar.com
Was this in an email? I didn't get it or know anything about what was said. If it is in fact true, what a tragedy!
ReplyDeleteBye bye, Li-Yen. It's been a pleasure working with you. You can shop in San Francisco, too, you know.
ReplyDeleteShe's not going anywhere.
ReplyDeleteSadly, she is more of an advocate for children than Dr. White. She will get thrown under the bus for him, though.
Li-Yen should have been fired years ago! As a former principal she was very unprofessional with parents, teachers and students. All she cares about is sucking on her blow pop suckers, shopping and spending money that she doesn't have,using that Geisha Girl make-up and dating black men(whether they be married or single). She needs to go!!!!
ReplyDeleteBlow Pop suckers? Really?
ReplyDeleteI would rather work for her than for Drs. Clency, Bridgewaters, or Greenwood.
ReplyDeleteIf you didn't get the email, then you now know that you are on the RIF list.
ReplyDeleteDon't fret. The corporate people in the coming "takeover" will act more paranoid and send worse memos.Can you say micro-manage? The only salvation for them will be that the "insiders" won't rush to take their e-mails to the media to expose them as just as clueless and corrupt. In other words, IPS needs to learn from the charter schools and the private schools how to better cover up their "problems." They have always done poor at damage control. All who must deal with society's ills run across this. Public education hasn't changed- society has ..and for the worse I might add. Let the corporate manipulation of facts and stats begin-MORE government control.
ReplyDelete@MORE government control.
ReplyDeleteWhat do you think we have now? We work for a public school district, are paid for with public monies, and dance to the tune of a public school board. We are under government control -- local, state, AND federal. Everytime we accept a penny from a governmental source, we are agreeing to governmental control. Every time we accept millions from Bill Gates, we are under corporate control. Face it -- public schools are not calling their own shots and haven't in decades.
I don't think not getting the email means you are on the RIF list. I did not get it and I know I will be back. I have however,gotten emails from Bridgewaters about a meeting on the balanced calendar.
ReplyDelete"What do you think we have now? We work for a public school district, are paid for with public monies, and dance to the tune of a public school board. We are under government control -- local, state, AND federal.Every time we accept millions from Bill Gates, we are under corporate control. Face it -- public schools are not calling their own shots and haven't in decades."
ReplyDeleteThe "good" non-urban public schools call their own shots. When the government hands things over to a corporation the people in charge will have LESS to do with education and MORE to do with "looking good" and fudging stats- that's what they do. My definition of the government is when you have elected school boards and public input. For decades parents could have become involved in IPS schools and school boards. They chose to NOT get involved thus we have what we have. Thus enters the corporate solution. The same yokels who couldn't remedy their own corruption with the banks or health care and STILL can't get it right. I'm still looking to see where our "Bill Gates money" went...it's not in new desks, chairs or the air conditioning. Maybe it went to the Dibels testing corporation or the people who do our Benchmark tests-not to anything useful for teaching kids.
Sounds like Li-Yen finally came unhinged. EW likely has had a mad fit about her email. I always figured she was smarter than that. Guess academic smarts do not correlate with common sense.
ReplyDeleteHow did this email get to the paper?
ReplyDeleteJust dont loan any money to Li Yen Johnson if you want to be repaid.
ReplyDeleteOh, come on are you that dumb! To the post above "How did this email get to the paper". I am thinking one of the email addresses for the email, plus using IPS's email it's public material. Or Mary Louis?
ReplyDeleteIn today's article about the needs of our students (specifically IPS #14), Bewley's interview inferred that SHE washes dirty students' clothing. Yeah, right.
ReplyDeleteI've never seen her in our building running loads of laundry, but I've certainly seen our head custodian and our ISS staff swapping filthy clothing for clean outfits.
Is there one person who continuously spells Mary Louise "Mary Louis" or is this something several people do. I saw it on the comments section of the star, and someone does it all the time here too. Is it at intentional mockery of her name, or does someone really not know how to spell it. It's like nails on a chalkboard for me. But maybe I have issues.
ReplyDeleteNails on a chalkboard, huh? Like the thilly perthon who taklth like our thuperintendent?
ReplyDeleteThpeech polithe, where are you tonight? Thleeping?
Big Gene, are you wif your thon, thelebrating hith thalary increath that came wif his new pothition? Fourteen thouthand dollarth can buy a lot of bling. Perhapth you two could get matching ruby Prada shoeth.
Will Big Gene dithtanth himself from Li-Yen, or thand wif her on the Titanic, rearranging the deck chairth while the band playth on?
Hey, guys, there's enough to dish out about Eugene White without doing a cheap imitation of an articulation problem, OK? His having a lisp has absolutely no relevance to his leadership/management issues with IPS.
ReplyDeleteThis mocking of Eugene´s diability is no worse than his lies and mocking of his IPS staff. Who ever is doing it, keep it up. I love it.
ReplyDelete"His having a lisp has absolutely no relevance to his leadership/management issues with IPS."
ReplyDeleteWeewee? But, I'm having tho much fun wif it! How would an expensive imitation be conveyed?
It's actually quite a challenge.....you ought to try it. There is more thinking involved that Big Gene puts in to mandates that reflect on the entire district. Think of nepotism, "balanced" calendar, school closings, swapping administrators like pawns, public humiliation of our entire system, or retaining $100K+ salaried ancient buddies in our top-heavy (both literally and figuratively) puzzle palace.
If you did it with a Upper crust British accent?
ReplyDeleteMaking fun of a lisp makes us look like complete idiots. If we would mock a disability in our supervisor, why wouldn't we mock a disability of a child? How can a professional really think that's okay? How can any human being with any sort of moral code think that's okay? Also, do you model this sort of contempt for the education system to your students? If so, then stop blaming their parents because kids don't take you seriously
ReplyDeleteIndianapolis Star
ReplyDeleteLetter to the Editor
Consider IPS
parents as partners
instead of problems
On Jan. 10, I attended an education
roundtable at Pike High School hosted by
the Indianapolis Alliance of Black School
Educators and Indianapolis Recorder. It
was both inspiring and alarming. For the
most part, administrators from diverse
district and charter schools rallied around
opportunities to improve urban education
and spoke of parents as "valued
customers" and "educational partners."
I am an IPS parent, so imagine how I felt
when Superintendent Eugene White focused
on parents as the problem. He practically
wrung his hands as he spoke about the
high percentage of single mothers and
grandmothers raising their grandchildren.
He complained that some IPS meetings
draw so few parents that "they wouldn't fill
a phone booth."
Little wonder. Who would have the spirit
after work, dinner and homework to go to
a meeting where your schools' leader
diminishes you and fellow parents in
public? Perhaps parents would find the
energy if IPS asked us when and where we
wanted our meetings to be and then
publicized these events widely and
provided child care. Imagine our response,
if White asked us: What do you want for
your child's education?
The school-parent bridge is crucial. I am
deeply grateful for the countless IPS
teachers, social workers and administrators
who step on that bridge every day to greet
me and all parents as unique individuals
rather than woeful statistics.
With this, I tell my superintendent: Parents
are your partners. Teachers have the
potential to make us better parents, and
parents have the potential to make them
better teachers. That's not a problem.
That's power.
Josefa Beyer
IPS parent
Member of Parent Power
Indianapolis
I saw that, and thought it was a really good letter. But I'm an IPS parent, so I'm biased, lol.
ReplyDelete"He (Eugene White) practically
ReplyDeletewrung his hands as he spoke about the
high percentage of single mothers and
grandmothers raising their grandchildren.
He complained that some IPS meetings
draw so few parents that "they wouldn't fill
a phone booth."
That is a strange way for him to showcase our parent/community involvement. Well, after hearing that kind of talk, it sounds like he's ready to throw in the towel. Has he forgotten that he came from a single parent home? I expect he thinks he turned out OK.
True, not a lot of parents show up for meetings, but maybe he needs to look at himself and the organizational culture that the parents perceive as working against them.
There is a movie out right now that portrays an English member of the royal family overcoming a thoroughly debilitating speech defect. This true story occurred half a century ago.
ReplyDeleteSurely technology has evolved in the past five decades that would enable a well-salaried, motivated, educated individual to eliminate a truly repairable speech defect, especially one that is so obvious. The fact that Big Gene either is unaware of this lisp, or feels he should be accepted as is, further portrays his disdain for the underlings that consist of teachers, parents, and students.
The word WIF (for with), however is dialect. Shall we blame that on being the fruit of a single mother?
Parents, I LOVE it when you are supportive! Last week, the mother of one of my students (who was escorted out of her charter, btw) told me that our school needs to quit bothering her, because she was trying to lower her sugar, and we need to stop calling.
"surely technology has evolved..." I don't know. Barbara Walters has a speech impediment that hasn't been fixed, and she has way more money than Eugene White. Mike Tyson has a lisp too. Diane Rehm (from NPR) has a speech impediment.
ReplyDeleteThat's not even the point. Even if someone did choose not to have a disorder fixed, it still doesn't make it okay to make fun of them for it. If a blind person could be corrected with surgery, but chooses not to have the surgery, is it okay to make fun of blind people? If a paraplegic could have prosthetics but chooses not to, does that mean it's okay to make fun of handicapped people?
ReplyDeleteI agree that it is not right to make fun of his speech impediment. I would think, though, that it is something he might have worked at since most much of his profession is public speaking. But, I am not a speech therapist and I do not know how difficult it is for someone to overcome a lisp as an adult. Perhaps speech therapy was not offered to him as a child.
ReplyDelete"Don't you mean Baba Wawa? It's always something!" said Rosanne Rosanadana
ReplyDeleteParaplegics generally don't need prothetics. Unless they are paralyzed by losing a limb?
ReplyDelete@paraplegics generally don't need prosthetics:
ReplyDeleteEverybody likes a little ass, but nobody likes a little smart ass!
I'm the one who made the paraplegics-prosthetics reference, and I laughed out loud when I read the correction. Of course, you're right, but you know what I meant! But as karma would have it, you spelled prosthetics wrong :)
ReplyDeleteJust wondering why Johnson is still around and not fired. No teacher would ever be allowed to do what she did and stay in the district!
ReplyDelete