Will Cory Booker Bring School Choice to New Jersey?


Sen. Frank Lautenberg (D-NJ) announced this morning that he will not run for a sixth term in the senate—possibly in response to the rather pugnacious maneuvering by Newark Mayor Cory Booker (D). This new (but expected) development leaves a straight path to the senate for Booker, who decided to "explore the '14 Senate race" in mid-December last year.
Booker is a self-proclaimed advocate of education reform, and not above touting the benefits of charter schools. He wrote in May 2009 for the Huffington Post:
Schools in Harlem, Newark and numerous other cities are succeeding in replicating models that are erasing the education gap evident along both racial and socioeconomic lines. In fact, the highest performing public school in all of Essex County, New Jersey—a county that has both pockets of poverty and great affluence—is a Newark charter school with a student population that is nearly entirely minority and with a significant percentage near or below the poverty line.
But does he have the guts to stand up to the powerful New Jersey Education Association (NJEA) in 2013 and beyond? The organization testified against "virtual charters" in the January 2013 issue of the Reporter, singling out two Newark schools in particular: Merit Preparatory Charter School (MPCS) and Newark Preparatory Charter School (NPCS). The union seemed especially upset that both schools are "operated by private corporations."
The schools are new—experimental even—and they're already taking fire from the unions. The NJEA filed a motion seeking a stay of the charter issued to MPCS and NPCS. Fortunately, the motion was denied.
Now the union is pushing the state legislature to shut them down. Will Booker push back? He has good reason to. As Sean Kennedy, a fellow with the Lexington Institute, pointed out in the New York Post earlier this week, blended learning is remarkably effective at eliminating the stubborn achievement gap:
In San Jose, Calif., the five Rocketship [Charter] Schools are among the highest-performing elementary schools in the state of California—though 90 percent of students qualify for free or reduced lunch.
All this while simultaneously cutting costs by up to 25 percent.
Public schools and teachers unions are against challenging the status quo. Hopefully Booker will help remove the final hurdle to their widespread implementation: a legislative evaluation and changes to the state law that allow not only for virtual charter schools but all kinds of alternatives to a floundering public education system.
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Well fortunately New Jersey has no history of organized labor or its associated organizations.
But does he have the guts to stand up to the powerful New Jersey Education Association (NJEA) in 2013 and beyond?
since Booker is a Dem, the obvious answer seems a no. Christie made a lot of noise in slamming teachers but showed himself a dishonest fuck by saying nothing about the rest of the public union apparatus.
Is it dishonest, though, when Republicans make no secret of their loves for cops and firefighters? Not defending Christie, but he seems very much like the law-and-order type given his background.
if your beef is with public union pensions/costs/etc, that should mean ALL public unions, not just the ones that are easy to yell at.
Besides, makes him look like the guy whose ass you wanted to kick - all macho with the wimminz but a big pussy around the menfolk.
That sounds like the moral, pure ideology that losses elections. Christie didn't win by much in NJ the first time around. If he pisses off every union member in the state, he will lose re-election this November.
Eh, I'm going to assume there are a shitload more teachers then there are police officers. Even in New Jersey.
if your beef is with public union pensions/costs/etc, that should mean ALL public unions, not just the ones that are easy to yell at.
Teachers are the hardest to yell at here. They tend to get everything they possibly want.
The pension reform Christie signed into law affects all public employees, FWIW, including cops and firemen.
Booker folded almost immediately after initially criticizing the Obama campaign over the "nauseating" attack ads on Romney and Bain.
I'm sure that either during the election or after he's elected, he'll get on board 100% with Team Blue.
Cory Booker is about the best a Democrat can be these days, so I would be delighted to see him in the Senate. NJ sure as hell isn't electing a Republican.
The only Republican in NJ who could win is Steve Forbes, and he won't run. If Menendez get's kicked out, I would love to see Christie appoint him.
How can
Community
Exist without the state
In charge of socialization?
School choice
The endless poetry...
It's on Thursday nights again, nicole. The question is how can it exist without Dan Harmon, and the answer is: it can't, not without sucking.
I'm going to my happy place.
Honestly, I thought they were surprisingly decent.
Yeah, they're decent. Which sucks compared to what the show used to be. I didn't love the show because it was decent, I loved it because it was great.
I dunno, neither one of these was a classic, but they've definitely had worse eps in previous seasons.
I think you are being too chang cynical.
Maybe. We'll see. I'm of course going to watch to find out anyway.
Annie was strangely hot as the Ring girl. The long black hair was working for me.
I agree. She doesn't really do it for me, but that look helped a lot. Of course the low-cut western paintball outfit wasn't bad either.
For, uhm, clarity's sake
As Sean Kennedy, a fellow with the Lexington Institute, pointed out in the New York Post earlier this week, blended learning is remarkably effective at eliminating the stubborn achievement gap
As is Head Start...
Is that Vin Diesel?
No, it's Dwayne Johnson.