Still Working

During this time of school closure, Red River United is here for you. We are working to ensure you are treated fairly and that your voice is still heard even though you’re not currently in the schoolhouse. If you need us or have a concern, we will answer your call anytime of the day. You can also message us directly on Facebook. We’ve always had your back and we still do. Let’s all work for the common good. We are stronger together. We are Red River United 318-424-4579 redriverunited@redriverunited.org

TWO LAWSUITS FILED IN BOSSIER DISTRICT COURT

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Red River United Files in Two Lawsuits in Bossier District Court.

Red River United prefers to resolve problems at the local level. Therefore, these lawsuits were filed after numerous school meetings, conversations amongst members, and only after the grievance procedure became unproductive. According to President Lansdale, “Some of these issues have been debated for nearly a year. We made a deliberate choice not to head straight to court, but now a new school year is upon us and Bossier employees deserve resolution.” Red River United will be at the July 14th school board meeting to discuss these and other pertinent issues. Join us.

1. DUTY-FREE LUNCH

Red River United filed legal action requesting the court to:

  • 1.Direct Superintendent Machen to make his recommendation to the School Board on how best to implement a thirty (30) minute duty-free lunch period in all schools, or show cause at a day and time by this court why he should not comply. or
  • 2.Direct Superintendent Machen and the School Board to comply with LA Revised Statute 17:434(A) (1) and give its members, and all teachers, each a minimum of 30 minutes duty-free lunch daily.

This issue can be resolved with MINIMAL FINANCIAL IMPACT. Red River United stands ready to collaborate and provide sample schedules that meet the duty free lunch requirement.

2. HIGH EFFECTIVE PAY STIPENDS 2013-14

A Red River United member filed in behalf of affected Bossier Parish School Board teachers who earned Highly Effective, Effective Proficient and Effective Emerging, but were not paid stipends pursuant to the adopted 2013 -14 school year salary schedule. A judgement from the court is requested for all amounts due from Bossier Parish School Board.

Lawsuit in Caddo Parish resolves Constitutional Violation

By Brian Landry, RRU attorney

Members need to be aware, that the RED RIVER UNITED is committed to the protection of their Constitutional rights, including their rights to privacy and to be free from unreasonable searches.

On September 22, 2014, a teacher and RED RIVER UNITED member, was injured while at school. Three students entered into her class and began hitting another girl in the class. While the teacher was going for the intercom system to signal the need for assistance, she was hit and knocked to the floor by one of the students. The teacher was directed by her supervisors to go to Willis-Knighton Work Kare, an occupational medicine provider used by the CADDO PARISH SCHOOL BOARD, and was eventually diagnosed with a concussion and other injuries. While at Willis-Knighton Work Kare, the teacher was told that she was required to submit to a drug and alcohol screen mandated by the CADDO PARISH SCHOOL BOARD for all accidents and injuries, without exception.

When the RED RIVER UNITED heard what happened, they contacted me and we filed a federal court lawsuit contending that the drug and alcohol screen mandated by the CADDO PARISH SCHOOL BOARD on September 22, 2014, was in violation of the teachers’ rights under the Fourth Amendment to the United States Constitution, same time Xarelto lawsuit news were announced, so injured people started to report another kind of violation – malpractice. What we learned was that the practice had been going on for some time, but no member had told RED RIVER UNITED about it.

Well, the CADDO PARISH SCHOOL BOARD, once they received the lawsuit, decided to IMMEDIATELY STOP the practice and AMEND its policy. Thanks to this teacher, RED RIVER UNITED was able to force the CADDO PARISH SCHOOL BOARD to change its ways. Teachers and other employees (except those employees working in a safety sensitive position) will no longer undergo drug or alcohol testing following an accident or injury during the course and scope of their employment, without individualized suspicion of intoxication or drug/alcohol use.

The process works, but it is dependent upon employees becoming RED RIVER UNITED members, and those members staying VIGILENT and ACTIVE.

Also, you should know that being a RED RIVER UNITED members means that you have access to CONSULT with me FOR FREE on any legal issue you are your family have. From adoption to last wills …. from divorces to personal injuries. You don’t have to get a lawyer from TV or the back of the phone book! You already have one, just call. All work is performed at discounted rates for members.

Have you seen the “RRU Chat Back Time” on FaceBook?

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“What do you think about creating a policy that limited faculty meetings to once per

month? Or, a policy specifying the maximum length for faculty meetings.”

 

“What do you think about principals telling their teachers they can never score a 4? Would

it be ethical if we told students they can never earn an A?”

 

“What do you consider a good use of planning time? Are you required to use your planning

time in ways you find unproductive or wasteful? Here is some food for thought, in Texas a

classroom teacher may NOT be required to participate in any other activity (during

planning time). In Arkansas, a teacher who does not receive the planning time shall be

compensated at her hourly rate of pay for each missed planning period.”

 

Chat Back with RRU, what do you think? 

Visit us on Facebook! 

URGENT ACTION: Reclaim Caddo!

URGENT ACTION: RECLAIM CADDO

Reclaiming the Promise of Public Education

Tell the RSD, “Thanks, but NO thanks.”

Sign the Petition NOW!  

The Recovery School District is looking to take over a number of schools in Caddo Parish. Join Red River United in telling the RSD, “thank you, but NO thank you.” The RSD does not have a successful track record in transforming academically unacceptable schools (Linwood and Linear). In fact, the RSD has been sued numerous times including twice by the Southern Poverty Law Center, once for handcuffing a first-grader and once for failing to provide services to children with special needs. Our children deserve better than this. We should not knowingly and willingly put our children into a failed system. Our children should not be experimented upon for political and economic gains.

We do not support the hostile state takeover of community schools. We do not support our schools being changed from a public school to a charter school operated by outside private-monied and political interests. We contend that the Caddo Parish School System is best equipped to raise academic standards and that the community deserves a say in the process.

We do not support changing our community schools to a RSD or Charter school. If the RSD decides to move forward with either plan, I choose not to participate.

The power of public education

  • Public education is how we fulfill our collective responsibility to give each and every child an opportunity.
  • To fulfill this responsibility we need a system of great neighborhood public schools, where educators have the tools and resources to meet the needs of each and every child.
  • Public education is the means by which all children, regardless of economic, social or cultural background, can achieve their dreams.
  • High-­‐quality public education is an economic necessity, a moral imperative and a fundamental civil right.

 

Under pressure and under assault

Economic and social factors put pressure on our children making it difficult for them to achieve success within the classroom.

  •    Nearly 1 out of every 2 students in public schools lives in poverty.
  •   Children living in poverty come to school with one-­‐fourth the vocabulary of children from wealthier families.
  •    Three out of every 5 teachers in America report that they have children who regularly come to school hungry.
  •   There are more homeless families than at any time since the Great Depression.
  •   If our nation would invest in high-­‐quality education and opportunities for ALL children, we could overcome this inequality.

 Public education is under assault by people that demand that we pursue austerity, polarization, privatization and de-­‐professionalization.

  • They call for cuts to funding for public education and then argue that public education is failing.
  • They fixate on testing rather than enabling educators to teach in a way that is engaging and enriching.
  • They emphasize sanctions instead of support, and shift responsibility onto the backs of teachers.
  • They promote vouchers and charters as alternative “choices” and promote the theory that only a few will succeed.
  • Years of top-­‐down approaches, mass school closures, privatization, and test fixation with sanctions instead of support hasn’t moved the needle in the right direction.

 

Reclaiming the promise of public education

We are at a crucial moment when we must reclaim the promise of public education.

  •   Not what public education is today or what it was in the past, but what public education can be to make sure that all children succeed.

Reclaiming the promise of public education is about:

  • Fighting for neighborhood public schools that are safe and welcoming places for teaching and learning.
  • Ensuring that teachers and school staff are well‐prepared, are supported, have manageable class sizes and have time to collaborate so they can meet the individual needs of every child.
  • Making sure our children have an engaging curriculum that includes art, music and the sciences.
  • Ensuring that children and their families have access to wraparound services to meet their social, emotional and health needs.

This vision may look different community by community. But it has a few common elements.

  •  Reclaiming the promise will bring back the joy of teaching and learning.
  •   It makes our public schools the center of the community and a place where parents want to send their kids, where kids want to learn and where teachers want to teach.

This is our core and it must be the focus of our work going forward.

This is a vision that works.

  • It is a vision of what parents and communities want for their children and the future.
  • This movement will stop those that want to privatize and profit at the expense of our children’s wellbeing.

 Call to action

  We need everyone’s help: educators, parents, students, civic leaders and community members.

  • We need to open eyes to the good things happening in our schools—as well as the challenges.
  • We need to open minds to this vision for great neighborhood public schools.
  • We need to open hearts to joining with us in the effort to ensure all our children get the great education they need and deserve.

None of us can be bystanders. Only by working together can we reclaim the promise of public education.

 

 

 

Sign the Petition!

Join Red River United! 

Look again at Common Core, LFT urges

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(Baton Rouge – October 14, 2013) The state’s highest education board should seriously consider delaying the full, consequential implementation of Common Core State Standards until problems threatening the success of our children and educators are addressed, according to the Louisiana Federation of Teachers.

The Board of Elementary and Secondary Education’s Academic Goals and Instructional Improvement Committee will discuss “the implementation of the Common Core State Standards and accompanying (high stakes tests) in Louisiana, including the technology requirements of school systems and the implications of halting the transition to Common Core State Standards” at its meeting on Tuesday afternoon.

“While the Louisiana Federation of Teachers supports the noble intent of higher standards to prepare children better for a constantly changing world, parents, teachers, and elected officials have all expressed serious concerns,” LFT President Steve Monaghan said. “Quite frankly, the noise is deafening.”

Last July, Monaghan said, the LFT unsuccessfully urged state officials to accept an offer from U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan to waive the imposition of high-stakes Common Core tests for at least a year.

“We believe that the ideas behind Common Core have merit,” Monaghan said, “but like so many other education reforms that have been imposed recently, there has been a failure to prepare and provision our teachers, our children, and communities for the changes.

“It is absolutely morally wrong if we do not try with all of our energies to prepare children for an uncertain future,” Monaghan said. “But, it is equally offensive to damage students and their teachers through a horrible implementation process.”

The state’s pledge to implement Common Core standards went hand-in-hand with a request for a waiver of sections of the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) that some claimed were overly burdensome, Monaghan said.

“The state’s original waiver application included a promise to establish comprehensive resources for teachers. That included content crosswalk documents, correlation charts to the existing curriculum and a phase-in of the new curriculum. Apparently, that waiver application was amended and the promised support withdrawn. The Louisiana Department of Education scrapped the transition, and passed the burden on to teachers and schools.”

“As a result,” he said, “teachers and local school districts are struggling to beg, borrow or improvise curricula to meet the standards.

“It’s like asking doctors to investigate a new disease, invent a drug and bring it to the market while treating a full patient load,” Monaghan said. “It’s unfair to teachers, students and the schools that will be judged on the success of Common Core testing.

The Federation president outlined a list of concerns that he plans to share with BESE when the committee meets on Tuesday afternoon:

• LFT believes the Department of Education and BESE have done a very poor job of preparing our teachers for Common Core standards.

While states like Kentucky and Arkansas have spent the past few years preparing teachers, students and communities to understand and to meet Common Core standards, Louisiana chased a series of policy misadventures, which included Act 54 of 2010 and Acts 1 and 2 (2012). It was as if key decision makers had forgotten their commitment made to CCSS in 2010.

• LFT believes that the state has shirked its responsibility to prepare local school systems for Common Core standards.

Instead of providing curricula or assisting with the development of curricula aligned with Common Core standards, the LDOE made it clear that teachers and each local school system are on their own in finding and developing curricula that align with the new assessments. Many teachers were directed to Web sites to master a completely new and still incomplete curriculum just days before school opened in August.

At the same time, five years of frozen funds have left school districts hard-pressed to meet regular expenses, let alone find costly new educational programs aligned with Common Core standards.
School infrastructure is woefully inadequate to handle the technological requirements of PARRC tests, which must be taken online by students. Wide swaths of the state lack necessary broadband access. Many schools do not even have enough computers on which students can take the tests. Some, it has been reported don’t even have the necessary electrical capacity.

• LFT believes the state may be setting Louisiana children and Louisiana schools up for failure by imposing rigorous new standards too quickly.

Students are required to tackle many concepts in earlier grades than before Common Core went into effect. As a result, children will be expected to grow two to three grade levels in one school year, and pass tests based on the new standards.

Opponents have charged that the math being taught is confusing and overly complex. Child development experts have challenged the age appropriateness of some of the standards. As mentioned earlier, the noise is deafening.

All PARRC tests must be taken via computer, including computations, even though many students have not been adequately prepared with keyboarding skills.

Louisiana children and schools will be compared to children and schools in other states will a much difference implementation narrative.

• LFT is concerned about the role played by corporate interests in the development and implementation of Common Core standards and testing.

Concerns have been raised about how companies that run testing will store, use and share student data. Educators and parents have raised questions about the appropriateness of learning materials and methods associated with common core standards. They deserve answers. Again, the noise is deafening.

Therefore, the Louisiana Federation of Teachers stands with organizations such as the Louisiana School Board Association, which have urged more transition time, the minimizing of negative consequences associated with the implementation process, and the provision of real support from the Louisiana Department of Education.

The committee is slated to begin its meeting at 2:30 P.M. on Tuesday. However, rules allow it to begin up to one-half hour earlier than scheduled. It may also begin later than scheduled if earlier meetings run over their time limit.

– See more at: http://la.aft.org/press/look-again-common-core-lft-urges#sthash.I8xJ3hmz.dpuf

Weekly Instruction Hours Calculator

NOTE:  This calculator is for the modified block schedule currently used in Caddo Parish Public High Schools.

 

This is a wonderful calculator sent to us by one of our awesome members.  THANK YOU.  The calculator should be easy enough to understand.  Enter the number of students per block, enter 1 for an ‘A’ week and 0 for a ‘B’ week, and you will be given the total student hours you work a week.  According to BESE Bulletin 741, “No teachers at the secondary level shall instruct more than 750 student hours per week, except those who teach the activity classes.”