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Occupy Wall Street Protests Outside Department Of Education

Occupy Doe

First Posted: 11/ 8/2011 8:49 am Updated: 01/ 7/2012 4:12 am

NEW YORK -- On Monday evening, about 200 students, parents, school aides and educators associated with Occupy Wall Street congregated on the steps of the New York City Department of Education in lower Manhattan to "occupy the DOE."

The crowd vented its frustrations about K-12 education in the form of a General Assembly, the consensus-building method Occupy Wall Street protesters originated in Zuccotti Park. The event was the first official General Assembly held on education, beginning what organizers said they hoped would become a recurring series of events.

The protesters aired their concerns about charter schools, mayoral control of schools, budget cuts and standardized tests. "I'm Jordan, I'm 13, and there's no point in the ELA," a student said about the English Language Arts assessment, an exam given to students across grades. "I work hard and my grades don't matter." Using the OWS technique known as "the people's mic," the crowd repeated each phrase in order to amplify it.

A Brooklyn teacher called for an end to the city's testing system. "These test scores are used to make decisions," she said. "If we can find a way to undermine these tests, we can undermine their entire system."

Throughout the evening, a phalanx of what appeared to be about 15 cops on motorcycles surveyed the area, warning the crowd to stay off the sidewalk and on the steps.

Organizers say the governance structure of New York City's public schools is closely linked to Occupy Wall Street's broader concerns about economic inequity, citing what they see as a privatization of public education. Mayor Michael Bloomberg runs the city's schools through a board known as the Panel for Educational Policy, the majority of whose members he appointed. Critics of mayoral control assert that the board functions as a rubber stamp for Bloomberg's preferred policies, eroding democratic processes.

"What we're seeing with mayoral control, it's still part of the one percent versus ninety nine percent type of narrative," Occupy Wall Street organizer and English teacher Kelley Wolcott said in an interview. "We have a mayor who is known for being in the top 20 wealthiest people in the country, who is singlehandedly dictating the reforms that come through the school systems without a lot of input."

"There's no way to intervene once a decision has been made," Wolcott continued. "Someone has accrued too much power in decision-making in one office and is very disconnected from the needs in the people in schools and communities but presumes to know what's better for us based upon his status."

Bloomberg's office declined to respond to the protesters' assertions.

Wolcott helped originate Occupy Wall Street's public-education arm, convening a committee that became known as "Occupy the DOE" in late October after the group disrupted a Department of Education meeting by using the people's mic as Schools Chancellor Dennis Walcott began to speak. The meeting, intended as an informational session for parents, disbanded into smaller classrooms as the protesters held their ground.

Though the protesters invited Walcott to the Monday's General Assembly, he did not attend.

Former DOE employees used the platform to highlight problems they saw inside the system. "I used to work in this building and it was a disaster," one said. "It was a travesty. I worked here for a year, and within one year they reorganized it four times."

High school students also sounded off. "We demand a dismantling of Bloomberg's panel for educational policy," one said into the people's mic. "We demand a new 13-member community board to run our public schools comprised of parents, educators, education experts, community members and a minimum of five student representatives."

Another student described how the DOE's budget cuts stripped his Bronx school of resources such as textbooks, librarians and school aides -- and then added it to the city's list of failing schools.

"I'm tired of being told that my school is failing. It is the Department of Education that has failed to give my students what they need to succeed," a teacher yelled. "If our banks fail, they get bailouts. If our schools fail, they get closed, or charter co-locations ... It is time that we hold the one percent accountable."

The protesters disbanded at 7:00 p.m., with plans to continue the General Assembly on Sunday and perhaps break out into working groups. Occupy the DOE meets Sundays at noon at 60 Wall Street.

Teachers across the country have joined with Occupy events to further their causes, including in Boston, Milwaukee and California.

Video and photo courtesy of Gotham Schools.

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NEW YORK -- On Monday evening, about 200 students, parents, school aides and educators associated with Occupy Wall Street congregated on the steps of the New York City Department of Education in lower...
NEW YORK -- On Monday evening, about 200 students, parents, school aides and educators associated with Occupy Wall Street congregated on the steps of the New York City Department of Education in lower...
 
 
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05:54 PM on 11/18/2011
I have three Arts and Humanity Awards last one presented by the first lady of Flordia all in regard to arts and education I write songs about prevalent issues in the world and produce concerts that give back to world community.

Here is A group of elementary school children with the help of their teacher
Mr John Olbert produced a video by using a song I composed entitled We
Did The Wild Life Boogie. This is a song regarding jobs and the economy.
Please click Like the kids would like that

The Economy Song – We Did The Wild Life Boogie http://www.youtube.com/watch?v....

You Got To Give Back- dedicated to Corporate America -
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

Onward
Mickey
09:52 PM on 11/16/2011
Joy--intersting article--things are changing so frequently in the responsibilities of the teachers that tey have no time to even teach "current events"--poitical issues--things so urgent for young people to know--In the late 1960's I taught in south Philly and was able to teach current events--using the NYtimes to 3rd grade students--they were thursty for knowledge--i did not have to worry about testing--
Guilla
No-name-plz
He meant spatula ready.
10:04 AM on 11/10/2011
Taxpayers under the abusive teachers union NYSLUT have been under attack for years. This year every homeowner in NY will be asked to pay 33% more for teacher retirements and 10% more for healthcare retirements while honoring up to 20% salary raises like several of the teachers in this article enjoyed during this recession. Fire them all and start over. Nobody can afford these people and their benefits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Venicelady
Ignorance is NOT bliss.
08:32 AM on 11/11/2011
But, but- who will "babysit" those children while you're at work from the hours of 7a.m.-5p.m. from Monday-Friday?

If you don't have any children or can afford live-in help, no problem. If you DON'T have the financial means ( and many parents and guardians DON'T, particularly in inner city areas), I guess your attitude is: "Tough luck!"...
No-name-plz
He meant spatula ready.
09:10 AM on 11/11/2011
So baby sitting is now worth millions in retirement?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Venicelady
Ignorance is NOT bliss.
10:29 AM on 11/11/2011
If you think education is expensive, try ignorance....
No-name-plz
He meant spatula ready.
10:42 AM on 11/11/2011
I think I'm conversing with pure ignorance right now
12:18 PM on 11/09/2011
Public education and teacher's unions are under attack because the right wing fascists in this country want to destroy the education system. They want to do this because poorly educated people are much easier to fool and brainwash.
01:59 PM on 11/09/2011
Ultimately, it is CHILDHOOD itself that is under attack...
Kids need to be kids... at least some of the time!
Please do not let the one percent convince you otherwise...
Read more...
www.HalfDayKindergarten.org
03:02 PM on 11/09/2011
That's right.  Kids are being overworked in school and they end up hating education in general.
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Greg Mirsky
Riga dimd, Riga dimd, Kas to Rigu dimdinaj?
03:14 PM on 11/09/2011
Bogus. It is current unionized model of education that is failing children. It is more and more dependent not on quality education in the classroom but on parental participation, tutoring outside of the classroom, outside of the school. To be competitive next generation must be better educated and that means they must spend more time in the classroom to get more information and more skills. Is union for that? Then who's failing our children?
05:30 PM on 11/09/2011
Please read the links on my site... Look at Finland, they spend less money and time in school and yet outperform the world. It does not matter if we spend the rest of our lives in school... Time will NOT fix it. Time is not the point! All THAT is doing IS create stressed out kids who as you say whine and underperform. The kids are checking out. They need BALANCE. A good school program, quality time with family, time outside, time to play... UNSTRUCTURED time that is not dictated by adults. We are doing our children an incredible injustice by trying to get them to spend MORE time in school...and trying to micromanage their every waking hour. This is a form of abuse. Please read more... www.HalfDayKindergarten.org
08:00 PM on 11/09/2011
bogus back.. finland the #1 country in education places a high regard to educators, trust in the system, students start at age 7, small class sizes, teachers trust their students, families trust the teachers, a learning model that teaches critical thinking, no testing of teachers or students and how come we are not following in this system give you one reason in Finland their society is not consumed with making lots and lots of money, cheating their fellow citizens. until we get control over this under regulated capitalism, look for the highest standards ( not the minimum) we will be past by many countries.
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El Chingaso
Fighting for mental superiority...
04:11 AM on 11/09/2011
"[A]bout 200 students, parents, school aides and educators associated with Occupy Wall Street congregated on the steps of the New York City Department of Education in lower Manhattan to 'occupy the DOE.'"

My faith in Americans is on a path of absolute renewal. DOEs -- especially at the federal level -- have been disastrous for public education in this country. The NYC DOE is like a cocktail party punch line. Keep up the good work, friends!
02:07 PM on 11/09/2011
I am with you on that... There is momentum and hope yet...
I would imagine that it is very helpful show the protestors support...
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
11:58 PM on 11/08/2011
...want to undermine tests? point out the "security issues" Arne Duncan finally caught on to. It's made cheating an epidemic; therefore the scores are null and void. Not that the they ever had any integrity given 40%+ margin of error, cultural bias, erroneous quality, dodgy questions, and numbing boredom that makes students stuporous. Not stupid, mind you. We have to note that maybe high scores in affluent areas are not accurate and without buy in, it is unfair for this test to be employed as an adequate evauation of teachers, who are not all subjected to whims of its data. Only the most overloaded and accountaboe educators answer to it: ES & MS educators of certain grades, English, Social Studies, Science and Math teachers for 9 and 10th graders . The rest have no obligation to be evaluated and earn what the core course teachers do. No offense to them or good work they do, but how is this tfair? I get a kid years behind in skills & not assessed by how much he improves in few months of my class but competing with dubious scores of different demographics. I'm punished for his truancy, transient situation, inabilty to speak English, parents' inability to aid him W/HW & culture; if he's hungry, indifferent, tired, disabled, abused, new or confused, I pay for it. I am there for him w/a snack, open heart, kind word, patience and lessons.. not school officials who care about cutting costs not children.
shakesome
Freedom. Not corporatism, not socialism.
11:45 PM on 11/08/2011
Reduced to its essence:
Kid: "I'm Jordan, I'm 13, and there's no point in the ELA. I work hard and my grades don't matter."
Adult: "If we can find a way to undermine these tests, we can undermine their entire system."
10:22 PM on 11/08/2011
hoopsland said, "Show your sources, where are you getting your informatio­n? You are just making this cr@* up as you go".

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Okay. Let's play your little game since you're too lazy to google this informatio­n. Here are your links:

Duke video: www.youtub­e.com/watc­h?v=pUY7o7­pX6vk
Socialist Workers Union: http://soc­ialistwork­er.org./
American Communist Party: http://www­.cpusa.org­/communist­-party-her­alds-occup­y-wall-str­eet-moveme­nt/
Endorsemen­t by Iran: http://www­.usatoday.­com/news/w­orld/story­/2011-10-0­9/iran-wal­l-street-p­rotest/507­13380/1
Another endorsemen­t from Iran: http://www­.cbsnews.c­om/stories­/2011/10/1­2/501364/m­ain2011923­6.shtml
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
joyz41
Standing for Fairness for All
07:51 PM on 11/08/2011
Don't use Occupy Wall Street to push your selfish agenda! Bullying by unions led to excessive pay, bonuses, and pensions, which contributed to the demise of the American economy. Down with corporate greed and down with union greed. Performance or merit based compensation is reasonable.
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Venicelady
Ignorance is NOT bliss.
09:01 PM on 11/08/2011
Actually, the growth of the unions in America led to the growth of the middle class. Along with the decline in union membership as we are presently experiencing, a decline in unions and their membership leads to a decline in the middle class. Unions helped raise the standards of working and living wages for all middle class workers, whether they were union members or not. Since the 1970's, the middle class has been in a decline. We are seeing the full effects now of union busting, outsourcing of jobs that USED to be in our country, laws passed that benefit only 1% of our citizens, to the detriment of the rest of us.

The field of public education is ripe for privatization and profits to be made by those that have their eye on this next golden egg. Those protesting at the NYCDOE are protesting against this. Without public education, where will those next generations of taxpayers come from in the future? I will also say this- I became a teacher ater having worked in the corporate world- I, too, thought that education could be run like a business, using merit pay for teachers. Well, after working in this field for almost 10 years now, I've been disabused of that idea. Students are not widgets, teachers are not factory producers, and too many variables go into the mix of public education for politicians that have NO background in this field to offer pat solutions to mollify an unsuspecting public.
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10:25 PM on 11/08/2011
Owned.
01:59 PM on 11/09/2011
Public unions did not contribute to any of your claims. At least be honest.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
12:07 AM on 11/09/2011
Excessive Pay? Really? Propoganda has you bamboozled. We are highly educated, constantly training and work our butts off.And Longshoremen earn much more than teachers do with a diploma from HS--so they don't have to worry about making interest on the student loans we have nor are they confronting pay cuts, abusive supervisors or illegal lay offs. They can barter with cargo while our employers force us to strike and that betrays thier "assets"--which is why I refuse to waste a second of class time on a fool errand. Yeah, I agree, teachers' unions are ugly, corrupt and harmful. But I am not my union. I am a member not by choice, but because I am forced to pay dues from day one. Not that it does me any good. My union is complicit with white chalk crime in the district, which appears to be supported by the Mayor and court system. Teachers are not the enemy. These criminals are. And so are you any other idiot who fails to do his homework.
www.perdaily.com Get your facts straight
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troutster
Fish fear me. Otherwise, I'm pretty harmless.
09:14 AM on 11/11/2011
Sorry to hear about your union. I'm a teacher in WV and a member of the WVEA. Our membership is voluntary, and I'm a member because it is valuable to me. They have my back on lots of issues. Too bad unions are so different.
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joyz41
Standing for Fairness for All
02:42 PM on 11/19/2011
I am so sorry to hear you are forced to pay dues to an organization that you know is "ugly, corrupt, and harmful." It is this type of tyranny that must be publicized and stopped.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
worker beenumbed
07:04 PM on 11/08/2011
If the crowd repeats each phrase,talking over is reduced and people listen better.I like the standardized tests when the test takers are not allowed to cheat.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
12:18 AM on 11/09/2011
Test takers don't care enough to cheat. There is no reason for them to bother as this test has no bearing on grades, college or anything else in thier lives. It is a teacher evaluation and I have just noted a primary reason it is not viable as such. BTW teachers are NOT the primary cheats in these scandals. Administrators are. They cheat both ways to manipulate an outcome that serves their agenda--if they want to sell a campus, they will rig negative data to assure the teachers can be displaced (RUINED!) and justify the sale since the students are "failing." Instead of attaking teachers, we should be asking what the heck these cash strapped officials are doing with the money they pull in from these deals. ...Among other things, like how come LAUSD's superintendent, notorious fraud and Gates' clone John Deasy makes more than the president of the USA? This doesn't include the 150K he gets from Scholastic. That company makes the test and millions from the district annually. Can you say "conflict of interest"?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillerm
03:44 PM on 11/08/2011
Is your child going to school today or is he/she being used as part of a Union demonstration? Teachers owe their allegiance to Union Bosses not the education of our children.
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Venicelady
Ignorance is NOT bliss.
06:30 PM on 11/08/2011
Not true- many of us were sitting in professional development sessions today learning how we can better educate our students.

I also have a child in the NYC public school system, and I know many other teachers that do, as well. So, to say that "we" owe our allegiance to "union bosses" and don't have any interest in our children is not true, at least for me and the other dedicated and hard working professionals that I work with.
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maggiee
07:06 PM on 11/08/2011
Well said.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
12:20 AM on 11/09/2011
Relevant instruction includes current events. In my mind, our present populace missed a great deal in civics class. They apparently had no clue about Democracy and have let things slip way to far before reacting and embraingthe power that is our right. Those kids will not forget this lesson. I don't see how the articulate remarks of these bright kids can evoke such an ignorant remark from an adut.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
quillerm
03:40 PM on 11/08/2011
Children used for propaganda purposes are victims, not students.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
12:22 AM on 11/09/2011
Propoganda is what you are buying into. Not these kids or the teachers and parents who are demanding a better deal for them. Either someone paid you to perpetuate more of it here or you slept through school and cannot score a poassing grade on that dang test yourself.
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quillerm
03:37 PM on 11/08/2011
This is the worst use of children for political purposes imaginable. These left wing Union Teachers should be removed from the classroom for using children for propaganda purposes. We trust teachers to be neutral in how they approach politics and other issues. This is a gross violation of that trust and should result in legal action. Union teachers are doing this all over the nation, using children for political events to deceive the media. This is disgusting and must be stopped.
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Ariel Bonzai
Naked is the best disguise.
12:29 AM on 11/09/2011
You know what is disgusting? Your absolute ignorance of what has happened to schools. How is 45 kids in a classroom acceptable? Have you been to a school lately? Have you seen the conditions? Have you any clue the load many teachers ust carry? The propoganda is that teachers fail when in reality schools are run like ruthless corporations. Teachers are set up to fail because that is more lucrative than success with Federal funding designed as it is. These people refer to children as "assets" and treat them like livestock. Before you express your opinions, you'd be wise to inform them as you do more harm than good when you spread misinformation. If you really care about youngsters, do a little reading beyond your usual diet of bipartisian fallacies. www.perdaily.com
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Ayla87
Don't Delete Me Bro!
03:18 PM on 11/08/2011
A child educated only at school is an uneducated child. -- George Santayana
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quillerm
03:37 PM on 11/08/2011
A child used for propaganda purposes is a victim, not a student.
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Ayla87
Don't Delete Me Bro!
04:09 PM on 11/08/2011
I agree. I was making the point that many of the people who complain and protest about the sorry state of education are often those who contribute to the problem by doing nothing proactive. Everyone wants to complain, but no one wants to step up and take it upon themselves to help fix the problem, even if it's only with their own children.

Well, that was the point I was trying to make anyway. I guess that quote can be used either way.
01:52 PM on 11/08/2011
Do these kids get extra credit for protesting?
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saltpeter
Ayn Rand is the L. Ron Hubbard of fiscal ideology
02:31 PM on 11/08/2011
Do you get extra tro// money for posting?
02:51 PM on 11/08/2011
So who pays you to post? George Soros?
shakesome
Freedom. Not corporatism, not socialism.
11:43 PM on 11/08/2011
Does your mom get extra for.. you know...
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quillerm
03:39 PM on 11/08/2011
These kids are being used by Union teachers and others as props to deceive the media. They are victims of left wing radicals that use children for propaganda purposes.