War San Francisco parents issue a warning to school leaders across the country | Opinion - Jeb! 2024

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San Francisco parents issue a warning to school leaders across the country | Opinion​

Jeb Bush
Fri, February 18, 2022 4 min read


As a proud Miamian, you won’t hear me say this often, but there’s a lesson to be learned from San Francisco. Last week, voters recalled three school board members by a 3:1 margin, and the reason was quite simple: They ignored parents.

Thankfully, Miami has leaders who don’t fear education innovations that help serve families. Recently, Mayor Francis Suarez announced a new partnership between the City of Miami and Madeline Pumariega, president of Miami Dade College, to launch a new Miami Tech Charter School. Together, this partnership represents their combined effort to creatively establish new education pathways for students.

Unfortunately, not every student in Florida or across the country is blessed with such leadership, and it’s a big reason why I hope the San Francisco recall election makes a national impact. It should serve as a wake-up call to those charged with overseeing local schools and a valuable reminder that families and students in their community are their constituency, not the special interest groups that write checks.

The San Francisco School Board members were recalled when parents became frustrated watching the board members focus on issues that had nothing to do with the purpose of education. Even before the pandemic, the school board spent more time debating abstract issues than addressing, for example, falling literacy scores. But during the pandemic, like parents all across the country, the disconnect became more apparent as the school board spent hours debating and then voting in favor of renaming Dianne Feinstein Elementary, Roosevelt Middle School and Abraham Lincoln High School (among 44 other schools) while not addressing that students assigned to those schools and all schools across the city remained at home, while students across the country were returning to in-person learning.

Sadly, although not surprisingly, this out-of-touch approach isn’t exclusive to San Francisco. In Los Angeles, hypocrisy was on display concerning masking. The nation watched as celebrity after celebrity attended the Super Bowl without a mask, and the city’s mayor absurdly claimed he held his breath when photographed indoors and maskless. Meanwhile, children in Los Angeles County Schools were required to be masked, despite what three scientists recently wrote in The Atlantic, saying that mandating masks on students “provides little discernible benefit.

But, whether students should be masked or not, the bigger issue at play is that families are largely shoved to the side when trying to sincerely express their frustration or simply gather more information. They’re treated as a necessary nuisance.

A case in point is Minnesota, where school districts complained of being besieged by freedom of information requests from parents. A new report by The 74 claims that information requests could cost districts millions of dollars in expenses. Minnesota’s proposed solution? Either have the state give districts the funds to cover those requests or allow the districts to charge parents more money for public information. The common-sense solution? Transparency. Make public as much information as possible, as easily as possible. When parents are concerned about school performance, don’t make it harder on them to access public information — pull back the curtain and restore trust.

Last month, I wrote about my idea for a Students Bill of Rights. While it’s a powerful concept to enshrine the rights of parents and students into law, the underlying policies are a tool for education leaders to regain trust with parents. Transparency is one of the three principles in my Student Bill of Rights, and it’s a meaningful, good-faith effort that school districts can take to better serve parents and students.

Another principle is access. Public-school systems shouldn’t deny students access to education alternatives, period. In fact, they should proactively work to open as many pathways to success as possible. Polling tells us time and again that parents are hungry for more education freedom.

Access was recently put at risk in Tampa. Only months before schools were set to reopen in the fall, the Hillsborough County School Board voted to close four thriving charter schools and voted not to approve an application for two additional charter schools.

Why would they make such a hasty last-minute decision? School Board member Nadia Combs defended the board’s decision, “If we stop five or six charters from coming here, we’re saving the district millions and millions of dollars.”

Sadly, it’s this zero sum-game mentality that ignores what parents want, ignores what’s best for students and acts as though serving the system is what matters most. And it’s why access is a right that I believe students deserve. Instead of scheming to find ways to limit students, school boards and education leaders should be looking at every creative way to expand access.

In the first six weeks of this year, at least 11 states have moved forward with education-choice legislation. Listening to parents is good policy, and as we’ve seen time and again, it’s good politics.That’s a win-win scenario.

The question remains whether other politicians and school leaders throughout Florida, and other states and communities recognize this singular lesson: Ignoring parents has consequences.

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Jeb Bush was the 43rd governor of Florida. He is founder and chairman of ExcelinEd.
 
Sadly, although not surprisingly, this out-of-touch approach isn’t exclusive to San Francisco. In Los Angeles, hypocrisy was on display concerning masking. The nation watched as celebrity after celebrity attended the Super Bowl without a mask, and the city’s mayor absurdly claimed he held his breath when photographed indoors and maskless. Meanwhile, children in Los Angeles County Schools were required to be masked, despite what three scientists recently wrote in The Atlantic, saying that mandating masks on students “provides little discernible benefit.
Ah, this is so cute. They are actually surprised at the utter hypocrisy and arrogance of the elite.

What a naïve little Jeb finally poking their head out of the sand to notice its surroundings.
 
If the warning isn't delivered via kidnapping, beating, duct-taping a schoolboard member's hands behind their back, and leaving them ass naked with "I rape kids" painted across their chest and back, I don't think the message was delivered clear enough. That headline sounds ominous, but all the parents did was use their fucking voting power as they should. If you want a warning, you put some fucking oomph behind it.
 
If the warning isn't delivered via kidnapping, beating, duct-taping a schoolboard member's hands behind their back, and leaving them ass naked with "I rape kids" painted across their chest and back, I don't think the message was delivered clear enough. That headline sounds ominous, but all the parents did was use their fucking voting power as they should. If you want a warning, you put some fucking oomph behind it.
More and more I'm starting to think Pol Pot was right about teachers. His ideas were just a little too ahead of their time.
 
Cuidado, beaner parents.
If you start rebelling against the woke and the gov't, you'll get ICE on your culos.
Laughs in Florida. Mexicans are just one part of our proud Latino culture. A lot of immigrants down here are through the due and proper channels, or they did something actually hardcore like riding an innertube 90 miles and dodging the coast guard. Fuck around with their keeds and you'll get la chancla. Jeb! probably wrote this because he knows a happy wife is a happy life, and he too fears la chancla.
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Laughs in Florida. Mexicans are just one part of our proud Latino culture. A lot of immigrants down here are through the due and proper channels, or they did something actually hardcore like riding an innertube 90 miles and dodging the coast guard. Fuck around with their keeds and you'll get la chancla. Jeb! probably wrote this because he knows a happy wife is a happy life, and he too fears la chancla.
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Doesn't he have a Latina wife or something? He's right to fear la chancla, and has probably been on the receiving end a couple times. That out of the way, Jeb does seem the most sensible of the Bushes. Not a very high bar, I know, but he seems to know the way the wind is blowing in a way most people of his pedigree do not.
 
Doesn't he have a Latina wife or something? He's right to fear la chancla, and has probably been on the receiving end a couple times. That out of the way, Jeb does seem the most sensible of the Bushes. Not a very high bar, I know, but he seems to know the way the wind is blowing in a way most people of his pedigree do not.
Columba Garnica Gallo was born in the community of Arperos, in the city of León, Guanajuato, Mexico,[3] the daughter of José María Garnica Rodríguez (1925–2013), a migrant worker and waiter from Arperos, Guanajuato, and Josefina Gallo Esquivel (born 1920), from León, who were married in February 1949. Columba's father emigrated to the United States in 1956 when she was 3 years old[4] and her parents divorced in 1963.[5] Following the departure of her father, Columba and her mother remained in León.[5][6]

Garnica attended Instituto Antonia Mayllen, a private Catholic school in the historic center of León.[5]

She met Jeb Bush in 1970 in León when she was 16 years old and he was 17.[3] Bush was teaching English as a second language and assisting in the building of a school in the small nearby village of Ibarrilla[7] as part of a class at Andover called Man and Society.[3][4]

Garnica and Bush married on February 23, 1974, in Austin, Texas[8][9][10] at the chapel in the Catholic student center on the campus of the University of Texas.[4][6] At the time of the wedding, she did not speak English and a part of the wedding ceremony was conducted in Spanish.[3]
Married for 48 years, come this Wednesday.
 
This all sounds nice but I do recall his brother doing no child left behind and that he's a Bush so I will refrain from clapping in approval until Jeb earns it.
But he asked so nicely!
 
Jeb! is back, back again. Jeb! is back, tell a friend.

Honestly never saw myself siding with Jeb! Bush in anything but a lukewarm or tepid matter but here I am. Sometimes it's nice to get issues that cross aisle and have more people agree with each other.
 
Jeb! is endearing thanks to all the memes over the years but he's a Bush and Junior set the ball in motion for where schooling is now with NCLB. Too little too late, turtle man.
That's also to say nothing of W's other fine works. Things like USA PATRIOT, the NSA, TSA, two wars, and worst of all, Dick Cheney.

Also W fears la chancla too, must've learned it from dear old Jeb!. Remember when he dodged one at some conference?


I'll only ever clap for Jeb! when he fully embraces 2016 and becomes a living meme.
 
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