Ken Goodman: It’s time to Resist NCLB: A Post-reauthorization Strategy

Literacy scholar and U of Arizona professor Ken Goodman on the resisting NCLB:

It’s time to Resist NCLB: A Post- reauthorization Strategy

Ken Goodman
Guest Columnist EdNews.org

The time has come for educators, parents and the general public to develop a post NCLB reauthorization strategy. We’ve essentially lost the fight to modify NCLB in any significant way or get rid of it. It’s time for an organized campaign of resistance. We must resist NCTE at every level in every practical way we can to save our students from its terrible effects and to save public education.

Within the next few weeks the House Education Committee will send to the floor of the House its revision of NCLB. Some time thereafter the Senate committee will send its revision to the floor of the Senate. They are likely to face only token opposition and little debate. The press will continue to largely ignore and misrepresent the real threat continuing NCLB poses to public education and American democracy.

What will result, as it now appears, is a slightly softer version of NCLB. It will provide a little more flexibility in how the law impacts English language learners and those with special needs.

But it will not change in any fundamental ways. And so far there is no indication that the Department of Education will make other than cosmetic changes in the way it interprets and enforces the law. Just last week, for example, a new review panel rejected the Reading First proposal of Puerto Rico because it didn’t conform sufficiently to DOE mandates.

In particular the Reading First section (Title X) will continue to define reading and reading research in such a way that the DOE will continue to impose absurdly narrow methods, materials and tests on states and local school districts. And the contracts illegally imposed on the states according to the Office of Inspector General reports will remain in force. The consultants who the OIG said have made obscene profits from imposing their own materials and tests on states and districts will not only go unpunished but their profits will continue. The astrologists of reading will continue in charge of the reading space program.

There is little reason to suspect that a change in the White House or an increased Democratic majority in Congress will further modify or abandon NCLB. Democrats George Miller and Edward Kennedy have committed themselves too deeply to NCLB to admit that it is a failure. Both have accepted the false and exaggerated claims of Bush and Spellings that NCLB and Reading First are working.

Though there has been a notable demand that NCLB be discontinued and ESEA revert to its pre-NCLB form, and a few members of Congress have agreed, getting rid of the law never got real consideration. Attempts at informing the decision making in Congress to produce the basic changes needed in NCLB to change it from a negative punitive law destructive of public education into a real reform have largely failed. The unions failed to rally their members and the public: AFT was coopted to support NCLB from the beginning and NEA was too timid in using its potential political strength to make any real difference. Movement conservatives with massive financial and tactical support from the National Business Round Table and rich right wing foundations have successfully kept NCLB out of the presidential campaign as they did in 2004.

For seven more years terrible things will happen to children as young as 5 as a result of NCLB and Reading First. And as every independent study has shown by 2014 virtually every school and school district will be failing. In the meantime huge numbers of students will drop out as the hand writing on the wall is clear that they won’t be able to graduate with a diploma from high school. And in a time when a teacher shortage is growing many teachers are leaving the profession and young people are being discouraged from entering. And the campaign will increase its attack on teacher education and higher education in general. Blaming teacher educators for the failures of NCLB.
Legal basis for resistance

There is a strong legal basis for resisting NCLB. The investigations of the Inspector General have laid out in explicit detail the ways in which those given the power in the Department of Education to implement NCLB and Reading First violated the NCLB law itself and the original law establishing the Department of Education. Both clearly prohibited the imposition of curriculum and methodology on states and local education agencies. That means that every state contract under NCLB is null and void. It means that contracts establishing assistance centers to advise the states and LEAs on implementation are void and those centers must be replaced.

And in addition to that the processes were illegal because staff and consultants were and still are involved in blatant conflicts of interest.

Legally, states and LEA’s have every reason to refuse to enforce their NCLB and Reading First contracts and have the grounds, if necessary, to sue the DOE and the offending consultants. Parents, individually and collectively, also have the right to sue on behalf of their children to get rid of the onerous and destructive effects of NCLB on their children’s lives and education.

There is ample documentation both for the illegality of the implementation of NCLB and for the damage it is doing to children.

Pedagogical Basis for Resistance

From a point of view of scientific pedagogy NCLB is riddled with absurdities:

1. It is punitive. Instead of providing financial and professional support for schools with low achieving students it punishes them. It has already led to transferring authority over schools and school districts from professionals and local authorities to politicians. Already many public schools have been handed over to profit makers.

2. In the name of putting “highly” qualified teachers in classrooms it has undermined state teacher certification programs and made it impossible for rural schools and middle schools to retain experienced teachers and recruit professionally educated teachers.

3. It has perverted science by using the phrases “scientifically based research” and “scientifically based reading research” to describe unproven commercial materials and methods which are absurd in design and unteachable. And it has marginalized a wide range of alternate approaches.

4.It has set absurd goals. Ultimately it requires that all students and all sub groups be “proficient” in reading math and science by 2014. Because “proficient” is essentially undefined. Both the press and politicians including President Bush and Secretary Spellings have freely equated that with having all children above grade level by 2014. That makes the goal absurd since by definition only half of the pupils in any grade can be above grade level, which is the mean score achieved on a particular test. Even Diane Ravitch, along term supporter of NCLB has called this goal absurd. In the National Assessment of Educational Progress the term proficient is used to name an arbitrary level above basic and below excellent. Only about 20% of those taking NAEP achieve the proficient level currently.

5. NCLB deprofessionalizes teaching. It limits the ability of experienced, professional teachers to make decisions on how best to serve each pupil. In enforcement, a hierarchy is established by NCLB which subjects effective teachers to interference by inexperienced and unqualified staff members empowered to slavishly enforce NCLB.

6.
It distorts and narrows the curriculum to reading, math and starting in 2007 science and limiting or eliminating everything else including physical education and recess. It’s absurd that our officials are taking fast foods and sugary drinks out of schools but eliminating physical exercise.

7. NCLB diverts kindergarten and even pre-school from their historical purposes to academic pre-first grades. What is more absurd than five year olds being labeled as failing in the first week of kindergarten because of their performance on absurd tests? And what is more absurd than having children repeat kindergarten as academic failures?

8. In the guise of having high expectations for all young people NCTE has required that children with special needs and English language learners to take the same tests and be subjected to the same curricula as all other children. Further, it punishes the whole school or LEA when either of these subgroups inevitably fails to achieve the unachieveable,

Moral basis for resistance

Framed as a reform which would eliminate differences between ethnic and economic populations of students in school success, NCLB has imposed an immoral, one-size fits all set of mandates which hurt all students but hurts those it claims to help the most.

It measures success by learners and teachers entirely by scores on tests of questionable validity. That devalues any learning that isn’t easily testable by simplistic tests and it narrows the curriculum to what is being tested.

It is robbing children of their childhood imposing tedium and guilt on them and making them personally responsible for the failures of the system. It has made successful learners feel they are failures and taught them that conformity is more important than thoughtful response.

NCLB has turned teachers from committed guides and mentors into automotons powerless to do what they know is best for their students. It has corrupted the moral obligation of teachers to protect their pupils from harm.

It has substituted governmental absolutes for the responsible choices of parents.

Methods of resistance

Educators, their unions and professional associations, educational decision makers, parents, interested citizens and the students themselves all have a range of ways of resisting NCLB.

Only massive resistance can bring it down and get the attention of the politicians.

Teachers and administrators are of course vulnerable. Often taking an overt stand can jeopardize their jobs. On the other hand they are the ones who see most clearly how NCLB is hurting their pupils.Some teachers and administrators will be confident enough to make public acts of resistance. As a profession, educators have tended to self-censor themselves more than is necessary. But as a result of NCLB teachers and administrators will reach a point beyond which their consciences will not let them go. They will refuse to administer certain tests, use certain texts, grade their pupils unfairly. Rather than simply leaving their jobs when they become untenable they will commit acts of resistence and dare their districts to fire them. Groups of teachers in individual schools and districts will of course be more successful if they act together and support each other.

There are ways that teachers and administrators can resist in private ways. Teachers can resist, in the time honored way, by closing their doors and doing what they feel is best for their kids, minimizing the use of absurd tests and materials. And they can keep parents aware of the real progress of their kids and help them to understand why they deviate from mandates. Informed parents are their best defense.

Administrators can protect teachers from some impositions and support their professional decisions for the benefit of their pupils. They can document the effects of aspects of NCLB for parents, school board members and the public. And they can establish a positive atmosphere in their schools that can neutralize some effects of NCLB interventions.

Unions and professional organizations have a responsibility to organize resistence. In Canada, England, Australia and New Zealand teachers unions have had a tradition of including methods and curriculum in their concerns. There are numerous examples of successful campaigns by unions to refuse to administer tests and support their members in their refusal to conform to unprofessional impositions. NEA’s California affiliate went beyond NEA’s position recently and called for abolition of NCLB. They need to take the next step of organizing their members to resist NCLB and supporting them when they do. The unions and professional organizations need to take the lead in organizing local, state, and national demonstrations against NCLB. They are probably the only ones who could bring a million teacher to Washington to show the politicians the professionals care about what happens to their students.

Administrators’ unions and organizations have taken strong positions against NCLB but they haven’t been public enough. They need to call for and support resistence to NCLB.

Parents have a wide range of ways to resist NCLB. They should inform themselves by visiting their children’s classes and observing what NCLB is doing to them. They can talk about NCLB with school administrators and school board members when they see their children being hurt by NCLB. Parents can use the existing PTA to resist NCLB or they can organize parents within schools and school districts to fight use of absurd tests and materials and decisions by school boards that limit the curriculum or eliminate play time. There are a number of specific actions parents can take:

1. They can boycott the tests by keeping their children home when tests are announced or demanding that their permission be obtained for each test. With absurd tests such as DIBELS parents can insist that their children not be tested and that no results be transmitted beyond the school without parental permission. NCLB requires that 95% of each sub group be tested so a few boycotting parents can have a major effect.

2. They can support acts of resistence by teachers and administrators

3. They can contact news media and school board members documenting how NCLB is hurting their children.

4. They can educate themselves and other parents of the political process for electing school board members and support candidates pledged to resisting NCLB.

5.They sue on behalf of their children to protest illegal implementation of NCLB.

Students of course feel the negative impact of NCLB the most. Even young children can, with the support of their parents, resist NCLB. They can write letters and circulate petitions about tests and school policies. For example they can petition the principal to reinstate recess or write to the school board about absurd materials. Children have rights and parents can help them to know how to assert their rights.

Older students in middle school and high school can organize their resistance to NCLB through letters, petitions and demonstrations. It was demonstrations by high school students that eventually brought down the apartheid system in South Africa. Students have the right to a voice in how their schools and classrooms will run.

NCLB came about through the clever manipulation of the democratic system to control Congressional decision making. United, educators, students, parents and the informed public can use the democratic system to resist NCLB and bring it down.

Published October 9, 2007

Trickle-up economics

Over at growinggap.ca, Armine Yalnizyan reports that the latest StatsCan study of high-income Canadians shows the rich are getting richer, while 90% of Canadians are taking home a smaller portion of the income pie.

Those at the very top have seen their incomes double in the past two decades. The share of incomes going to the top 1% has soared — rising from 8.5% in 1982 to 12.2% in 2004 (a 43% increase in their piece of the pie). The higher up the income spectrum you go, the better the story gets.

And perhaps most shockingly 80% of Canadians have seen no improvement in their incomes since 1982.

In his article “Trickle-up economics: The rich are getting richer — and we’re all helping,” Hugh Mackenzie, a research associate with the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives, illustrates how the average Canadian is paying dearly for tax cut of the past decade. According to Statistics Canada:

between 1992 and 2004, Canada’s income tax system ceased to be progressive for the richest 5 percent of tax filers. And what about the rest of us? For almost a decade, our provincial and federal governments have been talking tax cuts, but those cuts went into the pockets of the richest of the rich. And that tax break only bolstered the unprecedented growth in the share of income going to Canada’s richest.

The top 0.01percent, the millionaires sitting at the top of the heap, enjoyed an average effective tax rate drop of 11 percentage points.

The income/wealth gaps are growing in the US too. See Jack Rasmus’ three part study of the “trillion dollar income shift” in Z Magazine [Part 1 (Feb. 2007), Part 2 (April 2007), Part 3 (May 2007)]

Alison Bodine Defense Committee appeals for support

The Alison Bodine Defense Committee is appealing to all progressive groups and organizations who advocate for social justice to support the campaign to defend Alison Bodine, a US citizen who is being targeted by the government of Canada and the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA) for being an anti-war and social justice activist.

Originally from Broomfield, Colorado, Alison is the co-chair and spokesperson of Vancouver, Canada antiwar coalition Mobilization Against War & Occupation (MAWO), for three years was the president of the University of British Columbia’s Coalition Against War on the People of Iraq and Internationally (CAWOPI), a long-time executive committee member of the UBC Social Justice Center, is a prominent activist in solidarity with Cuba and the Pastors for Peace Caravan to Cuba, and an active supporter of immigrant and refugee rights in Canada and the US.

Near midnight on Thursday September 13, 2007, Alison was arrested by the CBSA when she attempted to legally cross the border at Peace Arch border crossing, traveling from Canada into the United States. Three days prior, Alison was harassed by CBSA officials while traveling from the US into Canada. The ordeal began after border officials searched her vehicle and identified her as a political organizer after they found various anti-war and political materials and progressive newspapers in her car. Currently she is being charged with “Misrepresentation”, however the basis for this allegation is vague and the CBSA’s argument will not be fully known until her hearing on Oct 11, 2007.

To read more details on the background of the case, please visit: http://alisonbodine.blogspot.com

Alison’s unjust and illegal imprisonment was met with a strong protest and organizing drive by the rapidly-formed Alison Bodine Defence Committee. Friday afternoon, on only 5 hours notice, 80 people came together at the Citizenship and Immigration Canada Offices in Vancouver, demanding the immediate release of Alison Bodine. Media was also quick to pick up this important case, which was covered locally and nationally by newspapers, TV and radio.

After being told all day that there was no way she would be released from detention before Monday, Alison’s status took a sudden turn. At 7:00pm on Friday, Alison was given notice by immigration officials that she would be released from custody until her Admissibility Hearing on Monday Sept 17th.

In the early afternoon of September 17th, Alison learned from a CBC reporter that the CBSA had cancelled her Admissibility Hearing scheduled for 2pm that day. Alison herself was never officially notified by CBSA. The CBSA postponement of Alison’s hearing was an obvious maneuver to delay given the huge media attention on the case and the weakness of their allegations against Alison.

Alison’s Admissibility hearing was rescheduled for Sept 28th. The fight in the courtroom that day was brief, but it brought important advances for the Alison Bodine Defence Campaign. After a week of battling for access to more evidence, Alison’s lawyer Gabriel Chand, was finally granted the right to get access to any existing initial notes written by the border guards that questioned Alison. In addition, he was finally given the full disclosure. This was an important step forward, as the CBSA prosecuting lawyer tried to argue with Chand’s request, but ultimately failed to prevent the right to access this evidence. Due to the introduction of new evidence, the hearing was then adjourned until October 11, 2007 at 11am.

Since the initial arrest there have been 7 defence rallies at the Vancouver immigration offices, 7 forums to discuss and strategize for the case and four press conferences. More than 1300 people have signed a petition demanding that the charges against Alison be dropped. Hundreds of support letters have poured in, including ones from MPs Libby Davies and Bill Siksay; MLA David Chudnovsky; the US-based Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization/Pastors for Peace; Federation of Post Secondary Educators, Richmond NDP; No One Is Illegal Toronto; Hospital Employees Union; Iglesia San Romero de Las Américas Church-UCC in New York City; Seattle Act Now to Stop War and End Racism (ANSWER); Peggy Askin; President of the Calgary and District Labour Council; CODE PINK Women for Peace (Bowen Island Local Coordinator); President of the Ottawa Local Canadian Union of Postal Workers CUPW and many, many more.

Being without status in Canada, Alison’s situation is always uncertain, and she can still be arrested at any time. All progressive, humanity loving people must unite around this case. We must understand that this is not just an attack on Alison, this is an attack on all of us. This is an attack on the basic democratic and human rights of all people, especially social justice activists, immigrants, refugees and all non-status people and non-residents in Canada. The illegal and unjust arrest and detention of Alison Bodine means the government of Canada and its agencies want to continue and escalate the silencing of free speech and political expression and continue their terrorizing of people who oppose their policies at home and abroad and the new era of war
and occupation. They are also testing and evaluating our response to defend ourselves against their attacks against us. The degree, seriousness, effectiveness and consistency of our defence impact their decision on how to further their repressive measures.

For this reason, we are appealing to you to join us in this struggle by endorsing this emergency campaign and by writing a letter of support demanding that the CBSA drop all charges against Alison. Please send this appeal to your email lists and friends. We must show the Government of Canada and their agency, the CBSA, that they cannot get away with trying to intimidate activists. We have attached a <a href=”Download file“>template support letter, as an example. Letters of support should be sent to: defendalisonbodine@hotmail.com

The CBSA might think that by delaying the Admissibility hearing this campaign will lose steam and the pressure against them will lessen. On the contrary, this campaign is only just beginning. People all across Canada and the world know about this case of political harassment and this will only gain momentum from here. This is a political case; Alison has done nothing wrong or illegal. Alison, along with supporters in Vancouver and across the country will keep up the demand that the CBSA must drop all charges against her and restore her full rights to travel between the US and Canada.

Our fight is not over. Your support is essential to get all charges against Alison dropped!

WE WILL WIN!

———————–
Alison Bodine Defense Committee (ABDC)

*Contact by phone:
Shannon Bundock 778.891.1470
Tamara Hansen 778.882.5223
Aaron Mercredi 604.339.7103
Andrew Barry 604.780.4029

*Blog, Daily Updates & Action Info: http://alisonbodine.blogspot.com
*Email: defendalisonbodine@hotmail.com

Rouge Forum Update

Dear Friends,

The Rouge Forum No Blood For Oil Page is updated. See especially recent work from Scott Ritter and Sy Hersh.

This week marks the 40th anniversary of the murder of Che Guevera whose sense of egalitarianism swept well beyond the confines of the Cuban revolution, and whose adventurous, courageous spirit lay at the heart of his triumph and tragedy. While Che is for sale today, like everything, his notions of an equitable society based on the sacrifices of new women and men, people who would fight for the right to share, remain challenging to the fear and greed that propels, for example, most US schooling.

Soon, we will also mark the 40th anniversary of what may have been the most conscious, militant, of the 60’s anti-war demonstrations, the March on the Pentagon of October 21, 1967, organized by, among others, the Students for a Democratic Society, the largest of the student movements of the time, later demolished by the terrorist Weatherman sect in 1969. The Weatherman theft and destruction of the SDS mailing lists took place just before the biggest outpouring of antiwar resistance during the May uprisings against the invasion of Cambodia, and the killings at Jackson and Kent State. Watch for upcoming editions of the Rouge Forum and Substance News for an analysis of the Weathermen, then and now.

The debates that went on inside SDS, about nationalism, racism, sexism, capitalism, imperialism, and the resistance, continue today. However, one thing appears different. Masses of people were willing to take serious risks, including imprisonment and death, in order to help change society. Che was clear: Change is sacrifice.
http://library.thinkquest.org/27942/war.htm

Upcoming conferences and action: The Rouge Forum will be gathering at the National Council for the Social Studies Conference in San Diego, November 29 to December 2, complete with a party. Plan to join us at sessions, on our tour of San Diego, and at the social.

The Longshore Workers, ILWU of San Francisco, recently passed a “Strike Against the War,” motion. They plan a conference in SF on October 20.

The Rouge Forum has supported the demonstrations against the wars on October 27. Be there! We hope to unite antiwar people with the movement for justice inside schools.

Set aside Vets Day weekend, upcoming, for a Calcare/Rouge Forum discussion on the plans to boycott NCLB in the spring in California.

The Supremes in black robes issued a ruling supporting the dismissal of a teacher who told her kids she honked for peace.

Neither big schools’ union took action to end the campaigns of fear and intimidation in schools.

In Canada, a courageous teacher was reprimanded for refusing to administer a standardized exam.

Whole Language guru Ken Goodman issued a personal call for resistance to the NCLB, as Jonathan Kozol’s call for NCLB reform came in for some criticism in Indymedia.

Up the rebels. Thanks to Adam, Gina, Bob, Susan, Ken Jr, Sherry, Sharon A., Dave, Beau, Erin, William and Christopher, Amber, Panyon, Sharon E, Michael, Sipho, Mary, Wayne, Paul, Kathy E., and Gilda.

All the best,

r

Supreme Court denies hearing for fired ‘honk for peace’ teacher

Yet another blow against free speech in schools. NCLB has resulted in strong pressures on teachers to operate as mere clerks for the state, mere conduits for the transmission of “official knowledge” to students. Now the US Supreme Court has upheld a ruling that strips free speech and personal judgment from the act of teaching. For teachers in Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin, this means they now are by law imperial agents.

San Francisco Chronicle: Supreme Court denies hearing for fired ‘honk for peace’ teacher

An elementary-school teacher who was dismissed after telling her class on the eve of the Iraq war that “I honk for peace” lost a U.S. Supreme Court appeal Monday.

The justices, without comment, denied a hearing to Deborah Mayer, who had appealed lower-court decisions upholding an Indiana school district’s refusal to renew her contract in June 2003. The most-recent ruling, by a federal appeals court in Chicago, said teachers in public schools have no constitutional right to express personal opinions in the classroom.

A teacher’s speech is “the commodity she sells to an employer in exchange for her salary,” the Seventh U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said in January. “The Constitution does not enable teachers to present personal views to captive audiences against the instructions of elected officials.”

The appellate ruling is binding only on federal courts in Illinois, Indiana and Wisconsin, but is one of a series of recent decisions taking a narrow view of free speech for teachers, other government employees and students.

The Supreme Court ruled in June that an Alaska principal was entitled to suspend a student who had unfurled a banner outside the school reading “Bong Hits 4 Jesus,” a message the principal said promoted drug use. Last year the court ruled that government employees are not protected by the First Amendment when speaking at work about job-related controversies, a ruling that the appeals court applied to teachers in Mayer’s case.

Mayer, who now teaches sixth grade in Florida, was distraught.

“I don’t know why anybody would want to be a teacher if you can be fired for saying four little words,” she said Monday. “I’m supposed to teach the Constitution to my students. I’m supposed to tell them that the Constitution guarantees free speech. How am I going to justify that?”

Mayer, a teacher for more than 20 years, was in her first year at a Bloomington, Ind., school district when the events occurred.

She said her class of fourth- through sixth-graders was discussing an article in the children’s edition of Time magazine, part of the school-approved curriculum, on protests against U.S. preparations for an invasion of Iraq in January 2003. When a student asked her whether she took part in demonstrations, Mayer said, she replied that she blew her horn whenever she saw a “Honk for Peace” sign, and that peaceful solutions should be sought before going to war.

After a parent complained, the principal ordered Mayer never to discuss the war or her political views in class. Her contract was not renewed at the end of the school year.

The district said she had been dismissed because of poor performance and complaints by parents. Mayer said that her previous evaluations had been good and that the district had solicited the complaints after the fact.

The appeals court that ruled on her case assumed she had been fired for her comments and said the school had the right to punish her for defying its policy, just as it could fire a creationist who refused to teach evolution. Mayer asked for a rehearing, saying no such policy had existed when she made her comments, but the court turned her down.

Similar cases have arisen in California, where federal courts have allowed schools to discipline teachers for expressing dissident views if the policies they violated were clearly explained in advance.

In one such ruling, in 2005, a federal judge in San Jose rejected a Cupertino teacher’s argument that his principal had violated his freedom of speech by prohibiting him from using outside religious materials in history lessons.

In papers filed with the Supreme Court, Mayer’s former school district described her as a “failing teacher” who had manufactured a controversy about free speech to try to keep her job.

“Public employees, including primary and secondary school teachers such as Ms. Mayer, simply do not have a constitutional right to interject their own opinions when speaking as employees,” the district’s lawyer said.

Grambling investigating pictures of noose lesson

Grambling investigating pictures of noose lesson

The Associated Press

GRAMBLING, La. (AP) — The Grambling State University president is investigating a case in which adults at the university-run elementary school on campus put a noose around at least one child’s neck and the school newspaper’s publication of photographs of it.

Kindergarten and first-grade students at Alma J. Brown Elementary School were being taught why nooses are a symbol of racism, an article from the historically black university’s student newspaper said.

The article said the children also were being taught about the “Jena Six” — black high-school students who are accused of beating a white schoolmate. Court proceedings brought about 20,000 to 25,000 people to Jena, about 70 miles from Grambling, for a civil rights march in September.

The Revs. Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson have said the charges were too heavy for the actions and that three white students who were suspended after hanging nooses from a tree on the school campus three months earlier should have been expelled and prosecuted.

The date of the Grambling incident was not clear and the article and the photos had been removed from the site.

University President Horace Judson said he ordered photos removed from the Web site as soon as his secretary called him Friday to describe them. At the time, he said, he was driving to Dallas for Saturday’s football game against Prairie View.

Judson told The News Star of Monroe and the Ruston Daily Leader on Friday that he was starting an investigating immediately, and would meet Monday morning with everyone involved.

It is at least the second time this year The Gramblinite has tangled with school administrators.

Provost Robert Dixon ordered the newspaper on Jan. 17 to stop publication, a move criticized as censorship by alumni, the Student Press Law Center in Arlington, Va. and Gramblinite editor Darryl Smith. He accused Dixon of trying to block editorials criticizing the school’s maintenance and suggesting the state was trying to shut down the university.

Eight days later, Dixon said the newspaper had provided a satisfactory plan to end what he said was shoddy editing and plagiarism, and the paper could resume publication the following week.

The brief Gramblinite article about the elementary schoolyard “march” said teachers “even had a replica noose and explained why it is such a symbol of racism,” but did not mention that the noose was put around anyone’s neck. That was shown in photographs, which The News Star of Monroe obtained by e-mail and e-mailed with the article to The Associated Press.

The Daily Leader, which does not have a Saturday edition, also published an article about the incident online Saturday, saying it was not using Grambling photographs because of copyright considerations and to protect the child’s privacy.

It said the student paper sent it copies of pictures and the article Friday morning, but later asked it not to use the photographs removed from the Web site.

One shows a young girl in a school uniform being held up by a woman while someone else, mostly hidden by a tree, holds a noose around her neck and up to a branch.

The article said kindergarten and first-grade students circled their playground with their teachers as a “march” to protest “the imprisonment of Mychal Bell, and the seemingly racial bias shown toward blacks in a small Louisiana town.”

Judson said Sean Warner, dean of the College of Education, has spoken with the principal of the elementary school about the incident.

“This is very serious. I will say that,” Judson told The News Star. “I’ll have a face-to-face meeting with everyone involved. We’re going to find out what the facts are. At this point I don’t know if my students were involved.

“These are minors at our school and this is a student paper that still must practice complete accountability,” he said.

Given the nature of the situation, Judson said, “it was certainly my judgment to take those pictures down.”

The Chronicle of Higher Education Video: Students Rally in Support of ‘Jena 6’

Chronicle Video: Students Rally in Support of ‘Jena 6’

Washington — Students from Howard, George Washington, and Georgetown Universities gathered on the National Mall yesterday to support six African-American high-school students in Jena, La., who have been charged with violent crimes amid racial tensions in the town. The university students were among undergraduates at more than 100 colleges who protested on Monday.

“Jena,” a new song from John Mellencamp

Via RockRap.com:

John Mellencamp has been in the studio working with producer T Bone Burnett on a new album. Due to the subject matter covered in one of the songs, “Jena,” I’m sending you a link so you can listen to it in advance of the album release.

“Jena” lyrics:

An all white jury hides the executioner’s face
Is this how we are, me and you?
Everyone needs to know their place
And here we thought this blackbird was hidden in the flue

Oh oh oh Jena
Oh oh oh Jena
Oh oh oh Jena
Take your nooses down

So what becomes of boys that cannot think straight
Particularly those with paper bag skin
Yes sir no sir wipe that smile off your face
We’ve got our rules here and you’ve got to fit in

Chorus

Hey some way sanity will prevail
But no one knows when that day will come
A shot in the dark, well it might find its way
To the hearts of those who hold the keys to kingdom come

Chorus x 2