| P E Y T O N W O L C O T T |
| h o w w e t a k e b a c k o u r c h i l d r e n ' s e d u c a t i o n -- o n e p e r s o n , o n e q u e s t i o n , o n e s c h o o l a t a t i m e . Copyright 1999-2006 Peyton Wolcott |

How we take back our children's education: one person, one question, one school at a time. |
Friends, because there's now so much on this site--reports, commentaries, book excerpts, all designed to help you bring improvements to your local schools--I'm in the process of preparing a site map. Underlining indicates active links. Please check back. SITE MAP NEW COMMENTARIES: RANDOM ROUND-UPS ACCOUNTABILITY & OPEN RECORDS ISSUES: School District Checks/Check Registers Online Connecting the Dots Pass the Trash Reader Q & A's SLAPP (Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation) Transparency Report ____ GOVERNANCE ISSUES: The American Superintendency Team of Eight ____ Arizona Nogales USD Pima County Ofc. of Ed. Santa Cruz County OE California Glenn County Ofc. of Ed. San Francisco USD Florida Citrus County PS Miami-Dade County PS Michigan Ann Arbor New York New York PS Roslyn Ohio Strongsville PS Texas Bremond ISD Cleburne ISD Dallas ISD Eanes ISD Edgewood ISD Everman ISD Houston ISD Katy ISD La Joya ISD Lake Travis ISD Llano ISD State Board of Education ____ Edu-Conferences ____ BOOK EXCERPTS: Education, Inc. How To File a Public Records Request How To Organize Lax Oversight ____ WHAT OTHER FOLKS ARE DOING: MODERN MINUTEMEN SUCCESS STORIES, KINDRED SPIRITS ____ COMMENTARY ARCHIVES ___ SPECIAL REPORTS: TEXAS LEGE: TEA POWER GRAB PAYING FOR TEXAS PUBLIC EDUCATION: A PRIMER ____ About/In the News 2006 - Year in Review |
AASA - American Association of School Administrators ASA - Association of School Administrators CSD - Consolidated School District DOE - Department of Education ES - Elementary School HS - High School ISD - Independent School District JHS - Junior High School MS - Middle School MSM - Mainstream media NSBA - National School Boards Association NSPRA - National School Public Relations Association PS - Public School(s) SBEC - State Board for Educator Certification SD - School District Sup't - Superintendent TAKS - Texas Assessment of Knowledge & Skills TASA - Texas Association of School Administrators TASB - Texas Association of School Boards TASBO - Texas Association of School Business Officials TEA - Texas Education Agency TEKS - Texas Essential Knowledge & Skills USD - UnifiedUnited School District |
| GUIDE |
| FAIR USE NOTICE: This site contains copyrighted material the use of which has not always been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. We are making such material available in our efforts to advance understanding of education issues vital to a republic. We believe this constitutes a "fair use" of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C., Chapter 1, Section 107 which states: the fair use of a copyrighted work, including such use by reproduction in copies or phonorecords or by any other means specified by that section, for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, or research, is not an infringement of copyright," the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes. If you wish to use copyrighted material from this site for purposes of your own that go beyond "fair use" you must obtain permission from the copyright owner. |
| QUOTES |
Separatists in India's north-eastern state of Manipur have shot six male teachers in the leg for allegedly helping students cheat in exams. Two women teachers were beaten with sticks for the same offence, the rebels of the Kanglei Yana Kan Lup group said. The teachers were abducted from their homes after an exam on Thursday. The rebels said the teachers took up to 5,000 rupees ($110) for helping students cheat and warned of further punishment if the cheating continued. The Kanglei Yana Kan Lup (KYKL) is one of many separatist groups fighting Indian administration in Manipur. It said it abducted the eight teachers from their homes in and around the state capital, Imphal, because of reports they had taken bribes. --By Subir Bhaumik - BBC |
| ATTENTION EDUCATORS AND ADMINISTRATORS: Every attempt possible has been made to verify all sources and information. In the event you feel an error has been made, please contact us immediately. Thank you. |
| Copyright 1999-2007 Peyton Wolcott |

| Britain's King George III once ruled our country; despotism by those with power does not last. Public school superintendents would do well to remember this lesson from history. |

My New Book PEYTON WOLCOTT |
| QUERY THE SUPE & THE PR GUY |
| STATUS: No response rec'd from Sup't Gray as of Jan. 22, 2007 |
| QUERY THE SUPE (& CC THE BOARD) |
| CONTACT: Peyton Wolcott P.O. Box 9068 Horseshoe Bay, TX 78657 peyton@peytonwolcott.com Want to subscribe to my newsletter? Send me an email marked "Subscribe." |
| F o c u s i n g o n accountability f i r s t |
| 95 Questions here Online School District Check Registers Here Random Round-Ups Here 2006 - Year in Review here Nov.-Dec. 2006 commen- taries here Pass the Trash here SLAPP reports here and here Reader Q&As |
| Conservative Commentary |

| LOCATION: Texas Association of School Boards/Texas Association of School Administrators - Annual Convention (Houston, Texas) DATE: Oct. 6, 2006 EVENT: UBS Financial Services, Inc. reception FACTS: There were four chairs at this table and a total of five alcoholic beverages (green arrows), according to waitstaff. There's more than one way to skin a cat--or to sell financial services. UBS was not listed on either the 2005 or 2006 TASB/TASA official paid and registered exhibitor list; instead, it appears to have bypassed the vendor hall in favor of doing its selling at receptions such as the one above. This is nothing against UBS; they're no doubt a fine company, plus I'm a pro-business and free enterprise kind of girl. But is this the type of environment in which we want our school superintendent s and trustees to be making important financial considerations involving taxpayer dollars? |
| Friends, can you help me identify the man and two women in this picture from TASB/TASA 2006? Enlarged, with more information, here |
| No, these folks above are not New Year's Eve revelers--this photo was taken Friday, October 6, 2006 at a party hosted by UBS Financial Services. Educated guess: These folks are most likely public school administrators or elected school board members. |
| CONTACT |
KEY POINT: "Superin- tendents and school boards would have to be willing to be perceived as being anti-open government and anti- transparency to turn down your request that they post their check registers online." --Peyton |
| Check registers online |
| Questions for the American Ass'n of School Admini- strators re the state of the American superin- tendency Tuesday, Jan. 30, 2007 |
| In progress: PROBLEMS WITH YOUR LOCAL SCHOOL DISTRICT? HOW TO SOLVE THEM |
Mr. Gorbachev, tear down this wall. --President Ronald Reagan |
| Texas-sized news! Showing the way for the rest of our great republic, the Texas Education Agency announced today it has posted its check register online! |

HERE'S HOPING THAT IF OUR LEGE PASSES A PRO-VOUCHER S BILL . . . They'll also at the same time completely rewrite our gibberish-laden , vendor-driven TEKS and give our Texas schoolchildren standards which are: Knowledge-bas ed Academic Measurable Explicit Grade-level specific and Objectively tested.* Otherwise, if children attending voucher-paid private school are forced to take the TAKS test as it is now written, nothing will be gained-- and much will be lost. The only place parents will then have left is to homeschool. We must be wary that the Lege is not hornswoggled again as occurred when the TEKS were chosen over the TAD--and common sense. The FBI appears to be on the trail of clearing up this earlier debacle--let's not drop our guard again. ___________ * Thank you, Donna Garner, for this language. |
| Still SBOE chair? WHY? |
| Geraldine "Tincy" Miller - Chair, Texas State Board of Education (PHOTO--Susan Bushart) |
| See, the trouble is, our fifteen State Board of Education members aren't able to elect their own chair; here in Texas the SBOE chair is appointed by the governor. And even though SBOE chair Tincy Miller's second and last term as chair (see "What the Law Says" below) has expired, the governor hasn't yet appointed a replacement. And there are apparent signs of her not wanting to step down. If the SBOE members were able to elect their own chair themselves, that would be one thing; for an appointee to not go gracefully into the sweet night is quite another. Tomorrow I'm heading in to Austin to drop in on the SBOE meeting, see what happens; will let you know. |
| WHAT THE LAW SAYS: § 7.107. OFFICERS. (a) The governor, with the advice and consent of the senate, shall appoint the chair from among the membership of the board. The chair serves a term of two years. (b) At the board's first regular meeting after the election and qualification of new members, the board shall organize, adopt rules of procedure, and elect by separate votes a vice chair and a secretary. (c) A person who serves two consecutive terms as chair is ineligible to again serve as chair until four years have elapsed since the expiration of the second term. Added by Acts 1995, 74th Leg., ch. 260, § 1, eff. May 30, 1995. |

| Thrills! Chills! A malfunctioning voting machine! An afternoon at the State Board of Education By Peyton Wolcott - Copyright 2007 Published Wednesday, February 7, 2007 SBOE chair Geraldine "Tincy" Miller (right) sure had her share of problems today. First off, she's not even supposed to chair the SBOE any more--her second and last term has expired (see "What the Law Says" in pink box below). |
| By Peyton Wolcott - Copyright 2007 Published Tuesday, February 6, 2007 |


| But she still holds that post until Governor Perry appoints a replacement--Texas being uniquely Texas, our SBOE is not able to elect its own chair, thanks to the so-called reforms Bill Ratliff pushed through in 1995. (You recall Bill; he became a powerful $99,999 a year lobbyist for the Texas Association of School Boards.) Further, rumors are circulating that forces on her behalf are lobbying the Lege to rewrite the law so that she can continue as chair a third term. |
| Tincy's problems began this afternoon with a voting machine that wouldn't work without the assistance of an assistant. Then she tried getting the board to approve some so-called improvements she dreamed up in a private workshop last November, most of which appeared designed to drain the board of their power and give it to her. The conservative majority wouldn't go along with her, resulting in an odd new alignment: the Republican chair voting with the Dems. (See photo below) |

| Bilingual ed promoter Mary Helen Berlanga (SBOE District 2) confers with new SBOE secretary, Rick Agosto (District 3). |

| New SBOE vice-chair David Bradley, District 7 (Beaumont) |
| A curious sight: the SBOE vote tally board (far left on wall below) shows Republican chair Tincy Miller aligned with Democrats and against fellow Republicans |

| In other news, the swearing-in of new members occurred today, and the board voted veteran David Bradley of Beaumont their vice-chair, and as customary, a member of the opposite party their secretary; this time Democratic newcomer Rick Agosto of San Antonio. |

| Wednesday afternoon's crowd was sparse (above); Will Lutz of the Lone Star Report and I were the only folks sitting at the press table. All SBOE members (left) were present except Pat Hardy; Texas edu-missioner Shirley Neely was testifying at the Lege. |
| Committee assignments were set, and it appeared most members got their first pick. |