The Central Labor Union Council and the unions representing district 
employees endorsed Peggy Flanagan, Lydia Lee, and Denny Schapiro, according to a CLUC 
flyer. Progressive Minnesota endorsed Peggy Flanagan and Lydia Lee.  

I handed out about 150 flyers -- In 2004, Vote Mann for School Board -- 
outside of the Minneapolis DFL convention, mostly to delegates.  I spoke with 
several delegates and at least two persons who were not attending the convention. 

In my opinion, promises by the DFL endorsed candidates to find real solutions 
to the education achievement gap are meaningless without a commitment to 
making a college-bound, "gifted and talented" education accessible to the general 
student population, instead of putting students into separate instructional 
groups and classrooms according to perceived ability and watering-down the 
curriculum for a majority of students.  A link to the text of the flyer that I 
handed out at the DFL city convention can be found near the top of the home page 
of my web site http://educationright.tripod.com

Two other essential gap-closing reforms: 
1) The creation of teacher in training positions that would more evenly 
distribute inexperienced, non-tenured teachers more evenly throughout the 
district's schools, and 

2) not allowing students to fall two and more years behind grade level, then 
dumping them into special education programs. Students who are failing to 
thrive academically should be evaluated and provided special education services if 
appropriate, and non-special ed assessment and educational planning for other 
students.  The screening protocol used by the district to determine 
eligibility for special education services, the pairing of a cognitive ability test 
and 
an achievement test, is (or had been) administered to nearly all students in 
the Apple Valley - Eagan - Rosemont district in order to assess instructional 
effectiveness.  The state of MN does not reimburse the district for at least 
some of the special education services it provides to students who have not 
fallen behind grade-level expectations (or a two year disparity between assessed 
cognitive ability and achievement). The district's approach is penny-wise and 
pound foolish. The total special education budget represents only about 5% of 
the districts operating budget, and some of the money expended in that area is 
reimbursed.  I think it is better to provide more non-reimbursed services -- 
and not force parents to sue the district for the services their children are 
entitled to -- and to take steps to improve instructional effectiveness for 
any student who is falling behind before they become a source of revenue for the 
district. I also recommend that the district's administration invite 
interested parties, including those whistle-blowing members of a certain special 
education advisory committee to develop proposals for new criteria for special and 
regular education interventions and for changing special education 
reimbursement criteria at the state level that our lobbyist could take to the 
legislature. 

-Doug Mann, King Field 
Author of "Flight from Equality: School reform in the US since 1983
http://Educationright.tripod.com
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