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GO Public Schools Group Wants a Seat at Fresno Unified's Table

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Fresno Unified Superintendent Bob Nelson’s leadership skills will be tested tonight by the last item on the board agenda.
For nearly a year, the nonprofit GO Public Schools Fresno has met with parents and community leaders to hear their concerns about Fresno Unified. In addition, the organization has engaged in community organizing. The hope is that more families participate in their students’ education and district decision-making.
GO Public Schools Fresno is an offshoot of its Oakland-based parent, and it packs plenty of political juice.

Portrait of GV Wire News Director/Columnist Bill McEwen
News Analysis
Bill McEwen

Diego Arambula Leads GO Public Schools Fresno

The Chan Zuckerberg Initiative — the philanthropy bankrolled by the fortune of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg and his wife, Priscilla Chan —has provided funding, as has the California Endowment.  Go Public Schools Fresno’s executive director is Diego Arambula, formerly “chief growth officer” for Summit Public Schools, a charter-school network firmly established in the Bay Area and Washington state.
Summit, which emphasizes personalized learning, already is involved with classes at Fresno Unified’s Tioga Middle School and at a Fresno charter school, Aspen Valley Prep Academy, which is near Hughes and Ashlan avenues.
Yes, Arambula, is the brother of Fresno area Assemblyman Joaquin Arambula, and the son of Juan and Amy Arambula, who long have wielded considerable influence in local political and education circles.
But Diego Arambula stands on his own two feet. He is Harvard and Stanford educated. He was communications director for Congressman Cal Dooley and he knows the ins and outs of hardball political campaigns. Arambula also was on the shortlist last year for the job that Nelson now holds.

Portrait of Go Public Schools Fresno executive director Diego Arambula
Diego Arambula, executive director of GO Public Schools Fresno
Arambula is bound and determined to see Fresno Unified do a much better job of preparing its students — especially children of color — for success. Thus, he wants his group to have a seat at Fresno Unified’s table.
That brings us to tonight’s board item.
GO Public Schools Fresno will present the board with its “Choosing Our Future” Report, an update on a 2004-5 community report to “transform” the district after it had hit rock bottom. The group is also asking the trustees to redefine “what success looks like in the 21st century,” provide individualized data and assessments for each of the district’s 73,000 students and create “an innovation zone to design and support transformational school models.”

Expect a Heated Conversation

Teachers union representatives will give their two cents’ worth, and I expect that most of their comments will be negative. They’ll pick apart the report’s comparisons and methodology. They’ll characterize Arambula’s group as a charter-school Trojan horse. And they’ll decry throwing precious district dollars at the innovation zone. Especially without knowing what the innovations look like and past results.


Trustees will chime in, too. Relationships with the Fresno Teachers Association and community leaders, political affiliations, and perceptions of the education innovation movement will shape their comments.

Nelson’s Outlook

Nelson told me that the district is already working on improving its tools for assessing student performance and needs. The goal, he said, is to “make sure that every family knows how their child is performing.” He says that GO Public Schools Fresno could be a potential partner in helping the district improve in this area.

“If you want to change things, come inside and make us better. We don’t need a group on the outside throwing rocks at us and having a negative impact on the community. But once you’re inside, you have to collectively own the results, too.” — Fresno Unified Superintendent Bob Nelson
But the superintendent anticipates a rigorous debate about partnering with Arambula’s group on the innovation zones.
On one hand, he says, “that implies that we’re not being innovative, and that’s not the case.”
On the other hand, Nelson acknowledges, “The biggest room in our house is for improvement. We should embrace ideas that make things better for kids.”
Finally, there’s this: GO Public Schools Fresno isn’t going away. If Fresno Unified says no thanks to the nonprofit, it can expect the group to chip away at the district with charter schools.
Says Nelson: “If you want to change things, come inside and make us better. We don’t need a group on the outside throwing rocks at us and having a negative impact on the community. But once you’re inside, you have to collectively own the results, too.”
 

Bill McEwen is news director and columnist for GV Wire. He joined GV Wire in August 2017 after 37 years at The Fresno Bee. With The Bee, he served as Opinion Editor, City Hall reporter, Metro columnist, sports columnist and sports editor through the years. His work has been frequently honored by the California Newspapers Publishers Association, including authoring first-place editorials in 2015 and 2016. Bill and his wife, Karen, are proud parents of two adult sons, and they have two grandsons. You can contact Bill at 559-492-4031 or at Send an Email

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    Joseph Herzog

    May 10, 2018 at 4:04 pm

    “Trojan Horse” is an appropriate term, while California has many, many outstanding schools, it leads the nation in failed charter schools. Public funded and publicly controlled charter schools are generally successful at about the same rate as traditional public schools. Privately funded charter schools have as their first priority, no matter their talk about “student centered learning” making a profit for their funders/hedge fund managers/investors. “Innovation and personalized learning” are often just buzz words for selling a product (computers/tech programs, etc.). Data collection and assessment are similarly “buzz words” that tells you that any teacher whose students don’t perform well on meaningless, poorly designed tests that often test material not even taught in the classroom, will be penalized in some fashion or other, often rated as “failures” with their jobs jeopardy. This has happened to at least two state “Teachers of the Year” on the east coast. Everyone wants the best for students of color and for special needs students and those terms make a great wedge into having your schools taken away from local control. We had a close family friend whose child attended Valley Prep Charter, and as a veteran teacher, I can tell you the results were less than impressive….a lot less. Look at the history of charter schools in California and look behind who really benefits from “Go Public Schools Fresno.” Indeed, a Trojan Horse on our doorstep.

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