BEGIN:VCALENDAR
VERSION:2.0
X-WR-CALNAME:www.indybay.org
PRODID:-//indybay/ical// v1.0//EN
BEGIN:VEVENT
UID:Indybay-18822789
SEQUENCE:18970066
CREATED:20190417T222000Z
DESCRIPTION:4/24/19 SF Special Welcome-Greet  Billionaire Union Buster Reed Hastings 
 who brought Charter School laws, Proposition 39 and Iis pushing charters 
 and privatization \n\nWELCOME THE BUNION BUSTERS AT  Teach For America TFA 
 Bay Area  Dinner Where Reed Will Be Honored For Bringing Charters To CA & 
 The US\n\n 2019 ANNUAL Teach For America Billionaires Dinner\nAPRIL 24TH, 
 2019 \n\nProtest Greeting Begins at 5:30 PM \nSan Francisco Design Center: 
 101 Henry Adams St Doors open at: 6:00 PM\n\nSponsored By \nDefend 
 Education NOW San 
 Francisco\nhttps://www.facebook.com/DefendPublicEducationNOW/\nEndorsed by 
 UPWA\nFor more information\n ‭(415) 533-5642‬\n\n\n2019 TEACH FOR 
 AMERICAN ANNUAL BAY AREA  DINNER\nApril 24th, 
 2019\n\nhttps://events.bizzabo.com/2019tfabaydinner/\n\nFEATURING   Reed 
 Hastings Founder and CEO Netflix    Jessica Lessin Founder and 
 Editor-in-Chief The Information \n\nArne Duncan 2016 Speaker\n\nApril 24th, 
 2019\nSan Francisco Design Center: 101 Henry Adams St\nMary 
 Vascellaro\nBoard Chair\nCommunity Leader in\nEducation and the Arts\nTammy 
 Crown\nVice Chair\nCommunity Leader in\nEducation and 
 Conservation\nKatherine Acosta-Verprauskus\nPrincipal\nMontalvin Manor 
 Elementary\nHerald Chen\nMember\nPrivate Equity and\nCo-Head of 
 Technology\nKKR\nJaime Dominguez\nHeadmaster\nStuart Hall for Boys\nMichael 
 Dunn\nChairman and CEO\nProphet\nAbby Durban\nCommunity Leader 
 in\nEducation and Children’s Health\nJason Fish\nCo-Founder\nAlliance 
 Partners\nElisa Jagerson\nCEO\nSpeck Design\nJessica Lessin\nFounder and 
 Editor-in-Chief\nThe Information\nMichael Millman\nCo-Head of Equity 
 Capital Markets\nAmericas\nJP Morgan\nAaron Money\nManaging 
 Director\nFriedman Fleischer & Lowe\nLLC\nTom Stocky\nHead of Learning 
 Platform\nChan Zuckerberg Initiative\nFrances Teso\nFounder & CEO\nVoices 
 College-Bound Language Academies\nKareem Weaver\nManaging 
 Director\nNewSchools Venture Fund\nEx Officio Board Members\nArthur 
 Rock\nPrincipal\nArthur Rock & Co.\nMeg Whitman\nCEO\nNewTVDoors open at: 
 6:00 PM\n\nTickets\n\nCommunity Champion\n1 table of 10 seats with priority 
 seating Your gift provides essential support to drive systemic change 
 throughout the Bay Area.\nUS$50,000 \nUS$50,000\n\nSchool Ally\n1 table of 
 10 seats Your gift equips transformational school leaders to expand the 
 impact of great teachers.\nUS$25,000 \nUS$25,000\n\nClassroom Advocate\n5 
 seats at a table of 10 Your gift supports teachers driving toward dramatic 
 outcomes for students each and every day.\nUS$12,500 
 \nUS$12,500\n\nIndividual Ticket\n1 seat at a table of 10 2 tickets sponsor 
 1 teacher for a full year.\nUS$2,500 \nUS$2,500\n\n\nUnion Busting 
 Billionaire Reed Hastings Who Is On California Charter School Association 
 On How To Bust Up Public 
 Education\n\n\n\nhttps://www.educationnext.org/disrupting-the-education-monopoly-reed-hastings-interview/\nDisrupting 
  the Education  MonopolyA conversation with  Reed Hastings\n\nBy  
 Joanne Jacobs \nPRINT | PDF | SHARE\nWINTER 2015 / VOL. 15, NO. 1\nNetflix 
 CEO Reed Hastings has given millions of dollars to start charter schools. 
 He’s put millions more into developing education software to personalize 
 learning. But he doesn’t just give money. He makes things change. And he 
 is not a fan of school boards.\nThe high-tech billionaire—he hit the 
 “b” this year, according to Forbes—led and financed a 1998 campaign 
 that forced the California legislature to liberalize its restrictive 
 charter law. He served on the California Board of Education for four years. 
 Hastings provided start-up funding for the Aspire Public Schools charter 
 network and helped start and fund EdVoice, a lobbying group, and the 
 NewSchools Venture Fund, which supports education entrepreneurs.\nHe’s 
 given money to Sal Khan of Khan Academy to develop teaching videos—and a 
 dashboard to track student progress—used in the U.S. and around the 
 world. Hastings also supports Rocketship Education, which blends adaptive 
 learning on computers with teacher-led instruction. He’s on the board of 
 the California Charter Schools Association; the KIPP Foundation; DreamBox 
 Learning, an education technology company; and the Pahara Institute, which 
 provides fellowships to education leaders. On the business side, he served 
 on Microsoft’s board until 2012 and is now on Facebook’s board.\nIn 
 2012, Hastings and his wife, Patty Quillen, joined the Giving Pledge, 
 promising to donate most of their wealth to charity. They live with their 
 two teenage children in Santa Cruz, a laid-back beach town.\nHastings has 
 kept his day job. At 54, he has gray hair and a youthful goatee. Casually 
 dressed in Silicon Valley style, he roves the Netflix complex in Los 
 Gatos.\nThe company is a model of disruptive innovation. Hastings and 
 co-founder Marc Rudolph came up with a new idea in 1997: DVDs by mail for a 
 monthly charge, with no late fees. Competitors who couldn’t adapt 
 quickly, that is, Blockbuster, went out of business.\nBut Hastings 
 disrupted his own company in 2011 and nearly destroyed it. Eager to move to 
 streaming video, he raised prices and announced Netflix would spin off DVD 
 rentals. In four months, the company lost 800,000 subscribers. Its stock 
 price crashed.\nHastings canceled the spinoff, admitted his mistakes, and 
 rebuilt Netflix. The stock price is higher than ever. The number of 
 subscribers has doubled. The company is now producing its own content, 
 including such hit shows as House of Cards and Orange Is the New 
 Black.\n“I’m not good at following orders”\nHastings grew up 
 primarily in Washington, D.C. He attended both public and private schools, 
 then majored in math at Bowdoin. He planned to join the Marine Corps, but a 
 summer boot camp showed he wasn’t cut out for military discipline. 
 “I’m not good at following orders,” he says with a smile. Instead, he 
 volunteered for the Peace Corps. Assigned to Swaziland, he taught math and 
 worked on community projects such as building a water tank and keeping 
 bees. He loved the flexibility. “There were no rules at all. Just use 
 your initiative.”\nHis 9th-grade students “had very uneven 
 preparation,” he recalls. “Many were very committed to their education 
 but their poverty made it hard.” Any new teacher learns a lot in the 
 first few years, Hastings says. He learned that “you have to connect with 
 kids.”\nAfter the Peace Corps, Hastings earned a master’s degree at 
 Stanford, specializing in artificial intelligence. He went to work in high 
 tech, then started Pure Software. The company went public in 1995, making 
 Hastings a multimillionaire.\n“I didn’t really want to buy yachts,” 
 Hastings told the Wall Street Journal in 2008. “I started looking at 
 education, trying to figure out why our education is lagging when our 
 technology is increasing at great rates and there’s great innovation in 
 so many other areas—health care, biotech, information technology, 
 moviemaking. Why not education?”\nHe decided not to “give a little bit 
 here and there,” Hastings says. “My philosophy is to focus on one thing 
 and try to do it really well.” His thing, he decided, would be improving 
 K–12 education. But how?\nAs an entrepreneur, Hastings was intrigued by 
 the charter movement. He began talking to advocates, such as Don Shalvey, 
 who had started the state’s first charter school as superintendent of the 
 San Carlos School District, just north of Silicon Valley. He also got to 
 know Michael Kirst, a Stanford education professor who had previously 
 served on the state board of education and would do so again in the future. 
 Kirst got Hastings into a master’s program at Stanford’s school of 
 education in 1997.\nHis time at Stanford was “eye-opening,” says 
 Hastings. He read widely, getting a “broader context” for understanding 
 education issues. “It further convinced me that expanding charter schools 
 would offer a long-term solution.”\nBut he left without completing a 
 degree. He was working on starting a new company, Netflix. And he was 
 getting into education politics.\nLifting the Charter Cap\nIn 1998, 
 Hastings teamed with Shalvey to write a statewide ballot initiative lifting 
 California’s charter cap and making it easier to start a charter school. 
 Hastings became president of Technology Network, a bipartisan lobbying 
 group formed by Silicon Valley CEOs. TechNet put its political and 
 financial clout behind the petition drive. When the initiative collected 
 more than a million signatures, the opposition caved. Hastings and Shalvey 
 agreed to drop the initiative if the legislature passed the charter law 
 written by an ally in the legislature.\nHastings helped Shalvey start 
 Aspire Public Schools, which became a network of 37 charter schools in 
 California and Tennessee. Shalvey now works on college readiness for the 
 Gates Foundation.\nIn 2000, Hastings gave $1 million to pass Proposition 
 39, which lowered the vote needed to pass school bonds from two-thirds of 
 voters to 55 percent. Despite his support for charter schools, he developed 
 a “good working relationship” with the California Teachers Association. 
 That year, Democratic governor Gray Davis named Hastings to the state board 
 of education. He became president of the board in 2001.\nIt was another 
 eye-opening experience, Hastings says. The board was grappling with how to 
 test students’ progress in order to hold school districts accountable. 
 Evaluating students’ writing by requiring an essay, not just 
 multiple-choice answers, was a big issue. An essay makes the test “more 
 expensive and less reliable,” says Hastings. But if writing isn’t 
 evaluated, it creates “an incentive not to teach writing.”\nGovernor 
 Arnold Schwarzenegger, a Republican, nominated Hastings for a second term 
 in 2004, but a group of Democratic legislators blocked his reappointment, 
 forcing him off the board.\nHe still had the teachers union backing, says 
 Hastings. “I tripped over a political issue on bilingual education.” He 
 had advocated two and a half hours of English instruction a day in 
 bilingual kindergartens, which typically devoted 90 percent of the day to 
 Spanish. Bilingual educators and their political allies mobilized against 
 him. “I lacked political deftness,” he says.\nDefenders of the 
 education status quo often have little use for wealthy philanthropists, 
 labeling them the “billionaire boys’ club” and “deformers.” 
 Hastings thinks his critics have “all the right motives.” They want to 
 “serve children better.” He doesn’t care if they don’t respect his 
 motives. “A public advocate needs a thick skin and a respect for opposing 
 arguments,” he says.\nTechnology for Learning\nSince leaving the board, 
 Hastings has focused on growing high-quality charter schools and developing 
 technology that could transform education.\n“Technology is global,” he 
 says. “We need every kid to get a great education, whether they live in 
 Mexico or Nigeria or Pakistan.”\nTechnology has the potential to 
 personalize teaching and learning, says Hastings. Adaptive programs let a 
 3rd grader work at the 5th-grade level while a classmate is learning 
 1st-grade math skills. Technology can free teachers to work with small 
 groups instead of lecturing to a large class. “It’s very 
 teacher-centric but it won’t be a teacher in front of a class explaining 
 how to do long division.”\nHe remembers the lessons he learned in 
 Swaziland. “There’s a huge emotional component to teaching and 
 inspiring kids.”\nNow, software is best at teaching “subjects with 
 correct answers,” he says. “It will take 5 to 10 years of hard work to 
 figure out” how to use software to teach students to analyze a poem or 
 understand a historical event. And it may not happen. “You can go back 50 
 years. In the 1960s, it was going to be TV-based learning,” he says. 
 “There have been many waves of great desperate hope that maybe technology 
 will save us.”\nMany charters are trying different approaches to blended 
 learning, says Hastings. Ideas will be tried, modified, expanded, or 
 dropped. Rocketship piloted a “flexible” learning lab with up to 115 
 students, three teachers, and a coach in the same very large room. Scores 
 fell. Teachers quit. The network modified the model and limited it to the 
 4th and 5th grades. Then its ambitious growth plans stalled.\nRocketship is 
 “pausing to take a breath,” says Hastings. It will grow much more 
 slowly than originally planned. But “they have great schools with a lot 
 of heart to grow and improve.”\nRocketship uses software developed by 
 DreamBox Learning, as well as programs developed by Khan Academy and 
 others. Boosting blended learning while investing in a for-profit software 
 developer is a conflict of interest, say Hastings’ critics. But Hastings 
 has “no financial interest” in DreamBox, he says. He donated to a 
 nonprofit, the Charter School Growth Fund, which invested in DreamBox. If 
 the company prospers, Hastings doesn’t make money.\nThe Trouble with 
 School Boards\nThis year, Hastings raised another set of hackles by 
 criticizing school boards in a keynote speech on March 4 at the California 
 Charter Schools Association’s annual conference.\nHastings didn’t call 
 for abolishing school boards in his speech, as reported by some. “Of 
 course, no one’s going to go for that,” he told the conference. 
 “School boards have been an iconic part of America for 200 years.” But 
 he does want to make school boards obsolete.\n“The school board model 
 works reasonably well in suburban districts,” he said in an interview. In 
 cities, where it takes thousands of dollars to run, school board seats 
 attract the politically ambitious. “They use the school board as a 
 stepping-stone to run for higher office.”\nThe way to get elected is to 
 promise change. Often that means throwing out the superintendent and 
 churning programs. Long-term planning is impossible. Superintendents come 
 and go, but the bureaucrats remain, gaining power. His solution is to 
 create “a system of large nonprofits” running charter schools, he told 
 the conference. “Every year they’re getting better because they have 
 stable governance.”\n“The work ahead is really hard because we’re at 
 8 percent of students in California [attending charters], whereas in New 
 Orleans they’re at 90 percent, so we have a lot of catch-up to do,” 
 Hastings said. “So what we have to do is continue to grow and grow.… 
 It’s going to take 20 to 30 years to get to 90 percent of charter 
 kids.”\nCritics complain that charter boards aren’t elected by voters, 
 or by the school’s parents, and therefore aren’t democratic. Parents 
 care a great deal about whether their child’s school is effective, says 
 Hastings. They don’t care about its governance. “If a nonprofit school 
 is effective, that’s great for democracy.”\nHe “doesn’t think much 
 good will come” from the recent Vergara decision, in which a California 
 judge ruled that teacher tenure and seniority laws violate low-income, 
 minority students’ right to equal education opportunity (see “Script 
 Doctors,” legal beat, Fall 2014). “It’s a distraction,” says 
 Hastings.\nEmboldened by the California decision, reformers are challenging 
 teacher protection laws in other states. Hastings foresees “a huge fight 
 that won’t lead to better outcomes for students.” School districts are 
 monopolies, he says. Protections for teachers are a “natural outcome of a 
 local monopoly.” Besides, teachers in Louisiana and Texas don’t have 
 tenure, he says. “It hasn’t changed the nature of the teaching 
 profession.”\nWhat’s needed is a way to disrupt the monopoly.\nJoanne 
 Jacobs, a former San Jose Mercury News editorial writer and columnist, 
 writes about K–12 education and community colleges at joannejacobs.com 
 and ccspotlight.org.\n 
 https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/04/17/18822789.php
SUMMARY:SF Greeting For Billionaire Union Busting Charter King Reed Hastings
LOCATION:San Francisco Design Center: 101 Henry Adams St\nSan Francisco
URL:https://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2019/04/17/18822789.php
DTSTART:20190425T003000Z
DTEND:20190425T023000Z
END:VEVENT
END:VCALENDAR
