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K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
Hoffman Reporting & Video Service Page: 1
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4 K-12 SUBCOMMITTEE BREAKOUT DISCUSSION
5
6 PRESIDENT'S ADVISORY COMMISSION ON
7 EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE FOR HISPANICS
8
9
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11 Fall 2014 Public Meeting
12 Wednesday, September 3, 2014
13 2:15 p.m.
14 The University of Texas at San Antonio
15 Downtown Campus
16 501 W. Cesar Chavez Boulevard
17 San Antonio, Texas 78207, at 2:15 p.m.
18
19
20
21 Reported by: Natalie Hunsucker, CSR
22 Hoffman Reporting & Video Service
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24
25
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 A-P-P-E-A-R-A-N-C-E-S
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3 PATRICIA GANDARA
4 JOANN GAMA
5 LILY ESKELSEN GARCIA
6 MONICA MARTINEZ
7 VERONICA MELVIN
8 KENT SCRIBNER
9 MARIA NEIRA
10 JOANN GAMA
11 MARCO DAVIS
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K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 K-12 SUBCOMMITTEE BREAKOUT DISCUSSION
2 MS. GANDARA: All right. So what we have
3 done in this committee in the past and, unless I'm told
4 not to, I think is a good idea is to include all of you in
5 the discussion just as the committee members because you
6 have important ideas, thoughts, comments, and we don't get
7 another opportunity to really share. So it just makes it
8 doubly difficult when we have only 30 minutes, but I still
9 want to encourage you to comment.
10 I have to ask first, because we have an
11 agenda here that is at least good for 75 minutes or so,
12 what your preference would be in terms of which issues to
13 take up first. Under old business, we have the issue of
14 the immigrant student services and comments on that. We
15 have the discussion, which Marco and I had talked about at
16 some length actually having today, about how we should
17 proceed with the teacher recognition piece. I think we
18 have to touch on that for five minutes anyway because some
19 decisions have to be made.
20 We have the issue of whether this committee
21 wants to be engaged in developing one or more policy
22 documents having to do with teacher recruitment and
23 perhaps other issues. We have -- And under there, I have
24 particularly the disappearance of Title 7 funding, which
25 we once had and I believe should have again, and the issue
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 of dissemination of the work because there's actually a
2 lot of stuff that is happening, going on, getting done,
3 being documented, being published. And I have great
4 concerns about how well we're disseminating all of that.
5 But under new business are also the issues
6 of unaccompanied child migrants, comments on a policy
7 consideration for dreamers who want to be prepare to
8 become teachers and whether the committee is still
9 interested in the two (inaudible) sides that it now has or
10 does it want to shift. And those two (inaudible) sides
11 being the immigrant student services and the teacher
12 recruitment. Or does the committee want to shift
13 priorities or add other priorities and I know there's some
14 comment here about that.
15 Alejandra is supposed to join us sometime
16 during these 30 minutes to talk about the 25th anniversary
17 and what we would like our role to be in that and what
18 kinds of initiates we would like to push. And, finally, I
19 wanted to put on the table perhaps a closer conversation
20 with AFT and CTA, who are representative of our committee
21 but have not had, I think, as high of a profile on this
22 committee as they deserve and could help us with
23 representing, I mean, given that we have this whole focus
24 on teacher recruitment.
25 So those are the issues. Do I hear anything
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 from the committee about where you would want to start on
2 that list? We're not going to make it through all of
3 this.
4 MS. MELVIN: We might want to just break up,
5 I don't know, in terms of time, into the two subgroups
6 that we have and have our own subgroups.
7 MS. GANDARA: ISS and the teacher stuff?
8 MS. MELVIN: Yeah.
9 MR. DAVIS: So because it's a public meeting
10 and we have to transcribe it, that would be hard to do.
11 MS. MELVIN: No subgroup. No subgroups of
12 the subgroups.
13 MS. SPEAKER: (Inaudible.)
14 MR. DAVIS: That would be hard to --
15 MS. GANDARA: All right. While you consider
16 that, I think I'm going to push it over to Marco and I to
17 have a little bit of a conversation with you guys about
18 the -- the teacher recognition/recruitment and the three
19 basic options we have before us about how we would like to
20 pursue that.
21 Marco, you want to outline the -- the three?
22 MR. DAVIS: Yes. Perfect. So you all may
23 recall, but for the certain -- for our -- for our guests,
24 let me share that two years ago, in 2012, the subcommittee
25 undertook a teacher recognition program whereby it sought
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 to recognize and elevate outstanding educators in the
2 Latino community. Ultimately, the program -- the teacher
3 recognition program was made a White House Champions of
4 Change program, which is a program that the White House
5 manages fairly regularly. It's available at
6 whitehouse.gov/champions. You can see where fairly
7 regularly, almost on a weekly basis, the White House
8 features outstanding, what they call, sort of everyday
9 heros, people who are not household names but who should
10 be, but who are not necessarily nationally recognized, who
11 are doing great work in various areas, whether it be
12 education, (inaudible), employment, law, et cetera,
13 et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So they have a standard
14 process and focus.
15 So that was one program that was done. And
16 so now the question before the subcommittee or -- or
17 for -- for the sake of time is to think about sort of how
18 to do this teacher recognition program, again, as there's
19 been a desire to -- to repeat it. But there are
20 essentially sort of three options to pursue it as I've
21 outlined it. But there's probably more than three, but
22 certainly three that have been discussed thus far.
23 So I want us to -- to repeat this Champions
24 of Change program. But what I would remind folks sort of
25 the way I -- to outline it, sort of the main features of
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1 that is to poll the Champions of Change event. What would
2 happen would be that the -- the commissioners would find
3 some way, through outreach, et cetera, to identify a slate
4 of teachers and to submit recommendations to the White
5 House for review. The White House would then review those
6 recommendations, review that slate of potential
7 candidates, would vet them, which is one of the standard
8 pieces that the White House does, which is sort of a
9 minimal background check to make sure that they're not
10 felons and so on partly because they're -- they're
11 recognized at the White House, so they have to attend the
12 ceremony, as well, and also apply any additional criteria
13 that the White House deems necessary in order to make
14 their selections. So that's a process that they manage
15 internally at the White House.
16 So, obviously, one of the advantages of
17 repeating the Champions of Change program is that the
18 program would then be held at the White House. Teachers
19 would be featured on the White House Champions of Change
20 website. There would be a media advisory issued by the
21 White House Communications Office, et cetera. Also, an
22 advantage would be leveraging the -- the White House
23 infrastructure. So holding an event at the White House
24 South Court Auditorium, those press releases and -- and
25 bios are drafted by the White House, et cetera. And, of
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 course, the teacher could go to Washington and see that
2 it's the White House's part of the program.
3 Obviously, the challenges to repeating that
4 program, as experienced prior, was that there's a loss of
5 autonomy. So the White House has the final say on the
6 criteria and the final say on the final slate of the
7 teachers, on the final selections. What the commission
8 would be able to do is to make a recommendation of those
9 seven people, but the White House ultimately would make
10 that decision as they run that program.
11 There are also sometimes challenges in terms
12 of costs associated, most notably travel for the honored
13 teachers to the White House, as the White House does not
14 have a budget for any of the Champions of Change programs.
15 So the teachers who are selected to be honored have to
16 under -- underwrite their own costs. It also --
17 MS. GANDARA: Or somebody on the committee
18 has to come up with the money for it.
19 MR. DAVIS: Right. But, see, if someone on
20 the committee comes up with it, much like Option B, as
21 I'll talk about in a minute, then it's a process that the
22 commission has to take on anyway separate from the White
23 House and it's still subject to -- so only doing it for
24 the ones that are selected by the White House, et cetera.
25 MS. GANDARA: All right. So before you go
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 on to the two, are -- are you finished with one?
2 MR. DAVIS: Yeah. The only other thing I
3 was going to say is, also, just bear in mind that
4 obviously, then, it also would be subject to the White
5 House timetable. For example, when this Champions of
6 Change ceremony could be held is subject to the White
7 House.
8 MS. GANDARA: And the obvious thing to
9 consider here, as we discussed in a private -- in a
10 previous meeting, was that it -- not only do we lose
11 autonomy, we lose continuity of a certain sense because it
12 doesn't have its own life. It just becomes something that
13 is part of Champions of Change. And in a change of
14 administrations --
15 MR. DAVIS: Right.
16 MS. GANDARA: -- we would not necessarily
17 have an ongoing program.
18 MR. DAVIS: Right.
19 MS. GARCIA: Do the -- Does the committee
20 get to know what the White House criteria is?
21 MR. DAVIS: Yes.
22 MS. GARCIA: That would be helpful. Because
23 I think before, we were selecting people that met our
24 criteria and then there were additional, obviously, things
25 that were going on that we -- if we had know it in
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1 advance, we would have maybe made other selections.
2 MR. DAVIS: Yes. Good point. Okay. So --
3 so that -- So that's option one just to think about.
4 Option two (inaudible), very simply, will be
5 for the commission to (inaudible). The process would be
6 that commissioners would develop a set of criteria, would
7 conduct outreach, recruiting candidates, oversee the
8 selection process and create the actual recognition
9 program event at the (inaudible) et cetera, et cetera, et
10 cetera. Obviously, one advantage is that there is then
11 the full commission autonomy. There's full commission
12 branding, visibility for the commission. For that, there
13 is that potential for continuity at the minimum through
14 this commission. And should this commission be recharged
15 in the future administration, it could continue that
16 program.
17 Some of the challenges are that there is no
18 existing infrastructure before that. Right? So the
19 criteria don't exist. Because even if you revisited last
20 year's, you would have to -- to take a look at that again.
21 All planning and implementation would have to be carried
22 out either by the commissions for (inaudible) resources
23 any funds to the underwriting costs of the program would
24 have to be raised by the commission, et cetera.
25 Obviously, the (inaudible) all the support that goes
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1 through its own processing department (inaudible) for any
2 gifts, solicitation and/or receipt to the Department of
3 Education and sort of putting out all sort of visibility
4 in media and outreach, et cetera. That's two.
5 Three is a -- a new possibility based on a
6 conversation we had about a month ago with an organization
7 called Hispanic Heritage Foundation. And for those who
8 are not familiar, I will very briefly just mention it.
9 The Hispanic Heritage Foundation was established by the
10 White House in 1987 but is now an independent 503(C)
11 nonprofit organization. But it was originally established
12 to commemorate the creation of the Hispanic Heritage month
13 in America.
14 It was known best for its prestigious
15 Hispanic Heritage Awards, which they still hold each year,
16 and are considered among the highest honors for Hispanics
17 in the U.S., often recognizing Latino leaders who have
18 made positive contributions in the U.S., in Latin-America
19 and globally in various categories. It honors physicians,
20 scientists, educators, public officials, celebrities,
21 athletes, et cetera. There's an annual event attended by
22 many people in Washington, D.C. Certainly the Warner
23 Theater has been attended by many sort of dignitaries.
24 The Hispanic Heritage Foundation also,
25 several years back, 16 years ago, added a youth awards
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 program where high school students have been selected for
2 their achievements in the classroom, in the community and
3 in focus of ten priority tracks, one of which is
4 education. After a high profile search featuring outreach
5 to 4,000 schools, young people are selected in regions
6 through a -- a local committee that will pass on the word
7 to local educators, staff and board members for the
8 Hispanic Heritage Foundation. And then there's three
9 regional winners and then there's five national winners
10 for young people.
11 The reason why I bring it up the youth
12 awards is that the youth winners -- each of these three
13 regional youth winners is asked to nominate the teacher
14 who has made a significant impact on them, on their
15 success per the innovative teacher recognition program.
16 So in each of the eleven markets, one teacher is selected.
17 Basically, the young people identify the teacher. They're
18 asked to get contact info and a bio and so on. But they
19 also are asked to write an assay on behalf -- or from
20 their perspective on the teacher, which includes things
21 like their vision, their empathy, their mentoring, their
22 guidance, their innovative ideas and untraditional efforts
23 to reach the students, cultural connectivity, engaging
24 with parents, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
25 The Hispanic Heritage Foundation, again,
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1 uses a local selection committee to review those
2 applications and staff that have been very (inaudible) to
3 (inaudible) at the moment, make the selection of those
4 individual teachers as soon as they know the winners so
5 that they can select from each market. From those eleven,
6 one is selected as the national winner who would attend
7 the national Hispanic Heritage Youth Awards program. All
8 of these are usually broadcast on television as well as
9 other things.
10 So what the Hispanic Heritage Foundation has
11 expressed interest in is in collaborating with the
12 initiative or the commission in looking at combining --
13 combining or involving the commission in some way in that
14 innovative teacher program. So the idea is that what
15 would happen here. And, obviously, there's still many
16 more conversations that need to be held, what we're
17 exploring through a few other activities, as well, in
18 creating a formal partnership with the Hispanic Heritage
19 Foundation and having an actual (inaudible) agreement
20 signed off on by the Department of Education and the
21 Hispanic Heritage Foundation for a number of activities,
22 one which would include this. It doesn't have to be
23 this -- this (inaudible).
24 Advantages would be leveraging the external
25 organization and infrastructure and their process for
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1 identifying and selecting teachers. There's obviously
2 eleven regional markets throughout the country, so there's
3 a potential to build into that. There's also an
4 opportunity there in that some if -- some if not all the
5 of costs could be borne by the Hispanic Heritage
6 Foundation. So basically as part of this (inaudible),
7 they're then able to fundraise, to get sponsors and so on
8 independent of us not to have the need to go through the
9 Department of Education's review process for fundraising
10 so long as they make their -- their fundraising their
11 portion of the event, which would include things like
12 travel. At the moment, the Innovative Teacher (inaudible)
13 all their expenses are paid for travel, so (inaudible).
14 Obviously, the challenge is there. There is
15 also a different type of loss of autonomy and that's
16 partnering with a partner and having to negotiate some of
17 those pieces, obviously, the same piece of visibility,
18 making sure that the two entities are well represented and
19 visible and so on and so forth (inaudible) White House
20 program as compared to the Championship program
21 (inaudible). So those are sort of just the three options
22 to put on the table to consider as -- as the commission
23 thinks about what direction you want to go.
24 MS. GANDARA: It's not clear to me how the
25 commission doesn't disappear into the Hispanic Heritage.
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1 And wouldn't there ultimately be only one teacher?
2 MR. DAVIS: So yeah. So we weren't able to
3 go sort of more in depth in terms of that. And I didn't
4 want, also, to go to too, too much into detail with them.
5 What I can say is that I think that the Hispanic Heritage
6 Foundation is fairly flexible, fairly adaptable in
7 (inaudible) the program.
8 So I think things like the question of
9 expanding it to be more than one national winner, figuring
10 out how to co-brand, so, for example, it could be the --
11 for -- for brevity's sake, the Commission/Hispanic
12 Heritage Foundation outstanding teacher award. I mean, I
13 think they could -- they would even consider renaming it
14 that way. There would be the ability to do all the media
15 (inaudible) with the commission's partner (inaudible)
16 Hispanic Heritage Foundation. And the commission is
17 honoring these folks.
18 There could be (inaudible) for the
19 commission to invite them to Washington, D.C., or
20 something to figure out ways to recognize, honor and
21 support them, raise their visibility and raise the
22 (inaudible) to their participation in the program. We
23 could have commissioners. Well, they did, in fact,
24 suggest, for example, the (inaudible) was we could work to
25 have a commissioner and/or staff person represented in
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1 each of the regional markets being the ones presenting the
2 award to the teacher, so (inaudible) the actual ceremony
3 where the youth awards happen and the teacher is
4 recognized (inaudible) be incorporated into the program
5 and visible recognizable (inaudible).
6 There's -- There is some flexibility.
7 There's not a lot of definitive. But it's something that,
8 again, if you wanted to pursue that avenue (inaudible)
9 right now, you could have further conversation about how
10 that would work to see if it would meet your requirements.
11 MS. GANDARA: Just before I ask Lily to
12 comment, do you know what their cycle is like right now?
13 MS. GARCIA: (Inaudible.)
14 MS. GANDARA: Oh, thank you. Great minds,
15 huh? Okay.
16 MR. DAVIS: Okay. So their current --
17 MS. GANDARA: So that means it wouldn't be
18 until the following September at the earliest?
19 MR. DAVIS: So -- Not exactly. So the
20 application, I think, deadline is September 30th, right?
21 MS. MARTINEZ: Yes.
22 MR. DAVIS: Yeah. So the application for
23 the youth award is September 30th, which means they'll
24 receive the youth applications. The youth are the ones
25 who nominate teachers. So it's actually spring, I think,
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 into the summer where they recognize the teachers. So you
2 could conceivably jump into this cycle if you desire.
3 MS. GARCIA: Because I know Tony Tijerina so
4 well, my comfort level is high. If this was like an --
5 an --
6 MR. DAVIS: Unknown area.
7 MS. GARCIA: -- unknown, right, I -- I'd
8 probably go whoa, whoa, whoa. So there's two things.
9 I -- I like the organization itself. It's a small
10 organization. It's not a very political organization. It
11 really deals with cultural -- preserving Hispanic culture.
12 So that appeals to me.
13 And the other thing is -- and I don't know
14 how to say this in a nice way -- commissions like ours
15 disappear every day. So we can't -- You know, we'll do
16 great work and I think we'll make an impact. But I never
17 thought of this commission as going on in 20 years,
18 because the next president of whatever party will have
19 different priorities. It might not be education of --
20 Hispanic excellence in education. It might be Hispanic
21 excellence in entrepreneurs and small businesses. I mean,
22 they -- there'll be a different focus inevitably.
23 So I -- I want to -- I look at us as the
24 clock is ticking and how do we take something that -- that
25 we all thought was a really good idea in recruiting more
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1 Latino teachers as the population and the student
2 population grows, how are we going to have the faculty in
3 a school reflect the community. And this was one tiny
4 little piece of, you know, making it a little glamorous,
5 to say, "You're recognized. You did an amazing thing."
6 They went to the White House. It got some -- It got some
7 media coverage. When we're gone, how will that continue
8 on?
9 And so, you know, I was thinking when you
10 got to number two, the second thing, I thought, well,
11 maybe AFT and NEA could take this over and make it more
12 the teachers. And we're hopefully not going away real
13 soon. That's my -- That's my goal. But if you have
14 something like the Hispanic Heritage Foundation, it kind
15 of takes it out of that political realm where maybe our
16 organizations have a good or bad relationship with the
17 administration and future administrations. You're never
18 going to have that with the foundation.
19 I like the idea of saying the connection we
20 have is that we would be part of the selection committee.
21 We could work with -- We could work with the foundation on
22 what the criteria would be. And we wouldn't -- we won't
23 forever maybe have this commission as the -- as the brand
24 of it, but that's less important to me than the
25 recognition that we wanted to have.
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1 And this is (inaudible). Okay. And this is
2 very popular on all the Spanish language television shows
3 around the country and -- and in certain places in -- in
4 Mexico. So I -- That appeals to me. And without knowing
5 a lot more of the details, I -- I could live with that.
6 MR. SCRIBNER: Another -- Another, for me,
7 encouraging sign is looking at who they're going to be
8 honoring this year. One of the -- the education honorees
9 are the Carl Hayden High School robotics team from -- from
10 our school district.
11 (Simultaneous discussion)
12 MR. SCRIBNER: The -- the -- The
13 documentary, "Underwater Dreams" --
14 MS. SPEAKER: Oh, that's at your school?
15 MR. SCRIBNER: That's our school.
16 MS. SPEAKER: I wondered about that.
17 MR. SCRIBNER: And then the featured film
18 with George Lopez and Marisa Tomei and -- and -- and
19 others, in January, "Spare Parts," is coming out. And --
20 and -- And I just say that because earlier this morning, a
21 couple of speakers, they talked about the activism and
22 dreamers and young people. And here is a wonderful
23 example of students who are excelling in stem and -- and
24 beating MIT in these competitions. They are the ones in
25 Arizona, my kids, who are leading the -- the group for
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1 grassroots efforts towards (inaudible) immigration reform.
2 So I'm all for it.
3 MS. NEIRA: I'd like to follow up on a
4 couple of things. One, I think it's going to be important
5 for the commission to have an understanding of what goes
6 into the MOU Commission. I think that's a real critical
7 piece. I think the co-branding, even if it's just
8 temporary, is critical to keep that role going.
9 I particularly appreciate the new voice,
10 that it really takes it away from the political voice also
11 locally when it comes from the students. We always say --
12 Teachers always say that if you want to be evaluated, go
13 to your students. So I think it's a real great way of
14 recognizing the voice of the students and sometimes
15 parents because the parents are so involved in that
16 process. So I -- I really support this with the caveat
17 that it really is a partnership.
18 And I think, as Lily said, the smallness of
19 the group and their intensity on culture, it -- it just
20 lends itself to collaboration. So I think I'm a lot more
21 comfortable with that than with the first recommendation
22 because it does take it away from the process.
23 That being said, I -- I want to go back to
24 the statement I made this morning. This is just a small
25 part of the process that we talked about. I think,
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1 Patricia, you said about the new business and the new
2 business is really trying to build upon what -- this whole
3 recruitment piece, because the recognition is just a
4 celebration, a celebration of the profession. It really
5 doesn't go to the heart of recruiting the -- the pipeline
6 that we need in our classrooms at this point.
7 MS. GANDARA: Does it -- Marco, does it tend
8 to lean towards high school teachers who get chosen
9 because it -- okay -- yeah, because these are the students
10 who --
11 MS. GARCIA: That should be part of the
12 criteria of looking to say that we have a number of early
13 childhood and elementary and secondary teachers. And it
14 doesn't come up from the students because they're not
15 going to have second graders (inaudible), but that there's
16 some way of recognizing (inaudible).
17 MS. GANDARA: Okay. If there's any other
18 comment about this?
19 MS. SPEAKER: I'd like to comment. I think
20 that the option to have the students recognize their
21 teacher is the best one. We give awards to teachers and
22 they stay on the shelf and they're great for that time
23 when you take a trip. But if you want to leave a legacy
24 and really have their -- their story told, it's through
25 the eyes of the child. Teachers love that.
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1 We -- You know, I have a student that I've
2 been in touch with after 26 years. He's my legacy. He's
3 my -- He's the reason that I do what I do. So I think
4 having students tell their story and letting that live on
5 will be a much bigger award than anything else.
6 MR. SPEAKER: I have a question on the
7 Heritage -- Hispanic Heritage. The criteria, we're
8 talking about recruitment, right, for Hispanic
9 recruitment? I'm a student. The person that influenced
10 me was Mr. Smith. Am I going to be eliminated because I
11 picked Mr. Smith and not Mr. Martinez? You see what I
12 mean?
13 So we're trying to recruit that -- So, in
14 other words, I'm a kid that's gotten nominated because I
15 was a great Hispanic kid in class, but my teacher that
16 influenced me was Mr. Smith. Well, is that part of our
17 criteria is going to be that it has to be Hispanic or not
18 Hispanic? Because then I'm getting nominated and I'm
19 going to write things about Mr. Smith and how great he
20 was. But with that rule, the committee's there saying,
21 "Well, I guess, Smith. We don't want Smith. We want
22 Martinez." So does that mean -- Are we going to have that
23 standard?
24 (Simultaneous discussion)
25 MS. GANDARA: I -- I appreciate you bringing
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1 that up. What we had decided in the last round was that
2 we were looking for Latino teachers or -- or teachers who
3 had dedicated themselves to the Latino population. And we
4 actually did have --
5 MS. SPEAKER: We had non-Latino teachers.
6 MS. GANDARA: We had a couple of non-Latino
7 teachers.
8 MR. SPEAKER: But as a -- but as a
9 student -- Yeah, well, that's what I was going to say.
10 MR. SCRIBNER: Yeah.
11 MR. SPEAKER: Because as a student, how
12 would --
13 MR. SCRIBNER: Right.
14 MR. SPEAKER: -- they wouldn't know. You
15 know what I'm saying?
16 MR. SCRIBNER: Right. The -- The robotics
17 experience, Freddie Lajvardi from -- immigrated from Iran
18 and has been in -- in West Phoenix his entire career
19 connecting with kids.
20 MR. SPEAKER: I just wanted to make sure.
21 MR. SCRIBNER: Yeah.
22 MS. GANDARA: Well, it's absolutely an
23 excellent question, as it would need to revisited now too.
24 (Simultaneous discussion)
25 MS. MELVIN: Related to that, are we still
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1 holding these teachers to our standards or the White House
2 standards or is that out the door now?
3 (Simultaneous discussion)
4 MS. SPEAKER: We would need to continue to
5 develop our -- our standards, our criteria.
6 MR. DAVIS: Right. So this -- so we --
7 There would be more flexibility. It would not sort of
8 be -- Because it would not be part of the Champions
9 program, there would not be that specific set of criteria.
10 But that's part of the pieces to which Maria was alluding,
11 that that would be the negotiation with the foundation
12 about what the criteria would be. And I know that the
13 commission would be able to sort of forward some ideas.
14 If they wanted something more concrete,
15 then, you know, at the -- at the moment, I'm not sure.
16 I'd need to get some more information on that. I'd have
17 to do some follow-up. It seems to be a little bit more
18 based on sort of the inspiration and the student's
19 impression of the teachers, effectiveness, impact,
20 motivation, you know, things like connections to the
21 parents. Right. Is it just that that teacher was
22 connected to the student's parents or is it all the
23 teachers' parents? Those are pieces that could be
24 explored that we could figure out ways to define it, to
25 capture more.
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1 MR. ARTILES: So I -- I agree with the
2 arguments made in terms of the (inaudible) the foundation
3 (inaudible) so far and particularly the issue of
4 sustainability and how do we keep this up over time. The
5 other concern I have is impact. Okay. We recognize these
6 individuals who have exemplary careers. Beyond this
7 legacy (inaudible) also these individual stories can
8 contribute to a -- a knowledge base, which is (inaudible)
9 base in terms of what we do to learn this in the larger
10 scheme of things.
11 So I think we should think about raising
12 money to document this individual's trajectory (inaudible)
13 in which we can carefully disseminate not only through the
14 commission's networks but all the networks that all of us
15 have in our respective professional careers and make sure
16 that this really is used in meaningful ways, not only
17 teacher education programs, but also professional
18 development, so really go beyond the recognition of that
19 individual and ask the question: "What we can we learn
20 from this person's experiences given the evidence we have
21 before us? What are the lessons that (inaudible) that we
22 can build over time?"
23 MS. SPEAKER: This person being what did we
24 learn from the teachers or what are we learning from the
25 student and how they view the teachers?
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1 MR. ARTILES: It's stories that we gather
2 about these teachers, whether it's the students' stories
3 or the students' or the teachers' experience, but how do
4 we impact the profession, as an example, from the lessons
5 we derive reflecting on what we have learned (inaudible).
6 MS. GARCIA: Can I piggyback on that?
7 Because -- and it's -- it's -- it triggered where this
8 recognition/recruitment that we're talking about, what
9 you're talking about is how do we use these award winning
10 incredible teachers to build something that then recruits
11 other wonderful, credible people.
12 MR. ARTILES: Exactly.
13 MS. GARCIA: And I -- I -- I don't want to
14 make the -- the judgment that because you're a Latino
15 student, you live in a poor neighborhood. But we know
16 that a lot of high minority populations are high poverty
17 populations. Part of the recruitment that -- that I
18 wanted to, you know, add to that is what drew those --
19 assuming or -- or analyzing which of those award winners
20 are in challenged neighborhoods, poverty neighborhoods,
21 what drew them to that? Because we're -- we're looking
22 for ways of getting incredibly bright, talented career
23 people who will teach in the most challenging way.
24 MS. GANDARA: Can I please second that?
25 Because that was my -- I think this was what made me
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1 rather upset the last time around was because that was
2 knocked out. The teachers who came from these kinds of
3 neighborhoods were not in the running, basically, because
4 the schools weren't doing that well --
5 MS. GARCIA: All based on test scores.
6 MS. GANDARA: -- based on test scores. And
7 so, for me, this would be very important that we talk
8 about people who are doing this work in the hard places
9 and not in the easy places.
10 MS. GARCIA: And -- And why they wanted to
11 teach there and why they wanted to stay there, I think, is
12 what the analysis should be based on.
13 MS. GANDARA: Well, it sounds like this
14 Heritage Foundation has a lot of positives and probably
15 more positives than the other two options. Though it does
16 also seem to me like this being September 3rd and then
17 closing September 30th and having to come up with criteria
18 and ideas about how we would do this and what the MOU is
19 and everything else simply may not be possible on this
20 cycle --
21 MR. DAVIS: It may or may not.
22 MS. GANDARA: -- realistically.
23 MR. DAVIS: It may.
24 MS. GANDARA: It may or it may not.
25 MR. DAVIS: It's not definitely out of the
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1 question.
2 MS. MELVIN: We close deals like this in a
3 month.
4 MR. DAVIS: Well, and, also, again, I
5 think --
6 (Simultaneous discussion)
7 MR. DAVIS: -- I think the teacher portion
8 doesn't close.
9 MS. GANDARA: But the students --
10 MR. DAVIS: Right. And so then the students
11 who, as I understood the process --
12 MS. SPEAKER: They would need some direction
13 also.
14 MR. DAVIS: -- the students who are
15 selected -- Right. And so I think it's after September
16 30th when the students are selected or asked to nominate a
17 teacher, after that.
18 MS. GARCIA: Okay. And we can -- we can
19 impact the criteria after that on -- on looking at the
20 teachers.
21 MS. GANDARA: On the teachers.
22 (Simultaneous discussion)
23 MS. GANDARA: But the students have to be
24 given some direction, though, right, about who you're
25 choosing? Like consider also elementary schoolteachers --
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1 MR. DAVIS: Right.
2 MS. MARTINEZ: -- and that sort of thing?
3 MR. DAVIS: Right. But they -- Again, I
4 don't think they submit the nomination with their
5 application. I think they submit it later.
6 MS. GANDARA: Oh.
7 MR. DAVIS: Yeah.
8 MS. SPEAKER: So right now, it's just the
9 students that get submitted?
10 MR. DAVIS: They just submit to -- Because
11 they -- The youth award wins a scholarship and
12 recognition.
13 MS. GANDARA: And then they --
14 MR. DAVIS: They -- Then the winners
15 nominate a teacher.
16 MR. SPEAKER: They select winners per
17 region.
18 MR. DAVIS: Right.
19 (Simultaneous discussion)
20 MR. SPEAKER: Every region has to send the
21 students who win.
22 MR. DAVIS: Right.
23 MR. SPEAKER: Then from that region, they'll
24 send a teacher. Then all those who will be considered for
25 the national program, they select one in each category.
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1 MS. GANDARA: But we're talking about trying
2 to broaden that so it's (inaudible).
3 MR. SPEAKER: Right.
4 MS. SPEAKER: And -- And my question was
5 about the fairness of being able to nominate a teacher.
6 How -- how -- How does it happen? Do you get buy-in from
7 the school districts or how -- how do the kids get to know
8 that this is open for them?
9 MR. DAVIS: Yeah. So the -- so the -- Any
10 student, I believe, of Hispanic descent anywhere in
11 America can sub -- Well, actually, I don't know if it's
12 anywhere in America or just the eleven markets. But
13 they're able to submit an application.
14 MS. SPEAKER: So where is the information
15 found for them to be included in that?
16 (Simultaneous discussion)
17 MR. DAVIS: It's on their website. It's --
18 It's this outreach to 4,000 schools through nonprofit
19 organizations that they partner with. So they disseminate
20 it through social media. They disseminate news about the
21 application.
22 (Simultaneous discussion)
23 MS. SPEAKER: So we wouldn't know
24 specifically what school districts have presented the
25 information or anything like that?
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1 MR. DAVIS: So they might be able to know
2 that. I don't know that they know your -- I -- I know
3 what -- Well, I don't know off the top of my head. But
4 the eleven cities, I think they try to get as much input
5 as they can from the eleven cities. They try to spread
6 the word as widely as they can in those eleven regions.
7 MR. SPEAKER: And they've also brought in
8 the (inaudible) through Mundos.
9 MR. DAVIS: Right.
10 MR. SPEAKER: They do Subway in (inaudible).
11 So it really is quite disseminated.
12 (Simultaneous discussion)
13 MR. DAVIS: They try to get -- I mean, they
14 get literally (inaudible) like -- I couldn't even
15 remember. I think it's something like 50,000 applicants.
16 They get a lot.
17 MS. GARCIA: I'm -- I'm assuming that if
18 this commission wanted to partner with them, they'd be
19 thrilled that we could then extend that reach. They're --
20 They're using what their staff and their, you know,
21 ground -- ground troops have. And those of us that are in
22 other areas like -- like our organizations could then say
23 we can push that out. We have affiliates in every state
24 and, between the two of us, in practically every school
25 district. So we could send information out to our
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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1 affiliates. We don't send information to kids, but we
2 send it to their teachers to make sure the kids in your
3 area have this information.
4 MS. GANDARA: Unless I hear something
5 negative here -- I'm just hyperconscious of the time
6 here -- it sounds to me like folks really very much would
7 like this idea of at least moving forward and getting
8 (inaudible).
9 (Simultaneous conversation)
10 MR. DAVIS: So what I would suggest simply
11 is for the next steps is I can -- I -- we can go back and
12 engage with the Hispanic Heritage Foundation. We can pull
13 in the cochairs for the initial conversation. And then we
14 can look at scheduling (inaudible) e-mails. We can
15 schedule like conference calls among the full subcommittee
16 so that folks are able to review before our final and
17 probably wait and make some sort of final decision once
18 all questions have been answered and there's a clear path
19 (inaudible).
20 MS. GANDARA: And -- And can we just leave
21 it that we will indeed have a conference call with the
22 subcommittee? I'm uncomfortable with the extent at which
23 we haven't had these and haven't had, you know -- And
24 maybe we can actually continue with some of the rest of
25 the agenda as well. Okay. Yes?
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1 MS. SPEAKER: A final comment. This is
2 important work. I'm -- I'm pleased to have been here
3 today. I have to get back to my school district for a
4 meeting. But I don't know how I got to be here. I'm
5 happy I'm here. But how does your important work get to
6 us?
7 (Simultaneous discussion)
8 MR. DAVIS: Did you register?
9 MS. SPEAKER: Yes, we did.
10 MR. DAVIS: You will be added to our mailing
11 list. You will get any and all communications from now
12 forward.
13 MS. SPEAKER: Out of curiosity, can you guys
14 tell us who you are?
15 MR. MARTINEZ: My name's Rudy Martinez. I
16 represent (inaudible). I'm in the central division,
17 assistant to the director.
18 (Simultaneous discussion)
19 MS. BARRERA: I'm Diana Barrera. I'm the
20 director of (inaudible) in Somerset ISD here in the
21 San Antonio area.
22 MS. MENDOZA: My name is Marie Mendoza. I'm
23 the director of World Languages. I teach bilingual, ESL,
24 language (inaudible) for middle school and high school,
25 Irving Independent School District (inaudible).
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1 MS. SPEAKER: Take a look at our book.
2 MS. MENDOZA: I know. I have.
3 MS. SPEAKER: There's -- There's a coupon
4 out there.
5 (Simultaneous discussion)
6 MS. TONYA: Hi. I'm Tonya (inaudible) with
7 Educational (inaudible) Service at the San Antonio office,
8 not the Woodstone office.
9 MS. SPEAKER: I'm (inaudible) for
10 (inaudible) America. I (inaudible) of our (inaudible)
11 teachers throughout the nation. So I'm really interested
12 in getting involved and helping out with that.
13 MS. GANDARA: So, for you, it would be very
14 (inaudible) the dreamers (inaudible) and the teachers.
15 MS. SPEAKER: Yes, unaccompanied minors. I
16 need to know everything (inaudible).
17 MS. GARCIA: Delia Garcia, (inaudible).
18 MS. SPEAKER: I'm (inaudible) Molina, vice
19 president of Texas Aide Teachers Association, middle
20 school teacher, ESL.
21 MR. PEREZ: I'm (inaudible) Perez with the
22 American (inaudible) Teachers (inaudible).
23 MR. DAVIS: Thank you all.
24 MS. SPEAKER: Okay. Thank you.
25 (Breakout concluded at 2:52 p.m.)
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1 THE STATE OF TEXAS *
2 COUNTY OF BEXAR *
3
4
5 I, NATALIE HUNSUCKER, a Certified Court Reporter
6 duly commissioned and qualified in and for the County of
7 Bexar, State of Texas, do hereby certify that the forgoing
8 is a true and accurate transcription, taken to the best of
9 my ability, of the K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion
10 at the President's Advisory Commission on Educational
11 Excellence for Hispanics, held at the University of Texas
12 at San Antonio Downtown Campus, 501 W. Cesar Chavez
13 Boulevard, San Antonio, Texas 78207, September 3, 2014,
14 from 2:15 p.m. to 2:51 p.m.
15 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand
16 on the 23rd day of September, 2014.
17
18
19 _________________________________ NATALIE HUNSUCKER, Texas CSR 4279
20 Expiration Date: 12/31/2015 Hoffman Reporting Service
21 Firm Registration No. 93 206 East Locust Street
22 San Antonio, Texas 78212 Phone: 210.736.3555
23 Fax: 210.736.6679
24
25
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WORD INDEX
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< 3 >3 1:12 35:1330 3:8 4:1630th 16:20, 23 27:17 28:1631 35:203rd 27:16
< 4 >4,000 12:5 30:184279 35:19
< 5 >50,000 31:15501 1:16 35:12503 11:10
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13, 22anyway 3:18 8:22appeals 17:12 19:4A-P-P-E-A-R-A-N-C-E-S 2:1applicants 31:15application 16:20,22 29:5 30:13, 21applications 13:2 16:24apply 7:12appreciate 20:9 22:25area 17:6 32:3 33:21areas 6:11 31:22arguments 25:2Arizona 19:25ARTILES 25:1 26:1, 12asked 12:13, 18, 19 28:16assay 12:19assistant 33:17associated 8:12Association 34:19assuming 26:19 31:17athletes 11:21attend 7:11 13:6attended 11:21, 23Auditorium 7:24autonomy 8:5 9:11 10:11 14:15available 6:5avenue 16:8award 15:12 16:2,23 22:5 26:9, 19 29:11Awards 11:15, 25 12:12 13:7 16:3 21:21
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< C >call 6:8 32:21called 11:7calls 32:15Campus 1:15 35:12
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candidates 7:7 10:7capture 24:25career 23:18 26:22careers 25:6, 15carefully 25:13Carl 19:9carried 10:21categories 11:19category 29:25caveat 20:16celebration 21:4, 4celebrities 11:20central 33:16ceremony 7:12 9:6 16:2certain 5:23 9:11 19:3certainly 6:22 11:22Certified 35:5certify 35:7Cesar 1:16 35:12cetera 6:12, 13, 13,13 7:3, 21, 25 8:24 10:9, 9, 10, 24 11:4,21 12:24, 24, 24challenge 14:14challenged 26:20challenges 8:3, 11 10:17challenging 26:23Champions 6:3, 6,23 7:1, 17, 19 8:14 9:5, 13 24:8Championship 14:20Change 6:4, 24 7:1,17, 19 8:14 9:6, 13,13Chavez 1:16 35:12check 7:9child 4:6 21:25childhood 21:13choosing 28:25chosen 21:8cities 31:4, 5class 22:15classroom 12:2
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developing 3:21development 25:18Diana 33:19different 14:15 17:19, 22difficult 3:8dignitaries 11:23direction 14:23 28:12, 24director 33:17, 20,23disappear 14:25 17:15disappearance 3:24discussed 6:22 9:9DISCUSSION 1:4 3:1, 5, 15 19:11 22:24 23:24 24:3 28:6, 22 29:19 30:16, 22 31:12 33:7, 18 34:5 35:9disseminate 25:13 30:19, 20disseminated 31:11disseminating 4:4dissemination 4:1district 19:10 31:25 33:3, 25districts 30:7, 24division 33:16document 25:12documentary 19:13documented 4:3documents 3:22doing 6:11 8:23 27:4, 8door 24:2doubly 3:8Downtown 1:15 35:12drafted 7:25dreamers 4:7 19:22 34:14Dreams 19:13drew 26:18, 21duly 35:6
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given 4:23 25:20 28:24glamorous 18:4globally 11:19go 8:1, 25 14:8, 23 15:3, 4 17:8 20:12,23 21:5 25:18 32:11goal 18:13goes 10:25 20:5going 4:2 5:2, 16 9:3, 25 17:17 18:2,12, 18 19:7 20:4, 8 21:15 22:10, 17, 19,22 23:9good 3:4, 11 10:2 17:25 18:16gotten 22:14graders 21:15grassroots 20:1great 4:3 6:11 16:14 17:16 20:13 21:22 22:15, 19ground 31:21, 21group 19:25 20:19grows 18:2guess 22:21guests 5:23guidance 12:22guys 5:17 33:13
< H >hand 35:15happen 7:2 13:15 16:3 30:6happening 4:2happy 33:5hard 5:10, 14 27:8Hayden 19:9head 31:3hear 4:25 32:4heart 21:5held 7:18 9:6 13:16 35:11help 4:22helpful 9:22helping 34:12hereunto 35:15Heritage 11:7, 9, 12,15, 24 12:8, 25
13:7, 10, 18, 21 14:5, 25 15:5, 12,16 18:14 22:7, 7 27:14 32:12heros 6:9Hi 34:6high 4:21 12:1, 4 17:4 19:9 21:8 26:16, 16 33:24highest 11:16Hispanic 11:7, 9, 12,15, 24 12:8, 25 13:7, 10, 18, 21 14:5, 25 15:5, 11,16 17:11, 20, 20 18:14 22:7, 8, 15,17, 18 30:10 32:12HISPANICS 1:7 11:16 35:11Hoffman 1:22 35:20hold 11:15holding 7:23 24:1honor 15:20honored 8:12, 15honorees 19:8honoring 15:17 19:8honors 11:16, 19hopefully 18:12House 6:3, 4, 7 7:5,5, 8, 11, 13, 15, 18,19, 21, 22, 23, 25 8:5, 9, 13, 13, 23, 24 9:5, 7, 20 11:10 14:19 18:6 24:1household 6:9House's 8:2huh 16:15Hunsucker 1:21 35:5, 19hyperconscious 32:5
< I >idea 3:4 13:14 17:25 18:19 32:7ideas 3:6 12:22 24:13 27:18
identify 7:3 12:17identifying 14:1immigrant 3:14 4:11immigrated 23:17immigration 20:1impact 12:14 17:16 24:19 25:5 26:4 28:19implementation 10:21important 3:6 18:24 20:4 27:7 33:2, 5impression 24:19inaudible 4:9, 10 6:12 10:4, 5, 9, 22,25 11:1 13:2, 3, 19,23 14:6, 12, 13, 19,21 15:7, 15, 15, 18,22, 24 16:2, 4, 5, 8 19:1 20:1 21:15,16 25:2, 3, 7, 8, 12,21 26:5 30:2 31:8,10, 14 32:8, 14, 19 33:16, 20, 24, 25 34:6, 7, 9, 10, 10, 10,14, 14, 16, 17, 18, 21,22, 22Inaudible. 5:13 16:13include 3:4 13:22 14:11included 30:15includes 12:20incorporated 16:4incredible 26:10incredibly 26:22independent 11:10 14:8 33:25individual 13:4 25:7, 19individuals 25:6individual's 25:12inevitably 17:22influenced 22:9, 16info 12:18information 24:16 30:14, 25 31:25 32:1, 3
infrastructure 7:23 10:18 13:25initial 32:13initiates 4:18initiative 13:12innovative 12:15,22 13:14 14:12input 31:4inspiration 24:18intensity 20:19interest 13:11interested 4:9 34:11internally 7:15invite 15:19involved 20:15 34:12involving 13:13Iran 23:17Irving 33:25ISD 33:20ISS 5:7issue 3:13, 20, 25 25:3issued 7:20issues 3:12, 23 4:5,25its 9:12 11:1, 14
< J >January 19:19JOANN 2:4, 10join 4:15judgment 26:14jump 17:2
< K >K-12 1:4 3:1 35:9keep 20:8 25:4KENT 2:8kid 22:14, 15kids 19:25 23:19 30:7 32:1, 2kind 18:14kinds 4:18 27:2knocked 27:2know 4:13 5:5 9:20, 25 13:4 16:12 17:3, 13, 15 18:4, 9 22:1 23:14,
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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15 24:12, 15, 20 26:15, 18 30:7, 11,23 31:1, 2, 2, 2, 3,20 32:23 33:4 34:2, 16knowing 19:4knowledge 25:8known 11:14
< L >Lajvardi 23:17language 19:2 33:24Languages 33:23larger 25:9Latin-America 11:18Latino 6:2 11:17 18:1 23:2, 3 26:14law 6:12leaders 11:17leading 19:25lean 21:8learn 25:9, 19, 24learned 26:5learning 25:24leave 21:23 32:20legacy 21:23 22:2 25:7lends 20:20length 3:16lessons 25:21 26:4letting 22:4level 17:4leveraging 7:22 13:24life 9:12LILY 2:5 16:11 20:18list 5:2 33:11literally 31:14little 5:17 18:4, 4 24:17live 19:5 22:4 26:15local 12:6, 7 13:1locally 20:11Locust 35:21long 14:10look 10:20 17:23 32:14 34:1
looking 13:12 19:7 21:12 23:2 26:21 28:19Lopez 19:18lose 9:10, 11loss 8:4 14:15lot 4:2 16:7 19:5 20:20 26:16 27:14 31:16love 21:25
< M >mailing 33:10main 6:25making 14:18 18:4manage 7:14manages 6:5MARCO 2:11 3:15 5:16, 21 21:7MARIA 2:9 24:10Marie 33:22Marisa 19:18market 13:5markets 12:16 14:2 16:1 30:12MARTINEZ 2:6 16:21 22:11, 22 29:2 33:15, 15mean 4:23 15:12 17:21 22:12, 22 31:13meaningful 25:16means 16:17, 23media 7:20 11:4 15:14 18:7 30:20meet 16:10Meeting 1:11 5:9 9:10 33:4MELVIN 2:7 5:4, 8,11 23:25 28:2members 3:5 12:7MENDOZA 33:22,22 34:2mention 11:8mentoring 12:21met 9:23Mexico 19:4middle 33:24 34:19migrants 4:6
mind 9:3minds 16:14minimal 7:9minimum 10:13minority 26:16minors 34:15minute 8:21minutes 3:8, 11, 18 4:16MIT 19:24Molina 34:18moment 13:3 14:12 24:15money 8:18 25:12MONICA 2:6month 11:6, 12 28:3morning 19:20 20:24motivation 24:20MOU 20:6 27:18moving 32:7Mundos 31:8
< N >name 33:22names 6:9name's 33:15Natalie 1:21 35:5,19nation 34:11national 12:9 13:6,7 15:9 29:25nationally 6:10NEA 18:11necessarily 6:10 9:16necessary 7:13need 13:16 14:8 21:6 23:23 24:4,16 28:12 34:16negative 32:5negotiate 14:16negotiation 24:11neighborhood 26:15neighborhoods 26:20, 20 27:3NEIRA 2:9 20:3networks 25:14, 14never 17:16 18:17
new 4:5 11:5 20:9 21:1, 1news 30:20nice 17:14nominate 12:13 16:25 28:16 29:15 30:5nominated 22:14, 18nomination 29:4non-Latino 23:5, 6nonprofit 11:11 30:18notably 8:12number 13:21 18:10 21:12
< O >obvious 9:8obviously 7:16 8:3 9:4, 24 10:10, 25 13:15 14:1, 14, 17Office 7:21 34:7, 8officials 11:20Oh 16:14 19:14 29:6Okay 10:2 16:15,16 19:1 21:9, 17 25:5 28:18 32:25 34:24old 3:13once 3:25 32:17ones 8:24 16:1, 24 19:24ongoing 9:17open 30:8opportunity 3:7 14:4Option 8:20 10:3,4 21:20options 5:19 6:20 14:21 27:15order 7:13organization 11:6,11 13:25 17:9, 10,10organizations 18:16 30:19 31:22originally 11:11outline 5:21 6:25outlined 6:21
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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outreach 7:3 10:7 11:4 12:4 30:18outstanding 6:1, 8 15:12oversee 10:7
< P >p.m 1:13, 17 35:14,14p.m. 34:25paid 14:13parents 12:24 20:15, 15 24:21, 22,23part 8:2 9:13 14:6 18:20 20:25 21:11 22:16 24:8, 10 26:17participation 15:22particularly 3:24 20:9 25:3partly 7:10partner 14:16 15:15 30:19 31:18partnering 14:16partnership 13:18 20:17Parts, 19:19party 17:18pass 12:6path 32:18PATRICIA 2:3 21:1people 6:9 8:9 9:23 11:22 12:5,10, 17 19:22 26:11,23 27:8Perez 34:21, 21Perfect 5:22person 15:25 22:9 25:23person's 25:20perspective 12:20Phoenix 23:18Phone 35:22physicians 11:19picked 22:11piece 3:17 14:17 18:4 20:7 21:3pieces 7:8 14:17
24:10, 23piggyback 26:6pipeline 21:5places 19:3 27:8, 9planning 10:21please 26:24pleased 33:2point 10:2 21:6policy 3:21 4:6political 17:10 18:15 20:10poll 7:1poor 26:15popular 19:2population 18:1, 2 23:3populations 26:16,17portion 14:11 28:7positive 11:18positives 27:14, 15possibility 11:5possible 27:19potential 7:6 10:13 14:3poverty 26:16, 20practically 31:24preference 3:12prepare 4:7presented 30:24presenting 16:1preserving 17:11president 17:18 34:19PRESIDENT'S 1:6 35:10press 7:24prestigious 11:14previous 9:10prior 8:4priorities 4:13, 13 17:19priority 12:3private 9:9probably 6:21 17:8 27:14 32:17proceed 3:17process 6:14 7:14 8:21 10:5, 8 13:25
14:9 20:16, 22, 25 28:11processing 11:1profession 21:4 26:4professional 25:15,17profile 4:21 12:4program 5:25 6:2,3, 4, 4, 15, 18, 24 7:17, 18 8:2, 4, 10 9:17 10:9, 16, 23 12:1, 15 13:7, 14 14:20, 20 15:7, 22 16:4 24:9 29:25programs 8:14 25:17Public 1:11 5:9 11:20published 4:3pull 32:12pursue 5:20 6:20 16:8push 4:18 5:16 31:23put 4:19 14:22putting 11:3
< Q >qualified 35:6question 6:16 15:8 22:6 23:23 25:19 28:1 30:4questions 32:18quite 31:11
< R >raise 15:21, 21raised 10:24raising 25:11reach 12:23 31:19real 18:12 20:6, 13realistically 27:22really 3:7 17:11,25 20:10, 16, 17 21:2, 4, 24 25:16,18 31:11 32:6 34:11realm 18:15
reason 12:11 22:3recall 5:23receipt 11:2receive 16:24recharged 10:14recognition 3:17 5:18, 25 6:3, 18 10:8 12:15 18:25 21:3 25:18 26:8 29:12recognizable 16:5recognize 6:1 15:20 17:1 21:20 25:5recognized 6:10 7:11 16:4 18:5recognizing 11:17 20:14 21:16recommendation 8:8 20:21recommendations 7:4, 6recruit 22:13recruiting 10:7 17:25 21:5recruitment 3:22 4:12, 24 5:18 21:3 22:8, 9 26:8, 17recruits 26:10reflect 18:3reflecting 26:5reform 20:1region 29:17, 20, 23regional 12:9, 13 14:2 16:1regions 12:5 31:6register 33:8Registration 35:21regularly 6:5, 7Related 23:25relationship 18:16releases 7:24remember 31:15remind 6:24renaming 15:13repeat 6:19, 23repeating 7:17 8:3Reported 1:21Reporter 35:5
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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Reporting 1:22 35:20represent 33:16representative 4:20represented 14:18 15:25representing 4:23requirements 16:10resources 10:22respective 25:15rest 32:24review 7:5, 5, 6 13:1 14:9 32:16revisited 10:19 23:23right 3:2 5:15 8:19, 25 9:15, 18 10:18 16:9, 12, 20 17:7 22:8 23:13,16 24:6, 21 28:10,15, 24 29:1, 3, 8, 18,22 30:3 31:9robotics 19:9 23:16role 4:17 20:8round 23:1Rudy 33:15rule 22:20run 8:10running 27:3
< S >sake 6:17 15:11San 1:14, 17 33:21 34:7 35:12, 13, 22saying 18:19 22:20 23:15schedule 32:15scheduling 32:14scheme 25:10scholarship 29:11school 12:1 18:3 19:9, 10, 14, 15 21:8 30:7, 24 31:24 33:3, 24, 24,25 34:20schools 12:5 27:4 30:18schoolteachers 28:25
scientists 11:20scores 27:5, 6SCRIBNER 2:8 19:6, 12, 15, 17 23:10, 13, 16, 21search 12:4second 18:10 21:15 26:24secondary 21:13see 6:6 8:1, 19 16:10 22:11select 13:5 29:16,25selected 8:15, 24 12:1, 5, 16 13:6 28:15, 16selecting 9:23 14:1selection 10:8 13:1, 3 18:20selections 7:14 8:7 10:1send 29:20, 24 31:25 32:1, 2sense 9:11separate 8:22September 1:12 16:18, 20, 23 27:16,17 28:15 35:13, 16Service 1:22 34:7 35:20services 3:14 4:11set 10:6 24:9 35:15seven 8:9share 3:7 5:24shelf 21:22shift 4:10, 12shows 19:2sides 4:9, 10sign 19:7signed 13:20significant 12:14simply 10:4 27:19 32:10Simultaneous 19:11 22:24 23:24 24:3 28:6, 22 29:19 30:16, 22 31:12 32:9 33:7,
18 34:5slate 7:3, 6 8:6small 17:9, 21 20:24smallness 20:18Smith 22:10, 11, 16,19, 21, 21social 30:20solicitation 11:2somebody 8:17Somerset 33:20soon 13:4 18:13sort 6:8, 17, 20, 24,25 7:8 11:3, 3, 23 14:21 15:3 24:7,13, 18 29:2 32:17sought 5:25sounds 27:13 32:6South 7:24Spanish 19:2Spare 19:19SPEAKER 5:13 19:14, 16 21:19 22:6 23:5, 8, 11, 14,20 24:4 25:23 28:12 29:8, 16, 20,23 30:3, 4, 14, 23 31:7, 10 33:1, 9, 13 34:1, 3, 9, 15, 18, 24speakers 19:21specific 24:9specifically 30:24sponsors 14:7spread 31:5spring 16:25staff 12:7 13:2 15:25 31:20standard 6:13 7:7 22:23standards 24:1, 2, 5start 5:1state 31:23 35:1, 7statement 20:24stay 21:22 27:11stem 19:23steps 32:11stories 25:7 26:1, 2story 21:24 22:4Street 35:21
student 3:14 4:11 18:1 22:1, 9 23:9,11 25:25 26:15 30:10students 12:1, 23 19:23 20:11, 13, 14 21:9, 14, 20 22:4 26:2, 3 28:9, 10, 14,16, 23 29:9, 21student's 24:18, 22stuff 4:2 5:7sub 30:11SUBCOMMITTEE 1:4 3:1 5:24 6:16 32:15, 22 35:9subgroup 5:11subgroups 5:5, 6,11, 12subject 8:23 9:4, 6submit 7:4 29:4, 5,10 30:13submitted 29:9Subway 31:10success 12:15suggest 15:24 32:10summer 17:1support 10:25 15:21 20:16supposed 4:15sure 7:9 14:18 23:20 24:15 25:15 32:2sustainability 25:4
< T >table 4:19 14:22take 3:13 8:22 10:20 17:24 18:11 20:22 21:23 34:1taken 35:8takes 18:15 20:10talented 26:22talk 4:16 8:21 27:7talked 3:15 19:21 20:25talking 22:8 26:8,9 30:1teach 26:23 27:11 33:23
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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teacher 3:17, 22 4:11, 24 5:7, 18, 25 6:2, 18 8:1 12:13,15, 16, 17, 20 13:14 14:12 15:1, 12 16:2, 3 21:21 22:15 24:21 25:17 28:7, 17 29:15, 24 30:5 34:20teachers 4:8 7:4,18 8:7, 13, 15 13:4 14:1 16:25 17:1 18:1, 12 20:12 21:8, 13, 21, 25 23:2, 2, 5, 7 24:1,19, 23 25:24, 25 26:2, 3, 10 27:2 28:20, 21 32:2 34:11, 14, 19, 22team 19:9television 13:8 19:2tell 22:4 33:14temporary 20:8ten 12:3tend 21:7terms 3:12 5:5 8:11 15:3 25:2, 9test 27:5, 6Texas 1:14, 17 34:19 35:1, 7, 11,13, 19, 22thank 16:14 34:23,24Theater 11:23thing 9:2, 8 17:13 18:5, 10 29:2things 9:24 12:20 13:9 14:11 15:8 17:8 20:4 22:19 24:20 25:10think 3:4, 17 4:21 5:16 6:17 9:23 10:3 15:5, 8, 13 16:20, 25 17:16 20:4, 6, 7, 13, 18, 20,25 21:19 22:3 25:11, 11 26:25 27:11 28:5, 7, 15
29:4, 5 31:4, 15thinking 18:9thinks 14:23thought 17:17, 25 18:10thoughts 3:6three 5:18, 21 6:20,21, 22 11:5 12:8,12 14:21thrilled 31:19ticking 17:24Tijerina 17:3time 5:5 6:17 21:22 25:4, 22 27:1 32:5timetable 9:5tiny 18:3Title 3:24today 3:16 33:3told 3:3 21:24Tomei 19:18Tony 17:3Tonya 34:6, 6top 31:3touch 3:18 22:2tracks 12:3trajectory 25:12transcribe 5:10transcription 35:8travel 8:12 14:12,13triggered 26:7trip 21:23troops 31:21true 35:8try 31:4, 5, 13trying 21:2 22:13 30:1two 4:9, 10 5:5, 24 9:1 10:4 11:4 14:18 17:8 18:10 27:15 31:24type 14:15
< U >U.S 11:17, 18Ultimately 6:2 8:9 15:1unaccompanied 4:6 34:15
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< V >various 6:11 11:19VERONICA 2:7vet 7:7vice 34:18Video 1:22view 25:25visibility 10:12 11:3 14:17 15:21visible 14:19 16:5vision 12:21voice 20:9, 10, 14
< W >wait 32:17want 3:9 4:7, 10,12 5:1, 4, 21 6:23 14:23 15:4 17:23 20:12, 23 21:23 22:21, 21 26:13wanted 4:19 16:8 18:25 23:20 24:14 26:18 27:10, 11 31:18wants 3:21Warner 11:22Washington 8:1 11:22 15:19way 6:25 7:3 13:13 15:14 17:14 20:13 21:16 26:23ways 15:20 24:24
25:16 26:22website 7:20 30:17Wednesday 1:12weekly 6:7well 4:4 7:12 13:8,17 14:18 15:23 17:4 18:10 22:16,21 23:9, 22 27:4,13 28:4 30:11 31:3 32:25went 18:6we're 4:4 5:2 13:16 18:7, 12 22:7, 13 26:8, 21,21 30:1West 23:18WHEREOF 35:15White 6:3, 4, 7 7:4,5, 8, 11, 13, 15, 18,19, 21, 22, 23, 25 8:2, 5, 9, 13, 13, 22,24 9:4, 6, 20 11:10 14:19 18:6 24:1whitehouse.gov 6:6whoa 17:8, 8, 8widely 31:6win 29:21winner 13:6 15:9winners 12:9, 9, 12,13 13:4 26:19 29:14, 16winning 26:9wins 29:11WITNESS 35:15wondered 19:16wonderful 19:22 26:11Woodstone 34:8word 12:6 31:6words 22:14work 4:1 6:11 15:24 16:10 17:16 18:21, 21 27:8 33:2, 5World 33:23write 12:19 22:19
< Y >
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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Yeah 5:8 9:2 15:2 16:22 21:9 23:9,10, 21 29:7 30:9year 11:15 19:8years 5:24 11:25,25 17:17 22:2year's 10:20young 12:5, 10, 17 19:22youth 11:25 12:11,12, 13 13:7 16:3,23, 24, 24 29:11
K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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WORD LIST
< 1 >12 (1)16 (1)1987 (1)
< 2 >2:15 (3)2:51 (1)2:52 (1)20 (1)2012 (1)2014 (4)2015 (1)206 (1)210.736.3555 (1)210.736.6679 (1)23rd (1)25th (1)26 (1)
< 3 >3 (2)30 (2)30th (4)31 (1)3rd (1)
< 4 >4,000 (2)4279 (1)
< 5 >50,000 (1)501 (2)503 (1)
< 7 >7 (1)75 (1)78207 (2)78212 (1)
< 9 >93 (1)
< A >ability (2)
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K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion President's Advisory Commission on Educational Excellence for Hispanics
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cities (2)class (1)classroom (1)classrooms (1)clear (2)clock (1)close (2)closer (1)closing (1)co-brand (1)co-branding (1)cochairs (1)collaborating (1)collaboration (1)combining (2)come (3)comes (2)comfort (1)comfortable (1)coming (1)commemorate (1)comment (6)comments (3)COMMISSION (24)commissioned (1)commissioner (1)commissioners (3)commissions (2)commission's (2)committee (14)committee's (1)Communications (2)community (3)compared (1)competitions (1)conceivably (1)concern (1)concerns (1)concluded (1)concrete (1)conduct (1)conference (2)connected (1)connecting (1)connection (1)connections (1)connectivity (1)consider (5)
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6 PRESIDENT'S ADVISORY COMMISSION ON7 EDUCATIONAL EXCELLENCE FOR HISPANICS8
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Page 31 K-12 SUBCOMMITTEE BREAKOUT DISCUSSION2 MS. GANDARA: All right. So what we have3 done in this committee in the past and, unless I'm told4 not to, I think is a good idea is to include all of you in5 the discussion just as the committee members because you6 have important ideas, thoughts, comments, and we don't get7 another opportunity to really share. So it just makes it8 doubly difficult when we have only 30 minutes, but I still9 want to encourage you to comment.
10 I have to ask first, because we have an11 agenda here that is at least good for 75 minutes or so,12 what your preference would be in terms of which issues to13 take up first. Under old business, we have the issue of14 the immigrant student services and comments on that. We15 have the discussion, which Marco and I had talked about at16 some length actually having today, about how we should17 proceed with the teacher recognition piece. I think we18 have to touch on that for five minutes anyway because some19 decisions have to be made.20 We have the issue of whether this committee21 wants to be engaged in developing one or more policy22 documents having to do with teacher recruitment and23 perhaps other issues. We have -- And under there, I have24 particularly the disappearance of Title 7 funding, which25 we once had and I believe should have again, and the issue
Page 41 of dissemination of the work because there's actually a2 lot of stuff that is happening, going on, getting done,3 being documented, being published. And I have great4 concerns about how well we're disseminating all of that.5 But under new business are also the issues6 of unaccompanied child migrants, comments on a policy7 consideration for dreamers who want to be prepare to8 become teachers and whether the committee is still9 interested in the two (inaudible) sides that it now has or
10 does it want to shift. And those two (inaudible) sides11 being the immigrant student services and the teacher12 recruitment. Or does the committee want to shift13 priorities or add other priorities and I know there's some14 comment here about that.15 Alejandra is supposed to join us sometime16 during these 30 minutes to talk about the 25th anniversary17 and what we would like our role to be in that and what18 kinds of initiates we would like to push. And, finally, I19 wanted to put on the table perhaps a closer conversation20 with AFT and CTA, who are representative of our committee21 but have not had, I think, as high of a profile on this22 committee as they deserve and could help us with23 representing, I mean, given that we have this whole focus24 on teacher recruitment.25 So those are the issues. Do I hear anything
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Page 51 from the committee about where you would want to start on2 that list? We're not going to make it through all of3 this.4 MS. MELVIN: We might want to just break up,5 I don't know, in terms of time, into the two subgroups6 that we have and have our own subgroups.7 MS. GANDARA: ISS and the teacher stuff?8 MS. MELVIN: Yeah.9 MR. DAVIS: So because it's a public meeting10 and we have to transcribe it, that would be hard to do.11 MS. MELVIN: No subgroup. No subgroups of12 the subgroups.13 MS. SPEAKER: (Inaudible.)14 MR. DAVIS: That would be hard to --15 MS. GANDARA: All right. While you consider16 that, I think I'm going to push it over to Marco and I to17 have a little bit of a conversation with you guys about18 the -- the teacher recognition/recruitment and the three19 basic options we have before us about how we would like to20 pursue that.21 Marco, you want to outline the -- the three?22 MR. DAVIS: Yes. Perfect. So you all may23 recall, but for the certain -- for our -- for our guests,24 let me share that two years ago, in 2012, the subcommittee25 undertook a teacher recognition program whereby it sought
Page 61 to recognize and elevate outstanding educators in the2 Latino community. Ultimately, the program -- the teacher3 recognition program was made a White House Champions of4 Change program, which is a program that the White House5 manages fairly regularly. It's available at6 whitehouse.gov/champions. You can see where fairly7 regularly, almost on a weekly basis, the White House8 features outstanding, what they call, sort of everyday9 heros, people who are not household names but who should10 be, but who are not necessarily nationally recognized, who11 are doing great work in various areas, whether it be12 education, (inaudible), employment, law, et cetera,13 et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. So they have a standard14 process and focus.15 So that was one program that was done. And16 so now the question before the subcommittee or -- or17 for -- for the sake of time is to think about sort of how18 to do this teacher recognition program, again, as there's19 been a desire to -- to repeat it. But there are20 essentially sort of three options to pursue it as I've21 outlined it. But there's probably more than three, but22 certainly three that have been discussed thus far.23 So I want us to -- to repeat this Champions24 of Change program. But what I would remind folks sort of25 the way I -- to outline it, sort of the main features of
Page 71 that is to poll the Champions of Change event. What would2 happen would be that the -- the commissioners would find3 some way, through outreach, et cetera, to identify a slate4 of teachers and to submit recommendations to the White5 House for review. The White House would then review those6 recommendations, review that slate of potential7 candidates, would vet them, which is one of the standard8 pieces that the White House does, which is sort of a9 minimal background check to make sure that they're not
10 felons and so on partly because they're -- they're11 recognized at the White House, so they have to attend the12 ceremony, as well, and also apply any additional criteria13 that the White House deems necessary in order to make14 their selections. So that's a process that they manage15 internally at the White House.16 So, obviously, one of the advantages of17 repeating the Champions of Change program is that the18 program would then be held at the White House. Teachers19 would be featured on the White House Champions of Change20 website. There would be a media advisory issued by the21 White House Communications Office, et cetera. Also, an22 advantage would be leveraging the -- the White House23 infrastructure. So holding an event at the White House24 South Court Auditorium, those press releases and -- and25 bios are drafted by the White House, et cetera. And, of
Page 81 course, the teacher could go to Washington and see that2 it's the White House's part of the program.3 Obviously, the challenges to repeating that4 program, as experienced prior, was that there's a loss of5 autonomy. So the White House has the final say on the6 criteria and the final say on the final slate of the7 teachers, on the final selections. What the commission8 would be able to do is to make a recommendation of those9 seven people, but the White House ultimately would make
10 that decision as they run that program.11 There are also sometimes challenges in terms12 of costs associated, most notably travel for the honored13 teachers to the White House, as the White House does not14 have a budget for any of the Champions of Change programs.15 So the teachers who are selected to be honored have to16 under -- underwrite their own costs. It also --17 MS. GANDARA: Or somebody on the committee18 has to come up with the money for it.19 MR. DAVIS: Right. But, see, if someone on20 the committee comes up with it, much like Option B, as21 I'll talk about in a minute, then it's a process that the22 commission has to take on anyway separate from the White23 House and it's still subject to -- so only doing it for24 the ones that are selected by the White House, et cetera.25 MS. GANDARA: All right. So before you go
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Page 91 on to the two, are -- are you finished with one?2 MR. DAVIS: Yeah. The only other thing I3 was going to say is, also, just bear in mind that4 obviously, then, it also would be subject to the White5 House timetable. For example, when this Champions of6 Change ceremony could be held is subject to the White7 House.8 MS. GANDARA: And the obvious thing to9 consider here, as we discussed in a private -- in a10 previous meeting, was that it -- not only do we lose11 autonomy, we lose continuity of a certain sense because it12 doesn't have its own life. It just becomes something that13 is part of Champions of Change. And in a change of14 administrations --15 MR. DAVIS: Right.16 MS. GANDARA: -- we would not necessarily17 have an ongoing program.18 MR. DAVIS: Right.19 MS. GARCIA: Do the -- Does the committee20 get to know what the White House criteria is?21 MR. DAVIS: Yes.22 MS. GARCIA: That would be helpful. Because23 I think before, we were selecting people that met our24 criteria and then there were additional, obviously, things25 that were going on that we -- if we had know it in
Page 101 advance, we would have maybe made other selections.2 MR. DAVIS: Yes. Good point. Okay. So --3 so that -- So that's option one just to think about.4 Option two (inaudible), very simply, will be5 for the commission to (inaudible). The process would be6 that commissioners would develop a set of criteria, would7 conduct outreach, recruiting candidates, oversee the8 selection process and create the actual recognition9 program event at the (inaudible) et cetera, et cetera, et10 cetera. Obviously, one advantage is that there is then11 the full commission autonomy. There's full commission12 branding, visibility for the commission. For that, there13 is that potential for continuity at the minimum through14 this commission. And should this commission be recharged15 in the future administration, it could continue that16 program.17 Some of the challenges are that there is no18 existing infrastructure before that. Right? So the19 criteria don't exist. Because even if you revisited last20 year's, you would have to -- to take a look at that again.21 All planning and implementation would have to be carried22 out either by the commissions for (inaudible) resources23 any funds to the underwriting costs of the program would24 have to be raised by the commission, et cetera.25 Obviously, the (inaudible) all the support that goes
Page 111 through its own processing department (inaudible) for any2 gifts, solicitation and/or receipt to the Department of3 Education and sort of putting out all sort of visibility4 in media and outreach, et cetera. That's two.5 Three is a -- a new possibility based on a6 conversation we had about a month ago with an organization7 called Hispanic Heritage Foundation. And for those who8 are not familiar, I will very briefly just mention it.9 The Hispanic Heritage Foundation was established by the
10 White House in 1987 but is now an independent 503(C)11 nonprofit organization. But it was originally established12 to commemorate the creation of the Hispanic Heritage month13 in America.14 It was known best for its prestigious15 Hispanic Heritage Awards, which they still hold each year,16 and are considered among the highest honors for Hispanics17 in the U.S., often recognizing Latino leaders who have18 made positive contributions in the U.S., in Latin-America19 and globally in various categories. It honors physicians,20 scientists, educators, public officials, celebrities,21 athletes, et cetera. There's an annual event attended by22 many people in Washington, D.C. Certainly the Warner23 Theater has been attended by many sort of dignitaries.24 The Hispanic Heritage Foundation also,25 several years back, 16 years ago, added a youth awards
Page 121 program where high school students have been selected for2 their achievements in the classroom, in the community and3 in focus of ten priority tracks, one of which is4 education. After a high profile search featuring outreach5 to 4,000 schools, young people are selected in regions6 through a -- a local committee that will pass on the word7 to local educators, staff and board members for the8 Hispanic Heritage Foundation. And then there's three9 regional winners and then there's five national winners
10 for young people.11 The reason why I bring it up the youth12 awards is that the youth winners -- each of these three13 regional youth winners is asked to nominate the teacher14 who has made a significant impact on them, on their15 success per the innovative teacher recognition program.16 So in each of the eleven markets, one teacher is selected.17 Basically, the young people identify the teacher. They're18 asked to get contact info and a bio and so on. But they19 also are asked to write an assay on behalf -- or from20 their perspective on the teacher, which includes things21 like their vision, their empathy, their mentoring, their22 guidance, their innovative ideas and untraditional efforts23 to reach the students, cultural connectivity, engaging24 with parents, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera.25 The Hispanic Heritage Foundation, again,
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Page 131 uses a local selection committee to review those2 applications and staff that have been very (inaudible) to3 (inaudible) at the moment, make the selection of those4 individual teachers as soon as they know the winners so5 that they can select from each market. From those eleven,6 one is selected as the national winner who would attend7 the national Hispanic Heritage Youth Awards program. All8 of these are usually broadcast on television as well as9 other things.10 So what the Hispanic Heritage Foundation has11 expressed interest in is in collaborating with the12 initiative or the commission in looking at combining --13 combining or involving the commission in some way in that14 innovative teacher program. So the idea is that what15 would happen here. And, obviously, there's still many16 more conversations that need to be held, what we're17 exploring through a few other activities, as well, in18 creating a formal partnership with the Hispanic Heritage19 Foundation and having an actual (inaudible) agreement20 signed off on by the Department of Education and the21 Hispanic Heritage Foundation for a number of activities,22 one which would include this. It doesn't have to be23 this -- this (inaudible).24 Advantages would be leveraging the external25 organization and infrastructure and their process for
Page 141 identifying and selecting teachers. There's obviously2 eleven regional markets throughout the country, so there's3 a potential to build into that. There's also an4 opportunity there in that some if -- some if not all the5 of costs could be borne by the Hispanic Heritage6 Foundation. So basically as part of this (inaudible),7 they're then able to fundraise, to get sponsors and so on8 independent of us not to have the need to go through the9 Department of Education's review process for fundraising10 so long as they make their -- their fundraising their11 portion of the event, which would include things like12 travel. At the moment, the Innovative Teacher (inaudible)13 all their expenses are paid for travel, so (inaudible).14 Obviously, the challenge is there. There is15 also a different type of loss of autonomy and that's16 partnering with a partner and having to negotiate some of17 those pieces, obviously, the same piece of visibility,18 making sure that the two entities are well represented and19 visible and so on and so forth (inaudible) White House20 program as compared to the Championship program21 (inaudible). So those are sort of just the three options22 to put on the table to consider as -- as the commission23 thinks about what direction you want to go.24 MS. GANDARA: It's not clear to me how the25 commission doesn't disappear into the Hispanic Heritage.
Page 151 And wouldn't there ultimately be only one teacher?2 MR. DAVIS: So yeah. So we weren't able to3 go sort of more in depth in terms of that. And I didn't4 want, also, to go to too, too much into detail with them.5 What I can say is that I think that the Hispanic Heritage6 Foundation is fairly flexible, fairly adaptable in7 (inaudible) the program.8 So I think things like the question of9 expanding it to be more than one national winner, figuring
10 out how to co-brand, so, for example, it could be the --11 for -- for brevity's sake, the Commission/Hispanic12 Heritage Foundation outstanding teacher award. I mean, I13 think they could -- they would even consider renaming it14 that way. There would be the ability to do all the media15 (inaudible) with the commission's partner (inaudible)16 Hispanic Heritage Foundation. And the commission is17 honoring these folks.18 There could be (inaudible) for the19 commission to invite them to Washington, D.C., or20 something to figure out ways to recognize, honor and21 support them, raise their visibility and raise the22 (inaudible) to their participation in the program. We23 could have commissioners. Well, they did, in fact,24 suggest, for example, the (inaudible) was we could work to25 have a commissioner and/or staff person represented in
Page 161 each of the regional markets being the ones presenting the2 award to the teacher, so (inaudible) the actual ceremony3 where the youth awards happen and the teacher is4 recognized (inaudible) be incorporated into the program5 and visible recognizable (inaudible).6 There's -- There is some flexibility.7 There's not a lot of definitive. But it's something that,8 again, if you wanted to pursue that avenue (inaudible)9 right now, you could have further conversation about how
10 that would work to see if it would meet your requirements.11 MS. GANDARA: Just before I ask Lily to12 comment, do you know what their cycle is like right now?13 MS. GARCIA: (Inaudible.)14 MS. GANDARA: Oh, thank you. Great minds,15 huh? Okay.16 MR. DAVIS: Okay. So their current --17 MS. GANDARA: So that means it wouldn't be18 until the following September at the earliest?19 MR. DAVIS: So -- Not exactly. So the20 application, I think, deadline is September 30th, right?21 MS. MARTINEZ: Yes.22 MR. DAVIS: Yeah. So the application for23 the youth award is September 30th, which means they'll24 receive the youth applications. The youth are the ones25 who nominate teachers. So it's actually spring, I think,
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Page 171 into the summer where they recognize the teachers. So you2 could conceivably jump into this cycle if you desire.3 MS. GARCIA: Because I know Tony Tijerina so4 well, my comfort level is high. If this was like an --5 an --6 MR. DAVIS: Unknown area.7 MS. GARCIA: -- unknown, right, I -- I'd8 probably go whoa, whoa, whoa. So there's two things.9 I -- I like the organization itself. It's a small10 organization. It's not a very political organization. It11 really deals with cultural -- preserving Hispanic culture.12 So that appeals to me.13 And the other thing is -- and I don't know14 how to say this in a nice way -- commissions like ours15 disappear every day. So we can't -- You know, we'll do16 great work and I think we'll make an impact. But I never17 thought of this commission as going on in 20 years,18 because the next president of whatever party will have19 different priorities. It might not be education of --20 Hispanic excellence in education. It might be Hispanic21 excellence in entrepreneurs and small businesses. I mean,22 they -- there'll be a different focus inevitably.23 So I -- I want to -- I look at us as the24 clock is ticking and how do we take something that -- that25 we all thought was a really good idea in recruiting more
Page 181 Latino teachers as the population and the student2 population grows, how are we going to have the faculty in3 a school reflect the community. And this was one tiny4 little piece of, you know, making it a little glamorous,5 to say, "You're recognized. You did an amazing thing."6 They went to the White House. It got some -- It got some7 media coverage. When we're gone, how will that continue8 on?9 And so, you know, I was thinking when you10 got to number two, the second thing, I thought, well,11 maybe AFT and NEA could take this over and make it more12 the teachers. And we're hopefully not going away real13 soon. That's my -- That's my goal. But if you have14 something like the Hispanic Heritage Foundation, it kind15 of takes it out of that political realm where maybe our16 organizations have a good or bad relationship with the17 administration and future administrations. You're never18 going to have that with the foundation.19 I like the idea of saying the connection we20 have is that we would be part of the selection committee.21 We could work with -- We could work with the foundation on22 what the criteria would be. And we wouldn't -- we won't23 forever maybe have this commission as the -- as the brand24 of it, but that's less important to me than the25 recognition that we wanted to have.
Page 191 And this is (inaudible). Okay. And this is2 very popular on all the Spanish language television shows3 around the country and -- and in certain places in -- in4 Mexico. So I -- That appeals to me. And without knowing5 a lot more of the details, I -- I could live with that.6 MR. SCRIBNER: Another -- Another, for me,7 encouraging sign is looking at who they're going to be8 honoring this year. One of the -- the education honorees9 are the Carl Hayden High School robotics team from -- from
10 our school district.11 (Simultaneous discussion)12 MR. SCRIBNER: The -- the -- The13 documentary, "Underwater Dreams" --14 MS. SPEAKER: Oh, that's at your school?15 MR. SCRIBNER: That's our school.16 MS. SPEAKER: I wondered about that.17 MR. SCRIBNER: And then the featured film18 with George Lopez and Marisa Tomei and -- and -- and19 others, in January, "Spare Parts," is coming out. And --20 and -- And I just say that because earlier this morning, a21 couple of speakers, they talked about the activism and22 dreamers and young people. And here is a wonderful23 example of students who are excelling in stem and -- and24 beating MIT in these competitions. They are the ones in25 Arizona, my kids, who are leading the -- the group for
Page 201 grassroots efforts towards (inaudible) immigration reform.2 So I'm all for it.3 MS. NEIRA: I'd like to follow up on a4 couple of things. One, I think it's going to be important5 for the commission to have an understanding of what goes6 into the MOU Commission. I think that's a real critical7 piece. I think the co-branding, even if it's just8 temporary, is critical to keep that role going.9 I particularly appreciate the new voice,
10 that it really takes it away from the political voice also11 locally when it comes from the students. We always say --12 Teachers always say that if you want to be evaluated, go13 to your students. So I think it's a real great way of14 recognizing the voice of the students and sometimes15 parents because the parents are so involved in that16 process. So I -- I really support this with the caveat17 that it really is a partnership.18 And I think, as Lily said, the smallness of19 the group and their intensity on culture, it -- it just20 lends itself to collaboration. So I think I'm a lot more21 comfortable with that than with the first recommendation22 because it does take it away from the process.23 That being said, I -- I want to go back to24 the statement I made this morning. This is just a small25 part of the process that we talked about. I think,
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Page 211 Patricia, you said about the new business and the new2 business is really trying to build upon what -- this whole3 recruitment piece, because the recognition is just a4 celebration, a celebration of the profession. It really5 doesn't go to the heart of recruiting the -- the pipeline6 that we need in our classrooms at this point.7 MS. GANDARA: Does it -- Marco, does it tend8 to lean towards high school teachers who get chosen9 because it -- okay -- yeah, because these are the students10 who --11 MS. GARCIA: That should be part of the12 criteria of looking to say that we have a number of early13 childhood and elementary and secondary teachers. And it14 doesn't come up from the students because they're not15 going to have second graders (inaudible), but that there's16 some way of recognizing (inaudible).17 MS. GANDARA: Okay. If there's any other18 comment about this?19 MS. SPEAKER: I'd like to comment. I think20 that the option to have the students recognize their21 teacher is the best one. We give awards to teachers and22 they stay on the shelf and they're great for that time23 when you take a trip. But if you want to leave a legacy24 and really have their -- their story told, it's through25 the eyes of the child. Teachers love that.
Page 221 We -- You know, I have a student that I've2 been in touch with after 26 years. He's my legacy. He's3 my -- He's the reason that I do what I do. So I think4 having students tell their story and letting that live on5 will be a much bigger award than anything else.6 MR. SPEAKER: I have a question on the7 Heritage -- Hispanic Heritage. The criteria, we're8 talking about recruitment, right, for Hispanic9 recruitment? I'm a student. The person that influenced10 me was Mr. Smith. Am I going to be eliminated because I11 picked Mr. Smith and not Mr. Martinez? You see what I12 mean?13 So we're trying to recruit that -- So, in14 other words, I'm a kid that's gotten nominated because I15 was a great Hispanic kid in class, but my teacher that16 influenced me was Mr. Smith. Well, is that part of our17 criteria is going to be that it has to be Hispanic or not18 Hispanic? Because then I'm getting nominated and I'm19 going to write things about Mr. Smith and how great he20 was. But with that rule, the committee's there saying,21 "Well, I guess, Smith. We don't want Smith. We want22 Martinez." So does that mean -- Are we going to have that23 standard?24 (Simultaneous discussion)25 MS. GANDARA: I -- I appreciate you bringing
Page 231 that up. What we had decided in the last round was that2 we were looking for Latino teachers or -- or teachers who3 had dedicated themselves to the Latino population. And we4 actually did have --5 MS. SPEAKER: We had non-Latino teachers.6 MS. GANDARA: We had a couple of non-Latino7 teachers.8 MR. SPEAKER: But as a -- but as a9 student -- Yeah, well, that's what I was going to say.
10 MR. SCRIBNER: Yeah.11 MR. SPEAKER: Because as a student, how12 would --13 MR. SCRIBNER: Right.14 MR. SPEAKER: -- they wouldn't know. You15 know what I'm saying?16 MR. SCRIBNER: Right. The -- The robotics17 experience, Freddie Lajvardi from -- immigrated from Iran18 and has been in -- in West Phoenix his entire career19 connecting with kids.20 MR. SPEAKER: I just wanted to make sure.21 MR. SCRIBNER: Yeah.22 MS. GANDARA: Well, it's absolutely an23 excellent question, as it would need to revisited now too.24 (Simultaneous discussion)25 MS. MELVIN: Related to that, are we still
Page 241 holding these teachers to our standards or the White House2 standards or is that out the door now?3 (Simultaneous discussion)4 MS. SPEAKER: We would need to continue to5 develop our -- our standards, our criteria.6 MR. DAVIS: Right. So this -- so we --7 There would be more flexibility. It would not sort of8 be -- Because it would not be part of the Champions9 program, there would not be that specific set of criteria.
10 But that's part of the pieces to which Maria was alluding,11 that that would be the negotiation with the foundation12 about what the criteria would be. And I know that the13 commission would be able to sort of forward some ideas.14 If they wanted something more concrete,15 then, you know, at the -- at the moment, I'm not sure.16 I'd need to get some more information on that. I'd have17 to do some follow-up. It seems to be a little bit more18 based on sort of the inspiration and the student's19 impression of the teachers, effectiveness, impact,20 motivation, you know, things like connections to the21 parents. Right. Is it just that that teacher was22 connected to the student's parents or is it all the23 teachers' parents? Those are pieces that could be24 explored that we could figure out ways to define it, to25 capture more.
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Page 251 MR. ARTILES: So I -- I agree with the2 arguments made in terms of the (inaudible) the foundation3 (inaudible) so far and particularly the issue of4 sustainability and how do we keep this up over time. The5 other concern I have is impact. Okay. We recognize these6 individuals who have exemplary careers. Beyond this7 legacy (inaudible) also these individual stories can8 contribute to a -- a knowledge base, which is (inaudible)9 base in terms of what we do to learn this in the larger10 scheme of things.11 So I think we should think about raising12 money to document this individual's trajectory (inaudible)13 in which we can carefully disseminate not only through the14 commission's networks but all the networks that all of us15 have in our respective professional careers and make sure16 that this really is used in meaningful ways, not only17 teacher education programs, but also professional18 development, so really go beyond the recognition of that19 individual and ask the question: "What we can we learn20 from this person's experiences given the evidence we have21 before us? What are the lessons that (inaudible) that we22 can build over time?"23 MS. SPEAKER: This person being what did we24 learn from the teachers or what are we learning from the25 student and how they view the teachers?
Page 261 MR. ARTILES: It's stories that we gather2 about these teachers, whether it's the students' stories3 or the students' or the teachers' experience, but how do4 we impact the profession, as an example, from the lessons5 we derive reflecting on what we have learned (inaudible).6 MS. GARCIA: Can I piggyback on that?7 Because -- and it's -- it's -- it triggered where this8 recognition/recruitment that we're talking about, what9 you're talking about is how do we use these award winning10 incredible teachers to build something that then recruits11 other wonderful, credible people.12 MR. ARTILES: Exactly.13 MS. GARCIA: And I -- I -- I don't want to14 make the -- the judgment that because you're a Latino15 student, you live in a poor neighborhood. But we know16 that a lot of high minority populations are high poverty17 populations. Part of the recruitment that -- that I18 wanted to, you know, add to that is what drew those --19 assuming or -- or analyzing which of those award winners20 are in challenged neighborhoods, poverty neighborhoods,21 what drew them to that? Because we're -- we're looking22 for ways of getting incredibly bright, talented career23 people who will teach in the most challenging way.24 MS. GANDARA: Can I please second that?25 Because that was my -- I think this was what made me
Page 271 rather upset the last time around was because that was2 knocked out. The teachers who came from these kinds of3 neighborhoods were not in the running, basically, because4 the schools weren't doing that well --5 MS. GARCIA: All based on test scores.6 MS. GANDARA: -- based on test scores. And7 so, for me, this would be very important that we talk8 about people who are doing this work in the hard places9 and not in the easy places.
10 MS. GARCIA: And -- And why they wanted to11 teach there and why they wanted to stay there, I think, is12 what the analysis should be based on.13 MS. GANDARA: Well, it sounds like this14 Heritage Foundation has a lot of positives and probably15 more positives than the other two options. Though it does16 also seem to me like this being September 3rd and then17 closing September 30th and having to come up with criteria18 and ideas about how we would do this and what the MOU is19 and everything else simply may not be possible on this20 cycle --21 MR. DAVIS: It may or may not.22 MS. GANDARA: -- realistically.23 MR. DAVIS: It may.24 MS. GANDARA: It may or it may not.25 MR. DAVIS: It's not definitely out of the
Page 281 question.2 MS. MELVIN: We close deals like this in a3 month.4 MR. DAVIS: Well, and, also, again, I5 think --6 (Simultaneous discussion)7 MR. DAVIS: -- I think the teacher portion8 doesn't close.9 MS. GANDARA: But the students --
10 MR. DAVIS: Right. And so then the students11 who, as I understood the process --12 MS. SPEAKER: They would need some direction13 also.14 MR. DAVIS: -- the students who are15 selected -- Right. And so I think it's after September16 30th when the students are selected or asked to nominate a17 teacher, after that.18 MS. GARCIA: Okay. And we can -- we can19 impact the criteria after that on -- on looking at the20 teachers.21 MS. GANDARA: On the teachers.22 (Simultaneous discussion)23 MS. GANDARA: But the students have to be24 given some direction, though, right, about who you're25 choosing? Like consider also elementary schoolteachers --
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Page 291 MR. DAVIS: Right.2 MS. MARTINEZ: -- and that sort of thing?3 MR. DAVIS: Right. But they -- Again, I4 don't think they submit the nomination with their5 application. I think they submit it later.6 MS. GANDARA: Oh.7 MR. DAVIS: Yeah.8 MS. SPEAKER: So right now, it's just the9 students that get submitted?10 MR. DAVIS: They just submit to -- Because11 they -- The youth award wins a scholarship and12 recognition.13 MS. GANDARA: And then they --14 MR. DAVIS: They -- Then the winners15 nominate a teacher.16 MR. SPEAKER: They select winners per17 region.18 MR. DAVIS: Right.19 (Simultaneous discussion)20 MR. SPEAKER: Every region has to send the21 students who win.22 MR. DAVIS: Right.23 MR. SPEAKER: Then from that region, they'll24 send a teacher. Then all those who will be considered for25 the national program, they select one in each category.
Page 301 MS. GANDARA: But we're talking about trying2 to broaden that so it's (inaudible).3 MR. SPEAKER: Right.4 MS. SPEAKER: And -- And my question was5 about the fairness of being able to nominate a teacher.6 How -- how -- How does it happen? Do you get buy-in from7 the school districts or how -- how do the kids get to know8 that this is open for them?9 MR. DAVIS: Yeah. So the -- so the -- Any10 student, I believe, of Hispanic descent anywhere in11 America can sub -- Well, actually, I don't know if it's12 anywhere in America or just the eleven markets. But13 they're able to submit an application.14 MS. SPEAKER: So where is the information15 found for them to be included in that?16 (Simultaneous discussion)17 MR. DAVIS: It's on their website. It's --18 It's this outreach to 4,000 schools through nonprofit19 organizations that they partner with. So they disseminate20 it through social media. They disseminate news about the21 application.22 (Simultaneous discussion)23 MS. SPEAKER: So we wouldn't know24 specifically what school districts have presented the25 information or anything like that?
Page 311 MR. DAVIS: So they might be able to know2 that. I don't know that they know your -- I -- I know3 what -- Well, I don't know off the top of my head. But4 the eleven cities, I think they try to get as much input5 as they can from the eleven cities. They try to spread6 the word as widely as they can in those eleven regions.7 MR. SPEAKER: And they've also brought in8 the (inaudible) through Mundos.9 MR. DAVIS: Right.
10 MR. SPEAKER: They do Subway in (inaudible).11 So it really is quite disseminated.12 (Simultaneous discussion)13 MR. DAVIS: They try to get -- I mean, they14 get literally (inaudible) like -- I couldn't even15 remember. I think it's something like 50,000 applicants.16 They get a lot.17 MS. GARCIA: I'm -- I'm assuming that if18 this commission wanted to partner with them, they'd be19 thrilled that we could then extend that reach. They're --20 They're using what their staff and their, you know,21 ground -- ground troops have. And those of us that are in22 other areas like -- like our organizations could then say23 we can push that out. We have affiliates in every state24 and, between the two of us, in practically every school25 district. So we could send information out to our
Page 321 affiliates. We don't send information to kids, but we2 send it to their teachers to make sure the kids in your3 area have this information.4 MS. GANDARA: Unless I hear something5 negative here -- I'm just hyperconscious of the time6 here -- it sounds to me like folks really very much would7 like this idea of at least moving forward and getting8 (inaudible).9 (Simultaneous conversation)
10 MR. DAVIS: So what I would suggest simply11 is for the next steps is I can -- I -- we can go back and12 engage with the Hispanic Heritage Foundation. We can pull13 in the cochairs for the initial conversation. And then we14 can look at scheduling (inaudible) e-mails. We can15 schedule like conference calls among the full subcommittee16 so that folks are able to review before our final and17 probably wait and make some sort of final decision once18 all questions have been answered and there's a clear path19 (inaudible).20 MS. GANDARA: And -- And can we just leave21 it that we will indeed have a conference call with the22 subcommittee? I'm uncomfortable with the extent at which23 we haven't had these and haven't had, you know -- And24 maybe we can actually continue with some of the rest of25 the agenda as well. Okay. Yes?
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Page 331 MS. SPEAKER: A final comment. This is2 important work. I'm -- I'm pleased to have been here3 today. I have to get back to my school district for a4 meeting. But I don't know how I got to be here. I'm5 happy I'm here. But how does your important work get to6 us?7 (Simultaneous discussion)8 MR. DAVIS: Did you register?9 MS. SPEAKER: Yes, we did.10 MR. DAVIS: You will be added to our mailing11 list. You will get any and all communications from now12 forward.13 MS. SPEAKER: Out of curiosity, can you guys14 tell us who you are?15 MR. MARTINEZ: My name's Rudy Martinez. I16 represent (inaudible). I'm in the central division,17 assistant to the director.18 (Simultaneous discussion)19 MS. BARRERA: I'm Diana Barrera. I'm the20 director of (inaudible) in Somerset ISD here in the21 San Antonio area.22 MS. MENDOZA: My name is Marie Mendoza. I'm23 the director of World Languages. I teach bilingual, ESL,24 language (inaudible) for middle school and high school,25 Irving Independent School District (inaudible).
Page 341 MS. SPEAKER: Take a look at our book.2 MS. MENDOZA: I know. I have.3 MS. SPEAKER: There's -- There's a coupon4 out there.5 (Simultaneous discussion)6 MS. TONYA: Hi. I'm Tonya (inaudible) with7 Educational (inaudible) Service at the San Antonio office,8 not the Woodstone office.9 MS. SPEAKER: I'm (inaudible) for10 (inaudible) America. I (inaudible) of our (inaudible)11 teachers throughout the nation. So I'm really interested12 in getting involved and helping out with that.13 MS. GANDARA: So, for you, it would be very14 (inaudible) the dreamers (inaudible) and the teachers.15 MS. SPEAKER: Yes, unaccompanied minors. I16 need to know everything (inaudible).17 MS. GARCIA: Delia Garcia, (inaudible).18 MS. SPEAKER: I'm (inaudible) Molina, vice19 president of Texas Aide Teachers Association, middle20 school teacher, ESL.21 MR. PEREZ: I'm (inaudible) Perez with the22 American (inaudible) Teachers (inaudible).23 MR. DAVIS: Thank you all.24 MS. SPEAKER: Okay. Thank you.25 (Breakout concluded at 2:52 p.m.)
Page 351 THE STATE OF TEXAS *2 COUNTY OF BEXAR *3
4
5 I, NATALIE HUNSUCKER, a Certified Court Reporter6 duly commissioned and qualified in and for the County of7 Bexar, State of Texas, do hereby certify that the forgoing8 is a true and accurate transcription, taken to the best of9 my ability, of the K-12 Subcommittee Breakout Discussion
10 at the President's Advisory Commission on Educational11 Excellence for Hispanics, held at the University of Texas12 at San Antonio Downtown Campus, 501 W. Cesar Chavez13 Boulevard, San Antonio, Texas 78207, September 3, 2014,14 from 2:15 p.m. to 2:51 p.m.15 IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand16 on the 23rd day of September, 2014.17
18
19 _________________________________ NATALIE HUNSUCKER, Texas CSR 4279
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