Guerdwich Montimere is still sitting in the Ector County Detention Center, waiting.

And in two communities separated by 1,700 miles, his story still puzzles many and questions remain.

Months after the former Dillard standout was first arrested for posing as a high school sophomore in Texas on May 11, 2010, those most connected to him are still waiting for a resolution to his case.

At Permian High in Odessa, where Montimere, then 22, pretended to be 16-year-old Jerry Joseph, administrators wonder whatif anythingthey could have done to keep him out of their school.


Danny Wright, the Permian basketball coach who opened his home to a man he believed was a homeless teen, finds his family is still hurting and adjusting after being deceived.

Meanwhile, the team Wright coached endured taunts all season.

And while Josephor Montimerecontinues to wait for his Aug. 2 trial date, a mother in South Florida struggles with her own personal pain.

Manikisse Montimere of Tamarac said she hasn’t seen or heard from her son Guerdwich in years. The possibility he could have pulled such an elaborate ruse leaves her dismayed.

“I get sad about it all,” she said. “I know I have a son named Guerdwich, but I haven’t known anything about him and any time I talk about it, it still hurts a lot. I don’t know if that’s him or not. I can’t explain it.”

The deception unravels

In February 2007, Guerdwich Montimere helped lead Dillard to the semifinals of the boys state basketball tournament..

The former McDonald’s All-American nominee appeared to be headed to a junior college career.

That never happened and many of Montimere’s friends and family said they lost touch with the former Panthers standout.

Said Manikisse Montimere: “He left my house after high school and I haven’t heard from him. Everyone asks me about him, but I don’t know. I don’t even know how to reach him.”

Last April, two South Florida basketball coaches attending an AAU tournament in Arkansas noticed that a young athlete named Jerry Joseph bore a striking resemblance to Montimere, one of their former players.

After anonymous tips about Joseph’s identity poured into school officials and media outlets in Fort Lauderdale and Odessa, an investigation was launched.

Joseph, whose story as a Haitian orphan who moved from Florida to Odessa with the help of his brother had even been featured in the Odessa American newspaper, continued attending classes at Permian throughout the investigation.

But eventually, authorities determined Joseph wasn’t the 16-year-old orphan he claimed to be. The American reported in May 2010 that during the course of the investigation, Montimere’s “guardian” told police that on April 29, a passport and Social Security card issued to Guerdwich Montimer were found in Montimere’s room.

Later, a release by the Ector County Independent School District stated that Montimere confessed to the deception while being questioned.

Tags: Montimere, Montimere Awaits

A TUSD teacher accused of routinely grabbing and yanking his second-grade students out of anger is facing termination.

Martin Villa, who was teaching at Ford Elementary School, denies any abusive behavior toward the 7- and 8-year-olds and will file an appeal this week, according to his attorney, Dan Cooper.

The TUSD Governing Board voted last week to send Villa a notice of intent to dismiss based on charges of unprofessional conduct.

The charges stem from an incident in December when he reportedly physically assaulted a student. It was reported that Villa confronted two students for having an off-task conversation, according to the statement of charges.

He roughly grabbed and squeezed a student’s neck and turned him around in his seat, the report said. He then roughly grabbed and yanked the other student’s arm and turned her around to face him.

Villa then reportedly yelled at the pair, asking them what they were supposed to be doing.

He told the first student to go to the wall and proceeded to pull the other back to her desk by the arm, the report said.

Later that night, the student complained of pain in his neck. He suffers from Asperger’s syndrome and his mother reported that he often feels violated and becomes withdrawn when he is touched.

Villa was confronted by the school’s principal and he acknowledged that he put his hand on the first student’s neck because he was “acting out.” He also said the other student sometimes needs to be guided by the arm because she is “constantly oppositional.”

TUSD Governing Board policy says physical force is strictly forbidden unless the child is threatening physical harm to self or others.

While the first student was being interviewed by Ford Principal Holly Leman, he was asked to display what happens when students are instructed to go to the wall.

The student went to a corner, sat cross-legged on the floor with his knees touching the wall. He leaned in until his nose touched the wall and stretched out his arms behind him.

“It was a degrading, punitive, physically uncomfortable and inappropriate time out for an 8-year-old,” the report said.

Villa confirmed that he sometimes had students take that position despite the fact that his classroom handout states that when inappropriate behavior occurs, he would speak privately with the child and use their thoughts to work toward a more responsible and respectful solution.

Leman interviewed 16 students and of those, 13 reported witnessing Villa routinely grabbing and yanking students. Eight reported being victims of assault.

“The emotional climate in Villa’s classroom was intimidating to students,” the statement of charges said. “Villa’s classroom was not an environment that was conducive to learning.”

In a letter to Leman, Villa’s attorney cited that throughout Villa’s career no allegations of abuse have been brought against him.

“Martin has a 15-year history of gentle, caring teaching and the current allegations against him are hurtful, unfair and false,” Cooper wrote.

Tags: Teacher

So, the biggest learning news coming from the Richardson household last week has, as is more often the case than not, little to do with the classroom and everything to do with doing. Two quick stories, both involving my 13-year old daughter Tess:

Story 1

Three weeks ago, Tess decided (on her own) to go out for the track team, something she had never done before. As soon as the coach saw her walk into practice, saw her thin, 5 11 frame, he pointed her over to the high jump pit and said have at it. And Tess started learning how to jump. Two things have jumped out at me in the interim. First, her high jump learning life has been made up of 98% failure, something my daughter does not deal with especially well when it comes to athletics. Ive been trying to point out to her that failure, in some cases lots of failure, is a necessary step to success, especially in getting over the high bar. Shes trying to make her body do things its never had to do before (just ask her heretofore non-existent ab muscles), and its going to take some time to find the rhythm of the run, the jump, the flip and the landing in ways that make her sail over, not into the bar. But heres the thing: success will not come just on the strength and the muscle memory she gains during the practice on or off the track. (Read: lots of sit ups.) It will also be dependent on her ability to reflect and learn from her failure. She cant jump 4 8 until she learns to jump 4 6. And while she gets feedback from her coach, she also gets feedback on every jump from the bar, whether it stays or falls as she tries to go over it. How she makes sense of that in her mind and adjusts her efforts will determine her success. The good news is that I think shes starting to understand this and, even better, shes beginning to see those connections to other parts of her life as well.

And I love this part: its just her. Shes played basketball and field hockey for the last two years, but high jump is all about her. Theres really no team involved. Thats the other thing shes learningto push herself for herself. Sure, she wants to do well as a part of the track team, but at the end of it, shes the only one who can make that success happen. No one is holding or adjusting the bar for her.

Story 2

Heres the second part: Her class took a trip to Washington DC over the weekend and, as luck would have it, they were in the House chambers when the very contested vote was taking place on the budget resolution last Friday. She heard Nancy Pelosi and John Boehner speak, saw a bunch of protesters get arrested and thrown out of the gallery, and got a real slice of what democracy (at least whats left of it) looks like. On the ride home from picking her up at her school last night, she was talking about all of the monuments, the museums and landmarks they visited, and all of the accompanying stories that she heard around those places. Despite the weather, it seemed to have been a pretty excellent adventure. At one point she said, You know, I really learned a lot on that trip. No doubt.

The Point

A couple of weeks ago, on the recommendation of Gary Stager, I picked up Seymour Sarasons 2004 book And What Do YOU Mean by Learning? and Ive been slowly working my way through it. Its not the easiest read, for me at least, but what keeps me diving in is the push he makes about what we define as learning, something that has been making me increasingly frustrated of late in terms of  the national conversation around schools. Here are Sarasons two main points for the book

  • First, well never get true reform in schools until we come to some consensus on a more accurate definition of learning.
  • Second, that productive learning as he defines it doesnt happen much at all in schools.

Here is a snip from the introduction that gives the flavor of both the style and the thesis:

Learning is not a thing, it is a processI try on these pages to distinguish between contexts of productive and unproductive learning. And by productive, I mean that the learning process is one that engenders and reinforces wanting to learn more. Absent wanting to learn, the learning context is unproductive or counterproductive. Is it not noteworthy that the word or concept of learning probably has the highest of all word counts in the diverse literature in education and yet when people are asked what they mean by learnng they are taken aback, stammer or stutter, and come up with a sentence or two which they admit is vague and unsatisfactory? (Boldface mine.)

Hes right. Ive been pressing this question of What is learning? in my presentations lately, and the answers have been intriguing to say the least. Some say its the acquisition of knowledge, others say its the application of knowledge, and yet others say its the creation of knowledge with a whole bunch of other stuff thrown in between.  And when the descriptions move more closely to the type of learning I hope happens in my kids classrooms, its difficult for many to describe what that looks like in practice.

In the real world conversation about schools, how learning is defined is pretty clear. Just do a search for the phrase student learning in Google News and youll get the gist right away. Just now, here are two of the three most recent results:

“Core courses taken during the school year give students an opportunity to gain a deeper understanding of course content as well as prepare students to be successful on the state standardized Prairie State Assessment Exam and the ACT,” said Rosemary Gonzalez Pinnick, associate superintendent for educational services. “Our schools are not only improving processes for monitoring student learning but also are implementing timely and appropriate interventions. Consequently, the summer program has changed accordingly.” (Here)

And:

Brickhouse said, This bill not only provides financial support for districts to hire teachers during a timeframe that facilitates their hiring the best teachers, it also sends the message that hiring well-prepared teachers is of critical significance to the goal of dramatically improving student learning in Delaware schools. New standards, longitudinal data systems, data coaches, new assessments all of these initiatives rely on strong implementation by capable and wise teachers. (Here)

My sense, and please correct me if you think Im missing it, is that neither of the people quoted in these snips are seeing the world as Sarason sees it. I read that stuff and just let out a heavy sigh. In fact, I would guess the vast majority of those invested in the conversation around schools right now dont see it that way either.

But heres what I see with my daughterTess wants to learn more. She wants to learn more about how to high jump and about some of the events she experienced in DC, events that couldnt be replicated by a text book or a YouTube video or anything else. Shes learning, productively learning by doing, not by studying up and taking a test and moving to the next chapter or passing the test. Im wanting for more of it to be happening in the classroom. And not just hers.

Tags: Learning

Kim Kenny, the interim athletic director at Franklin High School, told me Friday that the district will appeal NJSIAA second reliagment committees recent ruling to deny it its request to leave the Skyland Conference for the Greater Middlesex Conference. The hearing should take place sometime in May, according to state association executive director Steve Timko.
Franklin has been attempting to leave the Skyland for the GMC since the early 2000s, but the Skyland especially burnt by Hackettstowns quick get-away two years ago is digging in and has refused the Warriors release. The GMC approved Franklins application a couple of years ago.
Kenny said that players and coaches she has polled have all told her that the district is doing the right thing.
Kids from every sport, every gender, every race, Kenny said. I inherited this. I have to know what Im fighting for.
I was more surprised by their common experience in the Skyland, she added. We want to do whats best for the kids.
One of the biggest issues Kenny said for Franklins persistence is the time it takes to travel. The average round trip for Franklin to get to a an away football game is 70 miles in football, while it would be 53 in the GMC; 68.5 for wrestling, 53 in the GMC and 55 in soccer opposed to 50 for GMC opponents.
Weve done all of our homework, she said.

Tags: Appeal

BOYS
Team scores:
1. Viera 184; 2. Merritt Island 142; 3. Sebastian River 121; 4. Ft. Pierce Central 121; 5. Okeechobee 64; 6. Ft. Pierce Westwood 31; 7. Eau Gallie 18.
Individual winners: TJ – Shaun Applewhite 44-0; Shot – Kevin Mall 52-5 1/2; HJ – Corbin Jackson 6-2; PV – Shelton McLean 12-6; LJ – Stephan Clark 22-10; Disc – Giorgio Newberry 144-10; 4×800 – Sebastian River 8:24.25; Shot – Damarius Gray 15-2; 110H – Applewhite 14.90; 100 – Jacques Williams 11.26; 1,600 – Harsha Torke 4:22.24; 4×100 – Merritt Island 43.58; 400 – Justin Gorbea 50.40; 300H – Dennis Hooper 39.67; 800 – Evan Woodruff 2:02.66; 300 adaptive – Gray 4:15.37; 200 – Everette Jackson 22.92; 200 adaptive – Gray 58.37; 3,200 – Torke 3:30.95; 4×400 – Viera 3:30.95.

GIRLS
Team scores:
1. Merritt Island 204; 2. Sebastian River 140; 3. Ft. Pierce Central 131; 4. Viera 120; 5. Eau Gallie 31; 6. Okeechobee 12; 7. Ft. Pierce Westwood 5.
Individual winners: TJ – Brandi Lucas 34-8 1/2; Disc – Brittany Jackson 125-9; Shot – Jackson 37-6; LJ – Jackson 16-10 1/2; HJ – Jenna McElhenney 5-0; PV – Samantha Olson 9-6; 4×800 – Merritt Island 10:28.92; 100H – Hazel Lockard 17.01; 100 – Ebony Joseph 13.00; 1,600 – Elizabeth Harper 5:31.22; 4×100 – Ft. Pierce Central 49.84; 400 – Jackie Stengel 1:00.33; 300H – Lockard 49.39; 800 – Kierney Henderson 2:32.95; 200 – Sarafina Shepard 27.48; 3,200 – Elizabeth Harper 12:14.86; 4×400 – Ft. Pierce Central 4:10.65.

Viera hurdler/jumper Shaun Applewhite talks about his district meet results.

Tags: Island, Merritt Island