Destroying Public
Education in
by Stephen Lendman
Global Research, April 7, 2008
Diogenes called education "the foundation of every state." Education reformer and "father of American education" Horace Mann went even further. He said: "The common school (meaning public ones) is the greatest discovery ever made by man." He called it the "great equalizer" that was "common" to all, and as Massachusetts Secretary of Education founded the first board of education and teacher training college in the state where the first (1635) public school was established. Throughout the country today, privatization schemes target them and threaten to end a 373 year tradition.
It's part of
-- charter schools under the 1996 Illinois Charter Schools
Law; they're called "public schools of choice, selected by students and
parents....to take responsible risks and create new, innovative and more
flexible ways of educating children within the public school system;" in
1997, the Illinois General Assembly approved 60 state charter schools;
Charter schools aren't magnet ones that require students in some cases to have special skills or pass admissions tests. However, they have specific organizing themes and educational philosophies and may target certain learning problems, development needs, or educational possibilities. In all states, they're legislatively authorized; near-autonomous in their operations; free to choose their students and exclude unwanted ones; and up to now are quasi-public with no religious affiliation. Administration and corporate schemes assure they won't stay that way because that's the sinister plan. More on that below.
George Bush praised these schools last April when he declared April 29 through May 5 National Charter Schools Week. He said they provide more "choice," are a "valuable educational alternative," and he thanked "educational entrepreneurs for supporting" these schools around the country.
Here's what the president praised. Lisa Delpit is executive director of the Center for Urban Education & Innovation. In her capacity, she studies charter school performance and cited evidence from a 2005 Department of Education report. Her conclusion: "charter schools....are less likely than public schools to meet state education goals." Case study examples in five states showed they underperform, and are "less likely than traditional public (ones) to employ teachers meeting state certification standards."
Other underperformance evidence came from an unexpected source - an October 1994 Money magazine report on 70 public and private schools. It concluded that "students who attend the best public schools outperform most private school students, that the best public schools offer a more challenging curriculum than most private schools, and that the private school advantage in test scores is due to their selective admission policies."
Clearly a failing grade on what's spreading across the country en route to total privatization and the triumph of the market over educating the nation's youths.
In 1991,
-- contract (privatized) schools run by "independent nonprofit organizations;" they operate under a Performance Agreement between the "organization" and the Board of Education; and
-- performance schools under Chicago Public Schools (CPS) management "with freedom and flexibility on many district initiatives and policies;" unmentioned is the Democrat mayor's close ties to the Bush administration and their preference for marketplace education; the idea isn't new, but it accelerated rapidly in recent years.
Another part of the scheme is in play as well, in
Consider recent events under Mayor Richard Daley in
Nationwide Education "Reform"
Throughout the country, various type schemes follow the administration's "education reform" blueprint. It began with the No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) that became law on January 8, 2002. It succeeded the 1994 Goals 2000: Educate America Act that set eight outcomes-based goals for the year 2000 but failed on all counts to meet them. Goals 2000, in turn, goes back to the 1965 Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) and specifically its Title I provisions for funding schools and districts with a high percentage of low-income family students.
NCLB is outrageous. It's long on testing, school choice, and market-based "reforms" but short on real achievement. It's built around rote learning, standardized tests, requiring teachers to "teach to the test," assessing results by Average Yearly Progress (AYP) scores, and punishing failure harshly - firing teachers and principals, closing schools and transforming them from public to charter or for-profit ones.
Critics denounce the plan as "an endless regimen of test-preparation drills" for poor children. Others call it underfunded and a thinly veiled scheme to privatize education and transfer its costs and responsibilities from the federal government to individuals and impoverished school districts. Mostly, it reflects current era thinking that anything government does business does better, so let it. And Democrats are as complicit as Republicans.
So far, NCLB renewal bills remain stalled in both Houses, election year politics have intervened, and final resolution may be for the 111th Congress to decide. For critics, that's positive because the law failed to deliver as promised. Its sponsors claimed it would close the achievement gap between inner city and rural schools and more affluent suburban ones. It's real aim, however, is to commodify education, end government responsibility for it, and make it another business profit center.
Last October, the New York Times cited
In
New Millennium Education
That's the theme of Time magazine's December 9, 2006 article
on the
-- moving beyond charter schools to privatized contract ones; charter schools are just stalking horses for what business really wants - privatizing all public schools for their huge profit potential;
-- ending high school for many poor and minority students after the 10th grade - for those who score poorly on standardized tests intended for high school seniors; those who do well can finish high school and go on to college; others who barely pass can go to community colleges or technical schools after high school;
-- ending remediation and special education aid for low-performance students to cut costs;
-- ending teacher pensions and reducing their health and other benefits;
-- ending seniority and introducing merit pay and other teacher differentials based on student performance and questionable standards;
-- eliminating school board powers, all regulations, and empowering private companies;
-- effectively destroying teacher unions; and
-- ending public education and creating a nationwide profit center with every incentive to cut costs and cheat students for bottom line gains; this follows an earlier decades-long corporate - public higher education trend that one educator calls a "subtle yet significant change toward (university) privatization, meaning that private entities are gradually replacing taxpayers as the dominant funding source as state appropriations account for a lower and lower percentage of schools' operating resources;" corporations now want elementary and secondary education control for the huge new market they represent.
The Skills Commission's earlier 1990s work advanced the
scheme and laid the groundwork for NCLB. It came out of its "
Both Commission reports reflect a corporate wish list to commodify education, benefit the well-off, and consign underprivileged kids to low-wage, no benefit service jobs. It's a continuing trend to shift higher-paying ones abroad, downsize the nation, and end the American dream for millions. So why educate them.
School Vouchers
They didn't make it into NCLB, but they're very much on the table with a sinister added twist. First some background.
It's an old idea dating back to the hard right's favorite economist and man the UK Financial Times called "the last of the great (ones)" when he died in November 2006. Milton Friedman promoted school choice in 1955, then kick-started it in the 1980s under Ronald Reagan. He opposed public education, supported school vouchers for privately-run ones, and believed marketplace competition improves performance even though voucher amounts are inadequate and mostly go to religious schools in violation of the First Amendment discussed below.
Here's how the Friedman Foundation for Education Choice currently describes the voucher scheme: it's the way to let "every parent send their child to the school of their choice regardless of where they live or income." In fact, it's a thinly veiled plot to end public education and use lesser government funding amounts for well-off parents who can make up the difference and send their children to private-for-profit schools. Others are on their own under various programs with "additional restrictions" the Foundation lists without explanation:
-- Universal Voucher Programs for all children;
-- Means-Tested Voucher Programs for families below a defined income level;
--
-- Special Needs Voucher Programs for children with special educational needs;
-- Pre-kindergarten Voucher Programs; and
-- Town Tuitioning Programs for communities without operating public schools for some students' grade levels.
What else is behind school choice and vouchers? Privatization mostly, but it's also thinly-veiled aid for parochial schools, mainly Christian fundamentalist ones, and the frightening ideology they embrace - racial hatred, male gender dominance, white Christian supremacy, militarism, free market everything, and ending public education and replacing it with private Christian fundamentalist schools.
In March 1971, the Supreme Court ruled in Lemon v. Kurtzman against parochial funding in what became known as the "Lemon Test." In a unanimous 7 - 0 decision, the Court decided that government assistance for religious schools was unconstitutional because it violates the First Amendment's Establishment Clause. It prohibits the federal government from declaring and financially supporting a national religion, and the First Amendment states: "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof;...."
That changed in June 2002 when the Court ruled 5 - 4 in
Zelman v. Simmons-Harris that
The Court harmed democracy and the Constitution's letter and
spirit. It also contradicted Thomas
Nationwide Efforts to Privatize Education
In recent years, privatization efforts have expanded beyond
urban inner cities and are surfacing everywhere with large amounts of corporate
funding and government support backing them. One effort among many is
frightening. It's called "Strong American Schools - ED in '08" and
states the following: it's "a nonpartisan public awareness campaign aimed
at elevating education to (the nation's top priority)." It says "
Billionaires Bill Gates and Eli Broad put up $60 million for
the effort for the big returns they expect. Former
"Ed in '08" has a three-point agenda:
-- ending seniority and substituting merit pay for teachers based on student test scores;
-- national education standards based on rote learning; standards are to be uniformly based on "what (business thinks) ought to be taught, grade by grade;" it's to prepare some students for college and the majority for workplace low-skill, low-paid, no-benefit jobs; and
-- longer school days and school year; unmentioned but key is eliminating unions or making them weak and ineffective.
In addition, the plan involves putting big money behind
transforming public and charter schools to private-for-profit ones. It's
spreading everywhere, and consider
Under the governor's proposed 2008 $4.8 billion education
budget cut, transformation got easier. As of mid-March, 20,000
Plundering
Nowhere is planned makeover greater than in post-Katrina
In two troubling 5 - 4 decisions, the
The Court also made it easy for
-- two weeks after the hurricane, US Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings cited charter schools as "uniquely equipped" to serve Katrina-displaced students;
-- two weeks later, she announced the first of two $20 million grants to the state, solely for these schools;
-- then in October 2005, the governor issued an executive order waiving key portions of the state's charter school law allowing public schools to be converted to charter ones with no debate, input or even knowledge of parents and teachers;
-- a month later in November, the state legislature voted to
take over 107 (84%) of the city's 128 public schools and place them under the
state-controlled "
-- in February 2006, all unionized city school employees were fired, then selectively rehired at less pay and fewer or no benefits; it affected 7500 teachers as well as custodians, cafeteria workers and others.
Within six months of Katrina, the city was largely
ethnically cleansed, the public schools infrastructure mostly gutted, and a new
framework was in place. It put NOPS into three categories - public, charter and
the
The first half based on
-- "Half of (these children were) enrolled (in) charter schools." They got "tens of millions of dollars" in federal money, but aren't "open to every child....Some charter schools have special selective academic criteria (and can) exclude children in need of special academic help." Others "have special administrative policies (that) effectively screen out many children." This latter category has "accredited teachers in manageable size classes (in schools with) enrollment caps....These schools also educate far fewer students with academic or emotional disabilities (and) are in better facilities than the other half of the children...."
"The other half:"
These students were "assigned to a one-year-old
experiment in public education run by the State of
RSD "other half" schools got no federal funds. Its leadership is inexperienced. It's critically understaffed. Many of its teachers are uncertified. There aren't enough of them, and schools assigned students hadn't been built for their scheduled fall 2007 opening. In addition, some schools reported a "prison atmosphere," and in others, children spent long hours in gymnasiums because teachers hadn't arrived. In addition, there was little academic counseling; college-preparatory math; or science and languages; and class sizes are too large because returning students are assigned to too few of them.
Many RSD schools also have no "working kitchens or water fountains (and their) bathroom facilities are scandalous....Hardly any white children attend this half of the school experiment." RSD schools are for poor black students getting short-changed and denied a real education by an uncaring state and nation and corporations in it for profit.
Quigley described a system for "Haves (and)
Have-Nots," and race defines it. He also exposed the lie that charter
schools are public ones. Across the country, but especially in
Separate and Unequal
In his 2005 book "The Shame of the Nation: The
Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in
Harvard Civil Rights researchers captured the problem in
their Brown v. Board of Education 50th anniversary assessment stating: "At
the beginning of the twenty-first century, American public schools are now 12
years into the process of continuous resegregation." Desegregation from the
1950s through the late 1980s "has receded to levels not seen in three
decades." The percent of black students in majority-white schools stands
at "a level lower than in any year since 1968" with conditions worst
of all in the nation's four most segregated states - New
-- Board of Education of
According to recent
Despite high-minded political posturing and programs like NCLB, the truth is these youngsters are forgotten and abused. They're warehoused in decrepit facilities, curricula offerings ignore their needs, testing is unrelated to learning, teachers don't teach, the whole scheme is swept under the rug, and "educating" the unwanted is "standardized" to produce good workers with pretty low skill levels for the kinds of jobs awaiting them. Kozol refers to "school reform" as a "business enterprise with goals, action plans, implementation targets, and productivity measures," and above all what marketplace potential there is.
Separate and unequal is the current inner city school
standard. Unless it's exposed, denounced and reversed, (and there's no sign of
it), millions of poor and minority children will be denied what the
"American dream" increasingly only offers the privileged. And no one
in
Disturbing New Dropout Data
A new Editorial Projects in Education (EPE)
-- 1.2 million public high school students drop out each year;
-- 17 of the 50 troubled cities have graduation rates of 50%
or lower; in
--
-- the data show public education in the 50 largest cities' principal school districts in a virtual state of collapse;
-- dropout rates for blacks and Latinos are significantly higher than for white students;
-- dropouts are eight times more likely to end up in prison; family income is the main problem; in cities most affected, it goes hand in hand with a lack of good jobs and a sub-standard social infrastructure;
-- key to understanding the overall problem nationwide is the gutting of social services, widening income gap between rich and poor, exporting manufacturing and other high-paying jobs abroad, and politicians and business exploiting the needs of the many to benefit the few;
-- NCLB "reform" is called the solution; Democrats and Republicans are complicit in promoting it, and no one in government explains the truth - the report reveals a sinister scheme to end public education, say it causes poor student performance, and privatize it so the "market" can provide it to well-off communities and merely exploit the rest for profit.
Why else would the (Bill) Gates Foundation have funded the
study and Colin Powell's
Educational Maintenance Organizations
It's a new term for an old idea that's much like their failed HMO counterparts. They're private-for-profit businesses that contract with local school districts or individual charter schools to "improve the quality of education without significantly raising current spending levels." They're still rare, but watch out for them and what they're up to.
An example is the Edison Project running
Even more disturbing was Edison's performance in
The city's school superintendent had this assessment. He
said
Unless public action stops it, Edison is the future and so
is
Global Research Associate Stephen Lendman lives in
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to The Global Research News Hour on RepublicBroadcasting.org Mondays from 11AM to 1PM for cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests.
From: http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=8566