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Saturday, February 22, 2014

Corporations Want Our Public Schools



Corporations Want Our Public Schools
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YES! Magazine

The Myth Behind Public School Failure

In the rush to privatize the country’s schools, corporations and politicians have decimated school budgets, replaced teaching with standardized testing, and placed the blame on teachers and students.
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Classroom photo by hxdbzxy/Shutterstock
Photo by hxdbzxy/Shutterstock
Until about 1980, America’s public schoolteachers were iconic everyday heroes painted with a kind of Norman Rockwell patina—generally respected because they helped most kids learn to read, write and successfully join society. Such teachers made possible at least the idea of a vibrant democracy.
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Since then, what a turnaround: We’re now told, relentlessly, that bad-apple schoolteachers have wrecked K-12 education; that their unions keep legions of incompetent educators in classrooms; that part of the solution is more private charter schools; and that teachers as well as entire schools lack accountability, which can best be remedied by more and more standardized “bubble” tests.
What led to such an ignoble fall for teachers and schools? Did public education really become so irreversibly terrible in three decades? Is there so little that’s redeemable in today’s schoolhouses?
The beginning of “reform”
To truly understand how we came to believe our educational system is broken, we need a history lesson. Rewind to 1980—when Milton Friedman, the high priest of laissez-faire economics, partnered with PBS to produce a ten-part television series called Free to Choose. He devoted one episode to the idea of school vouchers, a plan to allow families what amounted to publicly funded scholarships so their children could leave the public schools and attend private ones.
You could make a strong argument that the current campaign against public schools started with that single TV episode. To make the case for vouchers, free-market conservatives, corporate strategists, and opportunistic politicians looked for any way to build a myth that public schools were failing, that teachers (and of course their unions) were at fault, and that the cure was vouchers and privatization.
Jonathan Kozol, the author and tireless advocate for public schools, called vouchers the “single worst, most dangerous idea to have entered education discourse in my adult life.”
Armed with Friedman’s ideas, President Reagan began calling for vouchers. In 1983, his National Commission on Excellence in Education issued “A Nation At Risk,” a report that declared, “the educational foundations of our 

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This article originally appeared at Colorlines.com. A section from "Massacre of the Innocents," by Dareece Walker. Image courtesy Dareece Walker. In the wake of last weekend's Jordan Davis verdict—a Pyrrhic victory for many—two things are happening again. People are asking if U.S. courtrooms are effective sites of justice, and they're feeling like their beliefs about the tragic f
Infographic: Why Corporations Want Our Public Schools
This article is from Education Uprising, the Spring 2014 issue of YES! Magazine. More Stories The Myth Behind Public School Failure Oakland Classrooms Try Healing Instead of Punishment Meet the New Rebels Taking Back Our Public Schools
The Myth Behind Public School Failure
Photo by hxdbzxy/Shutterstock Until about 1980, America’s public schoolteachers were iconic everyday heroes painted with a kind of Norman Rockwell patina—generally respected because they helped most kids learn to read, write and successfully join society. Such teachers made possible at least the idea of a vibrant democracy. Click here to subscribe to YES! Since then, what a turnaround
Meet the New Rebels Taking Back Our Public Schools
"Education is not the filling of a pail but the lighting of a fire." —William Butler Yeats. Photo by Vira Mylyan-Monastyrska/Shutterstock. Many of us were blessed with a teacher who touched our lives. My favorite was my second grade teacher, Mrs. Booth, who left her position at my nearly all-white school to teach at a school for African American students. It seems odd to write this

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Why Do Kids Act Out? Oakland Classrooms Try Healing Instead of Punishment
Fania Davis, executive director of Restorative Justice for Oakland Youth, with students from Ralph Bunche High School in Oakland. YES! Photo By Lane Hartwell. Tommy, an agitated 14-year-old high school student in Oakland, Calif., was in the hallway cursing out his teacher at the top of his lungs. A few minutes earlier, in the classroom, he’d called her a “b___” after she twice told him to l

FEB 17

No Longer Afraid: How the Fight Against Alabama's Anti-Immigrant Law Transformed a Community
This story originally appeared at Waging Nonviolence. Supporters of the Alabama Coalition for Immigrant Justice rally in Washington, D.C., on April 20, 2013. Photo by Silvia Giagnoni. When passed by the Alabama Legislature in 2011, HB 56 was considered the most egregious and far reaching of the state anti-immigration laws in the country—more harsh than even Arizona's much-derided SB 1070.
http://www.yesmagazine.org/