On Monday afternoon - Labor Day _ , a Hollywood
film called "Won't Back
Down" -- will be shown in Charlotte, Los Angeles
Mayor Villariagosa is scheduled to
speak on a panel at the theater, joined by Michelle Rhee of StudentsFirst, Ben
Austin of Parent Revolution, and Sacramento, Calif., Mayor Kevin Johnson.
Newark, N.J., Mayor Cory Booker will also speak at the event.
"Won't Back Down" stars
Maggie Gyllenhaal as a single mother determined to get her daughter out of
their failing public elementary school and Davis as a teacher at the school who
joins with her to gather parent and teacher signatures behind a It's a movie
about the push for school choice, a movement that has been gaining momentum
around the country for the past several years. It is also a film about
teachers' unions, who are one of the Democratic Party's biggest and most loyal sources of political contributions.
Randi Weingarten, president of the
American Federation of Teachers, the nation's second largest teachers' union,
blasted the film in an open letter this past week,
calling it "divisive" and saying it "resorts to falsehoods and
anti-union stereotypes."
"The film contains several
egregiously misleading scenes with the sole purpose of undermining people's
confidence in public education, public school teachers and teachers
unions," Weingarten wrote.
But the film is critical of unions
for resisting reforms like greater teacher accountability and more school
choice. It hits on some of the same themes as "Waiting
for Superman," a documentary by Davis
Guggenheim (who also made the 17-minute pro-Obama film "The Road We've
Traveled" and Al Gore's global warming film, "An Inconvenient
Truth").
While "Waiting for
Superman" was a well-done and well-received documentary, it packed nothing
like the emotional wallop of "Won't Back Down." Even Weingarten said
that "one can't help but be moved by the characters and story."
"Waiting for Superman"
did not make a broad cultural impact, although many of those who saw and were
influenced by it were undoubtedly among the political and media classes. Now,
"Won't Back Down" is poised to land on multiplex screens across the
country. It won't be just journalists, activists and highly involved parents
seeing it. It will be teens and 20-somethings, adults of all ages and social
and economic strata, many of whom have given little thought to education
policy.
Ten days later, however, Weingarten
released her letter slamming the movie and targeting the film's studio, Walden
Media (which also produced "Waiting for Superman"), and its owner,
Philip Anschutz, who she said has "invested millions in anti-gay and extreme
religious-right organizations."
But it is hard to paint the school
reform movement as a right-wing conspiracy. Support for taking on teachers'
unions is growing in Democratic and liberal circles. The best example of this
might be Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, a former organizer with United
Teachers Los Angeles who is in favor of greater school choice and teacher
accountability.
Villaraigosa is the current
president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, and in June, with the support of
several high-profile Democratic mayors, that group included support
for "parent trigger" legislation in its platform. Such laws allow
parents to take over a failing school if they meet certain requirements,
usually having to do with acquiring a sufficient number of signatures from
other parents. In a majority-Latino community outside Los Angeles, a fight
between the school board and parents, who are trying to use California's
parent trigger legislation to overhaul their local public school,
has become a national story.
Villaraigosa also happens to be
chairman of the Democratic convention this year. After "Won't Back
Down" is shown Monday in Charlotte, he is scheduled to speak on a panel at
the theater, joined by Michelle Rhee of StudentsFirst, Ben Austin of Parent
Revolution, and Sacramento, Calif., Mayor Kevin Johnson. Newark, N.J., Mayor
Cory Booker will also speak at the event.
Jon Ward. Huffington Post. Edited.
update. According to reports in the Washington Times, Michelle Rhee's major comment was that teachers needed multiple voices. She argued that the teachers' unions dominated discussion of school reform.
This is like the Republican campaign myths. Nothing could be further from the truth. If you monitor the education press and blogs, you will find a wide diversity of opinions shared. If you monitor press releases, press statements, and media appearances, you will not find union domination. This statement is primarily a self serving, self promotional statement to get more invitations for Michelle Rhee to make appearances ( often funded). If you want to see how this works look at Institute for Democracy and Education at the link on the left. https://sites.google.com/site/democracyandeducationorg/
Jon Ward. Huffington Post. Edited.
update. According to reports in the Washington Times, Michelle Rhee's major comment was that teachers needed multiple voices. She argued that the teachers' unions dominated discussion of school reform.
This is like the Republican campaign myths. Nothing could be further from the truth. If you monitor the education press and blogs, you will find a wide diversity of opinions shared. If you monitor press releases, press statements, and media appearances, you will not find union domination. This statement is primarily a self serving, self promotional statement to get more invitations for Michelle Rhee to make appearances ( often funded). If you want to see how this works look at Institute for Democracy and Education at the link on the left. https://sites.google.com/site/democracyandeducationorg/
Reviews of the film will be posted when the film opens.
by Duane Campbell
As
corporate domination of the school reform debate grows, non corporate institutions like schools and unions lose their access to the media and to the public
conversation about schools and
democracy as well as
multiculturalism.
Neoliberalism takes money
from public systems, such as
public schools, and transfers that money to private consumption thus public institutions lose
resources. Developing
democracy requires one form of education, pursuing neoliberalism requires a
very different form of education.
And, at present, clearly the neo-liberal agenda is winning particularly as advanced in law in the
No Child Left Behind act of 2001 and Race to the Top in 2008.
Neo
liberal reformers blamed the teachers unions for their own failure to improve public schools. In one sense they are correct. Unions have organized and used
political power to limit the expansion of corporate control over
schooling. Unions have defended
the traditions of Thomas Jefferson, John Dewey and others that public schooling
should prepare young people for democratic life.
Teachers’
voices are most often expressed through their unions. More than 83 percent of
teachers in the United States are represented by unions (National Education
Association, 2003). Teachers responded to the growth of educational management
and bureaucracy in the 1960s and 1970s by forming unions. In the intervening
decades, unions have become increasingly politically active, using their
organization and money to protect their members’ interests such as in the state
budget fights. Organized teachers’
unions have often protected school funding in the midst of public fiscal
crises. Serious effort at school reform must engage teachers through their
unions, and teachers interested in school reform need to enlist their unions’
aid. Unions have the organization and political capital that can assist or
defeat efforts to democratize public schools.
Teachers
increasingly work in an
environment that is often neither professional, free nor democratic. Particularly since NCLB and assessment
based reform, teachers’ decision
making has been restricted. Unions provide an important limit to the arbitrary power of administrators.
Teachers
in low-performing schools are too often treated as unworthy people—a
failure. They are blamed for the failures of the schools to educate, in spite of the economic/social
structures that leads to school failure.
Teachers are frequently
reminded of their low status by conflicts with students, orders from administrators,
and stories in the press. Compliance
is demanded to a long list of rules, teach this material, give this test,
monitor lunch counts, supervise the playground. Unions assist teachers with
these matters. Too often the buildings are dismal, rundown, inadequate. The
bathrooms are dismal, supplies are lacking, and most of all, time is lacking.
Most teachers know how to teach much better than they presently perform, but they
need time to prepare, to plan, and to support students.
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