One
of the things the right wing does is keep organizing. While we rest and
recover from an election such as California Prop. 30, they are off on their
next campaign. They do this by having hundreds of advocates. So that
while some recover, others launch their next campaign.
The Foundation for Excellence in Education’s annual conference
was held Nov 26-27 in Washington, D.C. The agenda
hits most of the main policies former Gov. Jeb Bush has supported: How to make
teachers more effective; school district accountability; charter school
accountability; the parent trigger and funding; and what to expect from new
Common Core assessments.
The agenda of the
agenda of the right and of the Obama administration has focused on Common Core
Standards. To date there has been
no evidence that common standards actually change what happens in
classrooms. This is the kind of
reform that the well funded foundations like because they can go out and
advocate and raise funds without having to get their hands dirty by talking
with teachers, students or parents.
Major
donors such as the Gates Foundation, the Broad Foundation, and others are increasingly driving education
agendas and that influence just continues to grow. These foundations have no public accountability, but they been successful in capturing the policy
agenda from local school boards, state legislatures, in the press and in Congress despite their lack of evidence of success.
In the
speakers and leaders of the Foundation for Excellence in Education ( Jeb Bush),
you see an increased sophistication of the anti teacher union part of their
message. They have developed what
look like PR developed talking points which are probably focus group tested.
They are less openly anti union,
just pro teacher professionalism.
And, of course to them, teacher unions are not professional. Conservative advocates use many of the same messages as the
Democrats for Educational Reform group has used. The effort seems to be to keep unions out of states and
districts where they presently are absent, and then the Democrats For Education
Reform can to seek to isolate
unions from “reform minded “ teachers where unions are strong.
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