by Duane Campbell
There are few institutions more directly
connected to our state and national prosperity and our democracy than public
schools. Now, a few states,
primarily in the South, are dismantling public funding in order to create for
profit options for private schools. http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/28/education/states-shifting-aid-for-schools-to-the-families.html.
The truth is that most charter schools are public, that is they are
funded by public funds. Usually
they are managed privately, at times for profit. The teachers in these schools
usually lack union protections.
Charters have become popular in communities of poor people
because the urban public schools are often failing. Parents want an alternative
for their children. Often in these
communities the health system, the police, the nutrition and fire systems and
employment opportunities are
usually failing.
Smart and adept politicians, usually Republicans, use the failure of poorly funded urban schools as a hammer to batter public education.
It is not
surprising that this rejection of
public education as a route to prosperity for all comes from the South and states dominated
by Republican legislatures. Arizona, Indiana, Texas,
and Alabama and the other states promoting charters can go ahead and decline if they so choose, however we need to set
up some borders and tariffs, and perhaps trade agreements to prevent their move
to “free market” choices from imposing vast new costs on the states which
continue to want democracy and prosperity. Remember, free market ideology is what brought us the
economic crisis since 2007.
Public schools
have significantly contributed to
U.S. prosperity for the last 100
years and they have fostered our national unity. It is accurate that some public schools
are failing- particularly those serving low income and minority children. But, there is no evidence that
privatizing will improve these schools.
The managerial
models brought into public education from the corporate world have failed. They
have not improved student well
being, student achievement, nor democratic opportunity.
The arguments
for privatization are based upon the myths of a “rational market”, or the
rational market hypothesis. Loyalty
to this ideology created the
recent economic crisis. There is
no evidence that more competition leads to more equality. It only leads to improved opportunity
for selected groups – now funded at state expense. It doesn’t even seem to lead
to improved schooling for the great majority of students. There is no evidence that more
competition leads to more democracy nor more democratic institutions. This is
the neo liberal myth.
The
current era is time for a change
for our society and in our schools. This generation must renew our democratic society. We face marked crises in government, politics, families, communities
and in the schools. Business
interests promote a neo liberal agenda that provides them with more profits
while starving the public sphere of the society. Public schools have a
particular responsibility to reverse these crises and to renew our democratic
society. The first mission of
pubic schooling is to equip all students for the responsibilities and
privileges of citizenship – and
many of the schools in low income areas are presently not fulfilling this mission. If we do not
solve the problems of low performing schools our democracy is endangered. For our democracy
to survive we need to create
schools that value all of our children and encourages their educational achievement.
All children need a good education to
participate in our democracy and prepare for life in the rapidly changing economy. Making schooling
valuable and useful is vital to prosperity for all. Lack of quality education is a ticket to economic hardship. The more years of school that a student
completes, the more money they are likely to earn as adults and the better their chance to get and keep a good
job. Unemployment is highest among school dropouts as is incarceration for
crimes. When we fail to educate
all of our children, the high costs of this failure come back to hurt us in
unemployment, drugs, crime, incarceration, violence and social conflict.
We
need to invest in urban schools, provide equal educational opportunities in
these schools, and recruit a well prepared teaching force that begins to reflect the student
populations in these schools. We must insist on equal opportunity to learn,
without compromise. When we do these things, we will begin
to protect the freedom to learn for our children and our grandchildren, and to
build a more just and democratic
society.
Many chools
serving urban and impoverished populations need fundamental change. These
schools do not open the doors to economic opportunity. They usually do not
promote equality. Instead, they recycle inequality. The high school drop out rates alone demonstrate that urban schools prepare less than 50 percent of their students for entrance
into the economy and society. A democratic agenda for school reform includes
insisting on fair taxation and adequate
funding for all children. We cannot build a safe, just, and prosperous
society while we leave so many young people behind.
At present there
is not a political agreement to make the necessary investments to bring about
substantial school reform in public schools. The U.S. government and the California state
government will not make the necessary investments to improve education,
nor to improve health care or to rebuild the economic infrastructure. The proposals to shift public funds to
private schools is not reform. It
is a major move in the wrong direction. They propose to fix public
education by giving the money to
private education.
Really ?
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