By Jeff Bryant
A favorite talking point of U.S. Secretary of
Education Betsy DeVos is to say that
conversations about education should not be about “systems and buildings” but
about “individual students.” It’s a skillfully crafted soundbite designed to
cast schools as oppressive bureaucracies that limit the education opportunities
available to children and families. It also differentiates schools from other
essential public infrastructure such as fire and police protection, sanitation,
and roads.
Few people question the
need to have a fire department or an office responsible for transportation, but
DeVos’s scripted phrase is an attempt to convince us that education has become
a consumer good we can pick up anywhere and that schools are relics of a bygone
era when we didn’t have the internet and other means of conveying knowledge.
But before DeVos casually
dismisses the need to dispense with public education institutions across the
country, she should look at the vital role schools and educators have played in
responding to the string of devastating natural disasters that hit America this
year.
When Hurricane Irma strafed Florida, over 6.5
million citizens were ordered to evacuate their homes in the flood zones.
Thousands found shelter in schools. Broward County, north of Miami, converted 21 schoolsinto shelters to take in those having to flee Fort Lauderdale and
other coastal towns. Palm Beach County schools took in 17,000 evacuees. Sarasota schools welcomed over 19,000 refugees. In Tampa-Hillsborough County, 45 of the district’s schools
became storm relief centers, sheltering nearly 30,000 evacuees.
To protect residents unable to get out of town,
Miami-Dade County converted 42 schools to shelters. In Monroe County, home to Key West which took
the brunt of the storm, the local school became a “refuge of last resort” for those unable to get off the islands.
In most cases, the people who staffed the
schools became the volunteersin the shelters, “working around the clock to feed evacuees, keep
the shelter clean, and provide other supports,” Education Week reports.
Teachers, principals, cafeteria workers,
janitors, social workers, and other school staff – many who are unionized
workers – were the “unsung heroes” of the storm relief effort, reports the Miami Herald. “Before
and during the storm, and into the aftermath, school employees worked
tirelessly, helping convert places of learning into safe havens for storm
evacuees.
When Irma shuttered schools and cut power in
high-poverty communities, where children rely on schools for free breakfast and
lunch, school districts used food trucks and delivery vans to distribute free meals to children.
When Hurricane Harvey slammed Texas with
torrential rains, 1 in 4 students in the state were affected by
the storm. A list of shelters taking in Harvey refugees published in a Houston news outlet
includes scores of schools along with churches and community centers.
While an owner of a furniture store made national headlines for taking in flood victims, educators and other school
staff across the state received few accolades as they helped to convert schools to shelters and deliver meals and blankets and other aids.
Schools used Facebook and Twitter to help family members track one another down, tell people
when shelters were full, and stay in touch with children and parents at their homes once the storm had passed
but schools had yet to reopen.
Victims of the most recent storm, Hurricane
Maria, that devastated all of Puerto Rico, are still digging out of the damage
and struggling to find access to safe drinking water and food. For many of the
sufferers and their communities, schools have been a lifeline. Many schools defied the widespread destruction to stay open
and serve as refuges for storm victims and community centers distributing water and meals.
Using the strength of their union, the
40,000-member Asociación de Maestros de Puerto Rico, Puerto Rican, educators
have distributed supplies, organized storm
centers, even provided money, in amounts of up to $500 each to help teachers
dealing with the impact of the storm.
Mainland schools and educators are playing key
roles in the storm relief effort as well, taking in hundreds of Puerto Rican
school children able to flee the island. Nearly 700 students displaced by the
storm have enrolledin the Orlando-Orange
County school district alone.
In California, where the
adversary isn’t wind and rain but devastating fire, schools and educators have
rushed to reopen campuses to resume teaching and learning after the blazes
displaced thousands of families and shut down 600 schools in three counties.
Educators, some of whom lost their homes, are returning to their workplaces with the urgency to “bring a
sense of security and normalcy” to traumatized children. Schools are
carefully following clean air protocolsto ensure safe environments for their students and bringing in
additional counselors and psychologists to help returning students with the
mental anguish of evacuating their homes and returning to the blackened
landscape.
Based on how schools and
educators have come up big for their communities hit by such cataclysmic
events, it would seem that Betsy DeVos would praise the “system” she leads and
urge the presidential administration she serves to bolster support for teachers
and schools.
Instead, while news stories showed how our
schools and educators performed heroically in the face of catastrophe,
DeVos urged parents to
choose education options other than their public schools and insultedanyone daring to defend our
public education system. That truly is “Sad!”
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