Selling out public schools [View all]
Here in the industrialized worlds most economically unequal nation, public education is still held up as the great equalizer if not of outcome, then of opportunity. Schools are expected to be machines that overcome poverty, low wages, urban decay and budget cuts and somehow singlehandedly level the playing field for the next generation. And if they dont fully level the playing field, they are at least supposed to act as a counter-force against both racial and economic inequality.
That vision, however, is now under assault by both political parties in America. On the Republican side, the Washington Post reports Mitt Romney just unveiled a pro-choice, pro-voucher, pro-states-rights education program that seems certain to hasten the privatization of the public education system completely. On the other side, Wall Street titans in the Democratic Party with zero experience in education policy are marshaling tens of millions of dollars to do much of what Romney aims to do as president and they often have a willing partner in President Barack Race to the Top Obama and various Democratic governors.
Funded by corporate interests who naturally despise organized labor, both sides have demonized teachers unions as the primary problem in education somehow ignoring the fact that most of the best-performing public school systems in America and in the rest of the world are, in fact, unionized (we are never supposed to ask how, if unions are the primary problem, so many unionized schools in America and abroad do so well?). Not surprisingly, these politicians and activists insist they are driven solely by their regard for the nations children and they expect us to ignore the massive amount of money their benefactors (and even the activists personally) stand to make by transforming public education into yet another private profit center. Worse, they ask us also to forget that in the last few years of aggressive reform (read: evisceration) of public education, the education gap has actually gotten far worse, with the most highly-touted policies put in place now turning the schoolhouse into yet another catalyst of crushing inequality.
Here are the five most prominent of those policies and how they threaten to make this country even more economically unequal and racially segregated than ever before.
more . . . http://www.salon.com/2012/05/30/selling_out_public_schools/