Corporate reformers wreck public schools [View all]
Both parties embrace all the wrong education reform ideas. Why is it so hard to invest in kids and teachers?
NIKHIL GOYAL
When Barack Obama was elected president of the United States in November 2008, I was grinding my way through the eighth grade, my final year at John F. Kennedy Middle School before I was to move up to high school. While I followed the election closely, the candidates positions on education policy werent of much interest to me. And at the time, I didnt give any thought to how my school experience could be different.
Among many progressives and liberals, there were flickers of hope that Obamas election signaled the prospect that his presidency would lead to the reversal of the No Child Left Behind Act and Bush-era policies. It sure seemed that way once he named Stanford professor and NCLB critic Linda Darling-Hammond to head his transitions education policy team.
But then in December 2008, any remaining optimism suddenly vanished. The president-elect appointed the CEO of Chicago Public Schools and his friend (and basketball pal) Arne Duncan to the post of secretary of education. A report by the Broad Foundation, a group that has financed anti public education reforms, noted that Obamas election and the appointment of Duncan marked the pinnacle of hope for our work in education reform. In many ways, we feel the stars have finally aligned.
As head of Chicago schools, Duncan shook up the systemin a disturbing manner. He bounced kids around from school to school to make it appear as though schools were turning around. He did not confront the effect of poverty on learning in a city system where 80 percent of schoolchildren live below the poverty line. He dumbed down standards, misleading the public when he pronounced that test scores had improved. He shuttered failing schools, replacing neighborhood schools with charters, often financed and run by fat cats and corporations. This is the man Obama put his faith in to run the Department of Education of the most powerful nation in the world.
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http://www.salon.com/2016/02/21/corporate_reformers_wreck_public_schools_billionaire_foundations_and_wall_street_financiers_are_not_out_to_help_your_kids_learn/