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There's a comment attributed to Einstein: "The sign of insanity is when you do the same thing over and over again and expect different results." I wonder what this eminent thinker would have to say about someone who not only repeats the same flawed procedure but then expands on it. That is what Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana is doing by increasing the number of charter schools state-wide after turning over all the district schools in New Orleans to charter managers. Jindal obviously thinks it's a good thing as he declared last year in a speech in the Capitol:
"Louisiana Governor and likely presidential candidate Bobby Jindal (R) released his new "road map" for reforming K-12 education focusing on the importance of deregulating and privatizing public schools and holding up New Orleans' all-charter Recovery School District as a model for the nation. "I'm proud we've increased the number of charter schools, nearly doubling them," Jindal told an audience on Capitol Hill. "I get so frustrated when people tell us to wait for incremental gains. We have seen remarkable gains."This is the "message" Jindal delivers in light of his opportunity to privatize all the schools in New Orleans as an example of what can happen when a school system is being "reformed" from the top down. First of all " new data calls the supposed gains into question. Most of the class of 2014 graduating from the 100%-charter New Orleans Recovery School District scored so low on the national ACT test that they didn't meet the minimum requirements for Louisiana's colleges. According to numbers crunched by Louisiana public school teacher and doctor of statistics Mercedes Schneider, just over 6 percent of high school seniors in the Recovery School District scored high enough in English and Math to qualify for admission into a Louisiana four-year college or university straight out of high school. Five of the district's 16 high schools produced not a single student who met these requirements. The district's test scores were extremely low prior to Hurricane Katrina and the charter school conversion, but despite Jindal's claims of "remarkable gains," there has been no improvement in New Orleans' Recovery School District ACT scores since 2005. The class average is now 16.4, one of the lowest in Louisiana. There was a 0.6 decline statewide. " Reality notwithstanding, let us explore Jindal's suggestion and try to anticipate the results of this "transformation" of education in the United States: 1.Since most charter schools "counsel out" ["Expel" in plain English] students who don't fit the profile for a successful education, that is, ones that are disruptive, poor learners and generally behave in ways that would have a negative effect on standardized test scores, if there were no more non-charters in which to dump them, where, besides the street, would they go during school hours? "There are a huge number of young people in New Orleans between the ages of 16 and 24 who are neither in school or working. The recent Measure of America study, conducted by the Social Science Research Council, found that the greater New Orleans/Metarie region is home to more than 26,000 so-called "opportunity youth." The youngest would have been just six when the overhaul of the school system began.Among the Governor's other accomplishments were: 1 . An increase in segregation in the city schools through his voucher program so egregious that "In 2013, the Justice Department took Jindal's voucher program to court, arguing that it was making racial segregation worse in the state's schools. In 2014, a judge ruled to allow the program to continue, but the federal government is closely monitoring its impact on segregation and could sue again in the future.4. "Part of the "reform" was the wholesale firing of some 7,000 teachers, most of whom were black, who formed the backbone of the city's middle class. 5. "One parent complained that the all-choice system actually disempowered parents. If she complained, she risked being asked to leave the charter school. The schools have more autonomy, but parents have less power. "The charter sector is now consolidating, with chains taking over most of the stand-alone charters, and with the successful charters defined as those that produce the highest scores, innovation is hard to find. What is common practice is long days, tough discipline, testing, and 'no excuses.' One parent lamented that the charter sector thinks that parents and children are problems, not patrons of the schools. If you might think these outcomes would give pause to the "reform" movement, consider what is happening in New York City with the increased influence of charter school entrepreneurs: In a July 30 New York Times feature on education it was reported that: "Jenny Sedlis, the executive director of StudentsFirstNY ,[a charter school lobbying group] said the group's goal was to create a permanent organization to advance important education changes and neutralize the influence of the teachers' union.Yet a spokesperson for the Governor delivers the same platitudes that were recited by Jindal. "Improving the state's education system has been one of the governor's top priorities since taking office," Jim Malatras, the governor's director of state operations, said through a spokeswoman, "and throughout that process, he has always partnered with groups, stakeholders, experts and other allies willing to fight for better futures for New York's students." That Governor Cuomo does not regard the teachers and their union representatives as an integral part of the partnering process is somewhat revealing. Cuomo is far less interested in education than in control of education especially since "the governor's proposals, particularly one that would base 50 percent of teachers' evaluations on their students' test scores, stirred fierce opposition from state and local teachers' unions, as well as many principals and parents." There are many more players in the reform movement's game plan, but in view of what happened to New Orleans, I would like to present my tentative conclusions based on fifty years of teaching.. 1. The education reform movement is not about education: it's about money: the growing influence of Pearson, the principle provider of instructional materials for useless test preps for useless tests proves this. That and the hedge fund investments in proprietary schools which have provided canny investors highly profitable enterprises. 2. But not only is the education reform movement about making money; it's about money with held or reduced in public school systems throughout the country . "At least 30 states are providing less funding per student for the 2014-15 school year than they did before the recession hit. Fourteen of these states have cut per-student funding by more than 10 percent.The war on teachers' unions is part of the agenda as new hired are cheaper and more easily controlled than old timers.. Meanwhile, despite dubious claims of success, on-line learning is spreading throughout the country like kudzu. 3. Finally, the education reform movement is about race and class. Although some of the staunchest allies of the reform and charter school movement are African-Americans and Latinos, the stringency with which the children "learn to follow instructions" is a very effective way of limiting the capacity of young learners to think for themselves.However, it is hard to argue with concerned parents who fear for their children's safety in non-charter schools when at least they will be safer in a school that can "council out" difficult learners rather than have to cope with them. But to me the worm in any apple determining the quality of learning in the classroom is the increasing emphasis on standardized testing which, in some states, such as Washington, is no longer required. Few elite schools are bothered by or even aware of standardized testing unless, of course, for college admission.If standardized test scores are so important, why aren't they taken that seriously in the privileged schools? The rise in the "opt out" of testing movement gives me hope that an increasing number of people see that the Emperor of Education has no clothes. However, in order to truly improve public education is a far greater challenge than coping with the charter and standardized scam; that is, to provide a living wage for all workers; invest to improve the quality of schools through better salaries and resources for teachers; and give a broad range of cultural and social opportunities for young learners with an abundance of the arts and sciences in the curriculum. -- This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website. ![]() More... |