http://www.salon.com/2013/09/15/diane_ravitch_school_privatization_is_a_hoa…
Diane Ravitch: School privatization is a hoax, “reformers” aim to destroy public schools
Sunday, Sep 15, 2013 04:00 AM PDT
Our public schools aren't in decline. And "reformers" with wild promises
don't care about education — just profits
Diane Ravitch
Topics: Books, Education, Editor's Picks, public schools, Teachers, Waiting for
Superman, Charter schools, Race to the Top, No Child Left Behind, Melinda Gates, Gates
Foundation, Oprah Winfrey, Media Criticism, Technology News, Business News, Life News,
News, Politics News
(Credit: Lightspring via Shutterstock/Salon)
Excerpted from "Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger
to America’s Public Schools"
As long as anyone can remember, critics have been saying that the schools are in decline.
They used to be the best in the world, they say, but no longer. They used to have real
standards, but no longer. They used to have discipline, but no longer. What the critics
seldom acknowledge is that our schools have changed as our society has changed. Some who
look longingly to a golden age in the past remember a time when the schools educated only
a small fraction of the population.
But the students in the college-bound track of fifty years ago did not get the high
quality of education that is now typical in public schools with Advanced Placement courses
or International Baccalaureate programs or even in the regular courses offered in our top
city and suburban schools. There are more remedial classes today, but there are also more
public school students with special needs, more students who don’t read English, more
students from troubled families, and fewer students dropping out. As for discipline, it
bears remembering a 1955 film called “Blackboard Jungle,” about an unruly, violent
inner-city school where students bullied other students. The students in this school were
all white. Today, public schools are often the safest places for children in tough
neighborhoods.
The claim that the public schools are in decline is not new. In his Pulitzer Prize-winning
book “Anti-intellectualism in American Life,” Richard Hofstadter characterized writing on
education in the United States as “a literature of acid criticism and bitter complaint . .
. The educational jeremiad is as much a feature of our literature as the jeremiad in the
Puritan sermons.” From the 1820s to our own time, reformers have complained about low
standards, ignorant teachers, and incompetent school boards. He noted that anyone longing
for the “good old days” would have difficulty finding a time when critics were not
bemoaning the quality of the public schools.
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There is a tendency nowadays to hark back with nostalgia to the mythical good old days,
usually imagined as about forty or fifty years ago. But few people seem to realize there
never was a time when everyone succeeded in school. When present-day critics refer to what
they assume was a better past, they look back to a time when a large proportion of
American youths did not complete high school and only a small minority completed four
years of college. In those supposedly halcyon days, the schools in many states were
racially segregated, as were most colleges and universities. Children with disabilities
did not have a right to a free public education until after the passage of federal
legislation in 1975 and were often excluded from public schools. Nor did schools enroll
significant numbers of non-English-speaking students in the 1940s and 1950s or even the
1960s. Immigration laws restricted the admission of foreigners to the United States from
the early 1920s until the mid-1960s. After the laws were changed, the schools began to
enroll students from Latin America, Asia, the Middle East, Russia, Africa, and other parts
of the world that had previously arrived in small numbers.
Thus, those who now sharply criticize the public schools speak fondly of an era when most
schools were racially segregated; when public schools were not required to accept children
with physical, mental, and emotional handicaps; when there were relatively few students
who did not speak or read English; and when few graduated from high school and went to
college.
Indifferent to history, today’s corporate reformers insist that the public schools are in
an unprecedented crisis. They tell us that children must be able to “escape” their
“failing public schools.” They claim they are “for the children,” unlike their teachers,
who are not for the children. They would have the public believe that children and their
teachers are in warring camps. They put “children first” or “students first.” Their
policies, they say, will make us competitive and give us “great teachers” and “great
schools” in every community. They say they know how to “close the achievement gap,” and
they claim to be leading “the civil rights issue of our time.” Their policies, they say,
will make our children into “global competitors.” They will protect our national security.
They will make America strong again. The corporate reformers play to our anxieties, even
rekindling dormant Cold War fears that we may be in jeopardy as a nation if we don’t buy
what they are selling.
The critics want the public to believe that our public schools are a clear and present
danger to our society. Unless there is radical change, they say, our society will fall
apart. Our economy will disappear. Our national security is in danger. The message is
clear: public education threatens all that we hold dear.
Recognizing that most Americans have a strong attachment to their community schools, the
corporate reformers have taken care to describe their aims in pseudo-populist terms. While
trying to scare us with warnings of dire peril, they mask their agenda with rhetoric that
is soothing and deceptive. Though they speak of “reform,” what they really mean is
deregulation and privatization. When they speak of “accountability,” what they really mean
is a rigid reliance on standardized testing as both the means and the end of education.
When they speak of “effective teachers,” what they mean is teachers whose students produce
higher scores on standardized tests every year, not teachers who inspire their students to
love learning. When they speak of “innovation,” they mean replacing teachers with
technology to cut staffing costs. When they speak of “no excuses,” they mean a boot-camp
culture where students must obey orders and rules without question.
When they speak of “personalized instruction,” they mean putting children in front of
computers with algorithms that supposedly adjust content and test questions to the ability
level of the student but actually sacrifice human contact with a real teacher. When they
speak of “achievement” or “performance,” they mean higher scores on standardized tests.
When they speak of “data-driven instruction,” they mean that test scores and graduation
rates should be the primary determinant of what is best for children and schools. When
they speak of “competition,” they mean deregulated charters and deregulated private
schools competing with highly regulated public schools. When they speak of “a successful
school,” they refer only to its test scores, not to a school that is the center of its
community, with a great orchestra, an enthusiastic chorus, a hardworking chess team, a
thriving robotics program, or teachers who have dedicated their lives to helping the
students with the highest needs (and often the lowest scores).
The reformers define the purpose of education as preparation for global competitiveness,
higher education, or the workforce. They view students as “human capital” or “assets.” One
seldom sees any reference in their literature or public declarations to the importance of
developing full persons to assume the responsibilities of citizenship.
Of equal importance are the topics that corporate reformers don’t talk about. Seldom do
they protest budget cuts, no matter how massive they may be. They do not complain when
governors and legislatures cut billions from the public schools while claiming to be
reformers. They do not protest rising rates of child poverty. They do not complain about
racial segregation. They see no harm in devoting more time and resources to standardized
testing. They are not heard from when districts cut the arts, libraries, and physical
education while spending more on testing. They do not complain when federal or state or
city officials announce plans to test children in kindergarten or even pre-kindergarten.
They do not complain about increased class size. They do not object to scripted curricula
or teachers’ loss of professional autonomy.
They do not object when experienced teachers are replaced by recruits who have only a few
weeks of training. They close their eyes to evidence that charters enroll
disproportionately small numbers of children with disabilities, or those from troubled
homes, or English-language learners (in fact, they typically deny any such disparities,
even when documented by state and federal data). They do not complain when for-profit
corporations run charter schools or when educational services are outsourced to for-profit
businesses. Indeed, they welcome entrepreneurs into the reform community as investors and
partners.
If the American public understood that reformers want to privatize their public schools
and divert their taxes to pay profits to investors, it would be hard to sell the corporate
idea of reform. If parents understood that the reformers want to close down their
community schools and require them to go shopping for schools, some far from home, that
may or may not accept their children, it would be hard to sell the corporate idea of
reform. If the American public understood that the very concept of education was being
disfigured into a mechanism to apply standardized testing and sort their children into
data points on a normal curve, it would be hard to sell the corporate idea of reform.
If the American public understood that their children’s teachers will be judged by the
same test scores that label their children as worthy or unworthy, it would be hard to sell
the corporate idea of reform. If the American public knew how inaccurate and unreliable
these methods are, both for children and for teachers, it would be hard to sell the
corporate idea of reform. And that is why the reform message must be rebranded to make it
palatable to the public.
The leaders of the privatization movement call themselves reformers, but their premises
are strikingly different from those of reformers in the past. In earlier eras, reformers
wanted such things as a better curriculum, better-prepared teachers, better funding, more
equitable funding, smaller classes, and desegregation, which they believed would lead to
better public schools. By contrast, today’s reformers insist that public education is a
failed enterprise and that all these strategies have been tried and failed.
They assert that the best way to save education is to hand it over to private management
and let the market sort out the winners and the losers. They wish to substitute private
choices for the public’s responsibility to provide good schools for all children. They
lack any understanding of the crucial role of public schools in a democracy.
The central premise of this movement is that our public schools are in decline. But this
is not true. The public schools are working very well for most students. Contrary to
popular myth, the scores on the no-stakes federal tests— the National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP) — are at an all-time high for students who are white, black,
Hispanic, and Asian. Graduation rates are also at an all-time high.
More young people than ever are entering college. Even more would go to college if the
costs were not so high.
Of course some schools and districts have very low test scores and low graduation rates,
and this has always been true. Most of these schools and districts have two features in
common: poverty and high concentrations of racial minorities. The combination of these two
factors is associated with low test scores. Children whose parents are poor and have low
educational attainment tend to have lower test scores.
Children who are poor receive less medical attention and less nutrition and experience
more stress, disruption, and crises in their lives. These factors have an ongoing and
profound effect on academic performance.
That is why poor children need even more stability, more support, smaller class sizes, and
more attention from their teachers and others in their schools, but often receive far
less, due to underfunding.
Unfortunately, many people are unwilling to address the root causes of poor school
outcomes, because doing so is either too politically difficult or too costly.
They believe it is faster, simpler, and less expensive to privatize the public schools
than do anything substantive to reduce poverty and racial isolation or to provide the
nurturing environments and well-rounded education that children from prosperous families
receive.
Instead, the privatization movement nonchalantly closes the schools attended by poor
children and destabilizes their lives. The privatization agenda excites the interest of
edu-entrepreneurs, who see it as a golden opportunity to make money. But it is bad for our
society. It undermines the sense of collective responsibility for collective needs. It
hurts public education not only by attacking its effectiveness and legitimacy but by
laying claim to its revenues. The money allocated to privately managed charters and
vouchers represents a transfer of critical public resources to the private sector, causing
the public schools to suffer budget cuts and loss of staffing and services as the private
sector grows, without providing better education or better outcomes for the students who
transfer to the private-sector schools.
Reformers in every era have used the schools as punching bags. In one era, progressives
complained that the schools were obsolete, backward, mindless, rigid, and out of step with
the demands of the modern age. Then, in their turn, came anti-progressives or
“essentialists” who complained that the schools had grown soft, standards and curriculum
had collapsed, and students were not learning as much as they once did.
At the beginning of the twentieth century, reformers lambasted the schools, saying they
were too academic and ignored the economy’s need for trained workers. In 1914, Congress
passed the first federal legislation to encourage industrial and vocational education so
that schools could prepare young people for jobs on the nation’s farms and factories. In
the 1930s, with millions of people out of work, reformers blamed the schools for their
inability to keep students enrolled and out of the ranks of the unemployed. Reformers
called on the schools to be more attentive to the needs of adolescents so as to entice
them to stay in school longer. The New Deal created the Civilian Conservation Corps and
the National Youth Administration to provide education and training for young people
during the Depression.
In the 1940s, reformers complained that the schools were obsolete and were failing to give
students the skills they needed for life and work; “life adjustment education” became the
reformers’ battle cry. In the 1950s, reformers said that the schools had forgotten the
basics and needed to raise academic standards and return to time-honored subject matter
disciplines. In the 1960s, reformers said that the schools were too academic and that
students were stifled by routine and dreary assignments; the reformers wanted more
spontaneity, more freedom, and fewer requirements for students. At the same time, the
civil rights movement achieved major gains, and the schools became the focus of national
legislation and Supreme Court rulings that required desegregation.
In the late 1970s, a backlash against the reform ideas of the 1960s and early 1970s led to
the rise of minimum competency testing and, once again, a return to the basics. Despite
the pendulum swings, despite the critics and reform movements, the American public
continued to be grateful for public education and to admire its community schools.
Then came the 1980s, with a stern warning in 1983 from the National Commission on
Excellence in Education that we were “a nation at risk” because of the low standards and
low expectations in our schools. Our national slippage was caused, said the commission, by
“a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a Nation and a people.”
This mediocre educational performance was nothing less than “an act of unthinking,
unilateral educational disarmament.” The alarmist rhetoric was excessive, but it was
enough to generate media attention and caused many states to raise their graduation
requirements. In response to the dire warnings in the 1983 report, standards, testing, and
accountability became the national agenda for school reform.
Many policy makers agreed: set higher standards; test to see if students have mastered
them; hold back students or prevent them from graduating if they don’t pass. There was no
research to support these strategies, but they were widely accepted anyway, as were
proposals to reward the schools that succeeded on state tests and penalize those that did
not. The first Bush administration embraced these ideas, as did the Clinton
administration. The second Bush administration made testing and accountability the federal
agenda with passage of its No Child Left Behind legislation.
Somehow, in the midst of all this nonstop controversy and criticism, the public schools
continued teaching generations of students. And somehow, despite the endless complaints
and policy churn, the American economy continued to be the largest in the world. And
somehow, American culture continued to be a creative and vibrant force, reshaping the
cultures of other nations (for better or worse). Our democracy survived, and American
technological innovations changed the way people live around the globe. Despite the
alleged failures of the schools that educated the vast majority of them, American workers
are among the most productive in the world.
After the publication of “A Nation at Risk: The Imperative For Educational Reform” in
1983, public discourse about the nation’s educational system settled on the unfounded
belief that America’s public schools were locked into an arc of decline. Report after
report was issued by commissions, task forces, and study groups, purporting to document
the “crisis” in American education, the “crisis” of student achievement, the “crisis” of
high school dropouts, the “crisis” of bad teachers.
News magazines like Time and Newsweek published stories about the crisis, television
networks ran specials about the crisis, editorialists opined about the causes of the
crisis. The steady drumbeat of negative journalism had its effect: Public opinion about
the quality of American public education dropped from 1973 to 2012. In 1973, 58 percent of
Americans felt confident about the public schools, but by 2012 their approval rating had
dropped to only 29 percent (which still was higher than public confidence in banks and big
business, which stood at 21 percent, or Congress at 13 percent).
In striking contrast, Americans whose children attended public schools continued to have a
very high opinion of their own schools. In another Gallup poll in 2012, only 19 percent of
the public gave an A or a B to the nation’s public schools, but 77 percent of parents
awarded high marks to their own public school, the one they knew best. Two-thirds of
respondents said they read mostly “bad stories” in the media about public schools. So, the
parents who had the most direct experience with the schools thought well of them, but the
relentless negative coverage by the media very likely drove down the general public’s
estimation of American public education.
More recently, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation dedicated its considerable energies
to persuading the public and policy makers that the nation’s public schools are failing.
In 2005, Bill Gates told the nation’s governors that the nation’s high schools were
“obsolete” and “broken.” At that time, he wanted to redesign the American high school by
making schools smaller, with the goal that every student would be prepared to enter
college. Three years later, his foundation abandoned its small-school initiative, having
spent $2 billion to persuade districts to replace their comprehensive high schools with
schools too small to offer a balanced curriculum. Despite this setback, Gates remained
certain that the public school system was obsolete and broken. The solution, his
foundation now believed, was to develop new evaluation systems that could identify
ineffective teachers so that there would be an effective teacher in every classroom.
In 2012, Melinda Gates was interviewed on the PBS “NewsHour.” When the interviewer asked
her what was “working and what can scale up,” she responded:
If you look back a decade ago, when we started into this work, there wasn’t even a
conversation across the nation about the fact that our schools were broken, fundamentally
broken. And I think that dialogue has changed. I think the American public has woken up to
the fact now that schools are broken. We’re not serving our kids well.
They’re not being educated for the — for technology society.
The Gates Foundation and others financed a lavish, well-coordinated media campaign to
spread the word about our broken public schools; its leading edge was a documentary film
called “Waiting for Superman.” The film, which included interviews with Michelle Rhee,
Bill Gates, and the economist Eric Hanushek, among others, made the central points that
public education was failing, that resources don’t matter, and that the best ways to fix
the national crisis of low test scores were to expand the number of privately managed
charters, fire ineffective teachers, and weaken the unions that protected them. It was
released in September 2010 with an unprecedented publicity campaign, funded in large part
by the Gates Foundation, and was featured on the cover of Time magazine. The film was also
the centerpiece of a week of programming on NBC, which the network called “Education
Nation,” as well as the subject of two programs on Oprah Winfrey’s popular television
show.
The film told the story of five children who were desperate to enroll in privately managed
charter schools and whose hopes depended on winning the lottery to gain admission. Each
child was adorable, and the viewers’ emotions became engaged with their plights and their
dreams of escaping from awful public schools (and in one case a Catholic school). The film
painted public schools as failures whose teachers were self-centered, uncaring, and
incompetent. The statistics in the film about poor educational performance were misleading
and erroneous, as was its idyllic portrait of charter schools. Yet the producers and
promoters of the film made sure it was viewed as widely as possible, giving free
screenings throughout the country to parent groups, state legislatures, even to the
national conference of the PTA.
“Waiting for Superman” provided the charter school movement with a degree of public
visibility it had never had. It also gave the movement a populist patina, making it seem
that if you were concerned about the plight of poor inner-city children, you would
certainly support the creation of many more charter schools. The film burnished the claim
by charter advocates that they were involved in “the civil rights issue of our time,”
because they were leading the battle to provide more choice to poor and disadvantaged
children trapped in low-performing public schools.
The film’s narrative, as well as the larger public discussion, was directed away from the
controversial issue of privatization to the ideologically appealing concept of choice.
Reformers don’t like to mention the word “privatization,” although this is indeed the
driving ideological force behind the movement. “Choice” remains the preferred word, since
it suggests that parents should be seen as consumers with the ability to exercise their
freedom to leave one school and select another. The new movement for privatization has
enabled school choice to transcend its tarnished history as an escape route for southern
whites who sought to avoid court-ordered desegregation in the 1950s and 1960s.
To advance the privatization agenda, it was necessary never to mention the P word and to
keep repeating the C word. After all, the public had no reason to be enthusiastic about
the takeover of one of its essential public institutions by private financiers and
entrepreneurs. Privatization of libraries, hospitals, prisons, and other basic services
had long been hailed by those on the political right, but how could one persuade entire
communities to hand over their children and their public schools to private sector
corporations, some of which hoped to turn a profit off their children, in order to reward
their shareholders? The only way to accomplish this sleight of hand was to pursue a
skillful public relations campaign that drummed in the message, over and over, that our
public schools are failures, that these failures harm our children and threaten our
nation’s future prosperity. Repeat it often enough, and people would come to believe that
any alternative would be better than the current system.
Once that message sank in, Americans would be ready for the antidote: eliminating the
public schools they had long known and cherished as the centers of their communities.
The prestigious Council on Foreign Relations issued a report in 2012 intended to provoke
fears that the public schools not only were failing but endangered the future survival of
our nation. Joel I. Klein, former chancellor of the New York City public schools, and
Condoleezza Rice, former secretary of state in the administration of President George W.
Bush, were co-chairs of the task force that produced the report. The report warned that
the nation’s public schools were a very grave threat to national security. It recited
doleful statistics showing that students in the United States were not leading the world
on international assessments but scoring only in the middle (but not mentioning that this
was the same complaint that had been expressed in “A Nation at Risk” thirty years
earlier). It asserted that employers could not find qualified workers and that the schools
were not preparing people to serve in the military, the intelligence service, or other
jobs critical to national defense.
On and on went the bill of indictment against the public schools. The task force offered
three recommendations. One was that the states should adopt the Common Core standards in
mathematics and reading, already endorsed by forty-six states. Since the Common Core
standards have never been field-tested, no one knows whether they will raise test scores
or cause the achievement gap among different racial, ethnic, and income groups to narrow
or to widen. One study, by Tom Loveless of the Brookings Institution, predicted that the
standards would have little or no effect on academic achievement; he noted that “from 2003
to 2009, states with terrific standards raised their National Assessment of Educational
Progress scores by roughly the same margin as states with awful ones.” Loveless reported
that there was as much variation within states, even those with excellent standards, as
between states.
The task force’s second recommendation was that the schools of the nation should have a
“national security readiness audit” to see if they were doing their job in preparing
students to meet the nation’s economic and military needs. This seemed like a hollow
attempt to revive Cold War fears, given that there was no military adversary comparable to
the Soviet Union. The report did not suggest what agency should conduct this audit, what
it would cost, and what would happen to those schools that failed it.
The key recommendation of the task force, whose members included leading figures in the
corporate reform movement, was that more school choice was needed, specifically the
expansion of privately managed charter schools and vouchers.
If it were true that the nation faced a very grave security threat, this was not much of a
call to arms to combat it, since most states had already adopted the Common Core standards
and were increasing school choice in response to the Obama administration’s Race to the
Top program.
Perhaps the most curious development over the three decades from “A Nation at Risk” to the
2012 report of the Council on Foreign Relations was this: what was originally seen in 1983
as the agenda of the most libertarian Republicans — school choice — had now become the
agenda of the establishment, both Republicans and Democrats. Though there was no new
evidence to support this agenda and a growing body of evidence against it, the realignment
of political forces on the right and the left presented the most serious challenge to the
legitimacy and future of public education in our nation’s history.
Excerpted from “Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to
America’s Public Schools.” Copyright © 2013 by Diane Ravitch. Excerpted by permission of
Knopf, a division of Random House LLC. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be
reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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