Robin Alexander, head of the Cambridge Primary Review and prominent British educator, learned that the conservative Education Minister wants to bring a US charter leader to run the British school inspectorate, called Ofsted. He was not happy. He knows what corporate reform is, and he doesn’t want their leaders in Britain.
Alexander writes:
“A check on the touted names makes it clear that the search is less about talent than ideology. The reputation of every US candidate in which the Secretary of State is said to be interested rests on their messianic zeal for the universalisation of charter schools (the US model for England’s academies), against public schools (the equivalent of our LA-maintained schools), and against the teaching unions. This, then, is the mission that the government wants the new Chief Inspector to serve.
“Too bad that the majority of England’s primary schools are not, or not yet, academies. Too bad that Ofsted, according to its website, is supposed to be ‘independent and impartial’; and that Her Majesty’s Chief Inspector of Education, Children’s Services and Skills is required to report to Parliament, not to the political party in power; and that he/she must do so without fear or favour, judging the performance of all schools, whether maintained or academies, not by their legal status or political allegiance but by the standards they achieve and the way they are run. Too bad that on the question of the relative efficacy of academies and maintained schools the jury is still out, though Ofsted reports that while some truly outstanding schools are academies, many are not. And too bad that the teaching unions are legally-constituted organisations that every teacher has a right to join and that, by the way, they have an excellent track record in assembling reliable evidence on what works and what does not.
“When we consider the paragons across the pond who are reportedly being considered or wooed in Morgan’s search for Michael Wilshaw’s successor, mere ideology descends into dangerous folly. One of them runs a charter school chain in which the brutal treatment of young children in the name of standards has been captured on a video that has gone viral. Another leads a business, recently sold by the Murdoch empire (yes, he’s there too), that having failed to generate profits in digital education is now trying to make money from core curriculum and testing. A third is the union-bashing founder of a charter school chain that has received millions of dollars from right-wing foundations and individuals but whose dubious classroom practices have been exposed not just as morally unacceptable but, in terms of standards, educationally ineffective. A fourth, yet again a charter chain leader, has published a proselytising set text for the chain’s teachers tagged ‘the Bible of pedagogy for no-excuses charter schools’ that, according to critics, makes teaching uniform, shallow, simplistic and test-obsessed. Finally, the most prominent member of the group has been feted by American and British politicians alike for ostensibly turning round one of America’s biggest urban school systems by closing schools in the teeth of parental protest, imposing a narrow curriculum and high stakes tests, and making teacher tenure dependent on student scores; yet after eight years, fewer than a quarter of the system’s students have reached the ‘expected standard’ in literacy and numeracy.
“As head of Ofsted, every one of these would be a disaster. As for the US charter school movement for which such heroic individuals serve as models and cheerleaders, we would do well to pay less attention to ministerial hype and more to the evidence. In England we are familiar with occasional tales of financial irregularity and faltering accountability, and of DfE using Ofsted inspections to bludgeon academy-light communities into submission. But this is as nothing compared with the widely-documented American experience of lies, fraud, corruption, rigged student enrolment, random teacher hiring and firing and student misery in some US school districts and charters, all of which is generating growing parental and community opposition. Witness the Alliance to Reclaim Our Schools and this week’s nationwide ‘walk-in’ in defence of public education. Yet the culture that American parents, teachers, children and communities are combining to resist is the one the UK government wishes, through Ofsted, to impose. Ministers believe in homework: have they done their own?”

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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Great to hear this very accurate prespective of US school “reform” from “across the pond”, and that the resistance of American parents, teachers, children and communities are, at least to some degree, being heard internationally-(or at least by Robin Alexander in England.)
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If the “reformers” could only read English! They might learn something from this. Oh, wait, ideologues don’t need to learn, they already “know” the answers. Great summary and thanks for sharing.
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Rankee & Yankee Go Home ❢
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Poor old England, she so much wants to be like the USA.
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
Will U.S. profit motivated, corporate driven, public education reform spread, like a terminal cancer, to the UK?
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Maybe public school parents in the UK and US can share information. We could save some time.
We’ve had ed reform in Ohio for going on 20 years.
It’s testing and charters. That’s the sum total of “ed reform” – tests for existing public schools and opening new charter schools.
It’s 90% “choice” and testing with the other 10% consisting of meaningless, feel-good blather about “equity” and “innovation” sprinkled in to appease liberals.
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Pearson is here because they are almost bankrupt in the U.K. They are really dependent on U.S. reform to keep them afloat.
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I’m not surprised. People in the US pay more for everything and get worse quality. We’ve become the suckers who buy all the garbage other (developed) countries reject.
That’s the price you pay for systemic political capture and corruption.
Our lawmakers see us as “marks”- ready to exploit.
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OT, Can you suggest articles where you got info re Pearson? Reuters said in Oct that Pearson’s stock had dropped as much as 18%. CBN said earnings would be lower than expected, ~17 pence. They lost big TX contract but did get 5-yr operations deal w College Board. About 40% of their business is outside North America (ELL in China, India does well). Tyia
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Reblogged this on Politicians Are Poody Heads and commented:
Robin Alexander hit the nail on the head regarding the numerous problems with the increasing charterization/corporatization of American public schools. He is absolutely right in resisting this being imported to Britain.
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Trading places. More of our chartering corruption to Great Britain and the Great Britain Inspectorate system now infecting the US, starting with teacher preparation programs thanks to The Gates Foundation and some of the friends of the Gates Foundation, including the Helmsley Charitable Trust.
Some of this is borrowed from a previous post. In late 2015, Gates awarded to “Teacher Prep Inspection — US, Inc.a grant for $3,248,182, 33 months.
If you work in teacher education, you should know that Inspections have already been piloted in the US. In 2013, Dr. Edward Crowe, co-founder of Teacher Preparation Analytics, managed the first pilots of the inspection process, modeled on the Tribal Group’s British inspection system. Crowe continues this work, leading the Gates-funded work Teacher Prep Inspection-US (TPI-US).
The Inspectorate criteria for rating teacher prep programs come form the infamous National Center for Teacher Quality’s ratings (published in US News and World Report).
Among the “experts” enlisted to shape and approve those criteria for the Gates-funded Inspectorate are:
Michael Barber, Chief Education Advisor, for Pearson International—publisher of texts, tests K-12, and teacher education, including on-line learning.
Doug Lemov, Managing Director of “The Taxonomy of Effective Teaching Practices” project for Uncommon (charter) Schools, trustee of the New York Charter Schools Association and of KIPP Tech Valley Charter School. Author of Teach Like a Champion: 49 Techniques that Put Students on the Path to College. Lemov is known for propagating the extremely authoritarian teaching techniques used in Eva Moskowitz’s Success Academy charter schools.
Meredith Liben, Director of Literacy and English Language Arts for Student Achievement Partners. Liben worked on the Common Core State Standards for English Language Arts and developed tools for analyzing text “complexity,” mathematical formulas and rules for selecting texts that comply with the Common Core State Standards (CCSS). Recall that that the Gates Foundation financed those standards. Only eight states are using the Common Core as written, nineteen have “re-branded” them.” More on the technical panel at NCQT at http://www.nctq.org/teacherPrep/review2014/ourApproach/whoWeAre/technicalPanel.jsp#318
Here is an overview of the US Inspectorate process, also showing the clear connection to criteria from NCTQ, notorious for their prescriptions that pretend to be based on research, http://www.iacte.net/files/Inspectorate%20Model%20Overview%201.31.14.docx
In the US Inspectorate— US (TPI-US)— higher education faculty in teacher education are excluded from the process except for being subjected to extensive surveillance and being “cooperative” in providing information as requested. Inspectors fault programs that fail to track the test scores produced by their graduates. The process tacks the equivalent of customer satisfaction reports from program graduates and employers of graduates (among much else).
You can get an idea of the process used in the 2013 inspections here. https://secure.aacte.org/apps/rl/res_get.php?fid=835&ref=rl
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Here’s a shocker- politicians are hoping no one will notice they don’t mention their plans for public schools:
“Want to know where the major presidential candidates stand on K-12 education? Don’t go to their campaign websites.
A quick review of the websites of every major 2016 contender wasn’t very revealing of their K-12 policy platforms when it comes to either their past record or their plans for the future. In fact, candidates of both parties—especially Democrats—were more likely to emphasize the other ends of the education spectrum, pre-school and college readiness, not elementary and secondary policy.”
I love how no one is willing to run on privatization, although they all back it lockstep at ed reform events and fundraisers and among fellow “movement” members.
They must be hoping they can pull an Obama.
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While we haven’t been hearing very strong about K-12 from Democratic candidates, can we force the issue? Can we make them talk about it, and force them to see our issues?
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Well, I’m glad to know that other people see the hypocrisy of the charter/reformster movement. I hope the British resist the temptation to import more of our idiocy.
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From the article “But this is as nothing compared with the widely-documented American experience of lies, fraud, corruption, rigged student enrolment, random teacher hiring and firing and student misery in some US school districts and charters, all of which is generating growing parental and community opposition. ”
This paragraph is full of words words usually used to describe criminal activities.
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