Erich Martel, an award-winning social studies teacher who retired after teaching for many years in the D.C. Public schools, here explains how unrealistic expectations set up the schools for failure and a hostile takeover. In doing so, he quotes my words back to me:
Martel writes:
How the Bipartisan Education Reform Party (forget right-wing vs left-wing; it’s a distraction) hijacked the social justice movement.
Here are just a few and their statutory icons:
Barack Obama & Arne Duncan & George Bush & Michelle Rhee & Joel Klein & Jeb Bush & the Broad Foundation & the Walmart Foundation & the Walton Family Foundation & the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation & Gov. Christie & Gov. Cuomo & Gov. Walker & Al Sharpton & Mitt Romney & NCLB & ESEA & RttT & Common Core, etc. & et al. (i.e. the bipartisan consensus)
In your “Left Back: A Century of Failed School Reforms” (2000), you wrote:
“Throughout the twentieth century, progressives claimed that the schools had the power and responsibility to reconstruct society. They took their cue from John Dewey, who in 1897 had proclaimed that the school was the primary means of social reform …”
“This messianic belief (more recently, “the social justice movement”) in the school and the teacher actually worked to the disadvantage of both, because it raised unrealistic expectations. It also put the schools squarely into the political arena, thereby encouraging ideologues of every stripe to try to impose their social, religious, cultural and political agendas on the schools. What was sacrificed over the decades … was a clear definition of what schools can realistically and appropriately accomplish for children and for society.” (p. 459)
If teachers’ decades-long claim that every up-from-poverty success “can thank a teacher,” then persistent school failure, the reformers say, must be teachers’ fault. This simple message reversal was available for any politician in need of a campaign slogan couched in civil rights language.
Deregulation, the new cyber-wealth, hostile takeovers, restructuring, leveraged buy-outs, etc. created concentrated super-wealth in search of investment that would appear socially progressive and a class of managers and politicians eager to adapt the business model to restructure public education. The siren song of Reform immobilized normal caution.

By the way, John Dewey HS was one of the schools slated for closure last summer but was halted by the courts.
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OY!
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Leon Black’s Apollo Global Management buys Twinkies, rest of Hostess snacks
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/black_takes_cake_xteJdxioIUEC549R3qpKTL
Junk education. Junk food. Stupid and fat. I guess that’s what the billionaire boys want.
In 2003, Apollo Global Management bought the Sylvan franchise, which included Connections Academy for less than $400 M investment (since 2000). Carving out Connections Academy, the firm sold JUST Connections Academy to Pearson for $400M in Sept. 2011. Apollo raked in $280 million, or about 20 times the cost of Connections.
http://www.thedeal.com/magazine/ID/044034/features/ma-deals-of-the-year-pearson-connections-education.php
Apollo went on to purchase McGraw-Hill’s education business in December 2012 for $2.5 billion. These complicated financial deals have to be balanced by more “risky” investments, like Cengage Learning, the second-largest college textbook publisher.
http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/apollo_crams_for_textbook_turnaround_Nitoa6Xg4SdFgt2OSQxzdI
Apollo wants to make inroads in the digital market for textbooks, but has to compete with the likes of Apple Inc. Poor babies! They all have “suffered because of a decrease in college, career and professional school enrollments and lower inventory stocking in bookstores and at online retailers.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2012-11-26/mcgraw-hill-selling-education-unit-to-apollo-for-2-5-billion.html
We must look to the top of the economic heap to understand why our planet and democracy are burning up. Will we resort to the Twinkie defense?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Twinkie_defense
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Great statement, Diane: “Deregulation, the new cyber-wealth, hostile takeovers, restructuring, leveraged buy-outs, etc. created concentrated super-wealth in search of investment that would appear socially progressive and a class of managers and politicians eager to adapt the business model to restructure public education. The siren song of Reform immobilized normal caution.”
TRUE!
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The only thing Martel has failed to discuss is his role in supporting Michelle Rhee as a Executive Board Member of the Washington Teacher Union. How he was a key supporter of the President George Parker and his possible criminal actions. There will be no re-writing history here!!
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Jeff,
I did not “support Rhee.” Support for Parker in the 2010 union elections (both of which were held after she had punitively transferred me ) was at no time support for Rhee, who had resigned before the second, run-off election.
Please support the lawsuit by EmpowerDC to stop the closing of 15 DCPS schools.
Come to the Save Our Schools Summit/Rally tonight (Thursday, 3/14) at Temple of Praise, 700 Southern Ave., NE DC (Ward 8)
Erich
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Barack Obama & Arne Duncan & George Bush & Michelle Rhee & Joel Klein & Jeb Bush & the Broad Foundation & the Walmart Foundation & the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation etc. etc…………………….
This list of ” the enemies of public education and the American worker” should appear regularly in every teacher union paper, on every teacher blog, stapled up on the bulletin board of every teachers lounge and a copy placed in the school mailbox of every teacher in the nation.
Every educator should know exactly who is behind the assault on our country’s schools.
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Those are just the high profile people. There are so many more with money and political clout who are behind the privatization of ALL of public education..
We must spread the word that people cannot tolerate phony “public-private partnerships” which pit the commons against for-profit shareholder interests (and “non-profits” that get away with acquiring millions in tax-free assets)
See Danny Weil. “The Corporate Privatization Raiders Destroying Public Education & Our Unions” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1xFhCyUwXdg
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Diane, please look at reports of what is happening right now at the Community College of: San Francisco, which is being threatened by privatization:
http://socialistaction.org/2013/03/sf-city-college-threatened-by-privatization/
and
The Privatization Assault On Community Colleges-Interview With Lawyer Kathleen Carroll
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This video makes me realize that we don’t understand how higher education is being privatized by the same players!
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Yes, exactly. Basically, paying infiltrators is the corporate approach. To dismantle public higher ed in CA, they’ve gotten to people in the organization that accredits schools. For more details, do a search of Kathleen Carroll on YouTube, where there are more videos of her explaining what’s going on and encouraging people to organize and push back.
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The demonization of President Obama here is a mirror of what the far right wing is saying. Does that concern any of you?
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I am not concerned that people expose the truth about Obama here. I am only concerned by how abhorrent the truth is: Obama sold out to corporate sponsors long ago and he and Duncan have been instrumental in moving the privatization of public education along at break-neck speed over the past four years.
That is the right wing ALEC agenda and it’s why the GOP and Democrats are on the same page regarding education, It’s also why, for the first time in my life, I did not vote for a Democrat last November. Obama reaps what he sows.
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And yet, Other Spaces, the right wing hates Obama. They despise his efforts to expand health care to millions of people. He recognizes that health care is vital. They reject and resist his efforts to increase taxes on the wealthy, in part to pay for more high quality early childhood education. And on and on. I’m not arguing that Obama (or any of us) are perfect.
It’s just striking how much this board often sounds like a mirror image, in terms of hatred for Obama, of the far right wing.
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The Democrats are not highly distinguishable from the Republicans anymore and they have lost many people who have long been their base, including a lot of educators who are tired of being repeatedly trashed and scape-goated by a government that ignores poverty and passes it off onto teachers to eradicate all by themselves..
This administration has figured out how to do end-runs around Congress to issue NCLB waivers and revise FERPA regulations that give away children’s privacy rights, as well as circumventing the constitution by requiring states that take RTTT funds to give up their 10th amendment rights. They should be able to figure out how to close tax loopholes, raise taxes on the 1%, penalize corporations for outsourcing and hiding assets in foreign countries, and require that highly profitable corporations pay their employees livable wages. But the Democrats have partnered with the 1% just as much as the GOP, so none of that is very likely to happen.
Obama also needs to figure out how to address all the companies that are cutting back on employee hours so they don’t have to pay for ObamaCare. I’m the uninsured Working Poor, unable to find full time work for the past five yeas, so I try to make ends meet with part time jobs. I can’t afford insurance now, let alone with reduced hours, so ObamaCare is far from being a step forward for people like me.
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Other Spaces, first, I hope that you find a satisfying full time job soon. One of the top priorities for the nation must be the creation of more full time, benefit paying jobs. Having some friends in your situation, I completely understand your situation.
You also make good points about teachers who are frustrated about the over-reliance on traditional, standardized, multiple choice tests.
Having said that, the right wing critics of Obama would strongly disagree that Obama has “sold out to corporate sponsors long ago.” They are furious that he is trying to increase taxes on the wealthiest people. They are enraged that he has challenged insurance companies. They call him a hypocrite for sending his children to a private school and then not supporting vouchers which would allow students to attend elite private and parochial schools. And so on.
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Vouchers are the only area of education where Obama differs from the far right. Otherwise, he is doing to education exactly what Republicans have wanted to do for a long time, but they could not get away with it. Just like it took a Democratic president to dismantle welfare, it required a Democrat to dismantle public education.
Please don’t tell me what Obama is all about. He’s from my city, my neighborhood, and he was my senator. I’ve come to know his track record well. He’s a capitalist at heart, not a liberal. His corporate sponsors collaborate with extreme right and are not all that much different from them..He has not shown support for unions. He has not walked the picket lines like he claimed he would. Arguing with Boehner is not enough evidence to me that he supports the common man.
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@Martel & Ravitch: Since when was the socioeconomic-cultural phenomenon of public education just a 20th Century agenda item? We can trace this phenomenon back to charity schools… our nation’s first attempt at public education!
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I don’t think you understand the origins or purpose of public education. The charity schools were pauper schools, not the forerunners of public education. Real public education shed that exemplar.
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http://www.freep.com/article/20130314/NEWS06/130314080/Michigan-s-EAA-receives-10M-grant-from-Broad-Foundation
Have you seen this yet?
This too?
http://www.hollandsentinel.com/news/x1959358073/Records-Detroits-EM-has-tax-liens-on-Md-home?rssfeed=true (can’t make this stuff up)
and this!
http://www.toledoblade.com/Opinion/2013/03/10/Ohio-s-charter-schools-Costlier-and-worse.html
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