Jack Schneider, a historian of education at the College of the Holy Cross, writes that public schools actually outperform private and charter schools but it is a deeply kept secret.

There is a reason.

Private schools and charter schools build their brand.

They aspire to be selective.

They market themselves to create a sense of scarcity.

Parents think they are lucky if their child is accepted.

Public schools don’t have scarcity: they accept everyone.

They don’t have a brand: they are the community public school.

They don’t put up flyers, send out post cards, buy television advertising, boast that they are better than the competition.

Schneider writes:

None of this is intended as a takedown of private and charter schools. Many do good work, and they should be valued for that. Rather, the point is that public schools suffer from a divergence between public perception and measurable reality. Knowing this, we might conduct fewer conversations about an ostensible crisis in public education, driven by the troubles of a small number of schools, and, instead, concentrate on the importance of cultivating positive reputations among the vast majority of public schools that are doing just fine. Traditional public schools need not build their brands in order to ensure survival—after all, they educate 90 percent of young people. But they may need to do so in order to secure the good faith of the American public—faith that is essential to a healthy and thriving system.

 

The problem is that it is expensive to build a brand identity. Why should public schools spend hundreds of thousands of dollars to compete with the charters or with each other, when all that money should go towards paying for the arts, smaller classes, supplies, and other needed resources?

Strange to say, the column was underwritten by the Gates Foundation and Participant Media, which sponsored “Waiting for ‘Superman,'” which did so much damage–unfairly, unethically–to American public education.

Maybe the Gates Foundation would agree to spend $1 billion restoring the public reputation of public schools, which it has done so much to vilify–unfairly.