A reader from the Netherlands noticed the recent post by Mario Waissbluth in Chile. Waissbuth said that Chileans were looking to the Netherlands as a possible model as Chile tries to extricate itself from decades of privatization. The privatization was launched by the dictator Pinochet, whose advisors admired the libertarian ideas of Milton Friedman.
Our reader from the Netherlands commented:
In The Netherlands, the situation has changed in the past 15 years. It used to be the case that about 60% of all schools were privately owned. The umbrella term for these schools was, and is, ‘Bijzonder Onderwijs” and this includes all schools on a religious basis (either Catholic, Protestant, Jewish, Muslim or any other denomination) as well as schools with a special educational denomination (such as Montessori, Jenaplan, Dalton, Democratic etc.). The remaining 40% of schools used to be governmental, i.e. really ‘public’.
All of these schools were (and still are) paid for by public money. Parents are asked a small yearly fee (about 25 to 100 dollars) in order for a number of extracurricular activities.
Then came the neolib overhaul. All school boards were privatized, which is merely a legal construction by which private non-profit foundations took over the former public schools. Now all Dutch primary, secondary or tertiary schools are part of some private Foundation of Union. They are not marketed, and don’t have shareholders. They receive about 8000 dollar of public money for each subscribed student. School boards can do with that money what they like, within very, very wide limitations. The ‘freedom of education’ has turned into an increased freedom for school boards, and a decreased freedom for teachers (who have to obey the boards’ working orders) and limited freedom for parents (who can send their children to a limited number of schools).
The neolib privatization overhaul was sold to the Dutch public by the usual pretexts: ‘more quality for a lower price’. As the sceptics expected, the result turned out exactly the other way. The public expenses have more than doubled in 13 years time (the cumulative inflation being less than 30%), salaries for non-teaching staff have increased hugely, as have their number. Teaching staff, however, receive lower pay, and both teaching hours and class size have increased. PISA comparisons show that results have steadily decreased, compared to similar countries, as have the qualifications of newly arrived teachers.
I find it a bit ironic that Chile would consider The Netherlands an example in order to fight segregation. The neolib overhaul and the government-forced ‘concurrency’ between schools has resulted in dramatic segregation in urban areas. The percentage of either ‘black schools’ and ‘white schools’ has increased from 25% to 75% in only two decades, and is still growing.
I used to be proud of Dutch education. That was when I started my career as a teacher, and researcher. At present, I see very little in my country’s education system or policy that can make me proud. And I certainly would not recommend it as an example to other nations.

Since equity is such an important matter in a highly stratified country such as Chile (and the US), why are they not considering the Finnish model?
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Ok, so I’ve learned from Robert Shepherd that CCSS and VAMPIRE are all part of a business plan. So what is the business plan for public school? If someone brought you in (anyone willing to consider it) to get things back on the right track , what would it look like? (I personally would hire a contracts attorney to figure out how to get out of contracts that are burdensome, cumbersome and in line with a corporate business plan and not a public school one. But even in a non-profit situation, you need a business plan. So, what is it?
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I didn’t mean VAM to read VAMPIRe, but I will take it as a providential autocorrect
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“If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.”
“Ask teachers what works and fund it.”
Personally, I’d love to see a 5 year business plan that lasts more than one year.
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Be careful what you wish for, because billionaires are persistent and they have too many politicians on their payrolls who can change or enact corporate/charter friendly laws for them to ensure things go their way, such as in NY recently. Personally, I’d love to see a 5 year genuine EDUCATION plan that lasts more than one year.
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That’s exactly why I think many teachers have not had a visceral reaction to CCSS —because stuff changes every year or two anyway, so they figure its just another “today’s miracle” and it too shall pass (hope they’re right on it moving along).
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“All school boards were privatized, which is merely a legal construction by which private non-profit foundations took over the former public schools”
Hah! Sounds familiar, huh? The biggest scam may be how they’re presenting this as “new!” and “transformational!” and “cage-busting!”
Ed reformers simply imported a privatization model into the US and it looks exactly like every other privatization model of the last 30 years.
What’s funny about privatization is how it always, always leads to higher wages among managers and lower wages for front-line workers, and that appears to have happened:
“The public expenses have more than doubled in 13 years time (the cumulative inflation being less than 30%), salaries for non-teaching staff have increased hugely, as have their number. Teaching staff, however, receive lower pay, and both teaching hours and class size have increased”
Is there a single example of privatization where middle class front-line workers benefitted? The money is ALWAYS shifted UP to the manager ranks.
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http://www.ed.gov/blog/2014/04/washington-d-c-charters-district-schools-collaborate-around-college-and-career-ready-standards/
Us Dept of Ed promotes DC ed reform again. It’s really hilarious to read that site.
It’s as if there are two places with public schools in the US, and one is DC and the other is Tennessee. Arne Duncan’s favorite school systems, and the model he would like the rest of us to adopt, obviously.
Reading the site, one would think the whole country was made up of “miracle” charter schools and former TFA “CEO’s” of “portfolios”.
Public schools are completely ignored. It’s as if they’re already gone.
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Yeah on the Robin Hood piece on 60 Minutes last night the subtext was “charters good, Public school bad” same as “water good, fire bad.” No questions asked. The root of poverty is public school, was the message.
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60 Minutes has been a tool of school privatizers for years and years. I quit watching their “stories” on education because they were lies.
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I saw that. What a bs puff piece. The Jones thinks he is some kind of savior to education. I wonder why he never gives money to public schools?
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This is off-topic, but if anyone is in Oklahoma I wish you would tell me how you beat the ed reform “leave third graders back” policy.
We adopted it in Ohio and everyone I talk to seems to hate it.
“One by one, K-12 education reforms passed in previous years by Oklahoma lawmakers are being targeted for weakening or repeal.
Among them: Common Core State Standards, the Reading Sufficiency Act, A-F school grades for districts, and middle school end-of-instruction exams for history and social studies. These all could be scaled back or revoked by various legislative bills that have passed in both the House and Senate.”
The Reading Sufficiency Act Oklahoma is getting rid of is the Third Grade Reading Guarantee in Ohio. How did parents get rid of it in Oklahoma? How do we get rid of it in Ohio?
I’d be interested if anyone knows.
http://newsok.com/oklahoma-lawmakers-parents-rethinking-past-education-reforms/article/4083325
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Not from OK, but you may want to check Professor Richard Allington’s research showing that retention resulted in greater drop-out rate, etc. Think he did study while he was at SUNY Albany.
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A portal into Americas future if the corporatization of education continues as planned. 😦
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So now we have Sweden, Chile and the Netherlands as examples of the failure of corporate educational reform. Who else has fallen for the neoliberal agenda?
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I can’t believe these countries fell for this garbage.
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TRULY SAD, indeed.
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GERM? Well, GERM is NOT good.
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Can anyone spell Public-Private Partnership (P3) and Charter School? When will Americans, parents, teachers and elected officials wake up? We are on a fast track to losing local, representative government, as these other countries did long ago.
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