Friends, when a small group of parents and educators formed the Network for Public Education in 2013, we had a singular goal: to mobilize the allies of public education against the powerful forces supporting privatization and high-stakes testing. To advance that goal, we hoped to create a force to counter the large amounts of money that were being dumped into state and local school board races to undermine public education, to demoralize teachers, and to promote an agenda of choice, testing, and sanctions.
We knew we were up against some of the wealthiest people in the nation. We knew they included a bunch of billionaires, and we could never match their spending.
But we put our faith in democracy. We put our faith in the simple idea that we are many, and they are few. We believed–and continue to believe–that an informed public will not give away its public schools to amateurs, hedge fund managers, rock stars, for-profit corporations, athletes, fly-by-night entrepreneurs, and religious groups. Our goal is to inform the public, assuming that they would not willingly abandon or give away what rightfully belongs to the entire community.
We believed that we could exert influence if we established our credibility as genuine supporters of children, parents, teachers, administrators, and real education, as opposed to the data-driven, high-stakes testing policies that degrade education and to the consumer-oriented choice programs that divide communities and harm public schools.
Our budget can’t match the budgets of those who want to turn our schools into profit centers. But we believe in the power of our message. During our short existence, we have proven on several occasions that our message can beat Big Money. We have seen candidates in state and local races triumph over well-funded adversaries. We think that our support gave them added visibility and contributed to their astonishing victories.
We supported Sue Peters for the school board in Seattle, and she won. We supported Monica Ratliff in a race for the Los Angeles school board, and she won. We supported Ras Baraka in his race for Mayor of Newark, and he won. This past week, we supported Valarie Wilson in the runoff for the Democratic nomination for state superintendent in Georgia, and she won. All of these candidates were outspent, sometimes by multiples of numbers.
Some candidates we endorsed lost their races. But our message has been consistent and powerful. All credit goes to the candidates themselves, of course, but we are proud that we gave them support and hope when they needed it most, and that our endorsement may have helped their fundraising and campaigning.
We urge you to join us as we promote the principles that will improve our public schools and repel those who seek to monetize them. We want our children to have a childhood. We want our teachers and principals to be highly respected professionals. We want parents and educators to stand together on behalf of their children and their community.
We oppose the status quo. We seek better schools for all children. We will work diligently with like-minded allies until we can turn the tide, turn it away from those who seek silver bullets or profits, and turn the tide towards those who work to restore public education as the public institution dedicated to spreading knowledge and skills, advancing equality of educational opportunity, and improving the lives of children and communities, while encouraging collaboration and a commitment to democratic values.
Join us! With your help, we will build better schools and better communities for all children.
Diane Ravitch, President, The Network for Public Education
Anthony Cody, Treasurer, The Network for Public Education
Robin Hiller, executive director, The Network for Public Education

Thank you Diane, Anthony and Robin for being a voice for the voiceless and for supporting public education, public school teachers, communities and all the children. ^o^ BATs love you for sure.
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A million times this.
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Congrats- Hopefully even more victories in years to come.
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It is we who owe you a debt of gratitude for your guidance, wisdom and endless energy in leading the effort to bring reason and compassion back into the discussion for meaningful reform in education in addition to identifying the current abuses threatening the very foundation of public education in the U.S. Those of us who have and will benefit from your leadership and insight, whether public education itself, parents, teachers and most of all the students and children, cannot thank you enough.
For all that you have done and continue to do, thank you.
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Dr. Ravitch, This is wonderful. I am posting it and forwarding it to teacher friends, family, and friends. People in Arizona need to figure this out the way they are in other states. See: http://www.azcentral.com/videos/news/arizona/politics/2014/07/21/12975869/
I left because of the way I was treated, but the lack of receiving fair pay was a factor, as well. I’m still working with low-income children through my church. This week is Vacation Bible School. We are doing crafts, art, music, and Bible stories. The children and teachers are having so much fun! We are also feeding 38 children, who most likely are not getting enough food at home. They are excited to see what their snack and lunch is every day.
Thanks for working to save our public schools.
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Here’s one of our allies.
http://radicalscholarship.wordpress.com/2014/07/24/the-charter-sham-formula-billionaires-flawed-reports-press-release-media-misled-public/
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Proud of this group!
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This is NOT just about saving public education. It is about saving our nation!!!! Without real education our nation, yes our world, is doomed. Humankind’s greatest minds have given us the parameters of true education. Politicians have usurped educators role, and have polluted the minds of the general public and our political leaders by the false god of promoting “government agenda”, the definition of education by our Supreme Court. Thank God that there are people who stand for true education.
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Heard about some of the work you’re doing through a PSEA Leadership Conference this week. Keep it up. Our students need you, and I’m inspired to better teaching knowing that I have allies like you who support my good work. My students are not dollar bills; they’re human beings.
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