Texas Republican leaders in the state senate unveiled their ambitious plan to enact the ALEC (American Legislative Exchange Council) agenda for privatization of public education.
With the help of Texans for Education Reform and a battalion of highly paid lobbyists, the Republicans will promote charters, school choice, and accountability measures to stigmatize public schools.
Texas schools have high numbers of students who are poor and who are English language learners. The senate has no new funding measures, despite the fact that $5 billion was cut from school funding a few years ago.
Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick is a voucher advocate. “On Tuesday, he said “148,000 students, approximately, today, are trapped in 297 school campuses across our state that have been failing for more than two years.”
His agenda includes school choice and other items, including:
“Giving letter grades (A-F) to individual public school school campuses each year based on their performance — something already done for districts;
A stronger “parent empowerment” law, often called “the parent trigger,” that would allow parents to petition for new management schools that have been failing for two years rather than five;
Removing limits on full-time virtual schools and online courses;
Making sure high school students can take more courses that count for college credit;
Creating a “college and career readiness” course for Texas middle schoolers.”
The spokesman for teachers was critical:
““None of the proposals offered by Sen. Taylor and the lieutenant governor would give teachers and students the time and resources they need to improve teaching and learning,” said Texas State Teachers Association President Noel Candelaria. “The Taylor-Patrick agenda fails to meet the needs of five million public school students whose schools have been inadequately funded by the very legislators who are eager to declare schools a failure based on standardized test scores.”
The Taylor-Patrick agenda is a grab-bag of failed ideas cribbed from the ALEC play book. None of them has been beneficial to students or successful anywhere.
Just finished an 8-8 day at school. Thanks for the good news.
Diane, how ironic, such horrible news coming from your home state.
Yee haww! If you have kids in Texas, you better save up those pennies for private school, partner!
If it is anything like NY, they will be taking $ away from the public schools and diverting it to the charters. It is a mess. Millions of dollars owed to public schools around the state and the governor is withholding it. Sickening. I don’t know how any of it is legal…
Thanks so much.. KC
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I just look thru new state laws to see if there’s anything positive/beneficial for public schools, More often than not, the answer is “no”.
I bet there was a lot of strutting around opining on “accountability!” though! 🙂
Interesting that they’re now going to set schools one against the other WITHIN districts. Doubling down.
I’m really concerned about the mindsets of both voters and elected officials in the lone star state…WOW! Rick Perry, “Dubya”, Ted Cruz, now this guy…what is going on there? What’s so disheartening is the breadth of the problem – Texas, Indiana (where I am), Florida, Ohio, Wisconsin, New York, New Jersey, Louisiana, Chicago, et al.
Tim Murphy at Mother Jones published an disturbing article on Dan Patrick back on Oct. 21st of last year. The title pretty much said it all:Man Who Believes God Speaks to Us Through “Duck Dynasty” Is About to Be Texas’ Second-in-Command…OMG!
http://www.motherjones.com/politics/2014/10/dan-patrick-texas-lieutenant-governor
Who in the hell votes for this type of mutant?
What Murphy writes in pretty scary. But Patrick’s latest assault on public education certainly isn’t surprising. The ALEC/Koch bros. machinery is so pervasive that the only way to stop it is by getting sheer number of voters to turn out. I don’t know if it’s even possible. As Paul Weyrich’s acolyte, Eric Heubeck, said it in the New Traditionalist (AKA
American Fascist) manifesto, “The support of an elite is more valuable than the support of the masses.” Chilling words from 2000…
All the major cities in TX voted Democrat this cycle. But there is low voter turnout.
When I (a middle school teacher) testified before the Senate Education Committee last year, I watched Patrick skewer the Pearson reps for an hour or so. That was satisfying. However, after the cute elementary kids testified and had their photo op, pretty much the whole committee left. You know, when it was time for adults to speak. I waited eight hours, then got five minutes in front of I think three members of the committee. Leticia Van de Putte had recently had surgery and was using a walker of some kind, but she was there. The others, including Patrick, didn’t bother to hear what we had to say. This is the way the Legislature works, folks. And now Patrick is their king. It’s depressing to be a teacher in Texas.
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.
Question: Is there a MEAN” gene in their genetic make-up? Just wondering.
Quote from Patrick in the Mother Jones article on the separation of church and state: “There is no such thing as separation of church and state.”
This is the mindset of Patrick and his ilk. There really is no other way to rationalize it. The religious right here scares me almost as much as ISIS.
Blaise Pascal phrased it most eloquently with, “Men never do evil so completely and cheerfully as when they do it from religious conviction.”
Follow the money. There’s money to be made in charters. A lot of it. That’s why this has become so popular. Their efforts have zero to do with kids and education and everything to do with lining their own pockets. How can I say this? Confront these privatization fans with hard questions and actual facts about charters success and lack thereof and they have no answer. They never have and they never will.
The majority of religious right, including myself doesn’t want vouchers, for we know strings come with the dollars.
To begin with, the proofreaders missed this typo: “Texas schools have high numbers of students who are poor and who are Enflish language learners.” (see paragraph 3)
Secondly, school choice is and has always been available. Anyone who wants to do so can either home school their children or send them to any private school they choose.
Thirdly, charter schools are not the answer. Charter schools can choose their students, public schools cannot. We get whomever moves into our district regardless of test scores from previous districts, behavior issues, language issues, and/or special education status. Charter schools can ask students to leave for misbehavior and public schools cannot. Public schools provide free and reduced breakfast and lunch, and in the case of our district, supper and summer meals. Public schools also supply transportation to and from school and often from after-school activities like tutoring.
All of those who jump on the charter school bandwagon would do well to thoroughly research charters. I see that several in Texas have already been shut down because of poor academic and fiscal performance. What happens to those kids?
If a charter school can meet the needs of the child then it may be a wise choice for a family. However, before jumping from public school that are improving, don’t expect charters to be the answer to improving education.
Who votes for the likes of Abbott and Patrick? It is the people who vote for gun rights and against equality, who are so misguided that they think that only the GOP can keep the state doing well economically. We have had issues with funding education for years, yet educators, parents, and business leaders continue to vote for these people. It is beyond me why so many people vote against their needs.
Not to ugly, but English is misspelled in the third paragraph.
This state has been ruled by Republicans far too long. Mentally, still riding in carriages. Ignorance and mediocrity is THE NAME of leadership.
What a waste!!!
And furthermore, it the state is going to grade public schools on an A to F scale, it should do the same to charters…
Since charter schools are all public schools, that is actually the very idea.