The Rev. Dr. William J. Barber II is a major national figure in the civil rights movement of our time. He will be the keynote speaker at the Network for Public Education’s annual conference on April 15-17 in Raleigh, North Carolina.
Rev. Barber is the founder of the Moral Mondays movement in North Carolina, where a radical faction has taken control of the Legislature and the Governor’s seat. The Moral Mondays convenes every Monday in front of the State Capitol to protest the legislsture’s assaults on basic human rights.
Please come to Raleigh to meet Rev. Barber and hear his eloquent plea for justice and decency in our time.
Here is a statement that Rev. Barber wrote about the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act.
Rev. Barber writes:
Fix public education, end high stakes testing, pass ESEA
All lives of students matter. Children come into life with fresh eyes, fresh minds, and boundless hope and energy. Our elders created schools, and taxed themselves to pay for well-educated, loving people to be teachers, to keep that hope, energy, and freshness alive through the first two decades of life. But every day we hear of kids being bullied, giving up, dropping out, losing hope. To stop this man-made flood from schools to prisons, we need an all-out, multi-dimensional effort.
I write today because all people of good will, all patriotic Americans, have a chance to do something now to begin repairing the striking poverty breach that is so plain. Congress is preparing to vote on the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA) on its 50th anniversary. What they decide now can change the course of federal aid to education for decades to come.
My father taught physics at the high school I attended in one of the poorest counties in North Carolina. My mother has worked in the same high school for more than 40 years. My five children worked their way through public schools in the poorest part of our state. One earned a PhD from Harvard in public health; one starts law school this fall; and two are working on their college degrees. My youngest son has several more years of public school ahead of him.
But my heart aches for their peers. Everywhere I go, I see children attending under-funded schools with over-worked teachers. The seeds of justice and love that we try to sow have a hard time taking root, when they land on hungry stomachs and hopeless hearts. Kids are born as hungry to learn as they are to eat. All of them need learning environments that help them thrive and live purposeful, prosperous lives. Educational opportunities and qualified, caring teachers make this dream possible. But as we under-resource our public schools, we are not just deferring dreams, we are shriveling and stomping on them.
The Southern Education Foundation (SEF) has tried to alert the nation for years about the crisis in our schools. Their 2013 report makes the problem plain. SEF Vice President Steve Suitts said, “Without improving the educational support that the nation provides its low income students – students with the largest needs and usually with the least support — the trends of the last decade will be prologue for a nation not at risk, but a nation in decline…”
In our Moral Monday Movement in North Carolina, we believe we must engage in every non-violent means of struggle possible to stop the tea party extremist attack on our teachers, our schools, and our children. If we sit back and watch extremists destroy our University and public school systems, we are discredited before our children, and we forfeit our chance to be called ‘repairers of the breach.’
When Congress enacted the ESEA in 1965, everyone knew education opportunities for black children were radically unequal to the opportunities for white students. Now, 50 years later, these gaps persist and are widening–despite the law’s promise to level the playing field for the nation’s most vulnerable students.
The last time Congress reauthorized ESEA, they and President George W. Bush established high-stakes testing, labeling, and policies that punish schools if kids flunked the tests. Tests don’t teach. Nurturing creative adults who know how to draw out individual children are what education is about. We don’t send our kids to school to become skilled test takers. We pay our taxes and send our kids to public schools because we need future corporate CEOs, cardiologists and aerodynamic engineers, university presidents and school principals, urban planners and architects. Our sons and daughters can’t reach these heights when accountability in our education system hinges on standardized test scores, not cultivating intellectual opportunity—the real measure of education. Standardized tests can tell us only so much. Educators know that annual multi-dimensional assessments that tell us whether a child is falling behind, whether she or he needs intervention and support the school can’t provide, or if a youngster is on track to graduate are the tools they need—not a single number.
Congress has a chance to fix the high stakes testing regime that has failed. Congress has the chance to deliver on its promise of educational opportunities for all students, especially the nation’s most vulnerable ones, which is the purpose of ESEA. Congress has the chance to repair the breach caused by sins and systems of slavery and segregation.
All our children have a fundamental civil right to a quality education. The ESEA can help make schools of hope and love. Stop drying up our kids’ dreams, like raisins in the sun.
Barber is the current president of the North Carolina State Conference of the NAACP, the National NAACP chair of the Legislative Political Action Committee, and founder of Moral Mondays.
Diane, I think you mean the Moral Mondays movement. The Moral Majority was Jerry Falwell’s right wing Xtian group in the 80s.
Teacher Ed, you are right !!! Will fix
Thank you!
While Barber makes a sincere appeal our responsibility to the greater good, too many our of representatives are sitting at the table waiting for their share of pork. So many special interest groups are looking to manipulate the bill to promote their agendas, whether it is states’ rights or charter schools, that they lose sight of the fact that this bill is supposed to pay to provide services to our most vulnerable students. Barber has good reason to be concerned because capitalism is neither humane or moral, and our poor, minority students are targets of corporate exploitation. The states need to accept their responsibility to adequately fund public education. It should be illegal for states to starve their public schools while they waste public money building sports arenas. Here’s a link to the national report card of school funding by state. http://www.schoolfundingfairness.org/
As predicted the coverage of the new scores on the more difficult tests will be used as further evidence (as if any was needed!) that public schools suck and “kids today” are dumber than ever.
“Scores plummet”
“As many educators predicted, scores on the state’s standardized tests plummeted this year, the first time the exams were aligned with the rigorous Pennsylvania Core Standards.
The Education Department didn’t dispute those findings, but said comparing results from 2014 with 2015 isn’t fair because the tests are completely different.”
The state also told districts they should not compare these scores with previous years, but the situation is vexing for school officials.
“Changing the ‘passing score’ along with the test itself makes it impossible to compare performance to past years,” Bethlehem Area Superintendent Joseph Roy said. “So districts can’t really track progress.”
Should be fun for school districts to try to pass levies to replace cuts in state funding now that the public will be told 70% of public schools are failing.
http://www.mcall.com/news/local/mc-pa-pssa-scores-drop-20150715-story.html
Rev. Barber has been tireless in his leadership of the Moral Mondays movement here in North Carolina. We need someone like him in every state to advocate for causes contrary to the big business interests that have hi-jacked our governing bodies.
The Moral Mondays movement has given me hope.
It’s hard to have hope that ordinary people can organize to fight for their rights. But the Moral Mondays movement is doing so in North Carolina.
Thank you, Reverend Barber, for a very powerful statement.
Diane,
I appreciate his comments, his leadership, and the work of Moral Mondays. However, not long before I read this post, I was on the TNTP website to see who serves on their board. I noticed the president of SEF (McGuire) is the chair of TNTP and since I wasn’t familiar with SEF I looked it up. What a surprise to find it is headquartered right here in my hometown of Atlanta! When I read your post, I was again surprised- there was SEF again…this time the civil rights leader Rev Barber was quoting the VP (Suitts). Hmm. Hard to know where people really stand in this morass.
So is Southern Education Foundation aligned with corporate reform agenda?
Kay, TNTP is on board with the corporate reform agenda. Southern Education Foundation is not. How McGuire wears both hats is beyond my understanding.
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Reblogged this on rjknudsen.
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.