The following comment was posted in response to Laura Chapman’s comment and critique of for-profit schools in Africa (see below):
My name is Josh Weinstein and another commenter, Laura Chapman, referenced a post that I wrote about my time working at Bridge International Academies. I am including the original post below, but I want to clarify some depictions of my views about for-profit education in developing countries and Bridge International Academies in particular.
For some background, I spent three years working in microfinance, agriculture, and education in Southeast Asia and East and West Africa. I came to Bridge in 2011 when it had 15 schools, and left in 2012 when it had 75 schools. Today it has over 400 schools and has grown considerably. I will address some of Ms. Chapman’s mischaracterizations of my views, and explain why I believe for-profit schools are, on balance, a positive trend to children born into extreme poverty.
First, Ms. Chapman says: “[Josh Weinstein says that] local people saw a contradiction between the Western idea of a liberal education with its emphasis on critical thinking versus the BIA practice of hiring high school graduates to teach from a prepared script. For this reason they automatically assumed that the quality of a Bridge education was poor, and “far below that of more expensive schools.” I did not say that, nor do I believe it. For people living on less than $2 a day, which is the target customer for Bridge schools, the concept of a liberal education is not a consideration. Rather, they evaluate BIA schools relative to public schools, which are underfunded, overcrowded, and serve a fraction of the eligible primary school population at a cost to parents, despite FPE (free primary education) in Kenya. The choice for parents is not between an education emphasizing critical thinking and one offering rote memorization, but fundamentally one that offers higher time-on-task and direct instruction of evidence-based teaching methodologies backed by rigorous testing.
Ms. Chapman quotes an organization called “Global Justice Now” in saying that BIA schools actually cost between $9 and $20 a month, or 68% of the income of someone in Uganda. That is also false – I’ve included the article she references below and the figure is unsourced. I performed the cost- and affordability analysis for BIA schools in 2012, which included detailed data gathering from teams of researchers in slums around Nairobi. In fact, BIA schools, at a cost of 400 Kenyan shillings (~$5) were considerably cheaper than the alternatives. Her statement about the cost of BIA schools is patently false.
Finally, I will make two points. First, BIA did not create the concept of a low-cost private school. It merely focused on streamlining operations to enable economies of scale that would allow it to focus on teacher training and curriculum development – the most important elements of an education. Many, if not most, of BIA students came from other private schools, run by churches, non-profits, or entrepreneurs. Students who could not get into public schools or whose parents did not feel the education was good enough also sent their kids to BIA schools. These parents are discerning consumers of education, and wanted the best for their children. They evaluated schools based on what skills students learn and how they perform on homework and how quickly they learn English and other skills. To assume that they do not what is best for them is paternalistic at best, and harmful at worst.
Second, criticisms in this and other articles ignore fundamental realities about life for the poorest of the poor. The conditions for people living in slums is dire, and the education systems of the countries mentioned in the article are rife with corruption (which is well-detailed). To make a blanket assumption that education is a public good and should be government-run refuses to acknowledges the harsh realities of life in the slums. If BIA succeeds, it will provide parents an alternative to education their children. Or, it will force governments to reconsider their own approach to public education. Either way, it is a good thing for children with few opportunities to escape the unfortunate circumstances into which they were born.
If you have any questions, please email me at jwduke109@gmail.com
My article: http://developeconomies.com/education-3/do-for-profit-schools-give-low-income-people-a-real-choice/
Further Reading:
“The Beautiful Tree” by James Tooley – http://www.amazon.com/The-Beautiful-Tree-Educating-Themsleves/dp/1939709121
Randomized controlled trials of private education from Jameel Poverty Action Lab: http://www.povertyactionlab.org/evaluation/private-school-incentive-program-pakistan
Josh Weinstein was responding to this comment by Laura Chapman:
I have been looking into Pearson’s second quarter 2015 report and the international marketplace for education.
Pearson has announced that it is in the process of selling many of its publications in order to concentrate on the education market. Although Pearson has lost big testing contracts in the United States it still has monopolies such as edTAP for teacher education and North America is still Pearson’s largest market.
In higher education, Pearson expects fairly stable college enrollments, less yearly churn in courseware, and growth in its online services and VUE (a platform for tests and 450 certifications).
For the pre-K-12 market, Pearson says “the possibility of further policy related disruption remains” but that they “expect greater stability in courseware and assessments with growth in virtual schools.”
Pearson has offices in more than 55 countries. It sees Growth markets in Brazil, China, and India, especially in English language learning and test preparation, almost all of this on-line. Overall, the company is “investing in courseware, assessment and qualifications (certifications), managed services, and schools and colleges. Pearson is planning for “a smaller number of global products and platforms for delivering infrastructure and “common systems and processes.”
Pearson is not the only international player and there are back-scratching relationships in reving up for international projects. For example, Pearson is one of the investors in Bridge International Academies (BIA) offering “Academy-in-a-Box programs from nursery school to grade 6 in over 400 schools. These schools are in Nigeria (world headquarters), Uganda, Kenya, and they are expanding to India. The World Bank has given $10 million to BIA in Africa. At least $30 million more has come from U.S. venture capitalists— Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Pierre Omidyar (founder of EBay) and also from Pearson.
Profits are made by offering a fully scripted curriculum in small schools. These schools are staffed by local instructors who are high school graduates, along with an Academy Manager who oversees and audits classroom instruction, recruits students, and communicates with parents and the local community.
According to BIA’s website, “Teacher scripts are delivered through data-enabled tablets, which seamlessly sync with our headquarters, giving us the ability to monitor lesson pacing in addition to providing the scripts themselves, recording attendance, and tracking assessments in real-time. We also create our own books, manipulatives, instructional songs, symbols for enforcing positive behavioral management, and more, which we are able to produce locally at an extremely low cost.”
Billing, payments, expense and payroll processing, prospective admissions, and the like are taken care of by “smartphone apps” tailored for the Academy Manager and for the Teachers’ tablet. The assessment platform in Kenya is called Tangerine:Class™ a mobile system for doing continuous, formative assessments with tracking of individual students.
Professional educators in each nation “managed by TFA alumni with master’s degrees” build the curriculum to meet national requirements. A video team films lessons for a version of field-testing the curriculum. Curriculum writers review the videos, looking for evidence of student engagement, comprehension, and retention of content. Student exams are used to identify weaknesses in the curriculum and review teacher performance.”
The curriculum explains what teachers should do and say during any given moment of a class, step-by-step. The marketing pitch is: “This allows us to bring best-in-class instruction, international and local research, and curriculum specialists into every one of our classrooms” and …”standardize our high-quality instruction across all of our academies.” …Because of our highly efficient delivery mechanism (marrying talented individuals from each community with technology, scripted instruction, rigorous training, and data-driven oversight), Bridge is able to bring some of the world’s greatest instruction and pedagogical thinking into every classroom in every village and slum in the world.”
BIA outcomes are currently tracked through products from RIT International, a US-based think tank in the process of commercializing some services and products. Bridge is using the Early Grade Reading Assessment (adapted for 40 countries in 60 languages) and the Early Grade Math Assessment (adapted for 10 countries and languages). Some school operations are monitored through Snapshop of School Management Effectiveness (adapted for 16 countries and 12 languages). RIT is a major contractor for almost every branch of the US government, foreign governments, foundations, and other groups.
According to Josh Weinstein who worked on data analytics for BIA in Nairobi, local people saw a contradiction between the Western idea of a liberal education with its emphasis on critical thinking versus the BIA practice of hiring high school graduates to teach from a prepared script. For this reason they automatically assumed that the quality of a Bridge education was poor, and “far below that of more expensive schools.”
Even so, Josh thought that Bridge was a fairly low-cost improvement over non-formal schools and government schools with little in-house teacher training. Josh was in charge of routine testing of 3,000 Bridge students matched with peers at government and other non-formal schools. So far, Josh says there are strong gains in basic reading relative to peers, and less strong, but still measurable, gains in math.
Josh (a global entrepeneur) was impressed that data is being used to improve the business model–profits, educational outcomes, efficiencies in ancillary services, the location of schools, and web-site performance. He said that policies can be examined on short notice and “changes can easily be rolled out across every single school.” He said that each school is profitable at a relatively small size, so more schools means revenue for scaling up.”
A group called “Global Justice Now” claimed that the real total cost of sending one child to a Bridge school is not the advertised $5 to $6 a month. It is $9 to $13 a month, and up to $20 a month with school meals. In Kenya, sending three children to BIA would represent 68% of the monthly income of half the population. In Uganda, sending three children to BIA would represent 75% of the monthly income of half the population.”
Anyone reasonably attuned to developments in American education will not find it difficult to see the scale of infiltration of TFA viewpoints and practices into the international marketplace. Moreover the same billionaires, corporate and international players are dominating the landscape.
Anyone with an eye to developments in American education can also see the pretense of representing ‘the world’s greatest instruction and pedagogical thinking” as scripted instruction, with data-driven oversight, apps for everything, and unacknowledged colonial values.

The giveaway line that this is masters level BS? “The choice for parents is not between an education emphasizing critical thinking and one offering rote memorization, but fundamentally one that offers higher time-on-task and direct instruction of evidence-based teaching methodologies backed by rigorous testing.”
Mr. Weinstein, I will respect Diane’s rules about using uncouth language in this comment because this is, after all, her virtual living room and she gets to set the rules.
I will say that, no matter HOW you try to spin it, making money off the poorest of the world’s poor and then trying to claim that you are some kind of social superman whose goal is to improve their lives while raking in the dollars is about the most despicable thing I’ve ever read here (or pretty much anywhere).
Then you have the temerity to try to deflect justifiable criticism by claiming your critics don’t understand the world, the poor, or how governments work and you try to claim a cookie because your profiteering and rent-seeking may, somehow, bring about some vague kind of positive future change, maybe.
You sir, are a sad excuse for a human being. My disgust with you and what you do is inexpressible in this forum.
My faith teaches me to pray for all, especially my enemies, and you sir, are my enemy, so I will pray that your heart, which, like the Grinch’s, is several sizes too small, and you will change your disgusting, predatory, greedy ways. May God have mercy on you and your soul!
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PS I have spent my adult life in service of the poor, over 50 years, and I have never wanted, needed, nor even thought about somehow making a profit off of them in any way.
That you proudly do so and are able to argue that what you do is somehow good, charitable, and righteous just made me vomit. Literally.
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Adam Johnson got it right in “The Most Evil Op-Ed Ever” referring to the editorial in Chicago by McQueary that longed for a Chicago-are Katrina disaster:
“These op-eds aren’t just whimsical thought experiments. They’re trial balloons that lay the groundwork for later radicalism. They not only normalize the exploitation of tragedy as a virtue, they dehumanize those disenfranchised by these attempts to do so. If they seem intuitively vulgar it’s because they are. They attempt to condition us to this type of sociopathic corporate thinking and to begin seeing our fellow citizens not as individuals, not as human beings, but as speed bumps getting in the way of ‘progress.’ “
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Chris,
There is a significant difference between the poor in the US and the poor in Africa. In many parts of Africa there are no free schools, no dedicated public school teachers. The school system is used for patronage, the teachers unqualified and teacher absenteeism is very high. In Lagos, Nigeria there are 1,600 public schools and there are estimated to be around 18,000 privately run schools. The overwhelming majority of these private schools were established by local community members because they saw the need (some parts of Lagos have no public schools at all, for example) and parents send their children to these schools because the parents agree.
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te, not a single thing you said in your mansplaining changes a single thing I said in my jeremiad.
I know about several African countries because I have longterm friendships with several Africans from several countries.
My church supports many schools, hospitals, clinics, and other social services there, all without rentseeking or making a single penny in profits over decades amd decades of free service.
Why am I not surprised that you support the exploitation of the poorest of the poor?
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Chris,
If you are concerned about exploitation of the poor, do not advocate for government schools in Nigeria. The Nigerian government is a profit making institution.
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Who said a thing about government schools in Nigeria? Not me. Your thinking is so narrow and limited, te. I advocate for free schools for all, parochial, public, secular, whatever. I oppose making profits off of the poorest people in the world for whatever reason.
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TE,
Hey, do you have any answers yet for the questions I asked you yesterday?
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Chris,
Your right I assumed that you were advocating for government provided public schools. Good to know that you are not an advocate of government provided public schools.
You do understand that if people who deal with the relatively poor are not allowed to make a profit, the relatively poor will be reduced to subsistence agriculture, right? No markets with small purchases from other relatively poor people, no cell phone services purchased from the relatively poor cell phone owner, no manufactured goods of any sort for the relatively poor. Only charity.
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TE, I repeat: tuition-charging public schools are a thing of the past in modern societies. No one ever made a profit from schooling in the 19th century, as we were developing. It seems that for-profit corporations will stifle the evolution of a free and universal public school system in Africa.
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Dr. Ravitch,
Tuition charging public schools may be a thing of the past in “modern societies”, but they are very much a thing of the present in Africa.
The formula for public school success in Africa is a fairly simple one: hire teachers because they are competent, make sure they actually go to the school (and of course make sure the school actually exists), and make sure that when they are at the school they actually teach the students. When public schools in Nigeria actually do this I am sure that parents would choose a public school that does not charge tuition over a private school that does charge tuition.
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The fact that the for-profit schools are growing and making money allows the government to ignore its responsibility to provide free public education.
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Dr. Ravitch,
These governments need no excuse to ignore the education of poor children. They have been doing that for decades. Makoko, for example, has a quarter of a million residents and not a single public school. Please let the poor parents have the same opportunity to spend their own money on the education they think best for their children that many commentators here are happy to give to rich parents in the United States.
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TE. have you ever read the Universal Declaration of Human Rights? Read Article 26. Is there something in there about for-profit corporations becoming the basic provider of education? I missed it.
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Dr. Ravitch,
How many generations of other people’s children are you willing to sacrifice in order to shame the government into actually providing an education?
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none.
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Duane,
I am sorry I missed your question. My posts often take many hours to make it through moderation. Perhaps you could repeat them? Please keep in mind that it might well take some time for my response to be posted.
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te, here is a charity I’ve supported since its inception:
http://jaajabarbshomeofangels.blogspot.com
A Canadian grnadmother began baking banana bread and selling it help AIDS orphans in Africa. She has built a magnificent compound that ismself-sustaining and growing by leaps and bounds.
It started small but under local guidance and leadership it has grown and it helps the whole community with sustainable practices of traditinal, local agriculture while schooling the most vulnerable children amd providing them healthcare as well.
No profits made, works with the local and narional government and leaders, self-sustaining, run by native wisdom.
Tell me again how this is impossible in today’s Africa?
There are many other examples, one in the comments below from Tanzania.
The last thing Africa needs is to be further poisoned and exploited by greedy Western free marketeers under the influence of an evil economic ideology that OK’s making money off the poorest of the poor.
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Chris,
Charities often do a great job. Better though to have something self-sustaining within a country that does not depend on the kindness of strangers. You might find this TED talk, by the founder of GrameenPhone, interesting: http://www.ted.com/talks/iqbal_quadir_says_mobiles_fight_poverty?language=en
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If we were shipwrecked on an island, and attempting to form a thriving society, I would choose Chris in Florida,
Laura Chapman, Chiara, Diane Ravitch, Krazy TA, Lloyd Lofthouse, Christine, May, Denis Smith, Bill Phillis, and most of the commenters at this site. I would cast adrift, Josh Weinstein, Rick Berman, Michael Milken, Arne Duncan, te. and hedge funders.
Let them bludgeon each other for food and fresh water.
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Linda, the desert island metaphor is perfect. Do you want to be marooned with people who share or with people who are greedy?
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Linda, I’m honored to be included in such a group. Sounds like an island utopia!
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Thanks Chris for expressing the revulsion we should all feel.
Laura Chapman exposed truths, that were intentionally hidden, behind profiteers’ self-serving verbiage.
“The most important element of education… economies of scale.”
The odds that reform defenders would work to have their own kids treated like widgets in an education factory? Zero.
America is better than its current, psychopathic oligarchs and, their minions.
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Linda,
Are you revolted by all of the 18,000 private schools in Lagos? You do know that there are more than 10 private schools for every public school in that city. In sections of the town that are filled with the poorest of the poor, like Makoko, there are no public schools at all. That those children would be denied an education is truly revolting, and it is local residents that organize private schools to prevent that from happening.
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te, i will give you this: the corruption in Lagos is a monument to Western exonomic theory and probably the envy of many an American politician and business person.
http://www.premiumtimesng.com/investigationspecial-reports/169586-exclusive-audit-exposes-massive-corruption-in-lagos-local-councils-indicts-officials-for-squandering-millions.html
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Chris – You are on fire! Thank you for your comments.
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Absurd that any private school charging fees could be proposed as a solution that will help the”poorest of the poor.”
Sent from my iPhone
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Leonie,
RIGHT ON! It is absurd.
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Leoniehaimson,
Public schools in Africa also charge fees, so not really any moral high ground there. It appears that many parents prefer a school that charges fees and educates their children to a school that charges fees and does not educate them.
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TE, in the 19th century, public schools in the U.S. in many places charged fees. It was considered a sign of progress when schools became free and without any tuition. The fees were paid to the public, not to for-profit corporations.
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I commend Diane Ravitch in airing the other side of the story on this blog. This is one of the few times the other point of view is show cased. I hope this will bring up a lively discussion based on merits.
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Thank you Raj for exposing the source of your radical ‘thinking’ as exposed in your frequent comments here.
You are a disciple of the ‘both sides of the story’ balance fallacy.
Balance Fallacy from the RationalWiki:
“The balance fallacy is a logical fallacy that occurs when two sides of an argument are assumed to have equal or comparable value regardless of their respective merits, which (in turn) leads to the conclusion that the answer to a problem is always between two extremes. It is effectively an inverse false dilemma, discarding the two extremes rather than the middle.
This is primarily a problem in the media, where confrontational or adversarial journalism might present more of a controversy than actually exists. It is effectively the opposite of bias—whereas bias over-emphasises one view to the detriment of another legitimate, well-supported view to give the impression of one being favoured, false balance over-emphasises a minority or unsupported view to the detriment of a well-supported view to give the impression that neither is favoured.
The application of the fallacy leads to two major problems:
Firstly, it can lead to equal exposure to arguments despite their lack of merits or relevance. This may arise due to a misunderstanding of probability; that two outcomes or positions lead to a probability of 50:50 for each, and so both deserve an equal chance to put themselves forward. In fact, probability is not necessarily equal.
Secondly, it can lead to the belief that the truth must lie somewhere in-between the two opposing sides, when it’s very much possible that one side is completely wrong. In this context the fallacy is sometimes known as the argument to moderation or argumentum ad temperantiam, and may be the result of attempts to reach a compromise between mutually exclusive positions, as often found in political debate where there is not necessarily an objective “truth,” as such, to be found behind a political policy.
Avoiding the balance fallacy requires objective criteria for assessing arguments, and cannot rely on just giving all arguments equal exposure for the sake of fairness. Arguments must be assessed using criteria such as formal logic, scholarly consensus and empirical evidence to see if a legitimate controversy exists between two viewpoints. Avoiding the balance fallacy does not entitle someone to the freedom to reject any and all criticism because they claim to have sufficiently “proven” their position, however.”
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To Raj and JW:
Please watch the movie ”Wolf of Wall-street”
All malicious CON ARTISTS use the same excuse to help the poor to commit crime on their behalf. They enjoy living in laps of luxury in the expense of gullible and trusting poor people that their educational schools will GUARANTEE students a better future CAREER with AMERICAN CORRUPTED CORPORATE.
Can we see enough of graduates from Broadie Academy who eventually become puppets superintendents in all Charters that are owned by corporate, and who eventually move into Public schools in order to privatize them all into profit scheme?
Power of money can only lure all evils to do bad deed in harming civilization. Power money cannot manipulate all conscientious teachers because conscientious teachers will sacrifice their love of teaching to quit or to retire early.
Whenever conscientious American Parents rise up to demand their tax paying toward their children’s PUBLIC EDUCATION and American Justice System is presided by conscientious judge, American Public Education will be restored to its previous premium level in the 1960 and 1970 = free tuition and freedom of debate in social policies from K-12 and through out higher education. Back2basic
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60 Minutes also did a story on the organ trade in India. Most of the people selling organs did so because they borrowed from a micro-lending bank and couldn’t pay back the loan. Do we think people should sell kidneys to send their kids to school?
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Save the Children and UNICEF have “corporate partners”, not sure why Gates, Zuckerberg, Omidyar are all “investors”-while those sponsoring students are “donors”.
Maybe it’s just poor word choice.
It’s not for me to tell people where to spend their money, but Oprah opened a school. Milton Hershey opened a school and Julian Rosenberg built school buildings for poor communities. Perhaps the “investors” could build or fully fund schools as well. Instead of all of this controversy, they could generate real goodwill.
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sorry- Julius Rosenwald
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Hmm, who should I believe? A commenter with a long and proven history of knowledgeable and accurate exposes of “education reform”, or an education profiteer? Gee, I just don’t know.
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Dienne,
Personally I would go with someone who has worked for a Grameen affiliated organization in the Philippines for a year before moving to Ghana for a year to work in agricultural development projects before moving to Nairobi and working for Bridge.
But you might be right that someone in the United States who writes a lot on the internet is more knowledgeable about education in the developing world.
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I could be persuaded that Bridge management is altruistic. The following conditions must be met. (1) They don’t write absurd defenses for the indefensible, like Weinstein’s. (2) Their bank accounts don’t grow, from helping the poor. (3) Their “charitable work” isn’t a stepping stone to higher paying jobs. And, (4) they work with the World Bank to develop a middle class teaching profession, in impoverished nations, to the exclusion of for-profit schools in a box.
Related topic, why can’t the great philanthropist, Gates, get off the richest men lists? It’s the ultimate failure of a man, whose company reportedly hires 1/2 the number of American employees, as the 50th largest company.
IMO, it’s a testament to how little money and how few jobs need to be created, for a plutocrat to influence government to create markets for taxpayer and family exploitation.
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The idea that those who live in these developing countries can’t figure out education themselves and have to have these “white saviors” come in to “save” their countries is despicable. Developed countries can help by sending in supplies for students, or even better, money so that those supplies can be bought locally. Developing countries can help with teacher training. But developing countries have NO RIGHT to sail in and tell people what to do with their own nations. Developing countries certainly have NO RIGHT to make money off the backs of these desperately poor people. How do these privatizers sleep at night, knowing that they are making money off of people who live on only $1 or $2 a day? What do they think they’re accomplishing? Studies have proven that there are far better results for developing nations when people in those nations make decisions and grow the programs themselves.
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There’s a really interesting international movement to “remunicipalize” public goods and services that have been privatized,
I haven’t read about it applied to education but it’s happening with water, power, and roadways. I was wondering if it could be applied to education if the push to privatize accelerates world-wide.
http://energytransition.de/2014/06/remunicipalization-of-hamburg-grid/
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I mentioned before about a privatized water company that had hook worms in the tap water it was selling to residents. I think a government agency would have been more responsible.
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Whether international or domestic, the aim of those who privatize public education is to make a profit for their investors by building tuition driven alternatives to public education, thus allowing governments to either absolve themselves of their obligation to educate their citizens and to move out of the realm of providing a free public education, or to deprive local and state governments of the capacity to provide that education by moving critical resources from the public to the private sector. Prior posters on this blog have put the lie to Josh Weinstein offers flim flam man, three card monte arguments
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I have been late in responding to Josh Weinstein’s criticism of my inquiry into the international privatization of education in which Pearson and billionaires in the United States, and a very large international network of investors, are offering help to the very poor… for a profit.
1. I have returned to the Mr. Weinstein’s website. He says that I have misquoted him. Here is the passage I posted: “[Josh Weinstein says that] local people saw a contradiction between the Western idea of a liberal education with its emphasis on critical thinking versus the BIA practice of hiring high school graduates to teach from a prepared script. For this reason they automatically assumed that the quality of a Bridge education was poor, and “far below that of more expensive schools.” Mr Weinstein said “he did not say that, nor do I believe it.”
Here are the words from his blog, Part IV “Criticisms of Bridge “The western model of education is premised on the idea that critical thinking is essential to success. The very idea of a liberal arts education is a distinctly Western concept. So, naturally, when people hear that our teachers are high school graduates who are taught to teach by reading to children from a script, they automatically assume that the quality of the education is poor. It is true that the standard of education at a Bridge school is going to be far below that of more expensive schools.“
Mr. Winestein’s objection has some merit. The referent for “when people hear” is ambiguous. I placed the criticism in a local context. He did not.
2. Mr. Wienstein implies that Global Justice is not a reliable source of information. Global Justice Now, founded in 1970 “campaigns for a world where resources are controlled by the many, not the few. We champion social movements and propose democratic alternatives to corporate power. Our activists and groups in towns and cities around the UK work in solidarity with those at the sharp end of poverty and injustice.”
Researchers for Global Justice Now are documenting how the UK government is supporting the privatization of schools. An April 2015 report (116 references) indicates how the UK government, via its Department for International Development working in tandem with the World Bank became an investor in Bridge International Academies. This paragraph is on page 11 of that report:
“Bridge states that: ‘Ten years from now we plan to be the global leader in providing education to families who live on $2 a day per person or less.’ Its goal is to operate in at least 12 countries across sub-Saharan Africa and India and have more than 10 million pupils by 2023.72 By 2013, Bridge was opening a new school in Kenya every 3-5 days.”
References show that Bridge is in the investment portfolio of Springhill Equity Partners, based in California. Springhill investors make money from companies that provide basic goods and services to “base-of-the-pyramid (BoP) consumers and BoP markets.” (references 71, 73). Visit the Spinghiil website to find out more about their “partners.”
3. Here is specific source of information on the cost of Bridge in Kenya. .I judge that this letter has current and credible information. The letter is signed by 30 social justice and labor groups in Kenya and Uganda as well as 85 other organizations within and beyond Africa who signed “in solidarity with organisations in Uganda and Kenya.“
13 May 2015
Dr Jim Yong Kim
President, World Bank Group
1818 H Street, NW
Washington, DC
Subject: joint open letter and statement in reaction to your speech in which you praised Bridge International Academies
Dear President Kim,
We are writing to express our deep concern about your recent speech, on 7th April 2015 titled “Ending Extreme Poverty by 2030: The Final Push,” in which you praised the for-profit, fee-charging chain of private primary schools in Kenya and Uganda, Bridge International Academies (BIA). Your remarks, in the context of a speech about poverty reduction, suggest that the World Bank believes this model should be supported and expanded through public policy, and that it is acceptable and desirable to expect poor people and communities to pay for basic education. The international community has fought to abolish school fees over the last two decades due to their negative impact on the poor, and their role in entrenching inequality. We are deeply troubled that this fee-based model is now being promoted as a means of ending poverty.
In your remarks you argued that, thanks to these schools, “[a]fter about two years, students’ average scores for reading and math have risen high above their public school peers.” And you said these results are achieved for “just” $6 dollars a month. The underlying message is that $6 is a small amount of money worth paying for schooling; however, this suggests a lack of full understanding of the situation of poor people in our countries.
In fact, school fees at BIA range from $6.5 to $9, depending on the grade. Beyond this, other costs to families are substantial, including uniforms (about $18.5 per year), exam fees ($2 to $3 per term), textbooks, and payment transfers; a conservative estimate of the real monthly amount received by BIA for each child ranges rather between $9 and $13 a month – excluding food, which BIA provides for an additional $7 per month. These costs are either prohibitive or demand a significant sacrifice for many Kenyans and Ugandans.
For the poorest half of Kenyan households who earn KES 7,000 ($75) or less per month, sending three children to a Bridge Academy would cost at least 24% of their monthly income, assuming a $6 monthly cost. Taking into account more realistic monthly costs of $17 that include school meals, the proportion rises to at least 68% of their monthly income. For 47% of Kenya’s population living below the poverty line – nearly half of the population – any expenditure to access education, even $6, means sacrificing another essential right for their survival, such as health care, food, or water. With nearly one out of six of Kenya’s primary school-aged children not enrolled in primary school, mostly due to cost factors, a model of expanding education based on charging school fees will continue to leave these children behind.
In Uganda, the situation is similar. Half of Ugandan households earn USH 200,000 (about $68) per month or less, and 21% of households earn less than USH 100,000 ($34) per month. Thus, for half the Ugandan population, sending three children to BIA would represent 52% of their monthly income assuming a $6 monthly cost, and more likely around 75%, taking the more realistic figure of $17 a month – and around 150% for the bottom quintile of the population, who cannot even afford to buy enough food. Such an expense is inconceivable for this segment of the population. Charging fees will also exclude the 9% of children who currently remain out of school in Uganda, and it is bound to result in more school dropouts – as research shows that fees are the most common educational barrier cited by parents whose children drop out or never enrol in school.
In your speech you also stated that students in Bridge Academies have better results than those in public schools. However, to-date we are not aware of any independent academic study available on Bridge Academies; it appears that the data you cited was from a study conducted by BIA itself. Other information about BIA schools calls into question these claims of higher quality. For example, teachers have only five weeks of training and rely on scripted, standardized lessons. Technology is a promising tool to improve learning, but it cannot substitute for a qualified teacher.
If the World Bank is serious about improving education in Kenya and Uganda, it should support our governments to expand and improve our public education systems, provide quality education to all children free-of-charge, and address other financial barriers to access. However, the Bank has no active International Development Association (IDA) investments in either Kenya or Uganda’s public basic education systems, and neither does it have any such future commitments in the pipeline. In contrast, last year, the World Bank’s private sector arm, the International Finance Corporation, made a $10 million investment in Bridge International Academies to enable its expansion. It is alarming to see the World Bank Group supporting fee-charging, profit-making, private education instead of free, public basic education in Kenya and Uganda. Given the World Bank’s power to influence the development landscape, it is a worrying indication of future trends.
Public primary education in Kenya and Uganda is, in law, free and mandatory. International human rights standards also require these countries to provide free quality education for all. The World Bank should work towards supporting countries such as Uganda and Kenya to put the laws into reality, and support public education systems.
Attached is a short briefing, which explains our concerns in more detail. Only a month before your speech, members of civil society from several countries, including Uganda, met with senior education officials of the World Bank specifically to discuss the rise of fee-charging, private primary schools, the World Bank’s support to them, and funding for BIA in particular. These civil society representatives were not just isolated voices but part of a global movement in support of the right to education, with strong concerns and deeply united positions on these issues. For this reason, we were particularly disappointed to hear your recent remarks. However, we understand that you are committed to dialogue with civil society and we are hopeful that you will consider and act on our concerns.
In particular, we call on the World Bank Group to:
—-Stop promoting the model used by Bridge International Academies and other fee-charging, private schools, and publicly re-commit the World Bank to universal, free and compulsory basic education.
—-Cease investments in Bridge International Academies and other fee-charging, private providers of basic education.
—-Re-establish World Bank investments in Kenya and Uganda’s public basic education systems.
—-Refrain from basing its views on self-produced evidence from corporate providers of education, and instead base its policies on independent, rigorous studies assessing the impact of education models on the totality of the right to education, including on discrimination and segregation.
¬—-Listen to and respond to the concerns of civil society, including by seriously taking into account their views when assessing and considering models such as that of Bridge International Academies and other fee-charging, private providers of basic education.
Signatures of organizations include some from the United States.
Click to access JointletterreactiontoWBstatementonBridge_EN.pdf
Now that Mr. Winestein is back in the US, I recommend he read: “Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools,” (Vintage, 2013).
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Laura Chapman and all, thank you for exposing this nonsense. I lived in Dar Es Salaam, East African from 1971-72 and I returned this year for a visit. I cannot tell you how these hucksters are not only ruining education, they (other profiteers) are doing the same to local agriculture which is doing just fine without Bill Gates, Round-Up, GMO, etc. etc. They are about the starve the people of Tanzania by their false methods. Tanzanian women are doing just fine but the profiteers won’t leave them alone. Are there problems? Of course. But indigenous methods work best. We need more Julius Nyereres for the continent.
Thank you so much for your incredible work and the letter to the World Bank. I hope I can do the same for the mess that is Bill Gates agriculture.
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Gates is backed by the money of Warren Buffett.
The power exerted by these self-appointed, self-serving oligarchs is inconsistent with both humanity and American values.
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Sorry for my typos — this is very emotional to me. Tanzania should have been the first successful country on the continent. It was stabbed in the back for many reasons, not least of which is the desire for profit.
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I used to believe that Nestlé was the most evil worldwide conglomerate – replacing breast milk with formula by marketing back in the ’70’s and currently pumping out the world’s aquifers to profit from selling bottled water.
Pearson educational industries may just take over this title.
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