Elizabeth Green of Chalkbeat discusses the arguments for and against “no excuses” charter schools like Success Academy, KIPP, and Achievement First.

 

She begins with the example of the video in which a first grade teacher at a Success Academy charter chastises a child, sends her to the “calm down”corner, and rips her paper in half.

 

Green acknowledges that there are charters where harsh discipline is common practice.

 

She reviews the critics’  view that such punitive discipline is unnecessarily humiliating and that it is fundamentally racist. The children are likely to explode or have psychological melt downs in response to strict control.

 

Those who defend “no excuses” discipline say that it teaches children appropriate behavior and self-control. Far from being racist, they believe they are rescuing poor children from a life of poverty, gangs, and drugs.

 

Is the “no excuses” regime an exercise in colonialism or is it the path to liberation? Can the demand for strict conformity produce people who are capable of initiative and self-reliance?

 

What do you think?

 

PS: Schools Matter dismissed Green as a shill for the corporate reform movement. I didn’t see this critique until after I posted.