Last week’s election was both a victory and a defeat for corporate education reform. On one hand, Donald Trump won with a strong commitment to school choice and privatization, which is the highest goal of corporate reformers. He will very likely appoint a Supreme Court justice (or justices) hostile to unions, another priority of the so-called reformers. Maybe now, they can give up their pretense of being Democrats and hail the new regime in D.C.
On the other hand, voters in two very different states–Massachusetts and Georgia–were asked if they wanted to “improve” their schools by turning them over to the charter industry, and both states answered with a resounding NO.
In Georgia, despite a deceptively worded constitutional amendment, a bipartisan majority voted 60-40 against allowing the governor to create a special district where low-scoring schools could be converted to charters.
In Massachusetts, the corporate financiers bundled $26 million, mostly from out of state donors, to promote Question 2, which would add 12 new charters every year. The advertising campaign tried to sell Question 2 as a civil rights issue. They promised it would not defund public schools. They swore it was only “for the kids.” Question 2 lost overwhelmingly by 68-32%. Two-thirds of the voters did not believe the promises.
Here is the big news: The largest vote against charters in the Massachusetts vote came in communities that already had charters. The voters knew that charters were taking money from their public schools. They didn’t like what charters were doing to their communities.
“Almost all of the fiercest Question 2 opponents were cities and towns whose public schools are losing money to charter schools.
“Easthampton topped all Massachusetts municipalities in the strength of its opposition — 76.2 percent voted ” No,” or 7,324 against 2,290 “Yes” votes — and that city will lose $940,000 to its charter school, Hilltown Cooperative Charter Public School, in fiscal 2016.
“It comes right off the top,” Easthampton Mayor Karen Cadieux said Thursday. “If you’re saying it doesn’t cost us anything, then you need to explain why I’m $940,000 short.”
“Hadley and South Hadley also followed the pattern, voting “no” to the tune of 73.7 and 68.9 percent. South Hadley contains Pioneer Valley Performing Arts Charter Public School and Hadley houses Pioneer Valley Chinese Immersion Charter School.
“Despite being located in Eastern Massachusetts, where opposition to Question 2 was not as high as in the rest of the state, Somerville also voted strongly against Question 2, with 71.2 percent of voters opposed. The city houses Prospect Hill Academy Charter School.
“Greenfield, where Four Rivers Charter Public School makes its home, voted against Question 2 by 71 percent. In Holyoke, which contains Paulo Freire Social Justice Charter School, 66 percent opposed.”
Despite the millions of dollars in Dark Money, despite the big buy on television, despite the civil rights rhetoric, Question 2 was rejected.
The best part of this election, other than the victory of public education, was that opponents of Question 2 were fully informed about the threat that privatization posed to public education in General and to their public schools in particular. Only a handful of affluent districts supported the measure. The rest understood that they were repelling an existential threat to a democratic institution that belongs to their community: their public schools.

Thanks, Diane!
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Being well informed is certainly important.
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Reblogged this on Crazy Normal – the Classroom Exposé and commented:
Wake up America. Wake up California. Stop the publicly funded, for-profit privatization and segregation of our community based, democratic, transparent, traditional public schools. Those are our tax dollars, not a corporate CEO or autocratic billionaire oligarch.
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Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
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Does anyone know anything-funding, disciplinary practices, etc. . . about the Paulo Freire Social Justice Charter School?
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Wow. Social justice versus charter school – those terms could not be more disparate. 1984 is alive and well.
Senhor Freire would roll over (or more likely stand up and shout) in his grave if he knew that a charter is his name were operated by a charter school for private gain. Here is a quote from Wikipedia: Freire is best known for his attack on what he called the “banking” concept of education, in which the student was viewed as an empty account to be filled by the teacher. He notes that “it transforms students into receiving objects. It attempts to control thinking and action, leads men and women to adjust to the world, and inhibits their creative power.”
I know nothing about this school, but I sincerely hope that it is a non-profit which accepts all children and channels its funding directly into teaching, not profit.
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Paulo Freier Social Justice Charter School? That’s a hot one.
It must be right down the street from the Oceania and Eastasia Charter School, where Ignorance Is Strength.
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I would be interested in knowing which wealthy communities supported them.
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18 towns voted majority support for Question 2 out of 351 in MA… about 5%, which means 95% opposed Question 2.
Towns that supported Question 2 near Boston were Lincoln, Weston, Wellesley, Dover and Sherborne. All of those towns have excellent schools Lincoln-Sudbury and Dover-Sherborne are top 10.
Manchester and Cohasset voted majority yes.
Mt Washington in SW corner of MA. Chatham and Orleans on the cape. 6 municipalities on Martha’s Vineyard and Nantucket.
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Rich/middle-class constituents simply cannot fathom the idea that poor (and particularly non-White) children might have functioning lives. This is an eerie echo of Trump’s endless bellowing about non-White people having awful, worthless living conditions — this line of noise from him a being dog-whistle signal for many of the middle-class citizens who voted him into office.
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