Detroit-based journalist Allie Gross tells the sad story here of the destruction of public education in Detroit by Betsy DeVos and her fellow “reformers” (i.e. privatizers) over the past two decades, abetted by the Obama administration. “Reformers” decided that public schools were obsolete. They promoted charters. As charters proliferated, the public schools lost students and revenue; the district’s deficit soared. “Reformers” installed an emergency manager. The deficit soared more. The state created an “Educational Achievement Authority.” It’s well-paid administrator created new deficit and left. The EAA was a monumental failure. The “reformers” had only one answer: more charters, more privatization.
Gross provides an excellent historical summary of the downward spiral of Detroit public schools as “reform” took hold.
“When charter schools first entered the national discourse, in the late 1980s, the conversations focused on goals of collaboration and partnership. Charter pioneers such as Albert Shanker, the late president of the American Federation of Teachers, supported these schools on the premise that they would have the flexibility to experiment with new teaching techniques that could ultimately be integrated back into the traditional public school setting.
“But by 1993, when Michigan lawmakers began to debate charter legislation and school reform, Shanker had renounced charters, calling them an anti-union “gimmick” — new supporters had capitalized on the charter promise of flexibility and begun arguing that teachers unions, with their clunky bureaucracy, would hinder innovation. This new face of charter school support was obvious in Michigan, where the movement’s biggest champions weren’t parents or educators but members of the business community and a cadre of billionaires with ties to the religious right. Among them were the DeVos family, heirs to the fortune amassed from marketing behemoth Amway, who since the 1970s have donated at least $200 million to conservative and Christian causes across the nation with a keen focus on education.
“Charters’ biggest champions in Michigan were members of the business community and a cadre of billionaires with ties to the religious right.
“John Engler, the state’s Republican governor, was in the middle of an education funding overhaul that would rely on sales taxes rather than property taxes and tie dollars to students rather than districts. This, he and backers including the Michigan Chamber of Commerce reasoned, would keep community taxes down but raise school quality overall as schools competed for the most kids and the most funding. “The schools that deliver will succeed. The schools that don’t will not,” Engler said in an October 1993 speech promoting the funding plan. No longer will there be a monopoly on mediocrity in this state.”
“Charter schools fit right into this paradigm, one way to save students from a stagnant and bureaucratic public school system. Reformers said opening districts up to competition would force schools to improve or be put out of business. Parents would get better options in a new education marketplace, free to choose among traditional public schools, state-funded charter schools, and eventually private and parochial schools paid for by state-funded vouchers.
“The goal of charter public schools was to provide choice and options for students and parents trapped in failing traditional public schools who didn’t have the means to move to the suburbs or pay private school tuition,” said Gary Naeyaert, executive director of the Great Lakes Education Project, a pro-charter advocacy group that DeVos founded and funds and where she sits on the board. “We’ve always had school choice for rich people, and charter schools provided choice for everyone else.”
“Engler signed a measure in January 1994 allowing charters to operate. The first charter schools opened in Detroit in the following year. In the beginning, they fit the original charter school mission: largely mom-and-pop operations that filled an unmet need in the city. Three-quarters of Detroiters were black, and two of those first charter schools were grounded in an Afrocentric curriculum.
“As charters attracted families with promises of smaller class sizes, increased technology, and minimized bureaucracy, Detroit’s traditional public schools lost students and hemorrhaged funds. Because the short-term costs of losing a student were far greater than the average cost of educating one, this set the public school district on a path toward insolvency. Last year, for example, there were more than 100,000 school-age students living in the city; fewer than 47,000 of them attended the public schools. Take the estimated per-pupil funding figure of $7,500 per kid, and that’s nearly $400 million in revenue missing from the district.
“Fixed overhead costs, such as heating a school building or paying teachers, didn’t suddenly drop because a child left the district. The result was a negative feedback loop. As students left, the district lost funds and had to make cuts. Maybe it nixed art, or got rid of a social worker. Maybe it crammed more kids into a classroom, or made the risky decision to get rid of on-site boiler operators. Maybe, if things were really tight, it shut down schools. These quick fixes in turn made the district less “competitive,” and so the kids who could leave eventually did. The district lost even more funding and sunk further into entropy. “It is akin to an arsonist adding an accelerant to a fire,” Peter Hammer, the director of the Damon Keith Center for Civil Rights at Wayne State’s law school, wrote in a 2012 paper on the effects of competition in DPS….
“Michigan has one of the most lax charter school laws in the nation and is often called the “wild West” of school choice. Nearly 80 percent of the state’s charter schools are run by for-profit companies — the highest rate in the nation. Anyone can start a school, and charter authorizers include a wide range of public bodies such as traditional school districts, public universities, and community colleges.
“Charter advocates point to the poor performance of public schools to explain the need for alternatives. But Michigan students’ achievement has not improved in step with increased school competition, and now both public schools and charters are falling behind. The state is currently ranked 41st in the nation in fourth-grade reading, when it was 28th in 2003.
“Lack of regulation has meant charter operators with bad track records or no record at all have cropped up in Detroit and across the state. A 2014 Detroit Free Press investigation into mismanagement in the charter school sector found the state had spent nearly $1 billion on charter schools yet public accountability had plummeted and schools were floundering. A 2013 Stanford University study found that more than half of Detroit’s charter schools failed to perform “significantly better” in math and reading and in some cases performed worse than Detroit public schools. Overall, the report found that 84 percent of charter students in Michigan performed below the state average in math and 80 percent were below the state average in reading.
“Nearly 80 percent of Michigan’s charter schools are run by for-profit companies — the highest rate in the nation.
Through the Great Lakes Education Project, the DeVos family has played a major role in ensuring the education marketplace remains unregulated. In 2011, they successfully advocated to lift the charter school cap and killed a provision that would have stopped failing schools from replicating. A review last year found “an unreasonably high” 23 charter schools on the state’s list of lowest-performing schools and questioned why after two decades of the charter experiment “student outcomes are still just ‘comparable’ to traditional public schools.”
Gross follows a mother and her children as they try to find their way through the choice maze. They liked the neighborhood school best, but it was closed by the state’s emergency manager.
“Choice doesn’t take place in a vacuum, and it vanishes when the school down the street is abruptly closed. “It’s backwards,” Moore told me last month as we sat in her tidy, plant-filled living room. Chrishawana, now 14, and Tylyia, 7, were eating a spaghetti dinner before getting ready for bed. “You’re trying to build this image of ‘OK, you’re free to go wherever you want,’ but if I have two crappy schools close to me and you close the school that out of the three was the best one, how are you helping me? What’s the choice in that?…”
The moral of the story: Despite the failure of school choice in Detroit, Betsy DeVos is poised to do to the nation what she and her allies have done to Detroit.

I’m afraid we’re not going to get any questions on this to DeVos because the Democrats in ed reform are interested only in “accountability”- they want reassurances that standardized testing will continue.
I haven’t seen any concern at all for DeVos’ anti-public school stance. As long as she promises to continue mandating “data” flows to interested parties she could close every public school in the country and these people wouldn’t care.
They’re not even discussing public schools. They’re discussing what form the 20 billion voucher initiative should take- should it be a straight voucher or can they sell it better as a tax credit?
They’ve capitulated so far already. Trump’s only been in office a month and they’re all busily horse-trading on vouchers and lobbying for more charter funding.
Our schools aren’t even on the DC agenda. Trump will roll right over them. He already has. They’ll get continued data collection and tracking and Trump will get his privatization agenda and ed reform will call it a good day’s work.
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And all of this sudden devil-may-care horse trading — both in the charter school hedge funding game AND in the larger general market — is likely leading to a massive bust.
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You’d have to value existing public schools to care about what happens to them. They don’t value them. They’re convinced the charter/private school replacements will be superior.
It’s a point of pride in ed reform to say you don’t value public schools. That means you’re “scientific” and “unbiased”. They literally compare schools to supermarkets.
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I’d leave the “likely” out of your last sentence, ciedie.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ccoaNIfJvrA
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This is literally all they care about:
“This brings me back to the issue of parental choice. I’m for choice, and I’m glad he and his Secretary-to-be are, too. But is there to be any accountability to parents and taxpayers in the choice? And what happens in the policy if all or even most of the students and parents don’t get choice because choice opponents stall or minimize the degree to which choice occurs?”
The debate is over in DC. They’re arguing now over whether our privatized school systems should be regulated or not regulated.
They didn’t even fight. They immediately surrendered. The MOST they will get is watered-down regulation of privatized systems. They didn’t even dare ask for support for existing public schools. That’s unimaginable, apparently.
http://sandykress.com/bipartisan-mangling-education-now-trumps-turn/
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Betsy Devos is a debutante who never had a job in her life. This woman’s life mission is to destroy the lives of hard working people who work in public schools educating our nations most vulnerable kids. We as a group of public school educators need to promote the fact that Devos:
1. Is clueless about public schools as she is a debutante who never worked a day in her life
2. Betsy is married to billionaire bozo who created the pyramid scheme known as Amway who sells products like water softeners and some other crappy products
3. Betsy destroyed the education system in the entire state of Michigan especially in and around the city of Detroit by instilling for profit charters and we all know what profit means in education……profit = kids with no education
4. Betsy wants to create a system of “vouchers” thereby giving students money to go to private schools yet in MIchigan this proposal was turned down numerous times resulting in the for profit charters instead – AND a proven fact that vouchers do not work
5. Betsy will be facing parents like the parents in Massachusetts who voted NO 65 – 35 PERCENT not to increase charter schools throughout Massachusetts!
This list can go on forever but Diane needs the space here.
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The ed reform promotion of vouchers flies in the face of the evidence they have in Ohio. Ohio has vouchers. It hasn’t “improved education”. Fordham took the study on vouchers in Ohio and (ridiculously) claimed that while vouchers hadn’t helped poor students, vouchers had mysteriously “improved” public schools. They can’t even credit public schools with “improving”. They instead credit private schools for any improvement in public schools.
It’s nonsense. This isn’t science. It’s ideology. The moment the “choice” scheme doesn’t perform as promised they shift the goalposts. We go from “excellence” to “choice” as the goal.
They should be ashamed to sell this as “science”. They’re bashing a group of well-intended and hard working local people to sell their ideological goals. It’s a personal betrayal of those people.
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DeVos is blindly biased. She would would turn taxpayers’ public taxes over to religious schools and other schools lower performing public schools with no accountability. Vouchers have been a resounding failure if she bothered to check facts. Students in voucher schools perform more poorly that those in public schools with legitimate teachers. http://www.politico.com/story/2013/10/vouchers-dont-do-much-for-students-097909
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Correction: schools lower performing than public schools.
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Even with accountability, vouchers are a very bad idea that will undermine public schools.
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School choice is advancing here in Virginia. Sadly, the 2016 session passed a choice bill in the state assembly, but the governor vetoed the legislation. School choice legislation will return to the assembly, and may make it into law at the next session.
I would hesitate to make a blanket statement, that school choice (vouchers/savings accounts) are a very bad idea. What is possibly wrong with empowering parents to have more control over their education spending? If the public schools in a certain area are delivering, and parents are satisfied, then the public school has nothing to fear from school choice.
Here is the governor’s veto message:
Q Pursuant to Article V, Section 6, of the Constitution of Virginia, I veto House Bill 389, which would remove state funds from our public school systems and redirect those funds to Parental Choice Education Savings Accounts to pay for educational services outside the public school system.
First and foremost, there are significant constitutional concerns with this legislation. The approved expenses as outlined in the bill include tuition at private sectarian institutions, bringing the legislation into direct conflict with Article VIII, Section 10, of the Virginia Constitution, which authorizes the use of public funds only for public and nonsectarian private schools.
While the bill would divert much-needed resources away from public schools, operating costs would not be significantly lowered due to the continued need for teachers, buses, and other administrative supports upon which public school students rely. Additionally, the funds withdrawn from the public system bear no relationship to the needs of the particular student or the cost of the additional support services he or she would require, because the amount received will vary based on the local composite index of the home division.
This bill raises constitutional questions, diverts funds from public schools, and creates an unfair system. Our goal is to support and improve public education across the Commonwealth for all students, not to codify inequality.
Accordingly, I veto this bill. END Q (from the Virginia Legislative Information System)
I believe the governor is dead wrong on several points. First, whose money is being diverted? Parents (and other citizens) who pay the taxes. The money belongs to the taxpayers, not the school systems.
And there are NO constitutional issues at all. The Supreme Court solved the issue in 2002, with Zelman V. Simmons-Harris. Educational savings accounts, empower parents to save for educational costs, and have the choice of directing the expenditures to paying tuition to religiously-affiliated schools. See ACSTO v. Winn 2010.
Virginia has educational savings accounts for college educational costs (They are called “529 plans”). money saved in these plans may be used at religiously-affiliated institutions of higher learning. No one objects to the 529 plans, even though the money goes to religiously-affiliated school tuition (and related costs). Money that would have gone to public institutions (like Virginia Commonwealth), goes to religiously-affiliated schools. No one ever raises a constitutional question.
Of course, directing money towards parents savings accounts, and away from failing public schools, will result in less money going to the public schools, which children would leave. No dispute. Just like when a child moves out of the school district. So what?
However, the governor is wrong, when he claims that operating costs, at the lower-populated public schools would not be significantly lowered. When the students leave, the workforce (teachers and administrators) will have to be down-sized. Personnel costs would decline, while “sunk costs” (buildings, warehouses,etc) would continue. The lower-attended public schools would have to cut costs, by selling off these unused assets.
The governor is way off about the costs. The costs of the saving accounts can be calculated to reflect the per-pupil costs, already being spent at the failing schools. Of course, the amount would vary. Per-pupil expenditures are higher in Fairfax county (Metro DC), that in Accomack County (rural).
The governor is off in his summary. The constitutional issues have been solved by the Supreme Court. Money would be diverted from public school spending, but money would NOT be diverted from publicly-supported education. This is what economists call a “zero-sum game”. The per-pupil expenditures would remain unchanged. Only where the money is spent, and who controls the money would be changed.
Giving parents more control over their education dollars, is inherently fair. No unfair system would be created.
There is already an unfair and unequal system here in Virginia. The rich have choice. Rich people can pay for a school system that they do not use, and then pay tuition to a private/parochial school that they do use. Lower-income parents are trapped into paying for a system of public schools. Some are delighted with the public schools, some are not happy. Don’t these parents deserve the same right of free choice as the rich?
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Yes, Cema4by,
Poor children should get $50,000 each to go to Sidwell Friends or the Hill School, where Trump sent his children.
The same choice, not a budget choice.
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The proposal in Virginia, which was vetoed by the governor, proffered a voucher amount which was much less than the amount you suggest. If you read the article, you will see that the voucher amount was approximately $3,625 (per student per annum).
Where did you come up with this amount?
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Cema4by,
What kind of school will accept a student with a voucher worth less than $4,000?
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I do not know of any school (at this time) with a tuition schedule at this rate. I do know, that a friend of mine with eight(8) children, homeschools all of his children. He would gladly accept a rebate on the taxes he pays to schools he does not use. There are private/parochial schools in my area, which offer scholarships to deserving students. Their tuition is $0 (zero). The parents of these scholarship recipients would gladly accept a voucher, and use the funds on other education-related expenses (transportation, computers, etc).
I am dead certain that there are parents who would accept the voucher, and augment the voucher with their own money to pay tuition at a private/parochial school.
The important concept is to empower parents, to have control over their education dollars.
Once the voucher program is in place, schools will appear, to enable parents to exercise choice, at a tuition rate, that is agreed upon by schools and parents. (See Say’s law, an economic theorem postulated by Jean-Baptiste Say) https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Say's_law
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Amplifying my answer. Since there is no voucher program in place in Virginia at this time, the question is academic. But, I know of some schools that would accept a voucher payment of $3625 for tuition. Those schools are the Virginia public schools. Under a voucher plan, the public schools would be required to accept the vouchers from Virginia parents. Schools which are satisfactory (to the parents), would just “keep on truckin'”.
I was speaking with my friend, Judd. (He has eight kids, that are home-schooled, and his wife is pregnant with #9). He pays the same taxes as public school parents, but accepts no education services from the schools he is supporting.
Sadly, his children are prohibited from participating in any of the extra-curricular activities at the local schools. In some states, home-schooled children are permitted to participate in band, athletics, debate team, etc. In Virginia, it is prohibited.
I think this is “taxation without representation”. What do you think?
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Cema4by,
Your friend doesn’t need a voucher to send his 8 children to public school. From your description, I feel sure that they would get a far better education at public school than at home. They won’t learn anything more than their parents know.
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Q Your friend doesn’t need a voucher to send his 8 children to public school. From your description, I feel sure that they would get a far better education at public school than at home. They won’t learn anything more than their parents know. END Q
Of course, Judd can send his school-age kids to the excellent Fairfax county public schools, anytime he chooses. If he received vouchers for his home-schooled children, he could use the resources for other education-related services, like computers, and transportation to museums and Civil war battlefield sites, etc.
Why do you think his children would receive a better education at the public school? His wife has an education degree. They use the internet, and various technologies in their home-school. They trade-off with other home-school parents, and exchange educations this way. They participate in field-trips and conferences with other home-schoolers. His older children are all college-bound.
If you believe that his children will be limited to what their parents know, you are just wrong. His children have access to books, the internet, museums, and all of the learning, that can be had through modern technology. Children are home-schooled all over the USA, and these home-schooled kids win awards, and get accepted to top colleges. In other countries, home-schooling is popular.
See Australia’s “School of the Air” https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/School_of_the_Air
When I was in the diplomatic service, many of the diplomatic children were home-schooled, in countries that do not have adequate English-language schools.
Home-schooling is a phenomenon that is here to stay. And, I predict that it will grow in popularity, when school-choice is implemented.
(BTW- Merry Christmas, and a Happy New Year)
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Most people who home school lack the education of certified teachers. Home schooling benefits very few children. They never interact with people different from themselves. They learn no more than what their parents know.
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Q Most people who home school lack the education of certified teachers. Home schooling benefits very few children. They never interact with people different from themselves. They learn no more than what their parents know. END Q
I concede, that most home-schooling parents do not have education certification or education degrees, nor the experience of classroom teachers. No dispute.
Home schooling benefits many children. I did some advising to a group in Kentucky. One of the moms, earned a national award for home schooling. All of her children were accepted into college.
You are mistaken if you think that home-schooled children do not interact with other people. In many (NOT ALL) states, home-schooled children are permitted to participate in extra-curricular activities at the local public schools. The parents “trade-off” their children between the other parents in the community, that are home-schooling. Many communities have home-schooling support groups, so that the parents can get counseling and advice. (I helped set up an electronics self-instruction program for a group in Kentucky). Groups of home-schooled children often participate in group activities like museum visits.
You are wrong, if you think that home schooled children learn no more that what the parents know. Through the internet, and using the same textbooks, that are used in public/private schools, children can learn the same material as any public/private schooled child. The home-school groups, often engage outside instructors and lecturers.
Many education advocates are pushing for lower class size. This is a laudable goal. With home-schooling, the class sizes are always small. A laudable benefit, indeed.
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Please read the article.
http://pilotonline.com/news/government/politics/virginia/private-school-voucher-legislation-advances-in-virginia-general-assembly/article_8e70a6c1-b76f-52a9-9c49-dc7620864957.html
Virginia HB 389 (passed by the assembly and vetoed by the governor) would have proffered a voucher in the amount of $3,625 (Three thousand six hundred and twenty-five dollars). By one estimate, the grants would average around $3,625 a year. Since the per-pupil spending varies from urban to rural areas, the amount of the voucher would also vary.
The defeated legislation, would not enable parents to receive a voucher in the amount you suggest. Where did you get this figure?
Parents deserve a choice in where their education dollars are spent.
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(possible duplicate)
I believe that Ms.DeVos (IF she is confirmed) will institute several changes. First, I believe she will push for school choice. She will push for giving parents the power to withdraw their children, from failing public (government) schools, and enroll these children in alternative schools. These alternatives will be public, private, parochial, and home-schools. School vouchers, and educational savings accounts, will “break the back” of the government/public school monopoly.
Now, children are assigned to a government school, based on their zip code. If parents do not like the government school, then they have few options:
1-Withdraw the child, and place the child in a private/parochial school, but continue to pay the taxes to support the school that they do not use.
2-Home school the child, and continue to pay taxes for the school they do not use.
3-Move to a different school district, and hope that the new government school is better than the old one.
4-“Suck it up” and continue to send the child to the government school that is not providing an adequate education.
I also hope that our nation will take a long hard look, at the entire educational program of our nation. Currently (2015 data from OECD) the USA is spending 6.4 percent of our GDP on education. We need to examine and audit the books. We need an accounting of how we are spending this money, and what value we are receiving.
We need to examine K-12 education, and see how it can be improved, altered, modified, to keep pace with the economic needs of the 21st century. We all have to live with the product of our educational system.
We need to have alternate certification for teachers. I am an engineer, but I cannot teach electronics in a public school in Virginia. Bill Gates cannot teach computer programming. Albert Einstein cannot teach physics. I speak French and German (I lived in France for one year, and Germany for two years, and I was a technical translator for the US Air Force). I cannot teach German in a public school. States should be able to conduct “boot camps”, where scientists and engineers can obtain the necessary training to conduct a high-school class, and how to complete the required government paperwork.
We need to break the backs of the AFT/NEA, and enable qualified people to teach in America’s schools, without the interference or approval of any third party.
We need to improve and expand vocational/technical education. Not all students have the aptitude or intelligence to cope with college. We will need air conditioning technicians, and automobile mechanics, and jet-engine mechanics. We need to observe and emulate some of the vo-tech programs used in other nations. Germany has a vibrant public/private apprenticeship program, that places vo-tech students in apprentice programs.
We need to expand university education in STEM programs. (I am a telecommunications engineer, so I feel very strongly about this). We need to invest more in educating the next generation of scientists, engineers, computer programmers, robotic engineers, and all of the high-tech specialties, that will enable the USA to compete with other nations, in the 21st century.
We need to diminish the number of students who are spending many thousands of dollars (often borrowed) to obtain a liberal-arts education, that will not garner them employment. Do we really need so many people with degrees in History, Italian Literature, and recreation?
Lastly, we need to abolish the federal Department of Education in its entirety. There is no specific authority delegated to the federal government, to have any involvement in education at all. Educational policy and education should be entirely a state/county/municipal function. Some poorer states could be considered for block grants, if their tax base is inadequate to support a modern educational program.
These are some, not all, of the changes I would like to see in education in the USA. I hope that Ms. DeVos can get on it immediately.
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