This post is updated based on your excellent suggestions.
I always enjoyed July 4 as a day to celebrate our nation and to honor its heroes.
With an ignorant bully in the White House, it is hard to feel good about what is happening today. Trump seems eager to demolish the First Amendment and that’s bad for our nation and our future. He wants to remove environmental protection and allow the pillaging of our air, water, and lands. He wants to defund every social program that protects those who are in need while giving the military more money than it asked for.
But enough complaining! It is what it is!
Today I want to celebrate the everyday heroes across the nation who are fighting to protect public education against privatization.
I won’t remember all of them and I don’t know all of them, so I invite you to add the names of people you know in your district or state who are fighting to keep public schools public.
Today I honor the following:
The BadAss Teachers Association, which has given courageous teachers a voice to fight against phony “reforms”;
Jitu Brown of Journey for Justice.
Speaker of the Texas House Joe Strauss, who has deftly fended off private school vouchers again and again;
The Honorable Dan Huberty, chair of the Public Education Committee in the Texas House of Representatives, who has knocked down vouchers again and again;
Pastors for Texas Children, which has not only fought vouchers in Texas, but has helped to organize pastors in other states to defend separation of church and state and religious liberty;
The Education Law Center, and especially Wendy Lecker, who work to protect public schools from predators;
Save Our Schools New Jersey, which has fought back to protect public schools from the Chris Christie regime;
Valerie Strauss, who writes The Answer Sheet blog at the Washington Post, and is the clearest thinking education writer in the nation;
The parent groups in Florida who continue to fight for public schools despite the Republican legislators who live under the thumb of former Governor Jeb Bush;
The Washington State Supreme Court that declared that charter schools are not eligible for public funding because they are not public schools, not having an elected board;
Mercedes Schneider, who is a powerful and indefatigable researcher, author, and teacher;
Kenneth Bernstein, who blogs for The Daily Kos as Teacher Ken;
NYSAPE (New York State Allies for Public Education), which combined 50 parent and teacher organizations across the state to fight for public schools, for equitable funding, for the right to opt out of abusive state testing, against the Common Core, and against high-stakes testing;
Larry Lee of Alabama, who fights for public education every day;
John Kuhn, superintendent in Texas, whose eloquence inspires us all;
The members of the board of the Network for Public Education, who serve without compensation and tirelessly give of their time to support public education and make it better for all children;
Carol Burris, who not only leads the Network for Public Education, but finds time to write brilliant exposes of charter corruption;
The Chicago Teachers Union, which has relentlessly fought Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s attacks on public schools;
The Massachusetts Teachers Association, which led the successful fight to defeat a referendum to increase charter schools in the stater;
Citizens for Public Schoools in Massachusetts, which fought the expansion of charters and won;
The NAACP, which bravely issued a clarion call for a moratorium on new charters, until existing ones are held to the same standards of inclusiveness, accountability, and transparency as public schools;
Black Lives Matter, which issued a statement condemning school privatization and calling for democratic control and equitable funding of public schools;
Julian Vasquez Heilig, who as blogger and NAACP activist, has fought those who cynically cloak their goal of privatization with the rhetoric of civil rights;
Defending the Early Years, which supports the right of children to a childhood;
Activists Nancy Carlsson-Paige and Susan Ohanian, who advocate for early childhood education free of standardized testing;
Helen Gym of Philadelphia, who ran for City Council and won, so she could fight for kids and public schools;
Jeannie Kaplan of Denver, who has waged a lonely battle against corporate reform and is not giving up;
Donald Cohen of In the Public Interest, which exposes efforts to privatize public institutions;
Arthur Camins, who understands the importance of public schools in a democracy; Mark Naison, who fights for equity through his writings and activism; and Deborah Meier, a lifelong champion of children, progressive education, and democracy;
Carl Peterson, Robert Skeels, Karen Wolfe, Ellen Lubic, Scott Schmerson, and all the other parents and educators in Los Angeles who keep hope alive for the survival of public schools in that billionaire-ridden city;
Angie Sullivan of Clark County, Nevada, who teaches in a Title I school and sends blast emails to legislators and journalists to fight for her students;
Sara Stevenson, middle school librarian in Austin, who writes a letter to the editor of the Wall Street Journal every time it attacks public schools and has become a friend of the editor of the letters section;
Tim Slekar, dean of Edgewood College in Wisconsin, who tirelessly fights for the teaching profession.
Bloggers Peter Greene, Jersey Jazzman, Gary Rubinstein, Mike Klonsky, Paul Thomas, Jennifer Berkshire, Steven Singer, Mercedes Schneider, Nancy Bailey, Arthur Goldstein, Susan Schwartz, Tom Ultican, Jonathan Pelto, Anita Senkowski, and many others who have fearlessly punched holes in the “reform” narrative;
Jeff Bryant and Jan Resseger, who fight for public education every day;
Laura Chapman, who conducts her own powerful research about the privatizers;
Bill Phillis, who founded the Ohio Coalition for Equity and Adequacy;
Public Schools First in North Carolina, who never give up hope;
Rev. William Barber, who launched the Moral Mondays movement in North Carolina;
Save Our Schools Kentucky, fighting against charters and vouchers;
Scholar Bruce Baker of Rutgers, who has studied the actual performance of charter schools and found it wanting;
Scholars Gene V. Glass, David Berliner, and Chris Lubienski, who have demonstrated time and again that public schools are far superior than nonpublic schools;
Scholars Gary Orfield and Myron Orfield, who have documented the continuing resegregation of the schools and called for needed changes;
FAIRTEST, which has stood strong against the misuse of and overuse of standardized testing since the 1970s;
Scholars Pasi Sahlberg, Andrew Hargreaves, and Yong Zhao, who have pointed the way to better schools through their scholarship;
State Commissioner of Education Rebecca Holcomb in Vermont, who has been an inspiring leader in articulating a vision of better education;
The National Education Policy Center, which regularly reviews research and think tank reports, for accuracy and soundness;
Class Size Matters, an organization founded by Leonie Haimson, that advocates for reduced class sizes and student privacy (I am a member of its small board);
The independent film makers who have created videos to celebrate our public schools and to expose those who attack them–including Michael Elliott, whose work supports the Opt Out movement; Mark Hall, who created “Killing Ed”; Brian and Cindy Malone, who made “Education Inc.”; Nebraska Loves Public schools, which makes films celebrating the work of good public schools in the state.
The Tennessee Mama Bears, who have fought to preserve their public schools, against a rapacious charter school industry;
New York superintendents Michael Hynes of Patchogue-Medford and David Gamberg of Southold-Greenport, who have turned their vision of child-centered education into reality;
The Opt Out Movement in New York, which year after year has persuaded 20% of the state’s eligible children not to take the state tests and has had a statewide and national influence;
The Parent Coalition for Student Privacy, led by Rachel Stickland and Leonie Haimson;
The Northeast Indiana Friends of Public Education, which fights for public schools in a state whose politicians were bought by reformers.
Now, I am certain I have only begun to scratch the surface of the nation’s heroes of public education.
I celebrate them today for their courage, their dedication, their devotion to democracy and to children.
If you have names of individuals or groups to add, please send them in.
Who are your heroes in education? Who has inspired you?
Dearest Dr. Ravitch:
Please add Dr. Ravitch, all members in NPE, and all conscientious veteran educators/ contributors in Dr. Ravitch’s website.
Respectfully yours,
May King
+1
Don’t forget Mercedes Schneider & all the investigative work she does!
Don’t forget about Save Our Schools Kentucky. We just got our first charter law this year, so our work to protect our schools has just begun. We are also fighting politicians bought by ed reformers and a narcissistic governor who calls parents and teachers “disgusting” for fighting to save our schools. But we are taking back our schools at the grassroots level. In our largest district (101,000 students), we voted out school board members who put business interests over their constituents. We just removed our superintendent who enabled the reformers instead of fighting for our kids and our schools. There is hope on the horizon. We may have lost the legislative battle but we will win the war. Because we must.
Scott Schmerelson for being the most reliable voice for public education on the LAUSD School Board. We’re going to need him more than ever with the new pro-charter majority.
Interesting editorial today. Here’s a snippet, “If charter schools aren’t accepting their full share of students with learning disabilities, or aren’t providing an obviously better education than nearby neighborhood schools, they shouldn’t be allowed to stay in business. Further, when it comes to sharing campuses, district schools should not be squashed into cramped spaces to make room for charters.” That’s from the infamous LA Times Editorial Board!
…and my American hero is — Schmerelson and Ravitch are good ones, but they’re taken already — my hero is Betsy DeVos’ bodyguard. Everybody protesting all the time. Constant grizzly bear alert. The inane comments. He or she puts up with a lot. This is not what you joined the Secret Service for, bodyguard. You’re my hero, security detail member. Hang in there!
You, my dear, are my hero.
Ditto!
What they both said.
Ditto!
I would add NY Regents Chancellor Betty Rosa & other members of the Board of Regents who last year opened a workable path for special needs students to earn local diplomas, making it possible for my daughter to graduate this year. (She attended a private – but not a charter – school, one of several that operate under the auspices of the NYC Public Schools system, showing how public & private can have a symbiotic, rather than adversarial, relationship.) She’ll be attending CUNY’s Guttman College (an excellent choice for special needs students, by the way) in the fall. Their decision literally changed her life, & we’ve let them know how meaningful their decision was to us.
Of course, Diane, your inspiration & guidance has been invaluable throughout our journey.
I would like to add the NAACP for their bold stand calling for a moratorium in charter expansion. I would also like to add Julian Vasquez Heilig, board member of NPE, for his blog ‘Cloaking Inequity’ in which he examines the racist proclivities of privatization.
I would like to add to your list of bloggers the name of Jan Resseger of Ohio. Jan has been an outstanding writer exposing those who would destroy public schools not only in her home state but across this nation. Thank you, Jan.
Jeff Bryant for his many articles supporting public schools and pointing out the many fallacies of charter schools.
Yes, Jeff Bryant and Jan Resseger for sure.
Also Bill Phillis of Coalition for Eqity and Adequacy in Ohio.
I concur with retired teacher and Rick Johnson and all who credit Diane Ravitch.
Also add the Reverend William Barber II, courageous leader of NAACP in North Carolina, a powerful speaker, and now leader of a new movement. https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/acts-of-faith/wp/2017/06/29/woe-unto-those-who-legislate-evil-rev-william-barber-builds-a-moral-movement/?utm_term=.58535d17e278
We wouldn’t be such a strong force without your leadership, Diane. Thank you for bringing all of us together in this fight. I am very humbled to be in the company of such humane and caring people. The fight continues.
My favorite hero in the education field, is Horace Mann. A Freemason, he instituted reforms, which last to this day.
Willie Nelson sang “My heroes have always been cowboys”. As for myself, my heroes have always been organizers. Horace Mann, Gandhi, Mother Theresa, etc.
Charles,
I agree about Horace Mann. I am re-reading his Reports to the Mass Board of Education for the umpteenth time; he was the father of public education, an abolitionist, a humanitarian, a fighter for decent treatment of the mentally ill. A great man.
Unfortunately there are too many other names on the “dog” list.
But kudos to all those who stand up for children’s rights’
Valerie Strauss—I still remember her take down of Steven Brill and his sophistry. Many outstanding columns….
The Momma Bears thank you for your kind words and encouragement!
Thank YOU, Diane for making us all more knowledgeable and aware. Your blog is invaluable!
Gratefully,
TN Momma Bears
http://www.mommabears.org
“Who are your heroes in education? Who has inspired you?”
Citizens for Public Schools, based in Boston, volunteers who helped to lead the fight against the pernicious Question 2 in Massachusetts last year, and who continue to struggle to save our schools.
And you, of course, dear Dr. Diane, our own Boudica, fighting to save our schools from the rampaging destroyers!
😘
Parents everywhere but personally those who have engaged in a two year battle to save one of NYCs precious progressive public schools, Central Park East I, from those who have tried to destroy its heritage thoughtlessly or…otherwise. It’s been badly damaged over the past half dozen years but it’s got a chance to rebuild the mission it was founded on in 1974–thanks to its parents, alumni and friends.
Sent from my iPhone
>
You, of course, Dr. Ravitch… but also Dr. Gene V Glass, and Lorretta Hunnicutt for exposing the conflicts of interests and discriminatory tactics of the crony capitalistic unprofessional owners at Challenge Charter School, Glendale, Arizona.
http://ed2worlds.blogspot.com/2017/05/a-citizens-encounter-with-charter-school.html
https://arizonadailyindependent.com/2017/05/30/challenge-charter-video-reveals-miller-ugly-tactics/
https://dianeravitch.net/2017/05/27/gene-v-glass-an-ugly-look-inside-a-charter-school-in-arizona/
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2017/06/22/problems-with-charter-schools-that-you-wont-hear-betsy-devos-talk-about/
Well, there is one group we’ve overlooked:
Those who haven’t found Diane’s blog and think they’re all alone.
Those who “occupy” kindergarten and protect childhood.
Those who nod their heads at the latest mandate, then close their doors and do what their education and experience shows is best.
Those who risk a livelihood they love when without union or tenure they push back on harmful practices.
Those who stand up to bullying administrators.
Those who don’t let data drive their decisions, using their knowledge of their students instead.
Those who keep snacks in their cabinets, for kids who don’t get enough to eat at home.
Those who pay for the TOEFL with their credit cards because there are no more waivers.
Those who scour second hand shops for warm jackets and give them away, because no child should be cold.
Those who scour second hand shops for prom dresses, and give them away, because everyone should go to the prom.
Those who run the after-school clubs without compensation because the kids need a safe place after school.
Those who miss their lunch period to comfort the kid who is afraid to come out to his “Christian” parents as gay.
Those who miss their planning period to comfort an immigrant parent afraid of deportation, whose children have no idea she is undocumented.
Those who worry about paying their mortgage and putting aside money for their own children to attend college.
Those who wake at 2:00 AM trying to figure out what’s bothering the kid in third period, who used to be just fine.
Those who get up early each morning, not quite rested, and do it all again, every day, for years.
Public school teachers, all across our country.
BRAVO, Christine Langhoff! I completely agree!
Christine, you da woman!
Dearest Christine Langhoff:
Your list has absolutely completed Dr, Ravitch’s request and all contributors’ suggestions.
I cannot control my tears while I read your list because I can feel and touch the true love and the true calling for the teaching profession from all conscientious educators around the world.
I have learned so much from your sharp wisdom and good sense of humor. This brings to my appreciation for Dr. Ravitch’s precious time, money, effort and knowledge to shoulder this forum for all readers.
Dr. Ravitch’s spirit has united all amazing and conscientious educators. I pray to God that some corporate will awaken as soon as they pay attention to Dr, Ravitch’s words of wisdom or to read all posts from all conscientious veteran educators in this website.
Lots of love and respect for your wisdom and knowledge. May
My dear May –
You honor me and have touched my heart.
You are correct that without Diane’s investment of time and energy there would be no way for us to unite and share what we know to save our schools. It’s that committment to the common good that will bring us through the Trump presidency and help us to rebuild our democracy once this administration and its hurtful policies have been purged.
Thank you for your always loving and thoughtful comments.
Christine
Thank you, May.
We never give up.
Additions (1) The SPLC’s work in Miss. to fight the “systematic and deliberate deprivation of African-Americans’ rights (to education). The state has watered down education protections in a White supremacist effort to prevent the education of Blacks.” The SPLC filed a lawsuit against the Lt. Gov., among others. The Lt. Gov. said,” The SPLC is challenging efforts to direct public funds to charter schools …”.
(2) Black Agenda Report for opposing privatization.
(3) Drew Franklin for exposing former TFA members who had glommed onto BLM. (It appears the scheme was thwarted.)
(3) The Florida League of Women Voters.
Partners for Public Education (chapters in Ohio)
Former Congressman Dennis Kucinich for calling charter schools in Ohio a multibillion dollar boondoggle.
Diane you are my hero!!
Marla Kilfoyle, Executive Director
The Badass Teachers Assoc. (BATS)
Thank you, Marla.
Diane, I think the regular contributors to your blog are heroes as well, because the discussions here can be very enlightening to a confused public, supportive to weary educators, and aid in widely spreading the message about the attacks on public education, as well as of the imminent need to protect our schools and children from profiteers, here and abroad.
Here are some of them, in no particular order –just basically off the top of my head, so I hope I don’t offend anyone who is omitted:
KrazyTA
democracy
Lloyd Lofthouse
Linda
jcgrim
GregB
Christine Langhoff
Chiara
retired teacher
WestCoastTeacher
Joel Herman
SomeDAMpoet
m4potw Back2Basic May King
Bethree5
John Ogozalek
booklady
carolmalaysia
gitapik
ira shor
joe prichard
Laura H Chapman
Threatened Out West
alphawolf1
Concerned
speduktr
Zorba
Catherine Blanche King
Duane E. Swacker, sitting in for Noel Wilson
retiredbutmissthekids
ciedie aech
2old2teach
Kathyirwin1
Máté Wierdl
Yvonne Siu-Runyan
I hope you’re not offended by your own omission from the list!!
I would add the head of the MA teacher’s union because her actions SET GREAT PRECEDENT FOR TEACHERS UNIONS ACROSS THIS NATION.
From 2010-2014, the Massachusetts Teachers Association (13,000 members) had as President a Fellow of the Gates-funded Pahara Institute. The guy is now on the Mass. higher ed. board. Mercedes Schneider described Pahara at her blog.
That would be Paul Toner, who was term limited, which led to Barbara Madeloni’s election. Sadly, Madeloni too, is bound by term limits and is serving her final round as president.
AFT doesn’t have term limits.
The MTA does, though.
Hi Diane, Please add Save Our Schools NJ too to your list! They are a phenomenal group of hard working parent and teacher activists that are constantly down in Trenton fighting for Public Education. Thank you!
http://www.saveourschoolsnj.org/blog/
Yes, of course! SOS NJ
Techeducator,
Done!
The Anti-Heroes
Anti-Heroes
There are many
“Sky is Falling!!”
Henny Penny
Testing Zeroes
Quite a few
Anti-Heroes
Make us blue
There’s one more Massachusetts organization that deserves recognition.
The Massachusetts Education Justice Alliance (MEJA) is an umbrella group which recognizes that education isn’t merely about schools, but a social justice issue that connects and permeates our lives. Among its member organizations are the MTA, the Boston Teachers Union, the Boston Student Advisory Council, Citizens for Public Schools, FairTest, Massachusetts Jobs with Justice, the AFT, and the Public Higher Education Network of MA.
One of the current campaigns is the Fair Share Constitutional Amendment
which “would allow Massachusetts to tax income above $1 million a year at a rate 4 percent higher than income below $1 million. This amendment to the state Constitution would affect roughly 15,000 residents with the highest incomes in the state. It would produce nearly $1.8 billion in revenue, which would be earmarked for education and transportation infrastructure.”
Here’s the website: https://massedjustice.org
Bernie’s “Our Revolution” has a new President, Nina Turner. I was hopeful that the recent list of issues of concern to Our Revolution would differ from the Democratic Party issues, with the inclusion of a reference to the privatization of America’s most important common good-public education. The K-12 exclusion is deliberate. It’s the only explanation when “college tuition” makes the list but, not K-12, despite the uproar over DeVos.
Linda,
We have to use our energies to get “Our Revolution” and the Indivisibles to get K-12 education on their agendas.
Agree. Nina’s from Ohio- she must have knowledge about the travesty of the virtual contractor schools.
How about Karen Lewis?
I could have put on Karen Lewis and Barbara Madeloni but recognized the unions that elected them instead.
How about Betsy DeVos?
She has done a great job of mobilizing the resistance with every foot she sticks in her mouth.
“Progressing by the Foot”
Every foot
Is like a mile
Betsy put
It in her smile
Foot in mouth
Does mobilize
North and south
At giant size
SDP,
Re your DeVos poem. Betsy doesn’t have a smile. She has a permanent sneer. She is sneering at us poor suckers.
Maybe it’s just the foot getting in the way.
If she took the foot out she might have something to smile about.
May I nominate myself or my nom de guerre Miss Fortune?
Absolutely!
This might be NY-centric, but I would add Assemblymember Christine Pellegrino, NYSAPE, Bianca Tanis (who has a very informative blog), NYC principal Jamaal Bowman and NYS Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie for holding the line on charter schools during this year’s budget battle.
Jake, absolutely!
I nominate the Alliance for Philadelphia Public Schools – https://appsphilly.net/ – a small group of mostly retired Philly Public School Teachers who have attended every School Reform Commission meeting, even ones called in the middle of the night to cancel the teacher’s contract. They research every proposal and call out every dubious action of Philly’s unelected school board. They meet weekly to strategize and educate themselves first on the mismanaging and privatization moves the district and the SRC are concocting. APPS is Amazing and doing amazing work every week! They should be relaxing in their retirement but they can’t bear to watch public education devolve. They’ve fought for nurses, counselors, and libraries to be brought back to the schools – Philly has 6 school libraries in the district. What more can I say – thank you APPS.
Thank you!
The Chicago group, Raise Your Hand (who once chased Arne Duncan into an alley) until recently led by the incredible Wendy Katten; ChiOptOut & ILParkthePARCC, & undeterred leader Cassie Creswell; Parents United for Responsible Education (PURE), & founder Julie Westehoff and last–but not at all least–special education expert of all experts & absolutely TIRELESS advocate, Beverley Holden Johns.
Coming late to the game from helping a life-long friend achieve a long-held desire to canoe the Missouri River from the last dam at Gavin’s Point to St. Louis, some 800 miles or so.
I would like to add Aussie Phil Cullen and Kiwi Allan Alach of the Treehorn Express.