Archives for the month of: July, 2017

The National Education Association passed a resolution on charter schools on July 4, 2017, which is appropriate because public schools are the foundation of democracy.

Add this to the resolution passed last year by the NAACP.

And the statement by Black Lives Matter in opposition to privatization of public schools.

And the statement endorsed by the Network for Public Education, saying that charter schools are “a failed experiment” and calling for an immediate moratorium and eventual absorption of them into school districts.

And together, you begin to see the growing backlash against private management of public money in schools that select their students and are exempt from most state laws.

This is the NEA statement:


Adopted by the 2017 Representative Assembly
July 4, 2017

Introduction

Charter schools were initially promoted by educators who sought to innovate within the local public school system to better meet the needs of their students. Over the last quarter of a century, charter schools have grown dramatically to include large numbers of charters that are privately managed, largely unaccountable, and not transparent as to their operations or performance. The explosive growth of charters has been driven, in part, by deliberate and wellfunded efforts to ensure that charters are exempt from the basic safeguards and standards that apply to public schools, which mirror efforts to privatize other public institutions for profit.

Charters have grown the most in school districts that were already struggling to meet students’ needs due to longstanding, systemic and ingrained patterns of institutional neglect, racial and ethnic segregation, inequitable school funding, and disparities in staff, programs and services. The result has been the creation of separate, largely unaccountable, privately managed charter school systems in those districts that undermine support and funding of local public schools. Such separate and unequal education systems are disproportionately located in, and harm, students and communities of color by depriving both of the high quality public education system that should be their right.

As educators we believe that “public education is the cornerstone of our social, economic, and political structure,” NEA Resolution A-1, the very “foundation of good citizenship,” and the fundamental prerequisite to every child’s future success. Brown v. Bd. of Ed. of Topeka, Shawnee Cty., Kan., 347 U.S. 483, 493 (1954). The growth of separate and unequal systems of charter schools that are not subject to the same basic safeguards and standards that apply to public schools threatens our students and our public education system. The purpose of this policy statement is to make plain NEA’s opposition to the failed experiment of largely unaccountable privately managed charter schools while clarifying NEA’s continued support for those public charter schools that are authorized and held accountable by local democratically elected school boards or their equivalent.

I. NEA supports public charter schools that are authorized and held accountable by public school districts. Charter schools serve students and the public interest when they are authorized and held accountable by the same democratically accountable local entity that authorizes other alternative school models in a public school district such as magnet, community, educator-led or other specialized schools. Such charters should be authorized only if they meet the substantive standards set forth in (a) below, and are authorized and held accountable through a democratically controlled procedure as detailed in (b) below.

a. Public charter schools should be authorized by a public school district only if the charter is both necessary to meet the needs of students in the district and will meet those needs in a manner that improves the local public school system. Public charters, like all public schools, must provide students with a free, accessible, non-sectarian, quality education that is delivered subject to the same basic safeguards and standards as every other public school, namely, in compliance with: i) open meetings and public records laws; ii) prohibitions against for-profit operation or profiteering as enforced by conflict of interest, financial disclosure and auditing requirements; and iii) the same civil rights, including federal and state laws and protections for students with disabilities, employment, health, labor, safety, staff qualification and certification requirements as other public schools. When a charter is authorized in a public school district that has an existing collective bargaining agreement with its employees, the authorizer will ensure that the employees will be covered by a collective bargaining agreement. Those basic safeguards and standards protect public education as a public good that is not to be commodified for profit.

In addition, charter schools may be authorized or expanded only after a district has assessed the impact of the proposed charter school on local public school resources, programs and services, including the district’s operating and capital expenses, appropriate facility availability, the likelihood that the charter will prompt cutbacks or closures in local public schools, and consideration of whether other improvements in either educational program or school management (ranging from reduced class sizes to community or magnet schools) would better serve the district’s needs. The district must also consider the impact of the charter on the racial, ethnic and socio-economic composition of schools and neighborhoods and on equitable access to quality services for all district students, including students with special needs and English language learners. The impact analysis must be independent, developed with community input, and be written and publicly available.

b. Public charter schools should only be authorized by the same local, democratically accountable entity that oversees all district schools such as a locally elected school board or, if there is no school board, a community-based charter authorizer accountable to the local community.

Maintaining local democratic control over decisions as to whether to authorize charters at all, and if so, under what conditions, safeguards community engagement in local public schools. A single local authorizing entity also ensures comprehensive consideration of whether each option, and the mix of options offered in a district, meets the needs of students and the community as a whole given the resources and facilities in the district. A single entity also permits effective integrated oversight of all schools, including charter schools, and a central mechanism for identifying and sharing successful innovations throughout local public schools.

The overall goal of the authorization and review process must be to improve the education offered to all students. That goal cannot be accomplished with a diffuse authorization system, comprised of multiple different entities, with differing partial views of the students served by a district and the overall scope of its educational offerings.

The local authorizer also must ensure that parents are provided with the same information about charters that is provided to parents about other district schools, as well as information about any significant respects in which the charter departs from district norms in its operations including the actual charter of the school.

The state’s role in charter authorization and oversight should be limited to ensuring that local school districts only authorize charters that meet the criteria in (a) above and do so by way of a procedure that complies with (b). To that end, the state should both monitor the performance of districts as charter authorizers and hold districts accountable for providing effective oversight and reporting regarding the quality, finances and performance of any charters authorized by the district. In addition, the state must provide adequate resources and training to support high quality district charter authorization practices and compliance work, and to share best authorization practices across a state. States should entertain appeals from approvals or denials of charters only on the narrow grounds that the local process for approving a charter was not properly followed or that the approval or denial of a charter was arbitrary or illegal.

c. Unless both the basic safeguards and process detailed above are met, no charter school should be authorized and NEA will support state and local moratoriums on further charter authorizations in the school district.
II. NEA opposes as a failed and damaging experiment unaccountable privately managed charters. Charters that do not comply with the basic safeguards and standards detailed above and that are not authorized by the local school board (or its equivalent) necessarily undermine local public schools and harm the public education system.

The theory that charter competition will improve public schools has been conclusively refuted. Charters have a substantial track record that has been assessed in numerous research studies. Those studies document that charters, on average, do no better than public schools in terms of student learning, growth or development. And those charters that do perform better are not incorporated into district-wide school improvement efforts.

In fact, at their worst, charters inflict significant harms on both students and communities. Of the charter schools that opened in 2000, a full fifth had closed within five years of opening and a full third had closed by 2010. Because the very opening of charters often prompts cutbacks and/or closures in local public schools, these alarmingly high charter closure rates subject students and communities to cycles of damaging disruption. Such disruption can leave students stranded mid-year. Even closures that occur at the year’s end disrupt students’ education and unmoors communities that previously had been anchored by the local public school.

Charters that are not subject to the basic safeguards and standards detailed above also open up the local public schools to profiteers. Such charters operate without any effective oversight, draining public school resources and thereby further harming local public schools and the students and communities they serve.

Finally, one particular form of unaccountable privately managed charters deserves specific discussion. Fully virtual or online charter schools cannot, by their nature, provide students with a well-rounded, complete educational experience, including optimal kinesthetic, physical, social and emotional development. Accordingly, they should not be authorized as charter schools.

III. Organizing Communities for Quality Public Education
NEA stands for our students wherever they are educated. Relegating students and communities to unaccountable privately managed schools that do not comply with the basic safeguards and standards detailed above has created separate systems of charters that are inherently unequal. To counter the threat to public education of such charters, NEA supports both communities organizing for quality public education and educators working together to improve charter schools.

a. NEA supports communities that are working to hold charters accountable whether that work takes the form of state legislative initiatives, local school board resolutions and actions, or efforts to raise local awareness of the need for charters to comply with the basic safeguards and standards detailed above. NEA also will support state and local efforts to preserve public school funding and services by eliminating such funding and services from unaccountable privately managed charters that do not comply with those basic safeguards and standards.

b. NEA believes that all educators deserve the right to collective voice and representation, and that an organized workforce is a better guardian of quality standards for students and educators alike. For that reason, state affiliates that seek to organize charter schools may continue to seek NEA’s assistance in those organizing efforts.

We have quite an amazing collection of readers on this blog. I often post your comments, because they are well-written, succinct, informative, and besides which, most of you know know more about teaching and the everyday life of the classroom than I do.

If your name was inadvertently omitted, let me know and I will add it.

A reader who goes by the name “Homeless Educator” sent this comment.

“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. If HE forgot you, please send your name. Or join the conversation. Whenever I think of suspending or ending the blog, I think of you and get a new charge of energy. We have a space for discussion and debate on this blog unlike anything else on the Internet.

“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
Ellen Lubic
Karen Wolfe
SomeDAMpoet
m4potw Back2Basic May King
Bethree5
John Ogozalek
booklady
carolmalaysia
gitapik
ira shor
Norwegian Filmmaker
joe prichard
Laura H Chapman
Threatened Out West
alphawolf1
Concerned
speduktr
Zorba
Catherine Blanche King
Duane E. Swacker, sitting in for Noel Wilson
Left Coast Teacher
retiredbutmissthekids
ciedie aech
2old2teach
Kathyirwin1
Kenneth Bernstein
Máté Wierdl
Yvonne Siu-Runyan
Carl Peterson
Arthur Camins
Ponderosa
Educator
Robert Skeels, Cynthia Liu
Carl Peterson
Mark Naison
Geronimo

This is a fascinating and funny and scary article about politics in Texas, written by Lawrence Wright, a Pulitzer Prize winning author and staff writer for The New Yorker.

The title of the article is “America’s Future is Texas,” and we better hope it is wrong.

When I was growing up in Houston, the state was reliably Democratic, although the Democrats were conservative.

Now the state is a red state, and Republicans have gerrymandered the districts so that they control everything.

The Republican party is divided more or less into two factions: those who are sane and concerned about protecting the state’s reputation as a friendly place to do business; and those who are to the right of the Tea Party and obsessed with God, guns, abortion, homosexuality, border security, lowering taxes, and tormenting people who are transgender.

The story has many very funny anecdotes about Texas craziness, along with some wonderful stories about Governor Ann Richards, who was an original. She had a laser-like intellect coupled with devastating wit.

Read it and learn how the Speaker of the House Joe Straus, a sane Republican from San Antonio, has managed to outmaneuver the zealots in the State Senate. Speaker Straus has fended off the worst excesses of the crazies in the Senate, including vouchers, a bill to stamp out any protections for transgender people, and other legislation that ignores the basic needs of the people of Texas. Speaker Straus is already on the honor roll of the blog. He actually wants to protect and improve public schools, not defund them. Imagine that!

If Texas is the future of America, we are hurtling back to the 19th century at warp speed, with no regard for the needs of our most vulnerable citizens and no concern for decency or human rights.

The hope for the future of Texas is that Anglos are now in a minority. If Hispanics begin voting in numbers, the political complexion of the state will change dramatically. Texas is actually a purple state, not a red one.

There is hope.

Governor Paul LePage of Maine is one of the worst governors in the nation. Twice he was elected by a plurality in a three-way race. He hates public schools. A citizens’ initiative forced him to raise state spending on them. He vowed to get even next year.

LePage started his time in office by doing whatever Jeb Bush wanted, such as agreeing to sign on to Jeb’s Digital Learning business to benefit Jeb’s tech sponsors. He periodically gets in trouble for shooting off his mouth.

Can’t wait until the voters of Maine replace this guy with someone who cares about the future of the state.

This article is an excellent analysis by civil rights lawyer Wendy Lecker of the deliberate destruction of public education in black and Latino neighborhoods in Chicago.

Chicago has purposely sacrificed the needs of black and Latino students while protecting and enhancing the needs of white students. We have to bear in mind what Rahm Emanuel told CTU leader Karen Lewis when he was first elected: about a quarter of these kids are uneducable. Everything else flows from that assumption.

Open the article to read the links. The most astonishing point noted here is that Chicago’s public schools OUTPERFORM its charter schools!

Lecker writes:

“Chicago is this nation’s third largest city, and among its most segregated. Recently, several unrelated reports were released about education policy in Chicago that, together, provide a vivid picture of the divergent views policymakers of have of public education; depending on who is served.
As reported by researchers at Roosevelt University, between 2009-2015, Chicago permanently closed 125 neighborhood schools, ostensibly because of low enrollment or poor performance.

“The standard Chicago used for low enrollment was 30 students to one elementary classroom — an excessively large class size, especially for disadvantaged children.

“The school closures occurred disproportionately in neighborhoods serving African-American, Latino and economically disadvantaged students. Professors Jin Lee and Christopher Lubienski found that Chicago’s school closures had a markedly negative effect on accessibility to educational opportunities for these vulnerable populations. Students had to travel longer distances to new schools; often through more dangerous areas.

“School closures harm entire communities. As Georgia State Law Professor Courtney Anderson found, where neighborhood schools were a hub for community activities, vacant schools become magnets for illegal activity. Moreover, buildings in disuse pose health and environmental dangers to the community. Vacant buildings depress the value of homes and businesses around them, increase insurance premiums and insurance policy cancellations. In addition, the school district must pay for maintenance of vacant buildings.

“Although Chicago claimed to close schools to save money, the savings were minimal — at great cost to the communities affected.

“At the same time Chicago leaders closed 125 neighborhood schools, they opened 41 selective public schools and 108 charter schools; more than they closed. Chicago charter schools underserve English Language Learners and students with disabilities, and have suspension and expulsion rates ten times greater than Chicago’s public schools. Even more astounding, despite the self-selecting and exclusive nature of charters, researcher Myron Orfield found that Chicago’s public schools outperform charters on standardized test passing and growth rates in both reading and math, and high school graduation rates.

“The Roosevelt University researchers found that the expansion of Chicago charter schools devastated the public school budget, contributing to massive cuts of basic educational resources in Chicago’s public schools. Moreover, many of these new charters have remained open despite falling below the “ideal enrollment” standard used to close neighborhood public schools.

“The education policies of Chicago’s leaders force its poor children and children of color to attend under-resourced schools, often at a great distance from their neighborhoods, on a pretext of under-enrollment and poor performance. Officials fail to consider the devastating effects school closures have on educational opportunities or on the health of entire communities.

“Chicago promised to use the proceeds of the sales of vacant schools to improve those neighborhoods. Yet, city leaders instead used those funds for school capital projects. A WBEZ investigation found that Chicago’s new school construction and additions disproportionately benefit schools that serve white, middle class students, even though white students are far less likely to suffer overcrowded schools than Latino students, whose schools do not see the benefit of capital spending.”

Peg Tyre, veteran journalist, published a balanced and well-written article about Bridge International Academies in the New York Times Magazine. BIA operates numerous low-fee, for-profit schools in Africa and  its investors hope to spread its brand across the world.

Investors in Bridge include Bill Gates, Mark Zuckerberg, Pearson, and other familiar names.

The founders had no education experience but they had experience creating successful tech start-ups. They wanted to disrupt education in the manner of Uber and AirBNB, the leaders of the new tech-based economy. They raised $100 million. Their schools cost parents a few dollars a month. Teachers deliver scripted lessons, written in the U.S. and delivered daily to them on an iPad. BIA opens its schools in poor countries where the quality of public education is low. They hope to do good while doing well.

Critics, including me, see BIA as a way that these countries slough off their responsility to provide education by outsourcing it. Critics see it as neocolonialism. Huge numbers of families can’t afford to pay the low fees. Kids are kept out of school when their parents don’t pay.

BIA was supposed to generate huge revenues. However, it is losing $1 million a month.

That is the only metric that counts. If they don’t turn a profit, they will close shop and move on.

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?

Paul Horton teaches history at the University of Chicago Lab School.

He writes:

Creating a Commonwealth: July 4th as a Concept

For most Americans July 4th is a celebration of American Independence. It is a day of music, fireworks, and grilling. We are bombarded with empty rhetoric about freedom from civic boosters who never learned much history. Many embrace a narrow version of American exceptionalism that claims that Americans are God’s chosen people and that the Declaration of Independence is a divinely inspired document.

Many of those who support our president believe that the Revolutionary war was fought over an effort to reduce high taxes. But this view is very short-sighted as historians from Jill Lepore to Gordon Wood have made clear.

The Declaration was written to gain the diplomatic recognition of France and other states that were hostile to the British global empire. The war had already begun, and the document that did more to unite the patriots than the Declaration, Tom Paine’s “Common Sense,” had already severed the cultural connection to the King by daring to question the royal family’s lineage.

When Teaparty advocates dress up as patriots, few of them understand that the tax on tea had been lowered and that the real patriots were more concerned with the monopoly on the sale of tea that had been given to the East India Company by Parliament. What the tea tax was used for was more concerning. These revenues were used to cover the costs of tariff enforcement and Vice Admiralty Courts that were held offshore, thus denying citizens accused of smuggling of their rights as Englishmen: the right to an impartial hearing; the right to a jury comprised of peers; the right to see and question accusers; and the right to an impartial judge. Vice Admiralty Courts were military tribunals that denied these rights and the officers who presided over them would receive a share of the value of seized property, tipping the scales of justice in favor of guilty rulings.

Teaparty followers also fail to understand that the revolution was motivated by land claims. Every colony claimed land west of the Appalachian mountains that were denied by the Proclamation of 1763 that the British established to maintain peace with western tribes following the War for Empire. Large eastern landowners who were indebted to British merchants wanted access to these lands to retire debt and small or landless farmers saw the west and cheap land as a way to establish independence in a world where dependence meant subservience.

My sixth great grandfather, Abraham Horton, fought at King’s Mountain and Cowpens for promised bounty land in what would become eastern Tennessee. He was cast out of his Quaker Meeting near Mount Airy, North Carolina, for joining the fight that would bring his family land in Cherokee country.

Unfortunately, victory in the revolutionary war for the patriots was a disaster for the Cherokee and other tribes.

Most importantly, those who subscribe to a presentist version of American exceptionalism claim that July 4th represents something about the freedoms that we must protect today as a justification for interventions in wars abroad. Wars abroad for revolutionary war patriots were wars in different republics. When the Intolerable Acts were issued in 1774, patriots began leaving colonial assemblies to form their own governments, republics based on the idea of creating a commonwealth. The Intolerable Acts suspended the assembly of Massachusetts and this served as a fire bell to those who saw a civil war approaching. When a Virginian went to Boston to fight the British, he was fighting in an allied republic that had cobbled together an allied army.

The term Commonwealth, not surprisingly, was a body where sovereign power resided in the Commons, the House of Commons, and in the idea that the Commons, land jointly owned, would be shared for the use and benefit of the people, not the crown, or those who possesses title. This idea extends back to the Magna Carta of the Forrest, the idea that the people have a right to subsist on the commons, to gather wood, hunt, graze livestock, and cultivate gardens on land not owned by those with title.

In short modern day neoliberals, tea party activists, libertarians, fail to understand why the concept of commonwealth was so important to the patriots. Parliament and crown had usurped the rights of Englishmen by attempting to destroy the right of the colonists to subsist for “the pursuit of happiness.” Patriots created commonwealths that reclaimed their rights and land that could be used for the common good. Commons meant public. Public buildings, meeting houses, courts, schools, alms-houses, and cultural institutions would be built on the commons.

By assaulting the very idea of the commonwealth: the idea that public authority, public space, and public institutions are legitimate; today’s neoliberals, tea party activists, and libertarians actively betray the ideal of freedom that was created when patriots formed state commonwealths.

The people should have the “right to pursue happiness.” To subsist in today’s world, they need a commons: good schools, a fair wage, fair access to due process, cheap good housing, and quality medical care.

America under Trump has betrayed the promise of the American Revolution. He and the Republican congressional leadership support monopolies and they support those without title who are creating a new plutocracy. They run roughshod over our rights as Americans and pollute the commons.

American must reclaim the idea of the commons, the idea of the republic, the idea of the public. To do so is to reclaim the true spirit of July 4th.

This is a wonderful bit of trivia about American history.

Three of the nation’s Founding Fathers died on July 4.

All three were former presidents.

Thomas Jefferson and John Adams died on the same day in 1826. James Monroe died on this day a few years later.

John Adams wrote:

“The whole people must take upon themselves the education of the whole people and be willing to bear the expenses of it. There should not be a district of one mile square, without a school in it, not founded by a charitable individual, but maintained at the public expense of the people themselves.”

Thomas Jefferson wrote:

“T]he tax which will be paid for this purpose [education] is not more than the thousandth part of what will be paid to kings, priests and nobles who will rise up among us if we leave the people in ignorance.”

Nancy Bailey dedicates her post to the late, beloved Joan Kramer.

“On this 4th of July, when we celebrate America’s freedoms, it’s a perfect time to discuss our free public schools, and where we are with them when it comes to school reform. It’s important to understand that our public schools have a new threat, as I will explain below.

“Public schools, with all their faults, are the only truly democratic institution we own “together” as a country. Our public schools open their doors to all children.

“Teachers take on the challenge of working with the oppressed, the poor, immigrants, and even those with the most severe disabilities. Collectively, such care of our children will lead to the greater good of our country and the world.

“Local school boards, elected by the people, give all of us a voice as to how our schools are run. This is a democratic process threatened with extinction because of school privatization forces.

“If you don’t like what your public school is doing, you can go to the school board meeting and make your voice heard. If you don’t know how to help your public schools, you can sign up to be a volunteer.

“A public school not only reflects the community that surrounds it, it is an anchor to bring people together.

“Efforts for us to hold onto our public schools are in jeopardy today, and they have been in jeopardy for many years. Business has staked a claim on our public schools. There’s money to be made using our tax dollars.”