Education Next is a publication funded by conservative foundations and staffed by conservative editors and writers. It supports charters, vouchers, school choice, high-stakes testing, the commodification of education, and the education industry.
Here are the results of its latest poll:
“The 2017 Education Next annual survey of American public opinion on education shows public support for charter schools has dropped, even as opposition to school vouchers and tax credits for private-school scholarships has declined. Opposition to the Common Core State Standards seems to have finally leveled off. When the “Common Core” name is not mentioned, support for the same standards across states rises among both Democrats and Republicans. Meanwhile, support for the federal role in education policy has waned. This year’s poll also finds that President Trump’s policy preferences widen the partisan divide on issues such as charter schools, Common Core, tax credits, and merit pay for teachers.
“Among the key findings:
“Charter school support drops. In a dramatic change of opinion over the past year, support for charter schools has declined by 12 percentage points, from 51% last year to only 39% this year (36% opposed). Support has fallen by 13 percentage points among Republicans and by 11 percentage points among Democrats, to 47% and 34% support respectively, leaving the partisan gap on the issue largely unchanged. Support for charters among blacks has dropped from 46% to 37% and among Hispanics from 44% to 39%.
“Opposition to private school choice declines despite partisan differences. Opposition to universal vouchers, which give all families a wider choice, has declined from 44% to 37%, while support for vouchers targeted to low-income parents has increased by six percentage points (43% in 2017 up from 37% in 2016). However, an analysis of individuals by political party reveals that support for universal vouchers has increased by 13 percentage points among Republicans (to 54%) but fallen by 9 percentage points (to 40%) among Democrats, whereas in 2016, Democrats were more supportive than Republicans of universal vouchers by an 8-percentage point margin. Opposition to tax-credit funded scholarships has declined from 29% to 24%.
“Support for national standards rises while opposition to Common Core levels off. Though support for Common Core plummeted between 2013 and 2016, the downward trend has leveled off, with support standing at 41% (38% opposed) in 2017, virtually the same as in 2016. Support for standards that are the same in all states is, at 61%, 20 percentage points higher when the name is not mentioned (6 percentage points higher than in 2016). While there remains a partisan divide in support for Common Core (32% in favor among Republicans and 49% among Democrats), support rises to 64% and 61%, respectively, when the name is not mentioned, eliminating the partisan gap.
“Support for local control of schools is on the rise. Although a plurality of the public continues to think accountability policy should mostly be a state responsibility, the latest poll numbers show that the public has shifted away from federal towards local control of schools. Only 36% of the public think the federal government should play the largest role in setting standards, down 5 percentage points from 2015; only 13% think it should identify failing schools, also down 5 percentage points; and only 16% think the federal government should be responsible for fixing schools, down 4 percentage points. Democratic support for federal decision-making has dropped by 8, 6, and 7 percentage points, respectively. The share of the public thinking these policies should be a local responsibility has risen by 4, 6, and 7 percentage points, respectively, for the three areas.
“Information about cost and earnings has little impact on college-going preferences–except among Hispanics. The latest poll shows that two-thirds of the public want their child to pursue a 4-year degree, while only 22% prefer a 2-year degree. Among white respondents with a 4-year college degree, 88% want their child to pursue a 4-year degree, compared to 57% of white respondents without a 4-year college degree. Most respondents, when they are informed as to the average costs and earnings associated with 2-year versus 4-year degrees, do not change their preferences. For Hispanics, however, providing both types of information shifts their preference for a 4-year degree to 72%, from 61% when no information is provided. This shift reverses the white-Hispanic gap in preferences for a 4-year degree. These findings emerge from an experiment where a randomly chosen group within the sample receives financial information while another group does not.
“The Trump Effect. On four issues—Common Core, charter schools, tax credits, and merit pay for teachers—the poll examines whether President Trump’s endorsement of a policy has a polarizing effect on public opinion by telling half of the sample the president’s position while not supplying this information to the other. EdNext conducted similar experiments in 2009 and 2010 during President Obama’s first two years in office. In 2009, Obama enjoyed a period of bipartisan support during which he moved public opinion toward his position, though the effect waned in 2010. Trump has not enjoyed such a “honeymoon” period (see figure). When informed of Trump’s position, Republicans move toward it on three of the four issues, including a 15 percentage-point increase in support for charter schools. However, Trump fails to persuade Democrats, who move away from the president’s position on two of the four issues, including a 14 percentage-point decrease in support for merit pay. These offsetting effects leave overall public opinion on these issues largely unchanged.”
One can draw different conclusions from this poll, but I am impressed by the stunning drop in public support for privately managed charter schools. As the public learns more about them, it likes them less. The steady drumbeat of charter scandals is getting through to the public. The scandals in Ohio, Michigan, Florida, Arizona, California, and elsewhere may be taking a toll on public estimation of charters. There is a glimmering of understanding that charters are unaccountable and that every dollar for a charter is taken away from public schools. The public is beginning to wonder about the value of funding two systems, one selective, the other open to all. One subject to democratic governance, the other controlled by private, self-selected boards.

https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2017/08/01/some-boston-charter-school-leaders-paid-hefty-salaries/fbHDOC33WKmzcvvZaNNkLN/story.html
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As a critique of charters schools — and a hilariously entertaining one at that — this never gets old:
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Thank you, John Oliver.
Charters and vouchers are scams.
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The change of opinion may be due to a boomerang effect from Trump and DeVos that have insisted on promoting largely unpopular vouchers. The support for vouchers has unleashed more scrutiny for charters. The bad publicity of waste and fraud in charters has also reached some people that before were led to believe that charters were “free.” The public is starting to understand that charter expansion equals disinvestment in public education, and most people support public education. It is the politicians that are leading the charge to privatize, not the public. The code of silence about charters during the Obama administration has been broken. Fewer people on social media, where I have been arguing for years in an attempt to sway public opinion, are charter trolls. Many more people are speaking out against the corporate takeover of our schools. Diane’s blog as well as other bloggers have had an impact on changing the conversation about public education and public dollars. The rhetoric is longer only about the “value” of charters; it is also about the harmful impact of privatization.
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I’ve noticed a distancing from corporate ed. reformers from Devos / Trump’s support of charter schools, as they attempt to fly the “progressive” flag.
For example, I’ve been monitoring the reaction to Devos’ speech at ALEC two weeks ago — with the accompanying protests — and how the speech/protests were covered by the corporate reform propaganda orgs (that is the on-line orgs belonging to the faux-progressive wing of the corporate reform).
I then compared that to how the mainstream media covered it.
First of all, Devos’ speech at ALEC and protests were a major national story about education — covered by the NY Times, Time Magazine, the Washington Post, etc.
However, the faux-progressive wing of the corporate ed. reform world wouldn’t touch the story with a ten-foot pole.
I checked on the coverage … or rather NON-coverage of Devos’ speech from the various billionaire-funded (i.e. Eli Broad) corporate reform propaganda orgs:
Campbell Brown’s THE 74 … nada, notthing, zip, zero … like it never friggin’ happened.”
L.A. School Report … nada, notthing, zip, zero … like it never friggin’ happened.”
Peter Cunningham’s Education Post … nada, notthing, zip, zero … *like it never friggin’ happened.”
Peter Cunningham’s personal Twitterl which usually and regularly includes comments on all things educational, in particular events or occurrences which have had much less of a national profile or impact than Devos’ speech …
… once again … nada, notthing, zip, zero … like it never friggin’ happened.”
The same goes for the twitter or Erika Sanzi, Shavar Jeffries, and countless others.
I would suspect there was some coordination on this also among all these folks, with the agreed upon plan to ignore the Devos’ speech and protests.
The faux-progressive wing of the corporate ed. reform movement apparently wants to have it both ways:
— to benefit from the support from ALEC and other assorted right-wing scum such as Trump and Devos .
… yet …
— distance themselves from those folk at the same time.
These faux-progressive corporate reformers need to maintain the phony illusion that corporate ed. reform is not an enterprise being executed by the extreme right wing — and that they’re joined at the hip to that right-wing scum — therefore they must pretend Devos’ speech never happened and her/their fealty to ALEC and extreme right-wing forces is non-existent.
For example, take a look at EDUCATION POST, founded and edited by Peter Cunningham:
Devos, according to the mainstream media, is the face of the School Choice, but instead of covering Devos’ ass-kiss-athon of ALEC, Peter — on or about the same day as the speech — instead publishes articles criticizing Devos on safe progressive-friendly issues, and implicitly distancing EDUCATION POST and the faux-progressive corporate reformers from ALEC, Secretary Devos, Trump and the rest of the extreme right-wing backers of charters and vouchers.
Here are these two recent EDUCATION POST articles referencing Devos— again, posted during the days before, during & after her ALEC Speech — ones that take safe stances in tune with progressives and progressive readers:
1) one critical of Devos’ Civil Rights stance on campus sexual assault;
http://educationpost.org/dear-betsy-you-need-to-get-serious-about-addressing-sexual-assault/
AND
2) another from a student attacking Devos’ Civil Rights stance:
http://educationpost.org/without-the-office-of-civil-rights-my-high-school-would-have-continued-to-discriminate-against-students-like-me/
You see. These are are safe “progressive” issues about which the faux-progressives, in their various propaganda orgs. can write articles dealing with Devos
This way the faux-progressive corporate reformers can then claim:
“Don’t you get it? We corporate ed reformers are true progressives who oppose Devos, Trump, ALEC, and extreme right-wingers etc. just as much as anyone does…
BUT ON THE OTHER HAND …
“We don’t want to report on Devos’ ALEC speech, as that would turn a spotlight on the extreme-right-wing scum who are backing both her and charters/vouchers/”School Choice” in general, and how, in fact, we faix-progressives are working hand-in-hand with that right-wing scum to push the same agenda.”
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When I went to comment and to share, I get a message that this page cannot be found. This is the first time this has happened. Do you have an explanation? NSA??? Regards, Pat Eck, Lead Contact Angry Grandparents Against High-Stakes Testing (AGAHST)
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Pat,
EdNext informed me that the poll is embargoed until August 15. I will repost then.
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pauleck47,
Please feel free to contact me at duaneswacker@gmail.com and I’ll send you an electronic draft copy of my book “Infidelity to Truth: Education Malpractice in American Public Education”. In it I discuss the purpose of American public education and of government in general, issues of truth in discourse, justice and ethics in teaching practices, the abuse and misuse of the terms standards and measurement which serve to provide an unwarranted pseudo-scientific validity/sheen to the standards and testing regime and how the inherent discrimination in that regime should be adjudicated to be unconstitutional state discrimination no different than discrimination via race, gender, disability, etc. . . .
I believe it can help AGAHST spread the word about the complete invalidities of standardized testing. Also see my posts on yesterday’s post by Diane, https://dianeravitch.net/2017/08/14/william-mathis-what-standardized-tests-tell-us-not-much/comment-page-1/#comment-2719743
I’ll be more than happy to send the e-draft copy of the book as soon as I get and read the email.
Thanks,
Duane
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N ot
A lways
A llowing of
C harter
P ropaganda
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Pray tell, why would anyone call this movement “conservative” — it certainly conserves no American values — if it seeks to take us back to anything, it is only an Old World system with one education for the wealthy and another education for everyone else.
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Polls are good ,but they will be ignored unless they are part of a broad based political movement . One far greater than the issue of charters and education. We will not change the assault on education till we reverse the assault on the American people. The forces aligned against us on every issue are to great to battle on any individual issue.
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This morning’s St. Louis Post Dispatch had two headlines: “Trump:Racism is evil.” and just to keep it fair and balanced, “NAACP advisory is hurting business”. I chided the pd for ignoring a much more serious “sin” of the NAACP and then walloped them with Rann Miller’s “Why the NAACP Said ‘Enough’ to School Privatization”, spread out over 3 posts. The Post Dispatch has forums to discuss things such as soccer….but they steadfastly refuse to provide a forum to discuss education.
Anything I post, goes into the catchall forum…”current affairs”, and is often ignored and disappears. I have been barred, without explanation, from commenting anywhere else in the Post Dispatch. I decided to add this edweek story, after an introductory paragraph: “Make no mistake about it….I am sick and tired about the way this newspaper is so gutless about reporting all that should be reported about charter schools. Wanna know your child’s teacher’s salary….”ok. We can do that.”(they actually provide a link showing every teacher’s salary in Missouri) Want an organized look at the charter schools? Forget it.
What happened in Charlotteville was horrible, and so was the reluctance of President Trump to react quickly with the most basic appropriate words. That is one aspect of racism….but what this newspaper has done over more than a decade with careful attention to the agenda of corporate interests is a different, but still serious form of racism. Institutionalized racism. More inclusive, and easier to disguise. With a disdain for the general public. I might continue to bump this thread, hoping one or two people might notice something worth thinking about.”
I keep posting, because occasionally I get amazing responses. I got one last week from one of the 7 members of the state board of education….and learned when he was talking to my high school contemporary issues teachers….the teacher wrote to me and said “When (board member) mentioned your name a couple of nights ago I nearly fell out of my chair. I had been thinking about you – wondering whatever happened to one of my most memorable students. YOU were in a class all by yourself in several ways…” I will visit him soon…
If there is any way that somebody could help me out….http://interact.stltoday.com/forums/viewtopic.php?f=6&t=1231198&p=7272696#p7272696 just offer some information…even if it opposes what I think…to my thread. What a surprise that would be.
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Did you see the PD PR piece for the new KIPP school in town? What a total sycophantic regurgitation of the KIPP propaganda. The ed reporter must have skipped a few journalism classes to have “written” that piece of utter cow manure. Needless to say it got a few different comments from me.
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“Secret support” for Common Core makes me laugh. 90% of parents in our district have no earthly idea what Common Core is, other than the tests.
The state never bothered to explain it to them. The assumption seemed to be that they’re just public school parents so who cares if they have any idea that this national “movement” upended their schools for 18 months.
Ed reformers don’t even talk about Common Core anymore. The moment the more difficult tests went in their interest ceased. They all moved en masse into marketing “blended learning”.
I sort of LIKE Common Core but it doesn’t matter. The promised “supports” never appeared and everyone at the statehouse and DC lost interest anyway.
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