Johann Neem is a historian who specializes in the study of colonial American education. He wrote the following wonderful post that summarizes his excellent new book, “Democracy’s Schools: The Rise of Public Education in America.”
He rejects the Trump-DeVos conception of education as a private choice.
He writes:
“this conception of public education ignores our collective interests as a society. America’s public schools developed because after the Revolution, Americans realized that leaving education to parental whims and pocketbooks created vast inequalities and could not ensure an educated citizenry. A return to this type of system threatens to exacerbate educational inequality, which already plagues modern America and weakens our democracy. The Founding Fathers saw freedom as the cornerstone of the nation and public schools as essential vehicles to secure it. Guided by their vision, we should work to fix America’s public schools, not abandon them.
“During the Colonial era and into the early American republic, most Americans shared DeVos’s notion that education was a family responsibility. Parents who could afford it taught their children at home, hired itinerant men or women who “kept” school for a fee, or sent older children to charter schools called academies. Most Americans had little formal schooling.
“The Revolution transformed how some Americans thought about education. These Americans agreed with Thomas Jefferson that the future of the republic depended on an educated citizenry. They also believed that the opportunities offered by schooling should be available to rich and poor alike. Many state constitutions included clauses like Georgia’s in 1777: “Schools shall be erected in each county, and supported at the general expense of the State.” But how to execute this directive? The best way, American leaders ultimately concluded, was to encourage local public schools and to limit the growth of academies.
“As early as the 1780s, Massachusetts Gov. Samuel Adams asserted that academies increased inequality because well-off families chose them over local district schools. Citizens, Adams argued, “will never willingly and cheerfully support two systems of schools.” Others shared his concern. New York Gov. George Clinton argued in 1795 that academies served “the opulent” and that all children deserved access to “common schools throughout the state.”
“Adams and Clinton identified a fundamental problem. If too many parents opted out, education would remain a private good, parceled out on the basis of economic means. Reformers, by contrast, hoped to convince Americans that education was a public good and that everyone benefited from high-quality public schools. It would not happen naturally, as Pennsylvania schools superintendent Francis Shunk observed in 1838: “It may not be easy to convince a man who has educated his own children in the way his father educated him, or who has abundant means to educate them, or who has no children to educate, that in opposition to the custom of the country and his fixed opinions founded on that custom, he has a deep and abiding concern in the education of all the children around him, and should cheerfully submit to taxation for the purpose of accomplishing this great object.”
“Horace Mann, secretary to the Massachusetts Board of Education in the 1830s, believed the only solution was to make every family a stakeholder in the public schools. Wealthier families would invest in other people’s children only if their own children attended the same schools and benefited from them. If some families decided to “turn away from the Common Schools” and send their children to a “private school or the academy,” poorer children would end up with a second-class education. To ensure that students and their parents came together as a public, “there should be a free school, sufficiently safe, and sufficiently good, for all the children” in every district. The constituency for the public schools would be forged through the schools themselves as more and more Americans sent their children to them and became devoted to their success.
“And it worked. As more and more families enrolled in the public schools, Americans developed a commitment to sustaining them. By the Civil War, most Northern states offered tuition-free, tax-supported common schools…
“Americans invested in educating one another’s children when most families had a stake in their local schools. The schools themselves fostered this commitment: The public good was not sustained by abstract principles alone but through actual institutions and investments. Certainly, parents have an obligation to look out for their children’s interests, as DeVos observes. Yet, unlike DeVos, Mann did not see this obligation as conflicting with a devotion to public schools. Every family benefited from successful public schools, not just society. But Mann recognized that widely attended public schools would also encourage Americans to fulfill their democratic obligations to one another. Making education a public good was one of the hard-fought victories of reformers after the Revolution, one that safeguarded the spirit of the Revolution and that now risks being reversed.”

A wonderful lesson we should revisit often! Reading this made my pulse race a bit, in a good way for a change. It’s also worth rereading the preamble of the Constitution every now and then because it echoes the arguments made so clearly by Neem.
The clause “…promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity…” implies the value of education in the word “Posterity.” It is also a part of every state constitution of which I am aware; every one makes public education either the first or among the first of each state’s priorities. Those who belittle or devalue public education unknowingly follow the selfish view made clear in the title of the famous essay by economist Robert Heilbronner, “What Has Posterity Ever Done for Me?”
For our online community, this would be a great post to share with all the people you know who can’t figure out why you are so passionate about public schools.
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Beautifully said, GregB!
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The value of a liberal arts education was one of the few things founding fathers Jefferson and Adams agreed on.The following is an excerpt from my upcoming (January 2018) book on The Carpetbagging of the American Public School System.
“When sobered by experience I hope our successors will turn their attention to the value of education. I mean education on the broad scale, and not that of the petty academies, as they call themselves, which are starting up in every neighborhood, and where one or two men, possessing Latin, and sometimes Greek, a knowledge of the globes, and the first six books of Euclid, imagine and communicate this as the sum of science. They commit their pupils to the theatre of the world with just taste enough of learning to be alienated from industrious pursuits, and not enough to do service to the ranks of science”
Correspondence between John Adams and Thomas Jefferson
Vouchers and tax payer credits for private schools are designed to aid and abet schools whose primary mission is the promulgation of a religious belief system. What about “a wall of separation between the church and the state” is unclear to these, “conservatives?” The idea of a publicly paid for private education is the sort of oligarchical “choice” that the monarchists of the time, the Tories, would have supported.
The phrase “wall of separation between the church and the state” was used by Thomas Jefferson in a letter written to the Danbury Baptists on January 1, 1802. Historians and scholars of constitutional law note that: “His (Jefferson’s) purpose in this letter was to assuage the fears of the Danbury, Connecticut Baptists, and so he told them that this wall had been erected to protect them.”
The wall referred to in Jefferson’s letter protected the Danbury Baptists, not the state. Public funds used for religious indoctrination damage both the state’s interest and the independence of those churches from the state. There are growing numbers of church leaders that are speaking out against vouchers and the public funding of private religious schools. They understand the issue.
“Conservative” and liberal families that chose Catholic Schools or private schools in the past knew that free religious choice required sacrifice. They did not feel entitled to take money from public funds to do so. This is called putting your objections aside and doing what is best for your community. A tenet that was taught in civics classes at the time.
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As usual the trope of the Eduformers “get the federal government out of education” has no basis in fact, which doesn’t deter them at all. They are masters of the “Big Lie” technique: say something over and over an loud enough and it becomes “truth,” at least for the faithful in the pews. This applies across the board, of course, they are still claiming that tax cuts for corporations and the wealthy will benefit ordinary people, all facts to the contrary.
On Thu, Aug 31, 2017 at 9:02 AM, Diane Ravitch’s blog wrote:
> dianeravitch posted: “Johann Neem is a historian who specializes in the > study of colonial American education. He wrote the following wonderful post > that summarizes his excellent new book, “Democracy’s Schools: The Rise of > Public Education in America.” https://www.washington” >
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“They are masters of the “Big Lie” technique: say something over and over an loud enough and it becomes “truth,””
Just as the American Psychological Association, The National Council on Measurement (sic) in Education, and The American Education Research Association do in their “Standards for Educational and Psychological Testing”, THE testing bible for those who believe (falsely) that they are “measuring” something in the teaching and learning process. That’s the BIG LIE. In the testing bible they (there are no authors listed at all), the organizations use the words measure, measurement and/or metrics on average of 4-5 times a page. Hey, repeat that lie often enough with authoritative sounding language (that is onto-epistemologically bankrupt) and Voila, it’s true (at least in their minds, and unfortunately in the minds of a gullible population).
Whatever is measured counts
Whatever counts is measured
And counting whatever measures
Is measuring whatever counts
SomeDam Poet.
The most misleading concept/term in education is “measuring student achievement” or “measuring student learning”. The concept has been misleading educators into deluding themselves that the teaching and learning process can be analyzed/assessed using “scientific” methods which are actually pseudo-scientific at best and at worst a complete bastardization of rationo-logical thinking and language usage.
There never has been and never will be any “measuring” of the teaching and learning process and what each individual student learns in their schooling. There is and always has been assessing, evaluating, judging of what students learn but never a truly objective “measuring” of it.
But, but, but, you’re trying to tell me that the supposedly august and venerable APA, AERA and/or the NCME have been wrong for more than the last 50 years, disseminating falsehoods and chimeras??
Who are you to question the authorities in testing???
Yes, they have been wrong and I (and many others, Wilson, Hoffman etc. . . ) question those authorities and challenge them (or any of you other advocates of the malpractices that are standards and testing) to answer to the following onto-epistemological analysis:
The TESTS MEASURE NOTHING, quite literally when you realize what is actually happening with them. Richard Phelps, a staunch standardized test proponent (he has written at least two books defending the standardized testing malpractices) in the introduction to “Correcting Fallacies About Educational and Psychological Testing” unwittingly lets the cat out of the bag with this statement:
“Physical tests, such as those conducted by engineers, can be standardized, of course [why of course of course], but in this volume , we focus on the measurement of latent (i.e., nonobservable) mental, and not physical, traits.” [my addition]
Notice how he is trying to assert by proximity that educational standardized testing and the testing done by engineers are basically the same, in other words a “truly scientific endeavor”. The same by proximity is not a good rhetorical/debating technique.
Since there is no agreement on a standard unit of learning, there is no exemplar of that standard unit and there is no measuring device calibrated against said non-existent standard unit, how is it possible to “measure the nonobservable”?
THE TESTS MEASURE NOTHING for how is it possible to “measure” the nonobservable with a non-existing measuring device that is not calibrated against a non-existing standard unit of learning?????
PURE LOGICAL INSANITY!
The basic fallacy of this is the confusing and conflating metrological (metrology is the scientific study of measurement) measuring and measuring that connotes assessing, evaluating and judging. The two meanings are not the same and confusing and conflating them is a very easy way to make it appear that standards and standardized testing are “scientific endeavors”-objective and not subjective like assessing, evaluating and judging.
That supposedly objective results are used to justify discrimination against many students for their life circumstances and inherent intellectual traits.
C’mon test supporters, have at the analysis, poke holes in it, tell me where I’m wrong!
I’m expecting that I’ll still be hearing the crickets and cicadas of tinnitus instead of reading any rebuttal or refutation.
Because there is no rebuttal/refutation!
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I am a playwright*, and THAT, defines how I interpret the BEHAVIOR which I see, becaus ewe dramaturges know that the DIALOGUE is all we have to really DEFINE the character who walks through on our stage.
Trump walks on a national stage and what he says and does cannot be laughed away as if he is in a comedy reality show.EVERY PLAYWRIGHT knows this, because they have no NARRATIVE to describe that this guy on the stage, is a charlatan, an impulsive, undisciplined, narcissistic, ignoramus.
WORDS AND BEHAVIOR TELL IT ALL!
I regard this link, below not merely important, but CRUCIAL and when you go there PLEASE SEE MY COMMENT ABOUT LIES THE LIES HE TOLD which predicted everything he has done.
https://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Greatest-Lie-Trump-Eve-by-SUSAN-TROTTER-Barack-Obama-Birth-Certificate_Birther-Trump_Deception_Dishonesty-170831-965.html#comment671936
There is no society or civilization that survives when deprived of the truth, because good decisions depend on knowing OBSERVABLE REALITY: i.e THE TRUTH about what is happening!
When the people who rise to the top do not supply the truth, chaos follows, and bad people rise into power. 1939 in Germany offers the validity of this.
“Alternative facts” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OdV_8TGswRA&list=RDOdV_8TGswRA is not a mere expression to provide laughs (that video amusing –> but it is the DEFINITION of a LIE, and on THE PRESIDENT as well as ON EVERYTHING THAT COMES OUT OF HIS MOUTH!
The world is watching us, and how will they trust us as an ally, if the man at the top is… well… you know!
We should not have to FACT CHECK everything this man disseminates in his tweets.
(another funny video on a topic that is NOT funny)
To me, and those who study history, the DANGER lies in the way that lies become accepted, and ‘alternative facts’ become a laughing matter, and worse. There are those that feel that thier ‘opinions’ and their right not just to speak them, but to demand that they have EQUAL TIME WITH REAL FACTS, because they twist the Constitution, and imagine that all speech is protected… it is not.
Soooo…. Please, Go to: https://www.opednews.com/articles/The-Greatest-Lie-Trump-Eve-by-SUSAN-TROTTER-Barack-Obama-Birth-Certificate_Birther-Trump_Deception_Dishonesty-170831-965.html#comment671936
and READ MY COMMENT, which demonstrates how THE LIES that defined Trump’s history, also PREDICTED WHAT HE DOES AS PRESIDENT…
What people Say, their dialogue is the BEST WAY TO KNOW the TRUTH ABOUT WHO THEY ARE…and how they will BEHAVE.
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Time to ask Ted Cruz and the other Red Staters:
Do you think the federal government should not pay for disaster relief?
They had planned to cut disaster relief by $1 billion to fund Trump’s nutty Wall.
Hurricane Harvey just guaranteed that the Wall will never happen.
Ann Coulter tweeted that Harvey was more likely God’s retribution on Houston for electing a lesbian mayor in the past, more likely than climate change. What a miserable person she is.
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I think you are far too charitable in using the term “person.”
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Dr. Janet Frazer tweeted in response:
If, as LGBTs, we have powers to create hurricanes, 🌏quakes, tornadoes, famine, droughts, etc… why antagonize us?!?
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Great article: “A return to this type of system threatens to exacerbate educational inequality, which already plagues modern America and weakens our democracy.”
Oh, oh, watch out Mr. Neem, the libertarians’ heads will explode and you even dared to refer to the US as a democracy (he later referred to it as a republic, too). According to libertarian “thought,” the US is not a democracy but a republic. Well, a republic is a form of democracy and most people, including the presidents, alternately refer to the US as a republic or democracy. Libertarians hate democracy, they even want to repeal the 17th amendment and they want to eliminate elected school boards. I really wish these regressives would find their own island where they could live out the libertarian nightmare to the fullest extent.
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Cross posted at https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/Johann-Neem-The-Founding-in-Life_Arts-Choice_Diane-Ravitch_PUBLIC-EDUCATION-NETWORK_Public-Education-170831-667.html#comment671908
with this comment which has embedded links at the address above:
Just like the corporations and hedge funds profiteers saw dollar signs if the health of our nation’s citizens could be turned into a marketplace, https://dianeravitch.net/2015/04/14/confidential-report-eduprofiteers-see-a-big-market-in-education/ so the same motivation is turning our public schools over to people who do to know about HOW LEARNING IS ENABLED, http://www.opednews.com/articles/Magic-Elixir-No-Evidence-by-Susan-Lee-Schwartz-130312-433.html and do not care about our children or the future of our democracy, because as E.D. Hirsch makes clear”democracy depends on sacred knowledge” http://www.aft.org/sites/default/files/periodicals/hirsch.pdf
At the DIANE RAVITCH BLOG.. and you can read about “The Trump Devos Demolition of American Education,” in her book. https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/The-Demolition-of-American-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Choice_College_Diane-Ravitch_Education-Curriculum-170606-760.html#comment662166
It is no secret that I follow the RAVITCH BLOG, of FORMER UNDER SECRETARY OF STATE’, DIANE RAVITCH who wrote How Not to Fix Our Public Schools AND Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/reform-reform you can read a confidential report on how ‘eduprofiteers’ see a big market in education and that is why they can get away with handing over the schools to the legislators, with not an educator on board… see my series at Oped News.
https://www.opednews.com/Series/legislature-and-governorsL-by-Susan-Lee-Schwartz-150217-816.html?f=legislature-and-governorsL-by-Susan-Lee-Schwartz-150217-816.html
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DeVos is not fit to be Sec. of Education!
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Defenders of a liberal arts education have a double “branding problem” with Republicans, suporters of Trump, and others. A not so funny way to view the value of higher education.
http://www.gallup.com/opinion/gallup/216275/higher-education-drop-term-liberal-arts.aspx
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I just saw this online. All students in the Houston area will receive free meals for the rest of the year. This is good news, especially for parents who have no idea of how to survive. I am very pleased that our government is doing something to help.
….
All HISD students to receive three free meals per day this school year
Decision will allow 218,000 students to eat all school meals for free this school year
The Houston Independent School District has received approval from the United States Department of Agriculture and the Texas Department of Agriculture to waive the required application process for the National School Lunch/Breakfast Program. This decision means all HISD students will eat all school meals for free during the 2017-2018 school year.
The decision comes in the wake of the devastation created by Hurricane Harvey and its aftermath. Despite the federal waiver, HISD is still asking parents and guardians to complete and return the application. The National School Lunch/School Breakfast Program applications and surveys are available at https://mealapps.houstonisd.org. They can also be accessed by visiting the HISD Nutrition Services website and clicking on the “One Form Means So Much” button on the right side of the page. The information received in the forms helps the district to secure funding and track student data.
“The flooding that is affecting the city of Houston has been devastating to so many. Some of the areas that are the hardest hit are filled with working parents whose limited funds will need to go toward recovery efforts,” said Houston ISD Superintendent Richard Carranza. “This waiver will give our families one less concern as they begin the process of restoring their lives. It will also provide a sense of normalcy by allowing students to have access to up to three nutritious meals each and every school day.”
Earlier this year, HISD certified 191 schools to participate in the Community Eligibility Program — giving nearly 123,955 students access to free lunch and breakfast. Just last week, the Texas Department of Agriculture approved the district’s application to offer free supper to all of the district’s students. This latest announcement supports the district’s goals of reducing food insecurity and providing food to as many students as possible.
“It will take months, possibly years for the city to recover. We expect families to be displaced, students to attend new schools, and many of them possibly using alternative ways to travel to and from school,” said Nutrition Services Officer Betti Wiggins. “We want to reduce any stress connected to food while families work toward getting their personal affairs in order. All HISD students will have access to good food, made with as many local and fresh ingredients as possible and served with love and a smile.”
The waiver will take effect immediately, allowing students to take advantage of free meals when school resumes.
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