Peter Greene read a report published by the Center for the Reinention of Public Education at the University of Washington, a leading advocate for charters, choice, and the portfolio model. The report offers advice to district leaders about how public schools can deal with declining enrollments by working with charter schools and putting them on an equal footing as partners, not competitors.
Maybe I am being a Pollyanna, but I see this report as a sign of weakness, a recognition by privatizers that they must develop strategies to get embedded because the tide of public opinion is turning against them. The opinion poll in the conservative journal EdNext recently reported that public support for charters dropped from 51% to 39% in one year. The NAACP statement criticizing charters undermined their claims about being leaders of the civil rights movement. The almost daily reports of charter scandals in many states is undermining their credibility. Betsy DeVos’s enthusiastic embrace hurts their carefully cultivated public image. Watch for more statements aimed at normalizing charters. They are worried.
Peter reviews the CPRE list of problems and remedies and he is not impressed.
So how do we fix all of these things? CRPE has some thoughts.
Districts need to close schools and negotiate contracts that don’t spend so much money. The closing school solution seems to run up against the “don’t take on long-term debts and costs” solution, as schools frequently manage consolidation of schools by taking on construction projects.
They would like to see more partnership, but their example is “if charters find a way to give cheap retirement plans might encourage public systems to adopt similar systems.” So, yeah, charters that want to pay teachers less could, I suppose, try to convince public schools not to outbid them. That’s cooperation, sort of.
And there would need to be city-level strategy sessions. Which should be a hoot as long as nobody ever addresses the underlying zero-sum game that is charter vs. public schools. But that’s not going to happen, since one proposed solution is that districts “publicly identify” their legacy costs in exchange for a charter funding formula that more closely resembles public per-pupil costs:
For example, charter schools might receive less per-pupil funding under such an agreement but would be able to tell the public, with confidence, that charter and district students received the same classroom funding and that charter schools weren’t contributing to a district’s impending insolvency.
Yeah, that doesn’t even make sense. “Getting same classroom funding” doesn’t equal “not sucking public school dry.” So maybe the suggestion here is that charter’s get their funding and public schools admit that they’re insolvent because their buildings and pensions and teacher pay are all just way expensive. In other words, charters agree to get paid public tax dollars, and public schools agree to publicly say it’s their own damn fault they’re having financial problems. Why would public schools want to enter into this deal, exactly? And would the funding formula include all the “philanthropic” contributions to charters?
CRPE also suggests that public schools be given some limited extra funding to be used only as a means of down-sizing. Or if districts can prove they’re shrinking as fast as possible, charters would agree to a voluntary growth slow down. Or some other grand bargain that basically involves charters conducting business as usual while public schools agree to work harder at dying, already.
CRPE also has a list of Things To Discuss and Research Further. Gather more data about how much financial vampirage charters are really committing, and how much is just, you know, other reasons for districts to lose money. More data about “fixed costs” and just generally how teachers are draining money by wanting to be paid. Figure out the greatest number of students the charters could handle, because that’s the ideal, apparently– as many students taken out of public school as possible. More power for superintendents. They don’t say which power, exactly, but context suggests that old favorite– hire, fire and set salaries without stupid rules and unions. Learning from other sectors like energy and healthcare, because they’re just like schools.
Bottom Line
CRPE is correct in one thing– we do have to look at how charters affect the whole local educational eco-system. But their belief in the inevitable supremacy of charters gets in the way of a useful conversation.
The report seems to boil down basically to “Charters and public schools should work together to make employment conditions worse for teachers. Also, they should team up to help charters thrive and to help public schools die more efficiently and without making charters look bad. For The Children.”
Maybe this is supposed to be an innovative approach to the Socratic method, and public schools are just supposed to take a hemlock bath because it would make life easier for charters. But I don’t imagine many takers will line up to take CRPE’s offer. Not even for the children.
Diane I hope you are right (that reformers are worried). But I think he is right that the “reformers” and charters, at their core, are about a “zero sum game;” and if that’s the case, then even the name of the center that put out the document at UW is just another example of “double-speak:” “The Center for the Reinvention of Public Education.” Either they actually support public schools (naw), or they use the term “public” to soft-sell what they really want: public schools “reinvented” to become public no longer, but some else-named derivative of private; and a new playground for substance-free moguls and marketers.
CPRE doesn’t support public schools. They support reinvention of schools, so that there is a “portfolio” like a stock portfolio. If you are satisfied with the test scores of the public schools, it stays in the portfolio. If not, invite an outsider to open a new school or take over an existing one. Schools are fungible.
Yes! Delusional free market solutions to the rescue . . . .
When something fails, something better and stronger will take it over. Big fish eats littler fish. Instead of guaranteeing a great education for all children, let free market capitalist solutions solve the problem, and if children become collateral damage, so be it. That’s America. At least someone or some people will end up getting something out of it. It’s not a total loss, except to generations of children who need to grow up educated. Know what I mean?
They have the advantage of simplicity on their side—”choice.” But, two can play that game. In my view, it’s vital that we are consistent in insisting the charter schools are private schools, and that NO public money should go to private schools. This is a winning argument…whoever frames the question wins the argument
“The Center for the Reinvention of Public Education is an operating arm of the Gates Foundation located at the University of Washington. Almost all reports from CRPE are about budget cutting and shoring up bad ideas they have promoted.
Now!? Now the charter cheerleaders want cooperation? OK, then the charter schools have to give up their private board of directors and agree to be under the wing of the duly elected school board and the duly appointed superintendent of the whole school district. The head of the charter school and other duplicative positions would be eliminated, liquidated. The charter schools would have to abide by the same rules as the district schools.
Joe The trouble is that ANY such concessions, to them, is just the beginning “win” in the battle of the longer zero-sum-game war. Said another way, as long as greed is their steed, their plan is to eventually trample right over everyone in sight.
Dan Quisenberry from a Michigan charter lobbying group says “we know charter schools make traditional schools better”
Do we “know” that? In Michigan? I don’t think we do.
I would be horrified if my local public school imitated Ohio or Michigan or Pennysylvania charter schools.
You really feel sorry for public school families in these “portfolio” districts- they are completely ignored.
It’s unfair to kids in public schools but they’ll all just have to take a hit for the good of The Movement, I guess.
One of the ed reform reports on downsizing public schools refers to public schools as “schools of last resort”
This is how The Movement views your child’s school- as a place where children who can’t be sorted into specialty charters will end up.
They offer absolutely nothing to public school families- the best we can hope for is they don’t do too much damage. That’s the BEST CASE.
What does ed reform offer to families in traditional public schools?
Can one of them answer that question? If the answer is “public schools will improve by imitating charter schools” that doesn’t apply in my state- Ohio charter schools are terrible.
What else do they have? Anything? One positive contribution or idea for an existing US public school. Name one.
Marketers have a field day promoting charters, which are REALLY AWFUL. Marketers LIE, CHEAT, STEAL, and generally promote mis-truths and so do those in charge of the Charter School INDUSTRY … KA CHING.
You notice too how the demands only run one way- a whole list of what public schools “must” do but nothing that charter schools must do.
Like all of ed reform it’s written from the perspective that charter schools are inherently superior to public schools and therefore public schools and the families who use them must give way the needs and wants of charters. It’s written from inside the echo chamber.
I don’t mind that there’s an entire industry devoted to promoted charter schools but I really wish we could drop the pretense that this has something to do with “public education”. It is ABOUT charter schools. It is NOT about public schools. Public schools are at best an afterthought in ed reform.
Chiara Public schools are a target of predation from a group of tribal-minded power mongers.
Public schools should resist and challenge every twisted idea from deformers. Public schools are no more a monopoly than the police and fire departments. Teachers should not be complicit in aiding the process any more than we have to. We have nothing to lose other than subjugation and annihilation.
Likewise, the public needs to resist every twisted idea from right wing ideologues. The destruction of a civil society should not be accepted along with a litany of horrible ideas that intends to regress us to the dark ages. I recently read this list of questions for Republicans which highlights the divide between progressives and regressives. FYI, Bernie Sanders is scheduled to debate Graham and Cassidy about their pitiful health bill on Monday evening on CNN. http://elisabethparker.com/questions-for-republicans/
In the report ed reformers admit that even with the constant public school bashing and cheerleading for charters, 50% of kids in these “reform” districts attend public schools.
This is the best ed reform can offer public school families? A list of sacrifices they must make? Loss mitigation?
50% of families are some kind of afterthought that must be “dealt with”? NO positive vision or plans for these families?
Wow. I feel sorry for public school families in these places. They are clearly a low priority.
Chiara,
Might be best to change our terminology: A school that has been subject to “reform” is a “reform school.”
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Education.
Scandal in a charter school?
Wasn’t it a famous edu-reformer who said about charters “it’s not a bug, it’s a feature.”
So true.