Recently I posted an article by pro-choice advocate Paul Peterson about the origins of charter schools. He wrote, “No, Albert Shanker Did Not Invent Charter Schools.” Shanker wanted teacher-led schools, schools-within-schools. He believed that their teachers would be union members and that the charters would be approved by the other staff in the school and by the local school board.
But, wrote Peterson, Minnesota rejected Shanker’s views and instead wrote a law in 1991 that allowed other authorizers besides the district, that cleared the way for entrepreneurs and other non-educators to open charters, and that were not bound to accept teachers unions. Shanker wanted charters to be Research and Development programs for public schools. Led by Ted Kolderie and Joe Nathan, the Minnesota reformers wanted charters to compete with public schools.
A few states made school districts the sole authorizers of charters, and those states have few charters. Most, however, followed Minnesota’s lead, encouraging many authorizers, many kinds of charter management organizations, and the emergence of an aggressive entrepreneurial sector. The latter states have h7 drew of charters of varying quality.
So what happened to charters in Minnesota, the first state to launch them in 1992?
Rob Levine, native Minnesotan, writer, photographer, blogger, assays the failed promises of charters in Minnesota in this post.
Levine shows that the push for charters came not from teachers or parents, but from “a who’s who of the state’s business, civic, foundation, non-profit and political elite.”
“Key to that sales pitch: the idea that education is, at its heart, a business and should operate by the business principles that govern virtually every other sector of the economy, with a spoken goal of “breaking the government monopoly” on public primary and secondary education. The unspoken goals were many and varied but the budgetary results of those efforts are quantifiable: the conversion of nearly $1 trillion spent annually nationally on public primary and secondary education to private profit, and the breaking of the nation’s teachers’ unions.
“To make this palatable, charter boosters focused on a righteous idea: the creation of better and more educational opportunities for poor children of color. In the end, the change model they embraced was what’s sometimes called the Shock Doctrine. First you create and/or declare an emergency in a cash-rich public sector, then you propose the solution that inevitably results in the privatization of as much of the sector as possible.
“In a wide-ranging proposal to reform government called the Minnesota Policy Blueprint, Mitch Pearlstein, a leader in Minnesota’s “School Choice Movement,” admitted as much in his chapter on education policy. In Pearlstein’s view, the answer to the challenges of public education is obvious: all public schools should be converted to charter schools.
Today only two of Minnesota’s 174 operating charter schools have a unionized faculty.”
“It’s not hard to see why that conclusion appealed to Pearlstein. For decades, the teachers unions have been the bête noire to GOP lawmakers in state houses across the nation. As the founder and leader of a Republican “think tank”, the Center of the American Experiment, Pearlstein understood that unions would not be able to get a foothold in charter schools. He was right. Today, 22 years later, only two of Minnesota’s 174 operating charter schools have a unionized faculty.”
Charter promoters, he says, worked out a deal that the state would ignore segregation in return for higher test scores.
“Twenty five years later the results of those “deals” are clear. After adjusting for external factors charter school students do no better, and probably marginally worse, on standardized test scores than students at regular public schools. And charter schools are decidedly more segregated than their regular public school counterparts. By 2016 there were 93 “hypersegregated” schools in the Twin Cities – more than 95% children of color. Almost two-thirds of those schools are charters. Children of color in the state who attend charter schools are twice as likely as their regular public school counterparts to attend a highly segregated school…Today, according to a report from the University of Minnesota’s Institute on Metropolitan Opportunity, “Of the 50 most racially concentrated Twin Cities schools, 45 are charters.”
The Big Daddy of charters in Minnesota is the Walton Family Foundation. Levine points out that “the Walton Family Foundation…has started or helped to start 30 percent of all charter schools ever opened in the state. In effect we’ve partially outsourced the starting up of new schools to the heirs of the Walmart fortune.”
Levine writes that there are 48,000 students in the Minneapolis schools, public and charter. 36,000 are in public schools. Reformers plan to add 30,000 new “relevant and rigorous seats.” He assumes they mean seats in charters. He foresees the withering away of public schools in Minneapolis.
Given the charters’ failure to fulfill any of their promises, he thinks the public might get tired of paying for them. But he worries that time grows short.
“A journalist once seeking to report on the Gates Foundation’s education activity lamented how difficult the job was because nearly everyone in the education community was taking his money. That’s how it is in Minnesota education policy discourse. The only voices making it through our media din are the ones with a steady stash of tax-exempt income. The reformers’ money guarantees a seat at every table.
“When they’re not dredging up or paying for bogus studies or polls, the foundations and organizations are sponsoring events to push their agenda. These events are then broadcast by local public media, presented as a “public service.” This is especially true for non-profit media the foundations contribute to, especially MinnPost, but also including Minnesota Public Radio and Twin Cities Public Television (TPT).
“Education reformers will need all that firepower because evidence and reason are always just around the corner. They can only make excuses for low test scores, all kinds of impropriety, incompetence and segregation for so long. Providing marginally better test scores at a few segregated schools won’t cut it. And it remains to be seen how long the voting public will take paying taxes to support schools while having little to no control over them. If we wait much longer to take action to end the failed experiment of charter schools it could very well result in the end of the Minneapolis public schools, and that’s just a start.”

How much waste, fraud, embezzling, segregation and cronyism are taxpayers supposed to tolerate in order to call privatization a wasteful failure? We have create a hideous hydra that seeks only to gather more public money into its portfolio. Privatization is no longer about being an “island of opportunity.” Charters have become islands of tax shelters for billionaires, businesses that seek a bigger “market share,” and opportunistic cesspools of profiteering that routinely fleece taxpayers and undermine public schools. Somebody needs to do a comprehensive study of amount of money spent compared to the so-called benefit, in relation to the damage done to communities and public schools.
From all appearances privatization has been an expensive scheme to move public money into private pockets. Voters need to support representatives that support public schools, and vote against DFER candidates unless they are running against a dystopian conservative. As a longer goal and based on the widespread failure of privatization, we need to change Clinton’s Improving America’s Schools Act of 1994, which legitimized privatization. We should put existing charters under the direction of local school districts and take the profit out of privatization. It is a way we can limit public school bleeding and make charters accountable to local boards of education. We need to restore some sanity to this run away train of profiteering and segregation.
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Traditional public education in the public sector with unionized teachers has NOT and NEVER has been a government monopoly.
Monopoly by definition is the exclusive possession or control of the supply or grade in a commodity or service.
The federal government has NEVER — I repeat: NEVER!!! — had exclusive possession or control of public education until the failed attempt with the passage of NCLB, Race to the Top, and ESEA along with the Common Core crapola that was all pushed by the same people and forces behind the privatizing of education through the misleading claim of CHOICE.
1st – there has never been one teachers’ union and the unions that do exist are broken down into democratic organizations from the national, the state and the local levels with members voting in their leaders and representatives at every level.
2nd – the public education sector in the U.S. is and has been divided up between the 50 states so each state, through the democratic process, determines how each state’s public schools should operate and be managed. Because most of the almost 14,000 individual public school districts are democratic organizations where the members of school boards are elected by local voters, each district is in a position to create more codes to create different learning environments across the country that reflect the values of each community but guided by both federal and state laws so that power cannot be abused.
However, it is obvious that the Koch brothers, ALEC, the Walton family, Eli Broad, and people like Bill Gates want to create a monopoly with them or the people they hire and pay in charge and the rest of the population cut out of the democratic, decision-making process. These greedy, power-hungry liars and frauds have proven with their actions, not their words and claims, that they want religious schools and/or they want draconian abusive schools where children are bullied and their spirits are crushed by autocratic, sociopathic or psychopathic CEO’s and managers like Michelle Rhee and Eva Moskowitz who answer to no one because the laws and legislation that came about over the decades through the democratic process does not apply to them.
The traditional public schools are democratic organizations. Teachers’ unions are democratic organiza6tions. They cannot become monopolies like Monsanto or Google or Facebook or Microsoft that are not and never have been democratic organizations.
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I like to call it a public institution despite the libertarians that try to make anything public a dirty word. They believe in small government, but if we believe the government is “we the people” why would be want it to be small? Libertarians want a small government that is weak and unable to curb endless profiteering. We want it to be effective. Some things to not belong in the “market,” and the current state of privatization proves it.
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“Key to that sales pitch: the idea that education is, at its heart, a business and should operate by the business principles that govern virtually every other sector of the economy”
Tell that to successful businessman Jamie Vollmer:
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Pretty sure the end game is no schools at all.
http://www.brightlightsmallcity.com/minneapolis-public-schools-ghosted-by-2040-city-plan/
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There will be a few schools — very expensive and exclusive for the children of the very rich and powerful
MAGA also means take us back to 1900 when 40-percent of the people lived in extreme poverty, women did not vote and were still considered the property of men, seven percent of the children graduated from high school and 3 percent from college and without any laws to protect children from being sold into a slavery called servitude by their desperate parents. In fact, back then, in some states, children as young as seven could be sold to a private-sector, for-profit business called whore houses.
https://nypost.com/2017/04/22/when-new-york-was-the-prostitution-capital-of-the-us/
“When it comes to sexual slavery and exploitation of children, Americans tend to view it as a problem somewhere else. Slavery doesn’t exist in the United States anymore, we tell ourselves. Certainly, the selling of children here is unimaginable. And no, slavery, as it existed in the early years of our country’s formation, does not exist openly. But make no mistake: the buying and selling of people, especially children, for sexual acts occurs today.”
https://warinternational.org/us-history-of-sexual-exploitation-of-children-news/
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I live in Alabama where senate candidate Roy Moore linked “the good old days” to “before the war”. You are late by about 40 years!
“I think it was great at the time when families were united — even though we had slavery — they cared for one another… Our families were strong, our country had a direction.”
-Roy Moore, September 2018
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More was talking about before the Civil War, right? That means he wants to return to before April 12, 1861 and MAGA by returning to that time.
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“A journalist once seeking to report on the Gates Foundation’s education activity lamented how difficult the job was because nearly everyone in the education community was taking his money. That’s how it is in Minnesota education policy discourse. The only voices making it through our media din are the ones with a steady stash of tax-exempt income. The reformers’ money guarantees a seat at every table.”
I think this is a major problem. Meg-millions are flowing directly to the charter industry for charter authorizers, researchers and PR professionals who circulate pretty pictures and stories about kids saved from failing schools, politicians in every state willing to support the rip-offs (e.g., Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow in Ohio), and so on.
In the meantime, while there is much PR for the charter industry, good and bad, the promoters of tech as a solution to everything are forging ahead with “machine learning” treated as the new panacea for modifying asocial behavior.
A major initiative is being lead by Dr. Angela Duckworth (Character Lab, Grit) and her side kick, Katherine Milkman, Ph. D. with appointments at the Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania and Penn’s Perelman School of Medicine. Both are heading up the “Behavior Change For Good Initiative.”
if this YouTube link doesn’t scare you with its pleasant and benign sounding utopian vision of behavior modification as a panacea for “every social problem of the 21st Century” then I do not know what will. Perhaps you think of B.F. Skinner is the unsung hero for educators.
Which problems? In the background of the Youtube are these words– unemployment, poverty, crime, obesity, smoking, climate change, and…don’t miss “academic underachievement.” The pitch is also around the concept of “Making Behavior Change Stick.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dUUqtRQG_Y
Tip of the hat to Wrench in the Gears for that YouTube and for other posts, including this Infographic showing where and how the money is flowing for personalized behavioral control https://www.edu2035.org/images/people/Poster%20on%20Learner-centered%20education-ilovepdf-compressed.pdf
The website for Behavior Change for Good says: The Behavior Change for Good Initiative will enlist computational devices with “an interactive digital platform to improve daily decisions about health, education, and savings.”
A variant of this basic idea is already being used for social control in China. There you have a reputation score which comes from compliance with state-approved behavior. You can earn credits for having a good reputation. Managing your reputation means you get real perks, bonuses, first in line opportunities (e.g., for housing, travel, admissions).
The “Behavior Change For Good Initiative.” is supported by a long list of foundations, banks, corporations, educators, health professionals and even more partners ready to cash in on algorithmic behavioral management. Take some time to look at the “Partners.”
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“Reform” is a gigantic pay to play scheme with opportunists trying to get their hands on public money while states starve public schools. These think tanks churn out misinformation to make their schemes sound legitimate. It is all so corrupt.
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Meet the Economist Behind the One Percent’s Stealth Takeover of America disq.us/t/32tnmlr
“…expressing eagerness to dismantle Social Security, Medicaid, and Medicare as well as kill public education because it tended to foster community values.”
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https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/meet-the-economist-behind-the-one-percents-stealth-takeover-of-america#disqus_thread
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The Corporate Plan to Groom U.S. Kids for Servitude by Wiping Out Public Schools
https://www.ineteconomics.org/perspectives/blog/the-corporate-plan-to-groom-u-s-kids-for-servitude-by-wiping-out-public-schools
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And from Mr. Joseph Nathan – who was last seen accosting strangers on the streets of the Twin Cities, grabbing them by the lapels and screaming, “But charter schools are public schools !!!” – crickets…
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