This is Jan Resseger’s third report on her experience at the Network for Public Education annual conference in Indianapolis last weekend. In this post, she reports on what she learned by attending a panel about the NPE-Schott Foundation study of state support for public schools vs. privatization of public schools.
One of the most fascinating workshops at the conference explored the complexity of researching the groundbreaking, June 2018 report, Grading the States: A Report Card on Our Nation’s Commitment to Public Schools, and the importance of the report, the first comprehensive effort to track and compare the growth of privatization and the characteristics of state vouchers and charters. The report, a collaboration of the Network for Public Education and the Schott Foundation for Public Education, defines its purpose: “States are rated on the extent to which they have instituted policies and practices that lead toward fewer democratic opportunities and more privatization, as well as the guardrails they have (or have not) put into place to protect the rights of students, communities and taxpayers. This is not an assessment of the overall quality of the public education system in the state—rather it is an analysis of the laws that support privatized alternatives to public schools.” (emphasis in the original)
The primary assumption of a report about the privatization of education but whose title incorporates these words, “a report card on our nation’s commitment to public schools,” is that the growth of several privatized education sectors at public expense—charter schools, vouchers, tuition tax credits and education savings accounts—reflects diminishing commitment to the inclusive mission of public education. Sure enough, the report confirms that assumption, most clearly in the diversion of tax funds away from public schools: “Vouchers and charters do not decrease education costs, but instead divert tax dollars ordinarily directed to public schools thus limiting the capacity of public schools to educate the remaining students.”
Last weekend’s workshop featured three speakers: the Executive Director of the Network for Public Education (NPE), Dr. Carol Burris, who was one of the report’s researchers; Tanya Clay House, the report’s primary author and researcher—also an attorney and consultant who has previously served as a Deputy Assistant Secretary in the U.S. Department of Education, the Director of Public Policy for the Lawyers’ Committee for Civil Rights Under Law, and the Public Policy Director at People for the American Way; and Derek Black, an attorney and professor of school finance law at the University of South Carolina…
As a participant in last weekend’s workshop, I was fascinated, as Burris and Clay House described the difficulties they faced as they tried to collect the most basic data about what is now nearly 20 years of expanding school privatization. The two women told of one data set they had assumed the report would cover only to be forced to omit that issue from the report because the the records had not been kept by enough states to make it possible to draw any comprehensive or meaningful conclusion. What became clear to me as I listened is that the promoters of school privatization trusted their own ideological belief that the marketplace would provide its own accountability. They assumed that as parents voted with their feet, parents themselves would identify high quality schools and seek them out; then schools of poor quality would not be marketable. Of course we know from research in Chicago and New Orleans and elsewhere that parents choose schools for all sorts of reasons that have nothing to do with school quality—a site near home or work, the presence of a childcare or after-school program, the reputation of the football team, the advertising on the side of the bus, the incentive of the gift of a computer upon enrollment. Several years ago, Margaret Raymond, a fellow at the pro-market Hoover Institution and director of the Stanford Center for Research on Education Outcomes (CREDO), shocked listeners at the Cleveland City Club by announcing that it has become pretty clear that markets don’t work in what she calls the education sector: “This is one of the big insights for me because I actually am a kind of pro-market kind of girl, but the marketplace doesn’t seem to work in a choice environment for education… I’ve studied competitive markets for much of my career… Education is the only industry/sector where the market mechanism just doesn’t work… I think it’s not helpful to expect parents to be the agents of quality assurance throughout the state.”
The third presenter in the NPE workshop was Derek Black, a civil rights attorney and school finance professor who explored what he believes is the overall significance of the Grading the States report. I was unable to capture verbatim Derek Black’s comments at the workshop, but in a blog post when the Grading the States report was published in June, Black made the same points in eloquent detail: “The report is, in many respects, the one I have been waiting for. It fills in key facts that have been missing from the public debate and will help move it in a more positive direction. In my forthcoming article, Preferencing Educational Choice: The Constitutional Limits, I also attempt to reframe the analysis of charter schools and vouchers, arguing that there are a handful of categorical ways in which states have actually created statutory preferences for charters and vouchers in relation to traditional public schools. I explain why a statutory preference for these choice programs contradicts states’ constitutional obligations in regard to education… My research, however, analyzes the issues from a relatively high level of abstraction, highlighting problematic examples in particular states and districts and synthesizing constitutional principles from various states. This new report drills down into the facts in a way I have never seen before. It systematically examines charter and voucher laws in each state with a standardized methodology aimed at identifying the extent to which each state’s laws represent a de-commitment to public education.”
Black continues: “Each year, the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools (NAPCS) releases a report detailing charter school laws, with the frame of reference being the extent to which states have laws that promote the expansion of charters. The report normatively assumes that charter schools are good and state laws that overly restrict them are bad… Because there hasn’t been any systemic response to NAPCS’s reports, it has been able to skew the conversation. This new report brings balance.”
When the Grading the States report was released in June, this blog summarized its conclusions. Needless to say, I came home from last weekend’s conference in Indianapolis and explored the report in more depth. Here is what jumps out at me as an Ohio citizen this fall, after I’ve been watching the fallout across Ohio all year since the state’s final closure of the giant online charter school, the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow, after it ripped off Ohio taxpayers and students for 17 years. The report examines charter schools. Forty-four states and the District of Columbia have passed laws to permit charter schools. Of those 38, including my state, earned F grades. The report explains they are “states that embrace for-profit charter management, weak accountability and other factors that make their charter schools less accountable to the public.” “Twenty-eight of these states and the District of Columbia fail to require the same teacher certification as traditional public schools… Thirty-eight of the states and the District of Columbia have no required transparency provisions regulating the spending and funding by the charter school’s educational service providers… Of the 44 states and the District of Columbia with charter school laws, students with disabilities are particularly disadvantaged in 39 states and the District of Columbia, which do not clearly establish the provision of services. Twenty-two states do not require that the charter school return its taxpayer purchased assets and/or property back to the public if the charter school shuts down or fails.” The details on the various voucher programs are equally alarming.

The AFT and NEA should have compiled a list of preferred state board of education candidates and mailed the list to retired public teachers for voting guidance. Neglecting to do so is a colossal failure of leadership.
Kentucky’s Board is just one that is run by privatizers. And, sadly, the electorate is probably unaware of it.
LikeLiked by 1 person
for long years now, COLOSSAL failure of leadership
LikeLike
I was born and raised in KY, and I still have family there. I am offended by your statement. The electorate in KY, is as aware of the situation, as anyone else. Kentucky is moving towards more charters and permitting families to escape from failing public schools.
Kentuckians are not a bunch of ignorant country hicks.
Shame on you.
LikeLike
Kentucky passed a bill authorizing charters. Kentucky has passed no funding for charters.
Kentucky parents are fighting to keep charters unfunded. They support their public schools.
They are much smarter than their legislators.
Did you know that, Charles?
LikeLike
Both my daughter and her husband have advanced degrees and live in Kentucky. My mother, a highly accomplished woman, was raised in the commonwealth of Kentucky. The bluegrass state has working people whose focus is on raising families and trying to cover rising healthcare costs with declining incomes.
Kentucky is like Ohio and other states where the citizens have been robbed of their democracy through oligarchical design. Political information is made difficult to access. Gerrymandering obscures political representation. Republican politicians refuse to hold town hall meetings.
The teachers in Kentucky who have been robbed by pension grifters are intelligent people who had no way to stop their fleecing just as the taxpayers in Ohio had no way to stop their $1 bil. charter school fleecing. The book Kentucky Fried Pensions shows all of us how political operatives work to destroy lives.
Charles, blaming the victims of corruption for their plight is a characteristic of a soulless person, which you prove you are, over and over again.
LikeLike
“The promoters of school privatization trusted their own ideological belief that the marketplace would provide its own accountability.”
This false assumption has permitted states to send money to private entities with little to no accountability or oversight. The “market” does not serve people well in any endeavor where the health and well being of people are a priority. We have seen market failure in private prisons, health care and education. Corporations will always put profit over people.
Some states provide charters and vouchers “statutory priority.” With lots of dark money behind privatization, many so called representatives are serving corporate interests over the interests of their constituents. They are promoting disinvestment in public education. Communities need to target these fake representatives for removal during election cycles.
LikeLike
In Ohio’s District 2 (Cincinnati area), the incumbent on the State Board of Education, Bruns, is running against a candidate that lists Christian schools in her bio (Kilgore).
LikeLike
I think the NPE report was published or in the works before the April 24, 2018 data from the Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC) for the 2015-16 school year was released. Page 13 of the NPE report (on charter schools) mentions the Civil Rights Data Collection (CRDC) for the 2011-12 school year.
The introduction to the 23-page report for the CRDC Database for 2015-16 begins with this: “Charter schools that receive federal funding are subject to federal data collection and reporting requirements. This includes schools that receive federal funding under Title I or Title III of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA), the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA), or funding through the Charter School Program (CSP). The charter school, authorizer and/or local education agency (LEA) must work with the applicable LEA and state education agency (SEA) federal program representatives to ensure that the appropriate data are collected and reported.
For 2015-16, all charter schools were required to meet federal reporting requirements outlined in this workbook https://www2.ed.gov/about/inits/ed/edfacts/eden/ess/15-16-charter-workbook.pdf
The 2015-16 Civil Rights Data Collection also allows data searches restricted to charter schools. I have not had time to download the CRDC data but it is structured to offer information on charter school performances on a wide array of indicators that you can see here. https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/docs/crdc-2015-16-all-schools-form.pdf
A recent (and misleading) use of the CRDC Database for 2015-16 can be found in the ProPublica report titled “Miseducation.” There are some not fully transparent uses of several other databases in this report. https://projects.propublica.org/miseducation/
LikeLike