Please read this year-end report from the Network for Public Education. You will learn about an important addition to our staff and plans for the future.
2018 was a great year for Public Education, despite the fact that the U.S. Secretary of Education—for the first time in history—is a foe of public schools and a religious zealot.
Teachers in West Virginia, Oklahoma, Arizona, Colorado, and North Carolina heroically stood together and demanded fair funding for their schools and their students. They said “Enough is enough!” They changed the national narrative, restoring to public view the fact that 85-90% of American students attend public schools, not charter or religious schools. Most of our public schools are underfunded, and most of our teachers are underpaid. According to the Center for Budget and Policy Priorities, 29 states were spending less in 2018 than they spent in 2008. “Choice” is NOT a substitute for funding. Choice takes money away from schools that are already underfunded and diverts it to privately managed schools that are unregulated and unaccountable.
In state after state, teachers and parents led the blue wave that elected new governors, broke Republican supermajorities, and flipped the House of Representatives.
In one of the biggest electoral victories for education of 2018, parents and teachers in Arizona beat the Koch brothers and squashed a vast expansion of vouchers. Another was the ouster of Scott Walker in Wisconsin by Tony Evers; the sour grapes Republican legislature just rushed through legislation to strip powers from the new governor, in a blatant rebuff of the voters’ choice.
In California, Tony Thurmond beat Marshall Tuck for State Superintendent of Instruction, even though the charter billionaires gave Tuck twice as much money as Thurmond, saturating airwaves across the state. Duncan, of course, endorsed Tuck. The charter billionaires placed their money on the wrong horse in the governor’s race, betting on former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, who came in third.
Friends, everyone senses it. Despite their vast resources, the privatizers are losing. They know it. Some say “Don’t call me a Reformer.” Others, like Arne Duncan, insist loudly that “Reform is not dead,” a sure sign that he knows it’s dying. All they can do now is lash out, double down, and destroy whatever has escaped their grasp.
It’s not about the kids. It never was. It’s about their egos and/or their bank accounts.
We now know that “Reform” means Privatization, and maybe it’s time to call them what they are: Privatizers.

Posted at OEN
https://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/A-Progress-Report-from-the-in-General_News-Education_Education-Costs_Network-For-Public-Education_Public-Education-181218-701.html#comment719784
with this commentary which contains embedded links at that address, to Diane’s posts here:
MY COMMENT
“Read other blogs by former ass’t Sec’y of Eduction and brilliant educator and historian Diane Ravitch:
Diane Ravitch on School Choice: From Segregation Academies to Charters — Pete Tucker
*Burris and Ravitch: Yes, It Matters Who Governs Our Public Schools
*Atlanta: After School Board Takeover, Major Disruption and Mass Privatization Underway
Billionaires are Undermining Democracy By Their “Investments” in Educationhow the billionaire class is waging war against public schools and an educated citizenry.
*New York Magazine’s takes notice of the rebellion against Mark Zuckerberg’s Summit Program, Which puts students on computers for hours a day.Reed Hastings, billionaire founder of Netflix, hates public schools. He wants to eliminate school boards and replace them with corporate management. He has spent more than $100 million promoting charter schools.
In the Public Interest: Betsy DeVos, Mark Zuckerberg, and Bill Gates Want Your Child’s School to Close
*Beware! Privatization Vandals Target 7 Cities for Destruction and Takeover
Ohio: Impoverished East Cleveland District Sues to Stop State Takeover
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It is a wise move to strengthen the political strategy of NPE as the corporate vandals are targeting cities for essentially a “hostile takeover.” We must continue to disseminate information to the general public as they are our best allies. Many people continue to remain unaware of the war declared on public schools. We must also continue to disseminate legitimate research on the impact of privatization to the general public.
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NPE is a bright ray of hope and strength in a dark time. I am thankful for the passion and commitment of everyone who makes it stronger every day.
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2018 was a year also in which the privatizers brought and won a case in the supreme court trying to undermine our unions. Another opportunity to destroy public schools by going after teachers and now their unions.
However, it appears the privatizers are losing here too as many people now realize how important having a voice is and having a union allows for having a voice! I do not know anyone who cares to “drop out” of their union but some of the privatizers thought we would just abandon our union and become a right to work for less state. Noooot.
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