Recently, while looking for the links between Governor Gina Raimondo, Corey Booker, and Charter Schools, I discovered this interesting critique of charter schools.
That article cited one by Pete Adamy, a professor at the University of Rhode Island, who pointed out that the original purpose of charters was to give teachers the freedom to innovate within their own schools.
Professor Adamy wrote:
“While there are certainly pockets of innovation in Rhode Island’s charter schools, as there are in most public schools in the state, our charters are not “laboratories of innovation,” as some have called them. Rhode Island’s charters have simply been better able to implement reforms that researchers have been pushing for decades: smaller class size, more teacher and administrative autonomy, curriculum that is linked across grade levels, increased parental involvement, community outreach, a coherent and consistent mission, etc.”
He wondered why the state did not take these successful strategies and apply them in public schools. Why benefit a few while ignoring the needs of the many?
The essay that led me to Professor Adamy was written by Robert Yarnall in “Progressive Charlestown,” and he cut right to the heart of the problem with charter schools, the distance the concept has traveled from the original idea of a school-within-a-School run by teachers.
Yarnall writes:
“Virtually every charter school in the state functions as a taxpayer-funded private school, with near-private school levels of control over admissions, student behavior, and parental involvement that are not available to traditional public schools.
“Teachers working in traditional public schools know it, teachers working in next-generation charter schools know it, and the bevy of charter school advocates- the politicians, the privateers, the parent groups- know it.
“This little chunk of inconvenient reality is the tenuous bedrock that the architects of new age charter schools hope to continue to exploit.
“New Age charter school networks react defensively to criticisms that they do not deal with the same sets of challenges as public schools. They routinely publish rebuttal dialogues using the popular “myth v. fact” format in professional marketing campaigns meticulously crafted by the research divisions of prestigious conservative think tanks.
“Their end game, beginning innocently enough with ventures like Rhode Island’s “mayoral academies,” is a gradual for-profit privatization of public education via a post-industrial Ponzi scheme masterminded by a consortium of ideologically conservative legislators, investment firms, and grassroots political action committees intent on exploiting the inherent weaknesses of a public education system struggling to cope with growing pains unleashed by the imperatives stipulated by The Education of All Handicapped Children Act of 1975.”
Yarnall briefly reviews the federal legislation that protects children with disabilities and the bullying that these children sometimes encounter in school because of their differences.
He sees how charter schools fit into the picture:
“A child’s physical and emotional welfare in school is the self-evident primary concern of parents. Academic achievement is important as well, but it necessarily takes second place in any conversation about school choice.
“Columbine and Sandy Hook changed American education forever. Those images lurk in the back of every American parent’s mind. Every time a son or daughter comes home from school with a story about a confrontational incident in school, a parent shudders.
“Some parents believe that New Age charter schools can make those bad thoughts go away by leaving the disruptive children behind in the real public schools. They believe that New Age charter schools, freed from the burden of managing behaviorally disabled children and instructing children with moderate to severe special needs, will produce superior academic gains for their children.
“So unless a child is one of the lucky 5% to pull a winning ticket stub, he or she will not be climbing aboard the charter express. Instead, they will join the other 95% on the regular bus. As Harry Chapin often said, “There’s always room in the cheap seats.”
“The school privatization investment crowd, fronted locally by Governor and former Wall Street hedge fund manager Gina Raimondo, First Gentleman and Director of Industry Learning for McKinsey & Company Andrew Moffitt, and Secretary of Commerce Stefan Pryor, founder of charter school chain Achievement First, Inc.
“They are further advised by Lieutenant Governor of Charter Schools Dennis McKee, former mayor of Cumberland who was instrumental in crafting legislation allowing charter schools to ignore a range of regulatory policies and practices applicable to traditional public schools, some of which are in violation of procedural rights accorded to special needs students by virtue of federal legislation such as PL94-142 and get the attention of advocacy groups because of this.
“The Raimondo Administration is well aware that Rhode Island public school teachers are catching up with their pernicious Wall Street pranks. Once the general public, especially parents of children who choose to remain in traditional public schools, become aware of the real tune that Gina & the Gypsters are having them dance to, the only things being left behind will be derailed political ambitions and a pathetic legacy of financial malfeasance perpetrated by a scurrilous band of Wall Street pirates.”

When raimondo first ran for gov in 2015, she thought with her hubby a former TFA charter and now McKinsey & Co guy, her Yalie buddy and charter school supporter, the Conn. carpetbagger ex commissioner of ed stefan pryor, who owns Armistad where Debora Gist took Linc Chafee there to see how wonderful charters were (cough cough ) and of course Dan McKee of Cumberland who had a charter- for years and was director & had to give it up when he became Lieu. Governor under raimondo, and then some of the mayors (Cranston -Warwick) were pitching for charters in there cities run with Achievement First. I remember writing these comments in blogs and in various sites for years and in Projo to remind people about raimondo’s capitalist Wall St agenda including charters until Projo took away comments and now people cannot comment on what this raimondo-bought newspaper writes. (Projo’s so bad it’s spiraling downward & losing readership and money. They are down now to less than 10 reporters. I personally think it will crash & burn.) Luckily many years ago with your help, I fought the mayoral charter AF school they wanted to put in Cranston- using your info and blogs-(Thank you again) & it never materialized-they moved it to Providence instead! raimondo got a rude awakening from the then unions-very strong in RI…against charters but that’s all they are strong in–(union leadership betrayed their membership when they sided with raimondo in the pension issue 2015- where retirees lost COLA and the pension changes to this day went down from 56% rate of return to 54%…
The union leadership didn’t even go after her when she vetoed the Evergreen contract. The Evergreen contract was started many years in the city where I taught 30 years…Warwick. If a contract was not agreed to through negotiations before school started we would teach under the old one- it was a contract provision that automatically renewed after the expiration date. It never lasted long- a couple of weeks or so tops…And there was never an interruption for the students. raimondo vetoed it when it came up this past year. What kind of union leadership does that to its dues paying members paying these suckers’ salary? Between that and the betrayal during the pension, many teachers are leaving the union-esp. now with the court decision.
God only knows what raimondo and now magaziner did and just recently- it was reported that raimondo’s Point Judith investment now will get a third extension- the hidden disclosure came out a couple of days ago that if 80% if the PJ investors agree, they can stay in the RI pension where even magaziner can’t change it-he’s come out against it) so raimondo gets 2.5% (125,000 on her 5 million dollar 2006 10 yr investment that should have been expired but now it’s extended. Anyway I have to spread your column now so people in RI read it!
Virus-free. http://www.avg.com
On Sun, Dec 23, 2018 at 12:02 PM Diane Ravitch’s blog wrote:
> dianeravitch posted: “Recently, while looking for the links between > Governor Gina Raimondo, Corey Booker, and Charter Schools, I discovered > this interesting critique of charter schools. That article cited one by > Pete Adamy, a professor at the University of Rhode Island, wh” >
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The days of idealistic educators seeking the freedom to be different from a public school are long over. Privatization has morphed into a bulldozer driven by wealthy individuals and corporations looking to run over public schools near you. Profit is the main motive, not freedom. The only “innovation” is turning young people into computer zombies staring at screens all day, and now they are trying to infect public schools with the same cheap, profit generating GERM.
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The supreme courts of New York and Washington have ruled that charter schools are private schools because they are governed by private boards whose members are not elected by the general public. It’s unconstitutional for public tax money to be the basic source of funding for private schools. The litmus test for determining that a school is a genuine public school is that it must be governed by a board elected by the general public. So, why are there not lawsuits in every state challenging the unconstitutional use of public money to fund private charter schools which are not governed by boards elected by the general public? Why?
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Journalist Matt Taibbi showed us the scumbags that Raimondo and Arnold are in his Rolling Stone article about Wall Street looting the pensions.
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Please find below an email from the most conservative colleges whose goal will be to start charter schools across America. Those that support good public schools for all need to know what the Conservative and Christian folks are doing to start charter schools that will not be inclusive.
Dear supporter ,
We are closed for Christmas break here at Hillsdale College, and our campus is uncommonly quiet.
That means that in homes across America, families with Hillsdale students are hearing from their sons, daughters, brothers, and sisters what they have studied here: the foundations of Western civilization in Athens and Jerusalem, America’s great and exceptional heritage of liberty, and so much more. But what is taught here also radiates across the country through our online courses.
We make many of the same courses we teach here widely available—and for free! Hillsdale’s online courses, offered at no charge to any citizen wishing to learn, cover topics that include the U.S. Constitution, American history, free-market economics, Shakespeare, C.S. Lewis, World War II, and Winston Churchill.
We are also helping to launch classical K-12 charter schools nationwide, with 20 Hillsdale-affiliated schools operating in nine states, with new schools opening each year.
Our goal is to take education back from the politically-correct enemies of freedom and faith and to preserve our great heritage of liberty.
But we need your help to continue—and to redouble—these efforts.
As you know, Hillsdale refuses all government funding—even indirectly in the form of federal or state student loans and grants. This frees us from federal mandates that would undermine our mission—but it also means we are entirely dependent on the support of private individuals who understand the importance of education.
Our year-end goal to stay on budget is $1,500,000. Our deadline is midnight on December 31. Can you help? I realize you haven’t been able to give yet this year, but you can click here to send a secure gift today: https://secured.hillsdale.edu/hillsdale/teach-millions-more-americans.
Thank you so much for your time and consideration. We are honored by your partnership.
Warm regards,
Larry P. Arnn
President, Hillsdale College
You are subscribed to Hillsdale College e-mails. If you’d rather not receive these, you can respond to this email, update your preferences, unsubscribe, or send a letter to 33 East College St, Suite 500, Hillsdale, MI 49242.
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Hillsdale is one of the three colleges in the US that accepts no federal funding. Not even student aid. Grove City College is another. Can’t recall the third, though it might be Betsy’s ama mater.
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Googled this, & it appears that Calvin College does get federal funds
(one of a # of colleges that, in total, received $5.6 million for “underserved students,” according to a November 2018 article).
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I googled and It turns out thereare 15 colleges that accept no federal aid of any kind.
https://deanclancy.com/a-list-of-colleges-that-dont-take-federal-money/
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A sham that needs to be stopped immediately is the Center for American Progress’s PR positioning as liberal. CAP promotes education privatization and CAP is one of the fronts for disaster capitalism in Puerto Rico. Media are shamed by their complicity in CAP’s false identity.
Backing corporate Dems instead of Justice Dems shouts DINO.
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