Dana Goldstein has been covering education for 13 years. At the beginning of her career, bashing teachers’ unions and praising charters was in. Now red-shirted teachers have canceled that narrative and reminded her (not me) that only 6% of the nation’s children are in charter schools.
She doesn’t reflect on the damage that charters do to public schools by diverting resources from them and leaving them with fixed costs, larger classes, feeer teachers.
She writes:
I first met Alex Caputo-Pearl, the strike-leading president of the Los Angeles teachers’ union, in 2011, when I shadowed him for a day at Crenshaw High School.
I was working on a book about the history of public school teaching, and Mr. Caputo-Pearl, then a social studies teacher, had a fascinating personal story. He had served in the very first class of Teach for America recruits, in 1990, and was part of a small group of original T.F.A. members who were, 20 years later, still working in urban public school classrooms.
But Mr. Caputo-Pearl didn’t remain in the Teach for America fold. He became a union activist and a critic of T.F.A., charter schools and the entire landscape of test-driven accountability for children and educators. At Crenshaw High, he helped develop a social-justice curriculum in which students organized their learning around the question of how to improve conditions in their low-income South Los Angeles neighborhood. It was unapologetically activist — outside the mainstream of what education reform looked like at the time.
The school district later ended that program, and in 2014, Mr. Caputo-Pearl was elected president of the United Teachers Los Angeles, the local union. He represented a new, more militant generation of teachers’ union leaders. This month, he led 30,000 educators in a weeklong strike for higher pay and more classroom funding, and against the growth of the charter school sector. It’s a story I covered with Jennifer Medina, my fantastic National desk colleague in Los Angeles, and our editors Julie Bloom, Dave Kim and Marc Lacey.
I’ve been reporting on education for 13 years, but I am absolutely stunned by the extent to which teachers’ strikes and walkouts are now a day-to-day part of my job. The Los Angeles action was the eighth mass teacher protest I’ve reported on in just 11 months, shutting down schools for one million students across the country. The reappearance of Mr. Caputo-Pearl in my professional life was just one of several uncanny moments that have made me, at age 34, feel old in beat-reporter years. So much has changed in education, as the focus shifts from calling out and overhauling bad teachers and schools to listening more carefully to what educators say about their working conditions and how students are affected by them.
I was at the Democratic National Convention in 2008, when one of the hottest tickets was to a panel discussion in which rising stars in the party, including Cory Booker, then the mayor of Newark, spoke harshly of teachers’ unions and their opposition to charter schools, which are publicly funded, privately run and generally not unionized. Union leaders argue that charters draw public dollars and students away from traditional schools like Crenshaw High.
Back then, it was hip for young Democrats to be like Barack Obama, supportive of school choice and somewhat critical of teachers’ unions. But now, the winds have changed pretty drastically. The revival of democratic socialism within the party has left many elected officials — even Mr. Booker — much more hesitant, it seems, to critique organized labor. Across the country, red-clad teachers on strike, sometimes dancing and singing, have won the affection of grass-roots progressives over the past year, leading to a new political dynamic around education, just as the Democratic primary field for 2020 emerges. The emphasis now is on what education experts call “inputs” — classroom funding, teacher pay, and students’ access to social workers and guidance counselors — and less on “outputs,” like test scores or graduation rates.
The truth is, both inputs and outputs are important. In some ways, continuing to cover the war between union leaders and charter school supporters frustrates and exhausts me. Charter schools are a growing part of our educational landscape because parents are always looking for more good options when it comes to how and where to educate their children. On the other hand, while politicians and wealthy philanthropists have always given outsize attention to charters, they educate just about 6 percent of American public school children, some three million students. In many ways, the battle is ideological, over what role choice should play in our education system. Will public-sector competition between charters and traditional schools lead to improvement, or simply provoke a melee over scarce taxpayer dollars? So far, both outcomes, I’ve observed, are very real across the country.
A few months ago, I was doing research in The Times’s digital archives when I came across our 1995 obituary of Fred Hechinger, an eminent education reporter and columnist here. I printed it out and clipped a paragraph, which I keep at my desk for inspiration whenever my energy flags after more than a decade on this beat.
“I began to realize that a country’s approach to education in general, and especially to its children, could tell more about its social, political and economic background than a whole battery of interviews with politicians,” Mr. Hechinger once said.
He was right. So I continue on.
She’s exhausted?! She?! Don’t even know what to say.
The journalist is fact- challenged and unwilling / unable to question the propaganda that competition from charter schools will improve public schools. There is no compelling evidence that privately operated charter schools have improved what the author calls “traditional public schools.” The author seems to believe that charter school growth, enabled by public funds in addition to the wealth of billionaires, can be explained and accepted as just a matter of parents seeking the best education for their children. This is the easy and the unacceptable lie. Charter schools choose their students and parents/caregivers. I suggest the author invest time looking at charter laws, charter contracts, charter school compliance reports, charter school application forms and rules for parents, money making opportunities for charter operators, documented frauds in the charter industry, patterns of school resegregation, billionaire investments in charter schools, the Heckman curve, the Gates compacts, and who is working to bring all of that ” to scale.”
Dana has yet to acknowledge that charters proliferated because of billionaire funding, not because of public demand.
In Los Angeles, a board member wrote on his FB page that 82% of charters in LA have vacancies.
You are asking a lazy journalist to do far too much work.
It’s so much easier to just get her talking points from pro-charter “experts” who she no doubt has on speed dial.
Dana Goldstein could not even be bothered to read the NAACP’s report asking for a moratorium on charters. I’m sure that is too much bother when the “smart” people she trusts implicitly because of their Ivy League degrees and high paying jobs in the “undermine public education” reform industry tell her how wonderful and perfect charters are and that the ONLY opposition comes from unions.
Seriously, Goldstein says that the only opposition to charters comes from unions, and she says it is the the good folks who she doesn’t identify (but she implies are on the side of the angels who only care about the poorest students) who support charters.
Excellent article. The comments for it so far are also illuminating. Some of the usual suspects who comment here. One that struck me was, “The biggest supporters of charter schools are always people that have never taught.” On the flip side, with some obvious exceptions, that’s one of the things I value on this blog. If policy makers would base their actions on discussions with people who have experience in the classroom instead of snot-nosed kids with little-to-no significant life experiences or limited TFA credentials, we’d all be better off. Certainly our children would be and then, by extension, us.
Have you read her book (The Teacher Wars), Greg? It gets excellent reviews on Amazon. I haven’t read the article, yet. My gut reaction is that she’s too balanced for my taste.
No I haven’t. To be honest, I have so many things on my reading list that I’ll never get to before I die, it’s hard for me to justify reading something that doesn’t immediately resonate with me. My next education read will be Diane’s new book. I know that Goldstein has written some things in the past that have made my blood boil, but one really can’t argue with this one. You’re right, however, just like climate change and gun violence, we need to beware of both-siderism when it comes to topics where the evidence is overwhelmingly preponderant on one side. Seems like she is getting there.
When she interviewed me many years ago (2011?), her charter Love was clear. Maybe she’s evolving.
Gotcha and understand. I appreciate you guiding me to the comments (didn’t realize Diane had included the entire article).
Anyone who gives credence to George W. Bush’s “soft bigotry of low expectations” and doesn’t understand it as the cynical opportunism it represented has a long way to go before winning me over as being an objective reporter.
“Maybe she’s evolving.” It certainly looks like doubt is creeping in, or perhaps a recognition of empirical experience.
Off topic, but if any you are frozen in and not in the mood to venture out much this weekend (Diane, of course, excepted, being in sunny CA) and it you have TCM streaming services, check out Peter Ustinov’s adaptation of Melville’s Billy Budd. Great lesson on how law often has noting to do with justice. Kind of fits with many of our discussions like this one.
Greg: keep that reading list long. I ran into Death on my way to school the other day. “It’s time, ole boy,” he said, “come along with me.”
” Naw,” I replied. “I can’t go with you. I have not even started Paridise Lost.”
Ole Death, he just kinda hung his head and went on. You keep a long reading list. Ole Death be goin down to somebody else’s house.
Thanks, Roy! That gave me a smile.
(?). There’s no comment thread at this NYT article.
But others sem to have found comments. Got a link for me?
On the NYT page, there is a link to comments right under the headline.
Here’s some of those dancing teachers (re-tweeted by Congresswoman AOC):
MY FAVORITE COMMENTS FROM THIS ARTICLE:
Sonja Luchini
Los Angeles, CAFeb. 1
“Back then, it was hip for young Democrats to be like Barack Obama, supportive of school choice and somewhat critical of teachers’ unions.”
Families of students with disabilities were dismayed when Arne Duncan was chosen, against their complaints, as the Secretary of Education. We knew well before his appointment of his corporate reform ideals (and had their “contributions” stuffed in his pocket) that did not include students with disabilities.
When charter law went into effect, many wealthy neighborhoods embraced charters first as a way to exclude those they didn’t want. Discriminating enrollment was practiced well before Dana Goldstein started reporting. I gathered data as early as 1998 when our child became a target of the neighborhood charter. The school drove our child to depression by administrators & teachers refusing to honor IEP (special education Individual Education Plan – a legal document) requirements that would’ve helped him and we were “counseled out” (forced to leave).
I would take my data to LAUSD’s board as early as 2003 and was ignored. I spoke at the 2006 meeting when Jon Lauritzen first requested a moratorium – the district was at 100 charters then with little to no oversight. If board members had approved the motion in 2006, we may not be in this mess now. The moratorium suggested is for 8 months, not enough time to fully inspect compliance records of every charter. Extend the moratorium.
I recall seeing an interview with Letterman and Obama. They were discussing Obama’s early years. Obama mentioned that his mother home schooled him for a year before he got a scholarship to a tony private school. He said his mother knew that the public schools would be unable to meet his needs. Perhaps Obama’s views were shaped by the union-minority rift Goldstein mentions, or his mother had a poor view of the local public schools. While Obama did not directly bash public education, his policies made it clear that he believed charters had the potential for helping minority students. I wonder if he holds the same opinion now that the dismal charter results are in, and public schools are fighting to keep the lights on due to charter drain.
Obama attended the most elite private school in Hawaii.
YES, and his family PAID a lot for that privilege; it always felt strange that he so nonchalantly missed the point that many, many families cannot pay, and if the families cannot pay, the kids need a government led by a PUBLIC school protective leader.
Obama also attended a private school when he and his mother lived in Indonesia.
Notwithstanding the former president’s purported enthusiasm for public schools, he sent his own daughters to an exclusive private school. (Sidwell Friends)
The Clintons also sent their daughter to Sidwell Friends.
I think that politicians that push public schools on everyone else, should be required to send their own children to the public schools.
Charles,
I believe everyone should choose the schooltheir child attends.
But only public schools-accountable to the public, subject to audit and oversight,
required to abide by federal laws, required to hire certified teachers—should receive public funding.
Write that again, Charles, for the thousandth time, and I will delete it.
Regarding Charles’ comment — it’s kind of missing the point to claim politicians push public schools on everyone else. A huge issue is that many politicians treat public schools with contempt in a way they wouldn’t dare treat other public institutions (except for Trump, who heaps all public institutions with contempt).
I would never say politicians should be REQUIRED to send kids to public schools, either. But I think sending kids to private school should be a bit of a political liability that they might have to defend, rather than a given. It should be viewed as similar to living in a gated community, driving a huge gas-guzzling SUV or not knowing how a supermarket scanner works — not fatal, but a sign of living a slightly rarefied life.
That should be the case for those who attended private school — kids aren’t responsible for their parents’ decisions — but choosing to live in a total private-school bubble and deriding public schools from there should earn disapproval. That said, I’m also shocked at the number of shameless billionaire-sucking-up public-school bashers who came from supposedly righteous Sidwell Friends — what are they DOING in that place?
(No offense to other Sidwell Friends alumni or parents, but maybe you have an insight on that?)
Michelle Obama said Malia, 10, and Sasha, 7, “bring with them a number of security and privacy concerns that come with being part of the new first family — and the school they’ve selected is positioned to appropriately accommodate that.”
She also said that Sasha and Malia had become good friends with Vice President-elect Joe Biden’s grandchildren, who attend the school.
Sidwell is a private Quaker school with a campus in northwest Washington for grades 5-12 and another in suburban Bethesda, Md., for kindergarten through fourth grade. Malia is in fifth grade and Sasha is in second grade, suggesting that the girls would attend schools at different locations.
They went to that University of Chicago Lab School before, too (these fake-progressive snooty elite privates drive me particularly batsh*t), so they can’t claim it’s all about security concerns as president.
Amy Carter went to a public school near the corner of K and 21st NW in DC, just a few blocks from the White House. Another reason to love them, regardless of what you think of their politics.
Q I believe everyone should choose the school their child attends. END Q
I believe this as well. I believe also that public school supporters and school choice supporters can find common ground, to make this goal a reality.
I am glad to see that you support empowering parents to be able to choose the school their child attends.
I favor school
Choice but not funding of nonpublic schools. If you want your child to attend a religious school, pay for it yourself. If you want to homeschool, don’t expect public money. It’s yoir choice.
Let’s not mix “school choice” with public schools. If you want to choose something other than public school, pay for it from your own pocket. That is your choice, and that is our common ground on school choice. Using the vocabulary and attitude of our fearless leader “Public schools first, your choice after”.
I compare public schools with the National Parks. If you are not satisfied with the beauty of the Grand Canyon, you are welcome to parkify your own land or some other private land to your own taste. But you are not to touch the Grand Canyon, and you are not to get your national park tax reduced one bit.
Charles, how many countries in the world allow parents and/or children to have a choice in the schools they attend and the tax payer pays for that choice?
I’ll list one success that I know of: Finland — all of the other countries that have tried this misleading CHOICE crap, Sweden and Chili, have failed miserably.
But … this is a very BIG but … in Finland publicly funded private schools must follow all the same rules that apply to the public schools. That means they must be transparent and the teachers must be highly qualified by all the same standards and are allowed to belong to teachers unions and earn the same pay and benefits.
The private schools in Finland are not managed by autocratic, secretive, child abusing, teacher abusing, greedy managers and/or CEOs like Eva Moskowitz and Michelle Rhee.
The result: less than one percent of Finland’s schools are publicly funded, private schools and none of those few private school perform better than the public schools.
I have attended both public and private institutions in my schooling. Both have their place. The private institution essentially gave me my education there, for which I am eternally grateful. Unlike Justices Gorsuch and Kavanaugh, my private school experience increased my understanding of and philosophical movement toward sympathy with the civil rights movement, the questioning of militarism in American society, and started me down a road toward a position far more moderate than most of my public school classmates, most of whom are to the right of my own views now.
School is about fit. I think choosing the right school is important. Choice is a good idea. But school choice in the present day means choosing not to go to school where “those people” go. It means taking public money and giving it to schools where administration earns fat salary and inexperienced staff teach kids.
Real school choice would mean well funded schools with various missions. All schools would serve as focus within a community instead of being modeled on restaurants that come and go.
We say this sort of thing all the time, as though we expect/ accept that our elected officials are so ignorant, so lacking in imagination & empathy, that they are capable only of legislation that relates to their personal, lived experience. I don’t buy it. Govt policy that ignores facts & the political will of the people is the result of kowtowing to big money, period.
Another one:
P
Pontifikate
Feb. 1
As a public school teacher in 2008, I will not soon forget the media firestorm about “bad teachers” and “bad schools”. I also will remember those who jumped on the bandwagon (Cory Booker and others). When the spotlight should have been on bad bankers, mortgage brokers, etc., we blamed hard-working, low-paid teachers, whom we should find ways to keep in the profession.
One more:
M
Melissa Westbrook
SeattleFeb. 1
Keep your eye on Washington state. Despite the presence of the Gates Foundation (an echo chamber of recycled ed reform ideas and huge charter supporters), this state has staved off charter schools for a long time. Indeed we only have 12 (soon to be 11 as one is closing). There just isn’t a big outcry or demand for charters here.
But TFA is having a gathering in Seattle this weekend, trying to lure TFA teachers from other parts of the country to WA state.
The current Mayor, Jenny Durkan, player coy during her campaign about public ed, refusing to explain a comment that made it sound like she wanted to take over Seattle Schools. And, despite numerous questions during a city levy campaign last fall about sharing K-12 funds with charter schools before the election, the Mayor and City Council waited until after the election to announce they would be sharing those dollars. I think if the decision goes thru, council members up for re-election may find that decision will haunt them.
I think while some states are oversaturated with charters, the industry may be looking to go elsewhere.
And lastly:
Gerard Iannelli
Haddon Heights, NjFeb. 1
The biggest supporters of charter schools are always people that have never taught. If charter schools are so great then why not assign them the most troublesome students and let the charters perform their magic on them? Also, if what charter schools do is so wonderful then why aren’t school superintendents incorporating those gimmicks into the everyday public school methods? Charter schools are money makers for the wealthy, ask Jeb Bush, he made his first million in charter schools, not oil.
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CC commented February 1
C
CC
California Feb. 1
Similarly, most supporters of public schools have never taught. And they are not familiar with the real statistics of spending and outcomes. Charter schools and public schools should not be pitted against each other, however. You are correct that public schools contend with the most difficult student population. Charter and magnet schools do not. Public schools are thwarted by a bureaucracy that treats all students, schools and districts similarly. Public schools are burdened with trying to balance the demands of parents and school boards. I wouldn’t wish that on anyone! That’s why private schools can pay teachers less than public schools—- because it’s an easier and more supportive environment.
Charter and magnet schools have the luxury of trying to realize a particular vision for particular students in a particular community. Shouldn’t students get to choose the particular school that best meets their needs? Shouldn’t any school be able to operate with a singular vision so long as they meet some set of regulatory standards? Wouldn’t it be wonderful if the governments‘ stole was as a regulator, demanding standards such as teacher qualifications, class size, core course offerings, etc and pay a per pupil rate to schools?
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I appreciate the fact that Goldstein focused on labor and not charters, because as a union officer (Pacific Media Workers Guild San Francisco Chronicle unit chair), that means I can post this in my union’s social media groups as a correction to the attitude so many people have that “I support labor except teachers’ unions.”
Dana has a soft spot for charters.
Was thinking about this as I pondered the comment from the article about charter supporters having no teaching experience. Could the reason for her soft spot be that she’s been reporting on education for 13 years since the age of 21 while never having had any experience as an educator herself? Could that be the foundation of her “soft spot”?
“So much has changed in education, as the focus shifts from calling out and overhauling bad teachers and schools to listening more carefully to what educators say about their working conditions and how students are affected by them.”
I don’t like the passive voice.
The focus didn’t just “shift”, magically.
Public schools were being completely and utterly ignored and West Virginia teachers walked off the job. That’s what happened.
That’s what it took to get the attention of ed reformers in government. They were shocked by the strike- had no earthly idea teachers were that unhappy.
Ed reformers at the federal level STILL ignore the strikes. They can do that because they are completely irrelevant to actual, existing public schools and students. They’re wholly consumed with inventing a privatized K-12 system while 50 million American children still attend the public schools they disdain.
It’s not that teachers unions are “the best” advocates for public school students and families- I don’t know if they are or not- it’s that they are the ONLY advocates for public school students and families.
If the teachers in your state shut down the entire K-12 public education system by walking off the job in an illegal work action, I would suggest the people in government at the state level are SLIGHTLY out of touch with what’s going on in their PUBLIC schools.
Things aren’t going well “on the ground”. MIGHT be time to reconsider The Agenda.
Maybe put in a whole work day on PUBLIC schools rather than the 50th voucher initiative?
Chiara,
As you know, the legislators don’t work for the people who elect them. They work for the people who fund them.
“because parents are always looking for more good options when it comes to how and where to educate their children.”
FOCUS: “looking for more GOOD options”
For me, that phrase turns my stomach and threatens to trigger anger.
How do these ignorant parents know what a good option is?
When most if not all of them have no idea what a GOOD option is because of all the lies and misleading ads that label schools failing because of secretive, profitable high stakes tests that rank and punish public schools (only), public school teachers (only) and public school students (only), with never any mention of poverty and lack of proper funding?
Well, they ARE looking for good options. It’s just hard to tell what a good option is. Also, because charter schools keep out the more-challenging students, we have to understand that a lot of parents DO find them a good option. It’s just for a dishonest, unfair, often illegal reason, and one that hurts the most vulnerable children (those in public schools that are harmed when charters drain their resources.
Many parents choose charters so their children can attend a school where the other children look like them.
I think there are basically two strands of charters — well, maybe more, but here are two. One is: charters designed for disadvantaged children of color, the ones that convince the wide world that they’re miracles run by saints, and that actually aggressively handpick the students so they’re only teaching the motivated, compliant students from motivated, compliant, supportive families. The other is: charters designed to isolate the privileged from the unwashed, not at all aimed at teaching disadvantaged children of color. The first set are likely to be rigid, military-style, hands folded on the desk at all times etc.; the second are likely to be groovy crunchy creative, often Waldorfy. Both are likely to be segregated in their own way.
agree completely with what carolinesf says
To me, it is part of what is so truly disgusting about almost all charter operators. Because they want to drive “customers” to their charters and the best way to get a customer is to completely undermine the public school in their neighborhood.
The incentive for every charter school CEO is to make every public school as terrible as possible. Their very existence depends on their making sure the public school choice is as bad as possible. The worse the public school, the better it is for their charter. They will only thrive and multiply if they make the public school so bad that the most motivated families will choose a charter and then to add insult to injury that charters then even “sort” the most motivated families and refuse to teach those whose children are just too difficult. And by throwing those children back to public schools, they help themselves by further undermining public schools by making sure they will have a disproportionately high numbers of more difficult to teach students and a disproportionately low number of students from families most motivated to seek out a better school.
Given the situation, how can you blame a parent for choosing a charter when their public school is being systematically undermined by the charter operators’ lies and the anti-public school billionaires who largesse they are dependent on? They must please the billionaires or fail to exist, and thus they either do their bidding or make sure to remain quiet as they see the lies proliferate. Their silence makes them complicit.
And nothing speaks more to this than watching Eva Moskowitz actually lobbying for larger class sizes for public schools and telling America that small class sizes are just not necessary for the most disadvantaged students in public schools.
And not one of the complicit charter operators spoke up about that truly harmful lobbying effort nor did a single charter operator speak up when Eva Moskowitz embraced Betsy DeVos and demanded she be confirmed.
Charters cannot thrive if their operators are not part and parcel of the drive to destroy public schools. Which is why they don’t thrive in the suburbs or in rural areas. Not that they aren’t trying to undermine the public schools there as well, they just haven’t succeeded yet thanks to the push back by families – especially the ones who have opted out.
There is absolutely nothing admirable about a charter teaching a small percentage of students while doing everything they can to destroy the public schools serving the students they have no interest in teaching.
Helping a few students (whose performance just happens to make you richer yourself) while hurting thousands of others because hurting them allows you to pay yourself an even higher salary is not anything admirable.
I note Goldstein’s potential blind spot to charter school criticism. Nevertheless, I appreciated the Hechinger quote at the end of the piece:
“I began to realize that a country’s approach to education in general, and especially to its children, could tell more about its social, political and economic background than a whole battery of interviews with politicians.”
That resonates with me.
There are a thousand things I believed when I was 34. Headstrong ad full of myself, I had a wave of preconceptions all ready to,crumble before the reality of experience. I will not bore you with them, but this young journalist would do well to challenge her basic assumptions to the logical test. She might be surprised at how many of her logical houses of cards come tumbling down. A lot of mine did.
I knew everything when I was 21, a little less when I turned 34, and now hardly know anything. Amazing how stupid I’ve become.
““I began to realize that a country’s approach to education in general, and especially to its children, could tell more about its social, political and economic background than a whole battery of interviews with politicians,” Mr. Hechinger once said.”
True statement by Hechinger, but an obviosity.