Many school districts have had unfortunate experiences with “Broadies,” the graduates of Eli Broad’s management program for future school leaders. The Broad Leadership Academy has sent forth hundreds of would-be superintendents to impose Broad’s top-down management style, his faith in data, and his belief that the best way to reform a public school is to close it and replace it with a privately managed charter school. Broad is one of the major funders of charter schools in the nation. Although he graduated from the public schools of Detroit, he has zero interest in public schools other than as objects for privatization. In my 2010 book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education, I referred to the Broad Foundation, the Gates Foundation, and the Walton Foundation as the Billionaire Boys Club. Since then, I have discovered that the club has dozens of billionaire members, and a few (think Alice Walton) are Girls, not Boys. All, however, share an animus toward public schools and a passion for privatization of what belongs to the public.
The big news is that Eli Broad has given $100 million to Yale University to administer his efforts to train future leaders of schools. It is not clear where the faculty will come from, since the Broad training program is unaccredited and is led by Broad allies, not academicians or scholars.
Now the graduates will be accredited, but their degree won’t mean much unless the philosophy of the program changes from its current emphasis on DPE (“Destroy Public Education”) to SPE (“Support Public Education”). That change is hard to imagine. If you want to see the fruits of Broad’s distorted thinking, look no farther than Detroit and Oakland, where Broad-trained leaders encouraged (or imposed in the case of Oakland) massive charter expansion, a goal shared with Betsy DeVos. Michigan’s Education Achievement Authority, whose leadership he selected, collapsed in failure. Oakland continues to suffer from the disruptive actions of Broadie leaders. His efforts to hand half of the students in Los Angeles over to charter schools have thus far been foiled.
Read Mercedes Schneider’s account of the multiple failures associated with Eli Broad’s agenda.
Eli Broad is aggressive in using his money and policy agenda to destabilize and disrupt public education.
Here is the press release from the Broad Foundation/Broad Center, with the usual puffery and zero admission of the failed policies (privatization, school closings, high-stakes testing, VAM) that Broad and the graduates of his program have inflicted on American schools over most of the past two decades.
The Broad Center Will Become Part of Yale University to Train Future Generations of Public School Leaders
$100 Million Donation from The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation will Fund The Broad Center at the Yale School of Management to Offer Tuition-Free Master’s Degree to Emerging Education Leaders and Advanced Management Training to Superintendents and Senior Leaders in Public School Systems
Los Angeles, CA – With a gift of $100 million to Yale University, The Broad Foundation today reaffirms its commitment to public K-12 education and makes possible the launch of a major new initiative of the Yale School of Management focused on strengthening leadership in public education. Building on transformative work by The Broad Center in Los Angeles, the initiative will ensure in perpetuity high-impact programs to advance excellence and equity in education.
The Broad Center at Yale SOM will develop research, teaching, and policy initiatives devoted to improving the effectiveness of top leaders in America’s public school systems. The ambitious initiative will leverage Yale SOM’s expertise in delivering rigorous management education to talented professionals in fields that have broad societal impact, while furthering and amplifying the previously independent Broad Center’s mission of ensuring high-quality leadership in public education.
“I’m very proud of what we’ve accomplished in the last 20 years and I can think of no better future for The Broad Center than Yale University,” said Eli Broad.
The gift is the largest ever received by the Yale School of Management and will enable the creation of a master’s degree program for emerging public education leaders and advanced leadership training for top school system executives—successors to The Broad Residency in Urban Education and The Broad Academy, respectively. The Broad Center at Yale SOM will also develop extensive research endeavors aimed at assembling the premier collection of data on public education leadership.
“With its mission to educate leaders for business and society, Yale SOM is a natural home for The Broad Center,” said Yale SOM Dean Kerwin Charles. “We have long recognized public education as critical to the health of our communities, and we believe that our distinctive approach to management education and research can have tremendous impact. Our efforts will build on the extraordinary work of The Broad Center team over the past two decades. Indeed, we are impressed by and grateful for what they have done to advance excellence and equity in public education.”
The Broad Foundation has learned through its 20 years of investing in public education that schools alone can’t solve for the inequities, indignities, and challenges facing students from underserved communities: Having The Broad Center housed at Yale SOM means all of its programs can be enhanced with input from Yale University’s leading thinkers in management, public health, law, child development, policy, criminal justice and economic development. The center will draw on the experiences and insights of practitioners, including Broad Center alumni and Yale SOM graduates, to help guide and inform its efforts in both teaching and research.
“I am honored that The Broad Foundation is entrusting Yale to carry out this important part of Eli and Edye’s philanthropic legacy. Educating leaders who will serve all sectors of society is part of Yale’s mission, so it is fitting that the Yale School of Management is creating a master’s degree program tailored to delivering management and leadership training that meets the unique needs of public education,” said Yale President Peter Salovey. “The school’s dedication to leadership education and cultivation is unmatched. Its track record of producing transformational leaders across a range of fields speaks to the tremendous promise of the new Broad Center at Yale SOM.”
The two programs of The Broad Center, The Broad Academy (founded in 2002) and The Broad Residency in Urban Education (founded in 2003), have trained more than 850 education leaders working in over 150 urban school districts, public charter school networks and state education agencies nationwide. More than 150 Broad Center leaders have served as superintendents or chief executives of local and state systems, and over 70 are currently in these roles. Each program has made great strides in building a diverse network of leaders that better represent the students and families they serve.
“The Broad Center has been committed to evaluating and evolving its work since it was founded – continuous improvement is in our DNA,” said Becca Bracy Knight, Executive Director of The Broad Center. “Organizational leadership has a direct effect on school quality, which is why The Broad Center has worked for two decades to elevate the field of public education management. We look forward to new opportunities to increase our impact by combining each organization’s unique and complementary strengths in service of our shared mission to improve public education.”
The current cohorts of fellows and residents will finish their programs through The Broad Center as currently structured; successor programs run by SOM will begin in 2020.
In its 20 years of investing in public education, The Broad Foundation has made grants to transform school governance, improve district operations, grow high-quality charter management organizations, engage in education policy and advocacy, and develop talented leaders, managers and teachers for public school systems.
###
high impact programs….
Yale is like a Nevada brothel.
The President and faculty there will do anything — I mean anything — for money..
Some DAM Poet,
Love your comment. It’s true.
100 Million Donation from The Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation will Fund The Broad Center at the Yale School of Management”
The Yale School of Propaganda Management.
Maybe they can hire Kelly Anne Conway to head up the program.
You may recall that in September I posted about Yale’s decision to sell the naming rights to its “Commons” to billionaire Stephen Schwarzman:
https://dianeravitch.net/2019/09/16/how-a-billionaire-bought-the-right-to-put-his-name-on-the-yale-commons/
I actually prefer a university name a building or commons after a donor than to give an Ivy League academic blessing – and legitimacy – to a donor’s right wing project to destroy public education or likely next time, to destroy democracy. I imagine next time Yale will be announcing that Robert Mercer gave $100 million for Yale’s new School of Management “executives in journalism” program to give academic credibility to the teaching of how to identify “fake” (i.e. anything that is not fawning and positive) reporting on right wing Republicans.
Yale has one of the highest legacy admission rates-
Mayflower Madam may be a better descriptor.
The Sun Never Sets On The Broadish East India Company
£ucre pro Verita$
Yale has effectively been ripping off the city of New Haven for over 100 years.
They pay no taxes on most of their property under an ancient agreement meant to keep Yale from going belly up in it’s early years.
They also pay no tax on their $30 billion endowment and pay no Federal income taxes either.
Meanwhile, the city where Yale resides is continually cash strapped because the traditional avenue for raising operating funds has been severely restricted by Yale’s exemption on nearly a quarter of all property in New Haven.
And as if to put a stick in New Havens eye, Yale keeps converting more and more real estate to tax exempt status.
https://www.norwichbulletin.com/opinion/20191006/yale-overwhelms-new-haven-with-enormous-endowment
Yale is the poster child for Entitlement.
Excellent, Jon. Really. What did historian Mike Wallace, in Ric Burns’ excellent extended documentary about New York call the India Companies? If memory serves, he characterized them as “Wal-Mart with guns.”
What an embarrassment for Yale. Is this the first time a billionaire has actually had an Ivy League University paid to give their imprimature to his failed pet project? The ineptitude of those who rose to leadership because they were doing Broad’s bidding after attending his leadership academy is notable.
What’s next? Robert Mercer can pay $100 million to get Yale to take over his program to train the next “leaders” of the white supremacist movement? They can all get Yale School of Management degrees and be Yale-approved to take over any job in government?
No, Yale sold the naming rights to its historic “Commons” to a billionaire.
I wonder if they would rename the university for a big enough contribution.
https://dianeravitch.net/2019/09/16/how-a-billionaire-bought-the-right-to-put-his-name-on-the-yale-commons/
They should just rename it “Sold University”.
That would pretty much cover all bases and avoid potential jealousy among donors.
It would also be in keeping with the slave trading habits of it’s namesake, as pointed out by John above.
Bumper sticker: “I’m sold on Sold”
Of course, so as not to cause confusion between different Ivies, they would have to put a number after “Sold”
Harvard and Yale could decide among themselves who wanted to be “Sold 1 University” and who “Sold 2 University”
I’m sold on Sold
The Yalie mold
I’m really spoiled
A brat, I’m told
Add to the Billionaire Girls’ Club Laurene Powell Jobs, widow of Steve Jobs, who started her ridiculous XQ Project hype-a-palooza after allegedly volunteering at a perfectly decent Bay Area suburban high school (Carlmont, for the record) and determining with her vast expertise that it was terrible. (Powell Jobs is a vegan-cuisine entrepreneur by profession.)
This is the same Laurene Powell Jobs who, according to her stepdaughter’s fascinating autobiography*, said in a family counseling session that “we’re just cold people.”
*”Small Fry” by Lisa Brennan-Jobs
Mrs. Jobs’ XQ Project is not faring well. Of the 10 “innovative” schools which received $10 million, four have already closed.
The “shop” tab at the XQ site-
Did someone involved actually claim that the XQ cartoon figure pays homage to the Tuskegee airmen? Nothing is sacrosanct.
Harvard has money donated from Jeffrey Epstein and now Yale accepts money from Eli Broad. These certainly aren’t institutions of higher learning (IMHO), but are brothels of greed. The rich get richer.
But can you imagine if Harvard or MIT had started the “Jeffrey Epstein training program for how to get rich billionaires to give you hundreds of millions of dollars” with special courses in “training young female teens to be good employees”?
And the “brothel” part most dangerous: “We will do whatever we’re told so long as you give us the money”
It’s a race to the bottom to see which richy-rich institution of “higher learning” can be the biggest boot licker.
It’s very ironic that the institutions like Harvard, MIT and Yale that, because of their mammoth endowments, can most afford to pick and choose their donors are most eager to sell their reputations.
They are apparently so greedy that they can’t even see the impact it is having. For example, who in his of her right mind would now send their child to MIP ?(Massachusetts Institute of Pedophilanthropists)
Ironic that Yale is doing this at the very same time that Tufts University has to take the Sackler name off of buildings and programs. Of course Tufts will be keeping the money.
I wonder if some day the Eli Broad name will be as despised as the Sackler, with Americans knowing that he worked so hard to destroy public schools all over America.
For two decades Broad and fellow billionaires with no expertise in education have poured money into “managing” teachers in public schools, a majority of them women. The idea that public education suffers most from poor management should now be Yale’s burden to bear, even it if is a private university.
I hope the Yale-trained Broadies take their insights first into Yale itself, cutting administrators, killing the useless athletics program, reducing salaries, forbidding any union workers, increasing the teaching loads of faculty, pushing for online courses and more teaching temps, eliminating all unfunded research, and more. The practice of Broad-style management in the Broad program should begin with the Yale University faculty, administration, students, and alumni.
I once met with Eli Broad, at his invitation. He said, “I don’t know anything about education or curriculum or instruction, but I know management.”
Yale School of Management is a business school where Yale’s president has a joint faculty appointment.
So it’s no surprise that he would be trying to make a name for himself by landing such a big donation.
It’s actually very humorous though not at all surprising that Yale School of Management offers an online course where you can, as they claim, learn to be a business manager in just 8 weeks!
Where have we heard this before?
Ah , Yes, from Eli Broad (Broad Academy) and Wendy Kopp (TFA)
Ha ha ha.
What a collection of clowns.
“I know management”.
That explains why Broad gives so much money to subsidize the charters that are famous for firing the very youngest elementary school students — starting in Kindergarten — because those students are good enough “workers”. That’s the good management practice that Yale will be teaching with Broad’s money. How to maximize profits by firing the students who are most expensive to teach.
After all, when you are driven by greed and a profit motive, firing the students who are cutting into your profits is exactly what Yale has now endorsed as the way that every public school should be run.
Truly shameful.
New Haven, CT, Yale’s home town, has already had Broadish charter school “leadership” foisted on our pubic school system. We rid ourselves of that Broad-trained superintendent quickly. Once again, Yale commits an act of greed against city families.
Info. in various internet articles about the tax exempt Knights of Columbus, headquartered in New Haven, is interesting. The guy in charge makes a big salary. K of C has $26 bil. in assets according to Wikipedia.
The U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops self identifies as strong advocates for parental school choice and have been from the beginning. The state Catholic Conferences’ position (and, activity?) relative to the Blaine amendments merits review.
66% of the pop.agree with the founding fathers about separation of church and state. Evidently, the Ohio and Indiana legislators disagree. Upwards of 80% of voucher money goes to Catholic schools.
One research project cited in media found that in some cases more revenue is generated for the parish from vouchers than from worshippers.
Yale didn’t even have “education studies” until 2013 when “reform” was well under way. According to their mission statement, they intend to “multidisciplinary academic program (MAP) in Yale College dedicated to improving education through research, policy and practice, creating a unique community supporting the next generation of education researchers, teachers and leaders.” Like TFA they will likely produce elites that will join lobbying groups to carve up the spoils from public education.
The program is supposed to be tuition-free. A Yale degree is prestigious. Yale can determine its direction but it is unlikely to decouple it from the Broad agenda of disruption and privatization.
No, Yale is a good college, it stays bought.
A Yale degree is prostitutious”
Fixed.
New Haven-
Home to Yale and the Knights of Columbus (headed by a former Republican operative and aide to Jesse Helms).
“on being black in the white space of Yale ”
Slate 5-11-2018
Round here Yale is sompin ye do when somebody steps on yer foot.
When I was an undergraduate at Hampshire in the early nineties, Yale took twenty million bucks from Lee Bass of the oleaginous Bass family of Texas. As I recall (I was an older undergraduate from an academic family, and I liked to read the stylish, late and lamented journal “Lingua Franca” in the Hampshire library, where I gleaned the details ), the Bass contribution excited a lot of remark in academia because of the numerous stipulations Bass put on the gift.
But the big catch? Bass wanted approval over faculty members as well as the curriculum for the courses he wanted his money to underwrite. In the end, Yale returned the money, pleading that the institution couldn’t accept the conditions Bass attached to the gift.
What are the chances that Yale will have second thoughts about Eli Broad’s gift? I’m not a betting man, but if I were, I’d put my wager on greed and an absence of principles.
Oleaginous. Nice word. Did you mean wealthy because of oil or just obsequious in general?
Oil–they Basses are oil heirs.
UnKochMycampus.org needs to cast a wider net.
Gone Fishin
All this talk of oily bass
Wider nets and biggest catch
Really has me just a wishin
That today I’d gone a fishin
Most clever, Poet.
For a minute there I thought you were talking about fishing
“But the big catch? Bass “
Hahahahaha! I’m not surprised to hear this, SomeDAM.
I once worked as a maid in the housekeeping department at Snowbird ski area, which is owned by Dick Bass.
I cleaned Dick Bass’ room at the Lodge at Snowbird.
My very brief brush with the 1%.
As I recall, he had a very messy suite and I didnt even get a tip.
Cheapskate.
There is a ski trail at Snowbird called Bassackwards.
A good description for most school reforms.
And Dick Bass basically bought his way up Mt Everest.
That’s the way people like Bass and Broad operate.
He could easily buy Mt Everest and have litter beaters carry him up
Ah!
At last!
A clue that SDP is female!
Excuse me, Diane — I am a big fan of yours, and I have many issues for sure with Broad’s work, but how can you keep repeating that Broad Center is unaccredited? It has been accredited by WASC (the sole accreditor for all higher learning institutions in the western states) since 2015.
https://www.wscuc.org/institutions/broad-center
I’ve been noticing lot of lapses in the “facts” that you share in a variety of your blog posts recently, and it’s starting to get frustrating. Repeating over and over again vague, dubious, or totally false things undermines your credibility (this is happening with a lot of education activists lately, and I’m disappointed with many of them, including you — it makes our movement look like the “fake news” spewers on another end of the ideological spectrum).
This is the first time that I ever heard that the Broad Center was accredited. Doesn’t an institution have to have a faculty to get accredited? Who are the faculty members? Doesn’t it have to have published admission requirements? What exactly are the standards of accreditation for this agency?
I don’t think you will find “fake news” on this site. If I make an error, readers are quick to point it out, and I am quick to check the facts and publicly make corrections. “Fake news” is falsehoods that stand uncorrected. If you ever see anything here that is wrong, please me sure to point it out, and if I am wrong, I will correct my error.
Please tell me more about this accreditation agency. What are their standards?
I will certainly let you know, as a regular reader, the next time I see an error-of-fact in your writing. Thanks!
WASC (https://www.acswasc.org/) is literally THE institution that confers accreditation on any educational institution (in the western states — there are similar connected institutions in every region of the country). Here is more about the U.S. regional accreditation system for K-12 and higher-ed (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Higher_education_accreditation_in_the_United_States#Regional_accreditors).
So, WASC literally confer accreditation on every public/private K-12 school + every public/private/non-profit/for-profit post-secondary institution in the western states.
So when a district high school in your city says they were accredited, it is because WASC conferred that upon them. Same with any post-secondary institution that hands out accredited degrees — whether a bachelor’s, master’s, PhD, etc.
WASC confers accreditation upon Stanford, UCLA, UC-Berkeley, etc…and, The Broad Center (and of course many other institutions of higher education). Here’s their full list that includes all of this (they have a separate site for K-12): https://www.wscuc.org/institutions
I assume, then, that you will correct your post that claims that the Broad Center is unaccredited?
I have removed the word “unaccredited.”
I reviewed the documents but I don’t see a reference to any faculty at the Broad Center. It’s adult students meet a few weekends a year in different cities.
Apparently there is no campus, no faculty, no library, and no scholars or actual research.
Perhaps you could explain what the standards for accreditation as a masters program are. I see 161 adults who meet a few times a year in different locations with no faculty.
I have never seen a master’s degree program akin to this, although Relay comes close.
Thanks for that correction.
I am NOT on expert on Broad or its Center, nor am I an expert on accreditation. All of the answers you ask for are on the WASC websites and other articles I shared about accreditation. To my knowledge, Broad does have faculty — I’m sure the requirements for what counts as faculty is looser than what you might imagine. To my knowledge, you don’t need to have a library to be accredited. There are of course many online institutions that confer degrees.
I believe the Broad degree, like many other accredited degrees that are somewhat non-traditional, require folks to meet for 8 separate one-week sessions over 2 years, with virtual learning requirements in between.
Again, you can quibble with how accreditation works, but Broad is no less accredited than Stanford. WASC reviews the curriculum, the faculty, etc.
Relay is a good example, there are a bunch of others too.
thx
If you find out who is on the faculty and what their credentials are, please share it. I truly don’t understand how a professional graduate program can be accredited without identifying the faculty.
Rue Uxer writes: “So, WASC literally confer accreditation on every public/private K-12 school + every public/private/non-profit/for-profit post-secondary institution in the western states.”
Well, that explains it. If you call yourself an Institution, WASC will “literally” confer accreditation on you. At least, that’s what the above sentence certainly implies.
Is there any institution that WASC has not accredited?
Diane Ravitch, it’s good to know that the Broad Institute had to meet the same standards as the for-profit schools like the New York Film Academy (you’ve probably seen their ads all over) and United States University in San Diego.
Not surprisingly, the for-profit United States University has one of the very lowest freshmen retention rates, not just in California, where it is at the very bottom, but in all of America.
Rue makes an equivalency out of the nutritional value of apples and shriveled up rat turds. Presumably, Western Governors Institute is accredited by WSCUC. Rue could have written Raegan’s rationalization that a ketchup packet qualified as a vegetable in public school kids’ lunches.
A hypothetical about honesty, for you Rue- Gates, Arnold, Walton heirs, Zuck and Bloomberg have in their collective possession, written directions that will save your and my lives and property. Our other alternative for those directions, is Diane. I’d trust Dr. Ravitch. How about you, Rue?
What a curious way to spend $100 million.
The latest generation of school “leaders” and reformers certainly have a lot of power, which they like to exercise by imposing “reforms” on classroom teachers. But it will always be teachers who have the most influence on schoolchildren.
The wisest teachers do their best to minimize all these disruptions (in particular the fetishizing of technology and the push to put a screen in front of each child, and also the pressure on teachers to collect (often meaningless) data about their students.
Guess this puts a whole new slant on the term “Elis” (Yale students are often referred to as “Elis,” in reference to Yale’s founder, Elihu Yale). I only know this from doing crossword puzzles!
Now, the whole of Yale can be called “Eli’s,” as in belonging to Eli (bought & paid for by Eli Broad).
Great point about Eli!
As I recall, the Yale “fight” song starts,
“Bulldog! Bulldog!
Eli Yale,
Our team will never fail…”
“How billionaire charter school funders corrupted the school leadership pipeline
Charter school funders have turned school leadership into a cartel system focused on enriching businesses”
By JEFF BRYANT
OCTOBER 20, 2019
https://www.salon.com/2019/10/20/how-billionaire-charter-school-funders-corrupted-the-school-leadership-pipeline_partner/
And now Broad has enlisted Yale’s President to facilitate the scheme.
No, Diane. You left out the all-important second line.
The song begins
Bulldog! Bulldog!
Bow, wow, wow
Eli Yale
Cole Porter wrote the song and lyrics.
I graduated from Yale College in 1984 and sang the song at plenty of Yale football games.
You are right!!
I forgot the “Bow, wow, wow!”
Silly me!
New Haven Independent, my a**.
That article is nothing more than a Broad sales pitch.
The only real question is how much Broad and Yale’s President (Peter Salivate) paid the paper to run the advertisement.
Yale or Bust
With wagon hitched to Yale
The Broadies hit the trail
To manage schools
Like bidness tools
The dollars never fail
Here’s how the local news is reporting this. See the comments section – of course Diane is mentioned – being such a champion of teachers everywhere.
https://www.newhavenindependent.org/index.php/archives/entry/eli_broad_som/
In its 20 years of
investing indisrupting public education, The Broad Foundation has made grants totransform school governance, improve district operationsput Superintendent hacks in place, growhigh-qualityfraudulent charter management organizations, engage ineducationprivatization policy and advocacy, and developtalented leaders, managers and teachersBroadomatons for public school systems.Fixed.
SomeDAM Poet! Outstanding.
[…] to high level positions in school districts to “shake things up,” but more often they just broke stuff. Including my […]