Jan Resseger, as you surely know, is oneof my favorite writers. I admire her deep moral values, her clarity, and her direct writing.
In this post, she discovered an article that I missed.
If you are going to read one article about public education this week, I recommend Derek Black’s commentary in last Friday’s USA Today, Trump’s ‘Education Freedom’ Plan Is an Attack on Public Schools. That’s Un-American. Derek Black is a professor of law at the University of South Carolina.
Black begins by challenging what he calls the coded language being used by President Donald Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos to pitch DeVos’s one program idea—the one she has pitched unsuccessfully to Congress now for three years running and the program she is pitching again this year. This is, of course, her idea for a kind of federal private school vouchers at public expense, a $5 billion plan for tuition-tax-credits.
Black explains: “‘Education freedom’—the Trump administration’s new buzzwords—is not about good education for the public. It’s about ending all that public education stands for. The administration won’t claim that precise goal because it’s politically toxic, including with a huge chunk of its own base. Instead, President Donald Trump and Education Secretary Betsy DeVos have carefully aimed at core aspects of public education without ever formally declaring war. But peel away the coded language and convoluted tax schemes, and the only thing left is an agenda incompatible with public education.”
In his State of the Union message, Trump described “American children trapped in government schools.”
Black responds: “‘Government schools’ refers to public schools in general… (T)he point is to equate public schools with all the negative connotations government conjures—waste, bureaucracy and liberty-crushing control.”
And with DeVos’s “Education Freedom Tax Credits,” writes Black, the administration is “casting government schools as the enemy of education freedom… Yet… the administration’s education freedom does not actually mean educational opportunities that free students. It doesn’t mean securing a quality education—private or public—for every student or opening doors of opportunity that were once closed. Education freedom means something much narrower: exiting public schools with the assistance of state and federal dollars. The education quality students receive after they exit, the segregation it might produce, and the exclusion and discrimination students might face are not matters the administration is worried about.”
Black reminds us that throughout American history, “The dominant story of public education…. has been expanding our commitments in public education to find solutions to the nation’s greatest challenges.. When deciding how the nation would expand westward and form new states in the late 1780s, Congress divided every square inch of undeveloped land into square townships and counties, reserving the center plots of land for schools… Congress directed that these schools were to ‘forever be encouraged.’ When the nation sought to lift poor whites out of illiteracy and blacks into citizenship at the end of the Civil War, Congress demanded that state constitutions guarantee uniform school systems that provided education to all children. To fund them, they mandated taxes. When the nation was struggling to break free of its Jim Crow discrimination, public education was chosen to lead the way—even as resistors explicitly tried to end public schooling (and replace it with vouchers).”
Black concludes: “Trump and DeVos have a vision of private education and individual freedom that is more than misleading; it’s dangerous. They are sowing the notion that a fundamental pillar of our democracy is antiquated and oppressive.”
Derek Black sounds like a voice we need to hear more from.
Public education is foundational to a functioning democracy. I never felt this belief more strongly than when I taught my ELLs. My job was to prepare these students to become knowledgeable, productive members of our society. I felt this responsibility daily when the whole school started the day with the “Pledge” and a patriotic song.
Public schools represent the best of our core values, opportunity for all. At their best they bring together diverse students and teach them to mutually respect each other. Some of my fondest memories were looking at the senior year books in my school district and seeing my former students as respected members of team sports, school plays and even some in advanced placement classes. These results were from the collective efforts of all the teachers in our system as well as the students’ families. Public education at its best can bring together disparate groups and encourage understanding and acceptance.
Trump and DeVos are liars that have no understanding of the common good, They are radical extremists that seek to divide us and separate us into groups that will be suspicious of one another. Divided people are easier to control in an authoritarian regime. There is no freedom in Freedom Scholarships, only poor quality scholarships whose main goal is to weaken democratic, transparent public education.
Amen, retired teacher! Love your comment. So true.
three key words: “OUR core values.” Lately it is getting harder and harder to know who is sitting inside the “our” corner.
I’m pleased someone said it but it’s hardly “coded”.
The Secretary cannot seem to find a single example of a strong public school anywhere in the country. Her message is overwhelmingly negative towards public schools AND public school students.
Pure ideology and if she has to bash and unfairly smear tens of millions of public school students to push her ideological vision, well, she will do that. Everything must give way to The Agenda. Public school students are consistently depicted as low performing, violent bullies which other students must “escape” from. It’s deliberate. It runs through all her formal speeches. Not an accident. She promotes private and charter schools and bashes public schools. Consistently. Every speech. Every interview.
She’s always been a political operative and, completely unsurprisingly to anyone who was familiar with her work in Michigan, she still is.
That we’re paying millions of dollars in expenses to her and her appointees to run this political campaign is the real shame. It’s a rip off. It offers zero benefit to any public school student anywhere in the country. Our students would literally be better off if these folks stopped coming to work.
20 years into ed reform I still have the same question I had when this political campaign launched- do ed reformers have a single positive idea or plan for students in public schools?
I know they ideologically oppose the existence of public schools. They’ve made that clear. Still, despite their best marketing efforts, most students still attend one.
Have they accomplished a single positive thing for any public school student in this country?
If you either neglect or bash 90% of students in the country you’re not working on “public education”. You’re working on promoting charters and vouchers. Should we maybe consider hiring some people who plan to return some value to 90% of the students in the unfashionable public schools, or should we keep hiring these folks, who don’t, and haven’t?
Are public school families and supporters permitted to insist that some of the public employees they pay put forth SOME effort on behalf of public school students, or is that forbidden? If not, why not?
The underlying question, Chiara, why do they continue to spend millions of dollars to gain control of state and local school boards and of legislatures since everything they have tried has failed and every promise has been broken?
Is it just power for the sake of power, or their stubborn refusal to admit failure?
I’d go with “stubborn refusal to admit failure” with “for the sake of power” a photo finish second.
Ohio lawmakers still haven’t completed public school funding. They haven’t completed graduation requirements. They haven’t completed the latest round of the endless modification of the testing requirements.
But they managed to complete a massive expansion of vouchers. They got that done. Ed reform lobbyists went right to the front of the line. Public schools, who serve 90% of students in this state, backburnered again, while my state government serves the demands of 150 ed reform lobbyists.
The worst part of ed reform isn’t the endless cheerleading for charters and vouchers that they palm off as “science”. The worst part of ed reform is that when they capture your government all effort and investment into public school students STOPS.
Our schools and students are no longer fashionable. No one will lower themselves to lifting a finger on their behalf.
From the article with a few changes: “Education freedom means something much narrower: exiting public school with the assistance of LOCAL, state and federal dollars. The education quality students receive after they exit, the segregation it HAS AND WILL produce, and the exclusion and discrimination students WILL face are not matters the administration is worried about.”
Donald Trump has much more in common with Andrew Johnson than being impeached. Neither really accepted the outcome of the Civil War. And anyone who accepts the existence of vouchers and/or corporate charter schools shamefully has a great deal in common with Trump and Johnson.