Jan Resseger provides a useful and disturbing overview of vouchers, which began in 1991 in Milwaukee. The funder that inspired the Milwaukee voucher program, paid its legal costs, and kept it going while it was challenged in court was the rightwing Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, led by Mike Joyce. When vouchers were launched thirty years ago, their promoters said they would “save” poor black children who were “trapped” in “failing public schools.” Five years later, Cleveland adopted its own voucher program. Vouchers have not been an academic success, as promised, but libertarians and conservatives continued to demand more vouchers and charters because choice is choice, even when it doesn’t produce the promised results. A while back, while doing research for a book, I interviewed Alan Borsuk, who has been writing about Milwaukee schools for years, and he gave me this summary: the three sectors–charters, vouchers, public–get about the same results, and the results are low for all three sectors (the public sector has a disproportionately large number of students with disabilities who are not wanted by the other two sectors). On the National Assessment of Educational Progress, black students in Milwaukee score at about the same level as their peers in poor, underfunded southern states.
Jan writes:
Milwaukee, the oldest publicly funded, private school voucher program in the United States just marked its 30th anniversary. Wisconsin vouchers have been a model for voucher expansion all over the country, which makes this a good time to review the impact of the growth of diversion of tax dollars to cover private school costs.
In a two part review for the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, Alan J. Borsuk, senior fellow in law and public policy at the Marquette University Law School reflects on the operation and public policy impact of the now 30-year-old Milwaukee voucher program, and more generally on the implications of the growing use of school vouchers.
Borsuk begins by noting that in Wisconsin, vouchers are now so old they have lost some of their luster. He believes the public ought to be watching more closely: “In Wisconsin, the sector wars between public school people and school choice people are kind of old hat. The hottest cup of coffee served in the last generation of education around here seems lukewarm now. But that is also a good reason to re-cap the impact of providing public support for thousands of children to attend private and religious schools….”
Based on his study of the Milwaukee voucher program over its 30 year history, Borsuk offers 10 primarily descriptive observations:
- “The voucher movement is big. It started out in Fall 1991 with 337 students in seven schools… By last fall, about 28,000 children, around a quarter of all Milwaukee children receiving publicly funded education, were going to about 115 private schools.”
- “It really is school choice… (N)o one has ever been required or assigned to use a voucher to go to a private school… Thousands of parents want their kids to attend private and, most cases, religious schools, and vouchers make that possible.”
- “Vouchers haven’t solved the success gaps in education. One of the primary claims of voucher supporters… was that giving parents more freedom to choose schools, coupled with competition among schools… would drive big improvements in overall academic success…. Nope. Overall, the reading and math scores of students using vouchers aren’t much different than students in Milwaukee Public Schools—and proficiency rates in both streams of schools have been generally unchanged… at depressingly low levels. Whatever is needed to… start up booming academic achievement, vouchers aren’t it.”
- “Vouchers have impacted Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS) negatively… (O)verall, in large part due to voucher use and charter enrollment, enrollment in MPS has fallen steadily for more than a decade, and that is not good for the system… Also, MPS has a higher percentage of students with special needs and students who have chronic behavior problems than schools in other sectors have.”
- “The voucher movement is religious… (F)or the last five years, more than $200 million a year in state money has been spent on vouchers, the strong majority of it at religious schools. Those schools cover a wide range of religions—Catholic, Lutheran, other Christian denominations, Muslim, Jewish—and there are almost no limits on how religion is taught or practiced in those schools. Both Wisconsin and U.S. supreme courts have ruled it is not a violation of separation of church and state, on the theory that the state is supporting parents choosing schools and not the state choosing schools.”
- “Milwaukee taught the country. One important lesson was how not to do vouchers… People with limited or dubious qualifications opened schools… Some schools were outrageously bad. Many were just mediocre and poorly run. It was only by launching regulations and creating some oversight that bad financial practices and… bad educational practice was reined in and many schools closed.”
- “School choice movement is stable. In the 2010s, it seemed like every two years, when the state budget was developed, big changes were made…. Voucher programs were added for Racine, for the rest of Wisconsin, and for students with special needs… Now, especially with split control of state government, nothing is changing.”
- “Vouchers keep private schools going… At many private schools, more than 90% of students are supported by vouchers of more than $8,000 per student per year… Milwaukee has a much more vibrant private school sector than many comparable cities. Is this a public good?… (S)aying vouchers are keeping the private school sector going is stating a fact.”
- “Vouchers fractured education politics… The intense battles between public school people… and voucher people meant there wasn’t a united front in responding to the needs of all the children in the city. The division and divisiveness remain….”
- “The voucher school roster has improved… (T)he closing of many of the poorest schools has moved the overall record of private schools in a positive direction.”
Borsuk’s analysis presents a pretty objective analysis of many aspects of Wisconsin vouchers, but he entirely fails to address what across many states is the most serious concern: vouchers eat up a huge and growing portion of state education funding in Wisconsin and other states where voucher programs have grown over the years. Borsuk points out that the Milwaukee school district’s loss of students has been bad for the public schools. What he doesn’t mention is that as students leave for private schools, in some states they carry the voucher funding out of their local school district’s budget. But even when the state pays directly for the cost of the voucher, the school district loses the voucher student’s per-pupil state funding, and because many school district costs are fixed, the district loses funds needed for programming for the majority of a community’s students—the children enrolled in the public schools.
While Borsuk doesn’t mention the fiscal impact on public schools of the growth of vouchers across his state, in a 2017 brief from the National Education Policy Center, the University of Wisconsin’s Ellie Bruecker does evaluate the fiscal impact of Wisconsin’s vouchers on the state’s public schools: “The program as currently structured appears likely to exacerbate existing inequities in state school financing. Taxpayers in many communities will be burdened with higher tax costs without seeing that burden translate into more spending on students attending local public schools. Moreover, the relative amount of money the state allocates to each public school student it supports is likely to decline. As more states enact or expand voucher programs, the case of Wisconsin offers a cautionary tale. Statewide voucher programs have the potential to seriously exacerbate funding disparities in the public system.”
Additionally voucher programs educate the few at the expense of the millions of children who continue to be enrolled in the public schools which lose the funding. For the Phi Delta Kappan, Mark Berends explains that today, while they are expensive, voucher programs serve relatively few students: “The number of school voucher programs has increased dramatically over the last two-decades. In 2000, there were just five such programs in operation in school districts and states… by 2010, the number had increased to 12, and by 2021, it had climbed to 29… (T)he number of students participating in voucher programs… has increased significantly in the last decade, though the total number of students receiving vouchers remains a tiny fraction of the total number of students in the U.S. (about 0.5%).” (Emphasis is mine.)
And while the voucher program in Wisconsin may have reached a stable plateau, in Ohio, like many other states, legislatures are making big new investments in private school vouchers. Writing for the Columbus Dispatch, Anna Staver and Grace Deng report: “School choice advocates say… they want Ohio and eventually the country to give a voucher to any kid who wants one. ‘People are cutting their cable and buying individual channels and personalizing what they want for their own entertainment,’ said Greg Lawson, a research fellow at the… Buckeye Institute. ‘It’s about choice. It’s about empowering folks. People want choice in their food, in their entertainment. Education should be that too.’”
Staver and Deng summarize the history of the recent rapid expansion of these programs, “(T)he rules that govern eligibility get a little more expansive every year. At first, only students assigned to schools in ‘academic emergency’—the state’s lowest rating—for three consecutive years could apply for a voucher. A year later it became schools in either academic emergency or academic watch for three years. Six months after that, the requirement dropped to two of the last three years. In 2013, lawmakers created an income-based scholarship for all kids regardless of their home district… Today, roughly half of Ohio’s families are eligible for an income-based voucher because the limit for a family of four (is) $65,500 of annual household income.”
In the state budget passed at the end of June, the Ohio Legislature raised the size of each voucher in another program, EdChoice, from $4,650 for students in grades K-8 to $5,500 and for students in high school from $6,000 to $7,500. Previously only 60,000 students could qualify for EdChoice statewide, but in the new budget, the Legislature eliminated any cap on the program’s size While there used to be a 75 day window for submitting an application for an EdChoice voucher, there is now a rolling window with no closing date. And beginning with the FY 26 school year students will no longer be required to attend a public school in the year prior to qualifying for a voucher. Today high school students need not attend a public school in the year before qualifying, but as of 2026, no student will need to have attended a public school prior to qualifying.
In Ohio, it never seems to stop. Last Wednesday members of the Ohio House held a press conference to promote House Bill 290, introduced last spring as what its sponsor is reported to have called “a legislative intent bill” for the purpose of promoting widespread discussion of universal vouchers.
Open the link and read the rest. The legislative strategy for vouchers is the camel’s nose under the tent. The first act is to provide vouchers for poor students trapped in failing schools, so there are income limits and requirements that students were enrolled in a low-performing school. In the second act, the income limit for eligible students is raised, or vouchers are enacted for students with special needs (even though these students abandon their federally-guaranteed rights when they leave public schools). Next step, students applying for vouchers need never have attended public schools, so they are not being “saved from failing schools” because they never attended public schools. The ultimate goal is universal vouchers, because choice may be academically ineffective but choice is good. In reality, as Jan points out, choice defunds the public schools that most students attend, so choice is not good after all.
Vouchers are BAD.
As an aside, Gary Paulsen, esteemed author for young people passed away on 10/13/21.
And sadly, Colin Powell just died from complications from Covid. It’s still not safe.
Take care, ALL. You are needed.
The ed reform echo chamber all celebrated the huge expansion in vouchers, in their (usual) lockstep fashion:
“School Choice Movement Celebrates Its ‘Best Year Ever’ Amid Pandemic”
https://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2021/06/25/school-choice-movement-celebrates-its-best-year-ever-amid-pandemic
They got nothing accomplished on behalf of public school students, again as usual, other than to promote the idea that all their schools are failing and they should “flee” from the public system.
Ed reform is now indistinguishable from any of the lobbying groups that exist to promote vouchers. The two groups are interchangeable.
So far the “ed reform movement” contribution to “public education” during and after the pandemic has been – massive expansion and marketing of vouchers, anti mask and anti CRT protests in public schools, and a standardized testing mandate.
This “movement” doesn’t add any value to public schools. They are 100% downside for public school students, and for some inexplicable reason they uttterly dominate national public education policy and have for 20 years. It’s a raw deal for students who attend public schools. Maybe we could think about hiring some people who actually support public education to direct public education policy.
Continuing to hire exclusively out of the ed reform echo chamber isn’t working out well for students who attend public schools. They don’t perform any productive or positive work on behalf of our students.
Remember when the ed reform “movement” insisted over and over that they weren’t committed to privatizing public education? Then we all watched as they spend 20 years exclusively focused on expanding charters and vouchers.
The whole ed reform echo chamber pushes vouchers now. Lockstep as usual, no dissenters.
They actually go further than just private school vouchers- they now promote voucherizing the whole system.
It’s really remarkable how little accountability there is in the echo chamber:
“Spotlight falling NAEP scores and widening achievement gaps
“Math and reading scores for 13-year-olds declined dramatically – representing the first major drops in the subjects since the National Assessment of Educational Progress began tracking long-term academic achievement trends in the 1970s,” writes Lauren Camera in US News and World Report. “Notably, results from the assessment show widening score gaps between higher-performing and lower-performing students, with the changes driven by declines among lower-performing students.”
Perhaps most concerning is that the results cover the 2019-20 school year before Covid hit. That means problems were already setting in before the enormous disruptions that have been a disaster for low-income children. Study after study, including the oft-cited brief from McKinsey, predict that the pandemic’s widening of achievement gaps will result in life-long challenges for countless children.
The results drive home just how important it is that we set a more ambitious goal than simply a return to a normal, given that normal wasn’t good enough for far too many students. Instead, we need to challenge ourselves to think creatively about what our children need in this new era. With the combined challenges of widening achievement gaps and extensive learning loss resulting from the pandemic, we should all be calling for a new educational agenda grounded in the needs of this new generation of students”
That’s 50 CAN, a lavishly funded ed reform group that pushes the ed reform agenda and has for years.
Is there any evaluation at all of ed reform in this “drop in NEAP scores”? Any attempt to even look at their agenda?
Nope. Instead they insist we should just double down on the same old ed reform agenda.
Ed reformers have utterly dominated public education policy for the last 20 years. When are they held accountable for results? Never? We just continue to blindly follow these same 150 “choice” lobbyists for another 20 years?
What would it take to break free from this echo chamber? Can public schools go their own way? How do we convince public schools that this “movement” adds NO value for their students and they shouldn’t continue to take direction from it?
Here’s one of the hundreds of ed reform groups who lobby for vouchers:
https://www.edchoice.org/engage/brief-school-choice-in-the-states-may-2021/
Like all members of the echo chamber, they insist they work for “school choice” which would include public schools, but you won’t find a single effort or initative for public school students in any of their full time (well compensated) work.
They simply don’t serve our students. They are professional public school critics and professional promoters of charter and private schools. And for some reason they run US public education policy, a country where 90% of students attend the public schools ed reformers don’t serve.
Ludicrous. And it’s been going on for 20 years now.
We should not have public education policy that is dominated by political oppponents of public education. That is not fair to students in public schools. It has not served them well.
Here’s another ed reform group promoting and marketing vouchers:
https://www.educationnext.org/how-big-was-the-year-of-educational-choice/
Lavishly funded, run out of an elite, expensive private university, do absolutely nothing for public school students.
Some of these echo chamber groups are actually funded by the US Department of Education. The public is paying a huge group of people who not only return no value to public schools or public school students, but actively lobby against them.
That’s the price we’ve paid for allowing this ideologically driven, echo chamber “movement” to run US public education for the last 20 years. Public school students have paid the price.
Education Next is a rightwing journal that is the East Coast branch of the Hoover Institution. It is rigidly pro-choice and anti-public schools.
and likely a place where a certain amount of the current actions against public schools find organization
Resseger reviews the various voucher schemes that have been used in Milwaukee and elsewhere that move public money into private pockets. Unfortunately, there is no big academic advantage to all this privatization, and the public schools become the schools of last resort for those no schools accept, the expensive and difficult to educate. Privatization imposes inefficiency on public schools and forces public schools to cut services for the neediest students due to a lack of resources.
Sending students into islands of homogeneity is missed opportunity for students to learn how to get along with different types of people. Privatization produces isolation along racial and/or religious groups. Government money should not be used to segregate students. In a nation where there are so many diverse groups, it is far better for young people to come together for better understanding of one another than to isolate them with others that are of the same background. We need to bring our young people together as a benefit to all, and not fragment them into separate and unequal groups.
Retired teacher.
At its core, democracy requires a set of values shared by every citizen seeking its protection, its tranquility and its dreams Dreams in a constant state of evolution enabling; over time, a better way to live on this our likewise evolving planet.
Experiments in democracy proliferate, from those leaving the remnants of a great civil war, to those suffering the stresses and strains of dissatisfaction, some real, some feigned, fueled, for example, not by spending millions of dollars to set up town halls in which to have productive discussion, but by propagandists expert in convincing the ignorant they are part of the process
“We need to bring our young people together as a benefit to all, and not fragment them into separate and unequal groups.”
It is precisely the latter that energizes the rich to fragment them. It is the insidious and onerous method by which efforts to convert our society from democracy to autocracy with out firing a gun, that makes your sentence I quote above glow with the hot lava of destruction.
I hope with every breath that my great-grandchildren will retain the tools our founding fathers left us with which to combat threats to their grand experiment unfolding for the last 225 years or so on this side of the planet.
Let weather not whether destroy us.
Vouchers are JUST MORE of Jim Crow. SAD and very sick.
Agree, retired teacher: “Sending students into islands of homogeneity is missed opportunity for students to learn how to get along with different types of people.”
Spot on, Yvonne! It’s no accident that this is happening at the same time that there is a vast Trumpy movement to remove instruction about genocide and racism from our schools. More. Jim. Crow.
The current voucher and charter movements have historically be fueled by two things: racism, and those who wanted to put their kids in private, religious schools who resented paying taxes to educate other kids.
If schools got integrated, white kids retreated to private schools. So as to not pay for their schooling twice, at least in their minds, these people wanted control over where their tax money went.
Is there any other category of taxation in which people are allow to choose how their money is spent? This fact alone tells you that these projects have been paid for by the conservative rich.
Thank you for not studiously avoiding mention of the beneficiary of most vouchers in Ohio.
Cincinnati local news credited the backing of a religious group (evangelical, although few Ohio students attend schools affiliated with that faith) for the legislative voucher win in Ohio.
Two proponents of privatization in Ohio are first cousins, Ohio state Senators Matt and Steven Huffman. In 2020, Steven Huffman lost his job in the private sector for his racist comments during a state Congressional hearing.
A significant number of religious schools in Ohio are segregated based on gender. Apparently, a segment of conservative religious prefer that model which is not a surprise.
Outside observers can conclude that conservative religious also prefer a different educational model for different student demographics as reflected in Cristo Rey schools, a religious chain operating in inner cities in 17 states. Suburban-located schools affiliated with the same faith, operate differently than Cristo Rey. The Christiansen Institute (originators of the “disruption” strategy), described a Cristo Rey prototype in Calf. that had 60 students per class.
Nationally, the statistic for one religion which has more schools than any other religion, is 30% of its secondary schools are single sex.
“…Overall, the reading and math scores of students using vouchers aren’t much different than students in Milwaukee Public Schools—and proficiency rates in both streams of schools have been generally unchanged… at depressingly low levels.”
It does not require testing to understand that impoverished areas are experiencing education in depressing ways. There are plenty of other depressing things about living in a locally depressed economy. Education is just one.
For the record, it does not require testing to figure out that vouchers will not work either, since we have known forever that cultural influences on human excellence are the biggest driver of human achievement. The Kenyans are good at running because they run. Culinary excellence resides in certain cultures. The community produces the excellence. Outside influences are never quite as successful. Testing generally serves to hide what a culture is doing, not disclose it.
Well said! With so much “choice” the needs of the neediest take a back seat to wants of others. The schools of the neediest face the largest economic loss. We cannot offer equivalent education for the same dollar with students going to so many different schools. The education received suffers as do the students.
Good public schools are efficient, and they consolidate resources. They offer services from professional educators with specially trained teachers to serve a variety of needs.
and so many people are politically manipulated into deciding what they ‘want’
Good article on the political groups behind the effort to have political activists create chaos at school board meetings-
https://popular.info/p/how-virginia-school-boards-are-being
At least one prominent member of the ed reform echo chamber now employed full time in this political campaign.
Ed reform is pretty lucratrive! Seems to create a lot of jobs- not in schools, but in lobbying groups that work against public schools and public school students.
How many well-compensated anti-public school operatives are there now? Has to be thousands.
Maybe we need fewer professional public school critics and more people who contrinute something positive to public schools.
Former Obama Administration official promotes a “study” put out by the charter school lobby with no further investigation or even questions:
“Joanne Weiss
Sep 22
During pandemic, charter enrol’t grew by 7%, while trad’l district enrol’t fell dramatically. “Families are sending a clear message. They want more public school options.”
This person was the head of federal public education policy for 8 years. Promotes charters, bashes public schools.
They all just swallow charter marketing whole. No questions, no analysis, no dissent.
Ed reform is indistinguishable from charter/voucher lobbyists. One cannot tell the difference between what is put out by the charter/voucher lobby and what is produced by the ed reform echo chamber. Identical. And they run US public education policy.
Is it any wonder public school students have fared so poorly under these folks? Maybe time to look outside the echo chamber and see if we can find people who support public education to work IN public education?
A great piece by Ms. Ressenger! Bravo!
Ofc, private schools are expensive. As Dr. Ravitch often points out, they cost FAR MORE than the vouchers provide. According the educationdata.org, as of August of 2021, $12,350 was the average annual tuition among the nation’s 22,440 private K-12 schools.And this figure includes ALL private schools, including lower-cost (and often very low quality) religious schools. High-quality private schools with vaunted curricula, low class sizes, and qualified teachers typically have annual tuitions of 30-60K per year.
So, what does that mean? Well, it means that the stated reason for voucher programs–to help poor families access better educations for their children, is total bs. Only wealthy families can afford to meet the additional cost of private school by supplementing from their own earnings the 4-7K from a state voucher program. So, like many government programs that purport to be assistance to the poor, if you look a little more closely, they turn out to be perks for the already well-to-do. As Ms. Ressenger points out, the trend in the past few years has been for states to expand, vastly, the eligibility requirements for receiving vouchers. The theory seems to be: sell it initially as a social equity program; then transform it into what it actually is–another giveaway to the rich.
“So, like many government programs that purport to be assistance to the poor, if you look a little more closely, they turn out to be perks for the already well-to-do.”
Exactly, Bob. And if these programs do not work for the poor, so much the better. The poor will blame the failure on the government and conservative pols will benefit from the negative view of government. They will join the Tea Party and vote against their best interests with gusto and viciousness.
Roy, you nailed it. You could do a whole course on politics in America that just elaborates on those observations! xoxoxo
cx: Ms. Resseger. I always add this n to her name! Yikes. So sorry.
Judd Legum
UPDATE: This AM, I reported Harry Jackson (
@HarryJ4Justice
) claimed on TV he was “not an activist” & a “Democrat” but was working for a Koch-linked group targeting schools (
@DefendingEd
) & active in the Youngkin campaign
Now DefendingEd
is “announcing” Jackson is joining
DefendingEd has two long term ed reform echo chamber members on the board- as you can see, it’s ALL about the chldren. Oh, and electing the GOP candidate in Virginia.
Deliver absolutely no value to public school students. No one can point to anything these people have done to “improve public schools” because there is nothing. They’re paid political operatives who lobby against public schools.
What I don’t understand is why “school choice” keeps getting connected to vouchers or charters. Charters and vouchers are not necessary for “school choice” but they are necessary for “school privatization”.
NYC had real public school choice long before it had vouchers and charters.
PUBLIC school choice means that any public school system may not exclude any children regardless of their behavior, their learning disabilities, or their health. PUBLIC school choice means that the public school system must pay the entire cost of a private school if a child has a disability or health issue so severe that no public school in that system can accommodate the child.
If a student is drummed out of a private school or a charter network, the private school or charter has absolutely no responsibility to him. None. That is what makes them “private”. If there is a charter network in the country that has to either educate every child who enrolls in one of the schools in their charter network or pay the entire cost of a private education out of their budget, that I am interested in what the name of it is.
But NYC public schools have public school choice. That doesn’t mean that every child has a choice of every school, but no matter what public school a parent chooses, if that public school doesn’t want to teach him, another public school in that system will, or the public school system will pay the entire cost of a private education from their budget.
The Ohio and Wisconsin program isn’t “choice” — a parent who chooses a private school that doesn’t want to teach their child isn’t provided with a seat in a different private school connected with that system. And a charter school that doesn’t want to teach that child has absolutely no obligation to find another school in their charter network to teach the child or must pay the cost of a private school.
What marks privatization is when dumping a student from a school ends the obligation of that private or charter school to the child.
It’s like saying two sets of hospitals are both “public”, but one hospital kicks out any patient they don’t want to treat and throws them in the street, and the other must treat every patient or is financially responsible for finding medical care for them in another hospital and paying all costs.
Those are not both “public” hospitals. And it is a joke on the public to call it “choice” when the ultimate choice always remains with the private hospital.
The Chicago Tribune (9-30-2021) in an article about gender pronouns and LGBTQ rights quoted Patrick Reilly of the Cardinal Newman Society, “…The simple fact is that a Catholic school exists to teach the Catholic faith…”
An outside observer might question why the argument against vouchers, particularly in states like Ohio, fails to direct the taxpayers’ attention to the fact that they are being forced by the legislature to subsidize conservative religion in a nation that is increasingly secular, a socio-cultural change which makes the U.S. similar to most western democracies and less like middle eastern theocracies.
Btw- a newly released Robert E. Lee biography provides description of the slave owners’ use of religion to back racism’s stridency.
Two important points are made in the Tribune article. (1) The false flag of “religious freedom” renders virtually impossible, secular redress in courts. (2) There is no adverse impact on the Church’s conservative politicking even in situations where there is an overwhelming majority of members opposing the Church’s political position. The money generated by wealthy conservative donors to the church overrides majority opinion.
The article does not make the additional point that a sizable number of liberal, high profile influencers provide a white-out service for the conservative politicking by one of the two major U.S. religions. The public should be made aware of what drives Leonard Leo and what drove Paul Weyrich. The public should be made aware of alliances between powerful religious organizations and notable, wealthy libertarians. The public should be aware of a major religion’s state organizations created expressly to influence legislation in state capitols. The public should be aware that SCOTUS exempted religious schools from civil rights employment law and, the justices can do the same for the all of the employees of what constitutes, the nation’s 3rd largest employer. With little recognition, tax dollars created religious organizations as major U.S. employers.
After having many conversations with Alan Borsuk over the years, I found him to have a clear view of the direction of schools in the Milwaukee area. When I developed the Milwaukee Village School back in the 90’s I felt support from Alan as well as the Milwaukee Teachers Education Association as we developed a system and philosophy of education that was designerd to serve all children on an even playing field.
MVS, as we were known as, was a fully pubic school just like many other schools in the Milwaukee system. What is little known was that many of the schools that were a full part oft he Milwaukee Public Schools (MPS), also had charters. Bill Andrekoupolis was a leader in this area supporting full public schools while the principal of Fritsche charter school. These schools were not beholden to any charter philosophy but kept a strong connection with MPS. Bill later became Superintendent of MPS.
Beginning with my MVS, we saw fully public charters cropping up within MPS that kept their money fully in the public system. Strangely enough, Dr Howard Fuller, as superintendent of MPS, sparked the increase of fully public charters until the charters began to run amuck. Later many charters began to open up by “fly by night” scoundrels as documented by Alan. That was good for Mercedes Benz sales but not as much for the quality of schools. Enter vouchers.
It is not surprising, now that the glow has warn off, that students going to voucher schools were no more likely to “succeed” than those in the full public sector. The problem was the guiding light remained as the artificial standardized test that many believed was designed to keep a people down. I donate a full chapter in my upcoming book, to the big deception called the big test. I rip it up one side and down the other because therein lies the crux of the problem. There is not enough room to expound on the insanity that is destroying children.
However, from my experience watching first hand the damage done in Milwaukee, I learned many lessons. 1. Many people with a good heart were seeking to help children. They wanted the same thing we want. 2. Also, more than should be, had dollar signs in place of their heart. They didn’t give a rats backside about children. 3. That schools like mine and the 4 other “innovative schools, ” fully public, were headed on the right track. However they were destroyed mainly my No Child Left Behind and other futile attempts to stuff kids into one tiny box full of word games and math riddles..
Again, there is too much to replace in the system of education to write about here. But instead of full public charter schools, I recommend states begin full public “Target Schools” to begin implementation of a new system of education that truly does respect the intelligence of all children. And the guiding light will not be the artificial test.
Public school teachers have the no how to develop that system. Once we begin, students will flock to our schools. But there is a problem. As Alan told me today, “I wish broader ideas were being considered in open minded ways these days”. Unless we work as one, we will be watching generation ll of vouchers and charters taking more kids and more moneyfrom fully public schools as they continue to shuffle the deck chairs on the MPS Titanic.