Mike Deshotels is a retired educator in Louisiana, who blogs at “Louisiana Educator.” He wrote the following post about the now well-established all-charter district.
The state of Louisiana took over most public schools in New Orleans after the devastation caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005. It turned them over to charter operators, who were expected to get better academic results than the underfunded public schools. The city’s experienced teachers, mostly African-American, like their students, were fired and replaced by inexperienced Teach for America recruits. Philanthropies and the federal government poured billions into the district to help privatization succeed.
Other states, impressed by the promises of privatization, pushed for more charter schools, and some for vouchers, like Arizona, North Carolina, Florida, and Ohio. Michigan created the Education Achievement Authority (which failed), Tennessee created the Achievement School District, which boldly promised dramatic increases in test scores. It failed too. Still others, like Oklahoma, Nevada, and Texas, encouraged privatization and rapid expansion of charter schools.
Billionaires like Michael Bloomberg, Bill Gates, Charles Koch, Betsy DeVos, and the Waltons continue to fund the charter idea, as does the federal government, whose Charter Schools Program doles out $440 million annually to open or expand charter schools (many of which will fail or never open).
For the billionaires and the charter lobby, New Orleans was the shining star of the corporate reform movement, promising huge academic gains by firing teachers, closing public schools, and privatizing low-performing schools. New Orleans is the foundational myth of the charter movement.
Mike Deshotels shows here that the New Orleans “miracle” was and is a vast mirage. Fully a decade ago, in a dissent to a report by the Council on Foreign Relations that endorsed privatization of public schools, Linda Darling-Hammond wrote that “New Orleans remains the lowest-ranked district in the low-performing state of Louisiana.” Billions of dollars later, New Orleans continues to be the lowest performing school district in the lowest performing state.
Here is an excerpt from Mike Deshotels’ post:
This recently released report by the Louisiana Pelican Policy Institute, a business funded “good government” group has produced a dashboard that compares the most recent data on all public-school systems in Louisiana. It provides a way for us to compare expenditures and results in public schools. We can now get a good idea about whether the school reforms in New Orleans have lived up to their promises.
It is important to note that not all public schools in New Orleans at the time of takeover had been deemed to be failures. Even though the Orleans public school system, as a whole, fell into the bottom quartile of public school systems in the state based on academic achievement, there was a group of public schools in New Orleans that were performing well, even before 2006. Several highly selective schools had been producing high academic achievement and great college prep results. So approximately one-fourth of the Orleans schools were left intact because of acceptable results. Those schools, even though now converted into charters, continue to be selective in the students they serve and continue to produce exemplary results. But there is still a major problem with the state test scores of the other three-fourths – the reformed takeover schools.
The recent study shows that taken as a whole, the New Orleans all charter system is still ranking in the bottom quartile of all public-school systems in the state. This is in a state that performs near the bottom of all states on national testing and college preparedness. For example, the new dashboard reveals that for the four academic subjects of math, reading, science and social studies, only 18% of all New Orleans public school students are now rated proficient or better. (I averaged the results of the 4 academic subjects)
In the key subjects of math and reading, Orleans performs at the 24th percentile compared to all other state school systems. This is approximately the same as the Orleans school system performed before Katrina!
What about efficiency in the use of per pupil dollars? Has the new business-oriented model resulted in more efficient use of tax and grant dollars?
One thing that the all-charter system has been successful in doing is attracting a generous flow of charitable foundation money to these new experimental schools. A sizable portion of per pupil dollars in the reformed Orleans public system come from charitable and foundation grants. So the reformed all charter school system is certainly well funded.
The Pelican Policy Institute study has provided a rough measure of how the school money in Orleans is now allocated. Total per pupil funding of the New Orleans system now adds up to $24,434 per student. For Louisiana, this is lavish funding by any measure. The state average per pupil funding is now $11,755, less than half the per pupil amount for New Orleans. How do the New Orleans schools allocate their per pupil funding compared to all other public schools? According to the Pelican Policy dashboard, New Orleans now spends 23% of all its funding on administration and 36% on classroom instruction. (Salaries of the Charter managers are not published as far as I know) The state average for other systems in Louisiana is 8% for administration and 56% for the classrooms. (All non-charter public-school administrators and teacher salary schedules are public records)
Did the increased funding allow the reformed Orleans school system to hire a better quality of teachers? The state auditor recently found that more than half of the Orleans teachers are not certified as teachers. In addition, most of the teachers now employed in Orleans are Caucasian while 90% of the students are African American. This ignores studies that show that children learn better from real role models of their own ethnic type. So much for the new business approach.
Finally, on average, the other school systems in the state have 31% of students achieving proficiency in the 4 basic subjects tested. This compares to 18% achieving proficiency in the new reformed Orleans system.
“fell into the bottom quartile of public school systems in the state based on academic achievement,”
As I’ve said many times before, and I’m sure will say many times hence: Don’t give a damn about “academic achievement”. A boondoggle of an educational concept if there ever was one. It’s a part of the standards and testing malpractice regime that has destroyed the teaching and learning process in public schools. To focus on and use such nebulous nonsense is beyond my understanding. Not to mention that “achievement” meaning test scores has no validity whatsoever.
Duane,
The false claims about the NOLA “miracle” were based on test scores. It’s useful to know it is a fake and always was.
Yes, I understand that fact. Doesn’t make my point any less cogent and/or important. Using the edudeformers’ language games can only help them in their cause. We have to consistently and loudly show that their proclamations are false, invalid and otherwise crap in the “crap in crap out” aphorism. Conceding on language terms concedes a lost battle.
yes, and we should add: to endlessly focus on and use such nebulous nonsense is complicity in the social mess we have created
What is New Orleans doing about this epic failure? Absolutely nothing. Once the money flows into private pockets, charter advocates stop talking about results, even though the imposed disruption has failed to improve academic performance. Academic improvement is the promise, but the real goal is to transfer public money to private entities.
What are charter schools great innovations? Cheap, minimally trained staff? Harsh, racist discipline ? A bloated administration? Hiding ill-gotten gains overseas? Sweeps contracts to unscrupulous CMOs? Privatization in New Orleans has imposed maximum disruption for no better results. Their big accomplishment is the corrupt financial system under which education now operates in the city.
Have you noticed that TFA no longer claims that its young recruits get better academic results than experienced teachers?
Jeffrey Yass and Daniel Loeb (charter schools) are featured in a story at Little Sis,’ “Eyes of the Ties,” 5-17-2022, “The Pro-Israel Billionaires Influencing Penn.’s Election.” Yass is also featured in a Pro Publica article posted today about taxes. The Little Sis chart shows Pro-Israel Super Pac donors. Intercept has written about the role that AIPAC is playing in defeating progressive candidates in primaries.
Open Secrets shows the pattern of Loeb’s political contributions, see the contrast in the amounts for Dems v. GOP. Yass is a well-known GOP donor.
A public school supporter can hope that Mike Deshotels is not ignoring the school reform activities generated at the Alliance for Catholic Education at Notre Dame.
“Reform Leaders Summit-
June 17-19 New Orleans
June 20-22 Tampa
June 9-11 Notre Dame U., Ind.”
Free lodging, travel, meals and other program expenses, “Who should apply…members of school choice and parent advocacy groups,” planned “takeaways,” “…ability to advocate for family choice public policy in their states”
The ACE site reports, the program was developed in response to a USCCB recommendation, it is facilitated by policy makers, researchers, education entrepreneurs and funders.
ACE is Norte Dame’s answer to TFA. It trains young people to be teachers and sends them to live in community and work for small pay (unlike TFA, whose teachers get a full salary and generate a commission for TFA).
ACE is not the source of Catholic demands for funding. That demand goes back to the 1830s, when Catholic schools were first established.
“ACE is not (a) source” of demands for tax money for private schools?
The Catholic Church funded its own schools in the 50’s- no tax money.
The Catholic Church has sought public funds since the 1830s. ACE is the Catholic version of TFA, kids who teach in Catholic schools, live in community, and are paid about $12,000 a year.
In the 1950s, Catholic school
enrollment was much larger than it is now. Elementary schools were free. The teachers were mostly low-paid religious. The Church schools lost a lot of the free or low-wage workers and was also paying out millions due to sexual molestation cases.
My read of the Reform Leaders Summit is it’s a different tentacle of ACE (based on goals and who they identify they want in attendance).
It reads like the Pahara Institute.
A savvy journalist could identify for the public, the funders of the separate initiative.
Sickening!
Charters are BAD and so are the people who support Charters…and that’s all I can say about Charters.
Would a Ravitch post about political school choice wins that can be directly or indirectly linked to ACE be a good idea?
Does Carol Burris have info. about the subject?
It is apparent that the Destroy Public Education Crime Syndicate is focusing heavily on RED states where Traitor Trump won the majority of votes from dangerously ignorant, hateful, dumber than dumb MAGA voters, because they have demonstrated how easy it is to fool and manipulate them.
Louisiana 2020 presidential results
Donald Trump
GOP
1,255,776
58.5%
Joe Biden
DEM
856,034
39.9%
Bellwether advised ed reformers in the South to achieve their goals through churches.
Send your thanks & appreciation to Paul Vallas.
BTW, he’s running (yet again) for Chicago mayor.
Insofar as I (& others) are concerned, he can keep on running…faaaaar away…like out of the country.
&, BTW, Mike: could you pen a nice editorial to one–or both–of our Chicago papers RE: Paul’s devastatingly bad NOLA decisions? (I don’t think many Chicagoans know about his very bad public school history.) The people of Chicago thank you in advance, Mike!
It’s so hard to make any sense of these numbers. We already know how useless state-stdzd test scores are for measuring learning. They’re of some minor symbolic use here: we can say to ed-deformers, hey using your own measure, you’ve failed, but that’s kind of disingenuous.
We can say: you pulled a huge amount of $ out of the classroom and put it in admin, no wonder you failed. But at the same time, NOLA spends more than double the state ave per-pupil: we don’t know what that comparison was pre-Katrina. It may be they’re spending the same on the classroom as before, hence no improvement—and how would we know whether there’s any “improvement”?
We have no info here, either before or since Katrina, on how well these kids are doing by real measurements. Do they graduate a large % of students? I hear this nutty all-charter system means NOLA can’t even keep track of how many students they have, much less get a handle on % dropouts or those who need extra yrs to graduate. Can students read/ write/ do math well enough to move into entry-level work after hisch grad? What % of them can cope with community college?
I spent some time comparing a couple of other urban city school districts with considerably higher child poverty than the average for their states, looking at per-pupil spending for the urb vs its state. Boston children have 123% the state’s ave child poverty, and spends 50% more than the state ave pp. DC children have 100% higher child poverty than surrounding states, and spends 49% more per pupil than surrounding state ave. But NOLA, with 63% higher child poverty than state ave, spends 108% more than state ave per pupil.
All we can really guess is that NOLA spends a lot more per pupil than is justified by results (however measured). Whose $ are they spending? The article says these charters attract a lot of private investment: what do they get out of it? I smell flim-flam– excess $$ sloshing around that isn’t being spent on ed but on some other agenda.
George Soros is the largest owner of Private Charter schools in the country. Many of the New Orleans charter schools are private charters. Some non profit, some for profit. The BESE is controlled by 8 members by Stand for Children who is a left wing organization out of Oregon. Much of its funding comes from Bloomberg, Gates Foundation, and Walmart heirs. The organization also controls many of our state representatives and senators. People, do your research and follow the money. You will understand why Louisiana education is at the bottom.
Johnny Fatheree,
Do your research. Start by reading my last book, Slaying Goliath, which names the billionaires who have funded charter schools and funded political campaigns for charter schools.
Reed Hastings, the Walton family, Betsy DeVos, Bill Gates, Michael Bloomberg, and many more.
George Soros is not on that list. I searched through the names of donors on every website supporting charters. Soros’ name does not appear.