Valerie Strauss posted an article by Darcie Cimarusti about the spread of charter schools affiliated with Hillsdale College. Cimarusti is the communications director of the Network for Public Education. The Hillsdale charters, called Barney Schools, promise schools where students get a patriotic education untouched by “critical race theory” and safe from the dangers of sex education, with more than a touch of fundamentalist Christian theology.
She writes:
Hillsdale College is a small, nondenominational Christian school in Michigan with a satellite campus on Capitol Hill. Hillsdale President Larry Arnn headed former president Trump’s 1776 Commission, and last year Hillsdale College released a “1776 Curriculum” as a counter to the New York Times’ 1619 Project and its corresponding K-12 curriculum.
Hillsdale spreads the gospel of the right-wing through their K-12 curriculum and the Barney Charter School Initiative, which currently claims member schools in nine states across the country and “curriculum schools” in 19 states. The college’s mission to maintain “by precept and example the immemorial teachings and practices of the Christian faith” morphs into a call for “moral virtue” in their K-12 charter schools.
The school’s expanding K-12 footprint aligns with former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos’s admission that “greater Kingdom gain” is the ultimate outcome of the religious right’s school choice agenda. Hillsdale has made gains in this aim via charter schools, which are publicly funded but operated by entities outside traditional school districts.
Hillsdale does not “own, govern, manage, or profit from” the charter schools they work with, and they do not charge for their curriculum. But Florida-based Academica, the largest for-profit education management organization (EMO) in the nation, stands to make money on Hillsdale’s crusade.
Hillsdale’s classical charter school initiative was designed to turn the tide on what the college sees as “a hundred years of progressivism” in public education. Charter schools that contract with Hillsdale agree to center Western tradition in their K-12 curriculum, and to focus on the “four core disciplines of math, science, literature, and history.” Students must learn Latin and receive explicit instruction in phonics and grammar. The core disciplines are taught through the reading of primary source material and the “great books” which are also chosen to guide students’ moral development. Hillsdale’s curriculum not only narrows the course of study available to students, it rewrites American history, particularly when it comes to civil rights.
The American Legacy Academy (ALA) was recently approved to open in the Weld RE-4 School District in Colorado. According to ALA’s website, the charter school will offer a back-to-basics, classical education as a Hillsdale College curriculum school. The approval of the charter school is a victory for local culture warriors who have stormed board meetings with grievances over masks and critical race theory.
New, large housing developments are leading to significant population growth and a severe public school capacity problem in the Weld RE-4 district. Nevertheless, in November 2021 voters rejected a bond initiative to build new public schools, leaving district officials to lament that they “have a problem without a clear solution.”
Since the bond’s defeat, district employees and community members have been working together to educate the community and put together another bond proposal. A district survey showed that 70 percent of residents favored a “district-built, traditional or non-charter school” in RainDance, one of the new neighborhoods.
But the supporters of ALA and the for-profit charter chain Academica have different plans. Academica is working closely with ALA’s founding board to open the charter through its related organization, Academica Colorado. According to ALA’s application, Academica Colorado will provide comprehensive services to the charter school.
Working hand-in-hand with Academica, ALA tried to purchase the RainDance property from the district for $2.1 million to build a charter school. Craig Horton, executive director of Academica Colorado, was the first member of the public to speak in favor of the purchase at a recent board meeting, just before board members voted down the proposal. Horton stated: “We’re providing a tax-free solution for two elementary schools. You’re walking away from the ability to relieve overcrowding and save taxpayers up to $80 million by building two charter schools in place of two elementary schools.”
At the meeting, ALA supporters said they would only support the district’s bond effort if the charter is approved, essentially holding the education of the district’s students hostage.
However, there are parents in the district who want to see a neighborhood public school on the property, not a Hillsdale charter school affiliated with Academica. They, too, spoke out. Autumn Leopold and Kimberly Kee, who administer a private Facebook group called RE4 Families Want Schools For All, told a local reporter: “We really just want a compromise that works for everyone and serves the entire community.”
Conservative culture wars
What is playing out in the Weld RE-4 district is part of a greater conflict in the state. A recent poll of Colorado voters showed a growing split in support for charter schools. Only 36 percent of Democrats polled expressed support, compared to 79 percent of Republicans. Perhaps most telling are the reasons. Among the reasons Republicans say in the poll that they favor charter schools is because they don’t teach a left-wing agenda while some Democrats and Independents oppose charter schools because they see them as religious.
The entrance of ALA follows raucous school board meetings over mask mandates, critical race theory, and other hot-button cultural issues that have been playing out in Weld RE-4 for some time. Tensions ultimately boiled over, leading to an unsuccessful campaign led by local resident Luke Alles to oust two board members. Alles is the executive chair of Guardians of RE-4, a local group “founded by three patriot families” that is pushing for the ALA charter school to open.
The first link on the Guardians website resources page is to the Colorado Department of Education’s “Charter School FAQ.” Another leads to a recently released film titled “Whose Children Are They?” The documentary-style film was produced by Deborah Flora, a syndicated conservative Christian talk radio host and failed Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate. When the film was released in March, Flora simultaneously announced that she was founding a new nonprofit, Parents United America, which she created to defend “parental rights” against “ideological state guardianship.”
The film is a veritable who’s who of the culture wars. Parents and teachers active in CRT battles are given voice, as are dozens more who claim public schools are grooming children through LGBTQ-infused curriculum and disadvantaging female athletes by allowing trans girls to compete in sports.
Representatives from organizations identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) as hate or extremist groups make appearances, as do spokespeople for conservative Koch-funded groups, including the Washington, D.C.-based nonprofit American Enterprise Institute.
The overarching narrative is that the ultimate villains are the teachers’ unions and the U.S. Department of Education. Conservative political activist and writer David Horowitz, [whose group is] considered an extremist group by SPLC, claims teacher unions have been infiltrated and are controlled by Communists. Public School Exit founder Alex Newman suggests that the Education Department was formed not only to teach Communist propaganda but to “de-Christianize” and “make the schools less patriotic.” The film claims this campaign began 100 years ago when progressives like John Dewey “intentionally undermined our education system.”
In early 2022, Fox News host Pete Hegseth launched a five-part series, “The MisEducation of America” on Fox Nation. The series shares the same themes, a similar format, and many of the same interview subjects as “Whose Children Are They?” “MisEducation,” which Hegseth claims is the most watched content on Fox Nation, supposedly “uncovers the secrets of the left’s educational agenda.”
In the fifth and final episode, titled “Our COVID- (16) 19 Moment,” the “experts” agree on this: the only path forward is for parents to remove children from the public school system and place them in Classical Christian Schools. If that’s not an option for families, they suggest a classical charter school.
Colorado
ALA will not be the first classical charter in Colorado. According to the 2019 Colorado Department of Education State of Charter Schools Triennial Report, 24 of the state’s 255 charter schools followed a classical curriculum in the 2018-19 school year.
Academica’s Craig Horton, a retired police officer, was a founding board member of a prominent classical charter, Liberty Common Charter School. Liberty’s headmaster Bob Shaffer is prominently featured in “Whose Children Are They?” — as is Kim Gilmartin, director of New School Development for Ascent Classical Academies.
Ascent, which is a Hillsdale College-affiliated CMO in Colorado, has two classical charter schools in the state, with ambitious plans to open several more.
Horton was also heavily involved in the formation of CIVICA Colorado, part of a national CMO CIVICA, which contracts with Academica. While CIVICA does not formally claim to be a classical charter, CIVICA principal Sheena McOuat stated: “I make sure a lot of politics that are in other schools, sex ed or critical race, they don’t come into my building and it aligns with a lot of people.” McOuat’s husband, Corey McOuat, is one of the founding board members of the American Legacy Academy.
The Colorado Department of Education, which recently revealed that it is struggling to spend down a $55 million dollar federal Charter School Program (CSP) award the state received in 2018, still went ahead and awarded CIVICA a $990,000 start-up grant. ALA hasn’t applied for CSP funds yet, but when representatives appeared before the Weld RE-4 board, they spoke confidently about access to a million-dollar grant.
Wyoming
The new Academica classical brand CIVICA is moving into Wyoming as well. Its Republican governor and legislature recently cleared the way for charter schools by passing legislation to take the decision out of the hands of local school districts and give it to a political body. The State Loan and Investment Board now has the ability to approve charters and is currently composed of Gov. Mark Gordon, Secretary of State Ed Buchanan, Auditor Kristi Racines, Treasurer Curt Meier, and Superintendent of Public Instruction Brian Schroeder. All of them are Republicans.
Horton, with the assistance of high-ranking state Republicans and the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools, is now attempting to open two new classical charters in Wyoming. The two schools — Wyoming Classical Academy and Cheyenne Classical Academy — which propose to open in the fall of 2023, will be Hillsdale College Member School Candidates.
Schroeder, the head of a private Christian school recently appointed state superintendent, attended a parent information meeting hosted by the Cheyenne Classical Academy at the Cheyenne Evangelical Free Church. He told the gathering of prospective charter school parents that “the evangelists of secularism saw two institutions, government and education, as the perfect twin vehicles through which they would remake society in their image.”
Conservative Christian Republicans are now positioning themselves, with the help of Academica and the charter lobby, to use taxpayer funds to challenge “the evangelists of secularism” with a national push for classical charter schools.
Meanwhile, the Weld RE-4 school board’s approval of American Legacy Academy’s application paves the way for two Hillsdale classical charter schools in the district. The schools will ultimately serve approximately 1,300 students, feeding them directly into the Hillsdale pipeline of conservative thinkers trying to “save the country.”
At scale, the approval could also add, at minimum, $580,000 a year to Academica’s bottom line. In the charter application, enrollment figures show that the two charters will serve 1,296 kids in total. In the draft contract between ALA and Academica, the base compensation is $450 per student. If 1,296 students are indeed enrolled, Academica would earn $583,200, not including earnings for facilities and other services
Better name would be ‘Blarney Schools’. But, anyone should be able set up a religious school, as long as the general public doesn’t help pay for it.
Pat Sajak, game show host, was prez of the Hillsdale board, and he is now a member of their board of directors. He has donated vast sums of money to them. The Heartland Foundation is also represented on their board and also gives them huge amounts of money. Their ersatz educators are mainly from similar religious cult-like Christian schools like Bob Jones U, and Liberty U, and have questionable creds to be legitimate ‘college professors’…
I have a friend who used to live near Bob Jones U. He was amazed to find a startling presence of pornographic magazines for sale in convenience markets surrounding the conservative school.
Hey, someone has to fill the demand, eh! The free market says so!
Many years ago, before the Internet became the primary medium for dissemination of this sort of material, a fellow was arrested for possession of porn in Utah. His defense lawyer won the case in court by showing that large numbers of oh-so-conservative Mormon men in the state were checking themselves into hotels ALONE so they could watch the porn channels on the televisions in one of the few places in Utah where these were available. The lawyer proved his case by subpoenaing hotel records.
Community standards. LMAO.
I highly recommend “Under the Banner of Heaven” on Hulu. It shows how religious zealots can pervert and twist doctrine in the LDS community. Fanatics do the same in other religions. The Amish are a lot more conservative than the Mennonites among Anabaptists. The Taliban is a lot more conservative than the typical Muslim. The ultra Orthodox Jews are a lot more conservative than the typical conservative or reformed Jew. We see this less tolerant trend in multiple religions.
I highly recommend the book on which the film is based. Under the Banner of Heaven, by Jon Krakauer. He is also the author of the moving bestseller Into the Wild.
The guy in into the Wild (Sean McCandless) was none too bright.
He should have listened to the native Alaskan who gave him a ride to the dropoff point, who suggested that a greenhorn like McCandless not go “into the suicide”.
Though I’ve spent a lot of time hiking and backpacking in wilderness areas of the lower 48 (far more time than McCandless had spent), I would never consider going into the wilds of Alaska to “live off the land”.
The fellow was clueless.
But if I had written the book, that would have made for a very short story.
Not incidentally, I’ve seen more than my share of clueless, unprepared greenhorns in the American outback, several of whom got into trouble and had to be carried out on horseback and even helicopter as a direct result of their idiocy.
Into the Wild, by SDP: “McCandless stepped out of the car into his fate.” The End
My friend was from another country. He had not experienced the southern tradition of dry counties surrounded by liquor stores just across the county line.
Into the Suicide (by SomeDAM Poet)
Sean McCandless, a clueless greenhorn and Henry David Thoreau wannable with little experience, went into the wilds of Alaska , with an entirely predictable outcome: he died.
The end.
Stay tuned for my next book Into A Thick Bankroll
Sorry it was Christopher MacCandless.
Should have been ‘McClueless’.
Krakauer is very into (and has made a lot money from) “Into ” books.
Some have suggested that Krakauer was actually delusional from some of that thin air he was breathing up on Everest.
Anyone who has read Into Thin Air should read Anatoli Boukreev’s book The Climb to get a slightly (slightly) different perspective.
Give him a break, SomeDAM. He was just a kid. I, too, have spent a lot of time out on the trails in my life, and climbing mountains. And when I started, I didn’t know Trump about it. Over time, you learn. Same with sailing.
But yes, what McCandless did was witless. Not uncommon among young men.
Along the same lines, Roy: In Georgia and Flor-uh-duh, it seems, every other public building is EITHER a megachurch or a strip club, each the size of a small European country.
Lots of us do dumb stuff when we are young.
But what he did was Darwin Award Dumb.
Although he did get a book written and movie made about him, so I guess that’s something.
best word for all they are doing: questionable
In related news, it was reported that the Hilsdale related charter in Tennessee had appealed the rejection of local school boards in Rutherford and Montgomery counties. Gov Lee has some state level group that will no doubt overturn these local rulings.
The thing about Republicans: They are for local control as long as they control the localities.
The Run with Saints website has 30 Hillsdale student comments from 2021. The comments will aid in understanding the campus and religion . Also of relevance, the connections between Clarence Thomas and Leonard Leo and the campus.
Fox News and the ex-president’s social media ain’t nothing compared to the 6 O’Clock News featuring today’s weather forecast and the local hero of the week. This Hillsdale issue is another example of how right-wing issues became LOCAL NEWS!
Their updated Playbook now includes how to unleash their message on millions of people who never gave much attention to national issues because for the most part, the pendulum swung back and forth and it didn’t affect – or infect them. Now, they convert political, national hot buttons into small town and local school board issues.
Three radicals show up at a School Board meeting with a sign complaining about evolution, a book title, a bathroom, a “feelings” survey, a workshop on “diversity,” sex education and people who never even knew there was a school board hear about it.
The “one word” candidates and GOP get more free advertising and more outreach than any advertiser in the country. Take a look at any newspaper (only or print) in any city or rural town with less then 25,000 people. They cover LOCAL NEWS.
(addendum) The ex-president will forever be the single factor in destroying democratic principles and democracy – but these extremists folks have picked up the reins (with a “reign” mindset).
“Now, they convert political, national hot buttons into small town and local school board issues.” On the nose.
This rapid expansion requires BIG deep pockets of money built up over time. It is obviously not all Hillsdale financing. A large complex network of dollars flooding in.
GRIST.ORG has published the story of Manhattan, Cato, Heritage and other right wing groups who have spent YEARS partnering w/ Canadian Atlas Network & Macdonald-Laurier Institute.
Pressuring Canada’s Parliament to ignore the UN, Native Land Authority and Climate Change in favor of fossil fuel extraction. Huge Profits accompanied by devastation to the ecosystem.
Follow The Money & plan accordingly.
https://grist.org/indigenous/how-a-conservative-us-network-undermined-indigenous-energy-rights-in-canada/
Good morning, class, and welcome to Hills r Dales Prep. Today we start the first unit of our History course. It’s called The Founders Wanted Us All to Have Invisible Friends.
And we might as well start with an etymology. History is HIS + story. His story. Any questions? If so, raise your hand. I’m keeping a list of potential troublemakers.
I think it important to note that Hillsdale uses phrases from the past to elevate their appearance. The “Great Books” approach to a liberal arts education and the teaching of Latin have no more relationship to the motivation for these charters than the good of the Ukrainians had to the motivation for Stalin’s collectivist policies. For Hillsdale, these words are lipstick on a pig
Hillsdale is trying to spread the word that History, Civics, Problems of Democracy and Social Studies is White, Male, Christian, European and anointed w/ a Colonizing Christian Destiny to Lord it over everyone and everything.
But organized groups of TEXAS educators, parents, advocacy groups and others are showing up in Austin 8/1 to testify on the once-in-a-decade rewrite of the TX social studies curriculum.
The Hearing Room is packed. Book Bans, shutting down school libraries, attacks on LBGTQ students, attacks on teachers, calling slavery “workers”, “immigration” or “involuntary relocation” is completely unacceptable to loads of TX citizens.
The Civics Alliance social studies standards for K-12 schools, entitled “American Birthright is a whitewash. Civics Alliance was created in 2021 as an offshoot of the National Association of Scholars, a conservative nonprofit aimed at reforming higher education which features right-wing leaders like Ginni Thomas on its board.
American Birthright says the 1776 Curriculum, published in 2021 by Hillsdale College, is aligned with their vision. Also the curricula of Great Hearts Academies, a “classical education” network. Also the Black conservative group 1776 Unites.
Kathyrn Joyce/Salon
https://www.salon.com/2022/07/08/rights-new-social-studies-plan-vows-to-fight-crt-wokeness-and-the-overthrow-of-america/
Oddly, Jesus wasn’t a ‘White European’.
Driving while Jesus
Driving while Jesus
Leads to a park
Histories teach us
That Jesus was dark
Today, for the first time, I received a newspaper publication, The Ohio Independent, unsolicited, from The American Independent located in D.C. I live in rural Ohio. The paper brings attention to a view that supports abortion rights, worker issues, and the election of a party in opposition to the reactionary/ALEC Ohio GOP.
Ms. Cimarusti could take a look at the site, assess it and possibly tell Ohio groups fighting for public education about it as a means to inform Ohioans that charter schools and vouchers are a ripoff of Ohio taxpayers.
How interesting! At the risk of sounding like Dinesen, but I once had a (small, 80 acre) farm in Ohio. About halfway between Wilmington and Xenia. I loved it. Mostly raised the usual three crops (Corn, Soybeans, wheat) along with sheep and a field of alfalfa/orchardgrass to feed the sheep. But (like Dinesen), I was forced to leave (wife).
The Ohio GOP has been a toxic force since the days of Jim Rhodes.
Your farm is very near where I am at. I hope your move was to a blue state.
Well, it was to New Jersey (supposedly Blue). I found more racism in NJ than I did in Ohio. I was so naive that I didn’t even see it until it was pointed out by some of my friends. Don’t kid yourself, ‘Blue’ doesn’t mean as much as you might think. And, that’s because the Blue has sold it’s soul for money.
I to grew up on a farm in Tennessee about that size
Add New York State to the list. A group looking to open a Hillsdale school near Auburn, in the Finger Lakes, applied for a charter from SUNY CSI, who is desperate for applications as the state continues to lose school-aged children and there is zero appetite for charters anywhere outside of the “Big Five.”
SUNY CSI counseled them to withdraw the application, purge the Hillsdale stuff, replace it with E.D. Hirsch, and reapply, but it is the same leadership group with the same goals; they’re even still using the “Barney” website template. Not great.
https://www.fingerlakesclassicalacademy.com
Classical, Latin, Christian, political, school, charter businesses. Creo quia absurdum est.
Ha! So true.
Non credo quia absurda fides est.
There. Fixed.
Well, the local serfs appear to have a choice between two masters, the USCCB and pedophile priests or, Clinton and Gates, with links to Epstein… no choice about privatization.
The Campaign for Our Shared Future self-appointed to battle in the education arena against the religious right (Politico 8-1-2022). One of the leaders of COSF is a Pahara Fellow (Gates) whose experience is with charter schools and the other, was a senior advisor to Arn Duncan.
COSF’s executive director, Heather Harding, of course, is a product of Harvard’s graduate school of education and, the other COSF leader went to a seven sisters school. In D.C. policy decision making, they just can’t find a state university grad. for the life of them.
I think our nation would be so much better off if the voices of state university grads were heard. Instead, national policy is constrained by an Ivy League straight jacket.
Agree, Eleanor. It’s the equivalent of the good ole boys club.
It’s a false perception that POC are champions for the people of their minority races. Many of us want to correct injustices of the past. Harvard and other ivy leaguers, White or Black, may or may not share that commitment. Making book for themselves may be the goal. Many of us are allowing ourselves to be deceived. We should make no assumptions. If a person has worked for the philanthropies of libertarians/privatizers, there is every reason for suspicion.