Peter Greene, retired teacher and brilliant writer, explains the real goals of the school choice movement, and how its rhetoric has shifted over the years from “saving children” to destroying public schools.
He writes:
A quick summary of the history, so far, of pro-choice arguments. Because if it seems like they keep shifting, well, there’s a reason.
If you’re old enough, you may remember a time when the argument in favor of school choice was that students needed to be able to escape their failing public school.
There was a period way back when in which the argument was for vouchers, but vouchers tested poorly with the electorate, so choicers threw their weight behind charter schools, with a continued and frequent emphasis on the notion that charter schools were just another type of public school, because generally speaking, people liked and trusted public schools. Charters will just add to a robust public educational ecosystem, they said.
The “public schools are failing” trope (first given some heft in A Nation at Risk, a report commissioned to make exactly that point) needed some back-up, and at just that opportune moment, we got the rise of the Big Standardized Test, a high stakes system that would provide solid data proving that public schools were Failing Our Children.
Then school choice was adopted by folks on the Left and the Right (and by people from the Right pretending to be on the Left) so we had a tag team argument. Students should not have their educational quality determined by their zip codes. The pro-choice argument was two-pronged:
1) Public schools are failing academically (look at these test scores) but unleashing the power of the free market will competitionize them into excellence.
2) Public schools are failing poor and minority students, and in the pursuit of equity, those students should be given a school choicey path out.
This two prong period lasted roughly most of the Obama administration, because the movement benefited from the neo-liberal Democrat support of choice. But it was at times a tense partnership. Free marketeers chafed at the social justice wing’s ideas about regulating choice schools to suck less, and the social justice wing tried hard not to notice that free marketeers didn’t really care that much about how choice affected their children.
And then Obama was out and Hillary tanked and the free marketeers didn’t need the social justice wing any more, and detente was over.
The choice argument was also suffering from another problem. Charter schools weren’t any better than public schools, and voucher systems were maybe even a little worse. Some new arguments were tried out, like “choice gives strivers a chance to get away from those other kids.” Some free marketeers and libertarians started saying more loudly that it didn’t really matter if choice improved outcomes or not–it was a virtue in its own right.
Trump knew nothing about education policy except that backing choice got him support from the Catholic Church. And Betsy DeVos was patiently waiting for the rest of the movement to catch up to where she has been for years.
Her moment was almost coming, but first we had a few years of just replaying the hits– escape failing schools, improve outcomes, let’s push vouchers under some other name, etc.
Then the pandemic hit, leaving local schools to wrestle with the question “How do we navigate this unprecedented crisis” while on the national level, everyone was more focused on “How do we leverage this unprecedented crisis for maximum political benefit.”
To their credit, many choicers initially resisted the call to blame public schools for schools being closed, but that moment passed, someone decided it would be good strategy to blame school closures on the unions, and then people lost their damned minds over masking. When Christopher Rufo decided to elevate critical race theory to the level of a McCarthy-style Red Scare, a whole network of anti-maskers was already in place to spread the word (Moms For Liberty is a fine example of a group that started out anti-mask and quickly pivoted).
The many waves of complaints and controversies may seem large and complex, but they really aren’t. They all connect through one simple idea, the new choicer pitch, summed up in this quote from Rufo speaking at Hillsdale College:To get universal school choice, you really need to operate from a place of universal school distrust.
The current choice pitch is that parents need the power of choice because public schools can’t be trusted. Jay Greene, who I always thought of as intellectually honest, has moved to the heritage foundation and now publishes pieces like “Who will raise children? Their parents or the bureaucratic experts?” He signaled this new approach explicitly with February’s “Time for the school choice movement to embrace the culture war” aka “We can use this current noise to further our cause.” My state of Pennsylvania is facing a viable candidate for governor whose idea is to end property taxes, replace them with nothing, and give every parent a voucher good for half of the current per-pupil spending amount in the state.
Do not be distracted by the arguments about LGBTQ students and trans athletes and teacher gag laws; these all matter, and certainly many hard right folks will be happy if they win these fights, but for the pro choice crowd, the point is that public schools can’t be trusted and we need to scrap the whole system and replace it with vouchers (or, as DeVos called it, “educational freedom”). If the right drags victory out of any of these many erupting pockets of chaos, that’s gravy, but for many choicers, the chaos is the whole point, because it adds to the claims of a failing public system.
The end game, for those on the far right DeVos-style wing is as it has always been–get the government out of education. Take back the schools for religious education. Slash the tax-based funding because that’s just the government stealing our hard-earned dollars to pay for more services for Those Peoples’ Children. And while all that’s happening, if we could break the back of the teachers unions, which just prop up the democratic Party, and, hey–also let some entrepreneurs make a buck selling education flavored products.
At every stage of the choicer evolution, you will find people who sincerely believe their talking point du jour. But at this point, it’s hard not to notice that some choicers will adopt whatever argument will get them closer to the dismantling and privatization of public education.
Like many other movements, the school choice movement has room for both true believers and grifters, but in both cases, the school choice debates are marked by a refusal to talk about what we’re really talking about–changing education from a universally provided public good into a privately owned and operated commodity delivered however and to whomever the market deems worthy.
There’s another paragraph. Open the link and read it.
So school choice is a “hoax.” Posted by someone who sent her own kids to private schools, but who wants wants to deny that option to non-affluent parents.
You can send your kids to private school if you pay for it yourself. Don’t expect taxpayers to underwrite your private choice. Should taxpayers build you a private swimming pool if you don’t like the community pool? How much “choice” do you think you will get with a voucher worth $8,000 or less? Parents don’t choose. The private schools choose. You can use your voucher to attend a religious school that does not have certified teachers or the advanced courses in public schools. If you expect to go to an elite private school with a voucher, forget it. Your voucher won’t cover the cost ($30,000-$70,000) and they don’t want your child.
Beth: I believe in school choice. Each parent should receive the 50,000 needed to go to the finest private schools. We can fund this with the outpouring of largesse that characterizes the typical private school parent when a school funding referendum comes up on the ballot.
I agree with Peter, except that the argument about “zip codes should not determine the quality of a child’s education” has not been used by the right. The zip code story is about the steady decline in public education funding and increasing reliance on local property taxes to provide an adequate education for “our” children while ignoring the needs of “those” children, largely of color and living in under-resourced communities. This is not a narrative the right has embraced, as far as I have seen. It might mean higher taxes to pay for adequate education for all the kids.
Actually it is not true that right wingers don’t use the “zip code” claim.
Here’s DeVos on Twitter in 2017:
Secretary Betsy DeVos
@BetsyDeVosED
No child, regardless of their ZIP code or family income, should be denied access to quality education. #JointAddress
10:29 PM · Feb 28, 2017·
At 12:00 PM it was suggested that those on the right did not use the zip code issue. A counter example appeared at 12:07. I believe Diane would be good in a debate format.
Ann– “The zip code story is about the steady decline in public education funding and increasing reliance on local property taxes to provide an adequate education for “our” children while ignoring the needs of “those” children, largely of color and living in under-resourced communities.”
Overall, there has not been “increased reliance on local property taxes.” Yes, there has been a decline in public ed funding— I believe there are still a few states which haven’ t even recovered to their pre-2007/8 Great Recession funding. But the overall story of recent decades is actually that states have taken on more funding responsibility for K12 pubsch ed. A spotlight was shone on the inequities of having the municipalities fund the lion’s share quite a while ago, and states stepped up. These days, the national average is: Fed funding 8%-9% [as ever]– but state funding 47%, municipal funding 45%.
A very few states [mine, NJ, is one, for the last 37 yrs] take it a step further, pooling state income taxes and redistributing most to poor districts, least to wealthy districts. Naturally, the wealthier districts simply upped the property taxes to make up the difference– until 12 yrs ago when Christie capped property tax increase at 2% per year. [Our upper-midclass district has continued on fine. They’re much more careful with priorities these days].
Of course there are outliers. In CA, e.g., municipalities only contribute 38%– and in NH they contribute 59%. But nationally, local property taxes are no longer the key driver of local pubsch funding. Nevertheless, they still bear nearly 50%, so there’s still a notable disparity. It’s just less outrageous than it once was.
So-called reformers keep changing the narrative because they have failed to deliver on their promises. There are no great results, only average and dismal ones with communities paying more for less. What they never mention is that the education becomes a commodity, not a public service. Of course, also never mentioned are the scandals of waste, fraud and embezzling.
Now the narrative is we need to kill off public schools. They call teachers “groomers;” they ban books; some states diminish requirements for teachers to deprofessionalize teaching, and they underfund the public schools. The assault is continuous and unjustified, and most parents know it. The public has seen all the false attacks before. Now the privatizers have gone from the ridiculous to the absurd, and the public knows it.
key point: over and over, every time the reforms don’t deliver, the same players just change up their names and titles and concepts a bit to continue doing exactly what they want to do
“they have failed to deliver on their promises.” Did they ever intend that their promises would ever be fruitful?
The promises were how they baited the hook.
“All the chaos we’re seeing around public schools right now is part of the privatization push,” says Amy Frogge. “To market new ‘solutions’ for schools, privatizers have to create doubt and fear around public schools.”
We live in a time when we are warped by a group of ruthless zealots selling fantasies. While the sideshow is playing, the larger move to privatization is played out in state legislatures funding proposals. Case in point:
“Tennessee is also in the process of crafting a new school funding scheme, called TISA (Tennessee Investment in Student Achievement), which has been supported by national “school choice” groups like Jeb Bush’s Chiefs for Change.”
https://www.salon.com/2022/08/22/tennessee-showdown-governors-big-plan-for-right-wing-charter-schools-sparks-fierce-backlash/
We live here in Tennessee with an electorate that does not care that the legislature is run by people like Glen Casada, who was just arrested for a get rich scheme. Hillsdale is another get rich scheme, a sideshow for griftering jackasses that masquerade as legislators.
Pat Buchanan and/or Paul Weyrich’s game plan?
Jefferson- in every age, in every country, the priest aligns with the despot.
Peter Greene is an artist with the pen. This essay brings me back to the bad old days and underscores just how relentless and profit driven this push has been.
Beth’s reply (the first one) is, I believe, coming from a place of compassion but I have to agree with Diane’s response. The devil is in the details. Privatizers know how to create talking points that will create a strong public response. Great PR firms. But when you take the time to realistically assess what their programs can actually achieve, the narrative changes.
When private schools, through selective admissions or through a process that inculcates superiority, are linked to intolerance of other demographic groups, the nation suffers.
A video from Dallas Texas is in the news today. It shows a woman in a racist rant attacking women with Indian accents. Early reports indicate the car the racist was driving had a Catholic High School sticker on it.
Taxpayers should never be forced to fund private schools. And, religious institutions should be given no tax advantages.