John Merrow has some excellent ideas about how to broaden the base of support in your community, town, or city. Reach out and involve others, people who have little direct contact with the schools. Seeing what the students are doing is a big counterweight to the lies and propaganda of extremist groups. Long before people had television sets, the school was the hub of community life. Friends and neighbors turned out to watch the spelling bee, to see the football games, to enjoy student performances. No one dreamed of opening up corporate chains or using taxpayer dollars to fund competing schools.
Open the link to finish reading the post. If you have more ideas, please comment.
Merrow writes:
The problem with the truism “It Takes a Village to Raise a Child” is that most villagers have no direct connection to children or to the schools they go to. Only about 25 percent of homes have school age children, and in some communities that number drops into the teens. Even if one includes households with grandparents, the percentage probably won’t reach 40. And although support for local public schools is at an all-time high (54%), that may not be high enough to withstand the vicious attacks on the institution by “Moms for Liberty” and other radical right groups. Educators need to do more to win the support of ‘outsiders.’
The 60-80% of households without a strong connection to public education will determine the future of public schools. Because they vote on school budgets, their opinion of schools, teachers, and students matter. That’s why educators must develop and adopt strategies to win their support. It’s not enough for good things to be happening in schools; ‘the outsiders’ need to be supportive, and a good way to win their support is to get them involved.
Because students who are engaged in their work are the best advertisement for public education, adults need to do two things: 1) Make sure the work is engaging and 2) that it involves the world outside the classroom. Substitute “Production” (meaning that students are actually producingknowledge) for “Regurgitation” (where students parrot back what their teachers have told them).
Start with a public website and a YouTube Channel that features student productions done outside of school–in their community. Whatever their ages, kids should work in teams, because it’s safer and it’s also how the adult world functions. Every smartphone is also a great video camera, and so young people can interview adults in their community, then edit those interviews to create oral histories of people and places in their neighborhood–a sure crowd pleaser because everyone loves talking about themselves. When students know that their work is going to be out there for everyone to see, they will go the extra mile to make them as good as possible. Adults can help set high standards, of course.
The possibilities are endless:
*Students can create a photo gallery of the residents of their apartment building or their street and then post portraits on the web for all to see and talk about. Include photos of how the neighborhoods have changed over time.
*Art students can sketch portraits of business storefronts, or workers and bosses, also to be posted on the web.
*The school’s jazz quintet can perform at community centers and post the recordings on the YouTube channel.
*Video teams can interview adults in senior citizen centers around a chosen theme (best job, favorite trip, et cetera), to be edited into a short video for the web. Producing short biographies of ordinary citizens will teach all sorts of valuable skills like clear writing, teamwork and meeting deadlines.
*Music and drama students can rehearse and then present their productions at retirement homes and senior centers — but with a twist: involve some of the adults in the process (a small part in the play, a role in selecting the music, and so on).

The school district in which I worked was and is cohesive and welcoming. The school district did lots of outreach to non-school related members of the community. It participated in local food and clothing drives. Senior citizens had a free pass to all school concerts and sporting events. Elementary schools celebrated often community helpers at school assemblies. At holidays the high school band and chorus performed at local nursing homes, and members of the school district were often invited to address local community groups such as religious groups, the Rotary Club or The NAACP. As a result, the school budget vote in May was generally passed, and it still generally gets approved by voters.
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These are all wonderful ideas. However, they run up against a grim reality. As much as educators espouse the importance of parental and community involvement, if and when such notions are proposed (the speech classes want to record oral histories in the neighborhood and post these on the internet), there is a STRONG likelihood that the proposal will be nixed by building-level or district-level administration. Why? In the past, an administrative job at either level was pretty much a lifetime appointment until the person chose to move. No more. These days, the average tenure of APs and Principals is about four years. Why? Schools are besieged, these days, by entitled parents who think that everything in the school should revolve around their kid and that their kid can never, ever, ever do any wrong. And they blame administrators, and this becomes an issue for the board or the superintendent, and out the admin goes.
And so, administrators have learned to play it safe and to severely limit community interactions to really controlled circumstances, like the PTO or Booster Club or Open House nights.
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I say this as one who has had many such proposals summarily shot down.
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Administrators typically do not want teachers and students creating websites, beyond anything on the school portal, because this means one more thing for them to police for potential issues for them.
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This doesn’t mean that Merrow isn’t right. He is, emphatically so. But making this happen involves hurdles. It’s a Catch-22.
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Peter Greene has a post about community members who’ve organized against the so-called “Moms for Liberty”. They call themselves Grandmas for Love: Radical women organizing from their assisted livng facility!
Showalter got together with Jeanette Bontrager, a Hempfield schools grad who had also attended EMU years ago, and Lynette Meck, a retired consultant who worked on the Mennonite Central Committee. The three grandmas live in the Lititz-based senior living facility, Moravian Manor. And as they watched the M4L crowd start pushing into the area, they had feelings:
“I’m just incensed at this whole Moms for Liberty endeavor,” Bontrager said. “It just makes my blood boil. I want to do what I can to keep it out.”
So they formed Grandmas for Love. Set up a website. And in about a year, they acquired 100 or so supporters.
https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/2023/10/pa-one-moms-for-liberty-alternative.html
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This. Is. Awesome.
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Here’s more: Moms for Libros in Florida.
The group has since incorporated as a non-profit, and counts parents of elementary to college students, teachers, PTA members and other concerned citizens as members. They’ve had requests from Iowa, California and elsewhere in Florida to start chapters in their districts. Moms for Libros is not alone; other resistance groups, such as Families Against Book Bans and FREADOM, have recently sprouted in Miami. The organizations host joint meetings at Books & Books.
In August, Moms for Libros partnered with the Southern Poverty Law Center to request that the Florida board of education amend its latest position on book challenges, and demanding the “fundamental due process right to be heard to all parents and guardians with a substantial interest in the materials their children have access to, not just to a subset of those parents”.
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2023/sep/23/florida-desantis-book-ban-school-student-parent?CMP=share_btn_tw
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WONDERFUL!
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Moms for Liberty should practice truth in advertising and change its name to Moms against Libraries.
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