Nancy Flanagan, retired teacher of music in Michigan, writes here about how “school choice” has damaged the perception of public schools, turning them from a valued public good to just another consumer choice. when she started teaching, public schools were the glue of the community. Now they are forced to compete with multiple private choices, which claim to be better although they are not.
She explains why we could have good public schools in every community, but we have lost the will to pursue that goal. instead we have pursued a series of demonstrably failed ideas, wasting money and lives, while disintegrating the will to improve our public schools.
She writes:
The only contentious thing I ever talk about, at holiday hang-outs or on Facebook (our new town square), is education policy. I will talk to just about anybody—persistently and passionately—about schools, and what it would take to make our public education system not merely workable, but beneficial for all kids in the United States.
This is, by the way, a goal that could largely be accomplished. We have the human capital, the resources and the technical knowledge to transform public education over a generation. What we lack is the public will to do so—for children other than our own, at least.
This represents a sea change in our 20th century national approach to public education, that post-war America where the GI Bill and the Baby Boom made tan, rectangular brick elementary schools spring up like mushrooms in the 1950s. Teachers were in high demand, and state universities were adding a new dormitory every year. Education was going to lift us up, make us (here it comes) the greatest nation on earth.
We don’t think that way anymore.
Somewhere in between our rush to put a man on the moon and the advent of computers in all our classrooms, we lost our “public good” mojo, the generous and very American impulse to stir the melting pot and offer all children, our future citizens, a level playing field, educationally. Lots of edu-thinkers trace this to 1983 and the Nation at Risk report, but I think that the origins of losing that spirit of unity are deeper and broader than that.
Recently, I posted an article from American Prospect on my Facebook page—The Proselytizers and the Privatizers: How religious sectarian school voucher extremists made useful idiots of the charter movement (Katherine Stewart). You can read divergent articles on charter schools (the most obvious and deceptive signal of the loss of our sense of “public good” in education) everywhere, but this was a particularly good piece, honest without being accusatory, damning but cautious:
A wing of the charter movement that is ideologically or religiously opposed to “government schools” was present at the charter movement’s creation, and has grown to comprise a sizable segment of the charter universe. With the election of Donald Trump and the appointment of Betsy DeVos as education secretary, it is presently empowered as never before. Public confusion about vouchers and charters continues to create opportunities. A lightly regulated charter school industry could achieve many of the same goals as voucher programs. They could drain funding from traditional public schools, deregulate the education sector, and promote ideological or religious curricula—all without provoking the kind of resistance that vouchers received.
I posted the article because it was true and thoughtful.
I live in Michigan, where charters took root over two decades ago. Like a handful of other states, we now know what happens to public education, including healthy districts, when charter schools damage the perceived desirability of one—thriving, publicly supported—school for all children. It’s happened all over our state, first in the urban and rural districts, struggling to maintain programming and viability, and now in Alpha districts, as their budgets are diminished and their student populations lured to schools that are “safer” (read: whiter).
After I posted the article, the online conversation was revealing. Teachers (and a lot of my Facebook friends are educators) contributed positive commentary. But there was also a fair amount what Stewart calls public confusion.
- A sense that charter schools are, somehow, de facto, better than public schools—simply by the virtue of the fact that they’re not public, but selective and special.
- Assertions that public schools (schools I know well, and have worked in) are attended by children who haven’t learned how to behave properly.
- Blaming teacher unions for doing what unions do: advocating for fairness, serving as backstop for policy that prioritizes the community over individual needs or wants.
None of these things is demonstrably true. The conversation illustrated that many parents and citizens are no longer invested in public education, emotionally or intellectually. School “choice” is seen as parental right, not something that must be personally paid for. There is now agreement with an idea once unthinkable in America: corporations also have a “right” to advertise and sell a for-profit education, using our tax dollars.
Education is a major major public good where we tax the rich in order to provide a public benefit that you get just by right of being a citizen. When they talk about needing to do away with the entitlement mentality, the most problematic entitlement for them is not Medicare or Social Security. It’s education. Education is even more of a problem for them because teachers are trying to encourage kids to think they can do more. And that’s dangerous.
The core of the public confusion around schooling has been carefully cultivated for decades.
It’s worth talking about—the uniquely American principle of a free, high-quality education for every single child—even if the dialogue is heated. We’re in danger of losing the very thing that made us great.


Reading this led me to contemplate how many incisive comments I have read here on this site. Nancy Flanagan is among the best of these.
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Here’s what I know…the Dunning Krueger Effect is in full force. It seems like I spent a historical rollercoaster ride from the time I started teaching (1990) till the day I retired (2022). And, if my old brain can recall correctly, we used to have neighborhood public schools; it appeared to work. I attended my neighborhood school. In fact, we had our private parochial St. Joseph’s School and even those who attended public school left on Thursdays (I think) for Catechism. And, when I was in eighth grade, a group of us in our Marine Biology class got to spend a week studying (Marine Research Station) and camping out at Dillon Beach on Bodega Bay. We also had speed reading, rocketry, puppet making, Spanish classes, wood shop, and a host of really cool electives. When I became a teacher (coming from another industry), much of public education made no sense. Start something; never give it time to develop “See it didn’t work!” Or rather, it wasn’t implemented correctly, e.g. Whole Language. Things to me that seemed to work, were cut. I taught elementary, middle, high school, continuation high school and Adult School so I got to see many of my students as youngsters and then adults and how they fared. Then somewhere along the way “Program Improvement” started. Families could send their children to a non Program Improvement school. As for me (because I continuously worked with the far, far below proficient students) I was always in Program Improvement. “You don’t want to go to that school they have bad teachers…their diploma is not as good as ours…that’s where all the bad kids go…” Despite my intellectual capacity to study, research, and work with children they way they learned, it wore on my psyche. Then, the school district adopted a Charter School funded by our school budget but also through Navigator Schools. “Look at what we do! We are great. Look at our test scores! Wow wee!” So, I looked at “the big deal” and what appeared to some great philosophy was more of “teaching to the test.” And it also appeared they “selected the cream” from neighborhood schools, therefore, they were superior to the rest of us. As far as the “school of choice” the district had to scramble to bring in portables because one middle school was not in PI. I think their enrollment grew to more than 1000 students, while the other schools (parents had no transportation and means for choice) dwindled. Then once that school received all the students who had choice, their scores dropped. I recall saying, “What now, musical portables?” The problem of this kind of thinking is you just move “issues” to a different location. Just because a location appears to be all “happy and shiny” does not mean that a student is going to excel unless the student habits change as well. And, when I tutored students from private schools, special needs children never got the help they needed. My math colleague was applauded for his math efforts one year and then the next he didn’t know what he was doing. I asked, “What changed?” He told me he taught with the same curriculum, used the methodologies that was “to die for” and then appeared to be incompetent. “Students changed.” I totally agree with Nancy. Read the labels. Most products are made by the same manufacturer, but packaged differently so they are all “shiny and new”. It’s like the lady who said, “The spider webs keep coming back no matter how many times I wipe them away.” Uh, you need to get rid of the spider. It is fixable IF people want to fix it, but we can’t keep doing the wrong things the right way. Thanks for listening to “The Education of Mr. Charvet.”
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Nancy Flanagan is right!
And that is the purpose of charters and voucher…to erode the public good and then blame public schools.
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I wrote a nice reply to Nancy’s article, but somehow I entered it correctly. But, I did receive this article that correlates to the gist of “bad information and rhetoric” and be “very, very afraid.” https://www.laprogressive.com/progressive-issues/trumpian-rhetoric-escalates
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The rejection of the concept of the common good tends to run along party affiliation lines, and it tends to be accepted where people are easily brainwashed by Fox News and other extremist news outlets. Unfortunately, it is often the poor and working class that are targets of this rhetoric and ideology. There remains many affluent communities that continue to support and defend their children’s right to a quality public education, and they expect to pay their taxes to provide that quality education.
School choice continues to be largely a top down movement that is often funded by wealthy individuals and dark money. The ultra-wealthy are behind most of the anti-public education propaganda along with some well funded ideological extremists. School choice would not have had the momentum that it has had if politicians were not for sale to wealthy donors. If we want to offer more equitable public education, we have to detach its funding from property taxes. It is the disparity in funding that started the whole failing schools narrative. While a few students may benefit from privatization, most do not, and many are trapped in failing charter schools that politicians choose to ignore.
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Does Flanagan’s messaging advance the cause of the common good? Or, does it serve to hide the fact that the consequences she lists are the goal of the enemy?
Theocracy’s increased role in dispensing largesse and exerting control, whether it’s social services, emergency aid in disasters, hospitals, schools, etc. is a power grab. The Koch style of economic policy-induced poverty coupled with religious sects, as the only provider of aid (instead of government), has played out repeatedly in history. Well before the Great Hunger in Ireland when 1,000,000 Irish died of starvation, Jefferson warned the nation, in every age, in every country, the priest aligns with the despot.
The naive craft arguments that claim policies like vouchers have some kind of hard-to-explain, longterm, adverse impact. It diverts from the important discussion. One of the enemy’s primary objectives is to eliminate common goods. The Catholic Church and organizations have created a definition for the common good that is consistent with privatization. It’s not that they don’t understand the effect that it has on the nation. They want the power that Jefferson and history warn about.
The exemption of religious schools from civil rights employment law (Biel v. St. James Catholic school) was not a tertiary issue. The expansion of exemption, whether it is to discriminate in providing services or in employment, it is a power grab. Exemptions to violate rights, tax money for religious schools, etc. are primary goals which have aims no less important to the religious right than the overturn of Roe v. Wade.
If Flanagan’s aim is to convince the religious right about their wrongness, I don’t think they’re listening. If her goal is to convince kindred spirits about something they don’t understand, maybe she could ask herself about whether it is strategically wiser to spread Jefferson’s warning providing evidence that supports it or, if what she is currently trying to message has been tried already.
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The United States and the U.S. Constitution has been under attack for some time.
Koch + ALEC may have started this covert seditious war, and too many billionaires that think libertarianism has to be shoved down everyone else throats using every sneaky method possible to make it happen.
The Walton Family Foundation
The Gates Foundation
David Coleman and The College Board
Fundamentalist Evangelicals (who call themselves Christians but they are not) that want to blow the world up so they can go to heaven while thinking the rest of us are going to hell, and they are also using covert methods to get what they want.
Traitor Trump and his fascist loving MAGA mob (the 20 percenters) that is made up of a mixture of several of the others in this list — all lunatic morons filled with rage they cannot define who are easy to manipulate.
Putin
North Korea
Iran
DeSantis
Abbott
I’m sure there’s more that could be added to this list — a lot more.
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“…public schools were the glue of the community.” I like how Garrison Keillor phrased it in his book, Homegrown Democrat, now nearly 20 years ago: “When you wage war on the public schools you attack the mortar that holds the community together. You’re not a conservative, you’re a vandal.” Charter schools began in my state thirty years ago, and now 260+ are scattered across the state. In order to put little butts in those seats at the desks in the charter schools, the state allows parents “choice” to enroll their child in any school in the state–that’ll have them, that is. To this old public school teacher from a non-charter state, the feeling of school spirit, if you will, throughout the community is absent.
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School choice means schools choose.
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