Archives for category: Betsy DeVos

 

Johann Neem is the author of an important book about public education titled Democracy’s Schools: The Rise of Public Education in America.

He recently wrote a post for the Brookings Blog in which he warned that anyone who races to embrace school choice should think hard about why public schools were created and what we lose if we abandon them. He reminds us that public schools are about much more than test scores.

He writes:

“Why do we have public schools? For Americans between the Revolution and the Civil War, the reasons were primarily civic. They wanted, first, to ensure that all Americans had the skills, knowledge, and values to be effective citizens. As North Carolina state Senator Archibald Murphey put in an 1816 report, “a republic is bottomed on the virtue of her citizens.”They wanted, second, to foster solidarity during a time of increasing immigration when, like today, Americans’ divisions often led to violence. As the Fond du Lac, Wis., superintendent of schools put it in 1854: In a society divided by religion, race, party, and wealth, public schools would “harmonize the discordant elements” as students “sympathize with and for the other.”

“Earlier Americans also argued that a democracy should develop every child’s potential. This required a rich curriculum in the arts and sciences. As the Rev. William Ellery Channing put it in the 1830s, every person is entitled to liberal education “because he is a man, not because he is to make shoes, nails, or pins.” Indeed, as one Alabama public school advocate argued, schools would not “weaken the self-reliance of the citizen” nor “destroy his individuality,” but “teach him to feel it.”

“Finally, earlier Americans wanted to equalize access. At the time of American independence, education had remained a family responsibility. How did it become a public good? Here, the past speaks directly to the present. Convincing Americans to pay taxes to support other people’s children was not simple. Pennsylvania Superintendent Francis Shunk noted in 1838 that it was no easy task to persuade someone that “in opposition to the custom of the country and his fixed opinions founded on that custom, he has a deep and abiding concern in the education of all the children around him, and should cheerfully submit to taxation for the purpose of accomplishing this great object…

“Historically, the most successful public programs have benefited a broad constituency. When policies are seen as “welfare,” taxpayers resent their money being spent on others. Public education—like Social Security—succeeded because most Americans benefited.

“The principles above guided public education’s advocates. And public schools were—and remain—among America’s most successful institutions. Our public schools struggle largely in places where poverty makes it difficult for students to learn. Our efforts to reform, then, must build on public schools’ immense historical success.”

 

 

I watched Leslie Stahl interview Betsy DeVos tonight on “60 Minutes” and found it hard to watch.

She has the same talking points that she had more than a year ago. She has learned nothing. She makes claims about the success of charters and vouchers that have no basis in fact. She could not deny that Michigan’s academic standing has plummeted in the past ten years though she did not associate that sharp decline with her control of the state’s education policies.

And she never stops smirking. She gives canned responses and she smirks.

Watch. What do you think?

 

What will Betsy say to the National PTA at its national conference from March 13-15?

Will she tell them to give up and send their kids to religious schools?

Will she urge them to join her in defunding public schools?

Will she give them a lecture on how terrible public schools are compared to charter schools?

Will she try to persuade them to support school choice?

Will she say once again that public schools are a “dead end”?

More important, what will the PTA say to her?

 

James LaPorta, a correspondent for “The Daily Beast,” posted this video on Twitter of Betsy DeVos after her visit to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. Notice how artfully DeVos dodges the questions, how vacuous her answers. She ended the press conference by abruptly turning on her heels and walking out.

What did you learn?

 

Gun Advocate Betsy DeVos did not get a warm welcome when she visited Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, this morning. Some students, like Emma Gonzalez, didn’t come to school. Others confronted her.

If she expected adulation and deference, she must have been disappointed.

“Her visit immediately sparked criticism and backlash from shooting survivors and advocates on social media.

“Do something unexpected: answer our questions,” Aly Sheehy tweeted at DeVos. “You came to our school just for publicity and avoided our questions for the 90 minutes you were actually here. How about you do your job?”

And this:

”She also told reporters she toured the school with student journalists, and vowed to return to sit down with them and further delve into the issues. The editor of the school’s newspaper “The Eagle Eye,” however, said DeVos “refused to even meet/speak with students…

”When further pressed on the issue of arming school staff, with questions surrounding training standards and student opposition to such a program, DeVos walked away from her podium and ended the press conference.”

 

 

Students and teachers at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, were surprised to learn that gun advocate Betsy DeVos is visiting their school today.

Is she on a listening tour? Will she speak to the student leaders, who are leading the fight for gun control? Will she advise students to abandon MSD and transfer to a charter or a religious school? Will she urge teachers to carry arms?

Did it occur to her that the Trump administration is not exactly a symbol of reconciliation and solace for those who suffer?

Methinks she can learn more from the MSD community than they can learn from her.

The U.S. Department of Education was created in 1980 as a Cabinet level agency. Its predecessor was the Office of Education, located in the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. Cabinet Secretaries take an oath to uphold the Constitution. It is assumed that they will follow the law and safeguard the institutions for which they have oversight.

As Elizabeth Warren shows in this searing document, Betsy DeVos has consistently violated her oath of office. She has rolled back civil rights protections for students with disabilities, for students of color, and for victims of sexual violence. She has protected the interests of predatory for-profit colleges, not the students who were bilked by them. She has appointed high-level personnel who have conflicts of interest (as she herself may have if her vast holdings were completely revealed). She has worked tirelessly to weaken public education. Her budget proposals seek to divert billions of dollars from the schools that enroll 90% of students to private and religious schools, which have the power to select their students and to deny service to students they don’t want.

“Do No Harm” is a very minimal standard for a public official. DeVos actively does harm to the very persons and institutions that she has sworn to protect.

When she was chosen, DeVos was known as a major financier for the privatization movement. Her foundation has long worked closely with the Koch brothers, ALEC, and others who are intent on harming public schools, eliminating unions, and removing any standards for teachers. She is a dedicated enemy of public education, of unions, and of the teaching profession, and a champion of charter schools, voucher schools, online schools, and for-profit higher education.

Betsy DeVos should not be Secretary of Education. Senator Warren provides the evidence for her campaign to destroy the functions and the purpose of the Department that DeVos heads.

 

NPE Action Fund is the political action arm of the Network for Public Education.

After careful deliberation, NPE Action has endorsed Ellen Lipton for Congress in Michigan. 

As a state representative, Ellen was a steadfast ally of public schools, even when surrounded by politicians who stood in line for DeVos money.

Ellen led the fight against the undemocratic and ineffective Education Achievement Authority, which used children in Detroit as guinea pigs for experiments with technology. Due in large part to her demands for transparency, the EAA finally collapsed.

Ellen will be a champion for public education in Congress. She will be one of the few in that body who fought the DeVos machine and won. We happily endorse her candidacy.

If you live in Michigan, please volunteer to help her. If you don’t live in Michigan, you can he,p with a donation to her campaign.

You can donate to Ellen’s campaign here.

https://secure.actblue.com/donate/elforcongressweb?refcode=website

 

 

 

Betsy DeVos has energized resistance to the privatization movement. She has stripped away the mask of Democratic support for privatization. She supports charters and vouchers. Trump supports charters and vouchers. Charters are the gateway drug to vouchers. Democrats who support charters are supporting DeVos’ agenda.

It is not just teachers who oppose DeVos and her privatization plans. It is parents, grandparents, citizens. Ninety percent of Americans went to public school. The U.S.is the most powerful nation in the world. We should thank our public schools.

If you don’t like DeVos’ plans to eliminate public schools, join the Network for Public Education. Join us in Indianapolis in October.

If you were a billionaire and you wanted to make the  American people totally gullible, you would dream up ways to keep them far removed from schools and teachers that teach them how to think critically.

You would embrace “education savings accounts,” which are vouchers by another name, which remove from the state any responsibility to educate any child. Just give every student a debit card, to be used at will.

Carol Burris explains the hoax here.

Parents pledge not to enroll their son or daughter in a public school or a charter school. In exchange, they get nearly all of what the school would have spent (usually 90 percent) placed on a debit card or in an account. The remaining 10 percent is used to fund program administration.

Parents can use the money for private or religious school tuition, online learning, books, hippotherapy (horseback riding for therapeutic purposes) and home schooling — or they can choose to spend minimal dollars on K-12 education and save for college.

There is no obligation that the curriculum that is used to teach students who use ESAs to attend private schools be developmentally appropriate, challenging or even accurate. Although a few states require parents to promise that their children receive instruction in reading, grammar, mathematics, science and social studies, what content is taught and what is learned is immaterial.

If at this point you are thinking that most taxpayers would view such an unaccountable and unregulated system as one in which families could easily be victimized by misinformation, false claims, profiteering and fraud, you would be right. This is not lost on the proponents of ESAs. That is why they have developed all kinds of language to make ESAs seem hip and cutting edge, when they are really advocating a return to a time before the 1830s when schooling was a haphazard event for all but the wealthy.

See how cool it is? Parents pledge not to enroll their children in a public school or a charter school. The family gets a debit card and goes shopping. Destroy public education. Just like Uber or Amazon, except this is education. This is our future. These are our children.

The people behind this are the super-rich. What do you think they have in mind? They send their own children to elite private schools. The ESA won’t cover that. Are they mad? Are they stupid? Are they vicious? What gives?