Archives for category: For-Profit

Delve into the mind of Betsy DeVos.

She is the first Secretary of Education ever to address the American Legislative Exchange Council, the secretive far-right organization funded by the Koch brothers, the DeVos family, and major corporations, with the intent of getting rid of unions, standards for teachers, environmental regulations, and anything that gets in the way of corporations.

Here is the speech she delivered today, released by the U.S. Department of Education.

Florida parents and educators opposed HB 7069, a bill which hurts public schools and enriches charter schools (private contractor schools), but the legislature didn’t listen. (Key legislators have financial ties to the charter industry.) They urged Governor Rick Scott to veto it but he didn’t listen.

Now school boards, led by the one in Broward County, are suing to block the law and have it declared unconstitutional.

The Palm Beach Post urges the Palm Beach school board to join the suit. Perhaps the courts will listen.

“Kudos then to the Broward County School Board for being the first to get this legal action started. It has outlined five grounds to challenge the law. Among them, aspects friendly to charter schools such as making it easier for a charter — or “School of Hope” — to open near an academically struggling traditional public school.

“Perhaps the most salient argument, however, will be that the omnibus legislation violates the Florida Constitution’s requirement that each bill deal with a single subject. To help guarantee passage, the law — championed by House Speaker Richard Corcoran — mashed together bills that dealt with, among other things, eliminating a state math exam, requiring most public elementary schools to offer daily recess, and providing more money for teacher bonuses and a school-voucher program for students with disabilities.

“If that doesn’t raise questions about the single-subject rules, how about this: The constitution also requires that a bill’s “one subject” be “briefly expressed in the title.” The title for HB 7069 is more than 4,000 words.

“Corcoran’s office says the law — which essentially rewrites the state’s public school system — falls under the “single subject” of “K-12 education policy.”

“The Speaker called the Broward lawsuit “another example of the educational bureaucracy putting the adults who administer the schools ahead of the children who attend the schools.”

“Not only is it clueless,” he added, “it is also arguably heartless, to sue to stop school children from getting recess, disabled children from getting funding, poor children from getting out of failure factories and teachers from getting more pay.”

“No, Mr. Speaker. What’s “clueless” and “arguably heartless” is holding things such as teacher pay, help for disabled students and recess for elementary school kids hostage in order to siphon more money from struggling traditional public schools to funnel to less accountable, for-profit charter school operators.

“There are many well-run charters in Palm Beach County; and our district is better for it. But there is no evidence that as a group they perform any better for our tax dollars. In fact, hundreds of charter schools have failed in the state of Florida, and dozens more are academically struggling.”

Why is it that Florida wants to divert funding from public schools to contractor schools? Follow the money.

Nicholas Kristof wrote an article defending Bridge International Academies’ for-profit schools in Africa. I disagreed with him here. He responded on Twitter by saying, if you want to judge, go visit a government school. His article asserted that when government doesn’t do its job, private enterprise should step in.

A reader calling him/herself “NYC Public School Parent” distilled Kristof’s arguments and shows why his solution is no solution. Please feel free to send this commentary to Kristof on Twitter:

“Shorter Nicholas Kristof:

“The government has failed to carry out its mission to teach all students. So I am going to promote a private corporation offering to teach the richest students who can afford the fees and ignore how many students drop out and then marvel at the “studies” that show amazing success.

“Shorter Nicholas Kristof:

“I support Trumpcare replacing Obamacare which has failed to make every American healthy. I am truly astonished and in awe of those private insurers who are willing — for a fee– to insure any American who is healthy and I won’t notice that when they are no longer healthy they get sick. Because I get lots of freebies and invited to rich people’s parties for pretending that allowing a private corporation to pick off the cheapest to teach or cheapest to insure people is a marvelous success!

“Shorter Nicholas Kristof:

“When there is government corruption, it is better to allow the private corporations to get rich. That’s why I believe that Trump’s corruption of the federal government should demand a return to private corporations being allowed to run rampant with no regulations.

“According to Kristof’s ridiculous premise, the answer to Trump’s corruption is to allow private enterprise to run rampant. Because actually supporting the democratic regulations that would prevent such corruption is not something the rich people he likes to hang out with believe and he is happy to agree when it comes to education. He cannot even see how much his piece is what Trump himself believes. When the government is corrupt, the best “fix” is allow private corporations to do whatever they want, says Nicholas Kristof and the entire Republican party.”

Jan Resseger writes in The Progressive about the biggest charter scam in Ohio.

When a charter operator gets a lot of money from the state, and selfsame charter operator gives generously to legislators, how can said charter operator ever be held accountable?

In Ohio, the press got fed up with ECOT and started paying attention to charter frauds. Politicians cannot tolerate constant negative press. So, lo and behold, the state conducted an audit of ECOT.

Resseger writes:

“With Betsy DeVos, a long-committed charter school proponent, in charge of the U.S. Department of Education, the country should look to recent goings-on in Ohio as a warning sign of what can happen when public institutions are privatized and an example of why a moratorium on more of these schools is necessary.

“In 2000, Bill Lager founded the Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow and the two privately held, for-profit companies that operate the school—IQ Innovations, which provides ECOT’s curriculum, and Altair Learning Management, which manages the school’s operations. According to an old 2003, Ohio Department of Education policy, online charter schools were paid a per-pupil amount from the state for every student enrolled. Until 2015, there was not a requirement that virtual academies demonstrated actual daily participation. Once the Legislature began demanding proof that students were regularly logging on to their computers, Lager and his attorneys have blamed the state for suddenly and unfairly changing the rules. In the 2015-2016 school year, ECOT was paid $106 million in public tax dollars for the more than 15,000 students it said were enrolled, but the state was able to verify the active participation of only 6,300 students.

“The state has demanded that ECOT pay back $60 million the school was over-paid for the 2015-2016 school year, but Lager has used his connections to the state’s biggest lobbyists and key Republican friends in the legislature to pressure lawmakers, even creating attack ads on TV aimed at the Department of Education.

“Thanks to relentless exposure of the scandal by the state’s major newspapers, it appears, finally, that Ohio may claw back some of the tax dollars Lager has stolen. But the state and a lot of local school districts are still owed $60 million for the 2015-2016 school year. And the Columbus Dispatch reports that the Ohio Department of Education has not released results of a new attendance audit for the 2016-2017 school year.

“Lager has been in court all year to block the state from making ECOT repay the money. In mid-June, the Ohio State Board of Education voted almost unanimously to accept the ruling of a hearing officer from the Ohio Department of Education, who is reported by the Columbus Dispatch to have declared that no school’s intent is to “teach to what could be the equivalent of an empty classroom.”

Keep your eyes on ECOT and whether it will be held accountable. Like other states, Ohio desperately needs charter legislation that is not written by lawyers for the charter industry. Ohio courts have ruled that anything purchased by a charter operator with PUBLIC funds belongs to the charter, even if it goes out of business. The law was written that way, by charter lobbyists.

Congratulations to the editorial board Of the the Sun-Sentinel in Broward County, Florida, which published a strong editorial lambasting the Legislature for passing HB 7069.

Several school districts are planning a lawsuit to stop the law from being implemented. The law will do massive harm to the state’s public schools while diverting millions to the charter industry. Several key legislators have financial interests in charter schools. The bill is a travesty.

The editorial board of the Sun-Sentinel wrote:

“Last week the Broward County School Board approved a lawsuit against House Bill 7069. Though legislators crammed more than 50 bills into HB 7069, the Legislature passed it with almost no debate. House leaders, including those with ties to charter schools, crafted HB 7069 in the last days of the session. Despite protests from superintendents and school boards, Gov. Rick Scott signed the legislation.

“A memo from Barbara Myrick, the board’s general counsel, lists five grounds for a case that the law violates the Florida Constitution:

*Legislation must cover one subject. HB 7069 changes 69 state statutes;

*The law restricts school district from carrying out their duty to oversee contracts with charter schools;

*The program that allocates $140 million to so-called “Schools of Hope” sets no standard for how charter schools could spend that money and thus illegally circumvents local school boards;

*The law seeks to create a second, private system of public education;

*Under current law, schools can share public money with charter schools for construction. Under HB 7069, districts would have to share it.

“Supporters of the law, which became House Speaker Richard Corcoran’s priority, stuck the controversial provisions into a must-pass budget bill because most couldn’t have passed on their own. Some of the potential damage already is clear. Depriving school districts of construction money could harm their credit rating.

“Given that prospect, the Broward County School Board acted correctly in approving $25,000 to recruit an outside law firm. Next week, the Palm Beach County School Board will decide whether to file a lawsuit. The Miami-Dade County School Board is scheduled to hold a workshop on the issue this month.

“Broward County Superintendent Robert Runcie told the Sun Sentinel Editorial Board that HB 7069 would create “a parallel school system that could be privately managed without the requisite accountability. It would be a shadow, private system that runs on public dollars.”

“Example: The new rule that school districts share money for construction. The source of that revenue is a property tax dedicated to capital projects. There’s oversight when school districts spend that money, but nothing in HB 7069 requires charter schools to spend the money on construction and/or maintenance. There’s no oversight.

“Runcie also notes that the district has shared capital projects money when appropriate. One goal of the district’s 2014 general obligation bond was to reduce the ratio of students to computers, which at the time was six to one. It is now two to one.

“The district gave some of the new computers to charter schools but kept track of the equipment. When the district has had to close some of those schools, the district was able to recover the computers, which are public property.

“Now consider the “Schools of Hope” program. Supposedly, the state would use that $140 million to attract charter school operators that would set up near low-performing traditional public schools and give those students a better alternative.

“Nothing in the law, however, requires charter companies to take just students from those schools. Nor is there language to ensure that new operators would produce better results. No school board approval is required. Again, there is no oversight of public money.

“Supporters of HB 7069 wondered why the teachers union joined superintendents and school boards in opposition, since the bill contained a provision for teacher bonuses. Easy. Teachers wanted raises, not more one-time bonuses that add nothing to their pensions. And the state would continue to base bonuses on teachers’ SAT or ACT scores from years ago, not current performance. There could be no changes to the bonus program until 2021.

“Legislative leaders claim to support local control. HB 7069, however, strips control of local tax revenue from school boards and seeks to undermine Florida’s system of free public schools. The law is terrible public policy done in secret. More important, for the purpose of the lawsuit, HB 7069 is illegal.

“The Broward, Palm Beach and Miami-Dade school districts estimate that the property tax provision of HB 7069 could cost them a combined $500 million over 10 years. Add the potential cost of higher borrowing rates and the case for a lawsuit is obvious. With luck, every school board in Florida will fight to overturn HB 7069 and protect public education.”

Between April and June of this year, PBS distributed a three-hour documentary called “Schools Inc.” to its member stations. I was invited to comment on the program by WNET, the PBS station in New York City. It was a 10-minute interview, and not nearly enough time to respond to all the issues covered in a three-hour narrative. I was certainly grateful to WNET for inviting my response but thought a longer analysis was needed. I asked Carol Burris, the executive director of the Network for Public Education, to co-author a critique of the program with me. It was posted last night by Valerie Strauss on her “Answer Sheet” blog. You can check her post for all the links in our article, as well as PBS’s response to my objections to the documentary and the libertarian CATO Institute’s critique.

The Network for Public Education circulated our objections to the program and encouraged our members to write to PBS. Our request has thus far generated nearly 12,000 emails to PBS. The Daily Kos replicated our campaign and generated nearly 150,000 emails. We expect PBS has heard our voices. We hope it will give equal time to documentaries that show the real challenges facing American education today, as well as the existential threat to public education posed by the ongoing attacks on public education funded by some of the wealthiest people in America, including the U.S. Secretary of Education.

By Diane Ravitch and Carol Burris


Education Secretary Betsy DeVos has famously called America’s public education system a “dead end,” and disparagingly calls traditional public schools “government schools.” She and President Trump have set out an agenda that is aimed at replacing the traditional public system with publicly funded private and religious schools.

Do you think this is wild speculation? Think again. The DeVos-Trump playbook was uncritically aired on PBS this spring.

PBS (“The Public Broadcasting System”) is known for its high standards and for its thoughtful documentaries that explain issues in a fair and well-informed manner. But in this case, PBS broadcast “School Inc.,” three hours of content funded by right-wing foundations and right out of the privatizers’ playbook. The program was partisan, inaccurate and biased against public schools. Not every PBS station aired this documentary, but many did. The timing was fortuitous for Trump and DeVos, whose “school choice” agenda aligns neatly with the philosophy expressed in “School Inc.”

First, a word about the funders of this program. The lead funder was the strongly conservative Rose-Marie and Jack R. Anderson Foundation. According to Sourcewatch:

The Rose-Marie and Jack R. Anderson Foundation is a 501(c)(3) grant-making foundation located in Plano, Texas. Many of the foundation’s contributions are given to conservative organizations seeking to promote private schools and public voucher school programs, in addition to the donor-advised conservative DonorsTrust fund and the State Policy Network web of right-wing “think tanks.

The Gleason Family Foundation in California, which backs school choice organizations, also funded the program. According to its tax filings, it has contributed generously to the voucher-promoting EdChoice (previously known as the Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice), the CATO Institute, the Heritage Foundation, the Manhattan Institute for Policy Research, the right-wing American Legislative Exchange Council and the no-excuses charter chain “Uncommon Schools.” The other major funders are the Prometheus Foundation, whose public filings with the IRS show that its largest grant ($2.5 million) went to the Ayn Rand Institute, and the Steve and Lana Hardy Foundation, which contributes to free-market libertarian think tanks.

We will explain as best as we can why we think PBS should give equal time to an unbiased portrayal of American education and its many challenges.

The documentary “School Inc.” expressed the personal views of the late Andrew Coulson, who was long associated with the libertarian Cato Institute. In 1999, Coulson published a book titled “Market Education,” expressing his fervent belief in the free market as a means of delivering educational services to the entire population. Ironically, proponents of this view want taxpayers to subsidize a market in which the schools are deregulated and unaccountable, rather than an unsubsidized market.

The thesis of Coulson’s show is that public schools have failed to embrace innovation for over a century. He claims that only private, for-profit schooling is truly innovative. It is a false caricature that makes one wonder whether Coulson, who grew up in Canada, ever set foot in a public school in the United States.

Public schools, we would argue, are more innovative than private schools and religious schools, and certainly more innovative than for-profit schools, which must cut costs to provide returns for their investors.

Enter a well-resourced public school and you will find many foreign languages taught, robotics programs, a school orchestra, advanced technology, smart-boards, a jazz band, a theater company capable of putting on Broadway plays, physical education programs of extraordinary breadth and academic specialties that most private and religious schools never offer. You will see highly educated teachers, most of them far better educated than the teachers in religious schools and far more qualified than those in charter schools, which are allowed to hire uncertified, inexperienced teachers. You will also see remarkable provisions for students with disabilities and professionals trained to meet their needs — provisions absent from most private schools, which usually reject students with disabilities. And these innovative practices are absent from the schools Coulson glorifies on his “personal journey.”

Coulson begins his fanciful but false story with a portrayal of the origins of American public education. He romanticizes the state of education in the new nation before Horace Mann and the introduction of public education. Although he claims to love innovation, he is infatuated with American education in the 1820s. He tells viewers that some children were home-schooled, some went to church schools and some were taught by people who advertised their lessons in the local newspaper for a fee.

This is clearly the time in American history that he likes best. He claims that literacy rates were rising rapidly, without substantiating his claim. At that time, however, there was no government agency collecting data on literacy rates, nor any standard definition of “literacy.” Was 10 percent of the population literate? Twenty percent? Thirty percent? No one can say with certainty. Did “literacy” mean the ability to sign your name? Or something more? No one can say with certainty. Whatever the boost in the “literacy rate,” many children were left behind without the barest literacy.

Ravitch wrote a history of education in New York City. At the time that Coulson praises, many city children were street urchins. They had no formal education at all. That is why philanthropic groups opened charity schools for the children of the poor. And that is why the New York state legislature decided in the 1840s that the city needed a real public school system, one that was open and free to all children. Before the advent of state-provided public schooling there were elite private schools for the rich, church schools for children of church members, and charity schools for the poor, but there were still large numbers of children who were illiterate. However, Coulson never acknowledges that his fantasy world without public schools had huge deficits, especially for the children of the poor. Perhaps he didn’t know.

Coulson belittles Horace Mann and James Carter of Massachusetts for their visionary understanding of the importance of public education. Coulson prefers the haphazard provision of schooling that preceded the common school movement of the 1830s and 1840s, even though many children had no schooling at all. Mann, Carter, Henry Barnard of Connecticut and the Stowe family in Ohio understood that the future of democracy depended on educating all children, not just those whose parents could pay for it or those whose church supported a free school. The free market was tried — and it was not enough for a democratic society.

Coulson moves from a romanticized past to a romanticized present. He spends considerable time praising Jaime Escalante, the Advanced Placement Calculus teacher memorialized in the film “Stand and Deliver.” He implies that Escalante was driven out of Garfield High School by a union that despised his work ethic and success. Escalante left Garfield after losing his department chairman position, for which he received a stipend. A talented teacher, Escalante said that he was fed up with what he called the “ingratitude” of some of his colleagues and frustrated by parents who didn’t value academic achievement.” He moved to another public high school in Los Angeles.

This is the beginning of a thread that runs throughout “School Inc.” With the exception of Escalante, Coulson portrays public school teachers as lazy, uncaring, undereducated, unmotivated and even corrupt (India). Teachers in private schools, in contrast, are portrayed as superstars, selfless, highly motivated and devoted. He makes his case, not based on studies or objective data, but by finding students who are willing to say how bad public school teaching is. In doing so, he appeals to stereotypes and emotion.

Coulson thinks that profit in itself is an innovation and, therefore, for-profit teaching would result in better instruction. For example, he marvels at a Korean teacher who sells his test-preparation lessons online, thereby making millions of dollars as part of the test-prep hagwon night schools. Viewers watch the teacher read notes into his headset in front of what appear to be hundreds of compliant students. He interviews students who portray their public schools as unchallenging and boring — places to sleep so they can attend hagwons until the early hours of the morning.

Se-Woong Koo, a former hagwon teacher, however, paints a very different picture of the hogwan in his commentary in the New York Times, titled “An Assault Upon Our Children.” Koo describes hagwons as a “system driven by overzealous parents and a leviathan private industry” and “a private education industry run amok” that is resulting in students who develop serious physical illnesses from lack of rest and stress.

Coulson just gets it wrong. Hagwons, with their superstar lecture teachers, do not represent innovation. They are pressure cookers for a society that worships high-stakes testing.

Coulson moves on to praise the charter school sector, using KIPP Public Charter Schools and the American Indian Model Charter Schools as his next examples of innovation and excellence.

There is no evidence that the pedagogy of KIPP is innovative. With its high attrition rates and lower numbers of students with disabilities as compared with traditional public schools, its “no excuses” philosophy resembles American schools of a century ago, which relied on compliance for instructional purposes. Even its founders have admitted that it is not for every child.

He then visits the American Indian Model Schools (AIMS), charter schools in Oakland, Calif., to convince the viewer that the public schools conspired to shut down wonderful charter schools. What he does not mention (and there was no effort to insert this fact in postproduction) are two salient facts about AIMS. First, it was founded as a charter school for Native Americans. It had very low test scores.

Then the charter brought in a new leader, Ben Chavis, and under his leadership, Native American students no longer enrolled in the school. The Native American population is now 0 percent; now the schools’ demographics are 54 percent Asian, even though they are located in a district where the Asian student population is 12.8 percent.

Chavis, no longer at the school, was indicted by federal officials for mail fraud and money laundering in connection with his leadership at AIMS, and $3.8 million was found to have been appropriated by Chavis and his wife. There was a concerted effort to close down the American Indian charters. The school was also sanctioned for numerous violations, including nonexistent board oversight, that resulted in the nearly $4 million of misappropriation of tax dollars.

However, Coulson’s real intent in this section is not to show innovation, but rather to push a radical idea that most of the public would find repulsive — leaving the education of the poor to depend on the generosity of the rich.

As he visits the charters, Coulson emphasizes the importance of philanthropy to scale up successful charters. That is not said as a mere aside. Coulson believes that philanthropy should educate the poor in his ideal system of for-profit, paid-for-by-the-customer, schooling. In his book (Page 324), he advocates for a competitive market in private scholarship programs to educate the poor:

“It is only a matter of time before low-income parents will be able to choose between scholarships from multiple foundations, each of which is competing vigorously with the others for the right to distribute the dollars of discerning donors to poor kids.”

Moving again beyond America’s borders, Coulson then brings viewers to Chile and Sweden, countries that have moved closer to his Libertarian ideal of unfettered choice, including schools that operate for profit. Once again, he presents a one-sided story that attributes progress to the commercialization of schools.

Coulson first visits Chile, attributing test-score improvement to its all-choice, voucher system put in place by former dictator Pinochet. Coulson dismisses the fact that the schools were privatized by a brutal dictator as a means by which to maintain his control.

He notes that poverty in Chile has dropped from 50 percent to 15 percent. According to the international Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development, 46 percent of the variation in test scores on PISA — a test given every three years to 15-year-olds around the world in reading, math and science — are attributable to wealth. Given that dramatic drop in the poverty level, Chile’s results on international tests should be on a steep climb. Yet Chile’s PISA scores have remained relatively flat and well below those of the United States and the world average. Why would we want to use the privatized, less successful Chilean system as a model?

What we know is that privatization in Chile created a stratified system of education that is segregated by class. The majority of the wealthiest students attend fully private schools, most upper-middle-class students attend voucher schools and the poorest students attend schools receiving only a minimum level of state funding.

According to a study by scholars Antoni Verger, Xavier Bonal and Adrián Zancajo titled “What Are the Role and Impact of Public-Private Partnerships in Education? A Realist Evaluation of the Chilean Education Quasi-Market”:

The effects of these dynamics on social justice and inequality of opportunities are multiple and devastating. There is a negative peer effect as a result of school segregation, for every potentially good student that is able to “escape” a bad school and to enroll with high-performing peers, there is a loss of that student in a school that remains full of low performers. However, the peer-effect losses that these dynamics have the potential to undermine the aggregate quality of the education system as well as the educational opportunities of those students that are not able to “escape.

Thus, what Chile’s privatization has achieved is a highly stratified school system, one that favors children of the rich above all others.

Moving on to Sweden, Coulson quickly deflects the criticism that privatization has caused the precipitous drop in the nation’s PISA scores, blaming that drop instead on what he characterizes as a weak public school teaching force and government control of curriculum. He ignores the far greater success of neighboring Finland, where students score among the top on PISA in a system that is public, unionized and focused on equity, not market-based reforms.

Coulson highlights and praises the for-profit Swedish chain Kunskapsskolan, a system of “personalized learning.” He does not bother to mention that Kunskapsskolan, which was admired by former Florida governor Jeb Bush and right-wing media mogul Rupert Murdoch, was tried in the United States and failed. In “Education and the Commercial Mindset,” Sam Abrams tell us how former New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg’s schools chancellor, Joel Klein, helped bring Kunskapsskolan to New York, where it was called the Innovate Manhattan Charter School. In its fourth year, its governing board shut it down. The school had financial difficulties, attracted few students and had poor academic performance.

Although there is far more to critique in this faux “documentary,” the bottom line is this — the for-profit marketplace competition that Coulson is selling does not work. It does not benefit students, it does not improve education, and it is not remotely innovative. The claim of DeVos and other “choice” proponents that competition will spur innovation is false. In real education markets, privatized schools have far stronger incentives to go for what researchers refer to as “second-order competition” — competition not in internal improvement but rather in marketing to recruit more academically able and compliant students.

That is why we see both smaller shares of students with disabilities and English-language learners in charters and private schools, and why the American Indian Charter School focuses on recruiting high-achieving Asian American students, rather than the disadvantaged Native Americans it was intended to serve.

There were numerous inaccuracies and unfair generalizations in the three hours given by PBS to Coulson’s opinions. Our intent in this critique was to correct some of the most egregious. We regret that our review of this documentary cannot possibly reach as many people as the three hours of programming that many PBS viewers saw on their local public television station. Wealthy donors with a political agenda to buy valuable airtime have as much right to create a documentary expressing their opinions as anyone else, but PBS has an obligation to assess the accuracy of the material.

Having failed to do that, we believe PBS — as a matter of fairness — should give equal time to those who believe that universal, free and democratically controlled public education is a foundation stone of our democracy.

Dutch journalist Maria Hengeveld reviewed the claims and business plans of Bridge International Academies and found much not to like. She is clearly irked that the Dutch Ministry of Affairs has invested in this plan.

Shannon May, a founder, says that BIA is all about “social justice.”

Hengeveld adds:

“And for profit. According to her husband, the “global education crisis” is worth about US$51 billion a year. In 2013, Kimmelman explained in a presentation how, for less than US$5 in tuition fees per pupil per month, Bridge could grow “into a billion-dollar company” and “radically change the world.” Earlier he and May promised that they could do this for US$4 per month per pupil.

“Big dreams and even bigger promises. However, my research and research done by others shows:

*that their quality claims have not been supported by any independent research;
*that the education provided turns out to be more expensive than promised;
*that underpaid teachers have to recruit additional pupils;
*that they have dismissed criticism from non-governmental organizations and trade unions;
*that critics are silenced;
*that a PR offensive has been launched in order to continue selling the education services provided.

“Furthermore, €1.4 million of Dutch taxpayers’ money has been poured into the company. Dutch support was provided because Lilianne Ploumen of the country’s Labor Party, currently caretaker Minister for Foreign Trade and Development Cooperation, believes that Bridge uses an “innovative and cost-effective education model, which is able to keep tuition costs per child down.”

“How do you improve education, make it cheaper and also make it profitable? May and Kimmelman have come up with an “innovative pedagogical approach.” The possibility of setting up a few thousand standardized schools within a few years is to be the first innovation. The profit made from each school may be low, but once half a million pupils are recruited — the number of enrollments that Bridge needs to break even — business really takes off. The plan is to reach two million pupils by 2018 and 10 million by 2025.

“This rapid growth would be made possible by using Bridge’s second innovative method, namely its very own approach to the role of teachers and their salary scale. May believes that “qualities such as kindness” are more important than diplomas and this allows for significant savings. In Kenya, where the starting salary for qualified teachers is around US$116 dollars a month, Bridge teachers usually earn less than US$100 a month. However, as Kimmelman explains in a presentation, teachers can earn bonuses by recruiting new students themselves. Marketing is a core task for both teachers and school principals.

“A third innovative aspect, explains May, is the smart use of technology. It works like this: a team of “master teachers” designs digital “master lessons” that are so detailed that all a teacher needs to do is read them from a special Bridge tablet (know as the Nook).”

She continues with a close review of BIA’s claims. It has been showered with awards, but it has run into considerable controversy. Some at the UN have even warned that it is a prelude to privatization of what should be universal public education. Maybe more than a prelude.

In this column, Nicholas Kristof defends the takeover of schooling in Africa by Bridge International Academies.

Kristof says that since the government failed to provide basic education, it is welcome news that BIA is doing it, for a fee. The investors include Bill Gates and Mark Zuckerberg.

He writes that American liberals should get over their squeamishness about privatization and for-profit operation of what are supposed to be public schools.

I think Kristof is wrong because BIA is a short-term fix, not a solution. It cannot possibly educate the hundreds of millions of children whose parents can’t afford to pay. By providing this “fix,” the government are relieved of their obligation to establish a universal, free public school system with qualified teachers. If teachers are sleeping in their classrooms, who should take responsibility? Who should supervise them and make sure that every child has a decent education? That is the government’s job. Addressing the systemic problems of low-quality public education would accomplish far more than creating a for-profit corporation to offer scripted lessons to some. BIA is not a long-term solution, and surely Kristof knows this. Why is he willing to settle for such a bad deal for the children in impoverished nations? This is a lifeboat strategy: instead of righting the ship, throw life preservers to a few (at a price).

Kristof chastises progressives and union leaders for their hostility to BIA:

“I’ve followed Bridge for years, my wife and I wrote about it in our last book, and the concerns are misplaced. Bridge has always lost money, so no one is monetizing children. In fact, it’s a start-up that tackles a social problem in ways similar to a nonprofit, but with for-profit status that makes it more sustainable and scalable.

“More broadly, the world has failed children in poor countries. There have been global campaigns to get more children in school, but that isn’t enough. The crucial metric isn’t children attending school, but children learning in school.”

Did he read Peg Tyre’s article in the New York Times magazine about BIA?

Although Kristof presents BIA as a grand venture in philanthropy, it was billed by its founders as a start-up that had the potential to grow into a billion-dollar company.

Tyre wrote:

“Bridge operates 405 schools in Kenya, educating children from preschool through eighth grade, for a fee of between $54 and $126 per year, depending on the location of the school. It was founded in 2007 by May and her husband, Jay Kimmelman, along with a friend, Phil Frei. From early on, the founders’ plans for the world’s poor were audacious. ‘‘An aggressive start-up company that could figure out how to profitably deliver education at a high quality for less than $5 a month could radically disrupt the status quo in education for these 700 million children and ultimately create what could be a billion-dollar new global education company,’’ Kimmelman said in 2014. Just as titans in Silicon Valley were remaking communication and commerce, Bridge founders promised to revolutionize primary-school education. ‘‘It’s the Tesla of education companies,’’ says Whitney Tilson, a Bridge investor and hedge-fund manager in New York who helped found Teach for America and is a vocal supporter of charter schools.

“The Bridge concept — low-cost private schools for the world’s poorest children — has galvanized many of the Western investors and Silicon Valley moguls who learn about the project. Bill Gates, the Omidyar Network, the Chan Zuckerberg Initiative and the World Bank have all invested in the company; Pearson, the multinational textbook-and-assessment company, has done so through a venture-capital fund. Tilson talked about the company to Bill Ackman, the hedge-fund manager of Pershing Square, which ultimately invested $5.8 million through its foundation. By early 2015, Bridge had secured more than $100 million, according to The Wall Street Journal.

“The fact that Bridge was a for-profit company gave pause to some NGOs that work in developing countries. But others reasoned that in the last decade, for-profit companies backed by what are called social-impact investors — people and institutions that make money by doing good — had successfully brought about important innovations, like solar-power initiatives and low-cost health clinics, in poor countries. Bridge’s model relied on similar investors but was even more ambitious in its dreams of scale. ‘‘There is a great demand for this,’’ May said in an M.I.T. video from 2016. Some of the company’s backers, she said, were ‘‘not social-impact investors,’’ continuing that ‘‘it was straight commercial capital who saw, ‘Wow, there are a couple billion people who don’t have anyone selling them what they want.’ ’’ For a 2010 case study on the company, Kimmelman told the Harvard Business School that return on investment could be 20 percent annually.”

So, some investors were making philanthropic investments (what’s a few millions to Gates or Zuckerberg?), but the founders imagined a company returning 20 percent annually. BIA currently has schools operating in Kenya, Nigeria, and Uganda and is opening in India. It planned to go public this year. “By 2016, they planned to enroll more than 750,000 students, at which point they would be breaking even. By 2022, they estimated that they would educate 4.1 million students and generate $470 million in revenue.”

Tyre shows that many families can’t afford BIA’s fees. If the parents don’t pay, the students are sent home.

Kristoff says, so what, as long as the children are learning. He cites a study commissioned and released by BIA.

BIA released a study called “The Bridge Effect,” which showed the success of its model. Kristoff cites it as evidence of success. Tyre took it to two independent experts, who found it inconclusive because 50% of the BIA students dropped out during the course of the study.

“I asked two experts in statistics — Nat Malkus, from the American Enterprise Institute, and Bryan Graham, from the University of California, Berkeley — to help me evaluate the findings. “This is good evidence of positive effects,” says Malkus. Both pointed out that the study’s results are complicated by Bridge’s high dropout rate: While a third of public-school students dropped out, nearly half of Bridge students left during the study and were unable to take the final assessment. ‘‘The high attrition rate should give one pause,’’ Malkus says, ‘‘when considering the full effect of the program.’’ Graham, co-editor of The Review of Economics and Statistics, says that ‘‘organizations are under a lot of pressure to do these studies and ‘prove’ their program works. Reasonable and informed people could look at the information in that report and come to widely different conclusions about the effect of Bridge on academic achievement as they measure it. It’s information, just not especially actionable information.”

“Another area of achievement that Bridge trumpets is the success of its students on the eighth-grade K.C.P.E. test. In 2015, according to Bridge, 63 percent of Bridge students who had been there for at least two years passed, compared with 49 percent of Kenyan students nationwide. But it’s unclear whether Bridge’s approach will be sustainable as the company grows. Former Bridge employees told me that in preparation for the 2015 exam, those on track to get a lower score were asked to repeat a year. The rest were taken to a residential cram school and prepped for the test by teachers who flew in from the United States.”

Tyre reports that BIA has had trouble hiring and retaining teachers. Turnover was high. Then BIA signed them to two-year contracts and warned that they would be docked the cost of training if they left before two years. That reduced churn. Teachers read their lessons from a script on a tablet called a Nook. The teachers are “managed” by text messages or robocalls.

“Some Bridge staff members described what they saw as a stark contrast between their hopes for Bridge and a grittier reality. One school administrator, an academy manager, described how the pressure to ensure that parents made their payments on time was disheartening. ‘‘I didn’t realize how hard it would be to talk to parents,’’ he said. ‘‘They’re ill, they’re out of work, they had a fire. No one is in the house who’s making any money. How can they pay when they have no money for food?’’ And working at Bridge, teachers said, can disrupt a career: Instructors are required to sign an employment agreement that includes a noncompete clause that prevents them from working at other nearby schools for a year after they leave.

“In the public and informal Kenyan schools I visited, school administrators welcomed my impromptu drop-ins warmly, showed me their classrooms and introduced me to their teachers, who spoke frankly about their challenges. Bridge teachers and managers say that sort of openness is not allowed. At some Bridge schools I visited unescorted, staff members said that they would need to contact superiors if I didn’t leave.”

The most peculiar part of Kristof’s article is his revenge to the situation of for-profit schools in the U.S., most of which are notoriously corrupt and thrive by using public funds for lavish marketing.

Kristof writes:

“But my travels have left me deeply skeptical that government schools in many countries can be easily cured of corruption, patronage and wretched governance, and in the meantime we fail a generation of children.

“In the United States, criticisms of for-profit schools are well grounded, for successive studies have found that vouchers for American for-profit schools hurt children at least initially (although the evidence also shows that in the U.S., well-run charters can help pupils).”

I don’t think Nick reads much about education, only what he sees in his own newspaper, although he clearly missed Peg Tyre’s article.

If he thinks governments are corrupt, he should take a look at the for-profit charter sector in the U.S. Furthermore his reference to voucher schools is wrong. The latest research shows that students who enroll in voucher schools (whether for-profit or not) lose ground academically, but if they persist for four years, they catch up to their peers in public schools. How is that helping children? If the same money were spent reducing class sizes in their public schools, all students would benefit.

A regular reader uses the pseudonym. He/she posted this comment about high school rankings:

“It isn’t just the US News & World Report school rankings that are dubious. It’s also Jay Mathews Challenge Index rankings at The Washington Post, which have been discussed on this blog.

“But there’s another set of rankings that are equally suspect. And no one is saying anything much about them. These are the school rankings produced by an outfit called Niche. And they are not very good.

“First, some history.

“Niche is a private, for-profit company. It began as College Prowler, a college guidebook company. Some questioned its college rankings and reviews, and its less-then-ethical practices. Some higher education experts criticized the “College Prowler scandal, in which the purveyor of college guides was caught impersonating both students and colleges on Facebook in order to mine data and drive traffic to its website.” More information on that scandal can be found here:

https://www.insidehighered.com/news/2008/12/22/frenemies-facebook

“The Chronicle of Higher Education noted that “College Prowler had formed a partnership with [another] company to ‘colonize’ Facebook groups for marketing purposes.”

“In 2015, the architectural engineering company SmithGroupJJR, one of the top such firms in the country, noted in its Perspectives blog that the Niche college rankings were of “questionable” value and – importantly – observed that Niche is working toward a future of trying to get its rankings used as ” a viable future replacement for SAT/ACT scores…”

“Niche now ranks public schools too, in each state and across states. It describes its methodology for “Best Academics” as “a comprehensive assessment of the quality of the academics at public school districts in the United States.”

“But it isn’t really that at all.

“Nearly a third of that assessment relies on dubious data. For “Best Academics,” Niche allots 10 percent to the number of students taking an Advanced Placement (AP) course, 10 percent for the percentage of students who “pass” an AP course, and 10 percent for SAT/ACT composite score. The Niche ‘best academics” assessment jumps to about fifty percent when student “interest” in an “elite” college is added in. Niche also uses state testing data.

“Research shows clearly that AP is not what people think it is. For example, a 2002 National Research Council comprehensive study of AP math and science courses and tests found they were “a mile wide and an inch deep” and did not conform to research-based principles of learning. A “3” on an AP test is considered a “passing” score, but it equates to a “C” in a college survey course, and most colleges – especially the “elite ones” – do not award any credit for a “3.” Students freely admit that they take AP course primarily to “look good” rather than to enrich their learning.

“As I’ve noted before, AP may work well for some students, especially those who are already “college-bound to begin with” (Klopfenstein and Thomas, 2010). As Geiser (2007) notes, “systematic differences in student motivation, academic preparation, family background and high-school quality account for much of the observed difference in college outcomes between AP and non-AP students.” College Board-funded studies do not control well for these student characteristics (even the College Board concedes that “interest and motivation” are keys to “success in any course”). Klopfenstein and Thomas (2010) find that when these demographic characteristics are controlled for, the claims made for AP disappear.

“A newer (2013) study from Stanford notes that “increasingly, universities seem
to be moving away from awarding credit for AP courses.” The study pointed out that “the impact of the AP program on various measures of college success was found to be negligible.” And it adds this: “definitive claims about the AP program and its impact on students and schools are difficult to substantiate.”

“But Niche has glommed onto the AP myth. The SAT and ACT too.

“SAT and ACT scores are little more than proxies for family income. They are not accurate predictors of success in college. College enrollment specialists say that their research finds the SAT predicts between 3 and 14 percent of the variance in freshman-year college grades, and after that nothing (the ACT is only marginally better). As the head of one college enrollment consulting company commented, “I might as well measure their shoe size.” Moreover, colleges – especially “elite” ones – use SAT and ACT scores to enhance their own prestige and to exclude poorer students from admissions.

“The Niche methodology for “best schools” also utilizes survey responses. Niche says that there must be a minimum of “11 unique respondents required at each district.” If that is for the entire district, then it’s a pretty doggone small sample. Moreover, the responses on which the rankings are made must come from “registered users.”

“All of this raises multiple questions. Why is Niche using suspect data like AP and SAT/ACT scores to rank schools? How – exactly – does one becomes a “registered user”? What are the demographics of Niche “registered users”? What does a sample “survey” that Niche gives to “registered users” look like?

“Guess what? If you asked Niche – even if you asked multiple times – you’d not get any answers.

“Interestingly, if you look at the Niche “best schools” rankings, all of them are interlinked with Realtor.com.

“Perhaps even more interesting, and bizarre, is that one central Virginia school division — a school division that touts AP courses and SAT scores, and that has gone all-in on the STEM fallacy, and that bills itself as “innovative” and “cutting edge” — has adopted the Niche rankings as the basis for a “market” that determines how it pays its teachers.

“The founder of College Prowler/Niche says this about Niche evolved out of College Prowler:

“Only a couple million people a year choose colleges. It’s not a market like Facebook…we needed more visitors and more dollars per visitor. How much traffic you have and how well you monetize this traffic is at the core of everything…So we rebranded from College Prowler to Niche…to a much larger market…We wanted to be a very big company, and now that’s what we’re on the path to do.”

“So, Niche, is “on the path” to market its mostly made-up school rankings to suckers, make big money doing it, and it has the help of a public school system that has already bought into all the educational goofiness that’s out there and yet has the gall to call itself “innovative.”

“I cannot help but to recall the line from Forrest Gump: “Stupid is as stupid does.””

Laura Chapman posted this comment, which I hope you will read:

Readers should know that GreatSchools.org website supports redlining. This is a non-profit website and organization in name only. Zillow, for example, pays a fee to lease all of the data and the ratings of schools. Specific schools can pay a fee to steer users to their websites.

The following supporters of redlining via the great schools website are not friends of public schools. They want to preserve schools and communities that are segregated by income, race, ethnicity, ownership of major assets (e.g., homes, automobiles), access to public services and amenities (e.g., public parks, libraries).

These supporters of segregation hide their agenda under a lot of rhetoric about saving children from failing schools. Wrong. These are the billionaires who are determined to misrepresent and undermine schools and neighborhoods through the irresponsible use of school “performance data,” especially scores on state standardized tests and more recently spurious surveys about school climate, the physical appearance of the school, and usually anonymous “customer” satisfaction ratings.

Major supporters of this redlining website are (logo displayed): Walton Family Foundation, Laura and John Arnold Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Carnegie Corporation of New York, Einhorn Family Charitable Trust; The Leona M and Harry B Helmsley Charitable Trust,
Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation

Other supporters: The Charles Hayden Foundation; Charles and Helen Schwab Foundation; Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation; David and Lucile Packard Foundation; Heising-Simons Foundation; The Joyce Foundation; Excellent Schools Detroit; The Kern Family Foundation; The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation; The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation;

Four other supporters of this website that forwards redlining sould be noted

America Achieves now calls itself “a non-profit accelerator” of large-scale system-wide change in public education. Achieve was and is the major promoter of the Common Core, college and career agenda, and associated tests. Achieve is funded by the Laura and John Arnold Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Charles Butt, the Heckscher Foundation For Children, the Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the George Kaiser Family Foundation, the Kern Family Foundation, the Edna McConnell Clark Foundation (among others).
EdChoice is the updated name for the Milton Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice. EdChoice wants market-based education, unlimited choice, but subsidized by tax dollars–The DeVos/Trump policy.
Innovate Public Schools is a California-based national organization that uses GreatSchools reports to promote “new” school formation, especially charter schools, through extensive parent “fellowships” and training.
Startup:Education is a grantmaking project of the Chan/Zuckerberg Initiative founded by Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg and his wife Priscilla Chan. Everything promoted by Start;Up Education and the larger Chan/Zuckerberg initiative is tech-based and mislabeled personalized learning.

There are other commercial supporters of the website. They pay fees for advertising space and market a range of products called “educational.”