The
number of private-sector managed charter schools has dramatically
increased during the past decade as the corporate education reform
Cartel has funded the election of Republican-controlled state
legislatures and governors across the nation. The current status of
charter schools was leveraged in 2009 when Republican operatives
created a national plan for redistricting state legislative and
Congressional districts to give Republicans a distinct advantage in
political races.
Since
that time, as David Daley noted in his recently published book,
Ratf***ed (The True Story Behind the Secret Plan to Steal
America’s Democracy), the initial scheme cost just $30
million dollars and has resulted in Republicans gaining control of 31
state legislative chambers, 25 states where Republicans have a
trifecta (control of both houses of the legislature and the
governorship), and Republican majorities in the U.S. House of
Representatives and the U.S. Senate. Nearly all of these
Republicans, and a rising number of Democrats, have lined up to
support corporate charter schools that the Cartel has been
systematically turning into corporate profit centers. Below is a
brief analysis of how charters have come to be a force in K-12 public
education.
What
Charters Were Supposed To Be: Charter schools were conceived in
1974 by the late University of Massachusetts education professor, Ray
Budde, and began being formed in the early 1990s. The late Al
Shanker, former president of the American Federation of Teachers
(AFT), was an early champion and promoter of teacher - and
community-centered charters as a way to focus on low-income,
under-performing students, and allowing for innovative approaches to
their instruction. But by 1995, he had soured on the concept as he
recognized that corporations were moving into the charter school
sector to refocus them as profit centers.
Thus,
a well-intentioned educational concept has morphed into an emerging
education tsunami that is wreaking further economic and social
devastation in low-income communities—predominantly those of
color. As of 2010, approximately eighty percent of charter schools
established has been in small and large urban centers where African
American and Hispanic students are the overwhelming majority of the
student populations.
Urban
Targets for Corporate Charters: The major targets of corporate
charters are: Chicago; Boston; Cleveland; New York City; San
Francisco; Newark and Camden, New Jersey; Los Angeles; New York;
Philadelphia; New Orleans; and Washington D.C. and numerous others.
Additionally, there has also been a precipitous decline in the number
of teachers of color in these cities. Moreover, the distinguished
University of Chicago professor, Charles M. Payne, has stated,
charter schools are “mediocre interventions that are only
accepted because of the race of the children served.” In
other words, poor parents and community leaders have been steamrolled
by their own legislative representatives and other legislators all of
whom are funded by the Cartel to pass school choice legislation.
Furthermore,
the Cartel, comprised of the Koch Bros.; Betsy DeVos (President-Elect
Donald Trump’s newly selected education secretary); the Walton,
Gates, Arnold, Fisher, and Bradley Foundations; and an army of CEOs
have formed and subsidized grassroots organizations and marketing
schemes (TV and radio ads and free laptops) to appeal to urban
parents for their support of corporate charters and other school
choice initiatives. At the same time, the Cartel’s legislative
surrogates have substantially reduced funding for public education in
the states Republicans control, severely limiting the ability of
urban school districts, which serve disproportionately poor student
populations, to meet the academic and social needs of their pupils.
North
Carolina, Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Michigan have been at the
forefront of this reduced funding for public education. In
Michigan, Betsy and Richard DeVos have jointly led the effort to
massively defund public schools and replace them with corporate
charters, to a large extent, in five majority-minority school
districts: Benton Harbor, Detroit, Highland Park, Muskegon, and
Benton Harbor. The DeVos’s also bankrolled the legislature to
remove nearly all measures of charter school accountability and to
enable non-certified teachers to teach in Detroit (which is not
allowed anywhere else in Michigan), while claiming that this scenario
provides minority parents with optimum and high quality school
choice.
This
charter school scam has been perpetrated by a number of movies
extolling the virtues and the academic success of charter schools;
three of the most prominent are: The Cartel (2009), The Lottery
(2010), and Waiting for Superman (2010). Waiting for Superman was
heavily advertised and nominated for an Academy Award.
President Obama also hosted the students (who appeared in the film)
and their parents at the White House after he signed Race to the Top
(RTTT) into law, which increased the number of charter schools
nationwide, giving them a major boost.
In
reality, however, roughly 17 percent of charter schools perform
better than public schools, 37 percent perform significantly worse,
and 46 percent perform about the same as their surrounding public
schools. This occurs despite the fact that charter schools have the
freedom to counsel out, expel, and remove students without a due
process hearing. For example, researchers at the National Education
Policy Center (NEPC) found that 40 percent of African American males
who enrolled in the widely heralded KIPP Public Charter Schools do
not survive to graduate. And a substantial number of charter school
students return to the public schools in their service area from
which they came during each school year.
Charter
Opponents’ Dilemma: Even with these statistics, opponents
of charters still believe that there are enough high performing
charter schools with whom they can collaborate. These activists and
some unions maintain this view irrespective of the aforementioned
data. They fail to recognize the fact that all charter schools
define themselves as high performing, along with the print and
broadcast media, and no one seems to challenge this falsehood. For
example, Michigan charter schools in the low-income communities of
color annually rank in the lowest percentiles of public school
performance.
Neither Gov. Rick
Snyder, state legislators, nor Betsy and Dick DeVos have made any
attempt to address this issue. These poor academic outcomes in
Michigan’s charter schools have been repeated in Philadelphia
and Chester, Pennsylvania; Baltimore; Washington, D.C.; and Newark,
Trenton, and Camden, New Jersey. Nonetheless, public education
stakeholders remain committed to working with so-called successful
charters when the absolute numbers of such schools continue to
decline. Corporate charter operators benefit financially and in
public relations as long as their adversaries acknowledge that there
are many good charters.
These
naive views serve to prop up a deeply flawed alternative educational
system that is now openly victimizing poor children and denying them
equal opportunity for a thorough and efficient education. Supporters
of public education persist in the belief that the corporate
education reform Cartel will “play fair” while watching
privatization advocates reduce accountability for charter schools,
commit fraud and theft of public dollars, and leave children in
poverty on their own—educationally, socially and economically.
In
the interim, the Cartel members will continue to cash the charter
school checks.
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