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April 29, 2010 - Issue 373 |
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The Looming Educational Catastrophe is
Scary. Indeed. |
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Obama Administration Education Secretary Arne Duncan was in Peoria, Il last week expressing alarm that some cities and states, facing a financial crunch are reducing � or contemplating reducing - the school week to four days. He also bemoaned the fact that nationwide as many as 300,000 teachers could be out of their jobs when the summer vacation is over. �We�re fighting to stop these massive layoffs,� he said. �We know school districts aren�t cutting to the fat, they�re cutting to the bone.� A couple of weeks ago, Duncan told Congress that �literally tens of millions of students will experience these budget cuts in one way or another� and �Schools, districts, and states that are working so hard to improve will see their reforms undermined by these budget problems.� Earlier
this month, Why is it that I don�t sense any emergency in the public discourse? Why can I count on one hand the stories I�ve read in the major mass media over the past few month about it? Why do I think I should be reading searing editorials and public statements from politicians about this looming catastrophe? I know some teachers, good ones, and they talk about it in alarming terms all the time; not just about the fact that they go from day to day wondering when and if a pink slip will arrive in their mail boxes but, more importantly about how the kids are being shortchanged. Citing school cutbacks slated for the areas around the nation�s capitol, Nick Anderson reported recently in the Washington Post, �From coast to coast, public schools face the threat of tens of thousands of layoffs this year in a fiscal crunch likely to result in larger class sizes and fewer programs to help students in need.� Sen. Tom Harkin (D - Iowa), who heads two Senate Committees that deal with education, said, �We must act soon. This is not something we can fix in August. We have to fix it now.� Harkin has proposed school aid legislation providing for $23 billion to help derail the threatened layoffs. September
is four months away and one thing is certain: the public is not be adequately
alerted to the seriousness of the situation and mobilized to do anything
about it. We would know far less about how critical things are in the
schools had not students in Besides, the only sufficient prescription for overcoming the crisis is obvious: find the money. What conclusion are we to draw from the fact that the richest and most powerful nation and most technologically advanced capitalist country cannot come up with the resources necessary to fund its educational system? This is not a technical problem, or even a financial one. It�s political. No
sooner than Harkin issued his challenge than some on the political Right
made it clear their just-say-no policy extends to schools and students
as well. Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.), who
at one time held the post The stimulus measure enacted by Congress last year provided for $100 billion in emergency education financing and it is estimated that over 300,000 jobs were saved in the nation�s schools as a result. But that money is running out. The White House has thus far refused to go back to Congress with another stimulus proposal and the Republicans and their �blue dog� allies have made it clear they would fight such a measure in any case. I had intended to write this week about swimming pools, prompted by the fact that the City Council in San Jose, Ca. had voted 10 to one reduce the city�s summer swim program to two pools. It is part of an effort to deal with a municipal shortfall of $116.2 million. The dissenting member proposed reducing the pay and benefits of City Hall janitors to keep the pools open (Good Lord!). I digress. But not really, for things like this are occurring across the nation. It fits right in with getting rid of school nurses, cutting back on physical education programs and eliminating music and art instruction. Or,
take adult education. �Here�s the scoop on our state�s latest naughty
secret,� wrote �All of this is occurring with scant warning or consideration for the teachers, administrators and staff who have dedicated their lives to adult education or for the students who have invested time and money in the programs, which often seem to be their only hope for upward mobility,� wrote Russell, �Today, they are left to flounder while the most effective institution they have to learn our language and culture is shuttered. �Paradoxically-owing to the recession and high unemployment-adult education enrollment was increasing, just as many classes or entire programs were decimated.� We
shouldn�t think this situation is unrelated to economic and social class.
Public education didn�t just drop out of the sky. It is the result of
an historic struggle to expand democracy and extend education to everyone
- including the working classes and African Americans and other people
of color. As with other gains, like security in old age (Medicare and
Social Security), the very principle is under attack. �The news says we
are watching the death of public education before our eyes,� wrote columnist
Derrick Jackson in the Boston Globe April 6. � Oh, and spare me the pundits that call themselves part of the �radical center� who want any new immigration law to contain a �guest worker� clause, not for any huddled masses but for imported science and technical workers. In other words, identify what categories of workers we need most and then outsource their education to other countries. It�s delusional to think that in the near or long term this would be good strategy for the country or anything but an insult to the young women and men in our communities shortchanged by a decimated educational system. What
gets me about all of this is that the pundits and politicians, who forever
extol the virtues of �free market� capitalism, are constantly telling
us how important education is. It is forever presented to us as the answer
to unemployment, the key to social mobility and the essential ingredient
in maintaining Michael J. Petrilli, who worked in the Education Department under President George W. Bush, told the New York Times that Harkin�s proposal could attract significant support. Even still, Petrilli said, �Is the federal government going to try to prop up states and districts forever. �If not, we�re just kicking the can down the road. Eventually, districts need to learn to live with less.� Now that�s an inspiring message. BlackCommentator.com Editorial Board member
Carl Bloice is a writer in |
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