The worst and the best education events of 2011

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Dec 31, 2011 7 Comments ›› leoniehaimson

Please add your suggestions of what I’ve missed in the comment section,

and Happy New Year to all!


Worst education news of 2011:

Schools suffer huge budget cuts across the nation & class sizes increases, with the support of billionaires like Bill Gates, Bloomberg & and other members of the .0001%, who send their own kids to expensive private schools and who claim that resources and class sizes don’t matter.

The child poverty rate grows even higher, with 11 states added to the list of those with rates of twenty percent or more.

Cheating scandals from Atlanta to DC to Philadelphia reveal the pressures of high-stakes testing.

The Gates Foundation continues its hegemony over education policy, providing funding to shady right-wing organization ALEC, responsible for much of the worst anti-union, anti-equity, and anti-kids legislation being passed all over the country.

Hundreds of millions of dollars from the Billionaire Boys Club of Gates, Broad, the Walton family, and the Koch brothers are funneled into creating and expanding numerous Astroturf organizations like Stand for Children, Students First, Teach Plus, 50Can, etc. all devoted towards spreading their tentacles into both political parties, to choke off democracy, demonize teachers, mandate more high-stakes testing, and privatize our public schools.

States rush to pass multiple laws in response to Race to the Top bribery, mandating unreliable teacher evaluation systems tied to test scores, alignment with the experimental (and controversial) Common Core standards, and the spread of charter schools; while the Obama administration holds out the promise of NCLB waivers based on the same damaging pre-conditions.

More districts follow the corporate model of Bloomberg & Co., by awarding useless merit pay schemes, divisive charter co-locations, heart-breaking school closings, and wasteful payments to consultants and private managers, rather than hiring teachers, expanding programs, or investing in the classroom.

The Gates Foundation, along with Rupert Murdoch’s Wireless Generation, creates a new limited corporation, euphemistically called The Learning Collaborative, to collect and crunch confidential teacher & student data, that states have voluntarily (and probably illegally) provided to them without parental consent.

Charters continue to expand rapidly, with over two million students enrolled, with hedge fund operators buying off politicians, while billionaires like Bloomberg donates big bucks to the campaigns of pro-charter school board members in Louisiana, to ensure their continued spread statewide – even after 70% of New Orleans schools have already been privatized.

The growth of online learning also continues apace, despite the lack of evidence of its efficacy, impelled not by the priorities of parents or what’s good for kids but by the greed of edu-entrepreneurs and profiteers.

Best education news of 2011

The popular uprisings in Wisconsin spark a national wakeup call about the heinous attempts to undermine the rights of public sector workers, galvanizing resistance throughout the country and leading to the repeal of Ohio’s anti-union and anti-teacher legislation, SB 5.

The emergence of Occupy Wall St sparks protests nationwide and impels a sharp awareness about the widening income gap, and the way in which the 1% has perverted our politics and educational policies, with mic checks taking over school board meetings from NYC to Rochester to Chicago and elsewhere.

The gathering and amplification of opposition voices at the SOS March in DC, and the appearance of Matt Damon as one of the first bonafide celebrities to help us push back against the big money and power of corporate education reform

The independent parent voice grows in influence, with the emergence of Parents Across America and its affiliates, speaking out about how the current policies are undermining our schools, and propounding an alternative vision of progressive education reform.

Diane Ravitch’s star grows ever brighter, as the inspirational and intellectual leader of the anti-corporate reform movement, as she travels the country, headlines at the SOS march, appears on Jon Stewart’s Daily Show, while her bestselling book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System, comes out in paperback.

The National Academy of Sciences and academic experts release multiple reports, attesting to the invalid, reductionist, and intellectually vapid nature of test based accountability systems, value –added teacher evaluation, and merit pay.

The revulsion against high stakes testing grows, and a national opt –out movement emerges, energized by the movie Race to Nowhere and brilliant thinkers like Yong Zhao.

Mayoral control is unmasked as a failure at improving schools or student outcomes in either NYC or Chicago, and most recently, the mayor of Rochester NY gives up his attempt to take over the city’s schools.

Cathie Black is fired as NYC chancellor, putting to rest the notion that a successful business career is good preparation for running a large school system, while Broad-trained superintendents are ousted from their positions due to popular opposition, including Maria Goodloe-Johnson in Seattle, Arlene Ackerman in Philadelphia, and Lavonne Sheffield in Rockford, Illinois, (though other Broadies, like Jean Claude Brizard and John Covington , merely move from one district to another, in a dance of the lemons.)

Independent and progressive school board members are elected in Seattle WA, Wake County NC and elsewhere.

Jonah Edelman and Stand for Children are self-outed as corporate reform toadies.

After sleeping through much of the Bloomberg administration, the NY Times finally begins publishing actual investigative education reporting locally, by Fernanda Santos and Anna Phillips, publishes trenchant opinion pieces critiquing school “choice” like this and this; features a pivotal piece by Sam Dillon on the overweening influence of the Gates Foundation, runs a terrific series on online learning and gives a platform to the invaluable Michael Winerip, who returns to the scene just in time to rake clueless educrats, charter operators, and oligarchs over the coals.

NY principals join the battle vs. inane and unworkable teacher evaluation systems.

The real reformers take center stage in the movie “The Inconvenient Truth behind Waiting for Superman” a documentary made for pennies by NYC teachers, now distributed in all continents and shown in every state, without any promotional budget.

Finally, despite the big bucks and political muscle of the Billionaire Boys Club, the hedge funders, the privatisers, and the other edu-entrepreneurs, real stakeholders, including parents and teachers dominate the online debate through tweeting and blogging – and use social media tools (which are free, after all) to spread the truth about #corpreform and #realreform.

I will end with a quote from my mentor and hero, Diane Ravitch:

“”We need to say, again and again, that they may have money and hold the reins of power (for now), but their ideas are failing. And now the public is getting it. And the louder we are, in whatever forums open to us, the more the mask will fall away, and the public will understand that the corporate reformers have hijacked the language of reform to protect the privileges and power of the 1% and we are reaching the public because we are many and they are few.”

Thanks to my friends and compadres at Parents Across America for many of these suggestions, and apologies if the list is too NY-centric. And let’s all hope for a better 2012 for parents, our children and public schools everywhere.


Comments

  1. [...] The worst and the best education events of 2011 « Parents Across … … anti-corporate reform movement, as she travels the country, headlines at the SOS march, appears on Jon Stewart's Daily Show, while her bestselling book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System, comes out in paperback. … http://parentsacrossamerica.org/ — Sat, 31 Dec 2011 10:04:33 -0800 [...]

  2. Sandra says:

    Florida - Best Education News of 2011
    Finally, we see more main stream coverage exposing the facts related to Florida legislators with direct connections or via family members to charter operations; exposing Frank Biden’s connection to Mavericks Chart H.S. (V.P. Biden’s brother); and exposing the influence of Jeb Bush’s Foundation in Governor Scott’s staff and on Florida’s education policy-making.

    Florida Supreme Court allows law suit to proceed regarding the state’s constitutional requirement to properly fund public schools after a challenge by legislators to stop the case.

    Florida - Worst Education News of 2011
    Slashed budgets and diverted funding impacts public schools causing elimination of some classes and overcrowding in high school electives. The learning environments narrow to common core standardization.

    I am sure there are more to add. Important for all to watch the way the wind blows in Florida.

  3. Steve Bailey says:

    I can’t resist tooting my own horn here. I am a Florida ex-teacher. This past August, I wrote, directed, and starred in “Testing: A Week in the Life of an Ex-Teacher,” an autobiographical comedy based on my experiences as a former teacher and standardized-test scorer. This whole standardized test mess is long overdue for satire, and for two weekends in August, at least, I got my revenge. Well-attended and -received, by the way.

  4. I agree that one of the best things to happen in 2011 was that the NY Times finally began to catch on and do what news organizations in a democratic country are supposed to do, i.e. provide information to the public. An additional indicator of this was the publication of two major articles by Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist Stephanie Saul. Both of Saul’s pieces presented some of the egregious abuses being perpetrated by greedy charter school organizations that were born into this earth by the corporate education reform machine.

    Saul’s first piece (June 2011) was a front page, above-the-fold exposé about the concerning business practices of the Cosmos Foundation, a Texas-based CMO operated by members of the shadowy and controversial Gulen movement. In the late 1990s, this opportunistic and imperialistically-minded religious group discovered that, as long as they worked clandestinely, they could hop on the U.S. charter school train and become the recipient of many, many millions of taxpayer dollars, supplied annually and in perpetuity, for the operation of their American schools. This was a fantastic deal for the Gulen movement because almost all of their other schools around the world happen to be private. Saul’s article raised up public awareness a huge notch, triggered a state investigation, and forced some legislators and other public officials in Texas to think twice about accepting anymore of those *free* (undisclosed to be Gulenist-sponsored and guided) propaganda-delivery trips to Turkey.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/06/07/education/07charter.html
    http://www.statesman.com/news/texas-politics/some-lawmakers-have-second-thoughts-about-turkey-trips-1548440.html

    Saul’s second piece (December 2011) was an examination of online charter schools, focusing on the for-profit provider K12, Inc. The information presented in this article immediately sunk the price of K12 stock, and launched an investigation into potential securities fraud by K12.
    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/12/13/education/online-schools-score-better-on-wall-street-than-in-classrooms.html?pagewanted=all
    http://markets.on.nytimes.com/research/stocks/news/press_release.asp?docTag=201112161900BIZWIRE_USPRX____BW6162&feedID=600&press_symbol=9634704

    Since these stories are just beginning to reveal tip of the dirty iceberg, I’m looking forward to more stunning revelations about the misdeeds of corporate ed reform in 2012.

    Happy New Year to all!
    Sharon, PAA co-founder
    @sharonoak on Twitter

  5. THE STRUGGLE CONTINUES….

  6. More great news! In August of 2011 a grass roots citizen group, Taxpayers For Public Education, successfully won a permanent injunction to stop a proposed voucher program from becoming a reality in Douglas County Colorado. Read more about our success at taxpayersforpubliceducation.org.

  7. Brad Wann says:

    Taxpayers For Public Education could not win the School Board seats need to stop this so they went to court and did it with a lefty judge that has halted the opportunity of Children and Parents to Choose where they are educated. The Schools were going to lose most of those kids in their PPR and the Douglas County BOE was attempting to do two things 1) Give Parents Choice, 2) Get something back from the children that were leaving anyway. We educate our children on $6,200 PPR and Denver gets $14,000 PPR The dumber you are the more you get in Colorado. Denver had a 50% failure rate. Way to go TFPE, Teacher 1, Children 0. The appeal is in process..

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