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Knopp and Bale write: "Whatever their original intent, charters are fundamentally restructuring the school system by placing it in private - often for-profit - hands."

Philadelphia announced a plan in May to close 64 schools and outsource 25 more. (photo: Max Klingensmith/flickr)
Philadelphia announced a plan in May to close 64 schools and outsource 25 more. (photo: Max Klingensmith/flickr)


Why Are Our Public Schools Up for Sale?

By Sarah Knopp, Jeff Bale, OtherWords

20 August 12

 

While charter proponents claim that their schools are less bureaucratic, more efficient, and more effective, the evidence fails to back those claims.

ack-to-school" sales seem to start earlier every year. These days, more than binders and backpacks are on offer. Now, public schools themselves are for sale.

In July, Muskegon Heights, Michigan became the first American city to hand its entire school district over to a charter-school operator.

More than 1.6 million American kids attend charter schools, which emerged in the early 1990s. Whatever their original intent, charters are fundamentally restructuring the school system by placing it in private - often for-profit - hands. They're making teachers and staff work harder and longer for less pay, usually without union benefits or protection.

In May, Philadelphia's schools announced a plan to close 64 schools and outsource 25 more to so-called "achievement networks" run by charter operators. The goal: that 40 percent of Philadelphia's children attend charters by 2017. Detroit's plans are similar.

Restructuring may seem the best option. Urban school districts have long struggled to serve their students. And many of us know firsthand - as former students, teachers, administrators, or parents - that many of America's public schools require radical change.

Charter proponents claim that their schools are less bureaucratic and more efficient, and thus save taxpayer money. Yet evidence is mounting to show that the opposite is true. When Philadelphia first announced its restructuring plans, the budget earmarked for charters stood at $38 million. By July, that figure was "rounded up" to an astonishing $139 million. Since when is a $100-million cost-overrun a sign of cost-effectiveness?

Moreover, charter proponents argue that competition and choice pressure all schools to perform better. This assumes that schools operate on even playing fields. However, Detroit officials followed their restructuring plans by imposing a contract on teachers that caps class sizes at more than 40 students starting in kindergarten and at a staggering 61 for sixth grade through high school. No school can possibly "compete" under such conditions.



(art: Khalil Bendib/OtherWords)


Finally, consider Muskegon Heights. The city hired charter operator Mosaica Education, a for-profit company premised on earning more from contracts to run schools than it pays out in expenses. In fact, Mosaica expects to earn as much as $11 million in its Muskegon Heights deal. That's roughly the same amount as the current budget deficit that officials gave as the reason to hire this outfit in the first place. Apparently, officials weren't troubled by Mosaica's record elsewhere in Michigan - its six other charter schools performed on average at the 13th percentile, according to the state's annual ranking in 2011.

That none of these developments has made national headlines is mind-boggling. Perhaps this has something to do with the institutional racism that led to the Supreme Court's crucial Brown v. Board of Education ruling in 1954.

Muskegon Heights is a highly segregated African-American community adjacent to the predominantly white Muskegon. In Muskegon Heights, median household income stood at just over $26,600 in 2010, with over 30 percent of residents living below the poverty line.

It's primarily in minority-majority communities like this where schools are being sold off to the highest bidder, regardless of those bidders' track records.

The same story has played out in Chicago for almost a decade. The city has closed dozens of neighborhood schools and considered replacing them with charters. What's different in Chicago, though, is that the Chicago Teachers Union is leading the fight against this agenda. After several years of building strong alliances with parent and community groups, the union is challenging Democratic Mayor Rahm Emanuel's attack on public schools. In July, Emanuel blinked and agreed to reinstate 477 laid-off art, music, PE, and foreign language teachers.

The union is demonstrating that teachers and students share common interests. Together with their parent and community allies, Chicago's teachers and their unions are proving that they can put public schools back in the public's hands and win the funding required for the world-class education that all our children deserve.


 

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+22 # df312 2012-08-20 19:22
I can't speak for Detroit, but in Salt Lake City the charter schools are not required to hire accredited teachers. Also, there have been charges nationally that the charters are teaching canned lessons, no real TEACHING involved. This is one of those areas- there have always been private schools- but if you don't want little Johnny to go to school with "them" then you need to pay for it by yourself, and not bleed the public system. Our schools have been notoriously underfunded. Here, the top officials make ridiculous salaries while the workers and students suffer. One of the things that made America great was our public school system. We need to support it and the teachers there.
 
 
+29 # hwatt 2012-08-20 20:54
Why Are Our Public Schools Up for Sale?

Because the entire system is up for sale; prisons, schools, hospitals, judicial, legislative, and executive.
Greed and avarice guiding concepts.
 
 
+5 # Billy Bob 2012-08-20 22:13
"Why are our public schools up for sale?"

Because it's repuglican philosophy in action. They don't believe in anything serving the public good. Unless it artificially supports the extra costs of subsidizing a profit they see no value in it.
 
 
+6 # 1984 2012-08-21 12:05
In addition, I think it is because they want to dumb down Americans starting from kindergarted up--turn them into mindless jelly sheep who will still think they were lucky to be born in America and therefor keep the 1% in place.
 
 
+11 # Trueblue Democrat 2012-08-21 03:16
Look who Obama put in charge of education in his cabinet. A snake-oil salesman for the for-profit charter school biz.

But you're right: move along folks, nothing to see here. Just keep moving.
 
 
+12 # Barbara K 2012-08-21 03:59
These schools were paid for by TAXPAYERS, that is us. The Tbagging governors, etc, should not be able to sell them so that the children are forced to attend pay for attending these for profit schools to make their cronies wealthy. The children have a right to a FREE education. I am a Michigan resident and the governor has even mentioned tearing down the public schools. We all know that is so that they cannot be used again. He is using all kinds of sneaky ways to screw the residents and we are now living under a dictatorship and it looks like there are some others who need to be recalled including the Secretary of State.
 
 
-17 # MidwestTom 2012-08-21 04:13
I have long had a theory that the public school decline started in the 1960's when one could avoid being drafted for Vietnam by staying in school and becoming a teacher. Draft resisters could either go to Canaca, or become a teacher. I thank that maybe as many as 20^ of those entering teaching were there simply to avoid Vietnam , and had no passion for teaching. This is strictly my theory, supported by several examples that I know personally
 
 
+7 # Glen 2012-08-21 06:02
You are speaking only of those who sought to become teachers, not the government or school systems. Certainly there have always been rotten teachers, regardless of where their attitude originated, but the overall system is failing for many many reasons, mostly politics and privatization.

There were states in the eighties and nineties that called up corporate leaders or lawyers who were brought in to advise on school standards and structure. Not one person directly connected to schools themselves, and I feel sure most of those on "advisory" boards hadn't been a classroom since graduation. Schools have been a political football for a long time.

No care is being taken to meet the needs of kids, just politicians and the wealthy. Certainly, with millions of kids in the U.S. requiring a decent education, that's a tough row to hoe, but local communities could get to work on it and keep their schools out of the corporate system.
 
 
+7 # dkonstruction 2012-08-21 07:38
Quoting MidwestTom:
I have long had a theory that the public school decline started in the 1960's when one could avoid being drafted for Vietnam by staying in school and becoming a teacher. Draft resisters could either go to Canaca, or become a teacher. I thank that maybe as many as 20^ of those entering teaching were there simply to avoid Vietnam , and had no passion for teaching. This is strictly my theory, supported by several examples that I know personally


I've always wanted to go to Canaca (sic). I've heard it's lovely this time of year. I've also heard that since the Canacians have not decimated their public school system that Canacian children still know how to spell. Thank you for demonstrating so clearly why we need a massive reinvestment in our public school system...not only so that our kids learn how to spell but, more importantly, learn how to think so that they understand that a theory is not proven because "I know personally" someone (or even "several examples") that proves my theory.
 
 
+1 # reiverpacific 2012-08-21 17:36
Quoting dkonstruction:
Quoting MidwestTom:
I have long had a theory that the public school decline started in the 1960's when one could avoid being drafted for Vietnam by staying in school and becoming a teacher. Draft resisters could either go to Canaca, or become a teacher. I thank that maybe as many as 20^ of those entering teaching were there simply to avoid Vietnam , and had no passion for teaching. This is strictly my theory, supported by several examples that I know personally


I've always wanted to go to Canaca (sic). I've heard it's lovely this time of year. I've also heard that since the Canacians have not decimated their public school system that Canacian children still know how to spell. Thank you for demonstrating so clearly why we need a massive reinvestment in our public school system...not only so that our kids learn how to spell but, more importantly, learn how to think so that they understand that a theory is not proven because "I know personally" someone (or even "several examples") that proves my theory.

Heh-heh!
 
 
+4 # mike/ 2012-08-21 09:05
i really resent what you say. you lump a lot of men into a stereotype when the vast majority of teachers were/are female; your argument lacks proof simply by the numbers;

i always wanted to teach and as far as Canaca (sic) both my father & uncle, decorated WWII veterans, separately came to me and told me to avoid going to Vietnam at all costs, even if it meant leaving the country; they strongly believed it to be an illegal, dirty little war.

the pure fact of the matter is that there were great strides being made in the 1970's in Education; in the 80's business decided to enter the fray; corporations told us that kids were coming to them lacking skills.

the fact is, no matter what kids were taught, these corporations "untaught" them because they wanted things done their way. Charter schools are the natural outgrowth of the interference from business.

i also have seen a definite backlash starting. there is a movement afoot to readopt the beliefs of John Dewey and other 'progressive' models because parents are catching onto the hypocrisy of business...
 
 
+9 # 1984 2012-08-21 12:09
Look up statistics! Public schools started to decline when Regan was President, not in the 60s. As a student of the 60s, we were taught to analyze, think, research and not to just accept a sound bite as true. Now memorization, not thinking, is the bulk of "education" (thanks to GWBush.)
 
 
+2 # MJnevetS 2012-08-22 06:02
I have long had a theory that the public school decline started with de-funding and the politically motivated firing of real teachers and educators (You know, the ones who try to create independent thinkers, those that are an anathema to Rick Santorum)...and , what do you know, my theory is actually backed up by empirical evidence, not just hyperbole.
 
 
+16 # skipb48 2012-08-21 05:01
Hey, MidwestTom, your talking about me! I got into teaching during the that war and taught for 34 years, avoiding the draft didn't take that long.
Teaching is a wonderful and rewarding profession, yes, there are some poor teachers just as there are poor practitioners in all jobs. But 80 to 90 percent of us are hardworking dedicated professionals hamstrung by lack of support from parents and administrators that feel that little Johnny can do no wrong and the poor grades are due to problems with the teacher rather than lack of effort on Johnny's part.
Education is a type of investment, you only get a lot out of it if you are willing to put a lot into it. That includes parents!
 
 
+6 # Glen 2012-08-21 08:59
Skipb, you are so right. You lived through the evolution of families and students into something other than respectful individuals maintaining an attitude of "we can all learn and will learn all through life". I did, too, so continue to be dismayed that local communities don't organize to assist schools.

However, the entire social system in the U.S. has changed, so families and students were bound to follow suit. Quite a loss.
 
 
+9 # Eliza D 2012-08-21 05:35
I have an acquaintance who is part of Teach for America and is licensed to teach music. She was recently sent by this organization to interview in Connecticut for a teaching position. When she arrived for the interview, she learned the position was for a Science teacher and lamented the fact that she could not take the job. The principal told her it was okay, she could learn as she went along! Thankfully, she felt that it would be a disservice to students to have a teacher who had no training in science, and refused the job.
There is a pernicious movement in education to bring in young, inexperienced teachers to teach for a few years, and then move on, so that districts do not have to pay the higher salaries,benefi ts and pensions to experienced teachers. Don't be fooled. Experience matters. Would you want a person without an MD to take out your appendix?
 
 
+6 # reiverpacific 2012-08-21 07:48
Well "Duh" again!
You don't need a PHd or even a high-school Ed' to to figger this'n out.
The last thing the Plutocracy/Corp orate state wants is enquiring minds but Charter schools that will always put the rationalization of power-elite-dom inance and rape of the planet in a positive light, so if they ever get to the college stage, they'll be nice, obedient MBA's or Scientists for the military-indust rial-prison complex, the aggressive remainder being recruited into the militarized police force, ground army and the drones servicing the fast-food/Walma rt complex.
Nice easy plan, very totalitarian and 1984'sh and creeping closer every week.
 
 
+3 # Buddha 2012-08-21 14:58
Pretty simple. They are non-union, and eviscerating public schools has the side-benefit of reducing the power of the teachers' unions, who tend to back the Democratic party. On top of the obvious "way to make a buck", the other goal is reduce the resources going to public schools to so decrease their quality that it further keeps the poor who can't pay for private schools from scholastic advancement and possibly challenging the children of the well-off for the few remaining good jobs we have in this country. And the final benefit: an ignorant public is easier to manipulate and lead, sheep are so much easier to cut the throat of than a human with a brain.
 
 
0 # MJay 2012-08-26 08:27
reiverpacific
you manifest good perception of the 'system' care topursue it?
MJay
 

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