August 16, 2013 |
Written by: David Sirota for the alternet.org
website. He is a best-selling author of
the new book "Back to Our Future: How the 1980s Explain the World We Live
In Now." He also hosts the morning show on AM760 in Colorado.
The recent scandal ousting Florida's
top education official shows the privatization movement is about profits.
Paradoxes come in all different
forms, but here’s one that perfectly fits this Gilded Age: The most significant
lesson from the ongoing debate about American education has little to do with
schools and everything to do with money. This lesson comes from a series of
recent scandals that expose the financial motives of the leaders of the
so-called education “reform” movement — the one that is trying to privatize
public schools.
The first set of scandals engulfed
Tony Bennett, the former Indiana school superintendent and much-vaunted poster
boy for the privatization push. After voters in that state responded to his
radical agenda by throwing him out of office, he was quickly hired to lead
Florida’s education system. At the same time, his wife not-so-coincidentally
landed a gig with the Florida-based Charter Schools USA, a for-profit company
that not only has an obvious interest in Bennett privatizing Florida schools,
but that also was previously awarded lucrative contracts by Bennett in Indiana.
Grotesque as it is to shroud such
self-enriching graft in the veneer of helping children, the self-dealing
controversy wasn’t Bennett’s most revealing scandal. That distinction goes to
recent news that Bennett changed the grades of privately run charter schools on
behalf of his financial backers. Indeed, as the Associated Press reported,
“When it appeared an Indianapolis charter school run by a prominent Republican
donor might receive a poor grade, Bennett’s education team frantically
overhauled his signature ‘A-F’ school grading system to improve the school’s
marks.” Yet, the Associated Press also reported that just a year before,
Bennett “declined to give two Indianapolis public schools (the) same
flexibility.”
In response, the American Federation
of Teachers is asking Indiana to release emails between Bennett and the
education foundation run by former Gov. Jeb Bush, R-Fla., another prominent
face of the “reform” movement. The union is requesting this correspondence
because of another scandal, this one publicized by the Washington Post.
Under the headline “E-mails Link
Bush Foundation, Corporations and Education Officials,” the newspaper earlier
this year reported on correspondence showing the foundation carefully shaping
its education “reform” agenda not around policies that would most help
children, but around legislation that would most quickly expand the profit
margins of its donors in the for-profit education industry.
Before all of these controversies,
of course, there were plenty of ways to see that something other than concern
for kids has been driving “reformers’” push to privatize public schools.
You could, for example, contrast
privatizers’ pro-charter-school propaganda with Stanford University’s study
showing that most charter schools perform no better — and often worse — than
traditional public schools.
You could juxtapose the Reuters
story screaming “Private Firms Eyeing Profits From U.S. Public Schools” next to
the New York Times headline blaring “Hedge Funds’ Leaders Rally for Charter
Schools.”
You could consider that the most
prolific fundraiser in the education “reform” movement is not someone with a
stellar record of education policy success, but instead Michelle Rhee, the
former Washington, D.C., schools chief whose tenure was defined by a massive cheating
scandal.
But maybe the best way to see that
profit is the motive of the education “reform” movement is to note that no
matter how many kids they harm or how many scandals they create, Bennett, Bush,
Rhee and other privatizers continue getting jobs, continue being touted as
education “experts” and continue raising huge money for their cause.
Thanks to that dynamic, education
politics is spotlighting a fact that should be taught in every civics class. It
is a fact that contradicts the pervasive rhetoric about meritocracy, but it is,
alas, a fact: If you are backed by enough money, you will almost always retain
your status in America — no matter how wrong you are and how many lives you
ruin.
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