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Tuesday, April 12, 2011

"Creating a rationale for corporate takeover" of our education system.

I keep telling myself my kids still stand a chance at getting a good education. Maybe not as broad as it could have been, but nothing like the Republican reform we're about to see rolled out across America. It's funny too, because most people aren't crazy about sending their tax dollars to private unaccountable schools. Town halls and polls have demonstrated their dislike, yet Republicans unabashedly steamroll ahead.

From Schools Matter, Chris Hedges on the decline of education in the U.S.. This is a short section of a much longer commentary at Commondreams.

A nation that destroys its systems of education, degrades its public information, guts its public libraries and turns its airwaves into vehicles for cheap, mindless amusement becomes deaf, dumb and blind. It prizes test scores above critical thinking and literacy. It celebrates rote vocational training and the singular, amoral skill of making money. It churns out stunted human products, lacking the capacity and vocabulary to challenge the assumptions and structures of the corporate state. It funnels them into a caste system of drones and systems managers. It transforms a democratic state into a feudal system of corporate masters and serfs. 
Teachers, their unions under attack, are becoming as replaceable as minimum-wage employees at Burger King. We spurn real teachers—those with the capacity to inspire children to think, those who help the young discover their gifts and potential—and replace them with instructors who teach to narrow, standardized tests. These instructors obey. They teach children to obey. And that is the point. The No Child Left Behind program, modeled on the “Texas Miracle,” is a fraud. It worked no better than our deregulated financial system. But when you shut out debate these dead ideas are self-perpetuating. 
“Imagine,” said a public school teacher in New York City, who asked that I not use his name, “going to work each day knowing a great deal of what you are doing is fraudulent, knowing in no way are you preparing your students for life in an ever more brutal world, knowing that if you don’t continue along your scripted test prep course and indeed get better at it you will be out of a job. Up until very recently, the principal of a school was something like the conductor of an orchestra: a person who had deep experience and knowledge of the part and place of every member and every instrument. In the past 10 years we’ve had the emergence of both [Mayor] Mike Bloomberg’s Leadership Academy and Eli Broad’s Superintendents Academy, both created exclusively to produce instant principals and superintendents who model themselves after CEOs. How is this kind of thing even legal? How are such ‘academies’ accredited? What quality of leader needs a ‘leadership academy’? What kind of society would allow such people to run their children’s schools? The high-stakes tests may be worthless as pedagogy but they are a brilliant mechanism for undermining the school systems, instilling fear and creating a rationale for corporate takeover. There is something grotesque about the fact the education reform is being led not by educators but by financers and speculators and billionaires.” 
Teachers, under assault from every direction, are fleeing the profession. 

2 comments:

  1. While it's nightmarishly true that there are those who dream of corporate take-over of our school system, and hold up already existing Corporate schools like ones in Florida as shining examples of their crappy Think Tank's brilliance. I find this framing of the issue as you have here disturbing. As disturbing (okay, almost) as the initiative itself.

    Could we keep it about the children initially and then as we move on to a broader view - could we not make this about the Holy Teachers? While I am horrified at the assault on collective bargaining myself, I also feel that the way teacher's Mouthpieces have framed their "pleas" over these last few years has done a lot to strengthen the Walker attack. Segments of the public have been alienated, have a negative view of public servants and those who chose the PR blurbs that have been representing the Teachers carry some of the blame, have played into the hands of their enemies.

    While I'm sure I will not be understood on that remark, I will make it, and then move on to my larger point. Which is, this assault on schools just stops dead at "it will hurt teachers".

    It threatens all of society. It's not about keeping ppl happy with cheap entertainments. it's about re-making society so that people are once again tractable, ill-educated, superstitious, manipulable persons with no idea of their rights (also eroding) and their own history.

    To frame this as "teaching profession will no longer be rewarding" and "teachers are leaving their jobs" omg. really? That's the danger here?

    Many young people grow up, having been educated in various of our public schools WITHOUT the ability to thin independently, or reason critically as it is now. Some, who have had fortunate contact with teachers who are not themselves drones have been lucky. But our schools are failing on massive levels re: critical thinking as it is now.
    For the Glenn Becks to even be popular requires oceans of Stupid, vast quantities of people who are poorly educated,with no awareness of civic reality, the way government really works, etc. That can't happen without massive failure of Public Education. You can't blame "what happens at home" exclusively, it has been proven too many times that effective public education lifts young people's minds out of the quagmire at home. I have seen this myself, it's not just a feel-good fairy tale. (continued - this is a real beast of a comment)

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  2. It becomes tedious to see the concerted and well-planned and financed attack on the bedrock of our society re-framed for a short-term goal and a very myopic view of "teachers will no longer enjoy their jobs" if corporatization continues. What will happen is a return to the horrors of the Industrial Revolution, child labor, and the normalization of the same working conditions that lead to the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire exactly 100 years ago.

    This is like a cheap disaster movie (which I enjoy unless I'm living in one) where it is always imperative that a few "main characters" survive their harrowing ordeals and everyone else (exploding dramatically in the peripherals of the screen to increase the Heroes sense of drama) are all just collateral damage. (I could certainly argue that the Home mortgage disaster of the recent past was enormous as an attack on a group of Americans but they did not have the "take to the streets" support, are a lower income demographic and are in the collateral damage "less than" so who cares that much" category)
    People didn't get that motivated when low income people who are "used to suffering" suffered a bit more. Just headlines, but "not us". Not really the sacred Middle Class. Weird value system IMO. Take care of your own, the rest is headlines at the dinner table.

    If Corporatization of public education succeeds, the fact that teachers "left the profession" will be so overshadowed by a landslide of greater issues, it just boggles the mind.
    Workplace schools exist now, with curricula set by the corporate employer. It's not about "teacher's benefits" or event eh Democratic party - it's about the re-enslavement of human race?

    Here's a fun fact - you know how Hitler got elected? he promised jobs. The he out-manueverd those elected persona round him who might provide checks and balances, then he sprang a bunch o' weird shit on the public, stuff he'd kept "secret" had not campaigned on but were personal private obsessions, his vision to re-make all of his society. Cool, huh? I suppose a few teachers no longer found the profession rewarding back then too, but that pesky Auschwitz and attention-sucking Buchenwald upstaged their pain.
    Damn them.

    (cue maniacal laughter as she slinks back to her underground lair and Conspiracy Cave without even checking for spelling and syntax errors)

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