Now Is Time to Fight for the `Public` in Public Schooling

Now Is Time to Fight for the 'Public' in Public Schooling
BC's teachers union stands against push to make business the model for educating children.
By: By Susan Lambert, 9 October 2012, TheTyee.ca
View full article and comments: http://thetyee.ca/Opinion/2012/10/09/Fight-For-PublicSchooling/
[Editor's note: This is adapted from an address given by BC Teachers Federation president Susan
Lambert to members of her union this summer.]
"Discover our own river of revenue at the schoolhouse gates!" -- Brochure advertising the 1997,
4th Annual Kid Power Marketing conference.
Four institutions form the basis of a functioning democracy: universal adult suffrage and a robust
electoral process, legal rights to which all citizens are equally entitled, a free press, and of course
the most critical institution: comprehensive universal public education.
Each one of these cultural institutions is in danger.
Sometimes, not even half the electorate votes.
Charging hearing fees and limiting legal aid reduces access to legal justice.
The press is increasingly under the monopoly control of people like Rupert Murdoch.
And public education is under attack world wide. It is under attack both by the privateers and the
education "reformers."
We are in an era when public education is being radically "reformed" as a private rather than a
public enterprise. There are about six key elements to this "reform." They say that:
1. Private alternatives offer parents and students "flexibility and choice" to design their own
programs;
2. Promoting competition between schools, through testing and ranking, provides for more
efficient and effective service delivery;
3. Policy decisions must be "data driven" to hold teachers accountable;
4. Teacher tenure is bad, bad teachers can be identified through testing and bad teachers must be
fired promptly;
5. The lessons of so called "effective" teachers, (those who achieve high test scores) are "best
practices" and should be adopted as standard practice; and
6. Class size and composition are not key indicators or drivers of education quality, "teacher
effectiveness" is and teacher effectiveness is the only variable that can be modified to increase
student achievement.
The so-called debate over these "reforms," especially the debate that pits "teacher effectiveness"
against class size is particularly troubling because it is so dishonest.
The entire debate is a smokescreen for privatization. As professor Alex Molnar of the National
Education Policy Center at the University of Colorado says, the reform movement is shoving
education toward privatization. Private interests must make the case for larger classes because
fewer teachers lower their expenses and maximize profit.
Solid empirical evidence and pure common sense tell us that small class sizes benefit students.
But we live in a crazy time. This craziness is not confined to the rural right wing regions of the
United States. It's not confined to the likes of Stanford's Eric Hanushek who proposes the firing of
the bottom 10 per cent of teachers according to their students' test scores, or Frances Gallo, the
superintendent who fired the entire staff at Central Falls High School. No, the so-called teacher
effectiveness movement is alive and living right here in the BC Liberals' education plan.
Our B.C. Ed Plan is a panicked and reckless call for rapid change for change sake: envisioning a
time when we will all welcome online education for kindergarten children.
The plan emphasizes teacher effectiveness and ignores the context of child poverty, class size and
composition.
At the bargaining table our rights were characterized as "impediments" to these reforms.
Our government is so eager to open up public education to the highest bidder that it has set our
education system adrift. We're lost in time and space. There are no geographic boundaries that
anchor kids in a caring community. School boards no longer have to adhere to a standard
calendar: summer vacation is up for grabs and why stop there? Why not schooling 24/7? What
makes the weekend sacred?
Of course business welcomes these changes. This from Ian Cook, director of the BC Human
Resources Management Association: "School calendar changes make sense for B.C.'s employers,
employees and students alike. It’s hard to stay competitive when you are used to taking the
summers 'off' while your competitors do not... From an employers' point of view, and for the HR
people who have to manage the effect of the two month school break, we foresee a scenario
where a shorter summer break would encourage productivity... In an increasingly competitive
global market, combined with shaky economic conditions, any opportunity to increase
productivity for businesses in B.C. is a benefit."
Everything is market driven.
THE BCTF ON WHAT PUBLIC SCHOOLS ARE FOR
"The broad prime aim of the public school system should be to foster the growth and
development of every individual, to the end that she/he will become and be a self-reliant, selfdisciplined, participating member with a sense of social and environmental responsibility within a
democratic, pluralistic society."
— BCTF Members' Guide
Those who see children's minds as a business opportunity
Entire public school systems in the United States have been sold to private, for-profit
corporations. And we're buying into the most powerful privateer in the field: Pearson
International.
Pearson, the largest for-profit education corporation in the world, is actively pursuing the market
in Canada. It bought BCeSis and is currently promoting a primary student evaluation software
package in Ontario.
Pearson and other education corporations created the testing agenda. They design curriculum,
script lessons and sell tests. "Failing" schools and entire "failing" districts are then bought and
sold to the highest bidder. Pearson has a five year testing contract with Texas that's costing
taxpayers nearly half a billion dollars. As Diane Ravitch notes, "An American child could go to a
public school run by Pearson, study from books produced by Pearson, and have his or her
progress evaluated by Pearson's standardized tests... and the only public participant in the show
would be the taxpayer."
A big revenue stream exploited by the privateers is online schooling. It's estimated that revenues
from the K-12 online industry will reach $24.4 billion in 2015.
In Virginia last year, a rep of the on-line company Connections Inc. explained that its services
were available at three price points per student:
"Option A: $7,500, a student-teacher ratio of 35-40 to 1, and an average teacher salary of
$45,000.
"Option B: $6,500 , a student-teacher ratio of 50 to 1, with less experienced teachers paid
$40,000.
"Option C: $4,800, and a student-teacher ratio of 60 to 1, as well as a narrower curriculum."
Connections is the second largest on-line school business company in the world with revenues
estimated at $190 million. It was acquired by Pearson for $400 million last year.
The frenzy to privatize education in the U.S. is driven by the industry's brilliant public relations
and lobbying campaigns that hype testing, the pace of change, rapidly evolving technology and
cost saving efficiency, as Lee Fang lays out in The Nation magazine article "How Online Learning
Companies Bought America's Schools."
Private education money funding politicians
These companies are major players in American elections. Funding political action committees
such as the "Alliance for School Choice" and the "American Federation for Children," they have
been pivotal in electing Tea Party candidates and were key in the Wisconsin recall campaign.
The efforts to improve test scores in the States have led to calls for a "common" or "core"
curriculum, standardization and teacher scripts. Seventy-one per cent of school districts in the
U.S. have cut back on subjects like Social Studies in favour of knowable, testable subjects. Florida
has banned the teaching of interpretations of history, avowing that there is only one true record.
The Republicans in Texas this July adopted their political platform, including their intention to
outlaw the teaching of higher order thinking skills (a program named HOTS) because critical
thinking skills "challenge student's fixed beliefs and undermine parental authority."
And yet, as education researcher Diane Ravitch has argued, "If we think about what our needs are
for the twenty-first century, and not just how do we compete in the world but how do we live in
the world, how do we survive in the world, we need a generation of people who will succeed us
who are thoughtful, who can reflect, who can think."
Meanwhile, Bill and Melinda Gates are now spending 1.1 million dollars to develop a way to
physiologically assess students' galvanic skin responses to measure their engagement level and
therefore their teachers' effectiveness.
But hidden in all this rubbish are glimmers of hope. Parents are beginning to worry. A study by
Ontario's "People For Education" has revealed a drastic decline in the joy of reading over the past
decade. The parents think testing, an over emphasis on the mechanics of reading, and the lack of
teacher-librarians is to blame.
They say, "If reading scores are going up at the expense of children's acquiring a love of reading,
we need to be very concerned."
Well, yes.
Customers or citizens?
In B.C., as elsewhere, we have deified the economy, and with this deification comes a philosophy
that everything can be made into a commodity. But that deification, that philosophy comes at a
terrible cost.
As professor Molnar writes, "The principal reforms promoted in education policy right now are not
reforms associated with education. The reforms are about money. Class size reduction can't be
allowed as a policy matter because it directly reduces the trajectory that's being attempted. It
threatens the possibility of making a profit."
It all hinges on what we consider to be the purpose of public education. Are we recruiting
customers or cultivating citizens?
There are many effective voices calling for an end to the insanity.
Joel Westheimer of York University says that standardized testing focuses us on what John Dewey
called "mean and repellant" bits of information.
"Calls for uniformity and standardization and related attacks on teacher professionalism are the
greatest obstacles to quality education," Westheimer has said. "The theme is one of an attack on
professional autonomy but the effect of testing is not only to shine a spotlight on probably the
most meaningless bits of information learned, it also simultaneously darkens other aspects of
learning, aspects that cannot be readily tested."
Westheimer believes that current education reform in Canada and the U.S. called 21st century
learning, personalized learning or career focussed education is an attack on the very power of
public education. "Everyone recognizes the power of teachers and education to shape the world;
that's why we frighten some who have a different vision of the world, a vision that devalues the
notion of the public commons; there are people who would prefer an acquiescent and compliant
population."
Westheimer's mother, as a 10-year-old child, was put on a train by her parents in WW2 Germany
to escape the Nazis. She never saw them again. Joel asked his mother what she thought was the
purpose of public education. She replied: "To teach children how to recognize good in the world
and pursue it."
What teachers stand for
And so, of course there's us. Teachers and teacher unions worldwide are rising up and resisting
these attempts to hollow out public education. And that's why we are under attack.
Last year we fought and we won. Let's be clear on the nature of the battle and the significance of
the victory. Last year we fought against those who would systematically starve public education in
order to promote privatization and we won. It was a trying and tiring year. It required our constant
attention, our thoughtful analysis of motive and intent, our agility in determining and sometimes
rejecting strategies and our dogged determination to remain strongly united. And we did so
because we understood the consequences.
There are those in this world who believe that commodifying everything adds value without
penalty. To them public education is low hanging fruit and ripe for the picking and the profit.
But there is an even more insidious view. It's the view of the privateers that democracy has
constrained the growth of the free market economy. It's the view that regulations of industry are
detrimental to growth, that corporations are persons and must have unfettered rights to exploit
opportunity for profit.
Our prime minister is of that view. That's why he has relentlessly gone after the institutions which
guard our rights as citizens: the regulatory frameworks that demand companies like Enbridge
consider the human and natural environments they operate in; the scientists who have guarded
our health, our oceans and forests; the CBC; Stats Canada and unions both private and public.
These people would privatize public education to take control and create a system that produces
both profit and compliant citizens.
Our mission as teachers has always been clear: we value and teach the whole child, every child.
Our vision has always been clear: we endeavour to cultivate confident engaged citizens dedicated
to the social justice of a better world.
We reject the brutal and snarling, snapping and predatory world of the marketplace.
We reject that ruthless competition and instead work for a world that embraces everyone's right to
economic fairness, to freedom from want, from prejudice, and from fear.
We see the world through the eyes and minds of the children we teach, the refugees from Sudan,
the children of violence, the children of fear, the anxious children and the children who come to
school with every need and emotion satisfied and loved. We see the world in our children and
through them and with them we hope to make it a better place.
Susan Lambert is president of the B.C. Teachers Federation. This is adapted from an address given
by Lambert to members of her union this summer.