If something is inconvenient, it causes someone trouble or creates difficulties that annoy them and worse, could interfere with their lust for wealth and power. This is particularly the case if verified or indisputable facts destroy an assertion or idea held by profit-driven cretins selling something founded on lies and misinformation. For the past two decades, at least, so-called “education reformers” in the Republican privatization movement, and recently the Obama Administration Education Department, have criticized the American public school system as an abject failure. Obviously, there is huge money driving the “education reform” movement’s drive to shift public school funding to the technology industry, religious private schools, and particularly the grossly underperforming corporate-run charter schools. There is also a concerted effort on both sides of the political spectrum to destroy teacher unions and disabuse the overwhelming majority of women teachers of the idea they deserve a semi-living wage and secure retirement.
Any educator is well aware that there are issues out
of their control in attempting to teach every student that enters their
classroom, and now another damning study
reveals that it is not poorly-qualified teachers, union representation,
or tenure hampering achievement; it is poverty borne of America’s
existential problem of income inequality. In fact, according to yet
another study,
America’s wealthiest traditional public schools that are unionized with
tenured teachers are among the world’s highest achieving schools. If,
as privatization “reformers” in Republican, corporate, and Obama
Education Department claim that America’s public schools are dire
failures, then America’s wealthy public schools with unionized teachers,
and tenure, would be failing and not at the “top of the international
charts.”
What that means is that it is not unionization,
tenure, or inadequate teachers, but “high poverty” that is the crux of
low academic and test score achievement on several levels. In fact, in
the U.S. Department of Education study that the Administration’s
Education Secretary, or President Obama, failed to read because it is
inconvenient, it reveals that “about one in five public schools was
considered high poverty” as of 2011; up from one in eight just ten years
ago.” In a previous Education Department study,
it found that “most high-poverty public schools receive much less than
their fair share of state and local funding leaving students in poor
schools with far fewer resources than schools attended by their
wealthier peers.” It is noteworthy, that the teachers at both wealthy
and poor schools have exactly the same education level, teacher
training, union representation, achievement standards, testing, and
curriculum, and yet it is glaringly obvious the only difference is
funding and crushing poverty regarded as the primary “out-of-school”
factors affecting student achievement.
No comments:
Post a Comment