Arne Duncan and other policymakers 
must acknowledge that schooling alone 
cannot create an equity of opportunity 
This from 
Salon:
Secretary of Education Arne Duncan hastily walked back his comments recently after dismissing Common Core opponents as “white suburban moms”  who
 had suddenly realized that their kids aren’t as bright as they thought.
 This sparked a furor amongst parents and educators and thrust the 
Common Core back into the spotlight. Although the controversy over 
standards-based education is nothing new, it speaks volumes that the 
outrage doesn’t make the evening news until white suburban moms are 
singled out. If there is something positive to be gleaned from Duncan’s 
tactless comments, it is the public recognition that these federal 
policies have stratified education along race and class 
divisions—policies that Duncan presides over and advocates for as 
Obama’s education secretary.
|  | 
| Secretary of Education Arne Duncan     (Credit: AP/Jacquelyn Martin) | 
Perhaps the uproar prompted by 
Duncan’s comments has less to do with white suburban outrage and instead
 signals a tipping point: a mainstream rejection of policies that are 
finally being exposed for their disproportionately detrimental impact on
 poor and minority communities. Duncan’s remarks provided a glimpse at 
the man behind the curtain. Race and class matter in education and 
Duncan simultaneously acknowledged and dismissed this.
It’s hard to sympathize with Duncan’s dismissiveness.
Common
 Core is just one of several examples of corporate influence in 
education. The foundations and consortiums behind these policies, like 
the Gates Foundation, Pearson, and others, all stand to profit from 
adoption of their methods, resources, and technology. But that’s 
neoliberalism in a nutshell. What is truly surprising has been the 
full-fledged support of high-stakes testing by the US Department of 
Education (DoE) under a Democratic president, continuing the infamous 
legacy of No Child Left Behind (NCLB). The mission of the DoE has been 
to fire “bad” teachers, as determined by their students’ test scores, 
and close schools which don’t meet these arbitrary and subjective goals.
Few
 would dispute that we should hold our educators and the children they 
are entrusted with to a high bar of excellence, but evaluating 
performance on test scores has never been a viable strategy. As Common 
Core test results have started trickling in, the results aren’t pretty. 
In New York, they show a
 widening of the achievement gap between
 black and white students. This leaves young teachers at a disadvantage 
since they are often placed in high poverty schools and are still 
learning on the job. They often have to also play the role of counselor,
 psychiatrist, and day care provider. So while the White Suburban Mom is
 disappointed because she’s tried her best to ensure the highest quality
 of life for her daughter, the Single Black Urban Mom who works two jobs
 simply can’t be as engaged with her son’s education: a child afflicted 
with
 toxic stress who
 then takes the same exam on an empty stomach. Ignoring these elements 
and relying solely on improving testing scores demeans the teaching 
profession and puts the students who need the most attention and 
wraparound services at a disadvantage.
Of course, this forms the 
ideological basis of corporate reform: firing “bad” teachers will fix 
education which will lead to middle class prosperity which will 
alleviate poverty. “College and career readiness” are the choice 
buzzwords found in the text of the Common Core.
 Speaking to Politico,
 Duncan said, “the path to the middle class runs right through the 
classroom.” Such a perspective, keen in the 1960s, sounds positively 
outmoded in 2013. As Millennials are 
quickly realizing,
 that rose-tinted vision of education as the great social equalizer 
simply cannot reconcile the effects of the Great Recession and decades 
of bad policy.
This is the crux of the issue. It really is all 
about money. Merit pay, standardization, union-busting, school closures,
 austerity budgets, unregulated charters, all coupled with persuasive 
messaging and the endorsement of both major political parties means 
corporate reform will make a few people very rich at the expense of 
equity and inclusiveness. Education is just another avenue where the 
profit motive has been pecking away at the remains of public 
institutions that we spent decades building.
It seems like 
grassroots uproar is finally coming to a head. The start of National 
Education Week this year saw anti-Common Core protests in
 New York,
 South Carolina, Maryland,
 and several other states. Much like the solidarity seen in recent fast 
food employee strikes and Black Friday protests from workers demanding 
fair wages and labor practices, teachers, parents, administrators, and 
legislators from all political stripes are uniting in opposition to 
unproven policies and their slapdash implementation across the country. 
Parents and educators should not be pitted against one another but 
realize their interests are very much aligned.
We have to 
acknowledge that non-school factors play a major role in learning 
outcomes and policymakers must know that enough is enough. Vast income 
inequality can lead to inequality in education, so we must ensure 
adequate funding formulas can meet the needs of diverse demographics. We
 must ensure access to affordable, quality healthcare for all families. 
We must further integrate schools to reduce achievement gaps. We must 
support the collective bargaining rights of teachers, who are often 
overburdened by factors outside the scope of their profession. As 
progressive populism is reignited, we must recognize that these issues 
are not about ideology but about pragmatism. Reinventing our social 
infrastructure for the 21stcentury means we simply cannot afford to 
treat our schools as a market ripe for competition any longer.
 
1 comment:
Our problem is that we have a government which has an over inflated concept of its influence which it uses to justify its overextension of power. Now we have multiple generations which are increasingly coming to believe in this myth that government is going to take care of them and that any action by the government is to that end. The pied pipper keeps lulling the docile electorate to sleep with promises it can't keep and entitlement programs it can't sustain.
Does anyone really think that Mr. Duncan and Fed DOE is going to make a difference in my kids school here in KY? It has been a few decades and I really don't see it. I do since that state education leaders are influencing change in my child's school but for the life of me, I really don't know what we are changing toward. Current state assessment seems more like a cage that traps teachers, students and curriculum through very finite determinants and a resulting finite future which looks more like today than tomorrow is going to be.
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