Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Foreword by John Cavanagh
- Introduction
- 1 Create jobs
- 2 Build America’s human infrastructure
- 3 Support public education
- 4 Extend Medicare to everyone
- 5 Raise taxes on top incomes
- 6 Refinance social security
- 7 Take down Wall Street
- 8 Make it easy to join a union
- 9 Set a living minimum wage
- 10 Upgrade to 10-10-10
- 11 Put an end to the prison state
- 12 Pass a national abortion law
- 13 Let people vote
- 14 Stop torturing, stop assassinating, and close down the NSA
- 15 Suffer the refugee children
- 16 Save the Earth
- Notes
- Index
- About the author
3 - Support public education
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 April 2023
- Frontmatter
- Frontmatter
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Foreword by John Cavanagh
- Introduction
- 1 Create jobs
- 2 Build America’s human infrastructure
- 3 Support public education
- 4 Extend Medicare to everyone
- 5 Raise taxes on top incomes
- 6 Refinance social security
- 7 Take down Wall Street
- 8 Make it easy to join a union
- 9 Set a living minimum wage
- 10 Upgrade to 10-10-10
- 11 Put an end to the prison state
- 12 Pass a national abortion law
- 13 Let people vote
- 14 Stop torturing, stop assassinating, and close down the NSA
- 15 Suffer the refugee children
- 16 Save the Earth
- Notes
- Index
- About the author
Summary
Reform (noun): a policy that is designed to undermine the effectiveness of a public institution in a way that generates private gains.
Reform (verb): to make something worse.
When did reform become a dirty word? Thirty years of education reform have brought a barren, test-bound curriculum that stigmatizes students, vilifies teachers, and encourages administrators to commit wholesale fraud in order to hit the testing goals that have been set for them. Strangely, reform has gone from being a progressive cause to being a conservative curse. It used to be that good people pursued reform to make the world a better place, usually by bringing public services under transparent, meritocratic, democratically governed public control. Today, reform more often involves firing people and dismantling public services in the pursuit of private gain. Where did it all go so wrong? Who stole our ever-progressing public sector, and in the process stole one of our most effective words for improving it?
At least so far as education reform is concerned, the answer is clear. The current age of education reform can be traced to the landmark 1983 report A Nation at Risk, subtitled “The Imperative for Educational Reform.” Future dictionaries may mark this report as the turning point when the definition of reform changed from cause to a curse. In 1981 Ronald Reagan’s first Secretary of Education Terrel H. Bell appointed an 18-person commission to look into the state of US schools. He charged the commission with addressing “the widespread public perception that something is seriously remiss in our educational system.” The commission included 12 administrators, 1 businessperson, chemist, 1 physicist, 1 politician, 1 conservative activist, and 1 teacher. No students or recent graduates. No everyday parents. No representatives of parents’ organizations. No social workers, school psychologists, or guidance counselors. No representatives of teacher’s unions (God forbid). Just one practicing teacher and not a single academic expert on education.
It should come as no surprise that a commission dominated by administrators found that the problems of US schools were mainly caused by lazy students and unaccountable teachers. Administrative incompetence was not on the agenda. Nor were poverty, inequality, and racial discrimination.
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- Information
- Sixteen for '16A Progressive Agenda for a Better America, pp. 23 - 30Publisher: Bristol University PressPrint publication year: 2015