Today, hundreds of state
legislators from across the nation will head out to an "island"
resort on the coast of Florida
to a unique "education academy" sponsored by the American Legislative
Exchange Council (ALEC). There will be no students or teachers. Instead,
legislators, representatives from right-wing think tanks and for-profit
education corporations will meet behind closed doors to channel their inner Milton Friedman and promote the
radical transformation of the American education system into a private,
for-profit enterprise.
Little is known about the
agenda of the ALEC education meeting taking place at the Ritz Carlton on Amelia Island .
The meeting is not open to the public and recently even the press has been
kicked out of meetings and barred from attendance. So to understand the ALEC
agenda with regard to education, it is important to examine ALEC's education
"scorecard."
Imagine getting a report
card from your teacher and finding out that you were graded not on how well you
understood the course material or scored on the tests and assignments, but
rather on to what extent you agreed with your teacher's strange public policy
positions. That is the best way to understand the American Legislative Exchange
Council's 17th Report
Card on American Education released last week.
The report card's authors
are Matthew Lardner,
formerly of the Goldwater Institute, and Dan Lips, currently of the Goldwater Institute and
formerly of the Heritage Foundation.
They give every state's public schools an overall grade based on how they rate
in 14 categories. Homeschooling, alternative teacher certification, charter
schools, private school choice, and virtual learning make up 7 of the 14
categories. Of the other seven categories, two rate the states' academic
standards and the other five have mostly to do with the way states retain
"effective" teachers and fire "ineffective" ones.
ALEC's education bills
encompass more than 20 years of effort to privatize public education through an
ever-expanding network of school voucher systems, which divert taxpayer dollars
away from public schools to private schools, or the creation of new private
charter schools with public funds, and even with private online schools (who
needs actual teachers when you can have a virtual one?). The bills also allow
schools to loosen standards for teachers and administrators, exclude students
with physical disabilities and special educational needs, escape the
requirements of collective bargaining agreements and experiment with other pet
causes like merit pay, single-sex education, school uniforms, and political and
religious indoctrination of students.
States where students score
well on tests but where ALEC's legislative agenda around school choice,
charters, merit pay, de-unionization and alternative certification have not yet
taken hold get low grades. States where elected officials are gung-ho for
ALEC's agenda but the students are not faring so well are still graded
generously.
Ranking Policy, Not Performance
While ALEC's report card and
its many appendices weigh in at hefty 130+ pages, it is markedly slight on
evidence that school choice, charters, or firing more teachers improve student
performance. Indeed, the report card itself even makes this case by also ranking
each state's students' performance on the National Assessment for Educational
Progress (NAEP) exam, the largest and most accepted national, standardized
assessment of student knowledge in several subject areas.
"It's a compendium of
the progress of the ALEC agenda and it has nothing to do with educating
students," says Julie Underwood, Dean of the School
of Education at the University of Wisconsin ,
Madison .
Underwood, who wrote about
ALEC for The Nation last
summer and has studied the organization extensively, notes that the most
interesting and potentially useful data in the report card is left out of each
state's grade calculation. There are tables ranking states according to the
NAEP performance of low-income students, students of color and students with
disabilities, but this is not added in in the final grade.
"Why is that not part
of the state's A to F grades?" Underwood asks. Missouri ranks 43rd in low-income students'
4th grade reading score improvement and 34th in math improvement, but still got
the top grade. Utah
is 49th and 37th, but was still one of the few states to score a B or better
from ALEC. Maryland
is number one in reading improvement and number 2 in math improvement, but drew
a C-.
Union-Busting applauded Her
answer comes in the report card's introduction, where Lardner and Lipps call
2011 "The End of the Beginning in the Battle for K-12 Reform." Legislative
efforts to weaken and defeat unions were so successful in places such as Florida , Indiana and Wisconsin last year
that, according to the authors, we have entered a new era for ALEC's education
policy agenda.
Comparing the union fight to
Britain's defeat of Germany in Egypt to secure the Suez Canal, Lardner and Lips
crow that in 2011, "For the first time, the unions suffered major policy
defeats in a large number of states across a wide array of policy issues."
Indiana Governor Mitch
Daniels wrote the report card's forward, lamenting how the unions in his state
once had a voice in issues such as the length of the school day, academic
freedom and, generally, the content of their work, says his state has turned
the corner. "Collective bargaining will now be limited to wages and
benefits and will no longer stand in the way of effective school leadership or student
progress," Daniels writes.
The report card, released
during National Charter School Week, also comes during the ramp-up to ALEC's
annual "K-12 Education Reform Academy" at the swanky Ritz-Carlton in
Amelia Island, Florida. The non-profit group Fund Education Now intercepted one
of ALEC's invitations to legislators in Florida
delineating the junket's deluxe (and gratis) accommodations and summarizing the
opportunity to learn more about school privatization and giving teachers their
comeuppance.
"You are cordially
invited to attend ALEC's K-12 Education Reform Academy, February 3-4, 2012 at
the Ritz-Carlton in Amelia Island, Florida. For invited legislators like you,
ALEC will cover your room for up to two nights at the host hotel. ALEC will
also reimburse up to $500 for travel expenses, which includes coach airfare, cabfare,
and a reimbursement of 55.5 cents per mile driven."
"This event will
address the top reforms in K-12 education that ALEC believes each state must
have to ensure the successful and productive education for all American
students. We will discuss what you as a state legislator can do to address a
variety of issues surrounding K-12 education reform, including charter schools
accessibility, accountability and transparency, standards for teacher
excellence, open enrollment, vouchers, tax credits, and blended learning
options."
Fund Education Now
co-founder Kathleen Oropeza says the "academy" is closed to the press
and the public and Amelia
Island itself is secluded
from the outside world and heavily policed. The meeting's agenda is so
secretive that Oropeza has been unable to track one down.
"The island is a
challenge for protestors, and we think they chose it for that reason,"
Oropeza says.
However, a raft of ALEC
legislative and corporate members are certain to be there. These include online
school businesses such as K-12 Inc., Insight
Schools , and Connections Academy a
division of Connections Education LLC. These for-profit schools will likely
join with their allies from the Heritage Foundation, Texas Public
Policy Center, The
Friedman Foundation for Educational Choice, the Hoover Institution,
the Alliance for
School Choice and more.
Today, the Democratic
Progressive Caucus of Florida (DPCF) called on Florida legislators to boycott the island
retreat. Caucus President Susan Smith stated, "The secretive process of
allowing corporate lobbyists and billionaires to write legislation, which they
then pass off to Florida
legislators, is a betrayal of the intent of representative government. The
closed-door gathering of legislators is not government in the sunshine."
Dustin Beilke is a
freelance writer who has written hundreds of articles for publications such as Newsday,
Salon.com, The Nation, The Progressive,In These Times, Mother Jones, The
Capital Times, Isthmus, The Shepherd-Express, Madison Magazine, Milwaukee
Magazine, and The Onion.
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