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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Mon Aug 19, 2013, 07:04 AM Aug 2013

How Schools Have Become Dead Zones of the Imagination

http://www.alternet.org/education/how-schools-have-become-dead-zones-imagination



Some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony, but we must speak. We must speak with all the humility that is appropriate to our limited vision, but we must speak.

~ Martin Luther King, Jr.

If the right-wing billionaires and apostles of corporate power have their way, public schools will become “dead zones of the imagination,” reduced to anti-public spaces that wage an assault on critical thinking, civic literacy and historical memory. Since the 1980s, schools have increasingly become testing hubs that de-skill teachers and disempower students. They have also been refigured as punishment centers where low-income and poor minority youth are harshly disciplined under zero tolerance policies in ways that often result in their being arrested and charged with crimes that, on the surface, are as trivial as the punishment is harsh. Under casino capitalism’s push to privatize education, public schools have been closed in cities such as, Philadelphia, Chicago and New York to make way for charter schools. Teacher unions have been attacked, public employees denigrated and teachers reduced to technicians working under deplorable and mind-numbing conditions.

Corporate school reform is not simply obsessed with measurements that degrade any viable understanding of the connection between schooling and educating critically engaged citizens. The reform movement is also determined to underfund and disinvest resources for public schooling so that public education can be completely divorced from any democratic notion of governance, teaching and learning. In the eyes of billionaire un-reformers and titans of finance such as Bill Gates, Rupert Murdoch, the Walton family and Michael Bloomberg, public schools should be transformed, when not privatized, into adjuncts of shopping centers and prisons.

Like the dead space of the American mall, the school systems promoted by the un-reformers offer the empty ideological seduction of consumerism as the ultimate form of citizenship and learning. And, adopting the harsh warehousing mentality of prison wardens, the un-reformers endorse and create schools for poor students that punish rather than educate in order to channel disposable populations into the criminal justice system where they can fuel the profits of private prison corporations. The militarization of public schools that Secretary Arnie Duncan so admired and supported while he was the CEO of the Chicago School System was not only a ploy to instill authoritarian discipline practices against students disparagingly labeled as unruly, if not disposable. It was also an attempt to design schools that would break the capacity of students to think critically and render them willing and potential recruits to serve in senseless and deadly wars waged by the American empire. And, if such recruitment efforts failed, then students were quickly put on the conveyor belt of the school-to-prison pipeline. For many poor minority youth in the public schools, prison becomes part of their destiny, just as public schools reinforce their status as second-class citizens. As Michelle Alexander points out, “Instead of schools being a pipeline to opportunity, [they] are feeding our prisons.”
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How Schools Have Become Dead Zones of the Imagination (Original Post) xchrom Aug 2013 OP
Schools are becoming nothing less than corporate indoctrination centers as these RKP5637 Aug 2013 #1
It is a sad state of affairs. earthside Aug 2013 #3
thom hartman has written books about this subject... madrchsod Aug 2013 #2
This is why we chose to pay $6,000 for pre-school. Lilyhoney Aug 2013 #4
THIS is why I vote for the Democratic Party. Octafish Aug 2013 #5

RKP5637

(67,084 posts)
1. Schools are becoming nothing less than corporate indoctrination centers as these
Mon Aug 19, 2013, 07:37 AM
Aug 2013

captains of the industry continue their war on education and continued brainwashing of the masses.

earthside

(6,960 posts)
3. It is a sad state of affairs.
Mon Aug 19, 2013, 09:18 AM
Aug 2013

In Colorado we will have on the ballot this fall a proposal to raise the income tax to pay for 'education'.

Democrats and liberals, predictably, seem to be all in a rush to get on board.

Unfortunately, the money goes to support exactly the kinds of 'un-reforms' described in the article.

It is a sad state of affairs that if Democrats and liberals were as hard-minded as they should be, they would vote against this initiative because in the end it will result in more standardized testing, more charters, more teacher bashing, in short the further corporatization of our 'public' school system.

It is a plain truth -- until you cut-off or genuinely threaten the flow of money, the politicians, the billionaires and the 'educrats' will not even begin to pay attention to student, parent and teacher demands that we end this twenty year old failing experiment in so-called 'reform'.

madrchsod

(58,162 posts)
2. thom hartman has written books about this subject...
Mon Aug 19, 2013, 09:02 AM
Aug 2013

one of the more interesting things he`s said was one room schools were better than the german model we have today.

Lilyhoney

(1,985 posts)
4. This is why we chose to pay $6,000 for pre-school.
Mon Aug 19, 2013, 11:57 AM
Aug 2013

This morning was the first day of pre-school for my son. We chose a private nonreligious school. Yes, $6,000 is a lot of money but it will be worth it. Next year will also be 6K then it jumps to 12K for 1st to 12th grade.

I am going to start my own thread on this topic and the reasons for my decision. I will link back to this thread.

Lilyhoney

Octafish

(55,745 posts)
5. THIS is why I vote for the Democratic Party.
Mon Aug 19, 2013, 12:14 PM
Aug 2013

My faction, anyway, believes in public education of the highest quality for all.

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