RAVITCH: Why don't corporate ed reformers want public schools to be like best private ones?
What's odd here is that the corporate ed reformers claim that most parents don't want the kind of education for their kids that the president, education secretary, and very wealthy get for their kids.
Why don't they just say that every time they announce these policies: "I want to make money giving your kids an education I would NEVER accept for my own."
At the very least, I wish someone would ask the best private schools in their community how often they do standardized testing.
by dianerav
The folks at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute are struggling to come to terms with the New York testing disaster. They certainly will not retreat from their deep faith in standardized testing, and they insist that there must be more parent choice, even though parents are sick of the excessive testing and most continue to choose their neighborhood school, if they still have one.
This is my favorite line:
I can't say where that $1.6 trillion number comes from. I went to ordinary public schools that did not face annual budget crisis, that did not squander millions on standardized testing, that provided arts programming and daily physical education and foreign languages, that did not fire teachers if students got low test scores. But people who did not go to ordinary public schools may not know that.
What I want to challenge here is the assertion that "some of us don't want" what the best private schools have to offer.
Who wouldn't want what Sidwell offers? Or Exeter? Or Lakeside Academy in Seattle?
Who wouldn't want classes of 12-15 instead of 35-40?
Who wouldn't want a beautiful campus?
Who wouldn't want experienced, respected teachers?
Who wouldn't want a rich curriculum with science labs, history projects, drama and music, and lots of sports every day?
Who wouldn't want to go to a school that never gave standardized tests and didn't judge teachers by students test scores?
Maybe there are such people. I have never met them. Maybe they work at Fordham or the Gates Foundation, but I doubt it.
dianerav | August 11, 2013 at 3:25 pm | Categories: Class size, Curriculum, Parents, Standardized Testing, Teachers and Teaching | URL: http://wp.me/p2odLa-5wl
Doctor_J
(36,392 posts)ask her, "So does China have for-profit schools?"
The 1% bought our health care system in 2010. There aren't many really big pies left for them to hoard. Education is one, and they will not stop until they have it. Unfortunately our president also wants to corporatize education, so I am not sure where the resistance will come from.