Austin American-Statesman

Grades part of right’s plan to privatize school system

- GLENN W. SMITH Regular contributo­r

The leadership of the Republican Party in Texas and around the country is hell-bent on ending public education as we know it and replacing it with private corporatio­ns that will get rich on our tax dollars while educating fewer of our children.

The dream of a universall­y educated citizenry will be killed in a premeditat­ed attack on perhaps the most important institutio­n of democracy there is. In fact, its importance to democracy is one reason why the authoritar­ian-minded want to kill it.

There are other reasons. Many may wonder how the Christian right can ally itself with Donald Trump, his greedsoake­d Education Secretary Betsy DeVos and other school privatizer­s. The equation is simple enough: The rich get richer, and the right gets public tax dollars for private, fundamenta­list schools.

Children in public schools will, over time, receive fewer and fewer resources and fall further and further behind. Then, there will come a moment when the underfunde­d public education system perishes like a starved prisoner in a forgotten cell.

The state recently released its latest version of school ratings, this one called A-F report cards. The “simplified” ratings are used, it seems, so Texas parents — already victims of underfunde­d public schools — have a shot at rememberin­g what A and F grades mean.

Such ratings are sold to us on the premise of increased accountabi­lity. Instead, they are used to destroy confidence in public schools to advance the cause of publicly funded private schools.

Think for a moment of all the time and money spent on questionab­le standardiz­ed testing and the casting of dark bureaucrat­ic spells — I mean developmen­t of ratings systems — upon public education. Think of the anguish of educators and students who are sentenced to Dr. Standardiz­ed’s Hamster Wheel Test of Accountabi­lity.

Now, imagine if you can that all that time and money was spent on educating our public schoolchil­dren instead of on the purchase of great barrels of ink to paint scarlet F’s on schoolhous­e doors. Why, gosh and golly, maybe all our schools would get A’s and B’s.

There’s not enough blunt talk about our imperiled education system. Texas public school educators try hard to persuade policymake­rs. Still, too many settle for gruel out of fear of further retributio­n from state officials.

What kind of retributio­n could make things worse? What could the governor and his GOP-controlled Legislatur­e do? Send them like so many Oliver Twists to Mr. Sowerberry for saying, “Please, sir, I want some more?” They should remember that even Oliver’s story ends happily.

The assault on public education has had the success it’s had because too many folks don’t want to believe it’s happening. They think public schools will always be there — the way sparkling clean water always comes out of faucets. Well, ask the people of Flint, Mich., about the water coming from their faucets.

If we look carefully, we might find that the efforts of the privatizer­s to embarrass public education sometimes backfire. Let’s put two facts back to back:

Democratic state Rep. Donna Howard of Austin recently pointed out that charter schools get 100 percent of their funding from the state. Public schools get 33 percent. The rest comes from local property taxes. Local districts’ efforts to overcome the state’s funding failure is the reason your property taxes increase, by the way.

As a public school advocate and former state school board member, Thomas Ratliff put it in a tweet after the A-F grades for schools were released: “8 percent of charter schools are rated F while only 1.2 percent of public schools [are].” Ouch.

Looky there on the blackboard: Charter schools, treated lavishly by the state, don’t quite pass on that lavish treatment to our children’s education.

Adding a profit motive to public education does not lead to better performanc­e; we pay more for less. That doesn’t make that much difference when we’re talking about our socks costing more and wearing out sooner than they should.

It makes a great difference when it means our children aren’t educated well enough to land jobs good enough to afford socks in the first place.

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