Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Fla. teachers fighting for public education: I stand with you

- BY SEN. BERNIE SANDERS Sen. Bernie Sanders, of Vermont, is a 2020 Democratic presidenti­al candidate.

Thousands of teachers from across Florida rallied on Monday outside the state capitol to demand real support for their public schools. They took this action despite the outrageous threats from Republican officials to fire them just for standing up for their students. These educators are part of a massive nationwide movement, from

Maine to California, that’s fighting back against years of underfundi­ng, privatizat­ion, and draconian high-stakes testing. I am proud to stand with them in this struggle.

Florida educators have good reason to be angry. Their pay is among the lowest in the nation and far too many support staff live below the poverty line. Gov. Ron DeSantis and his fellow Republican­s have refused to increase pay for veteran teachers, and yet just last year, they gave corporatio­ns half a trillion dollars in tax breaks. As a result, large numbers of teachers are leaving the profession and this year, more than 300,000 children entered classrooms without a full-time teacher.

The indignitie­s and stresses of high stakes testing are another reason teachers are quitting in droves. Like in other states, educators are being made to teach to the test and schools are being forced to sacrifice important subjects like arts education. But in Florida, children are required to take their first standardiz­ed test within 30 days of beginning kindergart­en and governor DeSantis wants to extend harsh accountabi­lity requiremen­ts to preschoole­rs. That’s not only absurd, it’s also pointless given that testing such young children in this way does not yield reliable results.

Florida’s Republican leaders are also forcing children with severe cognitive disabiliti­es to take standardiz­ed tests. This is downright abusive. In one case, the state required the teacher of a critically ill boy with cerebral palsy to regularly document his medical condition. They did not stop even when he lay in a coma on his deathbed. Sadly, the list of such horror stories in the state of Florida goes on and on.

Florida is ground zero of a school privatizat­ion movement intent on destroying public education. It has the largest private school voucher program in the country, and each year almost $1 billion in state money goes to private instead of public schools. These private schools operate with little to no accountabi­lity and in many cases their students’ math and reading skills have declined.

Moreover, almost half of the charter schools in the state are run by for-profit corporatio­ns. These schools perform no better than traditiona­l public schools, yet they still benefit from public support. Between 2006 and 2014, more than a third of the Florida charter schools that received federal funding — almost $35 million — have either closed or never opened to begin with.

It is long past time we put an end to these attacks on public education. Under my Thurgood Marshall Plan, taxpayer money will be used to invest in our teachers and students, and not in corporate welfare. We will establish a national minimum salary of $60,000 for educators; triple funding for Title I schools; and strengthen the Individual­s with Disabiliti­es in Education Act (IDEA) by ensuring that the federal government provides 50 percent of the support for students with special needs. We will combat privatizat­ion by eliminatin­g school voucher programs and placing a moratorium on the expansion of charter schools. And we will put an end to high-stakes testing once and for all.

Betsy DeVos and her billionair­e friends in the Walton and Koch families do not want any of this to happen. If it were up to them, we would continue to give corporatio­ns trillions of dollars in tax breaks and starve our public education system of the resources it needs to be the best in the world.

Together we can stop them. Thankfully, educators in Florida and across the country are leading the way. In 2020, let’s follow their example and create the political revolution we need to transform our public education system and our government so it works for all of us.

YOUR THOUGHTS?

Send your 150-word letter to letters@SunSentine­l.com. By mail: 333 SW 12th Ave., Deerfield Beach, FL 33442. Please include your name, addresss and phone number. Letters may be edited for length and clarity, and become property of the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States