Stamford Advocate (Sunday)

Public education as a political movement

- WENDY LECKER Wendy Lecker is a columnist for the Hearst Connecticu­t Media Group and is senior attorney at the Education Law Center

My 18-year “career” as a public education parent ended in June as my youngest child graduated from high school. I am witness to the profound effect my children’s teachers had on their developmen­t as students and human beings — nurturing their passions, providing life lessons, sparking their interest in subjects they had never considered, and challengin­g their world view.

Events this past year have shown me just how much of an effect teachers have on all of us — not just those they teach.

Those of us who have been fighting for years for strong, adequately funded, integrated public schools and against reforms that are damaging to children, communitie­s and democracy sometimes feel like we are banging our heads against the wall.

For years we presented facts about the harm of bad education policy and the benefits of good education policy. Yet politician­s ignored us and continued to push failed policies. They dismissed calls for adequate resources in impoverish­ed schools, branding these claims as “excuses” or “maintainin­g the status quo.”

The media narrative has also been impervious to facts, blaming impoverish­ed schools for “failing” children when our politician­s deprive them of essential resources to serve our neediest children; and accusing public school teachers of incompeten­ce and selfishnes­s when students do not perform well on standardiz­ed exams that were never designed to measure school or teacher quality.

This toxic public discourse seemed unending. Until teachers across the country took to the streets last spring. Teachers in West Virginia, Oklahoma, Arizona, Colorado and Kentucky walked out of their classrooms to protest the miserable conditions in which they had to work and their students had to learn.

And the public stood with them all the way. Parents brought their children to state capitols to support their teachers, supplied food, and participat­ed in the protests. A new Phi Delta Kappan poll reveals that 78 percent of public school parents support teacher strikes for higher pay.

Once these protests began, the media focus changed. Cameras showed deplorable conditions in

I attribute this conscious embrace of public education by political candidates to our teachers, who put their careers on the line to call attention to the needs of our most vulnerable students and communitie­s.

impoverish­ed classrooms, including crumbling textbooks, broken desks and chairs. Newspapers reported on the four-day school weeks in Oklahoma resulting from years of budget cuts, and the severe lack of basic educationa­l staff and services in the states where the teachers struck. They revealed how teachers were forced to hold down second and third jobs to make ends meet.

The concerns of striking teachers extended beyond a living wage for themselves. They fought for wellfunded schools, and adequate pay for all public employees. As Georgetown professor Joseph McCartin noted, “What you’re seeing is these unions acting as defenders of the public good.”

And now, voters and politician­s are getting the message.

Last week, six Republican Oklahoma house members who voted against tax increases for teacher raises were ousted in primary races. Of the 19 Republican­s who voted against teacher pay raises, only four will be on the ballot in November.

In Georgia, democratic gubernator­ial primary winner Stacey Abrams openly declares that she doesn’t want to be Georgia’s “education governor” — she wants to be Georgia’s “public education governor.” She advocates increased investment in public schools and opposes privatizat­ion schemes that drain resources from them.

On Tuesday, Tallahasse­e Mayor Andrew Gillum won a surprise victory in Florida’s Democratic gubernator­ial primary. Gillum credits his public school education for much of his success in life and supports increasing investment­s in public schools, including raising teachers’ starting salary to $50,000.

Educator David Garcia, the Democratic candidate for governor in Arizona, vowed to “end destructiv­e privatizat­ion schemes that drain money out of classrooms, and ... to invest in our teachers and classrooms once again.”

Longtime public school supporter Ben Jealous is Maryland’s Democratic gubernator­ial candidate. Teachers are running for office across the nation, including a former National Teacher of the Year, Waterbury’s Jahana Hayes, who won the primary for the U.S. House of Representa­tive in Connecticu­t’s fifth congressio­nal district.

Public education, an issue usually ignored by politician­s, is suddenly taking center stage in political campaigns. I attribute this conscious embrace of public education by political candidates to our teachers, who put their careers on the line to call attention to the needs of our most vulnerable students and communitie­s.

So as this school year begins, as a parent I want to thank Stamford’s teachers for helping me raise capable, tolerant, and independen­t adults. As a citizen, I want to thank America’s teachers for defending a precious democratic institutio­n, our public schools, and in the process, for giving me hope that our democracy may survive after all.

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