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Occupy Education: Corporate School Reform Attracts Renewed Heat
The Occupy movement takes on neoliberal education reform and the Bloomberg Department of Education.
Mic check! MIC CHECK! Let the Puppet show begin! LET THE PUPPET SHOW BEGIN!"
The demonstrators who held the floor at a December 14 meeting at Newtown High School in Corona, Queens, were part of Occupy DOE (Department of Education), a mix of veteran teachers, parents and Occupy Wall Street activists that is bringing the language and tactics of OWS to the grassroots fight against neoliberal education reform.
The demonstrators explained why the Panel on Educational Policy (PEP), which had convened the Queens meeting, is an illegitimate, undemocratic body. New York’s PEP replaced elected school boards when Bloomberg established mayoral control of the school system. It is a parody of a school board: at its meetings, members of the public make impassioned speeches, but nothing they say makes any difference. The majority of the panel’s members are appointed by the mayor, and the PEP has never, in all its existence, rejected any of his proposals.
As the official meeting began, each panelist was introduced. As each mayoral appointee said their name, Occupy DOE yelled, “Puppet!” Throughout the meeting, the protestors waved puppets to dramatize the nature of mayoral control.
The PEP was voting that night on a plan to open two new charter schools in Brooklyn, both with the Success network, run by Eva Moskowitz, a former city councilwoman with close ties to Bloomberg and his administration. Almost everyone on the Success board hails from the hedge fund or private equity industry. The idea that the one percent could open schools in Brooklyn neighborhoods, despite intense opposition from both the public and many of its local elected officials, has provoked fury.
As the depth of Brooklyn’s opposition to the Success schools became clear, the Department tried to avoid hearing from opponents or protesters altogether by moving the PEP vote from a central location in Manhattan to faraway Corona, Queens. The DOE initially claimed that this would make it easier for Queens parents to comment on proposals affecting their borough. The funny part was, there were no such proposals on the agenda.
Occupy DOE did shut down the PEP in October, and will surely do so again, though on December 14 the group decided that it would be better to let the meeting go on, since so many people wanted to speak out against the DOE proposals.
During the time allocated for public comments, Leia Petty, a young guidance counselor, asked Chancellor Dennis Walcott some direct questions (including, “Why did you move the meeting to Queens?”) Walcott refused to answer. After Petty exceeded her designated two minutes of speaking time, two white-shirted police officers came over to remove her from the meeting. As the crowd shouted, “Let her stay!” the officers backed away and did just that.
It’s not only in New York City that the Occupy spirit has invigorated education activists. In late November Occupy Rochester, along with parents and other community activists, disruptively mic checked a school board meeting to protest an undemocratic process for selecting a new school superintendent, a process that involved a corporate search firm. In Chicago, on the same day as the Queens PEP meeting, protesters shut down a school board meeting to protest recent failed reforms. Like New York, Chicago has been shutting down failing schools and replacing them with new ones, often charter schools. As in New York, many of the new schools perform even worse than the old ones. Parents and teachers mic checked the meeting, yelling, “You have failed Chicago’s children…These are our children, not corporate products!” Two days later, protesters occupied the lobby of New Jersey’s Department of Education, protesting Governor Chris Christie’s efforts to open more charter schools in the state.
Leia Petty, who has been active in OWS but especially in Occupy DOE, said of the education justice movement, “people have been doing this work for years but OWS has opened new possibilities for this work. It’s helped us think bolder. It feels like a whole movement, not just us.”
To be sure, the 99 percent isn’t unanimous in its opposition to the Mayor’s reform agenda. At the meeting in Corona, some charter school parents spoke of their satisfaction with their children’s education. But there weren’t many of them, and Gotham Schools has reported that they’d been organized to attend by an Astroturf pro-charter organization called Families for Excellent Schools, headed by Seth Andrews, who runs Democracy Prep, a charter chain.
The Corona meeting did indeed live up to its billing as a puppet show, as the PEP voted to approve all the mayor’s proposals as always.
But this grassroots movement to Occupy Education continues to grow. One teacher who, fearing retaliation from the Department, did not want her name printed, addressed the crowd shortly before the protesters walked out of the meeting: “We need to show them what democracy looks like, because, “ she pointed at the mayor’s hand-picked panel, “this is not what democracy looks like.”
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11 Comments so far
Show AllThe Chair of the Board of Trustees at the public university, City University of New York, is CEO of a company that pushed privatizing primary school education. This is the Board of Trustees whose meeting was "protected" by a police riot on Nov. 21st during which 15 CUNY students were arrested during a peaceful protest. Occupy CUNY. Occupy NYC. Occupy North America. Oust the oligarchs now.
It is becoming increasingly clear, and to a great many people of various 'walks of life' that I speak with, not just to me, that there is a growing, real likelihood of massive violence inside the U.S. as the people attempt to counter all of this evil - neoliberal 'education reform' - a complete contradiction in terms, the 'Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission' decision, the indefinite detention provisions in the NDAA, the rash of shit-head imbecilic fascists called 'Republican governors' by some, the brutal police state tactica against Occupy, etc., etc.
Whether this violence will be initiated by the state or federal governments as they roll out their Northern Command stormtroopers, or by the people remains to be seen. I personally have no trouble with the idea of burning charter schools to the ground, or anything that the 'neoliberaleducation reform' crowd attempt to build.
Let's have at it I say! I am preparing not for protest but resistance. No more asking nice for fascists to stop attacking decency at every level of society. No more getting pepper sprayed in the eyes by people who had time to prepare to kick our asses. It time to "hit it and quit it" - actions and not symbolic protests. The first duty of the resistance is not to get caught.
One of my first acts I'm really psyched about is radio - I figure by this time next month I will have spent less than $350 on FM radio equipment with which I should be able to blanket the city in spurts with Occupy-style messages.
Corporate education reform has to do with destroying unions and dipping into public monies collected through taxes. It has nothing to do with innovation, efficiency, or building community. If the charter movement was devoted to improving schools, then why aren't charters involved in securing more state funding for education? The reason is simple: if public schools are underfunded, they will be replaced by charters as students, teachers, and administrators have to deal with an impoverished curriculum, huge class sizes, and a general lack of resources. Charters WANT public schools to fail so they can flock to the carcass and feed on the entrails of once decent public school systems. As a former teacher, I am sick at heart for the damage inflicted on our public schools.
How about your tax dollars going to finance private for the rich only schools?
This trend was all too clear in the early 90's already. It has taken the public at least 15 years too long to catch on. The incursion of the business model and biz-speak into the school setting was unbearable even then. The neolibs are ripping up everything in sight. It was unfathomable to me then how the upper and middle managers of the school system could accept the new agenda so readily. No one put up a fight in the admin ranks. Teachers who protested were vilified in the street, at their jobs, and in the press. The very essence of what makes (made?) Western democracies great, IMNSHO, is being wiped out by the coporates behind this trend. I had to get out, despite a financial penalty. What a betrayal of our young generations.
It's the money, stupid!
None of this corruption would be possible without corporate personhood.
Just get rid of all these education "departments." They should really be called "schooling" departments because that's what it is. Get the federal government out of education and let the local counties and municipalities figure out how they want to educate their children.
These kids at occupy think they should be able to go to school their whole life. Go out in the real world and get an education. Go be productive and make a difference in the world. Your not going to do that in a fucking classroom.
The "fucking classroom" is where you learn most things that prepare one for anything outside of menail labor. The "fucking classroom" is where people learned how to build bridges that stay up and how to read music and how to decipher chemical names and how to conjugate verbs in other languages.
It's been a great struggle for even some of the working classes to get decent access to the "fucking classroom", and you want to tear at that?
I'm completely sick of the right wing "I have the right to keep my kids stupid" homeschool meme having penetrated so far into the so called left.
An article in Monday's NY Times (on page A23) gave a time line on how New York City's education reforms have worked in the last 10 years. Every "innovation" claimed to have improved students' test scores has been shown to be overblown and ineffective. Students are doing no better now than 10 years ago when Mayor Bloomberg took over the school system and appointed members of the school board.
Now the same type of "reform" has been proposed for the Indiaapolis school system. Because there is a lot of money and power involved, it will probably go through, with the same results.
I have been observing the PEP for over three years and I have seen the destruction and hostile take over of public education by private industry. Several of my students last year fought and protested but to no avail the PEP closed the schools. I honestly hope that OWS is more successful then we were. For your entertainment enjoy the following clip:
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/02/04/cathie-black_n_818601.html