U smantellamentu di u mudellu corporatizatu è militarizatu di a scola deve esse una prima priorità sottu l'amministrazione Obama. Sfortunatamente, Obama hà numinatu cum'è u so secretariu di l'educazione qualcunu chì incarna stu mudellu di scola assolutamente punitivu, anti-intellettuale, corporatizatu è test-driven.

 

Dapoi l'anni 1980, ma in particulare sottu à l'amministrazione Bush, certi elementi di a diritta religiosa, a cultura corporativa è a diritta ripubblicana anu sustinutu chì l'educazione publica gratuita rapprisenta o un fraudulente massivu o un fallimentu disprezzu. Luntanu da un veru appellu à a riforma, sti attacchi nascenu largamente da un tentativu di trasfurmà e scole da un investimentu publicu à un beni privatu, rispunsevuli micca di e dumande è di i valori di una sucetà demucratica ma di l'imperativi di u mercatu. Cum'è u storicu di l'educazione David Labaree sustene bè, i scoli publichi sò stati attaccati in l'ultima decada "micca solu perchè sò cunsiderati inefficaci, ma perchè sò publichi". l'insignamentu è l'apprendimentu è i guvernà secondu l'interessi corporativi sò evidenti in l'accentu nantu à e teste standardizzate, l'usu di mandati curriculari top-down, l'afflussu di publicità in i scoli, l'usu di motivi di prufittu per "incuragisce" u rendiment di i studienti, l'attaccu à i sindicati di i prufessori è i modi di pedagogia chì ponenu l'accentu nantu à l'apprendimentu è a memorizazione.

 

Per l'amministrazione Bush, a prova hè diventata l'ultima misura di responsabilità, smentendu i meccanismi cumplessi di l'insignamentu è l'apprendimentu. U curriculum nascostu hè chì a prova sia aduprata cum'è una strata per disabilità i prufessori riducenduli à semplici tecnichi, chì i studienti sò ridotti in modu simile à i clienti in u mercatu piuttostu cà cum'è studianti impegnati, critichi è chì e scole pubbliche sempre sottofinanziate fallenu cusì eventualmente pò esse privatizatu. Ma ci hè un latu ancu più scuru à e riforme iniziate sottu l'amministrazione Bush è avà usate in una quantità di sistemi di scola in tuttu u paese. Cum'è a logica di u mercatu è "u cumplessu crimine"[2] inquadra u campu di e relazioni suciali in i scoli, i studienti sò sottumessi à trè pulitiche particularmente offensive, difese da l'autorità scolastiche è i pulitici sottu a rubrica di a sicurità di a scola. Prima, i studienti sò sempre più sottumessi à e pulitiche di tolleranza zero chì sò usati principalmente per punisce, reprime è escludi. Siconda, sò sempre più assorbiti in un "complexu di crimine" in quale u persunale di sicurità, utilizendu pratiche disciplinari aspra, rimpiazzanu avà e funzioni normative chì i prufessori anu furnitu una volta sia in aula sia fora di l'aula.[3] Terzu, di più in più di e scole sguassate u spaziu trà l'educazione è a delinquenza juvenile, sustituendu pedagogichi penali à l'apprendimentu criticu è rimpiazzà una cultura scolastica chì prumove un discorsu di pussibilità cù una cultura di a paura è u cuntrollu suciale.

 

In cunseguenza, assai ghjovani di culore in i sistemi scolastici urbani, per via di e dure pulitiche di tolleranza zero, ùn sò micca solu suspesi o espulsi da a scola. Sò stati purtati in i recinti scuri di i centri di detenzione per i minori, i tribunali per adulti è a prigiò. Di sicuru, u smantellamentu di stu mudellu corporatizatu è militarizatu di a scola deve esse una prima priorità sottu l'amministrazione Obama. Sfortunatamente, Obama hà numinatu cum'è u so secretariu di l'educazione qualcunu chì incarna veramente stu mudellu di scola completamente punitivu, anti-intellettuali, corporatizatu è test-driven.

 

A selezzione di Barack Obama di Arne Duncan per u secretariu di l'educazione ùn hè micca bonu per a direzzione pulitica di a so amministrazione nè per u futuru di l'educazione publica. L'appellu d'Obama à u cambiamentu cade in piattu cù questu appuntamentu, micca solu perchè Duncan definisce largamente i scoli in un mudellu di pedagogia basata nantu à u mercatu è penale, ma ancu perchè ùn hà micca a minima cunniscenza di e scole cum'è qualcosa altru ch'è aggiunte di a corporazione in u megliu. o a prigiò in peghju. A prima vittima in questu scenariu hè una lingua di rispunsabilità suciale è pulitica capace di difende quelli istituzioni vitali chì allarganu i diritti, i beni publichi è i servizii centrali à una demucrazia significativa. Questu hè soprattuttu veru in u rispettu di u tema di a scola publica è di u dibattitu chì seguita nantu à u scopu di l'educazione, u rolu di i prufessori cum'è intellettuali critichi, a pulitica di u curriculu è a centralità di a pedagogia cum'è pratica murale è pulitica.

 

Duncan, CEO of the Chicago Public Schools, presided over the implementation and expansion of an agenda that militarized and corporatized the third largest school system in the nation, one that is about 90 percent poor and nonwhite. Under Duncan, Chicago took the lead in creating public schools run as military academies, vastly expanded draconian student expulsions, instituted sweeping surveillance practices, advocated a growing police presence in the schools, arbitrarily shut down entire schools and fired entire school staffs. A recent report, "Education on Lockdown," claimed that partly under Duncan‘s leadership "Chicago Public Schools (CPS) has become infamous for its harsh zero tolerance policies. Although there is no verified positive impact on safety, these policies have resulted in tens of thousands of student suspensions and an exorbitant number of expulsions."[4]

 

Duncan‘s neoliberal ideology is on full display in the various connections he has established with the ruling political and business elite in Chicago.[5] He led the Renaissance 2010 plan, which was created for Mayor Daley by the Commercial Club of Chicago – an organization representing the largest businesses in the city. The purpose of Renaissance 2010 was to increase the number of high quality schools that would be subject to new standards of accountability – a code word for legitimating more charter schools and high stakes testing in the guise of hard-nosed empiricism. Chicago‘s 2010 plan targets 15 percent of the city district’s alleged underachieving schools in order to dismantle them and open 100 new experimental schools in areas slated for gentrification.

 

Most of the new experimental schools have eliminated the teacher union. The Commercial Club hired corporate consulting firm A.T. Kearney to write Ren2010, which called for the closing of 100 public schools and the reopening of privatized charter schools, contract schools (more charters to circumvent state limits) and "performance" schools. Kearney‘s web site is unapologetic about its business-oriented notion of leadership, one that John Dewey thought should be avoided at all costs. It states, "Drawing on our program-management skills and our knowledge of best practices used across industries, we provided a private-sector perspective on how to address many of the complex issues that challenge other large urban education transformations."[6]

 

DuncanA difesa di u pianu di u Rinascimentu 2010 solu duveria avè immediatamente disqualificatu per l'appuntamentu Obama. In u core di stu pianu hè un schema di privatizazione per a creazione di un "mercatu" in l'educazione publica, incitandu à e scole publiche à cumpetenu l'una cù l'altra per risorse scarse è intruducendu iniziative di "scelta" per chì i genitori è i studienti si pensanu à sè stessu cum'è cunsumatori privati. di servizii educativi.[7] In u risultatu di u so sustegnu di u pianu, Duncan hè statu attaccatu da l'urganisazione di a cumunità, i genitori, i studienti è i studienti. Issi diversi critichi l'anu denunziatu cum'è un schema menu pensatu à migliurà a qualità di a scola chè cum'è un pianu di privatizazione, di sfondamentu di i sindicati è di smantellamentu di i cunsiglii scolastici lucali eletti demucraticamenti.

 

They also describe it as part of neighborhood gentrification schemes involving the privatization of public housing projects through mixed finance developments.[8] (Tony Rezko, an Obama and Blagojevich campaign supporter, made a fortune from these developments along with many corporate investors.) Some of the dimensions of public school privatization involve Renaissance schools being run by subcontracted for-profit companies – a shift in school governance from teachers and elected community councils to appointed administrators coming disproportionately from the ranks of business. It also establishes corporate control over the selection and model of new schools, giving the business elite and their foundations increasing influence over educational policy. No wonder that Duncan had the support of David Brooks, the conservative op-ed writer for The New York Times.

 

One particularly egregious example of Duncan‘s vision of education can be seen in the conference he organized with the Renaissance Schools Fund. In May 2008, the Renaissance Schools Fund, the financial wing of the Renaissance 2010 plan operating under the auspices of the Commercial Club, held a symposium, "Free to Choose, Free to Succeed: The New Market in Public Education," at the exclusive private club atop the Aon Center. The event was held largely by and for the business sector, school privatization advocates, and others already involved in Renaissance 2010, such as corporate foundations and conservative think tanks. Significantly, no education scholars were invited to participate in the proceedings, although it was heavily attended by fellows from the pro-privatization Fordham Foundation and featured speakers from various school choice organizations and the leadership of corporations. Speakers clearly assumed the audience shared their views.

 

Without irony, Arne Duncan characterized the goal of Renaissance 2010 creating the new market in public education as a "movement for social justice." He invoked corporate investment terms to describe reforms explaining that the 100 new schools would leverage influence on the other 500 schools in Chicago. Redefining schools as stock investments he said, "I am not a manager of 600 schools. I’m a portfolio manager of 600 schools and I’m trying to improve the portfolio." He claimed that education can end poverty. He explained that having a sense of altruism is important, but that creating good workers is a prime goal of educational reform and that the business sector has to embrace public education. "We’re trying to blur the lines between the public and the private," he said. He argued that a primary goal of educational reform is to get the private sector to play a huge role in school change in terms of both money and intellectual capital. He also attacked the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU), positioning it as an obstacle to business-led reform. He also insisted that the CTU opposes charter schools (and, hence, change itself), despite the fact that the CTU runs ten such schools under Renaissance 2010. Despite the representation in the popular press of Duncan as conciliatory to the unions, his statements and those of others at the symposium belied a deep hostility to teachers unions and a desire to end them (all of the charters created under Ren2010 are deunionized).

 

Thus, in Duncan‘s attempts to close and transform low-performing schools, he not only reinvents them as entrepreneurial schools, but, in many cases, frees "them from union contracts and some state regulations."[9] Duncan effusively praised one speaker, Michael Milkie, the founder of the
Strada Nobel
scole charter, chì anu dumandatu apertamente a chjusura è a riapertura di ogni scola in u distrittu precisamente per sbarazzarsi di i sindicati. Ciò chì hè diventatu chjaru hè chì Duncan vede u Rinascimentu 2010 cum'è un pianu naziunale per a riforma educativa, ma ciò chì hè in ghjocu in questa visione hè a fine di a scola cum'è un bene publicu è un ritornu à u mudellu neoliberale discreditatu è stancu di riforma chì i cunservatori amanu. abbraccia.

 

In spite of the corporate rhetoric of accountability, efficiency and excellence, there is to date no evidence that the radical reforms under Duncan‘s tenure as the "CEO" of Chicago Public Schools have created any significant improvement. In part, this is because the Chicago Public Schools and the Renaissance Schools Fund report data in obscurantist ways to make traditional comparisons difficult if not impossible.[10] And, in part, examples of educational claims to school improvement are being made about schools embedded in communities that suffered dislocation and removal through coordinated housing privatization and gentrification policies.

 

For example, the city has decimated public housing in coveted real estate enclaves, dispossessing thousands of residents of their communities. Once the poor are removed, the urban cleansing provides an opportunity for Duncan to open a number of Renaissance Schools, catering to those socio-economically empowered families whose children would surely improve the city’s overall test scores. What are alleged to be school improvements under Ren2010, rest on an increase in the city’s overall test scores and other performance measures that parodies the financial shell game corporations used to inflate profit margins – and prospects for future catastrophes are as inevitable. In the end, all Duncan leaves us with is a Renaissance 2010 model of education that is celebrated as a business designed "to save kids" from a failed public system. In fact, it condemns public schooling, administrators, teachers and students to a now outmoded and discredited economic model of reform that can only imagine education as a business, teachers as entrepreneurs and students as customers.[11]

 

It is difficult to understand how Barack Obama can reconcile his vision of change with Duncan’s history of supporting a corporate vision for school reform and a penchant for extreme zero-tolerance polices – both of which are much closer to the retrograde policies hatched in conservative think tanks such as the Heritage Foundation, Cato Institution, Fordham Foundation, American Enterprise Institute, than to the values of the many millions who voted for the democratic change he promised. As is well known, these think tanks share an agenda not for strengthening public schooling, but for dismantling it and replacing it with a private market in consumable educational services. At the heart of Duncan‘s vision of school reform is a corporatized model of education that cancels out the democratic impulses and practices of civil society by either devaluing or absorbing them within the logic of the market or the prison. No longer a space for relating schools to the obligations of public life, social responsibility to the demands of critical and engaged citizenship, schools in this dystopian vision legitimate an all-encompassing horizon for producing market identities, values and those privatizing and penal pedagogies that both inflate the importance of individualized competition and punish those who do not fit into its logic of pedagogical Darwinism.[12]

 

In spite of what Duncan argues, the greatest threat to our children does not come from lowered standards, the absence of privatized choice schemes or the lack of rigid testing measures that offer the aura of accountability. On the contrary, it comes from a society that refuses to view children as a social investment, consigns 13 million children to live in poverty, reduces critical learning to massive testing programs, promotes policies that eliminate most crucial health and public services and defines rugged individualism through the degrading celebration of a gun culture, extreme sports and the spectacles of violence that permeate corporate controlled media industries. Students are not at risk because of the absence of market incentives in the schools. Young people are under siege in American schools because, in the absence of funding, equal opportunity and real accountability, far too many of them have increasingly become institutional breeding grounds for racism, right-wing paramilitary cultures, social intolerance and sexism.[13] We live in a society in which a culture of testing, punishment and intolerance has replaced a culture of social responsibility and compassion.

 

Within such a climate of harsh discipline and disdain for critical teaching and learning, it is easier to subject young people to a culture of faux accountability or put them in jail rather than to provide the education, services and care they need to face problems of a complex and demanding society.[14] What Duncan and other neoliberal economic advocates refuse to address is what it would mean for a viable educational policy to provide reasonable support services for all students and viable alternatives for the troubled ones. The notion that children should be viewed as a crucial social resource – one that represents, for any healthy society, important ethical and political considerations about the quality of public life, the allocation of social provisions and the role of the state as a guardian of public interests – appears to be lost in a society that refuses to invest in its youth as part of a broader commitment to a fully realized democracy. As the social order becomes more privatized and militarized, we increasingly face the problem of losing a generation of young people to a system of increasing intolerance, repression and moral indifference. It is difficult to understand why Obama would appoint as secretary of education someone who believes in a market-driven model that has not only failed young people, but given the current financial crisis has been thoroughly discredited. Unless Duncan is willing to reinvent himself, the national agenda he will develop for education embodies and exacerbates these problems and, as such, it will leave a lot more kids behind than it helps.

 

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[1] Cited in Alfie Kohn, "The Real Threat to American Schools", Tikkun (marzu-aprile 2001), p. 25. Per un cumentu interessante nantu à Obama è a so pussibili scelta per dirige u dipartimentu di l'educazione è a lotta per a riforma di a scola, vede Alfie Kohn, "Beware School 'Reformers'," The Nation (29 dicembre 2008). In linea: www.thenation.com/doc/20081229/kohn/print.

 

[2] This term comes form: David Garland, "The Culture of Control: Crime and Social Order in Contemporary Society" (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2002).

 

[3] For a brilliant analysis of the "governing through crime" complex, see Jonathan Simon, "Governing Through Crime: How the War on Crime Transformed American Democracy and Created a Culture of Fear," (New York, NY: Oxford University Press, 2007).

 

[4] Advancement Project in partnership with Padres and Jovenes Unidos, Southwest Youth Collaborative, "Education on Lockdown: The Schoolhouse to Jailhouse Track," (New York: Children & Family Justice Center of Northwestern University School of Law, March 24, 2005), p.31. On the broader issue of the effect of racialized zero tolerance policies on public education, see Christopher G. Robbins, "Expelling Hope: The Assault on Youth and the Militarization of Schooling" (Albany: SUNY Press, 2008). See also, Henry A. Giroux, "The Abandoned Generation" (New York: Palgrave, 2004).

 

[5] David Hursh and Pauline Lipman, "Chapter 8: Renaissance 2010: The Reassertion of Ruling-Class Power through Neoliberal Policies in Chicago" in David Hursh, "High-Stakes Testing and the Decline of Teaching and Learning" (Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 2008).

 

[6] Vede: www.atkearney.com

 

[7] "Creazione di un Novu Mercatu di l'Educazione Pùbblica: U Renaissance Schools Fund 2008 Progress Report", U Renaissance Schools Fund www.rsfchicago.org

 

[8] Kenneth J. Saltman, "Chapter 3: Renaissance 2010 and No Child Left Behind Capitalizing on Disaster: Taking and Breaking Public Schools" (Boulder: Paradigm Publishers, 2007).

 

[9] Sarah Karp and Joyn Myers, "Duncan‘s Track Record," Catalyst Chicago (December 15, 2008). Online: www.catalyst-chicago.org/news/index.php?item=2514&cat=5&tr=y&auid=4336549

 

[10] (See Chicago Public Schools Office of New Schools 2006/2007 Charter School Performance Report Executive Summary)

 

[11] See Dorothy Shipps, "School Reform, Corporate Style: Chicago 1880-2000," (Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 2006).

 

[12] See, for example, Summary Report, "America‘s Cradle to Prison Pipeline," Children’s Defense Fund. Online at: www.childrensdefense.org/site/DocServer/CPP_report_2007_summary.pdf?docID=6001; also see, Elora Mukherjee, "Criminalizing the Classroom: The Over-Policing of New York City Schools," (New York: American Civil Liberties Union and New York Civil Liberties, March 2008), pp. 1-36.

 

[13] Donna Gaines, "How Schools Teach Our Kids to Hate", Newsday (domenica 25 aprile 1999), p. B5.

 

[14] As has been widely, reported, the prison industry has become big business with many states spending more on prison construction than on university construction. Jennifer Warren, "One in 100: Behind Bars in America 2008," (Washington, DC: The PEW Center on the States, 2007). Online at: www.pewcenteronthestates.org/news_room_detail.aspx?id=35912

 

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Henry A. Giroux holds the Global TV Network chair in English and Cultural Studies at McMaster University in Canada. His most recent books include: "Take Back Higher Education" (co-authored with Susan Searls Giroux, 2006), "The University in Chains: Confronting the Military-Industrial-Academic Complex," (2007), and "Against the Terror of Neoliberalism: Politics Beyond the Age of Greed," (2008). His newest book, "Youth in a Suspect Society: Democracy or Disposability?," will be published by Palgrave Macmillan in 2009.

 

Kenneth Saltman is associate professor in the department of Educational Policy Studies and Research at DePaul University in Chicago. He is the author, most recently, of "Capitalizing on Disaster: Taking and Breaking Public Schools," (Paradigm Publishers 2007), and editor of Schooling and the Politics of Disaster (Routledge 2007). 


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Henry Giroux (natu 1943) hè un scrittore è criticu culturale di fama internaziunale, u prufessore Henry Giroux hà autore, o coautore di più di 65 libri, scrittu parechji centinaie d'articuli accademici, hà datu più di 250 conferenze pubbliche, hè statu un cuntributore regulare à stampa, televisione. , è i media di nutizie radio, è hè unu di i più citati accademichi canadiani chì travaglianu in ogni area di ricerca di l'Umanità. In u 2002, hè statu chjamatu unu di i cinquanta principali pensatori educativi di u periodu mudernu in Cinquanta Pensatori Moderni nantu à l'Educazione: Da Piaget à u Presente cum'è parte di Routledge's Key Guides Publication Series.

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