The Crisis in Public Education: And Justice for All

Latest

Thousands of parents, students, teachers, public school employees and community members rally against proposed closing of 54 public schools in Chicago.
Thousands of parents, students, teachers, public school employees and community members rally against proposed closing of 54 public schools in Chicago.

ATLANTA, GA—The public school system in America is being gradually eliminated. Is it because it is the last area whereby corporations can create for-profit schools and the fact that our minority students have become the majority in the schools?Is it a war on people of color and of poverty?
On January 2, 2001 President George Bush signed the No Child Left Behind (NCLB) legislation that testing and accountability would be the criteria to measure if students and whether schools and/or school districts would be granted bonuses or suffer punishment such as the closure of “failing” schools. The high stakes testing and the top-down educational mandates are not meeting the needs of of the majority of the students—Hispanic and Black. This becomes the route from school to prison pipeline.
In the op-ed in the Bellingham (WA) Herald on March 23, Lorraine Kasprisin, editor of the Journal of Educational Controversy, writes, “The school-to-prison pipeline stands as a direct contradiction to the vision of the public school as an institution for promoting and sustaining a democratic republic.” She denotes that the data from the ED’s Office for Civil Rights “indicate that over three million students are suspended and more than 100,000 students are expelled each year.” She documents examples of zero tolerance policies, overuse of school discipline and juvenile court referrals all stemming from the pressures and abuse from the high-stakes testing environment as causes. She is an advocate for the student’s right to a quality education, freedom from discrimination and due process.
Many school systems and schools are taken over by the states or local governments under the pretense that they are “failing” systems or schools or that they are otherwise dysfunctional. Georgia Governor Nathan Deal recently removed six of the nine DeKalb County, Georgia School Board members (the three remaining members were just elected). The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) is the agency that monitors accreditation but actually only monitors management not student achievement. It considered the DeKalb County Board members dysfunctional and put it on probation. The Atlanta and Clayton County School Systems suffered from this same situation a few years ago. SACS plays a part in the move to privatize the public school systems. During the legislative session Governor Deal asked the state legislators to give the state more control to intervene over struggling school boards.
Other examples of “take-overs “ of school systems have occurred in Prince George, County, Maryland, by the County Executive; New Jersey Governor Chris Christie’s take-over of the Camden, NJ, system; Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanual plans to close 53 schools and in Michigan, emergency manager Roy Roberts has announced that he will fire the superintendent that the Detroit school board hired.There are many more cases of uprooting the democratic right of all—one man, one vote—which the Voting Rights Act of 1964 reflects.
Rich Gibson, an advocate for Education for Social Justice, Democracy and Equality, in response to this destruction of public education states: “the education agenda is a war agenda” (war on working people; war on poor people; war on people of color; war on youth; war on schools, students, teachers, and the community).

+ Articles by this author

Free to republish but please credit the People's Tribune. Visit us at www.peoplestribune.org, email peoplestribune@gmail.com, or call 773-486-3551.

The People’s Tribune brings you articles written by individuals or organizations, along with our own reporting. Bylined articles reflect the views of the authors. Unsigned articles reflect the views of the editorial board. Please credit the source when sharing: ©2024 peoplestribune.org. Please donate to help us keep bringing you voices of the movement. Click here. We’re all volunteer, no paid staff.

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here

Featured

A Third Woman Died Under Texas’ Abortion Ban. Doctors Are Avoiding D&Cs, Reaching for Riskier Miscarriage Treatments

Thirty-five-year-old Porsha Ngumezi’s case raises questions about how abortion bans are pressuring doctors to avoid standard care even in straightforward miscarriages.

‘Who Was Officer?’: Family Still Seeks Answers From Jackson Police a Year After Son’s Burial

Dexter Wade, killed by off-duty officer, was mistakenly buried by Hinds County, Mississippi in a pauper’s field. His mother seeks answers to what happened to her son.

Students Walk Out Across the Country to Protest Trump’s Election

Read the speech delivered by a student at the student walkout at MSU two days after the Presidential election. Thousands of students nationwide walked out to protest Donald Trump's election and his policies on the same day.

Let’s Join Hands to Resist the Trump Agenda

Thousands of groups and millions of people are beginning to reach out to one another to resist the Trump agenda. Regardless of who we voted for, we the people, have a common interest in seeing to it that all our families are well taken care of, that all children are well educated and have a future, and that we have a society free of climate disaster, racism, bigotry and inequality.

How Democrats Ignoring Gaza Brought Down Their Party

"Many Americans roused to action by their government’s complicity in Gaza’s destruction have no personal connection to Palestine or Israel. Their motive is not ethnic or religious. It is moral."

More from the People's Tribune