Sunday, June 12, 2011

Why I Oppose Charter Schools

Last year, Governor Christie cut aid to school budgets by 820 million dollars, yet he promised that he would not touch the money allotted to charter schools. He also promised that there would be more charter schools in New Jersey in 2011. This is illogical on many counts. Diverting money from already strained school budgets in order to open more charter schools, especially in towns with successful schools, will not solve any of New Jersey’s economic problems. It will also weaken the schools we have.

I teach English at East Brunswick High School, and I live in Highland Park. Both school systems are very successful. Both have a high graduation rate, high SAT scores, and a high percentage of students that attend four-year colleges. Neither is a "failing school." These kinds of schools are never mentioned in Governor Christie’s rhetoric. Both schools now succeed despite the fact that budgets were cut because of Governor Christie’s “tool-kit.” My honors English classes at East Brunswick High School are packed with students this year. Children are not getting the attention they deserve. Highland Park has been reduced to a skeleton crew of supervisors. Any extra money in either town's school budget would go to excellent use, but in East Brunswick, Hatikvah, a Hebrew Language Charter school, is further draining the budget. Highland Park's tiny school budget is in similar danger. Tikun Olam, another Hebrew language charter school, has been "fast tracked" for state approval. Trenton has instructed Highland Park to reserve money in its school budget to fund the charter school.

Why are charter schools being opened in successful districts? The citizens of Highland Park and East Brunswick pay high property taxes to live towns with good school systems. Now this money is being siphoned into an experiment in free market education. These districts do not need charter schools. This does not benefit the majority of the students. The “fast-tracking” of these schools is a political maneuver against public school teachers and unions. Governor Christie has effectively pointed the finger at the educational system for the State's economic woes, and he is supposedly using charter schools as a tool to balance the budget. This makes no sense. The cause of the recession is not competitive teacher salaries, and the solution is not more State funded schools. New Jersey already gives people a wide variety of choices in schools. That is why plenty of people with children want to live in East Brunswick and Highland Park.

Governor Christie never mentions this when he attacks New Jersey schools and their budgets. He also never mentions that New Jersey has the highest high school graduation rate in the nation. New Jersey sends an extremely high percentage of students to four-year colleges. Could certain schools use reform? Certainly. But to condemn the entire system-- when it is one of the most successful school systems in the nation-- is egregious. Christie's solution to the public school "crisis" is the free market. He believes choice and competition will solve the problem. Charter schools will offer this choice. And charter schools will do it on the cheap. Charter schools, though funded by the public, do not have to meet as many standards as public schools. Also, like private schools, charter schools have the ability to reject students with special needs, and counsel out students that are not performing well. Yet they still do not perform better than public schools. It seems the Governor bases his pro-charter school philosophy on one-sided, anecdotal documentaries like The Cartel, which he heartily endorses. The Cartel cherry picks a few stories of corruption in public schools and then makes a generalization, but making schools more like a business is perilous. A free market, while fine for non-essential items, is volatile and takes time to react to market needs. A free market in mortgage products resulted in our current recession. A free market in electricity resulted in rolling blackouts in California and the Enron scandal. Some things should not be subjected to the caprices of a free market, and our children's education is one of them.

All I ask is that the Governor put down his remote and do more reading. I suggest that he reads Diane Ravitch's recent analysis of charter schools, The Death and Life of the Great American School System. Ravitch, a former Secretary of Education, is as bi-partisan as they come. George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton appointed her, and she has been critical of both conservative and liberal views on education. Her book provides comprehensive data that charter schools generally do not produce better test scores-- more often than not, they produce worse scores-- and she details the logistical nightmare of making students and parents consumers of education, instead of citizens vested in their town’s school. Years ago, Ravitch believed charter schools would improve the educational system. Then she analyzed the data and looked at the consequences. She changed her philosophy. Is our Governor capable of such reflection?

The public school is one of the last places where the local community can participate in democracy: vote on the budget, influence the curriculum, collaborate with the school board. Places with the best educational systems-- from Massachusetts to Finland to Japan-- have a strong respect for public schools. They have community involvement in the curriculum; well paid, well educated, unionized teachers; and ample funding.

We do not need more schools in New Jersey. We need to become involved in the schools we have. We need impassioned participation in our educational system from parents, students, teachers, administrators and politicians. Teaching needs to be an attractive job for our best and brightest. We need to ask tough questions about what we want our children to know. And our public school budgets should not suffer because of our governor’s political agenda. Please do what you can to ensure that your town's public school is properly funded. All of our children deserve it.

11 comments:

  1. Great job, Dave. When I read about the push for the Hatikvah charter school, I thought, well no way that can happen. How does a Hebrew language school not violate separation of church/state? And now, here we are. I can't imagine...

    ReplyDelete
  2. that's whole other issue i didn't even get into-- what country is this? it seems as if, in fairness, there should be an Aramaic language school as well.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nice article Dave. As a product of a private school married to a smarter public school graduate I won't quibble with the basic concept of your piece but I think your two free-market-is-bad examples don't hold up to scrutiny...

    Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac hold about half of the residential mortgages in this country. They are government-sponsored institutions, and while not 100% to blame for the housing meltdown, certainly they bear a large responsibility for it by making it easier for banks and other lenders to sell their crap loans and thereby escape risk. Fannie and Freddie distorted the market by allowing lenders to take risks they might not have taken otherwise. Risk is a critical component of any free-market system.

    The California electricity crisis was caused by a stupid, partial-deregulation system. It was anything but a free-market. Electricity suppliers (after being forced to sell their power generating assets) by law could not sell electricity above a certain amount. That's great until the wholesale price exceeds the retail price. Demand keeps going up (why conserve if the price won't go up?) but supply stays the same (can't build new plants in Cali). Much of California's power comes from out of state (and even some from Mexico). Electricity can't be stored so the utilities, during periods of peak demand, had to buy on the spot market, which is very expensive (and where Enron was able to make most of its mischief). Enron would never have been able to manipulate prices the way they did if there had been a true free market - if the utilities could have raised retail prices, you would have seen a drop in demand and leveled out the supply shortages (think how gasoline use dropped nearly 10% after gas hit $4 / gallon).

    And the electricity crisis (which happened 7-8 years before this recession) had nothing to do with California's complete inability to keep spending under control. Their current deficit is $40 billion and there are $700 billion in unfunded pension promises to public sector unions - despite (or because of) having the highest, most progressive tax rates in the country.

    Jason

    ReplyDelete
  4. I see your points, but I think the analogy holds for both-- the schools are not going to be completely deregulated, like Freddie and Fannie, they will still be supported by public funds, and like the electricity market, a little bit of deregulation caused a lot of mischief. can you completely deregulate something that can't be stored and is essential for certain things-- hospitals, heat, air-conditioning, etc.-- without potentially killing people?

    also, most of the crap loans were being tranched and repackaged as CDO's and synthetic CDO's and being resold. that was due to serious deregulation of derivatives-- if it wasn't for people like john paulson and his investment in credit default swaps, even more risk would have been taken. and, like with AIG, and charter schools, if it all fails, the public will bail the schools out.

    my point is only this: a free market is great for certain things, it offers a quick solution to the proper price and supply, but it is volatile, and there is always the possibility of a black swan or a run on th emarket, and you may have to do without until things adjust. i don't think we want such a system in education, even if it might cut some costs in the end.

    ReplyDelete
  5. Aramaic? Do you mean Arabic? The two schools you mention most certainly teach Aramaic.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I have no problem with a robust, tax-payer funded public school system. It is clearly within the public interest and should be a primary function of local government.

    I am simply nitpicking your "deregulation" examples, because, in my opinion, they actually show the damage, however well-intentioned, government can inflict upon market efficiencies. California has, for decades, restricted supply of electricity (through regulation) yet imposed price controls as demand for that resource increased. That isn't "a little bit of deregulation", that's command-and-control delusion. Enron committed fraud, which is a question of law, not regulation, which is generally political.

    If Al Gore had become president, the financial meltdown would have still occurred (unless he would have fired Greenspan, which is unlikely). CDOs and mortgage derivatives are new financial instruments; they were created in response to global capital seeking better returns in our (and other) housing markets because the Fed and other central banks - government institutions - kept interest rates too low for too long. These instruments weren't "deregulated" - which implies that rules were loosened or eliminated - they were never regulated because nobody even understood what they were, including European banks, which are much more regulated than ours. Euro banks were / are much more leveraged and in deeper trouble than US banks despite their additional regulatory requirements.

    ReplyDelete
  7. Good point, I guess I should have said, "unregulated," in regards to derivatives.

    And I switched my language with California-- I was referring to the specific instances where Enron "gamed" the electricity market, closing certain plants to raise prices, and those transcripts where Enron traders are rejoicing about wild-fires because it's going to spike prices for "Grandma Millie."

    ReplyDelete
  8. also, i've been responding to a million things on this and reading really fast-- i just realized who i was responding to and i wish this wasn't such a serious forum so i could add some of my normal "rhetorical" techniques . . .

    ReplyDelete
  9. and i can't believe i conceded any points to you, no matter how trivial.

    ReplyDelete
  10. More importantly, when are you coming to Colorado so we can yell IDIOT at each other in person? Have the boys been on skis yet?

    ReplyDelete
  11. rented skis for the season-- we've gone a few times and i took them out yesterday on the hill in the park, they are getting there . . .

    ReplyDelete