American children are falling further behind. If memory serves, we’re down to 25th place now. Part of the reason is that education is underfunded. Another part is that curricula, especially in red states, have lost touch with teaching students how to think, in favor of teaching them what to think. And part is that Republicans want public education to fail, so that they can privatize it. Working to achieve that end, the DeVoss family is to education, what the Koch family is to organized labor.
Since the 2010 elections, voucher bills have popped up in legislatures around the nation. From Pennsylvania to Indiana to Florida, state governments across the country have introduced bills that would take money from public schools and use it to send students to private and religious institutions.
Vouchers have always been a staple of the right-wing agenda. Like previous efforts, this most recent push for vouchers is led by a network of conservative think tanks, PACs, Religious Right groups and wealthy conservative donors. But “school choice,” as they euphemistically paint vouchers, is merely a means to an end. Their ultimate goal is the total elimination of our public education system.
The decades-long campaign to end public education is propelled by the super-wealthy, right-wing DeVos family. Betsy Prince DeVos is the sister of Erik Prince, founder of the notorious private military contractor Blackwater USA (now Xe), and wife of Dick DeVos, son of the co-founder of Amway, the multi-tiered home products business [pyramid scheme].
By now, you’ve surely heard of the Koch brothers, whose behind-the-scenes financing of right-wing causes has been widely documented in the past year. The DeVoses have remained largely under the radar, despite the fact that their stealth assault on America’s schools has the potential to do away with public education as we know it.
Right-Wing Privatization Forces
The conservative policy institutes founded beginning in the 1970s get hundreds of millions of dollars from wealthy families and foundations to develop and promote free market fundamentalism. More specifically, their goals include privatizing social security, reducing government regulations, thwarting environmental policy, dismantling unions — and eliminating public schools.
Whatever they may say about giving poor students a leg up, their real priority is nothing short of the total dismantling of our public educational institutions, and they’ve admitted as much. Cato Institute founder Ed Crane and other conservative think tank leaders have signed the Public Proclamation to Separate School and State, which reads in part that signing on, “Announces to the world your commitment to end involvement by local, state, and federal government from education.”
But Americans don’t want their schools dismantled. So privatization advocates have recognized that it’s not politically viable to openly push for full privatization and have resigned themselves to incrementally dismantling public school systems. The think tanks’ weapon of choice is school vouchers.
Vouchers are funded with public school dollars but are used to pay for students to attend private and parochial (religious-affiliated) schools. The idea was introduced in the 1950s by the high priest of free-market fundamentalism, Milton Friedman, who also made the real goal of the voucher movement clear: “Vouchers are not an end in themselves; they are a means to make a transition from a government to a free-market system.” The quote is in a 1995 Cato Institute briefing paper titled “Public Schools: Make Them Private.”
Joseph Bast, president of Heartland Institute, stated in 1997, “Like most other conservatives and libertarians, we see vouchers as a major step toward the complete privatization of schooling. In fact, after careful study, we have come to the conclusion that they are the only way to dismantle the current socialist regime.” Bast added, “Government schools will diminish in enrollment and thus in number as parents shift their loyalty and vouchers to superior-performing private schools.”
But Bast’s lofty goals have not panned out. That’s because, quite simply, voucher programs do not work.
The longest running voucher program in the country is the 20-year-old Milwaukee School Choice Program. Standardized testing shows that the voucher students in private schools perform below the level of Milwaukee’s public school students, and even when socioeconomic status is factored in, the voucher students still score at or below the level of the students who remain in Milwaukee’s public schools. Cleveland’s voucher program has produced similar results. Private schools in the voucher program range from excellent to very poor. In some, less than 20 percent of students reach basic proficiency levels in math and reading.
Most Americans do not want their tax dollars to fund private and sectarian schools. Since 1966, 24 of 25 voucher initiatives have been defeated by voters, most by huge margins. Nevertheless, the pro-privatization battle continues, organized by an array of 527s, 501(c)(3)s, 501(c)(4)s, and political action committees. At the helm of this interconnected network is Betsy DeVos, the four-star general of the pro-voucher movement.
The DeVos Family Campaign for Privatization of Schools
The DeVoses are top contributors to the Republican Party and have provided the funding for major Religious Right organizations. And they spent millions of their own fortune promoting the failed voucher initiative in Michigan in 2000, dramatically outspending their opposition. Sixty-eight percent of Michigan voters rejected the voucher scheme. Following this defeat, the DeVoses altered their strategy.
Instead of taking the issue directly to voters, they would support bills for vouchers in state legislatures. In 2002 Dick DeVos gave a speech on school choice at the Heritage Foundation. After an introduction by former Reagan Secretary of Education William Bennett, DeVos described a system of “rewards and consequences” to pressure state politicians to support vouchers. “That has got to be the battle. It will not be as visible,” stated DeVos. He described how his wife Betsy was putting these ideas into practice in their home state of Michigan and claimed this effort has reduced the number of anti-school choice Republicans from six to two. The millions raised from the wealthy pro-privatization contributors would be used to finance campaigns of voucher supporters and purchase ads attacking opposing candidates.
Media materials for Betsy DeVos’ group All Children Matter, formed in 2003, claimed the organization spent $7.6 million in its first year, “impacting state legislative elections in 10 targeted states” and a won/loss record of 121/60.
Dick DeVos also explained to his Heritage Foundation audience that they should no longer use the term public schools, but instead start calling them “government schools.” He noted that the role of wealthy conservatives would have to be obscured. “We need to be cautious about talking too much about these activities,” said DeVos, and pointed to the need to “cut across a lot of historic boundaries, be they partisan, ethnic, or otherwise.”
Reinventing Vouchers
Like DeVos, several free-market think tanks have also issued warnings that vouchers appear to be an “elitist” plan. There’s reason for their concern, given the long and racially charged history of vouchers.
School vouchers drew little public interest until Brown v. Board of Education and the court-ordered desegregation of public schools. Southern states devised voucher schemes for students to leave public schools and take the public funding with them…. [emphasis added]
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This is a small part of a large article. Click through for the rest.
Vouchers serve a serve devious purposes. One is that they get poor and middle class people to help fund elitist education for rich kids. Even with vouchers, poor and middle class people could not afford to send their kids to the elite schools. Another is that vouchers provide a means to avoid the First Amendment establishment clause. It provides taxpayer funds to finance religious indoctrination of children. Yet another is that it allows racists in areas where whites are a minority to send their kids to schools with a minimum number of token non-white students. In all cases, the funds for vouchers comes from the budgets for public schools, making it more difficult tor them to provide quality education. That just what Republicans want.
I think that the system of local finance and control needs overhaul. Students in rich districts have plenty, while students in poor districts have little. Perhaps funding should be at the state level, so the funding of the schools depends on the number of students, not on the wealth of the communities where they are located it. In such a system, we could keep local school boards. However, a system that truly delivers equality of educational opportunity is the last thing Republicans want.
13 Responses to “Assault on Education”
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In MI we have something in the order of 250 different school districts. We don’t use vouchers for privatization we use charter schools. Funding levels for districts are determined on a single days attendance. Say the fifth Wednesday of the school year they every school takes attendance and that number determines how much of the pie, including charter schools gets. Seeing as 4th and 8th graders two years ago scored the lowest scores ever recorded on the National Education Assessment Test and Amway was founded in MI i don’t think this experiment works so well either.
Mark, how much of that can be attributed to how economically depressed the state is? A fair share of too little is too little. Is state funding all your districts get or do they get local funding too?
The state generally funds each district on a per pupil basis. The revenues from property taxes and (supposedly) the state lottery go into the pot to fund education. But that lottery money is taken intot the general fund and then after a rake off about 40% winds up in the education fund. some districts have held millage elections and get extra money that way.
That seems more equitable than most, but I suspect the millage receipts in wealthy districts still creates a considerable divide between rich and poor.
Many years ago–when i attended religious schools–vouchers or any funding from the state was strongly opposed- by the school systems themselves ; because ; state funding brings state control-simple—now it is still a state control issue—
It is a fashion to deride the Roman Catholic schools of the past , and the “mean” nuns (they were!) who taught in them—-but darned if those schools and nuns didn’t teach how to think ,and question—the religion itself I left behind-but I still can think !!-Those who control Education–control the people—still simple idea—-only now it has become a sought after goal , instead of being feared–
Phyllis, to the best of my knowledge, Roman Catholics have not been the driving force behind this. It has been the Republican Supply-side pseudo-Christians who want guv’mint money to teach 7 day creation and the heroism of Jefferson Davis.
I would strongly urge everyone to read this article about the DeVos family.
These are very, very scary people … and they got way too much money, so they can easily try to do what they want to do!
I agree and encourage everyone to click through as I recommended.
I couldn’t click through to the rest of the article. The part you posted was pukey enough. Luckily, we only have one private school here in our district – and it’s Catholic, which I would rather die than send my kid there. Luckily, my ex, while being a Catholic (even more so now since his wife is devout), is too cheap to send them there. 😆 So I’m off the hook there. In the last 10 years, Gurnee, my town has put up 5 brand new schools to accommodate the growing school population here. I don’t think you could pry vouchers into those peoples’ hands if you paid them to do it. And our schools here are excellent, AP programs starting in 3rd grade, National Blue Ribbons of Excellence, you name it, we have it. Charter school, not on your life. Religious school – out of the question.
Lisa, if you thought the part I posted was bad,Lisa, it barely scratches the surface.
I’m going to guess that you live in a well-to-do community with well-funded schools. I’m worried about the inner city and poor rural schools.
The republicans don’t care about funding decent public education because 8-10k per year tuition and books for private school for their little darlings isn’t all that expensive for them, and it keeps their children away from the riff-raff as well. Besides, why would they want the average American to have as good an education/be as smart as/ have as good a job as their precious babies? 🙄
Nikolai, that is the nub of the issue, isn’t it?