An Open Letter to Bill
Gates,
By Ruth Rodriguez-Fay
American education has
a long history of infatuation with fads and ill-considered ideas. The current obsession
with making schools work like a business may be the worst of them, for it threatens
to destroy public education. Who will stand up to the tycoons and politicians
and tell them so?
- Diane Ravitch, The Death and Life of the Great American School System, How Testing and
Choice are Undermining Education.
Dear Mr. Gates,
Your Foundation
contributions always seem to make for interesting prime time news. The real
story about what is actually happening on the ground where your market-driven
policies are now the “norm” is relegated to other venues such as academic
research, progressive blogs and media outlets.
While it is honorable for
anyone with your wealth to do whatever possible to give back to the community,
the community that helped you make your wealth, your history of failed experiments
with so-called market-driven, data-based education is well documented.
The test and punish, high
stakes testing mandates and the calls for teacher accountability as a means
towards improving education have clearly failed an entire generation. Despite
this failed policy, however, we are facing the same failed policies on steroids
with Race to the Top and the new Common Core Standards.
As communities that have
witnessed the impact of these policies, we have shown enormous patience,
allowing you to explore untested educational practices with our children, even
practices that are disproved by respected education experts at our finest
institutions of higher learning (CREDO study from Stanford University).
Expert educators,
including teachers, as well as students and families, understand that these
undemocratic, and unproven practices are extremely harmful to the students that
you say you want to help. Sadly, this
seems to have little or no influence on you to stop and consider that perhaps
it is time that you respect the educators and listen to the experts.
Perhaps your wealth and
influence could be put to better use and have greater results in real solutions
to our public schools, if your programs were designed to function like the
schools you send your children to, in collaboration with teachers, parents and
students. This could help you understand
that public schools are not factories, where children are viewed as
commodities; that our children are not to be used as guinea pigs to satisfy the
greed in the lottery style profit making schools. We know that certainly these are not the kind
of schools where you would ever consider sending your own children.
So here is a challenge
for you, if indeed you are sincere that the reforms you are proposing for our
children are the answer. Why not try
these reforms with the schools that educate the children of the rich and
politically influential? Why not take
the children in the schools where you, the President and the rich send their
children; trade places with the children in the schools of the poor, where your
education experiments are being implemented.
Here is an example, in
Massachusetts, take students and teachers from a school in Roxbury, move them
to, let’s say, Milton Academy. These
students will attend classes with their own teachers, but will enjoy all the
educational resources as well as the rich curriculum of a school like Milton
Academy. Then, tell the Milton Academy
families that their children will attend a school in Roxbury, where they will
be educated with the same tactics that are now used with urban school children.
The school in Roxbury
will remain with the same inadequate or absence of resources, as well as little
or no support for teachers. This will be
challenging for those teachers that have been accustomed of being treated with
respect. They will face the consequences
of working in an atmosphere of distrust and blame, foster by you and other
reformers who say that bad teachers and unions are the problem. Of course these teachers need to understand
that many of the schools in Roxbury will have limited resources, no libraries,
no music department, no art, no sports, no drama classes, and no hot
lunches. The class curriculum will be
limited, definitely no Early Civilization, no AP classes. There will be no guidance counselors, and
only half-time nurses. What they will
have plenty of is high-stakes standardized testing; and understand that their
job security depends largely on the student’s test scores.
It is fair to say that
these children will be subjected to some of the most extreme forms of abuse by
the practices promoted by you and other self-proclaimed education reformers,
policies which you claim, are intended as a way to reform our broken public
schools.
Now, Milton Academy
teachers will enjoy teaching their students in Roxbury, and Roxbury teachers
will teach their students at Milton Academy.
So, Mr. Gates after one year, let’s come together and look at the
results of this experiment. Then let us
have a serious conversation about the education reforms that you have designed
for educating urban children.
_______________________________________________________________
“With so much
money and power aligned against the neighborhood public school and against
education as a profession, public education itself is placed at risk. The
strategies now favored by the most powerful forces in the private and public
sectors are unlikely to improve American education. Deregulation contributed to
the near collapse of our national economy in 2008 and there is no reason to
anticipate that it will make education better for most children. Removing
public oversight will leave the education of our children to the whim of entrepreneurs
and financiers. Nor is it wise to entrust our schools to inexperienced teachers,
principals and superintendents. Education is too important to relinquish to the
vagaries of the market and the good intentions of amateurs.”
Diane Ravitch
________________________________________________________________
Ruth Rodriguez Fay is a former Kindergarten teacher and
School/Family & Community Coordinator in Massachusetts.
She is also a member of the National Steering Committee of
Save Our Schools March and past President of Citizens for Public Schools
in Boston.
Not only are his policies failing in education, they already failed his own company, Microsoft. Many business analysts accredit Gates' appraisal system of his employees as the impetus that led to MS’s low-morale, low-production, low-innovation problem, opening the door for Apple’s takeover in the technology world. If this system failed his own company, why would anyone think we should implement it in schools? See http://lisamyers.org/2013/02/16/following-bill-gates-down-the-microsoft-path-bad-business/ for additional info and sources.
ReplyDeleteThis is a great letter! The only thing I would add is the fact that the Gates Foundation typically requires school districts that receive their funding to close the so-called bottom 25% of schools and prioritize the turning over of the buildings to charter schools that may or may not perform any better than the schools they replace, or have the financial wherewithal to sustain themselves over the long haul. Chicago, Philadelphia and Boston are all part of the Gates district-charter compact, and all 3 cities are engaging in massive closures of public schools while rapidly expanding charter schools. Philadelphia plans to close 27 schools; Boston plans to close 20 schools and Chicago has 129 schools on its school closure list. In Chicago, 1/3 of charters are performing at the lowest levels (Chicago Public Schools) as compared to a national charter failure rate of 15% due to performance (Center for Education Reform). In Chicago, nearly 50% of charter schools have experienced serious cash flow problems, with a significant number being able to make teacher pension payments on time. Truly, this is not the way to bring about stability to a broken system. Massive school closings lead to increased violence; increased dropout and mobility rates; lower wages and loss of jobs. The school closures in Chicago are disproportionately impacting low income African American neighborhoods, the very people the Gates Foundation say they want to help. In Chicago, over 25% of our elementary schools are on a closure list. In my own community, 50% of the elementary schools are on the list of schools targeted for closure.
ReplyDeleteI think you should have called this posting ""A former kindergarten teacher stands up to Bill Gates".
ReplyDeleteI thought I was going to read actual "front-line" reporting....