Great post below by Philadelphia patriot, Ken Derstine:
I have stumbled onto this amazing video from a panel at the American Enterprise Institute (look at
this link) on February 5, 2015. This is a spawning center
of neoliberalism! This is the corporate education reformers talking to the
choir. It is amazing to watch. This confirms everything I said in Who’s
Is Eli Broad and Why Is He Trying to Destroy Public Education? from
their goals, to their deep collaboration with the U.S. Department of Education,
to Randi Weingarten’s collaboration with them.
Also, they might present a front that they are powerful because of
the subservience of the corporate media, but among themselves they
know they are just putting “a bucket in the ocean”. A number of times they
ask why the corporate funders keep funding the corporate attack
on education when it obviously is not working. They are also aware they
are in an ivory tower and have little understanding of their impact on
the “grassroots”. This is the video:
This video is also on YouTube and should be downloaded.
This video is four hours long, but watch a little of it to get the
flavor. (Warning: I said there is no way I can give four hours to this, but it
is so engrossing and important, I watched it off and on for two days and I’m
sure I will rewatch parts.)
Watch the first two panelists in the in the first panel. The second
panelist, Sarah Reckhow, (starting at 16:00) co-authored the policy paper
‘Singing from the same hymnbook': Education policy
advocacy at Gates and Broad | Michigan State University . What
struck me is how matter of fact she is in the video and the paper about Randi
Weingarten participating with them which is obviously assumed by other
panelists to be common knowledge. See pages 18 and 19 of the paper which
shows Randi Weingarten’s collaboration with them. Sarah Reckhow comments that
Randi Weingarten has been working with them to develop a teacher evaluation
based on standardized tests.
Anthony Cody had a post about this paper on February 9. Reckhow and Tomkins-Stange Document How Gates and Broad
Money Got Everyone “Singing from the Same Hymnbook He
makes no mention of Randi Weingarten’s role, nor does he link the panel (which
his article indicates he had seen).
Also see my article: Which Side Are You On? | Defend Public Education!
After watching the second panelist, go to 55:00. There is a real
demoralization they are showing. Notice what they say about the impact of the
Chicago teachers strike.
The second panel is about the “backlash” against corporate
education reform. (starts at about 1:30) The demoralization is very evident
here.
Howard Fuller of Black Alliance for Educational Opportunity (which
Philadelphia mayoral candidate Anthony Williams is affiliated with - see my
article Corporate Education Reform and Civil Rights )
is on the second panel. Notable quote (1:54): “We (BAEO) wouldn’t exist
without John Walton and this is one of the reasons I love that man."
At 1:47 the panelist Larry Cuban speaks about the Broad
Superintendent’s Academy. He is followed by Howard Fuller. (Starts at 1:51.)
His remarks are very revealing about how disconnected these people
are from what is the reality in public schools and from the impact of what they
are doing. Fuller seems totally unaware that he is working for the same
political forces that have been underfunding schools for decades and the
money BAEO receives from them comes from the low wage exploitation of Walmart
workers.
The third panel, starts at 2:42, is about the future of corporate
philanthropy. It starts with Dana Goldstein. I commented about Dana Goldstein on Schools Matter on
September 30, 2014. There are also articles on Schools Matter
if you do a search in the search engine for “Dana Goldstein".
The second panelist (2:55) talks about corporate education
reform in higher education. Anyone in higher education should watch this…and be
very afraid. The fourth panelist, Jim Blew (3:18), left the Walton
Foundation to replace Michelle Rhee at Students First. He spends most of his
time attacking teacher unions. (Note: He says his father was a teacher union
organizer.) One corporate ed reform organization he cites (which has gone below
the radar, I never heard of them; they are not mentioned on Sourcewatch) as being
very influential is the Fisher
Family.
This is the initial article that led to my finding this video:
March 24, 2015
Frederick Hess at the end of panel one made an off the cuff comment
(at 51:00) which summed up the bottom line for these people.:
“They (venture philanthropist) may not be as powerful as they think
they are in terms of shaping what happens in the nation’s schools and
classrooms, but they’re very powerful in terms of us being able to feed our
families and being able to do the research and analysis we like to do.” In
other words, there is no real passion, no real belief in what they are doing;
they looking at spreadsheets and each others position papers….and they are just
in it for the big bucks.
Ken Derstine
Correction by Ken Derstine: In his article, Anthony Cody does link the AEI page where the Reckhow and Tomkins-Strange document is posted. At the very bottom of the AEI page there is the easily missed [Watch the event video] which is the link to the four hour AEI video. Sorry for the error.
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