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posted by n1 on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:08PM   Printer-friendly
from the telling-half-the-story dept.

Diane Ravitch, a top public education advocate, reports via AlterNet:

This month, the Public Broadcasting System is broadcasting a "documentary" that tells a one-sided story, the story that [Trump's Secretary of Education] Betsy DeVos herself would tell, based on the work of free-market advocate Andrew Coulson. Author of "Market Education", Coulson narrates "School, Inc.", a three-hour program, which airs this month nationwide in three weekly broadcasts on PBS.

Uninformed viewers who see this slickly produced program will learn about the glories of unregulated schooling, for-profit schools, teachers selling their lessons to students on the Internet. They will learn about the "success" of the free market in schooling in Chile, Sweden, and New Orleans. They will hear about the miraculous charter schools across America, and how public school officials selfishly refuse to encourage the transfer of public funds to private institutions. They will see a glowing portrait of South Korea, where students compete to get the highest possible scores on a college entry test that will define the rest of their lives and where families gladly pay for after-school tutoring programs and online lessons to boost test scores. They will hear that the free market is more innovative than public schools.

What they will not see or hear is the other side of the story. They will not hear scholars discuss the high levels of social segregation in Chile, nor will they learn that the students protesting the free-market schools in the streets are not all "Communists", as Coulson suggests. They will not hear from scholars who blame Sweden's choice system for the collapse of its international test scores. They will not see any reference to Finland, which far outperforms any other European nation on international tests yet has neither vouchers nor charter schools. They may not notice the absence of any students in wheelchairs or any other evidence of students with disabilities in the highly regarded KIPP charter schools. They will not learn that the acclaimed American Indian Model Charter Schools in Oakland does not enroll any American Indians, but has a student body that is 60 percent Asian American in a city where that group is 12.8 percent of the student population. Nor will they see any evidence of greater innovation in voucher schools or charter schools than in properly funded public schools.

[...] This program is paid propaganda. It does not search for the truth. It does not present opposing points of view. It is an advertisement for the demolition of public education and for an unregulated free market in education. PBS might have aired a program that debates these issues, but "School Inc." does not.

It is puzzling that PBS would accept millions of dollars for this lavish and one-sided production from a group of foundations with a singular devotion to the privatization of public services. The decision to air this series is even stranger when you stop to consider that these kinds of anti-government political foundations are likely to advocate for the elimination of public funding for PBS. After all, in a free market of television, where there are so many choices available, why should the federal government pay for a television channel?


Original Submission

 
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  • (Score: 4, Informative) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:20PM (17 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:20PM (#527631)

    The title, as submitted [soylentnews.org], was
    PBS Runs a Three-Hour Series Glorifying the Anti-Public School DeVos Education Agenda

    The article was meant by the author to be a rebuttal of all the positive spin already present in Lamestream Media for privatizing public education.

    The S/N editor removed the edge from the headline, echoing, yet again, the abundant DeVos-friendly tack in much of corporate media.

    .
    Betsy DeVos is an old-school Reactionary Segregationist.

    DeVos was confirmed in the US Senate February 7 by a 51-50 vote, with Vice President Mike Pence casting the deciding vote. The education secretary is widely seen as a particularly philistine and crude representative of Trump's cabinet of billionaires and multi-millionaires.

    DeVos is married to Dick DeVos, the former CEO of Amway [an old-fashioned pyramid scheme whose business is ostensibly selling the kinds of cleaning products you can get at the supermarket at a lower price].

    Betsy DeVos (whose brother is former US Navy SEAL and founder of Blackwater, Erik Prince) is notorious for her indefatigable opposition to public education. The wealthy, right-wing "school choice advocate" has bragged of her family's efforts to buy favors from politicians, writing in 1997: "My family is the largest single contributor of soft money to the national Republican Party. I have decided ... to stop taking offense at the suggestion that we are buying influence. Now I simply concede the point. They are right. We do expect things in return."

    US Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos booed by students at Florida college [wsws.org]

    On [May 10], US Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos was soundly booed by students while attempting to give the commencement address at Bethune-Cookman University in Daytona Beach, Florida, a historically black university.
    [...]
    DeVos was jeered upon being introduced at the ceremony. Nearly half the audience of 380 students turned their back on the speaker as she made her remarks, which consisted largely of banal calls for students to dedicate themselves to the common good and other standard fare.
    [...]
    DeVos drew widespread criticism in February when she referred to historically black colleges and universities, such as Bethune-Cookman, as "pioneers of school choice." Such institutions were created historically out of harsh necessity, primarily in the former slave states, in response to the segregation of universities and colleges and the exclusion of black students. Whether the comment was intended as a provocation or simply displayed gross ignorance, many saw DeVos's comment as an apology for Jim Crow segregation.

    Bethune-Cookman Had a Reason to Invite Betsy DeVos to Give That Calamitous Commencement Speech [theintercept.com]

    Bethune-Cookman, as it happens, recently formed a new affiliation with a for-profit school under fire for its practices. If the school, Arizona Summit Law School, loses its ability to take federal loans, the school becomes effectively defunct.
    [...]
    Its sister school the Charlotte School of Law was put on probation by the American Bar Association late last year over its consistently low bar-passage rates. In December, the Obama administration blocked the school's ability to accept federal student aid, a potential death knell.
    [...]
    Bethune-Cookman will be forming a scholarship program to send its students to the law school, and will also work together on certain marketing and academic support programs.

    -- OriginalOwner_ [soylentnews.org]

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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by n1 on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:42PM (13 children)

    by n1 (993) on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:42PM (#527637) Journal

    Yes I changed it, but I didn't change or remove any of the content for your submission.

    I felt the headline itself was needlessly provocative and likely to incite knee-jerk reactions, without actually considering the content of the summary and article.

    I have no dog in this fight, my goal was to frame the story in a way which enables constructive discussion after people read the summary. It may be futile, but that was my intention.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:50PM (12 children)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:50PM (#527640)

      Off with his head!

      • (Score: -1, Troll) by Ethanol-fueled on Monday June 19 2017, @12:13AM (11 children)

        by Ethanol-fueled (2792) on Monday June 19 2017, @12:13AM (#527649) Homepage

        Oh you Original Owner. We don't want tards in our public schools. We are about Survival of the fittest.

        • (Score: 4, Insightful) by aristarchus on Monday June 19 2017, @12:23AM (8 children)

          by aristarchus (2645) on Monday June 19 2017, @12:23AM (#527655) Journal

          I thought the headline (as modified) must be some kind of joke. Everyone knows there are no positives to DeVos's agenda. Highlighting what does not even exist has to be glorifying, as in straight up propaganda.

          • (Score: 5, Insightful) by PartTimeZombie on Monday June 19 2017, @12:50AM (1 child)

            by PartTimeZombie (4827) on Monday June 19 2017, @12:50AM (#527666)

            No-one does propaganda quite like the US Government.

            When I was a teenager I remember being quite worried about the Soviet Navy, after watching a TV Documentary about how much stronger than the US Navy they were, and how they were beginning to move to a war footing.

            Several years later it came out that the US Navy had lost badly in a funding round against the Airforce, and had created the documentary to scare up some money.p.
            The Soviet Navy was more or less confined to port because of a lack of trained sailors at the time, and didn't have the money to train any new ones anyway. Less than 10 years later the US was giving the Soviets money to help dispose of the broken down nuclear reactors from the broken down Soviet Navy.

            • (Score: 2) by Joe Desertrat on Monday June 19 2017, @09:26PM

              by Joe Desertrat (2454) on Monday June 19 2017, @09:26PM (#528160)

              That's an old game in gaining support for funding. It was typical to count every ship the Soviets had, from garbage scows and tugboats on up to aircraft carriers, whether seaworthy, mothballed or not. Then our side would only count ships in action and of course the numbers would pale in comparison. I'm sure the reverse is true, and that sort of thing has probably gone on since the Phoenicians.

          • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @01:33PM (5 children)

            by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @01:33PM (#527890)

            I wouldn't be so quick to say there are no positives. As a father of a young one, I am horrified at the shit I see happening in public schools to a point where I will most likely have to opt for Catholic School education, at a considerable cost. Allowing us to choose where we send our kids would allow me to ensure they get the kind of education that reflects my moral values. No more "everyone gets a trophy" bullshit, and all the other sensitivity nonsense that has been jammed down the kids throats. The world is not a fucking safe-space.

            When I was growing up in a foreign land, we played with replicas of guns every day. There was no gun hysteria. Everyone of us had romantic notions of defending their country from foreign invasion, and believe me the threat was real then, and it's even more real now. US may think it will never be invaded, that's fine, but I want my children to maintain my more sensible outlook on the entire world, and not be pacified, nor ostracized, by the gun hysterians.

            I will simply not allow my children to be indoctrinated to point of view and group-think I disagree with several hours a day for minimum of 12 years.

            • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @02:52PM (4 children)

              by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @02:52PM (#527931)

              Belated happy Fathers' day.

              Parent here as well. We're similarly horrified - mostly by the pathetically slow and stunted form of education provided by US schools.

              We're doing homeschooling. We don't get any kind of subsidy, or rebate, or anything like that. We do it anyway. By hourly costs, it's more expensive than most private schools, but we still do it.

              People have called us religious freaks (not true), anti-government freaks (not true), undermining the system (our taxes pay for other kids' education), and a bunch of other nasty names and accusations, when the reality is that we just want a good education for our kids and we're willing to work very hard on that.

              A lot of people are like the proverbial crabs in a bucket, all pulling each other down while trying to climb out. And now they're pissed off that we don't want to be in the same bucket.

              Go figure.

              • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @05:47PM (1 child)

                by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @05:47PM (#528046)

                Happy Father's Day to you as well!

                You are doing great work, and I applaud you for taking your child's development so seriously. It is a great commitment, but it will be worthwhile. With subsidy, homeschooling would be a very appealing avenue for me to explore. Hopefully some things will change in the next few years that will make it more appealing to more people.

                I love your crab-bucket analogy. It is very apt.

                • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @05:56PM

                  by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @05:56PM (#528052)

                  Alas, the bucket crabs are not original with me.

                  But they sure as hell explain a lot of lowest common denominator policies and their proponents.

              • (Score: 2) by kaszz on Monday June 19 2017, @05:52PM (1 child)

                by kaszz (4211) on Monday June 19 2017, @05:52PM (#528049) Journal

                Hourly cost? so you hire a private teacher from time to time? Is that not deductible on the tax? because as you say otherwise you will be sponsoring the education of other children.

                Oh.. the bucket crabs. They are f-cking everywhere. But usually they are poor to handle people that are independent and quick movers.

                • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @06:01PM

                  by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @06:01PM (#528057)

                  No, hourly cost in terms of the value of our time. Both of us are highly educated, and could sell our time that we currently spend on teaching for around $100/hour on the open market. Devoting our time to our children and their education has a realistic cost - but one we have agreed to bear, and one that we are happy to bear.

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @01:16AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @01:16AM (#527675)

          We are about Survival of the fittest.

          Uh, yea...

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @04:04AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Monday June 19 2017, @04:04AM (#527717)

          Alcoholics are defective, OFF WITH HIS HEAD!

  • (Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:59PM (2 children)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 18 2017, @11:59PM (#527643)

    Well, we know one thing for sure. Continuing on with the Liberal indoctrination fest that is TODAY'S education system certainly isn't working. Throwing a neverending pile of money at the problem doesn't increase test scores or high school graduation rates either. I'm willing to give Devos a try. Seeing the percentage of educators/school administrators that donate to the Democrat party, I can't help but wonder if there's an ulterior motive to you and your type going nuts about her policies before they even are implemented.

    • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 21 2017, @12:47AM (1 child)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 21 2017, @12:47AM (#528814)

      Wonder no more. The ulterior motive is to prevent the americans's alleged system of education from getting significantly worse.

      Charter schools were designed to keep segregation alive [alternet.org]. No superficial appearance of educational excellence can wipe out the racism at its core.

      • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 22 2017, @05:51PM

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday June 22 2017, @05:51PM (#529599)

        Very misleading. Charter schools were attractive to a wide range of people who wanted no part of the current public failure schools.

        The fact that some racists might have glommed onto the plan for their own reasons doesn't mean the whole scheme is rotten. Don't be fooled by the public education agenda's slanders.