Re: We're all part Cave-Man (Neanderthal) except for the Africans
Good questions.
The speech was received extremely well, though in the Q&A period a couple of superintendents said they couldn't believe that all this could be planned; it sounded like a "conspiracy theory." News of decades of tobacco industry insider memos revealing conscious suppression of medical evidence had just come to light in the media. When I pointed out this long history from the podium, the two withdrew their objections. A number of superintendents rose to say that they thought that what I had described was happening but had never heard it said out loud before. That evening, at the cocktail reception, six different superintendents came up to me and said, "Dave, do you think we need a revolution?" Pretty amazing, coming from officials at the top of the local education establishment.
MASS then offered to hire me to put together an alliance of organizations to oppose business-led reform. Someone higher up in the government--I assume it was John Silber, then Commissioner of Education--quickly put the kibosh on that. The superintendents' organization then fell into line and supported reforms that its members knew were destructive but felt no power to resist.
Snce 1997 the situation in public education has gotten much worse. At the time of my speech, high-stakes testing had not yet begun in Massachusetts (it began in spring, 1998); it was only in Florida and Texas. In the ensuing years it was spread by state Business Roundtables to all 50 states. In 2001 a bill called "No Child Left Behind" was passed. This federal law was the collaborative product of the Business Roundtable, the AFT and NEA, Ted Kennedy and other liberal and conservative senators, George Miller and other liberal and conservative representatives, and George Bush. It is the most intrusive and destructive piece of education legislation ever passed. Its full effects will not be felt till 2014, but it has already had devastating impact. NCLB massively increases student testing. (the US already does much more testing than any other nation.) It sets schools up to fail by raising test targets yearly to unreachable levels even while education resources are dramatically cut. It allows for the mass firing of teachers at schools which fail to reach meet their "AYP"--annual yearly progress in raising test scores; these schools are typically schools in the poorest areas, where teachers and students face the greatest odds. It promotes privatization of public education.
Do I think Senators are actively worried about over-educated masses with high expectations, or are they just dupes? Another interesting question. Experienced leaders like the late Kennedy and George Miller understood the game and their role in it completely. But in our political system, it is not necessary for all the players to understand the game plan. They just have to know who is leading the team. When Business Roundtable lobbyists and officials tell Senators to jump, the only question is "How high?"
You'll note that the teacher unions, the AFT and NEA, were in on writing this bill. The national leadership of these organizations has long played a double game: expressing ineffective or tangential criticism of anti-education bills on the one hand, while undercutting teacher resistance on the other. For example, when the disastrous No Child Left Behind law was passed, what was NEA's strategy? Did it mobilize teachers to fight the bill or resist implementation? Not on your life. No, the NEA went to Court to demand that the bill be fully funded.
One last note. As I've mentioned elsewhere, the Business Roundtable was founded in September, 1972 in Washington, DC when the CEOs of the 200 largest corporations in the US came together to plan how to go on the counterattack against the popular movements of the 1960s that were challenging their power and their profits. The BR has played a leading role ever since then in planning and organizing education reform as part of its overall strategy of social control.
Originally posted by LazyBoy
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The speech was received extremely well, though in the Q&A period a couple of superintendents said they couldn't believe that all this could be planned; it sounded like a "conspiracy theory." News of decades of tobacco industry insider memos revealing conscious suppression of medical evidence had just come to light in the media. When I pointed out this long history from the podium, the two withdrew their objections. A number of superintendents rose to say that they thought that what I had described was happening but had never heard it said out loud before. That evening, at the cocktail reception, six different superintendents came up to me and said, "Dave, do you think we need a revolution?" Pretty amazing, coming from officials at the top of the local education establishment.
MASS then offered to hire me to put together an alliance of organizations to oppose business-led reform. Someone higher up in the government--I assume it was John Silber, then Commissioner of Education--quickly put the kibosh on that. The superintendents' organization then fell into line and supported reforms that its members knew were destructive but felt no power to resist.
Snce 1997 the situation in public education has gotten much worse. At the time of my speech, high-stakes testing had not yet begun in Massachusetts (it began in spring, 1998); it was only in Florida and Texas. In the ensuing years it was spread by state Business Roundtables to all 50 states. In 2001 a bill called "No Child Left Behind" was passed. This federal law was the collaborative product of the Business Roundtable, the AFT and NEA, Ted Kennedy and other liberal and conservative senators, George Miller and other liberal and conservative representatives, and George Bush. It is the most intrusive and destructive piece of education legislation ever passed. Its full effects will not be felt till 2014, but it has already had devastating impact. NCLB massively increases student testing. (the US already does much more testing than any other nation.) It sets schools up to fail by raising test targets yearly to unreachable levels even while education resources are dramatically cut. It allows for the mass firing of teachers at schools which fail to reach meet their "AYP"--annual yearly progress in raising test scores; these schools are typically schools in the poorest areas, where teachers and students face the greatest odds. It promotes privatization of public education.
Do I think Senators are actively worried about over-educated masses with high expectations, or are they just dupes? Another interesting question. Experienced leaders like the late Kennedy and George Miller understood the game and their role in it completely. But in our political system, it is not necessary for all the players to understand the game plan. They just have to know who is leading the team. When Business Roundtable lobbyists and officials tell Senators to jump, the only question is "How high?"
You'll note that the teacher unions, the AFT and NEA, were in on writing this bill. The national leadership of these organizations has long played a double game: expressing ineffective or tangential criticism of anti-education bills on the one hand, while undercutting teacher resistance on the other. For example, when the disastrous No Child Left Behind law was passed, what was NEA's strategy? Did it mobilize teachers to fight the bill or resist implementation? Not on your life. No, the NEA went to Court to demand that the bill be fully funded.
One last note. As I've mentioned elsewhere, the Business Roundtable was founded in September, 1972 in Washington, DC when the CEOs of the 200 largest corporations in the US came together to plan how to go on the counterattack against the popular movements of the 1960s that were challenging their power and their profits. The BR has played a leading role ever since then in planning and organizing education reform as part of its overall strategy of social control.
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