Towards the Privatization of Public Education in America. Imposing a Corporate Culture

The
idea that government can’t do anything right has been trumpeted by the
right wing for decades, particularly by its recently deceased leader
Milton Friedman, a former economist at the University of Chicago. He
campaigned to reduce government functions to a minimum while letting
private enterprise step in and take full responsibility for running all
industries, health care, retirement
pensions, and even education, which he viewed as socialist when run by
the government. Private enterprise, he argued, employs the most
efficient means while always producing superior outcomes.

Forms of Privatization in Public Education
These ideas were
typically regarded as fringe, but have gradually moved to center stage,
embraced by liberals and conservatives alike. George W. Bush succeeded
in privatizing many of the operations associated with the functioning of
the U.S. military overseas, including the supply of food, the necessary
infrastructure for housing soldiers, the use of special security
Obama’s
contribution to the privatization campaign has centered for the most
part on education. But before we can evaluate its impact, it is
necessary to consider the different forms privatization can take in
relation to schools, since it can occupy different positions on a wide
spectrum of possibilities.
At one end of the spectrum lie completely privatized schools that
provide their own financing and govern themselves. But many schools are
more like hybrids, a mixture of private and public. Charter schools
Similarly, essentially public universities or K-12 schools might make use of online courses

Another hybrid

Still another example is where a publicly funded and operated school imports the corporate culture from the private sector. For example, many public universities are abandoning their former practice of promoting faculty into administrative positions, paying them only slightly more than before and, instead, are drawing on administrators from the private sector and paying them exorbitant salaries while paying part-time

Another cultural import from the private sector involves measuring “student learning outcomes” in order to evaluate teachers, as if one is counting gadgets churned out on a factory assembly line. Of course, the result of the evaluation will depend of the choice of measurement, and although highly controversial, standardized tests now represent the most prevalent alternative.
Still another cultural import is the hyper emphasis on competition. Not only are students required to compete against one another for grades, teachers must compete against one another in order to hold their jobs

But with Obama’s Race to the Top even schools are forced to compete against one another. By tying federal funding to the acceptance of charter schools

Finally, partial privatization can occur simply by setting the goal of education as exclusively producing skilled workers primarily for the private sector rather than emphasizing the full development of the student or the training of a critically thinking individual who is prepared to assume the obligations of citizenship in a democratic society. City College of San Francisco, for example, in its fight for accreditation was forced to delete from its mission statement reference to teaching “life skills,” “cultural enrichment,” and “lifelong learning.” Pressure has mounted on all public institutions of higher learning to move students through quickly so that they can graduate with a degree and enter the labor market.
Why Privatize?
There are basically two distinct motives. As mentioned before, many believe that competition, emblematic of the private sector, is the best guarantee for the best outcomes. Competition compels participants to adopt the most efficient means and maximizes motivation by threatening extinction if a company does not excel.
But on a more pragmatic and less ideological level, education offers a tremendous source of profits

The privatization movement is now in full force as a consequence of the growing inequalities in wealth. With the decimation of those with middle income, wealth has become concentrated at the top. With wealth comes power

What Is At Stake?
Nothing short of genuine education itself is at stake. What particularly vitiates the learning process is the introduction of a corporate culture or “market” forces that insist on measuring “student learning outcomes” by “objective” standards such as standardized tests; that place an emphasis on competition so that there are inevitably “winners” and “losers;” that regard democratic structures that include teachers with disdain; that narrow the curriculum so that job

Students will not become genuine learners unless they are imbued with a love of learning, meaning they regard learning as an end in itself, an asset not easily measured. Every teacher is fully aware that in competitive environments students will concentrate their efforts on achieving a high grade, not on truly understanding the material. They will memorize for tests and then forget everything. They will take great pains to hide their ignorance, not raise critical questions, let alone questions about material they do not understand. We know that in moments of desperation the vast majority of high school students at one time or another will cheat, which is hardly one of the skills we want them to acquire.
We also know that when teachers are judged by their students’ standardized test scores, they will teach to the test, where the highest goal is to get the “right” answer, with or without understanding the material. Here students are drilled, so that for them school becomes painfully dull and boring. And who knows if those who create the tests have themselves identified the “right” answer or even asked an appropriate question. There is absolutely no opportunity to raise critical questions.
What is particularly vile about judging teachers by their students’ scores is that we have volumes of evidence that prove that the student’s performance in the classroom is far more a function of their family situation than what the teacher does.
Knowledge
is best pursued as a cooperative venture where students work together
to find solutions to problems and share their information. New teachers
do best, for example, when partnered with a mentor who can share with
them what they have found that does and does not work. This won’t happen
when teachers and schools are competing against one another.
When the search for the Higgs Boson particle, otherwise known as the
“god particle,” got underway, two teams of scientists of 3000 each were
created, not as a source of motivation through competition but to
provide independent confirmation of the other team’s results. Those on
each team worked in close cooperation with one another. Although
external rewards existed, the participants were driven by their love of
physics. As one veteran member told a newcomer: he will have “the time
of his life.”Because of its cooperative nature, the pursuit of knowledge cannot be disentangled from a sense of community where each participant acquires the ability to listen to different points of view, weigh their respective merits, and synthesize the best aspects of each view into a more sophisticated vision. Here everyone must enjoy an equal voice so that no one’s contribution can be routinely dismissed because of an individual’s status.
Consequently, institutions of learning that operate with a corporate top-down structure — where brute power

Of course, the most valuable moments in education cannot be measured. When students get carried away with a discussion where each responds to the others and where each contributes to the other’s response, it is impossible to quantify the performance of each student, as if each contribution could be isolated from the others. And, of course, any attempt to quantify their performances would only serve to undermine the spiritual pleasure that students derive from collaborating with one another where each one plays an essential role in creating a richer outcome.
Conclusion
The
vast preponderance of evidence unambiguously supports the conclusion
that the corporate culture in all its forms is antithetic to education.
And this doesn’t even take into account the inevitable and prevalent
corporate corruption that has infused education in the past several
decades where the well-being of students is sacrificed for the pursuit
of profits
.
But those who champion it, including the Obama administration, Bill
Gates, and all the reactionary education foundations, display little
regard for the conclusions of scientific studies. In their fanatical
zeal they have demonstrated a willingness to impose a corporate culture
despite the resistance of protesting parents and teachers. Lacking
rational justifications, they shamelessly make recourse to force,
closing community schools, for example, over the objections of the
families they serve.

There
can be little wonder that these zealots display no interest in the
indispensable role our public schools play in nurturing students into
citizens who are prepared to participate in a democratic society. For
them, democracy only serves as an annoying hindrance to producing
compliant workers who will follow the example of the politicians and
uncritically dedicate their lives to serving their corporate masters.
Note:
Diane Ravitch’s new book, THE REIGN OF ERROR, provides an excellent
analysis of many of the issues raised in this article and is a must-read
for anyone serious about education
Ann Robertson is a Lecturer at San Francisco State University and a member of the California Faculty Association. Bill Leumer
is a member of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters, Local 853
(ret.). Both are writers for Workers Action and may be reached at sanfrancisco@workerscompass.org
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