Pro-privatizers have done a good job of conflating being against their version of reform (e.g., being with parents and teachers) as being pro-status quo. It's the surest way to keep yourself out of the education policy job market to be on the side of the straw man status quo.
Notoriously funded by tiny groups of immensely wealthy people, with no control by or buy-in from communities, no democratic structures that allow for parent participation, and in fact nothing other than the whims of their millionaire funders, these groups have unilaterally decided they deserve a spot at the negotiating table. They bought their button, in other words.
Tuesday, June 26, 2012
"You don't negotiate with death"
h/t to Diane Ravitch for pointing towards this post, coming out of Chicago (where the stand-off between the Mayor and the teachers' union continues):
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