To understand how
unique our current historical moment is, and in particular, how much powerful
corporate interests have seized control of BOTH political parties, ask
yourself the following questions:.
When FDR spoke of a third of a nation “ill-housed, ill
clothed, and ill-fed” did he identify raising student test scores as a major
component of his program to heal a wounded nation?
When LBJ launched the anti-poverty program, did low test
scores of young people living in poverty represent a major target of the
programs he initiated?.
When Dr King unveiled his idea for the “Poor People’s
Campaign,” was poor performance on tests among the nation’s poor a central
subject of his rhetoric?
The very posing of
these questions moves us into the realm
of absurdity- yet in state after state, and in the US Department of Education,
“closing the achievement gap”- i.e. raising the test scores of students in poor
communities- is lauded as the civil rights cause of our time and the one sure
fire method to reduce inequality in a society where every other policy seems to
maximize it.
Do current policy
makers know something that FDR, LBJ and Dr. King didn’t, or is the egalitarian
rhetoric underlying their obsession with raising student test scores
disingenuous and self-deluded?
While I cannot
pretend to know what policy makers, in their heart of hearts, really think, I
do know this—that since No Child Left Behind was passed in 2001, child poverty
has skyrocketed, the concentration of wealth at the top of the society has
grown, the prison industrial complex has expanded, and the gap in college
admission and retention between poor and wealthy students has expanded
And as for schools, we see the wealthy sending their
children to private schools with few tests and a huge emphasis on the arts- and
the poor and the rapidly shrinking middle class sending their children to
schools which are stripped down test factories with beaten down and demoralized
teachers
.This is the ugly reality that the flowery rhetoric of
inclusion hides
If narrowing the
achievement gap is an anti-poverty strategy, is the single most ineffective
such strategy in modern America History..
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