Category Archives: Poverty

Hillary wants to experiment with the lives of poor children?

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Hillary Clinton spoke on a wide range of educational topics with Newsday editors on Long Island in April,  2016. The detailed, public transcript and video are posted HERE, in full.

Clinton claimed to support a Common Core and  National Standards in education. She supports “Public Charter Schools” and a litany of “good” things: good teachers, good schools, good Charters, good choice,  good testing,  good explanation (to parents) of “standardized testing.”  Never once did she define “good”, although she used the terms “good” or “great” at least eleven times during the eleven minute segment on education.

She did not speak to the dramatic structural inequity (nor the instability) of a Common Core or National Standards — without common,  national funding.

The most shocking aspect of her views on public education was her thought about improving education for “poor kids”, whom she had earlier acknowledged are now a majority in public schools.  The “poor” majority of children are described HERE as about 70% Hispanic, Black, Asian, Native American and Multiethnic.

Clinton herself describes poor children as coming to school with “all kinds of issues and problems”, her deficit view.

Then, almost as an aside, Clinton cites the “need” to “experiment” on “poor” kids:  She wants to experiment with “boarding schools for poor children.”  Segregate poor children in boarding schools, “if we can do it right”?..

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Reality Check

There are about 50 million children in public schools in the United States, according to the National Center for Education Statistics, linked HERE.  Therefore, the 51%  poor majority in public schools totals about 25 million children.

If Clinton’s boarding school “experiment” on “poor children” is successful, then to accommodate all the poor children, she would need to build 25 thousand boarding schools, each accommodating 1,000 boarders, plus faculty and staff, and all with incredible, on-going safety and security issues.  Food and transportation costs for 25 million “poor” children would all also need to be considered.

For one point of comparison, Clinton would be building 5X as many “poor” boarding schools as there are Walmart stores in the U.S..

Boarding schools for all 25 million children (all poor) is clearly an unrealistic idea.

Alternatively, Clinton could cut costs, build fewer schools and then concoct a way to ration access for “poor” children.  Some would be admitted, some “poor” children would need to be screened out.

 

Meanwhile, Clinton’s  ‘experiment’ would distract focus and drain much needed resources from the existing public education system.  Most importantly, it also fails to deal with root causes of poor children, they would continue as before.

Why would anyone even be thinking about boarding schools for poor children?

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Morality Check

The even greater contentiousness with Clinton’s idea to segregate “poor” children is its morality.

First of all, the concept of “experimenting” on “poor” children, even if it is voluntary, is contemptible.  How will results  of her experiment with their lives be determined?  The standardized testing results in use today have been shown to clearly identify socioeconomic status, no more (click HERE),  but we already know the children are “poor”.  If standardized tests are not legitimate, how else will she evaluate boarding schools?

Clinton may have given some clues about her motivation (and maybe her evaluation of results) in her comments about early results for “poor” kids in Pre-K in New York City.  “It’s not just the academic environment”.  She sounds informed so far, but then goes on to specify:

“It’s the social environment”. “It’s giving kids a chance to learn how to work in groups.  It’s giving, you know, kids who need it, maybe more structure.” 

Does Clinton really believe that all “poor” kids are in bad “social environments”?  (How to measure? Who determines?). Where is her data which tells her that “poor” kids don’t know how to work in groups and that they need more structure?  Her tone and intent seem patronizing at best.

Worse, Clinton’s boarding school socialization and structure idea sounds more like assimilation than education.  Shocking and scarily reminiscent of other U.S. ventures in segregating classes of “other” people. Native Americans were also thought to be in need of “education” to work differently in groups, and to be in need of structure.  Never forget the grossly inhumane segregation and the personal and cultural degradation of Native Americans in the attempt to assimilate them via boarding school “education”, as outlined HERE (page 6, and pages 8-10) and HERE (especially the subtitle “Transforming People…”).

Eerily, this earlier  boarding school idea for Natives was also preceded by an “experiment”.

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Politicians versus Practitioners

It is impossible to continue silently enduring simplistic, even dangerous views of learning and teaching practice by non-­practitioners.

Politicians’ simplistic “solution pills” to “fix” education, instead continue generating more and more collateral damage:  academic damage, systemic damage, financial damage, social damage, personal damage, and more.

There are no capital programs, no curriculum programs, no materials or supplies, no teacher incentives or teacher punishments, no longer hours, no charter business plans, no boarding schools, no “common core” or “standardized” testing program, nor even school closings that start at the center of the learning process.  Instead they all focus on the periphery.

Learners, the children, are the center.

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Learning is a complex, personal process. The learning process and its timeline for children varies infinitely, as does human experience.

Facilitating learning, or “teaching”, the wide range of learners and learning styles and learning paces which can be found in a typical Public School classroom, including “poor” children is an art, a “practice”:  an achievement of experienced professional experts.  It takes highly trained, highly competent people to work with people —  work with 30 people, every day, in one room, all day, day­-after-day.

Most politicians are not professional experts on education, nor even competent on education topics, yet they yearn to “experiment” and mandate pedagogy.

Whether we choose to acknowledge truth, or to adopt politicians’ simplistic view of children and teachers (people) as ‘widgets’ to experiment on, outlines the battle.

 

Complexity:  Widgets or people?

As one single example of one key complexity (there are many others), children in our Public School classrooms have massive rates of trauma, described by a U.S. Department of Justice report as an“epidemic” and by past Surgeon Generals as “national crisis.”

 

Childhood trauma includes childhood abuse, neglect and household dysfunction.  For a narrative view (“Peek Inside a Classroom”) click HERE, or click HERE.

The Center for Disease Control(CDC) says that childhood trauma is critical to understand.

One part to understand is that childhood trauma affects all classrooms, both “poor” children and rich children.

Childhood Trauma is an injury to a child.   It is not an issue of “bad” behavior.  It is not being “poor”.  It is not an “urban issue”.  It is not a “color issue”. It affects every city and every suburb.  The CDC’s own prodigious study was fielded in beautiful, suburban San Diego.

Further, neuroscience tells us that for those children in ‘fight or flight’ mode, defending against complex trauma it can be physiologically impossible to learn.  Physical brain architecture changes.

Public health research by the CDC/Kaiser Permanente illuminates shockingly high rates of childhood trauma.   Rates as high as English Language Learner (ELL) percentages and as high as those students with Individual Education Plans (IEP).  In some areas, the rate of childhood trauma is higher than the combination of IEPs and ELLs.  National totals of 35 million children, calculated HERE, are dramatically more than can be accommodated by individual ‘504 Plans,’ given current staffing in public schools.

Students with IEPs and ELLs are funded and accommodated. Childhood trauma is not.  Systemic ignorance or inaction is reality for tens of millions of children.  (Click HERE for more : “Failing Schools or Failing Paradigm?)

The net result:  trauma-­impacted children are blocked from equal access to an equal quality, public education.  That is morally wrong.  That is a blatant civil rights violation.

Just one example of complexity.

National political action would be correctly served by protecting the civil rights of trauma-impacted, children now being denied equal access.

Instead we have a national political candidate thinking about a boarding school experiment, with the lives of “poor” children.

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“Poor” families and educators:   the time to speak out is now.

(The “Education” portion of the Newsday video runs from minute 40:40 to minute 51:15).