Education policymakers are rarely faced with such clarity of failure. But I often think of this story when leaders talk about new initiatives or recommendations, because it provides such a stark example of policy backfiring. (I studied and worked in international development before moving to domestic education.) There was a common belief among development “experts” at the time that governments were too involved in their economies and in service provision, and that introducing market forces would improve the system. There are many education leaders today who say the same thing, and it’s this thought process that underlies the premise of charter schools. In urban areas, with more infrastructure, money, and greater population densities, it’s a solid premise with a lot of potential. But rural charters are a bad idea for many of the same reasons “market liberalization” was a disaster in southern Africa.
In 2002, the nation of Malawi had one of the worst famines in living memory—more than 50,000 people died because of hunger and hunger-related causes. But even that number understates the devastation. Many families clung to survival only by selling all of their possessions, land, and livestock, leaving them no livelihood. Malnourished children contracted debilitating illnesses like kwashiorkor, decreasing their resilience and likelihood of surviving future hardship. Communities were broken by distrust, children sent away from their families, and countless other tragedies occurred that most of us can only imagine. Floods were the natural cause, but government policies were the true disaster.
Education policymakers are rarely faced with such clarity of failure. But I often think of this story when leaders talk about new initiatives or recommendations, because it provides such a stark example of policy backfiring. (I studied and worked in international development before moving to domestic education.) There was a common belief among development “experts” at the time that governments were too involved in their economies and in service provision, and that introducing market forces would improve the system. There are many education leaders today who say the same thing, and it’s this thought process that underlies the premise of charter schools. In urban areas, with more infrastructure, money, and greater population densities, it’s a solid premise with a lot of potential. But rural charters are a bad idea for many of the same reasons “market liberalization” was a disaster in southern Africa.
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In my dreams, I still live in a farmhouse on a wooded island in Puget Sound with the skyline of the Olympic Mountains of Washington state in the background. In reality, I find myself with a wife and two kids in a Washington, D.C., rowhouse. Why do I live in one Washington and not the other? I realized a long time ago that despite my attachment to the beauty of Washington’s far-northwest Olympic Peninsula, I could not limit myself to the education and jobs available there. And neither should other rural kids.
Rural America has economies based on industries like farming, fishing, mining, and logging. These jobs once required significant amounts of labor and are either declining or nonexistent job sources today. The hard truth is that there are very few reasons for people to build 21st-century jobs, like electronics manufacturing, in rural areas because they are remote and lack flexible infrastructure, investment, and tax bases. As in other rural areas, older workers with experience logging or working in pulp mills where I grew up have skills not easily transferable to other more modern jobs. Working to improve the economies of these corners of the country is a worthwhile goal. But for the sake of rural children, we should never assume that rural redevelopment efforts will bring large-scale employment and should drive education policies, as Matt Richmond argued on this blog last week. The realistic assumption for the large bulk of the children in these areas should, instead, be that economic opportunities are better found elsewhere, and our education policies should follow. Why do we bother sending kids to school?
To get a job? Be good citizens? Because … just because! Stop questioning the obvious!(?) Getting a job and supporting oneself is probably a minimum — at least to our modern conceptualization of education’s purpose. That’s why we need the Common Core, high-rigor curricula, and standardized tests to make sure that kids can compete in the global theatre! Which is all well and good, but who are we kidding? Are poor, white kids in rural Missouri on the “global stage”? Are Native American students in poverty-ridden South Dakota competing against Indian engineers to build the next iPhone (or even their Foxcomm counterparts)? Fourteen million people in the U.S. don’t even have access to broadband internet (43 percent of households making less than $15,000 a year don’t have ready access to any internet). The global stage is too busy posting gluten-free recipes on Instagram to even notice broad swaths of rural Kentucky. |
aboutYEP-DC is a nonpartisan group of education professionals who work in research, policy, and practice – and even outside of education. The views expressed here are only those of the attributed author, not YEP-DC. This blog aims to provide a forum for our group’s varied opinions. It also serves as an opportunity for many more professionals in DC and beyond to participate in the ongoing education conversation. We hope you chime in, but we ask that you do so in a considerate, respectful manner. We reserve the right to modify or delete any content or comments. For any more information or for an opportunity to blog, contact us via one of the methods below. BloggersMONICA GRAY is co-founder & president of DreamWakers, an edtech nonprofit. She writes on education innovation and poverty. Archives
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