We, the students of Michigan - black, Latina/o, Arab, Asian, Native American, white, immigrants, with and without papers - are not for sale. We deserve a first-class free public education with all the vast resources and opportunities that our society has to offer. Public education is our nation’s most important and popular, fundamental, democratic right. The national campaign being spearheaded by Arne Duncan, Secretary of Education, to create a new, parallel, privately controlled, profit-driven system of 5,000 charter schools, which would be publicly subsidized but minimally regulated, would eviscerate this right. The new student movement in California has declared March 4th as a National Day of Action to defend public education and stop tuition hikes and funding cuts. Students across the state are organizing walkouts and marches to shutdown the state of California. On March 4th, Detroit students and teachers will lead Michigan in a statewide mobilization to Lansing to stand up for what we know we deserve – the true fulfillment of the promise of Brown v. Board of Education. We will not accept any more school closings, charterization, teacher layoffs, program cuts, and narrowing of our education.
Jennifer Granholm has overreached her authority. Desperate to get Michigan in line behind Education Secretary Arne Duncan’s Race to the Top scheme, Granholm has demanded that Districts tie teacher evaluations and pay to student progress assessments and standardized test scores. She is asking the legislature to give the appointed emergency financial manager of Detroit Public Schools, Robert Bobb, dictatorial power over Detroit even though the people of Detroit clearly oppose this policy. She is already facing opposition. A number of school districts in Oakland County, including Birmingham, Bloomfield Hills, Novi, Lake Orion, Walled Lake and South Lyon have voted not to participate in Michigan’s Race to the Top application. The Michigan Education Association is also urging its locals not to sign on to the application. The districts want to protect the integrity of public education and the capacity of their teachers to act as teachers, not as test-preparation robots.
Granholm is relying on the desperation of poor, majority-black urban districts and poor rural districts to get us to sign on to the terrible conditions Duncan is imposing on us in order to receive the money. It is time for us to let Granholm know that cynical disregard for poor children’s needs and rights, and open displays of prejudice and bias against black and Latina/o students will not fly in Michigan. Our students deserve the same opportunities to learn and to be creative and our teachers deserve the same respect as those in the suburbs.
Leading the Michigan fight to Stop Race to the Top gives us an opportunity to unite with the suburbs, to break down the division between city, suburbs and rural communities. All the divide-and-conquer schemes that have reinforced separate and unequal, segregated education can finally be broken through, because every school district is facing deep cuts and continuous attacks. We have a real opportunity to move toward an integrated, Metro Detroit-wide school district that can solve the crisis of education for Detroit students, if we use our power to win real gains for every district in the state.
The right to universal public education, like the universal right to vote, was won out of the great civil rights struggles of the 1950’s and 1960’s. Together, they represent the cornerstones of American democracy and freedom, concrete expressions of our shared national commitment to equality and diversity. The fundamental right of black, Latina/o, immigrant, other minority, and poor children in America to receive a public education is now in jeopardy. Creating a new education system dominated by privately controlled, publicly and privately funded charter schools, supplemented by a safety net of under-resourced public schools, will make the right to a public education more like the new proposed “right” of all to health care. Public education will become another government entitlement, subject to the laws of the market economy, completely unequal in its outcomes, highly stratified by socio-economic, race and immigration status. All due process, civil rights, first amendment, and labor protections for teachers, students and parents incorporated into current public school rubric, will be eliminated.
The most vulnerable students: black, Latina/o, immigrant, and poor students of all races who are cynically being presented by charter advocates as the “driving” concern of their movement, will face intensified segregation, isolation, and inequality if the charter scheme is adopted. The families of these students will lose any democratic or regulatory control over the schools their daughters and sons are being pressed to attend. Special needs students, who the charters do not even feign concern for, will be permanently assigned to second-class status. Instead of solving the "achievement gap," charters will exacerbate it.
The rights of minorities to equal voting rights and other basic and fundamental democratic rights won by the civil rights movement are also under attack. Indeed, the driving principle of the civil rights movement – that the only way to defeat institutional racism and all other socially created inequalities is to implement a set of public policies/laws that the government is bound to enforce – is being called into question by both liberals and conservatives.
A central social, political and legal justification for the old Jim Crow was that the government should play no, or at most a minimal role, in combating discrimination, prejudice, inequality and injustice. Private, individual rather than public, collective measures were seen as the foundation for achieving prosperity and progress. This ideology was pressed by politicians of all the major political parties, including both left and right wing populists.
Today, not only Republican but also key civil rights, labor, progressive and Democratic Party leaders are pressing the view that private, market-based solutions are the only way to redress inequality. There is near-unanimous agreement between the leaderships of both political parties that the gains of the civil rights movement should be placed on the backburner and that today’s captains of industry should be entrusted with the power to oversee and determine the character of black, Latina/o, other minority and poor students’ educational opportunities. The premise of this new paternalistic Jim Crow is that closing the achievement/ opportunity gap between black and other minority students and more privileged white students can best be solved through market principles.
This theory is driving the campaign to dismantle public education, to force charter schools on black, Latina/o and poor communities despite massive popular opposition, and to turn inner-city public schools into separate, segregated, unregulated, stripped-down, regimented vocational schools, devoid of art, music, sports, AP and other vital academic offerings. It is also behind the concerted campaign of liberal faculty and administrators at many elite universities to get young minority students to emulate Booker T. Washington.
On these campuses, minority students are urged to seek and rely on the support of private benefactors/philanthropists to maintain desperately needed targeted scholarship, recruitment and retention programs to compensate for the loss of programs ended by the ban on affirmative action. Instead of standing up and becoming leaders of the new integrated civil rights movement, these young and talented students are urged to sell the new Jim Crow to their communities. They are being urged to promote the ideology of black and Latina/o inferiority and to encourage cynicism, growing atomization and despair.
BAMN opposes this whole sordid plan. We know the vast majority of Americans support the right of all to a quality public education. We know from the outpouring of hope and support expressed in the campaign of Barack Obama how deeply Americans of all races believe in standing on Dr. King’s vision for America. And we know from that campaign that most Americans believe that progress for America and the ascension of young black and other minority political leaders to power are inextricably bound together. BAMN intends to prove them right.
We reject the view that black and Latina/o students must accept abuse to attain an education, a career or the hope of a decent, fulfilling life. We do not believe that separate can ever be equal. We do not accept the popular lie that integration failed; rather, judging from all the evidence of how successful school integration and magnet school programs are in closing the achievement gap and improving educational outcomes, we believe the problem is there has been too little integration rather than too much. Finally, we reject the theory that we should have to seek charity or philanthropy to achieve equality or even the hope of a decent education. We reject all notions that the laws of the free market should replace the legal and social conclusions of Brown v. Board of Education and the other far-reaching achievements and conclusions of the civil rights movement. We stand for and on the vision of Dr. King for America. We believe that every American deserves freedom, equality, justice, and dignity and so we fight for a truly egalitarian America.
BAMN invites everyone who stands for justice and equality to join us in stopping the attack on public education here in Michigan and throughout the nation. But most of all, we invite black, Latina/o, immigrant, and other minority youth and students to become leaders of the new movement and to assume your rightful place at the forefront of this nation.
Additional March on Lansing endorsers: MSU Students for a Democratic Society
If you would like to add your organization to the list of sponsors, please email us at letters@bamn.com.