208. It's
Not Your Money: The Underground History of American Education by John Taylor
Gatto from archive.org
It's
Not Your Money
Though
it was twenty years and more ago, I remember well that day in 1979 when I loaded my old Ford station wagon with broken
tape recorders, broken movie projectors,
broken record players, broken tripods, broken typewriters, broken
editing machines, etc., some nearly new
and still under warranty, and without notifying anyone trucked it all over to the repair facility on Court Street
in Brooklyn because the Bureau of Audio-
Visual Instruction had failed to respond to three official requests for
help from the school.
This was an errand of mercy for a new
principal, a fine North Carolina lady serving her probationary period, a woman for whom I had
high regard because she broke rules to do
the things that mattered. 3 The executive on duty at BAVI had once been
a "Coordinator" at the school
I was coming from. Apart from his job title he was a likeable sort who reminded me of Arnold Stang on the old
Captain Video show.
But when he saw my load of wreckage he
exploded. "What are you trying to pull?" he said. "We don't have time to repair
these things!" Official ladders of referral did in fact assign the repair function to BAVI; if not
them, then who? Because I was there, the
equipment was accepted, but shortly afterwards I heard on the grapevine
it had been thrown out and my principal
upbraided for her lack of decorum in trying to have it repaired. Broken machinery is a signal to buy
new and may be reckoned among the
lifeblood factors of school's partnership with the larger economy.
As
long as I'm reminiscing, I remember also an earlier time when a different
principal wanted to "make
space" in the audio-visual vault. Some years earlier a one-time foundation windfall had been expended on
thirty-nine overhead projectors even though
the school already had ten, and nobody but administrators and gym
teachers used them anyway because they
bored the life out of kids. "Could you help me out, John, and pitch those things somewhere after school when
nobody is around to see? I'll owe you one." The reason I was asked, I think, besides the
fact I always drove an old station wagon and
had no reluctance about using it for school matters, was that I always
insisted on talking as an equal to
school people whatever their title or status. I saw them as colleagues, engaged in the same joint enterprise I was
enrolled in myself.
This disrespect for the chain of command
sometimes bred a kind of easy familiarity with
administrators, denied more conventional teachers with an "us"
and "them" outlook. In any
case, I drove some of the junk to the dumpster at the entrance to the trail to
Lake Rutherford in High Point State
Park, in New Jersey, the rest to a dump near my farm in Norwich, New York, where $10,000 or so in
equipment was duly buried by the bulldozer.
Incidentally, I recall being expressly forbidden to give these
projectors away, because they might be
"traced" back to Community School District 3.
Community School District 3, Manhattan, is the
source of most of my school memories,
the spot where I spent much of my adult working life. I remember a
summer program there in 1971 where the
administrator in charge ran frantically from room to room in the last week of the term asking that teachers
"help him out" by spending some large amount of money ($30,000 is the figure that comes to
mind) that he had squirreled away on the
books. When we protested the school term was over, he explained he was
fearful of being evaluated poorly on
money management and that might cost him a chance to become a principal. Getting rid of money at the end of
the term so it didn't have to be returned was
a major recurring theme during my years in District 3.
Another District 3 story I'll not soon
forget is the time the school board approved funds for the purchase of five thousand Harbrace
College Handbooks at $1 1 each after it had
been brought to their attention by my wife that the identical book was
being remaindered in job lots at Barnes
& Noble 's main store on 1 7 th Street for $1 a copy. Not on the list
of approved vendors, I might have been
told, though it's too long ago to recall.
Why
do these things happen? Any reasonable person might ask that question. And
the answer is at one and the same time
easy and not so easy to give. When we talk about politics in schooling we draw together as one
what in reality are two quite different
matters. It will clarify the discussion to divide school politics into a
macro and a micro component. The
macropolitics dictate that holes in floors cannot be fixed, or machinery repaired, or independent texts secured at the
fair market rate. The macropolitics of
schooling are deadly serious. They deal with policy issues unknown to
the public, largely out of reach of
elected representatives — senators and presidents included — and are
almost impervious to public outrage and
public morality. Hence the windfall for teachers and administrators at public colleges over the
past decade and a half.
On the other hand, the micropolitics of
schooling deal with the customary venality of
little fish in their dealings with even littler fish. I speak of the
invisible market in petty favors that
school administrators run in virtually every public school in the land, a
market that trades in after-school jobs,
partial teaching programs, desirable rooms, desirable classes, schedules that enable certain
teachers, but not others, to beat the Friday rush hour traffic to Long Island, all the contemptible
non-cash currency without which the
management of schooling would become very difficult. The micro-politics
of schooling are degrading, disgusting,
and demoralizing, but it pales in importance before macropolitical decisions about time,
sequencing, curriculum, personnel, ties of schooling to the economy, and matters of that magnitude,
for which the opinions of school people
are never significant.
What follows in this chapter is mostly a
consideration of the macro world, but if I had to sum up in one image how otherwise decent
people conspire through schooling against
hardworking ordinary people to waste their money, I would tell my
auditors of the time I tried
energetically to save a Social Studies chairman a substantial amount of money
in purchasing supplies even though I
wasn't in his department. I happened to know where he could buy what he wanted at about 50
percent less than he was prepared to pay. After
tolerating my presentation and dismissing it, he became irritated when I
pressed the case: "What are you
getting so agitated for, John? It's not your moneyl"
3. She
was denied tenure a few years later for failing to play ball with the district
office and the teachers who mattered in
the building. Although a New York Times editorial came to her defense (!), the
superintendent was unrelenting. A year later he
was expelled for crossing the local city councilwoman.
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