209.A
Billion, Six For KC: The Underground History of American Education by John
Taylor Gatto from archive.org
A
Billion, Six For KC
What
are the prospects of reclaiming systematic schooling so it serves the
general welfare? Surely the possibility
of recharging the system when so many seem to desire such a course would be the best refutation of
my buried thesis — that no trustworthy
change is possible, that the school machine must be shattered into a
hundred thousand parts before the
pledges made in the founding documents of this country have a chance to be honored again. No one serves better as an
emblem of the hopelessness of a gradual
course of school reform or
one that follows the dictates of conventional wisdom than Judge Russell G. Clark, of Kansas City, Missouri.
one that follows the dictates of conventional wisdom than Judge Russell G. Clark, of Kansas City, Missouri.
For
more than ten years Judge Clark oversaw the spending of a $1.6 billion windfall
in an attempt to desegregate Kansas City
schools and raise the reading and math scores of poor kids. I arbitrarily select his story from
many which might be told to show how unlikely it is that the forces which gave us our present
schools are likely to vanish, even in the face
of outraged determination. Or that models of a better way to do things
are likely to solve the problem, either.
Judge Russell G. Clark took over the
Kansas City school district in 1984 after
adjudicating a case in which the NAACP acted for plaintiffs in a suit
against the school district. Although he
began the long court proceedings as a former farm boy raised in the Ozarks without an activist judicial record,
Clark's decision was favorable to the
desegregationists beyond any reasonable expectation. Clark invited those
bringing the suit to dream up perfect
schools and he would get money to pay for them! Using the exceptional power granted federal judges, he
unilaterally ordered the doubling of city
property taxes. 4 When that provided inadequate revenue, he ordered the
state to make up the difference. How's
that for decisive, no-nonsense support for school reform as a social priority?
Suddenly the district was awash in money for
TV studios, swimming pools, planetariums,
zoos, computers, squadrons of teachers and specialists. "They had
as much money as any school district
will ever get," said Gary Orfield, a Harvard investigator who directed
a postmortem analysis, "It didn't
do very much." Orfield was wrong. The Windfall produced striking results:
Average daily attendance went down, the
dropout rate went up, the black-white
achievement gap remained stationary, and the district was as segregated
after ten years of well-funded reform
as it had been at the beginning. A former school board president whose children had been plaintiffs in the
original suit leading to Judge Clark's takeover
said she had "truly believed if we gave teachers and administrators
everything they said they needed, that
would make a huge difference. I knew it would take time, but I did believe by five years into this program we
would see dramatic results educationally."
Who is the villain in this tale? Judge Clark is. He just doesn't get it.
The system isn't broken. It works as
intended, turning out incomplete people. No repair can fix it, nor is the education kids need in any catalogue to
buy. As Kansas City proves, giving schools
more money only encourages them to intensify the destructive operations
they already perform.
4.
They actually were raised 150 percent, from a base already not low. With what
effect on homeowners just holding on was anyone's guess. Here, as in the case of Benson, Vermont, up
ahead, the institution's aspect as predatory parasite appears in stark
relief. Education's Most Powerful Voice
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