210. Education's Most Powerful Voice: The Underground History of
American Education by John Taylor Gatto from archive.org
Education's
Most Powerful Voice
At
the 1996 annual convention of the National Education Association, delegates
were delighted to learn that the union
would pay them a $1000 bounty if they could succeed in getting themselves elected as a delegate to
the upcoming Democratic National
Convention. No similar prize was offered for selection as a Republican
Party delegate. The offer proved a
powerful motivater, about an eighth of all the delegates who nominated Governor Clinton for
President were NEA members and the union carried more weight at the DNC than California, America's most populous state.
President were NEA members and the union carried more weight at the DNC than California, America's most populous state.
President Clinton had been the featured
speaker at the NEA gathering. When he entered a
convention hall hung with Clinton-Gore signs and crisscrossed with
strobe lights, Clinton T-shirts and buttons
were everywhere, the band blared out rock and roll, and Arkansas delegates pretended to play huge make-believe
saxophones. The teacher crowd rocked the
room. This was its moment to howl.
The NEA bills itself as "education's
most powerful voice in Washington." It claims credit for creating the U.S. Department of Education,
for passing Goals 2000, and for stopping
the Senate from approving vouchers. Its platform resolutions and
lobbying instructions to delegates
include the following planks: "mandatory kindergarten with compulsory attendance"; opposition to
"competency testing" as a condition of employment; "direct and confidential" child access to
psychological, social, and health services without parental knowledge; "programs in the
public schools for children from birth"; a resolution (B-67) criticizing homeschooling as
inadequate and calling for licenses issued by the state licensing agency for those who instruct
in such schools; and a curriculum "approved by the state department of
education."
The
NEA also called for statehood for the District of Columbia, and announced
its undying opposition to all voucher
plans and tuition tax credit plans "or funding formulas that have the same effect." It
threatened a boycott against Shell Oil for alleged environmental pollution in Nigeria. The NEA
had a foreign policy as well as a
pedagogical agenda.
For
all this flash and filigree, while the NEA and other professional unions have
had some effect on micropolitics in
schooling, they have surprisingly little effect on public policy. For all the breast-beating,
vilification, and sanctimony which swirl about the union presence in schooling, where real power
is concerned the professional
organizations are not the movers and shakers they are reputed to be.
Mostly unions are good copy for
journalists and not much more.
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