Governor Chris Christie was in Camden, New Jersey this week
to praise the opening of some new charter schools that he is championing. A
great believer in school choice, Christie said that parents should have “more
choice, not less.”
I would like to take the Governor at his word on this. If I
were a Camden parent and I had real “choice”, I would choose to send my child
to a wealthy private school like the one Joe Kennedy, Sr. sent two of his sons
to, Choate Rosemary Hall. I think all of us might do the same.
Choate, of course, is one of the go to private schools for
the privileged in America. Located in Wallingford, Connecticut, its leafy
sprawling 458 acre campus is home to “one of the leading
schools in America.” Its alumni roll reads like a Who’s Who of American
politics, industry, arts and letters, and sports. Graduates include John F.
Kennedy, Edward Albee, John Dos Passos, Glenn Close, Michael Douglas, nuclear
physicist Katherine Way, Senator Bob Kasten and literally hundreds more prominent
folks. They also have one of the top ice hockey programs for boys and girls in
all of New England.
Not surprisingly, students at Choate appear to graduate “college
and career ready.” Many of them furthering their education at places like
Harvard and Yale.
OK, Ok, I know we can’t send all of our Camden students to
Choate. After all it costs about 52,000 dollars a year to educate a boarding
student there. So, if we can’t send all of our Camden kids to Choate, maybe we
can provide them with a Choate-like curriculum right in South Jersey.
What does the Choate curriculum look like? Here are a few
highlights.
·
There are more than 300 courses in the
curriculum
·
Coursework includes community service and global
studies
·
A two-year intensive Science Research Program includes
mentored laboratory work during the summer at universities in the United States
and abroad.
·
The Capstone Program allows sixth
form (senior) students to explore an area of the curriculum in depth. Working
under a faculty adviser, students take at least five courses that focus on a
curricular theme, culminating in a substantial final project.
·
Among extracurricular arts clubs are six a cappella groups; step dance, slam poetry, hip hop, and rap groups;
improv, musical theater, and instrumental ensembles of all sizes; photography
and film-making clubs; and supporting publications for the arts, fashion, and
culture.
·
The Arts Concentration Program provides
students with individually tailored instruction and class scheduling.
·
The Senior Project Program provides on- or
off-campus internships in academic research, visual art, and the performing
arts.
·
Other specialized programs include American
Studies, creative writing, economics, Future Business Leaders, mathematics,
philosophy, psychology, religion, and debate.
·
The Environmental Immersion Program allows
students to study environmental issues in the Kohler Environmental Center "the first teaching, research and
residential environmental center in U.S. secondary education."
·
Choate students may compete in more than 30
varsity sports including crew, water polo and squash.
Sounds pretty good doesn’t it. Who wouldn’t want to have
this type of choice for their children? I was struck by the lack of a mention
of the Common Core State Standards in the curriculum. And while Choate students
do take lots of AP courses and the corresponding tests, I could find no
evidence of yearly standardized tests meant to determine adequate yearly
progress.
So, what kind of choice does Governor Christie want to offer
to Camden’s children? A choice to send their children to a publicly funded,
privately run charter school managed by Mastery Charter. What will parents get for
making this choice? A bare bones curriculum focused on achieving higher test
scores on standardized measures. A curriculum taught by many neophyte,
uncertified teachers who are likely to leave in a year or two for greener
pastures, and a discipline regime based on rigid adherence to a “no excuses” philosophy
and shaming.
They will also get no voice in the policies of this school,
since their Boards are not elected entities and are often populated with people
outside the community. Can we really sell the idea that parents are getting
real choice when we deny them the voice that comes with the ballot box?
Politicians love to utter the word “choice” because it sounds
so American. We all want to have choice. Unfortunately, these politicians do
not want to offer poor, urban children any real choice. First, they underfund
and undermine urban public schools and then offer “choice” in the form of
privately run charters.
My bet is that given a real choice, parents of children in
Camden and all cities would choose to have a fully funded, well-staffed,
well-maintained local neighborhood public school that offers a rich and varied
curriculum focused on the interests and passions of every child and where parents
could voice their “choice” every couple of years by using that good old
American vehicle of choice, the vote.
The wealthy and powerful of this country have demonstrated
what kind of education is appropriate for their children by choosing to send
those children to schools like Choate, which offer a rich curriculum in an idyllic
trusting and nurturing environment. Why do they fail to offer a similar kind of
choice to other people’s children?
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