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Monday, March 03, 2008
Lee  Culpepper :: Townhall.com Columnist
Charter Schools: The Marine Corps of Public Education
by Lee Culpepper
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The Marine Corps’ mystique entices motivated recruits. Its battlefield ferocity strikes fear in the hearts of its enemies. The Corps is something nearly everyone admires, but only a few have what takes to make the commitment.

Marines do not make excuses; they find ways to accomplish their mission – often without assets others require. Marines pride themselves on their ability to “accomplish more with less.”

Charter schools have benefited from a similar philosophy. They, too, “accomplish more with less.” They entice committed families and teachers searching for something better in public education. They also strike fear in the hearts of teacher unions and slippery politicians.

Overall, charter schools have produced at least as good -- but typically better results than traditional public schools. They have done so without assets their competition demands. Charters have succeeded despite receiving less taxpayer funding. They are completely on their own to pay for classroom facilities. Whether they build, lease, or restore property, charters own the problem.

Charters also highlight the garbage surrounding “teacher certification.” Depending on the state, charters have flexibility in their hiring practices. Proportionally, they use fewer “certified teachers,” yet charters match or surpass their competition’s results.

They endure politically correct “deficiencies,” as well, like insufficient racial diversity. Many charters specifically target at-risk populations -- which are often minorities. Incredibly, their opponents assert charters support segregation.

By design, charters operate with greater autonomy and fewer regulations than district schools. In return, charters promise better accountability for academic results and fiscal bookkeeping. But teacher unions exert tremendous energy to cripple charters with the same regulations and central control that make public schools the disasters they are.

Granted, some charters emphasize the same politically correct fads district schools do -- self-esteem, diversity, or outcome-based instruction (i.e. low standards). Some have experienced accounting scandals that occasionally embarrass traditional schools. Such charters are like Marines who humiliate the Corps by failing to live up to its high standards (e.g. Congressman Frank Murtha).

Nevertheless, charters give parents an option that teacher unions frantically oppose. Choice equals competition, and customers generally choose the product that works best. Public schools haven’t worked for a long time because monopolies breed complacency. Charter schools open the door to competition. But teacher unions employ lawyers and politicians to slam that door shut. By imposing increased regulations and as much central control on charters as possible, unions undermine the competitive edge charter schools have – decentralized control.

The Corps faces similar problems. The smallest branch of the military, the Corps has battled being absorbed into another service. Its success and mystique are often envied and occasionally despised (as are charter results). For example, during the 1983 assault on Grenada, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, General John W. Vessey Jr., declared, “We have two companies of Marines running rampant all over the northern half of this island, and three Army regiments pinned down in the southwestern corner, doing nothing. What the hell is going on?” We should ask the same question concerning public education. Continued...

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About The Author

Lee Culpepper is a former Marine and high school English teacher. He is currently working to complete his first book, Alone and Unafraid: One Marine’s Counterattack Inside the Walls of Public Education. Visit Lee’s website at www.leeculpepper.com.

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To formerlyknownasHomeschoolMom:
You raise valid concerns. I would be willing to bet you, though, that if the NEA-500lbs gorilla and other union monkeys were all euthanized today, public schools would improve tomorrow. Union meddling is a primary cancer ailing public schools.

I would also wager that euthanizing "teacher colleges" would also improve schools immediately. Teacher certification is another real cancer -- along with tenure. Of course, both stem from union ideology.

The fact that a former colleague’s husband -- a surgeon -- would not be considered “a certified teacher” this very moment illustrates the idiocy of public schools. The man can perform surgery and educate fellow doctors, but he’s not qualified to teach a bunch of teenagers biology or chemistry until he forks out serious cash to be indoctrinated in politically correct BS.

Pardon me, I'm throwing up.

All right, I'm back. Maybe unions simply don't want "their teachers" to have to compete with men like Dr. Cutler who would like to teach when they retire from another career.

Simple are good plans. Start with some no-brainer solutions and improvise and adapt as necessary.

Give parents options, and give principals the power to hire and fire as they see fit. Success depends on leadership. Incompetent principals, like incompetent teachers, would not last.

I say, "Let the competition begin."

Respectfully,
Lee


Wary of unintended consequences 2 of 2
6. Which of the many standardized test available will be required, and who will decide? What will be the minimum test score standard required of the students? What will happen if the standards are not met?

7. What entity will monitor the schools and their performances? Will it be a government agency? A private agency? How much will it cost in tax dollars to fund monitoring? Exactly how will they monitor schools?

8. What implications will requirements and monitoring in the private institution sector have in the most private form of education-homeschooling?

9. Can anyone actually prove increased regulation and monitoring directly affect academic performance for the better? If not, why do it?

10. If more people have more funds available to them, will the tuition of private institutions most in demand increase? If private institutions financially invest in facilities, staff, and programs anticipating increased demand, will the government have the upper hand and ultimately control by determining who receives funds?
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