Critics: Governor's school takeover district represents disinvestment in public education

Below is the official statement from the press conference this afternoon at the Capitol by the Georgia Association of Educators and other education groups rallying to stop Gov. Nathan Deal's Opportunity School District.

Georgia voters will decide in November whether to empower the state to take over schools it deems

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Credit: Maureen Downey

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Credit: Maureen Downey

failing and reorganize them or turn them over to a charter operator. The change requires an amendment to the state constitution.

Here is the press conference statement:

This report is the most recent in a series of analyses of state takeover initiatives and other education governance reforms. In November 2016, Georgians will be asked to approve a state takeover modeled on the laws reviewed in this report. Finding little evidence of success, the authors, while flanked by supporters at their press conference today at Georgia State Capitol, provide an alternative vision for sustained school improvement inclusive of eight research-proven strategies.

Speakers urged voters to take into account lessons learned from past takeovers in Louisiana (Recovery School District), Tennessee (Achievement School District), and Michigan (Education Achievement Authority), which have not proven effective.  These initiatives have relied on converting schools to charters or closing them altogether. The results have been highly stratified institutions and deepened segregation, widened gaps in achievement, and further disadvantaging schools that already struggle to keep pace with their counterparts.

"As legislators prep to return to work and voters ready for an election year, it's our intent to share our ideas before their minds are made up. We believe the eight strategies in this paper outline an alternative path to creating successful public schools that we ask Georgians to consider as we evaluate the recommendations of the Education Reform Commission and OSD referendum.  All of us are ready for the challenge ahead," said Sid Chapman, a teacher and president of the Georgia Association of Educators.

The report goes on to suggest that Georgia's takeover proposal, the Opportunity School District, is a high stakes proposition for the state.  The OSD would disproportionately impact low-income communities with many schools targeted for takeover being concentrated in Atlanta (26 schools), Richmond (21 schools) and DeKalb County (24 schools).

Additionally, the student population across all OSD-eligible schools is composed of 94 percent African-American and Latino students. "The architects of the OSD are targeting low-income communities using arbitrary achievement levels to declare their schools and the students in them as failing," said Kent McGuire, president of SEF.

This report calls for investment, not divestment, in Georgia public schools, and for effective strategies like access to high quality early childhood education, collaborative school leadership, quality teaching, wraparound supports, restorative practices and student-centered environments, culturally relevant curriculum, and deep parent-community-school ties for students from low-income communities.

"This report provides an important framework and crucial strategies for working with communities to support their local schools, as opposed to having change forced on them by a state takeover. We're excited to be part of this work and look forward to hearing from families and communities in this process," said Janet Kishbaugh of Public Education Matters Georgia.

"Effective school reform is done in collaboration with communities, parents, students, educators and administrators," said Warren Simmons, executive director of the Annenberg Institute for School Reform at Brown University, and a Southern Education Foundation board member. "Top-down strategies have repeatedly not proven successful in sustaining high quality public education. It is the teachers, school leaders, students and parents who must carry out and push forward any improvement strategies; they must be engaged for the reforms to succeed."

Among those present and supportive of the initiative were national superintendent of the year, Dr. Philip Lanoue of Clarke County Schools, Dr. Sid Chapman, president of Georgia Association of Educators, and a host of concerned educators, parents, and community members.