Education reform’s central myths
The education debate rests on two faulty premises: that public schools are failures, and choice is the solution
The “Overton Window” is not a new kind of low-glare, high-insulation
windowpane. Nor is it the title of a paperback thriller like “The Eiger
Sanction” or “The Bourne Supremacy.” Identified by Joseph P. Overton of
the Mackinac Center for Public Policy, the Overton Window refers to the
boundaries of the limited range of ideas and policies that are
acceptable for consideration in politics at any one time. In other
words, the Overton Window is the “box” that we are constantly exhorted
to think outside of, only to be ignored or punished if we succeed.
The
debate about K-12 educational reform in the U.S. is an example of the
Overton Window at work. For a generation, almost all of the debate about
improving American schools has been limited to minor variations on two
themes. First, it is endlessly asserted, American public education is a
miserable failure, compared to the educational systems of our major
economic rivals in Asia and Europe. Second, the solution to this alleged
failure is the privatization and marketization of public education.
Sunday, August 5, 2012
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