Leaving Finland

Image
Lake Jyvasjarvi I have never lived anywhere for 5 months other than Jyvaskyla, Finland. As my Fulbright journey concludes, there is so much to still digest. It will take months, if not years, to truly assimilate all the learning. Before I left Southern California, I wrote about the what I would miss the most from home and what I  looked forward to experiencing in Finland. It is safe to say I met my goals. Top 7 Goals 1. Discussing Education Helsinki Workshop Through professional development programs, Fulbright Finland connected teachers with scholars and researchers, for the purpose of putting inquisitive minds together. The Making Democracies Resilient to Modern Threats seminar provided participants with fascinating research and presentations. 2. Nordic Model Bus station in Espoo What does an efficient and earnest country look like?  It looks like Finland. Yes, people pay higher taxes, but get so much in return. I for one appreciated the well-maintained ro

Propaganda

propaganda: the spreading of ideas, information, or rumor for the purpose of of helping or injuring an institution, a cause, or a person-Merriam-Webster dictionary

What is really going on with public education today? Are public schools really failing, or are they being portrayed as failures in order to set them up for corporate take-overs? The public has the right to know that they are being led down a road to the elimination of the middle class, in the corporate world's quest for massive profits via the privatization of the public sector.

In other words, selling schools=more money for rich people. It is in someone's vested interest that our public schools fail. And it ain't the teachers and the students.

Corporate charters are not in it to "save the children." They are in it to make money off of the children using propaganda and fake grassroots groups such as the Parent Revolution. The propaganda goes like this: "public schools are failing. The main reason for this is lazy, unmotivated teachers who are protected by powerful, but unethical, teachers' unions who are just in it to save jobs and work as little as possible."

If you eliminate the unions, it will be as easy as pie to take over the buildings and the business, and begin making mass profits.

In the next few weeks, we at DFSC will put together some sources off of the internet to show how this is being done. We will begin with images.

Images are a powerful means to convey ideas, sentiments, and opinions. The Los Angeles Times has used images quite effectively to portray unionized public school teachers as the scourge of humanity. Notice the wording of their headlines:
  • Failure gets a pass,
  • Firing teachers can be a costly and torturous task,
  • Bar set low for a lifetime job in schools, and
  • Accused of sexual abuse, but back in the classroom.
Now look at the headlines they use for non-unionized charter schools and teachers:
  • Charter tackles middle school challenges with young faculties and a no-nonsense attitude.
  • L.A. charter schools flex their educational muscles
  • Charters generally perform better than traditional schools, not as well as magnets
  • Locke High School's progress
See these headlines for yourself here.

Clearly, the use of such words is a planned, strategic effort to portray one group or another in a certain light. It is easy to fall for such propaganda. But the headlines are nothing in comparison with the photographs they have used to depict the different faculties at each type of school. Here goes:

CHARTER SCHOOLS
YOUNG AND HAPPY








ACTIVELY WORKING









NOT LAZY








ENGAGING STUDENTS










PUBLIC SCHOOLS

OPPRESSED (as in students are oppressed)









OVERWHELMED









MALICIOUS












INCOMPETENT













You would think, after reading these articles, that charter schools employ no unsavory employees, and are full of energetic, inspiring, creative teachers.

And you would think public schools are only full of lazy, incompetent teachers.

We will highlight public school employees that are doing an amazing job at teaching students IN SPITE of being abandoned and forsaken by our legislators, our local philanthropists, and even our own school board. Stay tuned.

All images from latimes.com


Update: 2/11/09 The LA Weekly has joined forces with the LA Times in their intensely negative portrayal of teachers. Read The Dance of the Lemons here. (By the way, didn't Jill Stewart already do this series at the now defunct New Times, almost 10 years ago? Why yes she did!) And the image to accompany this article?









Lovely.

Update 2/17/10

Listed below are headlines from publications throughout the United States, some whose claims have gone beyond beyond the realm of intellectual discourse and decency. Mistruths are stated as facts, then these mistruths get repeated as gospel. Some articles even attempt to portray teachers as sub-human. We will link to these publications to document the degeneration of this ed-debate into a quasi-fascist attack on teachers...on teachers, of all people!

L.A. Weekly LAUSD Dance of the Lemons 2/11/10 Writer: Beth Barrett
L.A. Weekly When Those Who Can't Do, Teach 2/18/10 Writer: Beth Barrett
Business Insider L.A. Superintendent Has Identified 1,000 Horrendous Teachers, But None Can Be Fired Thanks to the Union 2/17/10 Writer: Gus Lubin
Charter School Insights Blog What do 1,000 bad teachers have in common with mealy bugs, fleas, bed bugs, and skunk smell? 2/18/10 Writer: Doug Hering



*
*
*

Comments

  1. Well done! I hope people begin paying more attention to the nature of the news coverage you're examining here. The L.A. Times has decided what the narrative is that they wish to pursue, and it's all too rare that anything outside that narrative is seen on their pages or web site.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Heather Wolpert-GawronFebruary 9, 2010 at 5:50 AM

    I am so grateful to David Cohen for turning me on to your blog. It's fresh and accurate and vital in education today. The LA Times may have decided the narrative, but you have provided the Literary Analyis of their Voice. Imagine the true power of education if all those spin-off programs and funding for answers was actually placed into the schools. Well done, well said. And images clearly speak strongly for civilians. We should be speaking in them too!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Leaving Finland

The People who Make Fulbright Happen

When Typical Means Outstanding