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Taking notes 60: why teachers matter in dark times

Americans live in a historical moment that annihilates thought. Ignorance now provides a sense of community; the brain has migrated to the dark pit of the spectacle; the only discourse that matters is about business; poverty is now viewed as a technical problem; thought chases after an emotion that can obliterate it. The presumptive Republican Party presidential nominee, Donald Trump, declares he likes “the uneducated” — implying that it is better that they stay ignorant than be critically engaged agents — and boasts that he doesn’t read books. Fox News offers no apologies for suggesting that thinking is an act of stupidity.

A culture of cruelty and a survival-of-the-fittest ethos in the United States is the new norm and one consequence is that democracy in the United States is on the verge of disappearing or has already disappeared! Where are the agents of democracy and the public spaces that offer hope in such dark times? Many are in public schools — all the more reason to praise public school teachers and to defend public and higher education as a public good.

For the most part, public school teachers and higher education faculty are a national treasure and may be one of the last defenses available to undermine a growing authoritarianism, pervasive racism, permanent war culture, widening inequality and debased notion of citizenship in US society. They can’t solve these problems but they can educate a generation of students to address them. Yet, public school teachers, in particular, are underpaid and overworked, and lack adequate resources. In the end, they are unjustly blamed by right-wing billionaires and politicians for the plight of public schools. In order to ensure their failure, schools in many cities, such as Detroit and Philadelphia, have been defunded by right-wing legislators. These schools are dilapidated — filled with vermin and broken floors — and they often lack heat and the most basic resources. They represent the mirror image of the culture of cruelty and dispossession produced by the violence of neoliberalism.

[Credit: Taylor/Daily call.org.]
[Credit: Taylor/Daily
call.org.]

Under the counterfeit appeal to reform, national legislation imposes drill-and-test modes of pedagogy on teachers that kill the imagination of students. Young people suffer under the tyranny of methods that are forms of disciplinary repression. Teachers remain powerless as administrators model their schools after prisons and turn students over to the police. And in the midst of such egregious assaults, teachers are disparaged as public servants.

The insecure, overworked adjunct lecturers employed en masse at most institutions of higher education fare no better. They have been reduced to an army of indentured wage slaves, with little or no power, benefits or time to do their research. Some states, such as Texas, appear to regard higher education as a potential war zone and have passed legislation allowing students to carry concealed weapons on campus. That is certainly one way to convince faculty not to engage in controversial subjects with their students. With the exception of the elite schools, which have their own criminogenic environments to deal with, higher education is in free fall, undermined as a democratic public sphere and increasingly modeled after corporations and run by armies of administrators who long to be called CEOs.

All the while the federal government uses billions of dollars to fuel one of the largest defense and intelligence budgets in the world. The death machine is overflowing with money while the public sector, social provisions and public goods are disappearing. At the same time, many states allocate more funds for prisons than for higher education. Young children all over the country are drinking water poisoned with lead, while corporations rake in huge profits, receive huge tax benefits, buy off politicians and utterly corrupt the political system. Trust and compassion are considered a weakness if not a liability in an age of massive inequities in wealth and power.

[Credit: Stephanie Mcmillan.]
[Credit: Stephanie Mcmillan.]

In the midst of what can only be viewed as a blow against democracy, right-wing Republicans produce slash-and-burn policies that translate into poisonous austerity measures for public schools and higher education. As Jane Mayer points out in Dark Money, the Koch brothers and their billionaire allies want to abolish the minimum wage, privatize schools, eliminate the welfare state, pollute the planet at will, break unions and promote policies that result in the needless deaths of millions who lack adequate health care, jobs and other essentials. Public goods such as schools, according to these politicians and corporate lobbyists, are financial investments, viewed as business opportunities. For the billionaires who are the anti-reformers, teachers, students and unions simply get in the way and must be disciplined.

Public schools and higher education are “dangerous” because they hold the potential to serve as laboratories for democracy where students learn to think critically. Teachers are threatening because they refuse to conflate education with training or treat schools as if they were car dealerships. Many educators have made it clear that they regard teaching for the test and defining accountability only in numerical terms as acts that dull the mind and kill the spirit of students. Such repressive requirements undermine the ability of teachers to be creative, engage with the communities in which they work and teach in order to make knowledge critical and transformative. The claim that we have too many bad teachers is too often a ruse to hide bad policies and to unleash assaults on public schools by corporate-driven ideologues and hedge fund managers who view schools strictly as investment opportunities for big profits.

We need to praise teachers, hold them to high standards, pay them the salaries they deserve, give them control over their classrooms, reduce class sizes and invest as much, if not more, in education as we do in the military-industrial complex. This is all the more reason to celebrate and call attention to those teachers in Chicago, Detroit and Seattle who are collectively fighting against such attacks on public schools. We need to praise them, learn from them and organize with them because they refuse to treat education as a commodity and they recognize that the crisis of schooling is about the crises of democracy, economic equality and justice. This is not a minor struggle because no democracy can survive without informed citizens.

[Credit: Judy Green.]
[Credit: Judy Green.]

Neoliberal education is increasingly expressed in terms of austerity measures and market-driven ideologies that undermine any notion of the imagination, reduce faculty to an army of indentured labor and burden students with either a mind-numbing education or enormous crippling debt or both. If faculty and students do not resist this assault, they will no longer have any control over the conditions of their labor, and the institutions of public and higher education will further degenerate into a crude adjunct of the corporation and financial elite.

Clearly, it is time to revisit Mario Savio’s famous speech at Berkeley in 1964 when he called for shutting down an educational system that had become odious. In his own words:

There comes a time when the operation of the machine becomes so odious, makes you so sick at heart, that you can’t take part, you can’t even passively take part; and you’ve got to put your bodies upon the gears and upon the wheels, upon the levers, upon all the apparatus, and you’ve got to make it stop. And you’ve got to indicate to the people who run it, the people who own it, that unless you’re free the machine will be prevented from working at all.

Savio’s call to resistance is more relevant today than it was then. Public schools not only mimic the injustices of an oppressive economic system, but also funnel poor youth of color into the criminal legal system. The good news is that there is an echo of outrage and resistance now emerging in the United States, especially among young people such as those in the Black Lives Matter movement.

hilbern
[Credit: Branco/LegalInsurrection.com.]

If the major index of any democracy is measured by how a society treats its children, the United States is failing. Fortunately, more and more people are waking up and realizing that the fight for public schooling is not just about higher salaries for teachers; it is about investing in our children and in democracy itself. At the same time, we live in what author Carl Boggs and others have called a permanent warfare state, one in which every space appears to be a battlefield, and the most vulnerable are viewed not only as an imminent threat, but also as the object of potential violence. This suggests that the battle of education must become part of a wider political struggle. This is a struggle that connects assaults on education with the broader war on youth, police violence with the militarization of society and specific instances of racist brutality with the unchecked exercise of the systemic power of finance capital. But the struggle will not be easy.

Beneath all of the current brutality, racism and economic predation, there is some hope inspired by the generation of young people who are protesting police violence and the attack on public and higher education and working hard to invent a politics that gets to the root of issues. There is also a glimmer of possibility in those youth who have supported Bernie Sanders but are really demanding a new and more radical definition of politics: Their vision far surpasses that of the left-centrists and liberals of the Democratic Party.

Elections are the ruse of capitalism, and that has never been more clear than at the present moment. On the one side we have Hillary Clinton, a warmonger, a strong supporter of the financial elite and a representative of a neoliberalism that is as brutal as it is cruel. On the other side we have Donald Trump, a circus barker inviting Americans into a den of horrors. And these are the choices that constitute democracy? I don’t think so.

teach-trump

Collective self-delusion will only go so far in the absence of an education system that offers a space for critical learning and dissent, and functions as a laboratory for democracy. There is a tendency to forget in an age dominated by the neoliberal celebration of self-interest and unchecked individualism that public goods matter, that critical thinking is essential to an informed public and that education at the very least should provide students with unsettling ruptures that display the fierce energy of outrage and the hope for a better world.

But a critical education has the capacity to do more. It also has the power not only to prevent justice from going dead in ourselves and the larger society, but also, in George Yancy’s poetic terms, to teach us how to “love with courage.” Hopefully, while education cannot solve such problems, it can produce the formative cultures necessary to enable a generation of young people to create a robust third party — a party fueled by social movements demanding the economic and political justice that could allow a radical democracy to come to life.

[Credit: indybay.org.]
[Credit: indybay.org.]

[Thank you Henry for this piece. The article first appeared onTruthout.org.]

The writer is McMaster University Professor for Scholarship in the Public Interest in the English and Cultural Studies Department and the Paulo Freire Chair in Critical Pedagogy at The McMaster Institute for Innovation & Excellence in Teaching & Learning. He is also a Distinguished Visiting Professor at Ryerson University. His web site ishttp://www.henryagiroux.com and his other site is MCSPI.

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El 19 de Mayo: Paro y Movilización de la CTA Autónoma de la provincia de Bs. Aires, al que adhiere la Federación Nacional Docente, FND-CTA

Fuente Alternativa Docente / 19 de Mayo de 2016
Conflicto bonaerense: Hay recursos para resolverlo.  Una lucha creciente enfrenta a Vidal

El conflicto bonaerense transita un nuevo momento, al confluir más de 15 gremios estatales, sectores sociales, políticos y estudiantiles. La movilización del 19 mostrará a Vidal que no son ‘pocos’ los que reclaman y que hay plata para dar respuesta.

La masiva movilización del miércoles 11 y el paro de la salud, judiciales y docentes, con Astilleros, los rurales, estudiantes de la FULP y organizaciones sociales y políticas como el MST; puso en el tapete el planteo de paro y plan de lucha provincial de todos los gremios estatales.
La marcha del jueves 19, en la que confluimos sectores de ambas CTA y la CGT, da cuenta del nuevo momento. De mayor ofensiva, extensión y tendencia a coordinar para abrirle la mano a Vidal. Profesionales de la salud (Cicop) y judiciales (AJB) con sus planes de lucha, confluyen con ATE que, frente a su congreso, resolvió retomar la lucha; junto al paro de la CTA Autónoma al que adhiere la Federación Nacional Docente. Mientras marchan también el Frente Gremial Docente, Udocba y Soeme de CGT que además para.

Inusual confluencia que requiere ir por más

Importante confluencia que no se daba desde el 2001. El ajuste PRO y el ascenso en la lucha, reubica direcciones. Aunque la decisión de gremios de la CTA de Yasky y la CGT de postergar el llamado a paro conjunto, al menos hasta junio, no contribuye a dar el golpe que requieren los trabajadores de la salud o la justicia para arrancar a Vidal el aumento salarial y otros reclamos.
Al anunciar la marcha ante la prensa, SUTEBA Provincia destacó el pedido de urgente reunión de la Mesa Técnica Salarial; al reconocer que el aumento que acordaron fue superado por la inflación. Ante un gobierno que quiere aparecer “firme”, eso se logrará si concretamos ese paro, movilización y plan de lucha provincial que dé continuidad a las acciones emprendidas.
La unidad en la acción se amplia, libera fuerzas y fortalece por abajo. El método de las asambleas, plenarios y congresos es la forma de participación de las bases en los gremios en lucha, permitiendo incluso superar propuestas conciliadoras. A ese canal se debe apostar para masificar si todo se decide en asambleas y en amplia consulta a las bases.

Ley de Emergencia: Massismo y PJ, cómplices

El 19 se rechaza además el proyecto flexibilizador y privatista de Vidal. Una ley de Emergencia Administrativa que prácticamente anula los ya limitados mecanismos de control para licitaciones con corporaciones privadas, asegurando el negociado. Y avanza en la precarización, al afectar a 15.000 temporarios que aún no pasaron a planta y crear un nuevo régimen de Contrato Autónomo, el que no reconoce derechos de la ley 10.430 y plantea que ya no se puede aspirar a la continuidad laboral.
Cuando hay signos de crisis en el gobierno, el massismo (FR) y el PJ lo siguen salvando. Así lo muestra el voto con más de dos tercios en el Senado de esa ‘Emergencia’ y que el massismo apoyara en Diputados la “moción de preferencia” para intentar aprobarlo el 19 con mayoría simple. En el plano gremial, UPCN y Fegeppba, siguen negados a luchar, aunque hablen de un adicional salarial para compensar la inflación ante el 15% que apoyaron.

Se puede ganar, con plan de lucha unificado

Ante esto, la lucha se extiende, gana las calles y cobra marco nacional al sumar a la juventud. Por eso, frente al paro nacional de ATE del 24, hay asambleas de SUTEBA disidente que ya plantean a la conducción provincial que llame a parar y marchar en unidad, como parte de un plan de lucha. Y que CTERA llame también. Así lo entendemos desde la FND.
Ese planteo de plan de lucha provincial unificado debemos llevar a cada gremio. Y responder a Vidal cuando dice que no hay plata: En vez de endeudarnos y beneficiar a los ricos, hay que ponerles fuertes impuestos; no pagar la deuda externa; recuperar el 15% de coparticipación cedido a Nación y eliminar los subsidios a las privadas. Así habrá fondos para saldar la “deuda social” de la que Vidal solo habla.

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Paro nacional de los maestros en México. Hoy jornada de lucha en 28 estados contra la Reforma Educativa, por el trabajo digno y la educación pública

Con información del Centro Sindical de Investigación e Innovación Educativa de la Sección XVIII de la CNTE / 19 de Mayo de 2016

Por cuarto día consecutivo, las y los maestros mexicanos adherentes a la Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (CNTE) han paralizado el sistema educativo, desafiando las amenazas de Aurelio Nuño, Secretario de Educación Pública,  quien no ha desaprovechado ninguna oportunidad para amedrentar a los docentes con separarlos de su función si no regresan a las aulas, puesto que la nueva ley educativa marca que faltar más de tres días en un mes  es causal de despido.
A pesar de las amenazas de despido, así como del despliegue policíaco y militar que el gobierno mexicano ha realizado desde el día de ayer para contener la movilización de los profesores en los puntos donde la CNTE ha demostrado mayor presencia, los maestros de educación básica y del nivel medio superior, se preparan desde tempranas horas para realizar protestas masivas en contra de la evaluación en diversos estados de la República Mexicana.
Los maestros democráticos de  México,  han advertido de las implicaciones que tiene  la “evaluación para la permanencia” y del por qué la están rechazando: elimina la estabilidad laboral, pretende despedir masivamente a cientos de miles de trabajadores, precariza las contrataciones y desaparece el contrato colectivo, acaba con la organización sindical y tiene como objetivo desmovilizar al sector más organizado de la sociedad que se ha opuesto a las medidas de privatización de la educación pública .
Hasta el día de hoy se estima que el paro de labores ha alcanzado los 300 mil docentes; no obstante, los partícipes de las protestas masivas en bloqueos carreteros, ocupación de puntos internacionales de tráfico de mercancías, marchas y otras actividades, podría superar los 400 mil manifestantes en 28 estados de la República Mexicana.
En el caso particular del Estado de Michoacán, donde se encuentra uno de los bastiones más importantes de la CNTE,  podría ser un foco rojo para el gobierno federal, ya que tendrá lugar la reprogramación de la evaluación docente, a la que han  citado a 5 mil 300 profesores que serían resguardados por 5 mil efectivos de los cuerpos de la policía federal y el ejército mexicano; sin embargo, la CNTE espera una mega movilización de sus militantes de más de 60 mil personas que impediría por medios pacíficos cualquier intento de montar una  farsa mediática ante la poca respuesta que han tenido de los mentores para asistir al examen para la permanencia.
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Argentina: Se realiza en CTERA una nueva reunión del «Espacio para el debate político y pedagógico”

Fuente CTERA /  18 de Mayo de 2016

Hoy,miércoles 18 de mayo, en CTERA se realiza una nueva jornada del Espacio para el debate Político y Pedagógico.
El Secretario de Educación de CTERA, Miguel Duhalde, dio el marco de la jornada y el trabajo que se realizará en distintas comisiones.
Participan de la reunión secretarios de educación de las entidades de base de CTERA, pedagogos, académicos y docentes.

Buenos Aires, miércoles 18 de mayo de 2016

 

Alejandro Demichelis                           Miguel Duhalde                           Sonia Alesso
Secretario de Prensa                            Sec. Educación                       Secretaria General

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México: Movilización de tropas hacia Chiapas y Oaxaca donde este 19 de Mayo se cumplirán tres días de paro docente

Fuente: CNTE / 18 de Mayo de 2016

Maestros y miembros de la Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (CNTE) denuncian una fuerte movilización militar y policial hacia Chiapas y Oaxaca lugares donde los maestros iniciaron un paro docente desde el martes pasado.

A esto se suman las denuncias de Maestros de Michoacán  respecto a la «evaluación para el desempeño, con la cual pretenden despedir a miles de maestros».  Informa la CNTE de Michoacan que «citaron a 5300 maestros tan sólo de ese Estado. Además -continúan señalando los voceros de la CNTE-  «para garantizar el examen anunciaron un operativo de 5 mil efectivos, entre militares y policías federales»

 

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México: se suman al paro nacional el 80% de preparatorias en Chiapas

Fuente: Insurgencia Magisterial/ Quadratin  / 18 de Mayo de 2016

 

Por: Juan Manuel Blanco. Quadratín. 

El 80% de las preparatorias del nivel medio superior del estado, se han sumado al paro indefinido convocado por la Coordinadora Nacional de Trabajadores de la Educación (CNTE),en Chiapas en resistencia a la Reforma Educativa.

Lucio Ramírez Avendaño, maestro del nivel  Preparatoria en Chiapas, declaró que  los municipios de Tapachula, Siltepec, Tuzantán, Comitán y en la zona Centro, Costa, Sierra, Norte, Altos y Frontera, las instituciones del nivel medio superior, han colocado mantas rojas a las afueras de las escuelas.

Indicó que el 20% restante de las instituciones del nivel medio superior, se irán adhiriendo en los próximos días, ya que al final todas escuelas se tendrán que sumar al paro convocado por la CNTE. En las mantas que se colocaron este martes indica ” Suspensión de Labores Hasta Nuevo Aviso, sección 40 del SNTE- CNTE, nos sumamos al paro nacional convocado por la Asamblea Nacional Representativa  (ANR) y la Asamblea estatal Democrática en defensa de los derechos sindicales, laborales y humanos”, agregó.

Ramírez Avendaño, explicó que  el magisterio chiapaneco, se integrado en todos los niveles educativos para eliminar la ley educativa que está lacerando los derechos de los profesores a nivel nacional.

Fuente: https://chiapas.quadratin.com.mx/principal/Se-suman-al-paro-nacional-el-80-de-preparatorias-en-Chiapas/

Fotografía: chiapas.quadratin

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