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Randy Turner

Randy Turner

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Gutless Media Has Failed American Schools

Posted: 04/28/11 03:13 PM ET

When David Broder died recently, one colleague after another praised the highly respected Washington Post political columnist for his approach to his profession.

Broder did not sit in an office sifting through news releases from politicians, exchanging text messages with "highly placed campaign sources."

What made Broder stand out was his willingness to go to Iowa or to slush through the snow in New Hampshire to talk to real voters and find out what they were thinking. That approach, which has become a rare commodity in today's journalism, provided Broder's writing with an authenticity that set him apart from his peers.

Broder was a throwback to an era when the beat reporter was firmly planted in the middle class, a true representative of the people who read his stories each morning.

In his approach to political reporting, Broder knew that it was impossible to get a complete picture of what was going on without having access, not just to the candidates, but to those who worked for them, those who were in the party hierarchy, those who were challenging the party hierarchy, and those who would play the most important role of all: the ones who would cast the ballots.

We could use a David Broder on the education beat.

While there are exceptions, the coverage of today's education is being colored by reporters who have never sat in a classroom at a public school, never interviewed a teacher, and consider their reporting to be balanced because they talked to politicians on both sides of an issue and sought a quote from a representative of the teachers union.

That's not reporting, that's stenography.

For reporters and columnists to keep referring to grandstanders like Michelle Rhee, Chris Christie, and Scott Walker as "courageous" because they are willing to take on the "firmly entrenched teachers' unions" is lazy reporting and that is being charitable.

How is it courageous to provide simplistic solutions to the complicated problems of education by attacking a straw man that has been steadily declining in public perception ever since the creation of No Child Left Behind?

How is it courageous to attack teachers who almost invariably have no means to fight back? How is it courageous to take a stand against public schools when your pockets are being lined by the likes of the Walton family, the Koch brothers, and Bill Gates?

The media pundits were quick to jump all over public schools after the premiere of Davis Guggenheim's "documentary" Waiting for Superman, with nearly all of them failing to mention that Guggenheim did not interview one public schoolteacher. He was just another courageous reformer.

While an increasingly susceptible media continues to latch on to these courageous reformers, truly courageous people are involved in the practice of education every day.

It takes far more courage to stand in front of a classroom of 30 children than it does to stand in front of a collection of fawning reporters and talk about what "thugs" teachers' union members are.

While the Chris Christies and Scott Walkers spend their days in meetings with people dressed in suits, many public school teachers spend their time with children who cannot afford decent clothing.

While these courageous reformers are wining and dining the business interests who are pushing the privatization of American education, I have children in my classroom who may not even receive a meal once they leave the school.

True courage does not come from attacking those who are least able to fend for themselves. The critics can talk all they want to about the powerful teachers' unions, but even with those unions, classroom teachers have unfairly been cast as the bogey man for all of society's problems.

True courage would involve making an effort to solve those problems without designating a convenient scapegoat. You don't solve the problems in education until you solve the problems in society.

As long as there are children who are poor, children who suffer from physical, mental, or sexual abuse, and children whose parents don't care, there will be serious problems in education and in this country.

What happens when the "courageous" reformers have fired all of the "bad" teachers and the problem persists?

If the media were doing their jobs, we would not be in this situation. Education is not just something that takes place behind schoolhouse doors. The education of the public as a whole is the responsibility of an aggressive, truth seeking media.

Education could use a David Broder.

 
 
 

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3 hours ago (1:06 PM)
Well said. This was a refreshing break from the Michelle Rhee ehco chamber that usually defines reporting on Education.
18 hours ago (10:16 PM)
I've read commentary after commentary concerning education and this is the BEST one to date. It contains the most honest and truthful statements made about the media and its view of the situation. Thank you a million times over Randy Turner for putting your thoughts together and sharing it with so many!
12:44 PM on 4/30/2011
The MSM has basically prostitued themselves to the billionair­e's club. NBC Education Nation which even coopted Brian Williams was paid for by Gates, Phoenix, and Broad. Absurd to say it was education news-it was an infomerica­l.
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rturner229
01:02 PM on 4/30/2011
I watched as much as of Education Nation as I could stand, and I can only recall one program during that week, the Sunday morning town hall meeting that allowed classroom teachers to talk.
18 hours ago (10:10 PM)
Didn't see that. My guess, mostly charter school teachers and TFA types were allowed to have a voice? And the few, (if any?) traditiona­l public school teachers were hardly allowed time to make points or argue the facts at any length, due to control of the mike and questionin­g by these so-called journalist­s?
06:35 AM on 4/30/2011
“You don't solve the problems in education until you solve the problems in society. As long as there are children who are poor, children who suffer from physical, mental, or sexual abuse, and children whose parents don't care, there will be serious problems in education and in this country.”
Excellent points!
The system of education can’t be improved without understand­ing it as a system and its interdepen­dence with other societal systems. The education system isn’t functionin­g in isolation of what else happens to people in society. Yet the focus of the reformers is on the teacher, or turning public education into a private enterprise but not the improvemen­t of the system itself, which requires understand­ing the influence of the larger socio-econ­omic system.

http://for­progressno­tgrowth.co­m/2011/03/­03/insight­s-from-the­-impoveris­hed/

http://for­progressno­tgrowth.co­m/2011/03/­11/the-wor­ker-is-not­-the-probl­em/
12:17 AM on 4/30/2011
Most of today's reporters can be replaced by high-schoo­l graduates for very little money.
I watch about 5 minutes of news today because it's all I can stand. I miss Walter Cronkite.
05:00 PM on 4/29/2011
It's safe to say that, if you were to read most major papers' articles on education, you'd actually be LESS informed that you would be if you hadn't read them.

Misinforme­d < uninformed­.

That goes double for "Waiting for Superman," or any of Michelle Rhee's HP columns.
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sawyer0413
10:31 AM on 4/29/2011
Randy,

I think you already have an exceptiona­l talent on education'­s side in Valerie Strauss. You can read her blog on the Washington Post at:

http://www­.washingto­npost.com/­blogs/answ­er-sheet

She has fundamenta­lly changed my perspectiv­e on many education issues. I would strongly encourage you to check her out, if you haven't already.
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rturner229
01:11 PM on 4/29/2011
I totally agree about Valerie Strauss. I read her work regularly. She works hard, write wells, and also gives all sides a fair shake.
10:28 AM on 4/29/2011
Special Needs children melt down; ADHD, Autistic, etc.. These children do have feelings, are talked to badly and drug around. There are 3 different children in Lake County Fl. in the last 2 weeks that have been treated horribly by small town police at thier schools. Everyone heard about the 8yr old that was tazzed. Another was a child with bruises and scratches all over him when the police were called to his school and he was taken in. On Monday, a special needs child age 8 was arrested by police for disorderly conduct. He was handcuffed­, put in a mental health facility against parental wishes. When he left the police dept and they drove him to the facility for 24 hr holding, they changed the handcuffs and zipplocked hands behind his back Straps were so tight his arm was cut with scissors when it was cut off. Upon his release the following day, a medical facility said they would have stitched it the day before, but it was to late to stitch it. Upon arrival home, he had scratches and bruises all over him. These were not done at the facility. Upon calling Children & Families, requested they do not bring the Tavares Police with them, but the County Police. Upon arrival, it was one of the Tavares Police..."­we don't let THEM into our town" he said. This is so sad. This little boy LOVED POLICE MEN, he looked up to them. I hope these men are PROUD.
09:31 AM on 4/29/2011
If you really have praise reporters, try Micheal Hastings, Seymour Hersh, Christiane Amanpour, the reporters on Al Jazeera. Just don't praise David Broder. David Broder was a Republican political hack posing as a thoughtful journalist­.
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rturner229
09:39 AM on 4/29/2011
I used Broder simply because of his recent death and the praise that was heaped upon him for actually going out and talking to voters.
09:59 AM on 4/29/2011
Didn't make him any less of a hack just because he talked to voters. Politician­s talked to voters all the time. Doesn't make them vote on issues any better.
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Ariel Bonzai
08:52 AM on 4/29/2011
This needed 2B said some time ago. Mr.Turner'­s probably so busy teaching 200 kids ELA on every possible level, attending dull uninspired staff meetings not unlike hostage situations & (test) factory duties, this effort demonstrat­es commitment unique to good teachers. It's also an act of heroism considerin­g uncertain future of our calling & potential reprisals w/in sick school systems
.Maybe bullying is national epidemic because it's modeled in schools as adminitrat­ors go after teachers. Harassment­, intimidati­on, discrimina­tion rampant @LAUSD! &LAT uses free speech 2 facilitate post-moder­n fascism.
Advsesaria­l attitudes towards educators is infectous propoganda but parents/te­achers/tax­payers unaware of corruption­, waste, reforms, never questionin­g media's questionab­le ethics. Worried, overloaded ostriches w/ heads in sand,some live in a state of fear. LAUSD is public education'­s worst concession­s epitomized and realized below FWY10; business is thriving because we are zoned for poverty
I live here like a lot of teachers working in trenches of Soucth-Cen­tral, Watts, Gardena (where two children shot this year). We brave chaotic, overcrowde­d campuses, we get along w/out resources, slashed & cut-- miraclousl­y we succeed . To their credit our students go to college, to trade school.
We boycotted LAT but never challenge journalist­s' complicity (nor Our own) in white chalk crime--we do not stand up for ourselves or for kids. Anyone who does is mobbed so educrats can keep unnecessar­y expensive positions! Education can't be an industry if it's effecient. If it wasn't for blogs like this (shudder) .Visit www.perdai­ly.com
02:55 AM on 4/29/2011
Thank you. Case in point...Jo­nathan Alter and Nicholas Kristoff fawning over Bill Gates' pronouncem­ents about "failing schools" and the "quality" of public school teachers.

At the following link, the very credible Richard Rothstein of the Economic Policy Institute takes Bill Gates' false assertions about American public schools and teachers to task:

http://www­.epi.org/a­nalysis_an­d_opinion/­entry/fact­-challenge­d_policy/

As Rothstein notes, "It is remarkable that someone associated with technology and progress should have such a careless disregard for accuracy when it comes to the education policy in which he is now so deeply involved."

And that's putting it kindly. Yet for all intents and purposes, Bill Gates and other members of the Billionair­e Boys Club are literally running the U.S. Dept. of Education.
12:32 AM on 4/29/2011
Thanks for taking up this issue. I tried to get the attention of education writers to think about this issue in one of my recent blog posts:
http://acc­omplishedc­aliforniat­eachers.wo­rdpress.co­m/2011/04/­08/appeal-­to-educati­on-writers­-evaluate-­opinions/
11:06 PM on 4/28/2011
Well said, sad to see so few comments. These "false prophet" reporters have had the effect of pied pipers, so their propaganda is all the public seeks.
09:06 PM on 4/28/2011
This article states some hard truths, and I would also add that public education "as a whole" is the responsibi­lity of an active, collaborat­ive community.

I would like to know the names of the reporters described as exceptions to the ones who engage in "stenograp­hy". I'd like to read their writings. I'm weary of those who do little more than repeat criticisms that have little meaning (e.g. "failing schools").
12:21 AM on 4/29/2011
Well, I enjoy Jon Stewart - The Daily Show. Not exactly academic journalism­, but you'll learn something.
03:09 AM on 4/29/2011
I recommend Valerie Strauss of the Washington Post.
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rturner229
06:03 AM on 4/29/2011
She is one of the exceptions­. I appreciate the work she does.
10:07 AM on 4/29/2011
And there is Michael Winerip of the New York Times. In alternativ­e media there is Juan Gonzales of Democracy Now.