It’s an increasingly common refrain: school choice is an extension of the civil rights movement. But two of the choice movement’s elder statesmen took exception to that description at a National School Choice Week event.
The civil rights movement was broader than the battle for school choice, and every generation ought to define its own movements, said Howard Fuller, a legend in the choice movement and chair of the Black Alliance for Educational Options.
Also, attempting to link the two can create friction and arouse suspicions when it’s used by choice supporters who may not see eye-to-eye on other issues important to civil rights veterans and their supporters.
“Just even using that terminology gets us into arguments that we don’t need to be in,” Fuller said.
T. Willard Fair, a former chairman of the Florida Board of Education, raised another objection: When it comes to school choice, too many black leaders are not on the same page.
“During the civil rights movement, no black elected official dared to stand up and be against this,” said Fair, who co-founded Florida’s first charter school. “If he or she did, we would get them.”
The spirited comments from Fuller and Fair, and polite comebacks from other school choice leaders, came during Florida’s “spotlight” National School Choice Week event.
About 200 people attended the event, held at Coral Springs Charter School near Fort Lauderdale. It was organized by the Florida Alliance for Choices in Education, an umbrella group for a wide range of pro-school-choice organizations, including Step Up for Students, which administers the state’s tax credit scholarship program.
The back-and-forth over civil rights and school choice was spurred by the event’s theme.
This year is the 60th anniversary of the historic Brown v. Board of Education decision, which declared separate schools for black and white students unconstitutional.
Many school choice supporters see a connection between the barriers knocked down then and those falling now. Other panelists and speakers at the event were among them.
Expanding access to a high-quality education is “by far the No. 1 issue facing our country today,” said Julio Fuentes, president and CEO of the Hispanic Council for Reform and Educational Options. Seeing some of the schools where poor families have to take their children “literally drives me to tears.”
“We know that too many kids are not getting the access, are not getting the level of education they deserve. And that is injustice,” said Georgia state Rep. Alisha Morgan, a strong pro-school-choice Democrat who grew up in Miami. “While we’re not marching or protesting in the street, we ought to.”
In his opening remarks, Fuller stressed equal opportunity.
He called President Barack Obama a hypocrite for opposing school vouchers while sending his own children to an exclusive private school. He said he’d never stop noting that it’s only poor people in America who don’t have choice.
“Because if you got money, and the schools are not working for your kids, you’re either going to move to communities where they do work, you’re going to put your kid in private school, or you’re going to get the most expensive tutor you can find, or you’re going to do all three,” Fuller said.
The panel discussion also featured two high-profile figures in the charter school realm: Frank Biden, president of the Mavericks charter school network, and Jon Hage, founder, president and CEO of Charter Schools USA.
The panel discussion also featured two high-profile figures in the charter school realm: Frank Biden, president of the Mavericks charter school network, and Jon Hage, founder, president and CEO of Charter Schools USA.
Biden, the brother of Vice President Joe Biden, offered some red meat, saying the school choice movement needs to continue organizing parents – and accumulating political power.
“It’s all about the 501(c)(4) and how much money we get in it,” he said. “And we go see our friends and we tell them we’ll support them. And we go see our enemies and look ‘em in the eye and say we’re going to take you down.”
Hage said it’s clear vouchers and charter schools aren’t fads.
Coral Springs Charter School, which Charter Schools USA manages, has 2,000 students on its waiting list. But, he also said, supporters should understand the movement isn’t going to win overnight.
"We’re in for a “50-to-100-year battle,” Hage said. “Education is one of those things that’s going to be state by state, and it’s going to be much harder work.”
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