“Our public education system is in crisis” warns the Seventy Four in its mission statement, echoing the refrain of billionaire school privatizers over the last decade plus. It’s evidence that Brown’s latest venture is dedicated to pushing what has become known as the “awfulizing narrative” that America’s schools are broken beyond repair; that teachers, unions and locally elected school boards are to blame; and that the only way to fix our education problem is by dumping one of America’s oldest democratic institutions—public schools—in favor of a market-driven system.
After Brown announced the Seventy Four was coming and the site’s backers were named, numerous education watchers wondered aloud whether an education news website underwritten by a collective that has poured billions into school privatization would even attempt to offer impartial journalism..... Kali Holloway http://www.alternet.org/education/campbell-brown-new-leader-propaganda-arm-school-privatizationA few weeks ago the morning Chalkbeat linked to 2 articles on the Campbell Brown run "The Seventy Four" without any disclaimer. I wrote about it: Chalkbeat Treats Campbell Brown Led Ed Deform Site as Legit News Source. After reading that my old ICE pal Julie Woodward sent me the Alternet piece which mentions Chalkbeat as being funded by these same sources. Of course they will say Randi and the AFT also gives them money -- just a different version of ed deformer.
But why should those who read Chalkbeat's carefully calibrated coverage to give the impression of journalism be surprised?
Alternet's in-depth piece linking the ed deform funders to control of the press. Follow the money as one wise sage once said.
It’s not just Brown, though. A look at the back end of education media reveals plenty of outlets that are funded by those seeking to displace public schools in favor of a market-driven system. Media Bullpen, published by Walton grantee Center for Education Reform, bills itself as an education “media watchdog,” and receives funds from the Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, the Walton family and the Gates Foundation. (The Columbia Journalism Review notes a managing editor job ad explicitly sought a “passionate advocate for education reform.”) Education Post, “a nonprofit, nonpartisan communications organization,” launched with promises to promote “an honest and civil [education] conversation,” as well as $12 million in startup funds provided in part by “the Broad Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies [and] the Walton Family Foundation.” (Per the Washington Post, the site’s three areas of focus are “K-12 academic standards, high-quality charter schools and how best to hold teachers and schools accountable for educating students,” the Holy Trinity of education reform.) Brown’s Seventy-Four, it turns out, is just another holding in the portfolio of the education reform lobby.
Not every group is so nakedly apparent in its goals. Well-respected education blogs including Chalkbeat and Education Week both receive funds from the Walton Family Foundation (in the latter case, specifically for “coverage of school choice and parent-empowerment issues,” a long-winded way of saying pro-charter pieces.) The 3,000-strong Education Writers Association receives money from Gates and Walton, while the L.A. Times—which maintains that it retains editorial control—receives funds from Broad for its Education Matters Digital initiative.Even the so-called non-bought off press - like the tabloids and even the NY Times coming down on ed deform -finds all kinds of ways to support ed deform. See that awful April 2 Kate Taylor piece on opt out where she went to a school in Chinatown of all places to find the least likely parents to opt out - and include Eva quotes too (Kate making amends for being attacked by Eva for her devastating stories?). -- Despite Protests on State Testing, Some New York City Parents Are Happy to Opt In
The Alternet piece lists more funded ops:
As mentioned above, the Walton foundation provides money to an unexpected list of progressive entities. As Inside Philanthropy puts it “[i]t's heartening to see philanthropy coming to the rescue of journalism. But the trend is also problematic...Nowhere is the influence of private money over public life more pronounced than in K-12 education and yet, as it turns out, the specialized media most likely to raise questions about the trend are themselves supported by foundations.”The entire piece is below the fold or at: http://www.alternet.org/education/campbell-brown-new-leader-propaganda-arm-school-privatization
We haven’t even gotten to various other media campaigns guided by the invisible hand of school privatizers and built on a foundation of billionaire corporate reform stacks. Gates and Broad both underwrote the multi-year “Education Nation” broadcasting initiative, which brought education-focused programming to NBC staples “such as ‘Nightly News’ and ‘Today’ and on the MSNBC, CNBC and Telemundo TV network.” The Walton Family Foundation reportedly provided the cash for Chicago Public Schools to purchase ad space for videos to spin the closures of 50 traditional public school even as charters increased in the city.