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Today鈥檚 school failures have Reconstruction roots

Why are public schools failing? Why is school segregation higher than it鈥檚 been since the mid-20th century? To answer these questions, followed the money. Her new book, 鈥淐utting School: Privatization, Segregation, and the End of Public Education,鈥 traces the financing of segregated education in America, beginning with Civil War reconstruction to today.

鈥淧ost-Reconstruction, the fight was already around funding 鈥 who was going to pay for black people鈥檚 education? And how much did they need, when there were crops that needed to be picked?鈥 says Rooks, director of Cornell鈥檚 American Studies Program and associate professor of Africana studies.

Rooks found the same social dynamics playing out today. She breaks down the fraught landscape of 鈥渟egrenomics,鈥 showing how experimental solutions to so-called achievement gaps 鈥 including charter schools, vouchers and cyber schools that rely on, profit from and ultimately exacerbate high levels of racial and economic segregation under the guise of equal opportunity.

While the topic is timely, Rooks has been working on her book for the better part of 10 years. Her research reveals national trends, such as people of color being prosecuted as felons for 鈥渢heft of school鈥 鈥 using the address of a family member or friend to enroll their child in a school system where they do not live. Some examples Rooks offers are a homeless woman using the address of her babysitter and a live-in housekeeper using the address of her employer.

鈥淪chool systems all over the country have started contracting with private detectives, starting whole new surveillance entities to catch parents doing this,鈥 says Rooks. 鈥淥verwhelmingly the people who are being prosecuted are people of color.鈥

This power dynamic dates to post-Reconstruction America, says Rooks, when whites in the South felt blacks were 鈥渟tealing school鈥 from their children because it was a waste to educate blacks.

Rooks also details the use of virtual education, especially in urban areas, as the preferred method of educating poor children despite the approach鈥檚 failures; for example, between 2011 and 2014 in Philadelphia, every virtually educated child failed every state test. Despite this 100 percent failure rate, virtual schools have continued to expand in Philadelphia and elsewhere.

Profiting from the nation鈥檚 failure to provide a high-quality education to all children has become big business, says Rooks, pointing to the example of convicted felon Michael Milken, who was a founding investor in a company called K12 that would go on to become a $2.5 billion business selling virtual education to public schools. Despite the company having been sued or investigated by the federal government 56 times and having paid up to $200 million in fines, it  it continues to win contracts with public school systems.

The threat to public education has uncovered a fragility to American democracy and revealed a way for it to be easily undermined, says Rooks. 鈥淥ne of the first lines of attack for those who have been trying to privatize public schools is to create a crisis around the funding of the public schools or to take advantage when there鈥檚 a disaster. Once funding is cut, they reallocate money so the public school systems are struggling, and then they are 鈥榝orced鈥 to suspend the democratically elected school boards and take over. And that only happens in communities that are really poor and struggling,鈥 she says.

Rooks鈥 goal with 鈥淐utting School鈥 is to shift the conversation around public education. 鈥淚鈥檓 not just presenting facts, although the book is deeply researched,鈥 she says. 鈥淭his is advocacy on behalf of schoolchildren who are poor and who are having funding taken from them.鈥

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 Book cover of Cutting School