Cara Fitzpatrick
New Arizona Fellow, 2019
麻豆果冻传媒 (New Arizona) 2019 Fellow Cara Fitzpatrick spoke about her book, The Death of Public School, for “Three questions” in The Fifth Draft, the Fellows Program’s monthly newsletter. Fitzpatrick is an independent education journalist in New York. Prior to that, she was an education reporter at newspapers in Florida.
Your Fellow鈥檚 Project is the forthcoming book . Can you share the origin of this project?
I covered education as a newspaper reporter in Florida for about a decade, with several years devoted largely to coverage of school segregation in one county. Florida has long been a laboratory for school choice programs, and I talked to a number of families who were fleeing some low-performing and under-resourced segregated public schools by using choice options, such as charter schools or school vouchers. I was curious about the origins of choice policies, whether they 鈥渨orked,鈥 and if choice could co-exist with traditional public education.
My goal as a writer was to trace the rise of the school choice movement and to explain how the country has reached this point, where more and more tax dollars are flowing to private education.
The book details the radical changes to American public education since the 1950鈥檚. Looking ahead, what trends do you see in education and school choice?
It鈥檚 really hard to predict. When I started researching the book in late 2017, several people told me that school choice was all but dead. Now, school choice is having this huge moment. Many Republican-led states have expanded or created new school voucher programs, and Oklahoma has approved an application for the country鈥檚 first religious charter school. I鈥檒l be watching a few things in the coming years. First, what the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 conservative majority does with cases involving charter schools鈥 there鈥檚 a looming question about whether charters are legally public or private鈥攁nd what that means for the First Amendment鈥檚 separation of church and state. Second, how much these universal school voucher programs cost. We鈥檝e already seen wildly varying cost projections. Finally, I鈥檒l be interested in the ongoing academic and social recovery from the pandemic, and watching to see if Republican-led culture wars ultimately backfire with voters.
Do you have an ideal reader in mind? Is there a particular group, policy makers, educators, that you鈥檇 like to reach?
As a reporter and editor, I don鈥檛 think it鈥檚 my job to advocate for particular policies. That鈥檚 what editorial boards do. My goal as a writer was to trace the rise of the school choice movement and to explain how the country has reached this point, where more and more tax dollars are flowing to private education. I hope that anyone who is interested in the future (and history) of American education picks up the book.
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