Tough Lessons About The Corrupt Public School System

by Anthony Mitchell on October 12, 2010

The school system may be made to be a great deal profitable, says Bob Bowdon, however entirely at the expense of things comparable to teachers and students. In his documentary “The Cartel,” Bowdon, a New Jersey television news newsperson, turns the camera on the massive degeneracy and misdirection that has led his state to squander more than any other on its students just with substandard results. The numbers express the tale: $17,000 exhausted per student, and there’s simply a 39% reading proficiency rate, it’s tough to argue that there’s a crisis afoot, but harder to concur on a solution.

On the one side is the monolithic Jersey teachers union and shady school officials, who guarantee that, as Bowdon points out in his picture, 90 cents of every tax dollar go for other expenses, including six figure incomes for school administrators and, in a shocking example, a school board secretary who makes $180,000. On the other side are the supporters of charter schools — private schools which can function beyond the power of what Bowdon calls The Cartel. In those disordered public schools, Bowdon points out, it’s very nearly impossible to fire an instructor — so even a dreadful one has a job for life.

“The documentary examines lots of out of the ordinary aspects of public education, tenure, backing, support drops, corruption –meaning theft — vouchers and charter schools,” says Bowdon. “And as such it kind of serves as a rapid-moving primer on all of the raging topics between the education-reform crusade.”

“The movie first appeared on the festival circuit in summer 2009, appearing in theaters nationwide a year later. Hopefully it will get a rise, and not be overshadowed, by the more recently released docudrama “Waiting for Superman,” by “An Inconvenient Truth” director Davis Guggenheim. Bowdon says the documentaries can be seen as companion pieces: his focusing on public policy and Guggenheim’s taking the human-interest angle. “My picture is the left-brained version, more analytical,” Bowdon says, “‘Waiting for Superman’ is more the right-brained treatment.”

The left-brained approach means arguments that watch the economics — money misspent, opportunities wasted. He follows the money to extract conclusions about how shameless the Jersey school system is, but his picture features moments of elevated emotion and grief. A girl’s weeping upon hearing that she wasn’t selected to attend a charter school, that she’s stuck in her public school, exemplify the failure of a system as well as Bowdon’s charts and interviews.

And though it may be simple to accept the presence of corruption in a state so associated with organized crime, the uncomfortable fact of the subject is that this is a very familiar situation. Any watcher will acknowledge the failings of their own state’s education system and the struggle for control. The one he seems to be most behind is the charter schools, which take the reins from the unions and give them back to the taxpayer. But “The Cartel” also shows us how laborious it’s going to be to get that control back from those who’ve found it so profitable.

Learn more about the truth and what’s really going on in our world.

categories: documentaries,film,productions,movies,entertainment

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