Covid and Kids: Once More Into the Breach

Everywhere outside we see nature exemplifying why this seasonal cycle is called spring. The temperature warms, the flowers burst forth, the leaves revive, the fields of play and the open waters call us like Greek sirens, whose victims were so eager to answer they never saw the rocks that destroyed their ships and drowned the passengers.

No one wants to be under Covid’s house arrest anymore. All have tired of sheltering-in and lockdowns and lonely basement workouts and hair too long ; casual dinners at corner restaurants, happy hours of raised glasses and office talk all absent from our lives for what seems forever too long. Death numbers and morbid TV seers offer hard truths but little relief, with only an occasional eye of the storm shedding a brief swath of a hopeful light.  We are all in this together.

In this world health emergency, the youngest of us slipped beneath the radar, dismissed by adults with legitimate and terrible worries over jobs, food, money, rent. Tension hangs over dinner tables like cloudbursts ready to implode, relationships become strained for all the wrong reasons, kids fear for family and personal survival. Young people need structure, a world where certainty of home and school, love and support, anchor them in security so they can be the free, independent devils of childhood and adolescence, mocking with rebellion what they love and need most.

The routine of centuries has been suspended, and kids hang like flags on a windless, breezeless day, droopy, listless, waiting to fly. During this time, parents and adults took solace in a presumed childhood immunity to Coronavirus, only worrying about their children’s missed class time, staying focused on online learning and the dinner menu. Their emotional and physical well-being secondary to the real world of adult concerns. In the last ten days, the cloud ruptured.

With states across the country planning for schools to open in the summer or September, Covid launched a new offensive, targeting young people, causing terrible suffering. While Covid 19 itself is not the issue, the virus has triggered a horrifying illness called pediatric multi system inflammatory syndrome. When infected, an overreaction of the immune system occurs, which leads to swollen blood vessels, damaged organs, and a host of symptoms. Damage may be permanent or even lethal, as three deaths have occurred in NYC. CNN reports many victims show damaged hearts. Quick treatment for otherwise healthy kids holds the key to surviving without permanent damage.

Our society doesn’t have much respect nor affection for our senior population. As cabin fever coupled with economic paralysis grates more on all of us, many voices, mainly those on the pro-life Republican side, clamored for virtually a full opening of the states, despite lack of direction. Pres Trump has said we are “warriors,” and will not close the country if a second wave hits later in the year. As Texas Lt Gov Patrick epitomized the let-them-eat-death sentiment regarding seniors by saying grandparents should be willing to die to open the economy.  

But are we now willing to sacrifice our children? Higher rates of death to silver America inevitably will result from greater weakening or dissembling of Covid defenses. But pride goeth before the fall, and our arrogance in thinking we know and can control the most deadly of nature’s forces has led us to this point of millions of cases and 100,000 deaths in the US alone. Our young people from one to under twenty are now exposed to MIS-C subjugation.  

   By sacrificing our elders for greater normalcy, are we risking our kids as collateral damage in a pandemic? In January, many played down the threat of Covid -19 until, like most serial killers, it angered at the lack of respect. According to Dr. Steve Kernie writing in “Health Matters”, this disease is still very rare. That is some good news in this bleak crisis, though not much consolation to the parents of the three kids who have died from it, nor for those facing serious cardiac and other organ issues. We place our faith in doctors like Kernie and Fauci and scientists and health experts to monitor closely this new front, and care for the children so afflicted; the true warriors, once more into the breach.

MIS-C may evolve into a growing threat as the nation’s schools open. Teenagers, still a large segment of college students, remain vulnerable to MIS-C. Many campuses will have openings, even if limited. School districts will open their buildings for the new school year. Officials assure parents strict adherence to Covid-19 protocols will be followed. Good luck with that.

The US may be ready to push our elders off the Covid Cliff for the economic reboot, but the currency may be the lives and health of a generation of young people.  Betting on everyone to be smart and responsible does not work well in our society. Old people may not mean much, but now there is a secondary target population. First the old. Now the young. And no one knows how much will satisfy the Covid Piper before he takes them all.  

  

GatesGate

During the 1980s, when Japan’s economy was humming like a finely tuned Kawasaki, American business executives looked across the sea in envy. During the next decade, they came out of the Rising Sun‘s shadow. The men and women of corporate America found their mojo by becoming meaner and leaner as their bank accounts grew greener. They closed factories, shipped jobs overseas at $5 per week, and pared down to skeletal payrolls.  Business’ answer to non-working America: retrain (for jobs that they would again lose and once more admonished to retrain). However, don’t blame these good souls for the US fiscal fiasco of the 80s.

Corporate America discovered why America was lagging behind Japan: public schools! No, really. Pandora’s education box was opened—let slip the scapegoaters of war. Kids cannot read. Teachers cannot teach. Our economy was becoming the hand basket in which hell resides because education was failing business and America. Japan’s education was battering ours. An academic version of Little League Baseball’s World Series, in which their kids always beats our kids, teed off like a WWII Japanese mulligan. America fought the Emperor in Surprise Attack 2.0, as the country was caught off its economic guard because of enemy soldiers trained in educational bootcamp. We must whip our teachers into battle shape and get our yearn-to-learn children up to speed. The game’s afoot, to the victor go the global spoils. It was American enterprise’s version of a rival’s sacred custom: saving face.

ast forward to the present time. In the intervening three decades, more people and entities have landed on the educational landscape like so many Neil Armstrongs on the moon. One small thud for kids, one giant step for profiteers. Standards for sale, voucher and tax-credit proponents, teacher training consultants, commercial reading models, charter and for-profit schools, companies like standardized test giant Pearson to Bush family’s Ignite!--sellers clapping their jaws at the education feeder throwing them tax dollars and grant money and foundation underwrites to fill their rapidly swelling bellies. Only public schools were left to ask, like Oliver Twist, “Please, may I have some more?”

 None landed harder on terra educationa than Bill Gates. His divinely wrought Common Core begat high stakes standardized testing and Old Testament rewards and punishments for schools and teachers. He and his acolytes made learning more difficult, less fun, reducing classrooms to teaching-to-the-test bubbles. Once the Spring standardized exams ended, teachers lost all leverage because kids know that nothing matters more. The curriculum loses substance; only filler remains. The meaningful school year has been unofficially shortened because outside of the high achievers and a scattered few, students tell you “Frankly our dear teachers, we just don’t give a damn.”  

Under the sterile culture of Common Core and technology as the ultimate pedagogue, classroom management is more difficult as many students act out as a defense mechanism to deal with their failures of an unnecessarily elitist, complex curricula. Creativity is stifled by conformity and standardization, the effect of a technological society, as French philosopher Jacques Ellul predicted.  Childhood is stolen not by drugs nor family instability nor precocious sex but humorless and humaneless  classrooms devoid of youthful ebullience and professional enthusiasm. Teachers must pair lessons and student assignments with citations more reminiscent of a DA’s charges referencing the federal penal code. This commentary conforms to Standard XIV, Article 7, Section 8.B.4, paragraph 3, line D.5. Hey, buddy, can you spare a rubric?

The political rationale for open season on public education is simple. US schools trail other countries, as international test scores demonstrate; therefore, these failures put America at risk of being unable to compete (there’s an American buzzword if there ever was one) in the global marketplace,as been the case for forty years. Well, let’s look at this…rationally.

Japan’s economy in the golden 80s spurred a panic about our education the way Sputnik did to the nation in the late 50s. Japan’s economy crashed in the 90’s. The following two decades of stagnation and reversal of fortune was called “The Lost Twenty Years”, the bloom was off the Chrysanthemum. The residual effects still permeate their economy.  

n the 1990s, while Japan’s economic light dimmed, the US economy roared back as government policies plus business and labor working together helped spur growth and prosperity. Business congratulated itself on a job well done, and Clinton basked in the credit of wiping out the deficit. Each strata of the economy enriched, as minority businesses made gains and middle-class salaries rose; Wall Street boomed.

Nowhere, however, was praise and a thank you given for the educators, students, and public schools for its contribution to the recovery. The same could be said for the economic recovery begun after business nearly destroyed the world’s wealth in 2008 (let’s not forget the 1986 and 2001 collapses). Until the Covid-19 outbreak, we led the world for ten years in the financial recovery from the 2008 debacle.

So, how could it be that education led to the 1980s Japanese beatdown, but not the recovery of the 90s? How could it be that education was so failing we needed, in addition to other remedies, Common Core to save America’s place in the global marketplace when we, in fact, were the global marketplace?

The Education—Industrial—Political Complex became this century’s multiplier effect —huge amounts of money, personal goals, career ambitions and political agendas became way too important to let reality crash the party with truth and fact. Fake news preceded Trump’s ascendancy. To give education its due in the recoveries would obviate the personal ambitions of people like Gates and threaten everyone else who feared the Goose may have dropped its last golden egg.

Financial-centric, power-driven New York never could resist the seductions of a Bill Gates, bedazzled by his Microsoft history, software genius, and $100 billion. Amazon billionaire Bezos got a sweetheart deal for a headquarters in New York City, but ultimately failed to close. Bloomberg, a communications billionaire, turned the City’s vaunted, ferocious NYC media into mayoral Pavlovian dogs for 12 years --- including a pass on a Putin-like illegal third term suddenly made “legal.”

Schools need a myriad of resources from infra-structure upgrading to a vast reduction in school population to limiting class size to fifteen students. The creation of multiple schools in one building has created logistical nightmares and dangerous situations. Overcrowding is a pedagogical deal breaker for effective learning and teaching. Assessments are, to use an old computer term, garbage in, garbage out. Counselors, psychologists, support staff are needed to fulfill the requirements, policies, and unfunded mandates that make caring for kids or administering discipline next to impossible. We need a common core of community outreach, private and government programs to rebuild inner city neighborhoods, offer kids safe and enjoyable alternatives to the streets. Ipads and condescending white suburban college prep will continue to fail minorities.

Rebuilding schools from the perspective of students and educational professionals is not the direction this partnership of political and financial power will travel. If anything, the fight is defiantly, patronizingly the opposite. Gates bankrolls his MBG Foundation with pockets deeper than the Grand Canyon to satisfy his egolust to remake education in his own image, not those on the front lines.   

Seriously Governor Cuomo, dancing the tech tango at the gates of Bill and Melinda is not tripping the light fantastic; it is falling over your two left feet.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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