Reporting on Teachers Unions Has Been a Long Story. This Is the Last Page
Antonucci: Thanks to you, my readers. All of you have made my long career, and now, happy retirement, possible.
Get stories like these delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 成人抖阴 Newsletter
I won鈥檛 bury the lede 鈥 I鈥檓 retiring, and this is my final column.
I took the long way around to get to this work. I was an animated film-maker 鈥
鈥 and a sheet metal worker and member of of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers. I then spent almost eight years in the Air Force as a C-130 navigator.
To illustrate just how much technology has advanced since then, that box in the upper right corner of the photo contains a sextant, which was my primary means of navigating over water.
After leaving the service, I got my master’s in international affairs and began a freelance career as a .
I took work as a newsletter editor, back when the internet was a rumor, personal computers only did one thing at a time, and 鈥渃ut and paste鈥 meant scissors and glue.
My first article about a teachers union was published almost 30 years ago. For me, it was just another story, along with others I had written about California鈥檚 recycling program, or weird news I compiled and labeled 鈥渢he outpost of the odd.鈥
But readers responded to the union story, so I wrote more, culminating in a 1994 long-form analysis of the California Teachers Association for the Golden State Center for Policy Studies. I called it 鈥淭he Shadow Legislature.鈥
Three decades later, that鈥檚 still an accurate title.
Obviously, many things have changed in public education. When I started writing, charter schools were just a fledgling experiment and school choice an impossibility.
Unfortunately, many other things are almost exactly the same. I recently came across . It was about outcome-based education, and if you change some of the acronyms around and update the references, it could have been written last week.
Schrag described issues of textbook censorship, social engineering, performance-based assessments, phonics versus whole language and more. Then there is this paragraph:
鈥淚t’s striking how quickly our struggles about curriculum ideas escalate into quasi-religious controversies over social or moral absolutes. The right sees a conspiracy by the federal government and its secular humanist legions to strip parents of control over their children and inculcate them with relativistic values, witchcraft and satanism. The left looks at every parent who walks into a principal’s office complaining about a book or a school assignment as a tool of religious fanatics.鈥
See our full archive of Mike Antonucci’s Union Report
Schools are a political battleground, because everywhere is a political battleground. We can wish for things to be different, but we have to deal with the realities. My only goal for the past 30 years was to tell you the stories the teachers unions won鈥檛. That鈥檚 all.
I couldn鈥檛 possibly list and thank all the folks who helped and supported me along the way. Some of them, on both sides of the divide, probably wouldn鈥檛 want to be mentioned by name anyway. But I do want to single out the good people, past and present, at this publication, 成人抖阴. For the past seven years, they have been patient, kind and invaluable in making this column much better than it otherwise would have been. So thank you, Romy, Steve, Bev and the entire crew. I wish you much future success in your continuing mission to challenge the status quo.
Finally, thanks to you, my readers. All of you have made my long career, and now, happy retirement, possible.
God bless you all.
Get stories like these delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for 成人抖阴 Newsletter