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Banking on ignorance: A spatial inquiry into the truncated politics of charter school teachers

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  • Claire Cahen

Abstract

Over the past 30 years in the US, the teaching profession has been radically transformed as publicly-funded, but privately managed charter schools have created a workforce of less experienced, less unionized, less credentialed and more transient educators. This paper argues that a primary effect of these labour practices is to reduce the charter school project’s ideological exposure. Charter school teachers are recruited from a national pool and for transient positions. They are disconnected from the low-income and racialized places where they are brought to teach and, on the job, face speed-up, heavy-handed management, deskilling and job insecurity. Charter school teachers in this study are not, as previous research has argued, cheerleaders for the privatization of education, let alone the virtues of flexible, non-union work. Rather, they express frustration that their work conditions are degraded. But unlike their counterparts in traditional public schools, who are more anchored in the politics of place and education, charter school teachers are unfamiliar with the policy changes that have brought them to the current moment. The neo-Taylorist labour practices of charter schools make it difficult for teachers to analyse or parse the power dynamics of which they are a part as subjects if not victims. The study makes a case that the working conditions and workforce composition of frontline workers are key to understanding how these workers engage in battles over welfare provision in the neoliberal city.

Suggested Citation

  • Claire Cahen, 2024. "Banking on ignorance: A spatial inquiry into the truncated politics of charter school teachers," Environment and Planning A, , vol. 56(8), pages 2105-2120, November.
  • Handle: RePEc:sae:envira:v:56:y:2024:i:8:p:2105-2120
    DOI: 10.1177/0308518X241269364
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    References listed on IDEAS

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    1. Stephanie Farmer & Rachel Weber, 2022. "EDUCATION REFORM AND FINANCIALIZATION: Making the Fiscal Crisis of the Schools," International Journal of Urban and Regional Research, Wiley Blackwell, vol. 46(6), pages 911-932, November.
    2. Claire Cahen, 2023. "Anticolonial realism: The defensive governing strategy of a Black city in white space," Journal of Race, Ethnicity and the City, Taylor & Francis Journals, vol. 4(2), pages 153-175, July.
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