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The Chicago Model of Militarizing Schools

by: Brian Roa, t r u t h o u t | Perspective

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Navy Chief Petty Officer Walter Thompson, a Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps teacher in Chicago. (Photo: The Associated Press)

    For the past four years, I have observed the military occupation of the high school where I teach science. Currently, Chicago's Senn High School houses Rickover Naval Academy (RNA). I use the term "occupation" because part of our building was taken away despite student, parent, teacher and community opposition to RNA's opening.

    Senn students are made to feel like second-class citizens inside their own school, due to inequalities. The facilities and resources are better on the RNA side. RNA students are allowed to walk on the Senn side, while Senn students cannot walk on the RNA side. RNA "disenrolls" students and we accept those students who get kicked out if they live within our attendance boundaries. This practice is against Chicago policy, but goes unchecked. All of these things maintain a two-tiered system within the same school building.

    This phenomenon is not restricted to Senn. Chicago has more military academies and more students in JROTC than any other city in the US. As the tentacles of school militarization reach beyond Chicago, the process used in this city seems to serve as a model of expansion. There was a Marine Academy planned for Georgia's Dekalb County, which includes 10 percent of Atlanta. Fortunately, due to protest, the school has been postponed until 2010. Despite it being postponed, it is still useful to analyze the rhetoric used to rationalize the Marine Academy. Many of the lies and excuses used to justify school militarization in Chicago and Georgia may well be used in other cities as militarism grows.

    Not for Recruiting?

    A favorite lie used to defend the expansion of military academies is that they are not used to recruit for the military.

    "This is not a training ground to send kids into the military," Dekalb Schools' Superintendent Crawford Lewis told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution in March. Those same words could have come straight from Col. Rick Mills, director of military academies and JROTC in Chicago, who explained away recruitment in a similar fashion.

    "This is not a recruiting tool, but a way to help students succeed at whatever career they might choose," Mills told the Chicago Tribune.

    Yet military academies receive money from the Department of Defense (DoD). The DoD would be derelict in its responsibilities were that money not spent as an investment in future soldiers. Accepting the claim that there is no recruiting in military academies makes about as much sense as allowing gangs to fund and operate within schools, on the assumption that they won't recruit on school grounds.

    Moreover, since military academies are staffed with ex-service members (many don't even require valid teaching certificates), students are likely to receive career advice that favors a military path.

    There are more blatant examples of recruiting at RNA. The cadets - the label applied to students at military academies - have taken a school-sponsored field trip to the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. Furthermore, last year the school hosted Adm. Michael Mullen, the current chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. Mullen told the cadets that the Navy was a "great career choice." RNA has hosted ten admirals in their short four-year history.

    In addition to these direct tactics, the academies use more insidious approaches. A military culture permeates these schools. Students dress in uniform, receive demerits, and are introduced to the military hierarchy and way of life. For example, I have witnessed students marching with fake rifles. This cultivation of a militarized mind is the best explanation for why 40 percent of all Naval Junior Reserve Officer Training Corps program graduates wind up entering military service. This statistic is especially telling, considering that less than one percent of the population has served in the military at any given moment since 1975.

    The Choice Argument

    Military academies are promoted as an option within the public school system for parents. We heard it from Arne Duncan (ex-CEO of CPS and current secretary of education) and we hear it from Dale Davis, public information officer for the Dekalb County School System, who calls the military school "an addition" for parents to consider. Compare that with what Colonel Mills said in December 2007 in the Online News Hour: "The purpose of the military academy programs is to offer our cadets and parents an educational choice among many choices in Chicago Public Schools and to provide an educational experience that has a college prep curriculum, combined with a military curriculum."

    We must dissect what kind of "choice" parents are given. If one's only choices are a school in desperate need of repair or a shiny new military academy, parents will often "choose" the "better" school.

    The unbalanced funding presents an incredibly difficult decision for many parents, as Marivel Igartua, mother of a cadet inside the Naval Academy, told me. She didn't want to have to send her daughter to RNA, but she felt squeezed into the choice because her area school was in such bad shape. The unequal allocation of resources, which favors military academies, can serve as a form of economic coercion upon parents.

    If public schools were given the resources they need to improve, then we could offer parents a more real choice.

    Military pushers also argue that the academies are a popular option among parents. According to Mills, quoted in In These Times in 2005, "These kinds of programs would not be in schools if there weren't kids who wanted it, parents who supported it and administrators who facilitated it."

    Arne Duncan claimed there were waiting lists filled with children hoping to attend a military academy. However, CPS has never released the so-called waiting lists, and concrete numbers tell a different story. RNA's goal for student enrollment for this year was 500-600 students. RNA finished the year with 376 students. Where's the demand?

    Military Academies in the Context of Dismantling Public Education

    Viewing militarization in the broader scope of "school improvement" can provide a helpful lens. In Chicago, military academies often represented one offshoot of a general plan to break down public education and replace it with charter schools and contract schools, siphoning public money to business people and "nonprofits." However, these "chosen" schools don't perform any better than public schools. A recent Chicago study compared ACT scores between charter schools and neighborhood schools, and no statistically significant difference was found. There was a difference in the number of English language learners and special-needs students accepted. Charters received fewer of both students. We see the same dichotomy with Senn and RNA.

    What may be more problematic is that sometimes the charterization movement masks hidden agendas Sometimes the hidden agenda is union busting. Sometimes it's gentrification. Sometimes it is militarization. We have seen all of these hidden agendas in Chicago. We all agree that public schools are in desperate need of renovation and repair. But simply demonizing public schools as failing without giving them the resources to succeed - and replacing them with experimental schools - is unjust.

    The push to destroy public schools and replace them with military academies and charter schools was further facilitated under the mayoral control of schools in Chicago. Mayoral control means that a city's once publicly elected school board is replaced by mayoral appointees partial to the agenda set forth by the mayor. In Chicago, it also meant replacing the school superintendent, who was legally mandated to have public education experience, with a CEO, who is only mandated by his scruples. Duncan served as the CEO for several years. He helped administer and finish off the largest militarization of a school system in the US, under the banner of "school improvement."

    If we look at the history of Chicago's "school improvement" plan, we can see the hidden agenda pushed by the charter movement. According to Pauline Lipman, writing in Substance News in 2005, it is a plan whose blueprint was ripped from the Commercial Club of Chicago, a conglomerate of Fortune 500 companies in Chicago. Schools are closed and reopened while students are shuffled around to other schools, which are often performing worse than their original school. Little regard is paid to the education of the majority of students, almost all of them poor, black and Latino/a. Simply put, Chicago's plan is not a school improvement plan. It is the dismantling of a public good for the benefit of a chosen few. School militarization was accelerated as this plan was being implemented in Chicago.

    The pushing of similar plans can be expected throughout the US now that Duncan is secretary of education. With the stimulus bill's $100 billion in emergency aid for public schools and colleges, Duncan is in an incredible position of power. He could use it to promote renovation and increase resources to existing public schools. Or he could spend it on costly privatization and militarization, squandering our tax money and endangering our children's futures.

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    Brian Roa is a science teacher at Chicago's Senn High School and a member of CORE (Caucus of Rank and File Educators), a caucus in the CTU which works for equitable education for all students and against the charterization schemes in Chicago.

  

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Comments

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It's the old Hitler Youth

It's the old Hitler Youth scam all over again: politicized militarized kids whose special priviledges place them above "regular" students attending the same school or university, with the express intent of placing them in a junior officer rank when they leave school. Uniformed from childhood on, favored solely because of their willingness to "serve", not for academic achievement, Hitler Youth made perfect political-military goons, unquestioning, following any and all orders and joyfully prepared to die for the FΓΌhrer, be he Adolf Bush or Adolf Obama. It could never happen here? It's happening.

Good article. Arne Duncan

Good article. Arne Duncan has been criticized for his attitudes towards education by other writers. If they are correct, Obama made a lousy choice with this guy. Local school systems should not allow themselves to be coerced. It may cost them money, but look at the alternative. One more solid reason to reject federal money.

The colonial or shall we say

The colonial or shall we say post-colonial soldier is necessary to maintain the empire. Since the army cannot recruit all that it needs for this maintenance, we must start early and especially with men of color, who flood our penitentiaries. It fits well in that we criminalize and confine men of color to the barren reaches of our empire, why not put them and their supposed violence to good use as they have been for centuries. FYI: Latinos make of the large number of Congressional Medal of Honor recipients and most of those are Mexican in origin! Not too mention the legacy of violence that pervades our society from the legacy of wars fought by our men? Orale Gung Ho gangstas!

Blame Arne Duncan. There's

Blame Arne Duncan. There's a good article and video, possibly two on www.blackagendareport.com on teachers suing for discrimination in Chicago, and other things about policies championed by Arne Duncan in Chicago.

As a 4-year Army and Navy

As a 4-year Army and Navy JROTC cadet, I can tell you these programs do not recruit, in fact, my instructors went out of their way to make sure that anyone interested in the military knew the truth about what it's like, not the Hollywood, silver-screen romantic version. NJROTC Cadets in my school were in a "leadership academy", partly funded by the DoD, but without recruiting goals/standards. All were welcome, and when grades were returned, the LA cadets were 50-60% higher than regular kids, because we had tutoring programs, as well as inter-class, inter-year cooperation, where seniors could help teach freshman in a non-threatening, non-linear way. JROTC is healthy when it's maintained with a high degree of involvement by parents, students and teachers in a positive environment.

Isn't this just the story of

Isn't this just the story of the US in microcosm? Schools starve while the war machine eats our young? What stupid people we are that we allow this to happen. History will not look kindly on us. We are selling our future to the warmongers for peanuts.

Rich Gibson and Wayne Ross

Rich Gibson and Wayne Ross wrote "The Education Agenda is a War Agenda," well before the demagogue, Obama, took power. They're right. Four things are going on in schools: curricula regimentation to produce witless nationalists and soldiers, anti-working class and racist high stakes exams, militarization, and fear. The Gibson/Ross analysis is online with the title noted. Whether or not teachers, students and parents can unite and fight is in question now.

Gives me the creeps. They

Gives me the creeps. They know how impressionable the young are - prime targets for brainwashing and military indoctrination by focusing their unformed minds on obedience, the politics of hierarchical positioning and (the natural outcome of the former two), killing. Truly, truly messed up. Thanks for an informative, well-written article.

the scary thing is its not

the scary thing is its not just in high schools - it goes all the way down to even the elementary school level - the alachua county school board here in gainesville, florida allowed a group called "the young marines" to promote its youth group to kids as young as kindergarden - i wrote a letter to the school board and they responded by saying they were proud of their ROTC programs and of course they both claimed it was not a recruiting tool which is like saying a nascar driver is not promoting wonder bread even though the logo is on his car

What's freaky about all this

What's freaky about all this is it seems upside down. How does it happen we are becoming so militarized at a time when we are waging only murderous one sided bombing assaults against unarmed civilians in two Muslim countries, and arming similar attacks on Palestine? One would think we would all be turning away in revulsion at what our military is doing, or having huge anti war demonstrations, like Vietnam. There is some hideous kind of disconnect here. Obama escalates the brutal bombing of Afghanistan, extends it to Pakistan, and the citizens who so hated Bush's wars appear unaware that any of this is going on. Yes it is very scary.

We're the number people.

We're the number people. We've got numbers on and for and about every blessed thing on the planet. The only thing in the American Empire that isn't carefully and accurately quantified is the total number of civilian casualties of our foreign military adventures. Of that number they say we just can't be sure.

My worry isn't just that the

My worry isn't just that the kids are being used. My worry is that the kids are not being taught to question and develop ideas on their own. How will these students ever learn to be inventive? America is supposed to be anti-authoritarian. First the All-Coal, All-Dirty energy bill, and what's next? Pakistan? Healthcare that is the same or worse than before? Yes, military youth programs led to Hitler. Dictators are all so encouraging at first, then, you lose your freedom. Dictators use extreme idealism without human rights. What rights to poor in America have to equal education? Poor schools get rid of music except for the band, because it accompanies sports. Media has fired all the music critics. But competition, me-first, that's everywhere. Without arts, there is little building except for more towers of administrative business. Structures are not protected from the least earthquake, because that's something that science promotes, and science does not bow to authority. The result of militarizing the youth, even without war, is devastating to culture. But it also leads to war, famine, epidemics, when those youth study nothing but war. Obama must re-think his choice. I am sorry that I walked my legs off for him on election day.

It would be wrong to assume

It would be wrong to assume that everything the military does has to be with a direct agenda. If they can so blatantly say they are not recruiting, then all they are not saying is that this is an image building exercise. Some of these kids will grow up not having apprehensions about joining the military at some point. If they have apprehensions, then they don't have to. I see nothing wrong in taking advantage of Uncle Sam's money in schools. In fact, the more we milk the military's money through programs like this, the more justified it seems.

With the rescinding of Posse

With the rescinding of Posse Comitatus, active duty military are permitted to carry out the aims of the government within the United States. Whether it's charter military high schools, Explorer Scouting, or Junior ROTC, our youth are being trained to serve the Empire both within and outside of our country. We cannot expect to export repression and not have that same repression be turned against the people in our own country.

"Normalizing" the concept of

"Normalizing" the concept of the militarization that is occurring in our schools is what these ROTc programs are about. Make sure that concepts such as killing and maiming are ok and acceptable as long as "our" side, you know, the good guys, do it. Make sure that students do not think and only say "Yes, sir!!". Where's Arlo when you need him???

With apologies to Country

With apologies to Country Joe & the Fish: "Now come on all you young strong men, Uncle Sam's in a helluva jam, Way down yonder in Afghanistan. Put down you books and pick up a gun, Cause we're gonna have a whole lot of fun. Well it's one, two, three what are we fighting for? Don't ask me I don't give a damn, next stop is Afghanistan. And it's five, six, seven open up the pearly gates. Well, there ain't no time to wonder why, cause we're all gonna die." What ever happened to anti-war protest songs. My teenage son has shown me a few but for the most part today's music is all fluff and puff. OYE

It's Recruiting for

It's Recruiting for sure... To the commenter who is a 4 year JROTC cadet, please understand that recruiting is not always an overt sales pitch. It's about making you think the military is sweet for doing nice things for you and other kids. It's about image enhancement and tenderizing the war machine. You have given 4 years to ROTC, and I wonder are you not going into the military when you are done? More than that, ROTC is part of the control technology model that creates drones, rote thinkers, robots, follow orders, yessir commander, pee in a jar, grab your gun, dress up in a uniform just like everybody else, and ultimately kill kill kill in the name of US empire. My friend, you HAVE been recruited in the most clever way, the way that is you don't know you have been. Whether you ever join the military or not, you are part of the war supporters and military groupies. Better that your school would offer highly-subsidized programs in peace and conflict resolution, environmental restoration, and social justice. Would you give four years of your life to a program that taught you how to heal the planet, think for yourself, and bring peace to the world, rather than a program run by and for the US military?

To the ROTC cadet who posted

To the ROTC cadet who posted above, I'd like to quote a classic line by Milton Friendman - "Judge an action by its results, not by its intent". I would rather have the military say that it is recruiting and not have it work than say that it is not recruiting and have it work :). End of the day, the recruitment rates are a LOT higher at these schools. This simply means that no matter what the intent of the military or navy really is, the result is an increase in 'cannon fodder'.

Apologies to Neil Young

Apologies to Neil Young (Living With War 2006) LIVING WITH WAR I'm living with war everyday I'm living with war in my heart everyday I'm living with war right now And when the dawn breaks I see my fellow man And on the flat-screen we kill and we're killed again And when the night falls, I pray for peace Try to remember peace (visualize) I join the multitudes I raise my hand in peace I never bow to the laws of the thought police I take a holy vow To never kill again To never kill again I'm living with war in my heart I'm living with war in my heart and my mind I'm living with war right now Don't take no tidal wave Don't take no mass grave Don't take no smokin' gun To show how the west was won But when the curtain falls, I pray for peace Try to remember peace (visualize) In the crowded streets In the big hotels In the mosques and the doors of the old museum I take a holy vow To never kill again Try to remember peace The rocket's red glare Bombs bursting in air Give proof through the night, That Our flag is still there I'm living with war everyday I'm living with war in my heart everyday I'm living with war right now.

Anyone criticizing the

Anyone criticizing the military in this comment stream needs to make sure that they never need the assistance of a Coast Guard rescue effort or National Guard deployment for disaster assistance(as happens several times every year). The military is the manner in which those who are disadvantaged by financial or familial burdens greater than the norm can muscle their way up the social ladder. Most of the comments are clearly written by those who've never served and if they had they would know that the military's system of customs and courtesies makes prior social class a subordinate factor to present achievment and performance. If they don't have the stones to participate in so intense a capacity they should at least respect those who do.

As a native of Chicago and

As a native of Chicago and former resident, I witnessed, first hand, the militarization of Chicago schools by Obama's basketball buddy, Arne Duncan. I guess it's too much like real democracy to make all public schools good schools for all students. You can't have too many truly educated Black and Brown kids, but you can get them ready for their more desired roles as drones and cannon fodder for the "noble sacrifice" of fighting wars that are now destined to last well into this century. When public schools are so run down and inferior, they can't begin to compare with shiny new militarized programs, in or out of school. Any parent wishing the best for their child will choose these well appointed schools funded by the military. I agree with Peter Kraus in comments - it's just the old Hitler Youth scam all over again.

hidden agendas?JROTC schools

hidden agendas?JROTC schools have less gang activity ,better grad rates,and rules the students will follow . Making "drones?"Grant,Patton,MacArthur all came from your concept of a drone manufacturing plant. is your point that the fed gov not follow the Constitution?well think on this most socialistic countrys require nat service,yet you will not even volunteer ,did you take an oath to defend the country and the Constitution to get your job?would you?oh right you do not have to because a citizen vol to do it for you.remember its your great leader that put the military in harms way,not the JROTC recurters .

While this analysis shows

While this analysis shows many aspects of the military presence in Chicago High Schools, one aspect is sorely missing. Consider the parent seeking an education for a vulnerable teen. There are two high schools in my zip code, both buildings quite nice yet one has about 26% of its students meet state norms while the other has 67% meeting the same norms. Don't I want my child to get at education at the Bronzeville Military Academy? The military as well as all aspects of government need good Christian men and women as much as any other sector of society.and we need educated adults. While civil society can change the system through community action, it can also alter the system by having reputable students and families in these institutions where education is happening.

This is nothing like the

This is nothing like the Hitler youth. To compare it is insulting.That was mandatory, comprehensive, and propagandizing Nazi ideology and hate, not teaching the kids about the military. It also shut down every other youth organization so every child in the country was in some form of it. However, if you choose to, why don't we compare this over fascination with forced and monopolistic public education to Communistic ideas of controlling every aspect of society. I am ten times more worried about zero-tolerance schools trying to take away my rights as a parents, treating kids like their in prison and the growing fear amongst incompetent educators that parents in some circumstances might, brace yourselves, chose educating their kids via charter schools, military schools, private schools, home schools over their reigning power hungry public monopoly. Funny, this science teacher has lots of tired and well exhausted rhetoric that I have been hearing for years and still isn't proven at all. Fear mongering might even be an appropriate phrase. Why not talk about how backwards so much of the education system is? I find it sickening how some educators will say we need a vibrant public education system, and we do, but then do nothing reformative to improve it. They blame everyone but themselves. Newsflash, DeKalb county is not exactly a successful county, nor are its school successful. Guess what, belly-aching educators like this wouldn't have to be competing if they would actually demand intelligent functioning from the system they operate in. Of course, if they did, they might risk losing their cushy tenure and free reign to be incompetent. Sounds like tired old rhetoric from "peace" activists. The same ones who decry the military in every way they can, then whine when events like Sudan and Rwanda happen and no military steps in. Or worse, they are the ones letting it continue.

I'm a graduate of a private

I'm a graduate of a private fur year military school, back when the JROTC department was staffed by active duty personnel, not retired veterans. B ack then - 1957 to 1961, there was no effort to recruit. I work closely with my old school and I can tell you that recruiters are not allowed on campus. Next, JROTC does not give a commission. The best one can get out of the program if one does enlist, is a higher ENLISTED rank if one joins the reserves. I can say from first hand experience that the program was far more military oriented then than now. I think that those who wrote in attacking the system, acting with all the intelligence of a bunch of Bush backing conservatives, ought to do a bit of research before acting like Pavlov's dogs. It seems to me the author's greatest gripe is that he's sharing a building with a different program. There he has a gripe.

Dear Mr. Dougherty: As to

Dear Mr. Dougherty: As to your comment to Mr. Roa's article and in view of other Commenters, it was precisely when the National Guard was needed in New Orleans that they were off in the Middle East, guarding oil fields. The American military must retool or the Nation will be just another failed experiment in Democracy. National Guard and Coast Guard should be the primary forces - true defense. To deny them to outspoken Americans who don't want their children guarding oil fields in hostile countries is a form of EXTORTION. Add to the torture scandals and ROTC has "a lot of 'splainin' to do".

The Chicago JROTC program is

The Chicago JROTC program is a flatout recruiting scam. I come from a AFJROTC program that had an average of 150 students, and who came from all backgrounds within the school. Our Commander was an amazing man, suggesting that we do what we want to do with our lives, and being more focused on us attending college than the military, unless that is what we wanted to do. I discovered the Chicago JROTC website in 2007, and sent a few emails to the director of JROTC (then) and a few of the schools commanders about the set up of these schools, as far as the cadets running it and the way the entire system is set up. None of it is official, which just screams wrong to me because it's a military organization, which wants everything to be perfectly organized following procedure. No one could show me procedure for how a several thousand member JROTC program can be set up. Just a personal gripe. I'm sure the JROTC program there is helping curb gang related incidents and what not, but I also know that when the cadets in the school realize that they can overpower the rest of the school, you'll have the same effect as the movie Taps, or something along those lines. And as far as that goes, the AFJROTC program is lacking greatly in Chicago. Navy and Army JROTC programs dominate because they own the ground and sea as far as the military goes, but to fly, most have to be commissioned, so I'm assuming that's a justifiable reason to cut them out of the middle? I think not. I'm also a pro military advocate, by the way.