Communities should lead and sustain the transformation of our schools. Nearly 20 cities united to take our fight to Washington.
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KOCO engaged our leaders in organizing eighteen cities around the country that were experiencing mass school closings to testify at a federal hearing we played a leadership role in organizing at the US Department of Education (DOE). Collectively, we won a commitment from the DOE to work with our coalition to advance community-driven sustainable school transformation models as an option for school districts – not just privatization models. We also won a commitment to meet with DOE Secretary Arne Duncan in the next 2-3 weeks to continue discussing alternatives to current federal education policy. Held January 29, 2013, high-level DOE officials, including Sec. Duncan, and federal legislators (and legislative aides) were present to hear testimony from parents, students, and educators from 18 cities across the country on the impact of market-driven reforms on communities of color.
KOCO, a member of the nationwide Journey for Justice coalition, is engaged in organizing 18 cities around the country that were experiencing mass school closings.
Through J4J, we are also engaging with diverse communities on various policy issues, working towards a nationwide quality-of-life agenda.
Collectively, J4J and KOCO presented to the U.S. Department of Education community-driven sustainable school transformation models – not just privatization models – as an option for school districts.
KOCO leaders have provided technical assistance and support to cities around the country to file civil rights complaints with the Education Department in response to the disparate negative impact on Black and Latino neighborhoods.
This created an opportunity for J4J leaders to build the framework for a national network to promote the needs of school districts serving predominantly Black and Latino students. KOCO supported J4J’s push for community-driven sustainable school transformation, resistance to the privatization of the public school system, and call for a federal investigation into civil rights violation claims in those districts.
Largely through participation in national education reform coalitions (e.g., Communities for Public Education Reform, Alliance for Educational Justice, and Communities for Excellent Public Schools), our organization has built relationships with communities in: Atlanta; Baltimore; Boston; Cleveland; Denver; Detroit; Eupora (Mississippi); Hartford; Kansas City; Los Angeles; Newark; New Orleans; New York; Oakland; Philadelphia; Washington, DC; Wichita; and Wilmington.