Public schools account for over 713, 871 students in over 1,082 public institutions and that's only for LAUSD (Los Angeles Unified School District). With the number of students growing everyday, there’s an increasing demand for teachers to provide the education for these students. Consequently, the new teachers entering are younger, whiter, and less experienced thus decreasing the quality of the education. (Lafer 127). Yes, Lafer’s argument that “corporations are remaking America” in a way that weakens democracy is persuasive because education has become one of the biggest corporations around the world, reforming public schooling would be conducive to the reduction in public budgets and overall performance in our institutions.
There has been more legislations revolving around education than any sector
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(Lafer 133) Under corporate lobby groups like ALEC, legislatures and bills are introduced across the country. Basically, the committee consists of half state legislators and half corporate lobbyists, later the same corporations that are members of ALEC fund these candidates’ campaigns, and spend their own money on advertising on TV, radio, and social media. On the other hand, during the Citizens United federal decision, but until 2010 there were 22 states that had their own laws barring or limited corporate spending in politics. (Lafer 151) Following that decision, 11 states went from either mixed or Democratic rule to being wall-to-wall Republican, with the GOP in control of both houses of the legislature and the governor’s office. Critically, the objective is to support reduced school funding and opposing economic policies that deny a student for their parents income level. (Lafer 155) Not necessarily, to replace public schools with privately run charters thus resulting in