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A fair shake for public schools

Phil Halperin, executive director of California Education Partners, shares how ordinary citizens can make a difference in education.
February 11, 2022

Here鈥檚 a fact: Of any major city in America, San Francisco has the lowest percentage of kids under the age of 18. What鈥檚 more, about a quarter of those kids go to private school. But these numbers don't deter Phil Halperin in his quest to get people to care about the quality of a public school education in San Francisco.

Halperin is the co-founder and executive director of , an education reform nonprofit, and founder of the , which supports education-focused organizations serving California children. He is also a product of the public school system himself. 

鈥淚 had severe learning differences,鈥 Halperin says. 鈥淚 was dyslexic, I was dysgraphic. I had undiagnosed ADHD. And the only reason I鈥檝e been successful in life is the number of teachers who took the time and the patience to nurse me along through my K-12 education. So when it came time to think about where I could make a difference in the world, there wasn't any other choice besides public education.鈥

On this episode of School鈥檚 In, Halperin, a 海角乱伦社区 alum and chair of the advisory council at 海角乱伦社区 Graduate School of Education (GSE), joins GSE Dean Dan Schwartz and Senior Lecturer Denise Pope to discuss how ordinary citizens can make a difference in education 鈥 including an innovative approach he鈥檚 currently pursuing in San Francisco that would make significant changes in the way the school board operates.

Halperin has co-chaired seven ballot campaigns that have collectively raised more than $7.3 billion for the public schools in San Francisco. Despite the relatively small percentage of kids in the public school system in San Francisco, Halperin says, 鈥減eople get that all kids deserve a good shake.鈥

San Francisco needs to be able to pay its teachers enough to ensure retention, he says, noting that the pandemic has burned out a lot of educators. It 鈥渉as destroyed them and sucked their soul, and a lot of them are going to leave the profession, so we need another generation,鈥 he says. 鈥淎nd that generation needs to look like the kids they're serving.鈥

You can listen to School's In on , , , , and .