
Contents
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Lessons Learned from Superintendent Hornbeck’s Race-Confrontational Approach Lessons Learned from Superintendent Hornbeck’s Race-Confrontational Approach
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“Anti-Philadelphia Bias” “Anti-Philadelphia Bias”
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White Solidarity White Solidarity
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The Pennsylvania School Funding Campaign’s Colorblind “Win” (2005–2014) The Pennsylvania School Funding Campaign’s Colorblind “Win” (2005–2014)
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Four Race-Conscious Losses and Colorblind Wins during the Hornbeck and Rendell Eras
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Published:March 2024
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Abstract
Chapter 4, “Race-Conscious Losses and Colorblind Wins during the Hornbeck and Rendell Eras” tells the history of school funding coalitions in Pennsylvania and lays the groundwork for understanding how today’s colorblind approaches are shaped by past colorblind wins and race-conscious losses. In the early 2000s, David Hornbeck, former superintendent of the School District of Philadelphia, vocally criticized the state for its racist school-funding structure. This created an antagonistic relationship between the school district and Harrisburg politicians—one that was highly unproductive to securing resources for Philadelphia and contributed to the eventual state takeover of Philadelphia schools. In contrast, the golden era of school funding, a brief three-year period, from 2008 to 2011, when Ed Rendell was governor, achieved both a fairly distributed school funding formula and a large increase to the education budget without ever talking about race. Knowing this history allows us to understand present-day coalition politics and why colorblind approaches carry such currency.
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