"No public policy is permanent."
With those five words, education reform pioneer Dr. Howard Fuller delivers a wake-up call to the charter school movement in this powerful Thanksgiving week conversation with host Jed Wallace.
Drawing a stark parallel to the overturning of Roe v. Wade, Fuller warns that charter school laws—despite decades of progress—could be eliminated through political change alone. But this isn't a message of despair. It's a call to action rooted in thankfulness, self-criticism, and an unflinching commitment to purpose over institutional arrangements.
Fuller, the former superintendent of Milwaukee Public Schools and a lifelong advocate for educational choice, brings his characteristic blend of intellectual rigor and moral clarity to urgent questions facing the movement today:
Have we lost the balance between freedom and accountability? In trying to prove charter schools are "public," did we adopt the very accountability measures we sought to escape? Are we taking for granted the hard-won victories of pioneers like Annette Polly Williams? And most critically: What price are we willing to pay to continue the struggle?
The conversation moves from policy to philosophy, from Milwaukee's funding battles to the lessons of Black abolitionists, from Greek tragedy to Frederick Douglass's timeless truth: "Without struggle, no progress."
Fuller doesn't shy away from the personal toll of advocacy, reflecting on Brandon Brown's experience in Indianapolis and asking each listener to confront an uncomfortable question: If you decide to wage struggle for social change, what price are you willing to pay? Balance? Comfort? Security? There's no formula for the answer, but there is a requirement for honesty.
Yet amid the challenges, Fuller offers a vision grounded in history and hope. He argues that studying the past—from Du Bois's "Black Reconstruction" to the forgotten role of Black abolitionists in financing John Brown's raid—isn't about relics. It's about understanding today through a broader prism, about making history alive in service of the present.
This is Fuller at his best: challenging, inspiring, and utterly committed to the belief that public education can be delivered through multiple systems, that parents deserve choice, and that educators deserve the freedom to create schools rooted in community self-determination.
Released during Thanksgiving week—exactly when conventional wisdom says not to release a podcast—this conversation embodies Fuller's own philosophy: be thankful for what we have, but never stop working to make it better. Because we're still alive. And because the struggle continues.
EPISODE HIGHLIGHTS:
• Why charter school laws could be eliminated (and what that means for the movement)
• The lost balance between freedom and accountability in charter schools
• Milwaukee's 21st century educational ecosystem built on 20th century rules
• The personal price of advocacy and what it demands from leaders
• Why studying history matters for today's educational battles
• The role of Black abolitionists in American history—and why it's been forgotten
• Frantz Fanon's challenge: every generation must discover its mission and either fulfill it or betray it
ABOUT DR. HOWARD FULLER:
Dr. Howard Fuller is a distinguished professor of education and founder of the Institute for the Transformation of Learning at Marquette University. As former superintendent of Milwaukee Public Schools and a lifelong advocate for educational choice and social justice, he has spent decades fighting for parent empowerment and community self-determination in education. His book "No Struggle, No Progress" captures his philosophy of educational reform and social change.
RESOURCES MENTIONED IN THIS EPISODE:
• "Wretched of the Earth" by Frantz Fanon
• "Force and Freedom" by Kellie Jones
• "Black Reconstruction" by W.E.B. Du Bois
• "Educational Blacks in the South, 1867 to 1935" by Jim Anderson
• Ted Kolderie's work on chartering and institutional frameworks
• Brandon Brown's previous Charterfolk Chat episode
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Charterfolk Chat brings you in-depth conversations with education leaders, reformers, and advocates who are working to transform American education. Hosted by Jed Wallace.
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