I was invited by Frontline to offer reactions to the documentary about Michelle Rhee. I was disappointed that the documentary did not mention that Rhee is now working on behalf of a far-right agenda of privatization; that Washington Teachers Union President George Parker now works for StudentsFirst; that Rhee’s “miraculous gains” as a teacher in Baltimore have been discredited. But I had space limitations. So this was my commentary:
I watched John Merrow’s documentary on “The Education of Michelle Rhee” with high anticipation. I wanted to see what she had learned from her experience, and what lessons there might be for the nation.
The documentary emphasizes her steely determination to do whatever she thought necessary to turn around the Washington, D.C. school system. She fired principals; she fired teachers; she closed schools. She told every principal that he or she must set a target for raising test scores. If they met it, their schools would win thousands of dollars; if they didn’t, they risked termination. She tied teachers’ evaluation to student test scores.
Rhee assumes that better test scores equal better education. She never once mentions literature or history or science or civics or foreign languages; she doesn’t talk about curriculum or instruction. She never calls out a teacher for poor instruction or a principal for a weak curriculum; she is interested only in the bottom line, and that is the scores.
The problem, of course, is that focusing obsessively on test scores has predictable results: narrowing the curriculum (some districts and schools have dropped the arts and other subjects to make more time for testing); cheating; teaching to the tests; and distorting the whole education system for the sake of scores. Our best public and private schools would never dream of making test scores their goal. They know that a real education includes the arts, history, science, literature, foreign languages and physical education. Their parents expect nothing less.
Unfortunately, Rhee cared only about test scores, not a balanced curriculum. By the end of the documentary we learn that the public schools in D.C. improved “slightly” on national tests but “are still among the worst in the nation,” and its high school graduation rate is dead last. We learn that her relentless focus on test scores produced allegations of widespread cheating, not better education. Her policy of firing teachers and principals did not turn around the schools; it created turmoil. Every year, about 20% of the teachers (including those she hired) leave, and most of the principals she hired have moved on.
The only logical conclusion from this documentary is that states and districts should not do what Michelle Rhee did. It didn’t work. It failed. Rhee, however, remains unfazed. She’s taken her reform agenda to the national stage and is now urging states to follow her lead.
True educational leadership involves a commitment to children and to education (not just test scores), a dedication to improving curriculum and instruction, and the ability to recruit and develop a strongstaff. That is the kind of leadership I saw when I visited Finland, a nation whose students never take standardized tests yet do very well on international assessments.
Thankfully, such leadership is hardly absent in the U.S. In schools all across the nation, I have come across countless unsung educators who build teamwork and a culture of professionalism. They create a climate of respect built on wisdom and judgment, not carrots and sticks.

It is maddening that Rhee gets a forum and you don’t… And in the bitterest irony, Rhee, who is using tests to reinforce the factory school model, becomes the face of “reform” and you, who seek systemic change to schools, get cast as a defender of the “status quo”…. You can’t have reform when you rely on tests based on age-cohorts…
Very disappointing. She should have paid for the hour-long free advertising. I thought Frontline was about investigative journalism.
Thank you for your thoughtful analysis. There is a strong well funded group of people who know nothing about education backing Rhee. Why? Comments on Frontline or on Huff Post that tell the truth about her tenure in DC are deleted. Why?
This is an arrogant, obnoxious, crusader who sought to destroy DC public education. She had no real qualifications for the job. Since when does the head of a school system have no degrees in Education? She had some Masters degree in business, no PhD, no MA in Education, nothing that qualified her for that job.
She disrespected teachers, principals, parents and children. She was allowed to experiment on DC children’s education, and they were mere guinea pigs in the school privatization effort.
Michelle Rhee is a fraud and a shyster, and I am glad you keep exposing the truth.
Why oh why did PBS do a special on her? There are so many other more worthy educators!
I was very disappointed that one man being interviewed (I think it was Richard Whitmire?) was allowed to regurgitate that old bromide that tenure protects bad teachers and it’s so hard to get rid of the bad or incompetent teachers, blah, blah. Unless I missed it, Merrow offered no one to counter that anti-public school teacher opinion and he just let the comment pass without any follow up or challenging the veracity of that BS.
No credible critic was on the program. George Walker, head of the WTU, now works for Rhee. Why not interview someone who knows her record, like G.F. Brandenburg or civil rights lawyer Mary Levy.
“George Walker, head of the WTU, now works for Rhee”
I think you mean George Parker, who is listed on the StudentsFirst Staff webpage as a Senior Fellow and former president of WTU.
So much of the Frontline segment seemed to be interviews from the past, which I found rather confusing. It also makes me wonder if what Parker said occurred before he lost his election and went over to StudentsFirst.
Some people really will do anything for money.
thank you Ms. Ravitch for being a voice of reason. Thank you for giving educators like me faith and hope that common sense may yet prevail in education “reform”.
Thank you for believing in a well rounded education is more than test scores and for defending the arts and literature as worthy subjects. And thank you for calling out a charlatan when you see one.
Thank you. I wish that Clifford Janney, Michelle Rhee’s predecessor in DC, would get full credit for the then new DC standards, coordinated city-wide curriculum and related teacher training that caused the increase in academic performance in DC schools in Rhee’s first year. I am a DCPS parent.
One person rarely deserves “full credit” for anything. Full blame, possibly, but credit is almost always shared among the designers and the implementers.
Michelle Rhee represents the Frankenstein that one fears when one hyper focuses on Test Results. Test Mania is a nightmare and it often is used to drive Privatization, which in turn makes the private school owners, the charter school owners and the proponents of this effort richer — and the casualties are our kids, their teachers and society,
We do have a problem in public schools besides Test Mania, We need to invest more in developing teachers, giving them the tools they need and to make sure that bad teachers and principals are improved or removed. Our best defense is a good offense
The second Rhee began attracting attention I predicted that she was of the rare species whose career would prosper inverse proportionately to her level of failure.
If Michelle Rhee succeeded in D.C. she would have just been a school superintendent – no documentaries, huge speaking fees, fame or fortune. There is no value in being a good educator.
The genius of the TFA/New Teacher project scheme is that failure is then used as evidence against the viability of public education. In other words, “Even the great ME can’t fix this damned school system. Let’s shut it down or privatize it.”
Rhee is not interested in the children, certainly not in the teachers, or in improving education. I don’t think she cares about improving anything other than her own political aspirations. She has a terrible track record and regurgitates the same old tripe, equating reform with test scores. I am amazed that anyone gives her the time of day. Very disappointed in PBS for not calling her out on her misguided policies.
Will have to explain to the numerous future MDs, attys, teachers, etc I graduated high school with that we got shorted.
All we cared about was passing the numerous comprehensive tests they threw at us. Chapter after chapter, note taking, discussions, papers, getting up in front of the class to explain problems.
THEN we had mid terms followed by end of the semesters and then the finals. We had to know the material in the books as well as what the teachers explained.
Frankly when a teacher explained a concept to us we were expected to use it in all similar situations.
Teaching to the test is how children LEARN.
Tf
Yes Terry, but the tests you mention were catered generally to the specific class you were taking, not generalized for thousands of classes. You teacher was able to administer those tests as deemed appropriate. “Teaching to the standardized test” would in fact distract from just that kind of instruction. I suggest you take an education class that discusses different kinds of assessment.
Also, you are only viewing this from the perspective of your own experience. As an example, what say you to the students who come into this country, are illiterate in their own language let alone English, and then are asked to take a test in English (as is mandated for immigrants who have been in the country for around a year, state law depending)?
This is one of many situations outside of your reality that has to be considered when you think that standardized test scores accurately measure school efficacy.
Just discovered there are actually two Frontline mirror pages on the Rhee show, so the comments are split up on different pages.
Most are here: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/education-of-michelle-rhee/
Some are here: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/education/education-of-michelle-rhee/education-department-finds-no-evidence-of-widespread-cheating-on-d-c-exams/
Interesting how they sandwiched Diane’s comment between Geoffrey Canada’s and Margaret Spelling’s. The Live Chat Assessing Rhee’s Reforms on Thursday is likely to be just a imbalanced with their selection of “leading journalists and experts.”
If you didn’t believe before that the media is a tool of propaganda that’s owned and controlled by corporate America, you should have enough evidence now to see how tainted the reports are. Representatives of real people discussing all sides of such important matters on these shows are few and far between –and tokenism at best.
It’s so unbelievable the she continues to hold test scores as the single criteria when those we admire and respect in society are those that lead with action and innovation in sports, arts, government, science and technology. Why do people continually want to reduce what’s possible and our children to test scores?
Maureen: Would you go to an MD who couldn’t pass the exams but did well in art?
How about flying a plan designed by people who were really really friendly and thought numbers were limited to phones?
Seriously, have worked with asians who come here like coiled springs ready to take jobs every chance they get. They had to actuallY LEARN it all… the basics on up.
Imagination without comprehension of the sciences, numbers etc around us is a fools paradise.
silly, silly, silly argument.
Terry – I regret dedicating time to responding to your earlier post. I won’t even try to dismantle the specious fallacies in this post, let alone the latent racism.
And bad spelling and grammar.
Is there a reason why most of the original comments on THIS page are missing, Diane?
The comments are moderated on the Frontline pages and I had left a comment which was never approved that said something negative but true about Rhee’s track record. I reviewed the comment rules and thought maybe it was flagged as a “personal attack” on their beloved Rhee. Maybe that’s why the “Ice Queen” paragraph was cut, too.
TeacherEd: Near the top, after Diane’s nine paragraphs, it says (now) 60 comments. Just under that there is a link for “Older Comments”. Click on that to see the rest of the comments for this blog entry. WordPress.com must do that automatically when the number of Replies gets over a certain limit.
Thank you, Mathcs! I never saw WordPress do that before on this blog.
CHARLES KING
AS A RETIRED SOCIAL STUDIES TEACHER I HAVE ALWAYS FELT THAT PEOPLE LIKE MICHELLE RHEE ARE THE REAL ENEMIES OF PUBLIC EDUCATION. THEIR EMPHASIS ON A STRUCTURED SYSTEM THAT FUNNELS LEARNERS TOWARD “BOTTOM LINE” RESULTS–STANDARDIZED TESTS–DESTROYS CREATIVITY, IMAGINATION AND THE POTENTIAL FOR THE UPWARD EVOLUTION OF THE HUMAN FAMILY.
Chas … so you would go to an MD who never could pass the boards but became an MD based on his lack of whatever you mean by creativity?
But of course you were probably a wonderful teacher who never gave tests because you could just tell by the vacant look in their eyes they were enthralled and must certainly understand it all on account of your own creativity. Sighhh
There’s no doubt there’s a rigorous cirriculum of Math and Science required to become an MD. I agree totally. However, is every student going to become an MD?
I just finished my student teaching practicum in 5th grade and was frankly overwhelmed by the creativity and imagination of the students. For example, one student made personalized cartoon drawings for every student in class on Halloween. She obviously has a tremendous talent for art. This imagination should be encouraged and she should explore this talent instead of only being regulated to endless standardized testing to improve her Math and Science scores.
Frankly, I walked away amazed at the possibilities if students are left to explore problem solving using their natural intuition rather than be stuffed into a shoe that doesn’t fit. There are students who will naturally gravitate towards becoming MDs and they should be encouraged to go that route. However, every student shouldn’t be mindlessly pushed into a direction that doesn’t suit their proclivities. This is what fuels the status quo of our world, the standardized sameness of our thinking that produces automatons incapable of critical, inquiry-based creative thought.
What parents, and the rest of society want to know is how the children are doing. Inner city children are our most vulnerable.
So how would YOU suggest people learn to read and write and decipher and provide accurate feedback. right now we are watching generation after generation of inner city children end up on the streets… contributing little to themselves, others or society.
When threatened our current crop of teachers in many many cases teach their students (by example) that it is OK to cheat … and how to cheat.
If we don’t try SOMETHING different we are doomed to continue this process indefinitely.
Michelle Rhee is a buffoon. I have no respect for her or her credentials to have ever been the Chancellor of the D.C. schools. Her methods are archaic and if her “Pedagogical Practices” were truely awe inspiring and worked, wouldn’t you think this egotistical, narsasistic individual would have takenthe show on the road? What a PHONEY! If everyone quits following or listening to her, she’ll go away. I challenge everyone to boycott her and her foundation.
Pigeon-holing Rhee as caring “only about test scores” and then attacking her for doing so is shoddy, lazy, and misleading. Rhee correctly worked to improve low test scores, but sought that through improving the quality of teachers, principals, data, curriculum, operations, and a host of other things that go into making a district functional. Judging the progress of DC’s schools by test scores, as you do, is disrespectful to the legacy of Rhee, whose reforms have been instrumental in turning around a dysfunctional system, which will in turn be able to provide a better education to students.
Rhee did not turn around the DC system. As I said in my commentary, most of the principals she hired have left. She (and her deputy) have run the system for five years, have a free hand to fire people and hire people, and the system remains one of the lowest performing in the US, with the largest achievement gaps between black and white students as well as Hispanic and white students. The gaps are twice as large in DC as in any other urban district in the US.
Fair enough–the school system is still significantly under-performing. But pre-Rhee, there weren’t textbooks in every class, qualified teachers, well-functioning infrastructure, access to technology, and on and on. And now there is. How can you dismiss everything else she’s done for this system? It isn’t reasonable to expect an improvement in student achievement when the system itself was in shambles, and those things have certainly turned around.
What is te evidence of turnaround? The biggest achievement gap in the nation and the lowest graduation rate and the highest teacher turnover?
guess you are correct. Those darn minorities … what can we do?
More PE, Art, communications skills, recess, study time….
Are you sane? Rhee and respect…legacy…progress…turning around..better education…oh my! Back to work at Students Last, please. Gift cards anyone?
I really hope you have the same sense of sarcasm that I have because if not I hope you never encounter the Jim Jones type (of which the rheeject is one) and drink the koolaid.
Rhee displays symptoms of a psychopath who is able to fool a lot of people.
Rhee is VERY asian in her take on things. Those chinese especially think that children should work hard, study, do homework .. and that their teachers should know how to teach and that they are totally familiar with their subject matter.
Those krazy asians, what do THEY know about education??
Lack of empathy, self-centered, driven by the desire for power over as many other people as possible.
Could you explain to us why TEACHING to the TEST is wrong? Never had a teacher who DID’NT teach to the test!
Cannot fault Ms Rhee for believing that teachers and administrators would NOT cheat. Who amongst us would have believed (teacher unions blamed Rhee of course) that adults would sacrifice the education of little children would be sacrificed for money.
Rhee exposed the horrific conditions of inner city schools and the horrible adults who make their living from those poor children.
Teaching to the testis wrong. When kids practice for the tests, they may learn to answer those kinds of questions, but if you gave them a different test of the same material, they may not be able to answer at all. They didn’t practice for that test. It is bad education. Children need general knowledge and skills that can be applied in many situations. You will notice that the best schools and best teachers do not teach to the tests. Also, many tests are narrow and of little educational value.
Sorry you never had a teacher that didn’t teach to the test. How old are you 20? The fact is an assessment is just that, what one teaches and then see if the students have comprehended. No, no good teacher “teaches to the test”. One teaches and the test is a tertiary concern.
And I’m glad that you weren’t affiliated with Jim Jones, because if you were as defensive of him as you are the Rheeject you would be dead by now from drinking the koolaid.
Will have to explain to the numerous future MDs, attys, teachers, etc I graduated high school with that we got shorted. All we cared about was passing the numerous comprehensive tests they threw at us. Chapter after chapter, note taking, discussions, papers, getting up in front of the class to explain problems. THEN we had mid terms followed by end of the semesters and then the finals. We had to know the material in the books as well as what the teachers explained. Frankly when a teacher explained a concept to us we were expected to use it in all similar situations. Teaching to the test is how children LEARN. Tf
Nonsense. The tests ask you to guess at a bubble, not to explain what you know.
Guess? HOPEFULLY you are not involved in the education system! WOW
THE FACT THAT, ACCORDING TO YOU, “{You] Never had a teacher who DIDN’T teach to the test.,” GIVES US PRETTY CLEAR INSIGHT INTO WHY YOU HAVE SUCH ADMIRATION FOR “EDUCATORS” LIKE MICHELLE RHEE.
EVEN THOUGH I WASN’T LIKE MOST OF MY COLLEAGUES, I TESTED STUDENTS BECAUSE I HAD TO HAVE SOME HARD EVIDENCE TO BACK UP THE GRADES I WAS REQUIRED TO GIVE. I ACTUALLY THOUGHT TESTING (AND REVIEWING FOR TESTS) WAS A WASTE OF VALUABLE TEACHING TIME, AND THAT ASSIGNING GRADES WAS MORE HARMFUL THAN HELPFUL. SO I LET MY STUDENTS USE THEIR NOTES DURING TESTS. I ALSO LET THEM CONSULT THEIR TEXTBOOKS DURING TESTS. FOR ESSAY QUESTIONS, I WOULD GIVE THEM A SELECTION OF QUESTIONS BEFORE TEST DAY, BUT REQUIRE THEM TO CHOOSE THEIR QUESTION AND WRITE THEIR ESSAY DURING THE TEST PERIOD. EVEN WITH ALL THESE ADVANTAGES, I HAD STUDENTS WHO SCOURED POORLY ON MY TESTS
. ADMITTEDLY I WASN’T EDUCATING DOCTORS, BUT THEN I DON’T KNOW ANY PUBLIC SCHOOL TEACHERS WHO DID.
We should stop calling this education reform. It is education raping. At least we should just come out and say what it’s all about, for-profit education, or Wall Street’s Guide to Harvesting Funds from U.S. School Districts. StudentsFirst has 7 lobbyists in Tennessee now. Tennessee Education Association has one. I am interested in organizing a Town Hall Meeting on privatization, which is still a low-radar issue. THMeeting could be named: “R.I.P. Public Education,” or “The Wal-Martization of Educating children.”
I actually am thinking of using the Frontline Documentary as a teaching tool for my leadership classes. It’s treasure trove of examples of “how not to lead a district,” from placing a rookie principal in a wildly over-crowded and dysfunctional school and expecting her to magically improve things, to firing a principal on camera, to degrading your own talent pool (constantly bad mouthing the DC teachers, etc), to the rank insubordination that got her fired, Rhee has inadvertently given me weeks of teaching material.
I posted a long response on the PBS site … but forgot to mention the discuss I felt watching Rhee get in and out of the backseat of her chauffeur driven SUV. I once saw Al Pacino driven away from a restaurant … choosing to sit with his driver in the front seat. She is no Al Pacino. For kids and administrators to view her pulling up to their schools in such a regal manner speaks not just to her judgment … but her need to be feel regal and be viewed as the same. It looked ugly to me.
And one last thought. The scene in the PBS doc. of Michelle and a principal in conference, albeit a snippet, could be used in principal training as an example of what NOT to do. Her focus was completely on gleaning a commitment to raise scores … not have a discussion on best practices, strategies for improving instruction, etc. She simply wanted her charges to give her a % of scores they hoped to have a year’s end … nothing about school climate, the whole-child, they type of instruction that best works, was had. Shameful. Just angry at all of this.
I posted a long response on the PBS site … but forgot to mention the discuss I felt watching Rhee get in and out of the backseat of her chauffeur driven SUV. I once saw Al Pacino driven away from a restaurant … choosing to sit with his driver in the front seat. She is no Al Pacino. For kids and administrators to view her pulling up to their schools in such a regal manner speaks not just to her judgment … but her need to be feel regal and be viewed as the same. It looked ugly to me.
Wonder if Frontline understands the damage they have done to their brand? Rhee is a self-serving dissembler, but Frontline had a well deserved, positive reputation–one that has been seriously eroded. Was it worth it?
Chuck and Diane,
But read this comment left by Merrrow. I am confused by it. It seems he wants publicity for his blog rather than doing the right thing to repair his reputation. Am I reading it incorrectly?
john merrow 10. Jan, 2013 at 12:50 pm #
I hope that those who criticize me and/or the Frontline program will devote as much energy to making this blog (and the criticism) go viral. A typical Frontline program reaches between 700,000 and 1,000,000 viewers as I understand it. So make that your challenge, my friends.
See the post and all comments:
http://takingnote.learningmatters.tv/?p=6070&cpage=1#comment-17388
Linda,
I can’t be sure but this is how I interpret what John meant in that post. He was unable to put into the Frontline piece all he wished he could have. If he had had complete editorial control, there would have been more about Adele Cothorne, whom he obviously admires. Maybe 1 million people saw the PBS show. If his post goes viral, maybe 1 million will see what ended up on the cutting room floor.
This is sheer speculation, but I am guessing that someone higher up on the food chain wanted kid-glove treatment of Rhee. That’s why we saw lots of the old fawning footage, and not enough about the people who were frightened to be interviewed and not enough about what happened to Adele.
Diane
Got it! I think you may be on to something.
I am so leery of his people that I get too suspicious. I hope that is true.
I suppose Gates is at the top of the food chain.
Just look at how many crooked cheating teachers and administrators Rhee uncovered. No WONDER DC children can’t get an education.
Funny how progressive educators continue to support these cheaters.
HOPEFULLY we will root out all the DC teachers and administrators that were involved in cheating.
Then you must expect her to turn herself in soon. Can you contact her and ask her to do the right thing.
She was their “leader” and the fish rots from the head. Get on that please.
So you agree there were/still are hundreds of teachers and administrators involved in the cheating and that they should be let go as they are uncovered?
Oh, wait, the Teachers Unions will halt any investigations just for that reason.. LOL
… but you do agree that if it turns out that huge numbers of teachers and other professionals were involved in cheating they need to be fired …. right??
Oh yes, of course and after Rhee and her gang turn themselves in that will happen.
They were fired in Atlanta for cheating. The superintendent who promoted the cheating got a nice bonus.
Same in DC too, right??
Yes, I agree. Rhee is a liar and cheater too.
HOPEFULLY she fired most of the liars and cheaters and only left a few hundred.
BUT I guess with the PC crowd in charge things will go back to the way they were.
Well said!!!!!!
Why is it that these “special” people who fail at their jobs (Rhee in DC) become the spokespeople for “how to do it right?” Another failure is Carley Fiorina the former HP CEO (who was fired because she was sending her company down the tubes) and then wants to run for political office and appears frequently on talk shows to tell us how to run the economy. These kinds of people are losers. Wake up America.
This article is totally inaccurate. Things improved significantly while Rhee was in DC. The mayor after her backed off of much needed reform. She puts STUDENTS first, not adults. Teachers in reformed cities can make up to $140,000 a year plus bonuses for being a highly effective professional. A lot of highly effective professionals work in challenging environments. We wouldn’t want the doctor who has a history of patients dying on his table, would we? Why do we except this from educators? Because our families have already escaped to the suburbs, and it’s not really our concern? She wants students to enjoy school, because then they will perform well academically. If you have a teacher that labels students and families as “bad” that teacher’s classroom will be out of control. If you have a teacher that respects students and believes that they can achieve greatness despite their neighborhood, income level, and color, that teachers scores will be high because the students will want to be there and learn. Those teachers often don’t agree with their unions, and say, “Yeah, go ahead and count my kids test scores in my evaluation!” Michelle Rhee will always have you loud mouth haters, but now thanks to studentsfirst.org we parents can join a strong national advocacy to fight defeat unions who want to give 99% of teachers a good evaluation every year even if their students fail to read every year. Organize, parents! Use your voices. Studentsfirst.org is often the way that one or two powerful parent voices are heard and win the fight to reform our failed education system.