A reader sent the following comment:
For the past twelve years I have been a pre-k teacher in a public urban inner city school. I also owned a business for twenty-five years. I attended a public elementary school and a private high school. I attended public, private, and online universities.
I know the difference between public good and free market.
When I returned to teaching twelve years ago things were just starting to change. In my district a lot of early childhood supervisors who knew a lot about early childhood retired and/or moved to other states. The staff developer in my building told me they had seen the handwriting on the wall and were getting out while they still could. Truthfully, I did not understand her comments. Pre-K had been separate from the rest of the NYC DOE and I couldn’t imagine that it would change. Teachers were supported and encouraged to use solid, child development research in creating the best atmosphere for our students. My staff developer said, “Wait. When they get through mucking everything else up, they will focus on pre-k.” To be honest, I didn’t pay much attention because I was free to create my own curriculum based on my children’s needs. I wasn’t worried about performance tasks and rubrics. My students thrived.
I did notice that in Kindergarten and other grades teachers and students were being asked to do things that, to me, didn’t make sense but it didn’t impact on me, so I more or less ignored it. I figured I would be exempt.
Teachers would complain during lunch but since I was not immediately involved, I didn’t comment. At first I thought they were just complaining. Then I noticed some of the work that was being produced on their bulletin boards. The work didn’t seem to fit what I knew were developmentally appropriate activities.
My parents started asking for homework notebooks. At first, my principal defended my position of no homework notebooks and encouraged family projects. A year or two later, my principal asked if I could use a homework notebook and request projects. That seemed reasonable so I complied. The next year my principal asked if I could do a few worksheets just to make the parents happy. I resisted but in the end acquiesced.
It was such a slow process that I didn’t immediately realize what was happening. Looking back I think I was the frog in the pot of water on the stove. If the water is boiling, the frog jumps out. But if the water is cold and increases in temperature, the frog gets cooked. That was me; a cooked frog.
At the same time, the Mayor decided to eliminate the Universal Pre-K umbrella that had more or less protected us from the whims of curriculum changes over the years. Suddenly my principal had complete control. Now I was expected to have my students reading and writing legibly by the end of the year. My principal said my students didn’t need to nap. It took away from academic rigor. The fact that some of my students fell over on the carpet after lunch was ignored. I was to wake them so they could learn.
By accident I read “The Death and Life of the Great American School System”. I didn’t read it because I was trying to raise my voice against the system. I had read “The Language Police” and wanted to read more about what Diane Ravitch had to say. For me, much of what is in the book is my history. As I read, I remembered living through much of those times. I just didn’t realize back then that it was a carefully planned attack by people with money and power to manipulate the system for their own agenda. Clearly, this assault on teachers and education had been going on for quite a while.
I remembered back when Sputnik went up and the battle cry was more math and more science. How are we going to beat the Russians? I made my mother go to a PTA meeting against her will where she spoke up for more classes in ethics and civics and fewer classes in math and science because she felt that if people couldn’t be human to each other, all the knowledge in the world wouldn’t help. She was asked to leave the meeting and not bother to return anytime soon.
I started thinking about how my classroom had changed and how I had been slowly brought around to doing educational practices which were against what I knew to be wrong but did them anyway to keep peace and my job. I still didn’t fully understand the big picture.
Then I started speaking up and colleagues would just look at me and tell me it was just a small thing I shouldn’t make waves. I read the papers. No one was speaking out. The dominant media had fallen in love with charter schools and public education was under fire. I followed the stories. At first an article spoke about how charter schools were the answer to schools that were failing. I didn’t know any failing schools but figured there must be some and thought the charter schools might take on special needs students for whom a public school was not working. As time passed I read more articles about how unions protect teachers against bad teaching and if only there were no unions principals could fire all the bad teachers and we would have wonderful schools. I never saw an article opposing that reasoning. I knew there were some teachers in my school who were not as knowledgeable as other teachers but in every profession there are some who excel and some who are just adequate and some who should find another career. But no one talked about that. The news stories featured only teachers. Then the articles got bolder. In some newspapers it seemed that reporters were given assignments to find dirt on a public school teacher and make it a front page headline. Politicians sensing there was power and money to be made jumped on the bandwagon and reassured the public that they would do everything in their power to root out bad teachers so their children would soar academically. There was no more hiding their agenda. It was out in the open. Shakespeare was being rewritten to “Let’s kill all the teachers.”
I noticed after quite a while; sometimes I process things slower than most, that all the vitriolic rhetoric towards teachers was aimed at schools and teachers in low income communities. Schools in affluent areas didn’t seem to be affected at all. It didn’t make sense. There must be ineffective teachers everywhere; why just in poverty pockets?
Then it dawned on me; those areas were easy targets. Parents everywhere want the best for their children. Poverty, crime, sometimes inadequate nutrition, family issues were not in play. It was the teachers to blame for their child’s poor performance in school. The politicians were going to save their children. It was a slick marketing campaign and it worked.
By then my voice was just a whisper against the massive voice that had been created. I was very depressed. It saddened me because I love teaching and I want the best for my students and I see how the reformers are looking at them as OPC (other people’s children) and creating curricular that is damaging many of them to the point that they will simply drop out of school when they can rather than face continued frustration and failure.
Then I remembered. When we liberated the death camps after WW2, everyone said “how come no one knew?” People knew but the dominant voice made it dangerous to speak out. Many who challenged the politicians disappeared. After Joe McCarthy was dethroned, people asked, “how did we let this happen?” There were voices but again the dominant voice made it dangerous. Those that spoke out often lost their jobs and careers were destroyed. They sent a clear message to those who would challenge the agenda of the day. Be quiet or risk your career.
I hope that when this dreadful period of time in American history comes to an end it has not destroyed one of the pillars of democracy; that of a free and public education.
In the end, historians and social psychologists will study this era for many years just as they study Nazi Germany and Joe McCarthy to try and understand how it happened.
It seems to be in our nature not to learn from history.
However, I have not given up hope. My daughter, whom I had been asking for years to read your book (she is also a teacher) read it this summer and said, “WOW” If she has finally found her voice, there will be others to follow. When it’s all over people will say they knew nothing about it and how could it have happened. Some will say, “Never Again”.

Excellent letter! Thank you for sharing.
Speaking as a teacher in one small district, this is where our union has come up short. We are far behind in organizing, meeting, and discussing our own field of education. Too many of us do not know what is going on. I didn’t until this February when I took it upon myself to research and connect via the Internet.
Due to ed reform policies, teachers in our district belong to so many committees and have so much data to input and collect on top of managing our classroom or duties that the general reaction when the union has asked to meet is “not another meeting”.
We will need a paradigm shift in this behavior, or we can expect to see the culture change taking place to continue.
Therefore, my goal locally is to encourage union leaders to get this knowledge to all teachers so we are aware of what is going on around us. We need to keep spreading the word and growing the numbers of those involved. This is the grassroots meaning of union that is missing, at least here.
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tell your colleagues to read my blog. It’s better than a committee meeting!
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Schools have kept us bush like hamsters on a wheel. They baffle us
with fad after fad and complying with a myriad of mandates and some are not even a reality. People don’t question or research and teachers are so overwhelmed they just go along.
Baffling how they want us to create children who developed a love of learning and ask questions…higher order thinking, but we are supposed to just go along with their nonsense. Ask a question or propose a different solution and you are not a team player.
We need to use our meeting time, without adminstrative badgering, more productively. I have encouraged all teachers in my area to subscribe to this blog.
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Busy, not bush….iPad..typing too fast!
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As a small union president I have shuffled 3-7 emails a week with legislative updates, with calls to action etc., and just now are some getting active. The ‘it isn’t affecting me’ mentality is spot on.
We are fighting hard here, let’s hope more union members get active in educating family voters, friends & neighbors. It’s not too late, but a lot of people are barely hanging on!
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This has been a slow process, getting employees both union and non-union to see the picture that is being painted before their eyes. It takes bold and strong leadership to get them to strip the canvas that has been started. I am a firm believer that constant communication is the key to repainting the canvas and to putting educators in charge of the paintbrushes instead of the politicians. Your goal is one all should take on.
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I recently became union rep at my campus. I feel it will be an important part of my work to educate my colleagues as to the looming clouds on the horizon. Many newcomers have no idea of these horrors coming down the line. And we must speak out when we see the little signs, the added paperwork, the subtle comments from administrators saying “teachers need to feel the urgency” or “we need to know where (i.e. On Whom) to focus our interventions”
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As a president of a local in an urban area, I’ve worked very hard on keeping teachers and other educators informed on these issues. However, I also can’t help but wonder if this is not part of the plot – the many meetings that teachers are now required to attend – as a way to keep them so tired and overworked that they really do not have time for anything else. A union meeting can’t compete with a district meeting that pays for attending – not when teachers have received paycuts and increased costs for what they pay for health benefits. In my district this increase has gone from 20% paid by employees to almost 50%.
I’m working on a variety of ways to get the message out what is going on and I think that many of the people I represent know what we are up against.
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Diane, you and I had a conversation ( I don’t expect you to remember) on twitter months ago that still resonates: are we the frog in the pot, being boiled so slowly we aren’t even aware, or are we the canary in the mine, crying for all we’re worth?
This teacher’s story is MINE…I too have been a good soldier, signing up for this reform effort and that…from New Math to Common Core. Teachers find ways to make all this craziness work. Maybe we’re so busy trying to figure out how to incorporate the new mandates into the existing ones we don’t notice what’s happening to our schools and most importantly our students.
I’m trying to follow your lead and sing as loudly as I can!
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As a university faculty member who has seen this happening over the years my concern is with how to get my colleagues and students to wake up and see it. Even while we are overwhelmed by “reformy” ideas (our president has signed us up for a multi-year grant w/school districts that mandates the use of VAM scores) my colleagues sit on their hands and are too frightened to resist . . . and of course my students are even more loathe to speak out as they fear they won’t be able to get a job.
I know Diane and others are doing all they can to fight back, but it is depressing to daily witness what is happening to our schools and universities. We need better tools to fight back with but our logic and data are of no consequence when the arguments made from the other side are irrational to begin with.
HELP!
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don’t give up hope. We will continue to expose this and the American public will join us. I believe that.
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Thank you Diane. Your blog gives me hope.
As a student, I often had to read books I was assigned. Most of them I disliked but one high school English teacher require my class to read Viktor Frankl’s, “Man’s Search For Meaning”. This book moved me greatly. The author, a survivor of four concentration camps, describes his experiences in honest detail.
Whenever I have experienced the effects of oppressive authority, I find a connection to the contents of this book.
Here’s is a compelling excerpt:
“One evening, when we were already resting on the floor of our hut, dead tired, soup bowls in hand, a fellow prisoner rushed in and asked us to run out to the assembly grounds and see the wonderful sunset. Standing outside we saw sinister clouds glowing in the west and the whole sky alive with clouds of ever-changing shapes and colors, from steel blue to blood red. The desolate grey mud huts provided a sharp contrast, while the puddles on the muddy ground reflected the glowing sky. Then, after minutes of moving silence, one prisoner said to another, “How beautiful the world could be…”
Thank you to you and those who comment on this blog for giving us reform weary teachers a glimpse of “how beautiful teaching could be …”
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My biggest complaint about administrators when I taught was that they were functionaries and rarely, if ever, advocated anything. Young teachers who look to their leaders, their administrators won’t find out what is crucial to their career. They’ll find it if they start digging in a library or online but they are busy people. Blogs from teachers and teacher advocates are revealing what is so often hidden. To all these contributors to the common good, thank you! And I sincerely hope teachers are reading these blogs!
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Well said! We really need to start a movement! Please keep me informed, I would like to be on the front line…
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I am saddened deeply by the attacks in ‘the name of better education & choice’. It has nothing to do with either. It is a money grab to siphon no less than 20% of public school funding off to for profit corporations, bust unions and create a fearful middle class (quickly becoming the upper poor). I am sad that my children will only be judged now based on 9-11 test scores. Be VERY afraid if the blowback is not soon, swift and severe by parents, taxpayers and teaching professionals.
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Thanks for this great post.
I feel like I’m right behind you: I am a freelance writer who spent years trying to cover DC school reform for a set of hyper-local monthly periodicals. Some people told me Rhee was our savior (and the only one we were likely to get); others told me that I was witnessing deliberate attacks on public schools. But I’d been taught (family and religious teachings) to give the benefit of the doubt. Plus I was supposed to aim for objectivity, right?
Finally realizing the extent of #ALEC and its coordinated attacks on democracy and education, I now regret my earlier withholding of judgment. I have launched a blog, ALECinDC.wordpress.com with information about what is — and HAS LONG BEEN, I confess — happening in the nation’s capital in this regard. I am coming out of the “journalist” closet on this to call the DCPS reform emperors naked.
And THANKS to Diane R. for this blog, which has been an invaluable resource.
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Good for you! Look at DC test scores on NAEP. Rhee has nothing to brag about but it doesn’t stop her.
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In June , 1992, I wrote the following letter to the editor. Based on today’s posting, I think this letter is as relevant today as it was in 1992.
“Try to picture this. A large national corporation, until recently grazing contentedly on federal military contracts, finds its annual earnings reflecting a shocking drop. It is decided that new access to federal dollars must be found, or the corporation may go out of business. Someone suggests a product which could tap into ever increasing federal education dollars. Another suggestion leads to looking into the possibility of crafting that product so that state and local education dollars can also be tapped.”
“The marketing department points out that the product will not sell, unless the buyers, the American public, can be convinced that the current product is substandard. Marketing is assigned the task of creating the need for these new products by convincing the American public that its public education institutions are utter failures. Once that had been accomplished, a program will be undertaken to separate public education dollars from public education institution. Those dollars would become the mainstay of corporation earnings. The product is private education.”
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Ken, this is absolutely prescient! This is exactly what has happened. A triumph of PR, persuading the public that our public education system is “broken,” as Bill Gates says.
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Diane: Thanks. You and Walt Gardner (Reality Check) seem to agree. Coming from the two of you, that means a lot to me. Unfortunately, it had little or no impact here in Washington state.
I’m a member of Mainstream Republicans of Washington board, a charter member of NEA Republican Leaders Conference, and VP of WEA-Retired. I’ve been working those venues for 25 years, acting as liaison between MRW and WEA, with reasonable success up until the last year and a half.
But, I still keep writing and posting and working.
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How could we not know what was happening? Perfect. It happened to me too, and many others. So now they say, “Your 3rd grader is not at proficiency, we’d better start curric to testing for 2nd graders, to 1st graders, to Kindergarten.” And the whole lot falls on the floor. You’re correct in observing that good teaching, learning works best when it is matched to the developmental levels of the students.
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It’s not just teachers who feel this way. I just left teaching to become an administrator and feel even more powerless and helpless than I did before….and I didn’t notice how hot the water was getting either.
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I have only been teaching for 6 years, but I have seen it happening from the first year and getting worse with each successive year. I have been that voice shouting against the dominant voice, writing a blog, publishing op-eds in the paper, lobbying state legislators, speaking on the radio and in town halls, doing whatever I can to get through to anyone who might actually still care. I have been the union steward in my school the past two years, recruiting new members and trying to get existing members active.
I just resigned from my teaching position last week, after accepting a job in communications for SEIU. I will miss the kids, and many of my colleagues; but I will not miss the hoops we jump through, or the hamster wheel we run on as another commenter put it. I will not miss the new evaluation system, the pins and needles it puts all of us on and the grief it brings me as union steward. I will not miss the endless regime of testing, testing, testing. I will not miss that flat-but-slowly-bending-downward line of a career that education promises…no hope for moving up (unless you want to be in administration), just staying the same–if you’re lucky–or making less for doing more. I will not miss the disrespect shown us by politicians on the right and, unfortunately, too often on the left as well; by the media; by some administrators, by some parents, by some students, by commenters on stories on education online, where some people feel free to call teachers all sorts of choice names, as if they never learned anything from a teacher themselves. At the end, I really think it is the disrespect I am most relieved to leave behind. Working for a labor union, I know very well I am not done getting disrespect from the pubic–but at least there will now be a political edge to my work where I could reasonably expect to see my work criticized. As a teacher, I should never have been criticized for going in and working my hardest to educate my students every day, and also for speaking out for what I saw to be in their best interest. That was my job and it was an important one. If we see signs of child abuse, we are required by law to report it. To ignore it is actually a crime, both morally and legally. Yet if we see our students’ future being robbed from them by big vested corporate interests, we are expected to say nothing, to go along to get along…and if we do speak up, we have to expect abuse. It’s insane.
So, another one bites the dust. Would I have kept teaching forever? I don’t know; I often think probably not. But did these changes drive me out faster than if they had not been happening? Absolutely. And, perhaps more relevantly, they “radicalized” me. I am leaving education not to go work in the private sector to participate in the capitalist system and make more money, but to work in labor, because I believe in it and because the system has convinced me it is perhaps the single most important area I could be working in.
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After five years, I too am leaving the profession. What put me over the edge were the ATRs that subbed at my school; all of them had decades of experience behind them, but had the misfortune of being on staff at a failing school. Now, in their middle age, they were in the unfortunate position of having too many years in to quit but too young to retire. So, they got to go sub at a different school each week, regardless if was in their content area or not. As a 43 year old, I’m getting out while I can.
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I began teaching in the mid eighties for a short time, then stayed home for ten years to care for my daughter with medical needs. I returned to teaching in 2000. I’ve been back to college several times advancing my education and obtaining more degrees. I have worked at the district level for a couple of years and I am now an administrator at an elementary school. I too feel like the frog in the pot. In the early years there was so much excitement and so much to learn. I was so excited to be at the forefront of all of the new methodology and instructional practices in special education, early childhood Ed, family involvement, positive discipline, etc. I surrounded myself with smart people so I could learn from them.
I am suddenly keenly aware that the water is boiling! When did this happen? I look around and see new young teachers whose only experience is to teach to a state test and who worry about test scores to keep their jobs.The older teachers are slowly retiring and taking with them a wealth of knowledge. I often talk to those who stuck it out, about the “good ole days” when we actually taught our students by trusting our instincts and degrees to guide our teaching. The younger teachers can’t imagine what we are talking about. Many of them were fast tracked through an alternative teaching degree program. They work extremely hard and are committed to education, but the deck is stacked against them. By the way those older teachers still have the highest scores at our school, but they won’t stick around much longer. If I could I would probably be retiring with them.
I thank god everyday that my own two children have finished their education and won’t have to be exposed to this horrible experiment. I grieve for those children of poverty who will be most affected. A whole generation of children who we will have failed to educate in a way that expands creativity and innovation. Wealthy and middle class kids will be Ok because their parents can provide them with better resources. I must admit that I am quickly becoming more discouraged. Where are the media reports? Why isn’t the public informed? Why is it that no one seems to care ( outside of these blogs)? The lies and misinformation in the media are becoming almost too much to stand. Thanks to this and other blogs for keeping our fight alive and keeping the truth alive.
Of course I can’t abandon the sinking ship and leave my 600 students here (93% poverty level) to sink or swim on their own. I hope that our parents will also stick with us and not jump on the charter school band wagon. Thanks for renewing my resolve. I will do my best to return to school and try to support my teachers and students through this rough patch until the rest of our country wakes up and smells the cesspool! 🙂
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Reblogged this on Abelardo Garcia Jr's Blog and commented:
To my fellow teachers, take a good slow read of this reblogged article. The time to speak out is now!!
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My parents were children during the Depession of the 1930s. One thing they learned and passed on to their children — not in so many words but in how they lived — was the fact that you cannot trust a public need to private greed. Some things we learn through our own experience and some things we learn through others’ experience. I hope it won’t be the hard way this time.
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“was the fact that you cannot trust a public need to private greed.”
Great line. I hope you don’t mind if I use it, and that would be often!
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Just one more heart rending story. I gave up teaching kindergarten seven years ago, I could not stand what it had become. Had any of us foreseen this ten, fifteen even twenty years ago, could we have avoided so much tragedy in education? I look at young teachers and I want to shake them, scream at them, “Don’t you understand? Can’t you see what they are doing is wrong? Can’t you see what they are making you do is wrong?” An old man yelling in an empty auditorium.
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“Now I was expected to have my students reading and writing legibly by the end of the year.” Good Lord, that’s awful. Let them read when they’re ready to. By the time they’re 16, if they want to read, they’ll pick it up at their own pace. You wouldn’t want to stifle their creativity at the expense of useful communication skills.
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You’re kidding, right?
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Sarcastic, obviously. The caricature she tries to draw is wildly out of touch with reality, but I’ll chuckle. haha
Maybe she is an example of an armchair wag that has never heard of Piaget or who understands the notion of what is developmentally appropriate for various children – something real practicing educators know viscerally. But amateurs have been determiniing the agenda.
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Wow. Just wow. I have been teaching community college lab science part-time since 2009. I am dismayed at the level of competence students come to me with. I went through public K-12 in the 60’s and 70’s. Apparently many of today’s high school graduates know how to take multiple-choice tests (if there are only four choices and two of the answers are ridiculous), but they don’t seem to have reasoning or communication skills above what I would consider a 7th grade level.
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I’ve heard it suggested that the purpose of education in the United States has always been to supply corporate America with workers – nothing more.
Perhaps the education reformers are in fact doing what is best for our students: stupefying the masses so they can compete with 3rd world nations as laborers.
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When Congress passed a law requiring 100% pass rates for all students in all schools or be judged failing schools, how could we not know where it would lead? What should we logically assume about the representatives who passed such a law? Ignorance? Premeditation?
We have met the enemy…
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First, insincerity. No one thought that 2014 would ever arrive. Most thought “it’s good to have a goal.” And didn’t think about the consequences.
Second, ignorance. Some really believed that NCLB had the right levers to force improvement. We now know that was not right.
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