Nicholas Lemann has written a powerful review of Michelle Rhee’s memoir, in which she calls herself “radical.” She is indeed radical. She wants to tear down public education, a basic democratic institution. That is very radical.
As Lemann points out, Rhee has reduced all the problems of American education to the very existence of unions. This can’t offer much hope to the many states where unions are weak or nonexistent. Who should those states blame since they don’t have unions to scapegoat?
Lemann notes that Rhee loves to portray herself as a victim, a woman of courage who stands up fearlessly to the rich and powerful. The reality, of course, is that Rhee is a tool of the rich and powerful.
An excerpt:
“Rhee is a major self-dramatizer. As naturally appealing to her as is the idea that more order, structure, discipline, and competition is the answer to all problems, even more appealing is the picture of herself as a righteously angry and fearless crusader who has the guts to stand up to entrenched power. She is always the little guy, and whoever she is fighting is always rich, powerful, and elite—and if, as her life progresses, her posse becomes Oprah Winfrey, Theodore Forstmann, and the Gates Foundation lined up against beleaguered school superintendents and presidents of union chapters, the irony of that situation has no tonal effect on her narrative. Again and again she gives us scenes of herself being warned that she cannot do what is plainly the right thing, because it is too risky, too difficult, too threatening to the unions, too likely to bring on horrific and unfair personal attacks—but the way she’s made, there’s nothing she can do but ignore the warnings and plow valiantly.”
Of course, she is ridiculous because she has collected tens of millions, maybe hundreds of millions, from America’s richest people. Just days ago, she got $8 million from the far-right Walton Family Foundation.
The other point Leman makes is that Rhee has no evidence for her claims. She starts with her conclusions, then looks for “evidence.”
An excerpt:
“Rhee simply isn’t interested in reasoning forward from evidence to conclusions: conclusions are where she starts, which means that her book cannot be trusted as an analysis of what is wrong with public schools, when and why it went wrong, and what might improve the situation. The only topics worth discussing for Rhee are abolishing teacher tenure, establishing charter schools, and imposing pay-for-performance regimes based on student test scores. We are asked to understand these measures as the only possible means of addressing a crisis of decline that is existentially threatening the United States as a nation and denying civil rights to poor black people.”

The title says it all: How Michelle Rhee MISLED…
Glad to see the New Republic jump on the anti-Rhee bandwagon. A few months ago they were championing her brand of school reform.
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One last thing about Rhee. Her one foray into a charter school, St. Hope with her 2d hubby, Kevin “Sweet 16” Johnson was an unmitigated disaster. Yet she lives on as an educational savior. Until now. First,the Atlantic Monthly and now The New Republic – liberal and neo-liberal rags coming to their senses.
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Michelle Rhee is one of the most self-centered, arrogant, and twisted human beings to ever to use poor kids, school teachers and public schools for personal gain!
http://atthechalkface.com/2013/05/20/michelle-rhee-in-the-poor-house/
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I totally agree with you, Timothy Sleker!
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DITTO!
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At the suggestion of my academic mentor, I saw _Waiting for Superman_ last night. I noticed what Lemann writes: That these folks (including Rhee) offer the conclusion first as The Solution then work bacwards in an effort to justify their claims. And these are folks who have accepted Big Money to promote privatization and bash community public schools.
Utter nonsense.
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Michelle Rhee is a fraud.
Her conclusions have no genesis. She is about as intellectual as Yosemite Sam.
She’d make a great realtor, talk show host, serial killer, or maybe she should be demonstrating a frappe in a Magic Bullet on some late night infommercial.
Educator she will never be.
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Michelle Rhee has been sneaky with her massaging and the name of her organization: Students First. She should rename it Profits First. The biggest problem with Rhee and her benefactors is that they have adopted a capitalistic approach to public education that wants to turn the education of our children into privatized profit centers that are made up of standardized processes that will make shareholders money on quarterly basis. I find it obscene that multinational companies are making money off of my child’s education. What Rhee and the other ‘reformers’ are unwilling to do is invest in the future of our country by revering educators and rewarding their profession with better salaries, and investing in new innovative educational programs that support science, engineering, the arts and humanities that are in line with the 21st century. Sir Ken Robinson is right, we are teaching our children using a 19th century Industrial Revolution assembly line approach that just doesn’t work in a hyper connected world, where children are far more exposed to information and ideas.
Rhee demoralizes and beats up our teachers up, while boring our children to death. The only thing standardization achieves is teaching our children to hate learning.
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The Rheeject is simply a North Korean spy sent here to destroy American public education so that one day NK can take its rightful place as the top dog nation of the world!
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