The commenter who calls himself or herself “Democracy” says the following about the Reauthorization of the federal Elementary and Secondary Education Act (currently known as NCLB):
“Bill Mathis correctly points out that education legislation pending in the Congress “would still ‘disaggregate’ test results by ethnic affiliation and income levels so as ‘to shine a light’ on the disparities and inequalities of educational opportunities and outcomes.” He adds this: “These inequalities have been well-documented for the last half-century.” And yet, they persist.
The problem is that proposed legislation does nothing to address the inequities. To provide substance would “require politicians and inside the beltway actors to actually press for funding equal to the mandates. It would require significant investments in job, community and comprehensive educational support systems.”
Over at the Center for Education Reform, resident crackpot Jeanne Allen dispenses some horrifically bad information and advice on education “reform.” Allen claims (incorrectly) that “65 percent of America’s K-12 student population that is failing and falling through the cracks” (she must not read anything about NAEP scores or disaggregated PISA scores).
Allen says that “the federal role should be one of assessment and data gathering,” and “there must be firm consequences for federal spending at state and local levels” because “local control is a hallow theme when it is school board groups and teachers unions doing the controlling.” Yet, when it comes to charter schools, Allen wants no accountability whatsoever.
Allen demands merit pay for regular public school teachers based on student test scores, even though there is no solid research to support it. As Mathis notes, “test-based evaluation systems have such a high error rate that their use in teacher evaluation is unstable.” This troubles Jeanne Allen not at all. But then, the Center for Education Reform gets its funding from conservative organizations like the Arnold, Bradley, Broad, Kern, Milken, and Walton Foundations, and from the Gates Foundation.
To cite but two examples, the Arnold Foundation is a right-wing organization founded by a hedge-funder who resists accountability and transparency in derivatives markets but calls for them in education. Its executive director, Denis Cabrese was former chief of staff to DIck Armey, the Texas conservative who now heads up FreedomWorks, the group that helps to pull the Tea Party strings and gets funding from the billionaire arch-conservative Koch brothers.
And the Walton Foundation focuses on “competition”, “charter school choice,” “private school choice,” and teacher effectiveness. It funds groups like Teach for America, the National Association of Charter School Authorizers (whose board of directors includes Rick Hess and whose advisory board includes a KIPP founder, a Walton board member, and education blatherer Andrew Rotherham) and the Charter School Growth Fund (interestingly, Kevin Hall sits on the board of both this group AND the Charter School Authorizers and was previously the “Chief Operating Officer of The Broad Foundation” and “worked at…Goldman, Sachs & Co., and Teach For America.”).
The corporate-style “reformers” – and their Republican and Democratic allies – care not for addressing the real inequities in American public schooling.
And that truly is a shame.”

Just a nitpic: Dick Armey got fired from FreedomWorks in a power play – and got an $8m payout to go away. Nice work if you can get it.
LikeLike
Diane and readers:
Relevant to this post is a great synopsis of the edu reform movement written by Peter Dreier over at Truth-Out. In it he references a new film that aims to counter the prevailing narrative. Sounds like something worthy of attention on this blog. Perhaps you are already aware of it?
http://www.truth-out.org/opinion/item/17455-go-public-finally-a-film-that-celebrates-public-schools
http://gopublicproject.org/
LikeLike
I am aware of Peter Dreier’s article and the new movie. Planning to post in a week, closer to showing in Pasadena.
LikeLike
Allen is also a member of Jeb Bush’s Foundation for Excellence in Education (FEE), a parallel to ALEC.
LikeLike
Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.
LikeLike
@ Kim Kaufman: you’re exactly right, nice catch. That comment should have read “…Denis Cabrese was former chief of staff to DIck Armey, the Texas conservative who used to head up FreedomWorks, the group that helps to pull the Tea Party strings and gets funding from the billionaire arch-conservative Koch brothers.”
Like you say, Armey got $8 million to just go away.
But he didn’t go away quietly. He called FreedomWorks “dysfunctional,” and its leaders “dishonest and dangerous to the organization.” Presumably he wasn’t including himself in those descriptors, though he seems to fit them well.
LikeLike
I wish some University level person would/will have the opportunity to take someone influential in the federal government out for a drink and tell them how terribly wrong the current thinking is. Maybe somebody’s cousin’s neighbor’s boyfriend or something will be at a wedding or some such nebulous gathering and will have a chance to say the right words, at the right time, in a thoughtful and thought-provoking way so as to instill change.
That is my prayer. Same on the state level and on down.
In casual conversation, perhaps real changes can be sparked.
All the more reason for conviviality!
Now. . . off for a drink–searching for politicians.
LikeLike
“Now. . . off for a drink–searching for politicians.”
Politicians are money searching more so than drink searching but if drink searching nets them money then drink searching it will be.
LikeLike
I should have used a comma. I was off for a drink, searching for politicians. Occasionally I do meet some.
LikeLike
Drinks or politicians? Preferably the first!!
LikeLike
Many of us HAVE, indeed, attempted many times to appeal to the reason and the humanity of politicians and their corporate sponsors in a variety of arenas, but money trumps all else in their world. They just laugh their way to the bank, as they think of us poor dullards.
You can get a clue as to why they think this of us when you look at how easy they have made it for entrepreneurs to become wealthy by following the formula they’ve laid out for establishing charter schools. That’s a very low-risk venture which is funded by tax dollars that often pay start-up and maintenance costs, as well as providing tax-free land and rent-free school buildings. Whether one establishes a non-profit or a for-profit enterprise, whether executives are educators or not, they have a very high probability of garnering six figure incomes that surpass those of public school superintendents who run hundreds of schools.
I can think of no other comparable business opportunity that has ever existed. This is probably why, though tempered with a modicum of disclaimers, Duncan basically goaded entrepreneurs at the National Alliance for Public Charter Schools conference this month, with a wink and a nod, when he said, “As the Harvard economist Roland Fryer has pointed out, even with today’s rapid rate of charter growth, ‘it will take more than a hundred years for high-performing charter schools to educate every student in the country.’ ” (i.e., Hint, hint: Crank up your privatization plans, entrepreneurs, and get this ball rolling a lot quicker!)
Most career educators are just too ethically minded to jump on that “reform” bandwagon and risk losing our nation’s system of public education to privatization purely for personal gain, so most education entrepreneurs are business people, not genuine educators. We live in very different worlds with differing values.
LikeLike
I live in both worlds and consider it my duty, aside from being a mother, wife and teacher, to find the right listening ear. I realize that very few teachers have that position, but I do. And I hope to use it to help public schools.
I don’t think those worlds used to be so divided.
LikeLike
Also, won’t it eventually form a bubble? Like real estate and .coms?
Flerp, where are you?
LikeLike
But not an edu-business world, just a business world.
(I married well). My husband supports public school. I know there are others who succeed in the business world who do. I am on a mission to find them.
LikeLike
Ok, quick bit of conversational research tells me a bubble would not happen.
Also, that charters do make sense from business perspective in short terms, but that they will wither on the vine.
??
LikeLike