The most contentious issue in the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (currently named No Child Left Behind) will be the federal role in mandating annual testing. The latest polls show that it is opposed by a majority of parents and educators, but Secretary Duncan has staunchly insisted it is necessary; 19 civil rights groups endorsed his position, even though the children they represent all too often are negativrly afrcted by such tests. Since minority children, English learners, and children with disabilities are disproportionately stigmatized by standardized tests, it is bizarre to assert that standardized tests are guarantors of civil rights.
So here comes an interesting debate in the conservative National Review. Michael Petrilli of the conservative Thomas B. Fordham Institute and Rick Hess of the conservative American Enterprise Institute take issue with Jonah Edelman of the corporate reform Stand for Children.
Stand for Children is an active and politically savvy opponent of teachers and teachers’ unions. A few years ago, Jonah Edelman boasted at an Aspen Ideas Festival about his role in buying up all the best lobbyists in Illinois so he could ram hostile legislation down the throats of teachers across the state and make it near impossible for the Chicago Teachers Union to go on strike. He was wrong about the latter, because the CTU garnered overwhelming support for a strike and followed through in 2012. Edelman pulled a similar stunt in Massachusetts, having collected millions of dollars from hedge fund manager to make war on teachers and their benefits and job security.
In the present case, Petrilli and Finn chastise Edelman for supporting an expansive federal role in education.
They write:
“In the piece, Edelman denounces efforts to shed some of No Child Left Behind’s more onerous and unworkable provisions as a “threat” to “your kids’ future.” He then recounts a parade of horribles from the last century. “Linda Brown was denied the opportunity to attend a nearby public school because she was black,” he reminds us. “Black students were denied access to a public high school by segregationist Governor Orval Faubus.” And states and districts weren’t meeting the “special needs” of students with disabilities.
“This is a shopworn parlor trick — equating conservatives concerned about federal micromanagement of schooling in 2015 with the “states’ rights” segregationists of two or three generations past (who, for what it’s worth, were overwhelmingly Democratic)….
“But this sort of rhetorical sleight-of-hand has not held up particularly well. Debating whether the federal government should tell states how to label, manage, and “improve” schools (all on the basis of reading and math scores) is a far cry from debates over whether states should be allowed to deny black students access to elementary and secondary schools. Moreover, those who, like Edelman, celebrate Uncle Sam’s expertise and the effectiveness of federal bureaucrats fail to acknowledge how often federal bureaucrats have gotten it wrong — and put in place laws and regulations that have gotten in the way of smart, promising reforms at the state and local level.
“What are the issues that have Edelman so worked up? Republicans on Capitol Hill make no secret that they envision a reauthorization of No Child Left Behind that will significantly reduce the strings attached to federal education dollars. Among the possible actions: Allowing states to test students every few years rather than annually; getting the federal government out of the business of telling states how to design school-accountability systems or address low-performing schools; and making clear that (contrary to the Obama administration’s designs) the federal government should have no role in dictating state reading and math standards.
“Casual followers of the education debate might notice that these changes seem both modest and sensible. Yet Edelman insists that if Congress dares to go down this path, “disadvantaged students will lose out, and millions of young people who could have become hard-working taxpayers will end up jobless, in prison, or worse.” (Worse?)….
“The deeper problem is that Edelman and his allies fail to grapple with the very real harm that federal education policy has caused, especially in the past decade. This is baffling, given his own admission that No Child Left Behind is “deeply flawed” and that “federal interventions don’t always work as intended.” But his solution — to simply update the law more regularly — indicates a misunderstanding of the realities of the legislative process (Congress updates laws when it will, not on the schedule of us pundits) and of the root problem. The real issue is not just that specific provisions of NCLB are problematic (though they are); it’s that the federal government is destined to mess up whatever it touches in education. That’s because it’s three steps removed from actual schools, with states and local districts sitting between its good intentions and its ability to ensure good results.
“All the federal government can do is pass laws telling federal bureaucrats to write rules for the states, whose bureaucrats then write more rules for school districts, which in turn give marching orders to principals. By the time this game of telephone is done, educators are stuck in a stifling, rule-driven culture that undermines the kind of practical discretion that characterizes good schools.
“During the Obama years, this problem has only grown worse. Convinced of their own righteousness and brilliance, Obama’s education officials have pushed all manner of half-baked ideas on the country (especially the demand that states evaluate teachers largely on the basis of test scores); helped turn potentially promising ideas into political hot potatoes (see Common Core); and embarked on ideological, deeply harmful crusades (using legal threats, for example, to discourage schools from disciplining minority students)….”
What Secretary Duncan has achieved in his six years in office is to persuade many liberals and conservatives that the U.S. Department of Education has abandoned any sense of federalism and has assumed far too much control. While liberals are uneasy about trusting either state or local government with the future of education, they are just as wary (or warier) of the heavy-handed power of the federal government. Duncan himself has become a symbol for many of the federal government’s abandonment of public schools and its commitment to privatize public schools “with all deliberate speed.” Duncan’s demand for annual testing and his determination to evaluate teachers based on students’ test scores–practices not found in high-performing nations–has put him on the wrong side of history. He simply ignores the failure of his pet policies, as well as the protests of parents and educators. His self-righteousness is no substitute for evidence and democratic governance.
“Of Trumps and Chumps”
With race card played
The trump’s been laid
But sometimesTrumps
Are simply chumps
The umbrella organization for Civil and Human Rights that mustered 19 signers for a test-em-til-they-drop agenda have been given more attention than they deserve. Why.? There are 200 members of that organization. So the support was not all that strong. Moreover. Some of the groups who were on board for a 2011 reauthorization have vanished for this round.
DFER and Gates purchased the Civil Rights astroturf. The Southern Poverty Law Center that has been a wonderful organization, took a bundle from Bill to develop Teaching Tolerance curricula for the Common Core, so they return the favor.
If you look at DFER in every state you see paid “talented tenth” in control of Wall Street bucks. DFER is Wall Street bucks, that appear in the states as an African American advocacy group.They use Civil Rights as their wedge issue to divide and conquer the African American community and the left. Many upper class blacks who support charters in Chicago are aligned with DFER Civil Rights propaganda, the Commercial Club of Chicago, and its propaganda arm, The Joyce Foundation.
DEFR will funnel campaign funds to African American candidates who align with the neoliberal education agenda.
We must reach John Lewis on this issue to mobilize the Progressive caucus against this canard.
African American need to evaluate what neoliberal idealogy is doing to their community. There are several questions they should be asking. Do African American own the corporations that are benefiting from privatizing schools? Do they not understand that privatizing is resulting in more segregation while it undermines democratic values. Are minority students better off in impoverished schools after charters have siphoned off a lion’s share of funding? Are minority women that were formerly public teachers better off now that white teachers have replaced them in privatized schools? Is high stakes testing going to help black students succeed? They must read the research on testing to understand the consequences of these actions. Why is so much money being funneled into testing, when the program needs so great? Are the children in New Orleans, Chicago, Philadelphia and Ohio better off in privatized education? Why are parents dismissed from having a voice in their child’s education in Newark and York City? These actions undermine democracy.
The results are in, and black leaders must change their course of action, and they need to examine them with unflinching honesty. Minority children are being used to line the pockets of mostly white businessmen. Public schools offering a comprehensive education are being destroyed for test prep factories. Democratic principles are being discarded so that a few can make a profit at the expense of many. Wake up!
http://truth-out.org/opinion/item/12126-can-democratic-education-survive-in-a-neoliberal-society
Sorry: African Americans
I believe that civil rights groups want annual testing to monitor states- that makes sense to me. I think people can disagree with it as a process or argue there are better ways but states often DO go off the rails and we know that.
What I don’t like is how the Obama Administration and congressional Democrats are pretending that’s the only reason politicians want annual testing. Come on. They just spent hundreds of millions of dollars on Common Core tests and they are absolutely in love with sorting and measuring teachers. They can’t back off the Common Core testing now and they can’t do the teacher rankings without the tests.
The whole Obama ed agenda is based on testing – testing and charter schools. That’s it. 1. data collection, 2. charter schools. To say “we only care about data collection because states may walk back equity without a national check on that” is just blatantly false.
Congressional Republicans don’t have any reason to compromise with Democratic ed reformers. They got everything they wanted from Democrats. They got unlimited growth in charter schools and “choice”. Democrats signed on to their entire “choice” agenda. Now they’ll go back to being Republicans. They don’t need Democratic ed reformers anymore.
Chiara: thank you for your comments.
If I catch your drift, we shouldn’t let partisan political hacks frame the conversation. As the recent “admissions” by Sandy Kress make clear [along with much else], it’s just a game to them. And they play fast and loose with the rules.
Hold everyone’s feet to the fire. Remind them of their own words and deeds. Don’t let them get away with outrageous lies, omissions and half-truths that don’t square with their actions.
For example, note this from the posting:
“During the Obama years, this problem has only grown worse. Convinced of their own righteousness and brilliance, Obama’s education officials have pushed all manner of half-baked ideas on the country (especially the demand that states evaluate teachers largely on the basis of test scores); helped turn potentially promising ideas into political hot potatoes (see Common Core); and embarked on ideological, deeply harmful crusades (using legal threats, for example, to discourage schools from disciplining minority students)….”
Okey dokey. From the blog of deutsch29 [the redoubtable Dr. Mercedes Schneider] of 12/28/2013, a posting entitled “The American Enterprise Institute, Common Core, and ‘Good Cop’” that quotes from a December 2013 blog posting of Dr. Frederick Hess:
[start quote]
In truth, the idea that the Common Core might be a “game-changer” has little to do with the Common Core standards themselves, and everything to do with stuff attached to them, especially the adoption of common tests that make it possible to readily compare schools, programs, districts, and states (of course, the announcement that one state after another is opting out of the two testing consortia is hollowing out this promise).
But the Common Core will only make a dramatic difference if those test results are used to evaluate schools or hire, pay, or fire teachers; or if the effort serves to alter teacher preparation, revamp instructional materials, or compel teachers to change what students read and do. And, of course, advocates have made clear that this is exactly what they have in mind. When they refer to the “Common Core,” they don’t just mean the words on paper–what they really have in mind is this whole complex of changes.
[end quote]
For much needed context and links go to—
Link: https://deutsch29.wordpress.com/2013/12/28/the-american-enterprise-institute-common-core-and-good-cop/
If one takes Petrilli and Hess at face value without considering what they’ve said and done before, you are making the same mistake as you would if you blindly accepted what Arne Duncan’s speechwriters have him say—
Word salad and cognitive dissonance do not a coherent and convincing argument make.
And always remember that they are shameless. Chris Guerrieri mentions one instance below. They will stop at nothing to achieve $tudent $ucce$$.
Thank you for your comments.
😎
For the first time since it started, I believe the Common Core might peter out. The thing is huge. It requires more than a marketing plan and then briskly moving on to the next ed reform agenda item. The dispatches from the state dept of ed in Ohio sound less and less enthused.
I’m not a conservative so I wouldn’t have any process problem with national standards but I think one would really have to work hard at it for a long time, and I don’t see that happening at the ground level without a lot of support for public schools. There’s NO political support for public schools. They’re barely mentioned. Politicians gave them a REALLY tough job and then wandered off again, chasing something or other.
They would have had to truly commit to standards, focus on it, NOT do something else on their endless list to do it well, say “no” to someone in their ranks who demands the latest “reform”, but they didn’t.
A pro choice advocate in Florida, Reverend H.K. Mathews just compared the people who are against vouchers to the white power structure in Selma and Alabama in the sixties. They do so because it is impossible for them to have an honest debate.
http://www.jaxkidsmatter.blogspot.com/2015/01/comparing-opponets-of-school-choice-to.html
Psychiatrists would call that projection. It’s also a very old political tactic.
Are they going to actually fund Common Core and the testing that comes along with it, or are they bored with that now?
Because tens of millions of public school children are spending February getting ready for their super-de-duper new test. I hope public schools don’t get stuck with another giant ed reform unfunded mandate.
I wonder if given a choice between keeping the Common Core or test-based evaluations of teachers which one Reformists would choose. My gut feeling is that they care more about the test-based evaluations, but they would probably need to check with Mr. Gates first.
In Gates thinking, the end goal (that he has made quite clear) is to “create new (software) markets” which will only happen when the tests align with the curricula which align with the standards
The standards are the most important thing because they allow for a common standardized test which drives development of a common curriculum, which allows businesses to devote their efforts to single versions of software which can be “plugged into” and profit directly from the public schools.
My guess is that Gates might be willing to give up VAM, but certainly not Common Core.
Then again, VAM is how Gates and others keep teachers in line and on board with Common Core, so it’s not clear they would be willing to give that up either.
Most respectfully, I think that if push comes to shove—as is happening now—some form of CCSS can be rebranded and offered as a “new and improved” eduproduct by the “education reform” establishment.
What can’t be junked is “measure and punish” [thank you to Audrey Amrein-Beardsley for this felicitous phrase]. Scrapping that means doing away with high-stakes standardized tests, and then the single most insidious and effective weapon of self-proclaimed “education reform” is rendered null and void. *I remind folks here of the truly devastating power of mathematical intimidation and obfuscation to confuse, mislead and silence the vast majority of us.*
Notice that over and over again the “measure and punish” approach is, when necessary, reworded and reused by the self-serving rheephormistas. For example, it’s an equity issue because using test scores makes schools and teachers focus on, not neglect, the neediest students. Or it’s a civil rights/human rights issue because using “objective” tests levels the playing field for individuals and groups that have historically been discriminated against. Or it lets us know which teachers are “highly effective” and which teacher are “grossly ineffective.” Or it’s the most useful way to avoid the highly subjective opinions of the [supposedly many] teachers that have the “soft bigotry of low expectations” that their students aren’t worthy of their best efforts.
I don’t think the rheephorm leaders of the education status quo will gladly give up either, but the “measure and punish” part [of course, for OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN] is, I think, what most warms the cockles of their hearts—if, indeed, they have any…
Just my dos centavitos worth…
😎
It’s complicated and I don’t know what they’d give up either (nothing! they give up nothing! they just pile more on!) but I think one has to remember the national LITIGATION strategy relies on teacher ranking so maybe they would throw the CC under the bus if it meant they’d keep that.
They’re just getting rolling with the lawsuits. Can’t have a lawsuit without an expert and a lot of numbers!
If they throw Common Core under the bus, I’m pretty sure it will only be on the luggage rack below, so they can paint it and tag it with with some other name and drag it out later on (as Krazy TA pointsout).
When you are a company developing software, the very best thing that can happen is to have a single high volume customer that wants only one version of software that is set in stone (what Common Core is).
The very worst thing that can happen is to develop software for one standard (what has been going on for some time now) and then have that standard yanked out and replaced with something else, even if that something else is another monolithic standard.
For this reason, I can’t see folks like Gates giving up on Common Core (ever) because once the standard is gone, the software developed by companies like Microsoft and Pearson (for both curriculum and testing) is basically worthless. In effect, they have to start all over.
With billions of dollars riding on that (both past and future), I seriously doubt it is going to happen.
But I’d like to be proved wrong
Should have said “one version of software written for a standard that is set in stone (what Common Core is).
Lots of great points.
I’ve always thought that Gates was legitimately well intentioned. In it for his legacy rather than for the money.
That being noted, he has really monopolized (do I sound like Governor Cuomo?) the educational policy debate in way that may be similar to how he dominated the software industry. He bought off the lobbyists, the policymakers, the interest groups (even our own unions!), and the media. At first (when it was most important), it was very subtle. Now (when we can’t do anything about it?), it’s obvious.
Algebra Teacher
I think Gates’ motivations are nuanced.
One need not assume that he is “in it for the money” to claim that his approach is essentially the one that will generate the most money for businesses like Microsoft and Pearson.
There are actually several things going on.
1) Gates has a lot of money and much of that will eventually be “lost’ to taxes (including estate taxes) so it makes perfect sense to spend it now on so-called “charitable’ organizations. People assume that Gates is being very magnanimous in “giving”away billions, but that assumption is actually flawed because it actually makes good business sense. Gates has nothing to “lose” by doing so.
2) Gates’ world view (markets know best) impacts his approach to everything, including his philanthropy work.
He may actually genuinely believe that what is best for businesses will also be best for schools. but whether he believes that or not, the fact is that companies like Microsoft stand to make a killing on establishment of a single national educational standard like Common Core. Even if Gates is “well-intentioned”, it does not change that fact.
Whether Gates is “well intentioned” or not is actually irrelevant. One need not speculate to understand his primary goal because he has laid it out quite clearly in speeches he has made (eg, before state legislators).
In Gates’ own words:
‘When the tests are aligned to the common standards, the curriculum will line up as well—and that will unleash powerful market forces in the service of better teaching. For the first time, there will be a large base of customers eager to buy products that can help every kid learn and every teacher get better. ” — Bill Gates in 2009 speech to state legislators
Can’t disagree with anything you wrote, Poet (and love your poems, btw). My one quibble is that if he’s legitimately well-intentioned, he might eventually listen to reason (signs suggest that he’s so emotionally invested in his initial thoughts that, so far, he has not). As things stand, he’s an even greater threat to improved education policy than someone like Duncan, because he so dominates the process…and he won’t be disappearing in 2017.
I also hate the phrase “the race card” so they get huge demerits for that. Did they play it from “the bottom of the deck”?
Ugh. Create some new slogans.
Chiara: I do not lightly use the phrase “sneer, jeer and smear” to describe one of the fundamental features of the self-proclaimed “education reform” movement.
It’s their stock in trade. That’s why when they use it against their critics that are for a “better education for all” I find it morally repulsive.
But consider this: if they had to argue the soundness of the “education reform” agenda on its own merits—and do that honestly and openly—where would they be?
For example, how to sell their fundamental proposition that all their “solutions” are only to be applied to OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN aka the vast majority? And that the sound pedagogical and other practices that they ensure for THEIR OWN CHILDREN are not to be replaced/displaced by those that they are using, sometimes openly as an experiment, on OTHER PEOPLE’S CHILDREN? And that they are engaged [please read Michael J Petrilli] in a thinly-disguised form of educational triage in which the [supposed] ‘non-strivers’ and ‘uneducables’ are to be thrown away and abandoned? And that vouchers and charters have strong roots in the segregation academies?
Of course, these things only come up occasionally, and buried ASAP. But that’s the purpose of this blog. And others like it. And the activism around public education.
To stand with a genuine American hero and tell it like it:
“Where justice is denied, where poverty is enforced, where ignorance prevails, and where any one class is made to feel that society is an organized conspiracy to oppress, rob and degrade them, neither persons nor property will be safe.”
Frederick Douglass. Right then. Right now.
Right on!
😎
This is pure baloney, too, from Democrats:
“and new efforts to reduce testing where it has become excessive”
States are already reducing testing, and the one and only reason they’re reducing testing is parents and teachers insisted they do so.
The Ed Reform Movement did nothing.
It’s a fake concession. Parents, teachers and students were getting less testing with or without DC Democrats. We already won that round without their help. Duncan now offering it as a “benefit” if we accept the rest of the agenda is pure pandering.
Absolutely right, Chiara. Fake concessions. I hesitate to say we’ve won any round before it actually leads to something.
Playing the race card. If anyone should be playing it…it should be those impacted by their policies. I mean- cripes. You have a bunch of people, not reflective of the student and parent population telling them that we’re fighting for your civil rights and your child’s educational future by parachuting some 22 year-old suburban kid from a ‘selective’ college with 5 weeks of part-time, pretend, summer school team-teaching into your neighborhood school. For good measure we’re not accepting any excuses – from anybody about anything. Talk about an attitude and mind-set; that if not patently racist, surely borders on. As a person of European descent, I cringe and am embarrassed by them every time they open their mouth. As for Mike, focus your attention on the MCPS school you bailed from.
It’s a lot worse than cringe-worthy.
Relative to Black employment and pay, what do the payroll records show for reformists’ hedge funds and for the test and tech companies? A check of the reformists’ “walk” instead of their “talk”, might lessen “civil rights organization” support (unless, of course, it was paid for).
Out of curiosity, are villainthropy employees, full-time with benefits or, are they contractual workers, part-timers, etc. Has their “work” been outsourced to China or India?
There’s no small irony in this for me. What are essentially right wing market driven ideas/ideologies about education were put in place by a bunch of bipartisan sock puppets which has caused an inadvertent shift in policy on he right, perhaps because an African American democrat is president while the corporate 5th columning of education is attempting to peak. The response from the right has been to decry the special interests and the DOE’s involvement, pretending they are two or more separate things such that their anti government message and actions actually end up opposing them all in the name of local control. So some of the extremists on the right accidentally find themselves squarely inside an old school conservative position on education while being blind to and utterly clueless about the same cronyist dynamics in other policy areas. HEADDESK….
“Obama’s education officials have … embarked on ideological, deeply harmful crusades (using legal threats, for example, to discourage schools from disciplining minority students).”
Is the author writing about solitary rooms where misbehaving students are placed? Or excessive fines/suspensions for minor infractions?
Here is a heart-breaking article about “discipling minority students”. http://www.nytimes.com/2014/12/11/us/school-discipline-to-girls-differs-between-and-within-races.html
That whole line of reasoning is very troubling.