In the first year of this blog, someone explained the methodology of corporate reformers by referring to the marketing strategy known as FUD. This is an acronym for fear, uncertainty, and doubt. When trying to put a competitor out of business–whether in politics or commerce–spread FUD. That way, the public will distrust their brand or candidate, and be open to your promises for your brand or candidate. According to Wikipedia, the term has been used since the 1920, but more recently was adopted by IBM, then by Microsoft. We have certainly seen FUD employed against public education since 1983, when we heard from the government report “A Nation at Risk” that our very identity as a nation and a people, as well as our economic competitiveness, was undermined by our mediocre public schools. In 2012, Joel Klein and Condoleeza Rice released a report on behalf of the Council of Foreign Relations declaring that our terrible public schools were a threat to our national security. What was our salvation: Common Core, charters, and vouchers.
Peter Greene has analyzed the reformer game-plan and boiled it down to a 3-step strategy. Step 1: there is a terrible crisis; Step 2: therefore we must do Step 3) what I prescribe.
Here is one of his examples:
1) SOMETHING AWFUL IS GOING TO HAPPEN OH MY GOOD LORD IN HEAVEN LOOOK I EVEN HAVE CHARTS AND GRAPHS AND IT IS SOOOOOOOOO TERRIBLE THAT IT WILL MAKE AWFUL THINGS HAPPEN, REALLY TERRIBLE AWFUL THINGS LET ME TELL YOU JUST HOW AWFUL OH GOD HEAVENS WE MUST ALL BEWARE— BEEE WAAAARREEEEEEE!!!!!!!!!
2) therefore for some reason
3) You must let me do X to save us!
The trick here is to load up #1 with facts and figures and details and specifics. Make it as facty and credible as you possibly can (even if you need to gin up some fake facts to do it).
#3 is where you load in your PR for whatever initiative you’re pushing.
And #2 you just try to skate past as quickly as possible, because #2 is the part that most needs support and proof and fact-like content, but #2 is also the place where you probably don’t have any.
In a normal, non-baloney argument, #2 is the strongest point, because the rational, supportable connection between the problem and the solution is what matters most. But if you are selling baloney, that connection is precisely what you don’t have. So instead of actual substance in #2, you just do your best to drive up the urgency in #1.
Thus, we have a constant litany of complaints about test scores, graduation rates, dropout rates, etc., linked to solutions that have no evidence that they will have any impact whatever on test scores, graduation rates, dropout rates, etc. Where is the evidence for vouchers and charters? There is none? Where is the evidence to take away teacher tenure? There is none. Where is the evidence that merit pay improves student performance? There is none. Where is the evidence that evaluating teachers by test scores improves education? There is none.
Evidence doesn’t matter. So long as reformers play on the public’s doubts and fears for their children, they can keep pushing failed policies.

I put a link directly to Peter Greene”s post , with an introductory quote from your post:
http://www.opednews.com/Quicklink/CURMUDGUCATION-Reformster-in-Best_Web_OpEds-Argument_Fear_MARKETING_Peter-Greste-150215-921.html#comment533606
with this comment:
“If you want to understand what is happening RIGHT NOW, to destroy public education, get the feed from this site, told in Peter Greene’s style… easy to understand; behind the humor lies the disaster overtaking our economy as the liars who have co-opted the media and are convincing a confused electorate that they can fix, what THEY BROKE.”
Trust me… you will get it!
Submitted on Sunday, Feb 15, 2015 at 12:09:31 PM
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He got it. Put it on FB.
The frustrating part is when #1 gets echoed and parroted or rather that #3 becomes a number one, such as the case with school letter grades.
“We didn’t make growth!! We must rework everything about how we approach the school day to get scores up and grow the kids. Hurry. Quick. Don’t think. Just act. ”
Which brings me to a philosophical question. Is the growth bit the “saving grace” of VAM and letter grades? I am reading things in my state that sort of say well, yeah, the letter grade would be fine if it just gave more emphasis to growth. And same with VAM? So is this the case, or is this just trying to find something positive in a really dire set of circumstances? Has education integrity lost if a school letter grade and VAM are given any deference, or do we just have to have these as part of our reality now and so the growth piece is just the most visible port in the storm? I’d love to know what regulars here think. (Swacker, I already know Wilson fits here but I also like to hear other thoughts). 🙂
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Joanna,
Actually I hadn’t thought of Wilson as a response to your questions. But what he says still holds true in the sense of in starting with invalidities and one will end up with invalidities and that is what Peter is pointing out. Start with a false statement, gloss over connecting that falsehood with the proposed solution (which more likely than not will make you bunche$ of edudollar$) and voila you are an edugenious.
But you have an interesting insight in the edudeformers using “growth” as a determining term. Who can be against “growth”? I mean if one is not “growing” obviously they are dying. And also obviously “growth” can be “measured”, eh?!?!? Might as be against mom, apple pie and the American Way as to be against “growth”.
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I just saw Fareed Zakaria interview the Gates and really paid attention to their bit on education. Melinda answered this one and she REALLY FUD-DED it up. She talked about the broken education system, and gave a stat about how many are not ready for college (was it only 30%?) and then she spoke of charter schools, teacher evaluation, and because we know how important teacher effectiveness is, and how few effective teachers there are, the solution is technology, having access to these great teachers online. Just terrible.
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Good one. I heard Jennifer Jacqueta in an NYC interview talking about the way shame is used these days as a tool, and it reminded me of conversations right here, about how these tests which appear to be addressing effectiveness’ have another side –the one that shames teachers and students for failure, with words — ‘ineffective’ . Shaming the professional so they can ‘fix’ the schools shames the kids too, calling them failures. No wonder they don’t want to go to school if their performance is rated by tests that do not demonstrate what they CAN do, but how they failed.
I was in the real standards research, and the reason for tests was a positive one… to see by actual performance (writing for example) what the student had accomplished so far, so as to PLAN to meet individual needs in the coming lessons… all assessment were for the teachers… but as I say, over and over – where is the conversation about what a lesson looks like, how a professional chooses materials and why that is crucial? A teacher is NOT a trained mechanic, or a trained medic, but an educated pedagogue who knows how the human brain works!
and I have another question, in the context of what you said about FUD, since the real standards research was all about the POSITIVE ASPECTS THAT ENABLE LEARNING until they turned the conversation to the negative aspects of ineffective teachers.
* WHAT THE HECK HAPPENED TO the REAL, authentic and GENUINE, NATIONAL STANDARDS Research OUT OF HARVARD, FUNDED BY PEW : 3RD LEVEL RESEARCH ( it must work everywhere in a big study)????????
“Where did the real standards research GO???????
Have Gates, Broad, Koch and friends and the $$$$ make FUD the talking point by completely demolishing this GENUINE RESEARCH which offered the POSTIIVE rubric for evaluating performance. After all…. THAT is what they did… they went into 12 districts across the nation, into low and high performing schools, and evaluated the teachers against a rubric FOR LEARNING…and VOILA…in all classrooms where those ‘standards (i.e principles) were in operation kids performance soared.
How could this research just disappear? — The Clinton 2000 project– replaced with Bush’s NCLB standards– based on testing and rating schools…. mostly as failures? Inventing failure not supporting teachers.
WHERE IN THE WORLD ARE Pew, Harvard and the LRDC (The Univ. of Pittsburgh) which gave the workshops to the cohorts…of which I was THE one in NYC!
How come I can’t even FIND IT WHEN I GOOGLE IT ?
SURELY one of you academic educators who read this can find the research…. it was third level out and EXPENSIVE!
Why isn’t Diane and Randi, and Karen and the voices that are talking about what went wrong, asking this???
NO one listens to me… and in fact, at this blog, I have been told that when I bring this up, it turns people off… but no more than I am turned off by all the fudging conversations about the alphabet soup…VAM & PARCC.
I am just the grunt on the line, who was the COHORT (and BTW my evaluation led to a special exhibit at the end of the research, where the top six teachers among the cohorts– out of tens of thousands– showed how they met the principles in a unique way… NO FUD…NO TESTS.
Did I Imagine it?
After all, NYC one of the 12 districts Pew studied —received MILLIONS for the research as the workshops ran for 2 years as did all the districts. All that $$$$ and no one touting the results… the things that make LEARNING HAPPEN? Instead we get the magic elixir of testing, testing testing.. and an endless narrative all about ‘teaching!”
WHERE IS LAUREN RESNICK????? She wrote the thesis that powered the research… principles for learning —those things research shows are present in all successful practices i.e the classrooms of the bottom civil servants who educate our future citizens?
Now, when you answer those questions then you will realize that
1- There were actual standards, principles for enabling learning to occur.
2- They were replaced WITH A FAUX-POLICY by the PRESIDENT OF THE US — BUSH.
3- All these years later, we see what testing kids and schools –a bogus education policy (no evidence needed to put it into place,
BUT, to re-authorize a policy that failed is beyond understanding for parents and teachers.
I have a word that begins with an F that describes how I feel having seen the first assault on how it laid the groundwork for the fudging poop that is going on now!
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I wanted to post on a September article but the comments are closed; forgive me for writing it here. In Cleveland there are some very nasty comments on an article about students who are “losers” and the old mediocrity stuff about schools. It is timely because they are now coming up to the time when they must give the tests…. from what I gather only one school board member is listening to the parents (I could be wrong but perhaps it is more)…. It is hard for one teacher to take on godzilla… and that is the struggle I feel going on in many states. If you can go to the article and post anything at all????
quoting from the Cleveland newspaper (with all the nasty comments about schools and kids) “That county’s opt-out movement gained support from several teachers, including Elyria teacher Dawn Neely-Randall, whose criticisms of tests have landed in Washington Post blogs and also caught the ear of education activist Diane Ravitch.
Neely-Randall said she would not give the tests to her students if she was not worried about losing her job. But she is still wavering. ‘ do not want to send them into the lion’s den and be tested for six days of their life,” she said. “I don’t think I can go against my convictions.”
I know it was in September in Diane Ravitch’s list but the tests are coming up now so the article in the cleveland paper has current comments…. as in Massachusetts where Mitchell Chester is insisting the students stay on the testing schedule despite the 6 feet of snow that buried us….
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re: Cleveland newspaper http://www.cleveland.com/metro/index.ssf/2015/02/growing_number_of_parents_opt.html#incart_river
please believe me the teachers need all the support they can get and so do the parents
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That’s their (reformists, libertarians, right wingers, faux liberals) M.O. Arbitrarily declare a crisis and then recommend what ever poison pill they can come up with. Sacrifices must be made (by the teachers, by the little people, don’t you know), school privatization is their panacea of choice. The same thing is going on against Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid and ACA. Actually, SS is not in crisis, it has $2.7 trillion in assets that earn interest every day. But billionaires like Pete Peterson have been propagandizing against SS and the other social safety net programs for decades; Peterson has spent hundreds of millions demeaning, demonizing and swift boating against SS, etc.
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Is not what Peter describes the methodology of “swift boating”?
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They have to blame someone to cover their own behinds and it wasn’t going to be the political sector or the private sector.
That leaves public schools. You’re responsible for all our economic and societal ills.
You didn’t think we were going to blame powerful people in government or business did you? Fat chance. As long as they’re pointing fingers at you no one looks at them.
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Lets face it: they can’t come out and tell the truth, they the are in it for the ROI. They no longer want to fund PUBLIC education because there is no profit in it. They want to privatize so they can capitalize on all those taxpayer dollars. That is number 1.
Secondly, they want to bust unions.
Thirdly, they want to get rid of teachers and use computers and technology, which is cheap and adds to the bottom line of their ROI.
Fourth, they want to reduce the have nots to even less than and the way to do that is by dumbing down education.
Many schools no longer teach script/cursive. Thus, in the future, no one will be able to READ important historic documents. Then, the 1% can tell the have nots/lesser thans what those documents state, without question.
Community college will offer “degrees” in beauty, mechanic, line operator, cashiering, lawn technician/gardener, medical billing/coding, dental hygienist, receptionist, bartender. Whatever job can be made low-paying and be condescended to by the haves, it will now require a community college “degree.”
They are wiping out the middle class. When there are no jobs, or part time low paying jobs only without benefits, and entire families are living in communal apartments and relying on the government cheese….who is going to buy the fancy new gadgets built in china by Microsoft? Who will even be able to afford to shop at Walmart?
They would like us to go back to an era of servitude, with slavery, via withholding a good education, keeping us dumb and subservient, and teaching us how to respect our overlords.
Eventually, there will be no need for voting. Our fates will be decided for us by our masters.
Of course, they are patient. They can’t say all this…but its what they’re implementing with their bought politicians and corrupt back-door regulations.
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I like the concept of sacrificing virgins except does anyone know which type of virgin works best for our eduproblems? Is there a manual of “Sacrificing Virgins: Getting it Right” out there?
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Women of experience are being sacrificed not virgins Duane.
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Maybe that’s the edudeformers’ problem. They need to sacrifice virgins (preferably their own) and not women of experience.
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