Peter Greene notes the terrible pickle that the “reformers” are in. They were trying so hard to prove their bona fides as leaders of the “civil rights movement of our time,” trying so hard to claim that they really were pushing school choice “for the kids,” trying so hard to call themselves progressives…and Donald Trump, the arch reactionary, has embraced their cause. The hedge fund managers, the billionaires, and the corporate titans pushed charters and school choice, and Donald Trump wants charters and school choice too! He goes a step further, and he wants vouchers too.
Peter Greene calls the current state of affairs the “Faux Progressive Polka.”
Their dilemma is laid bare: Real progressives support public schools, not school choice. School choice was the battle cry of the segregationists in the 1950s and 1960s, and today school choice is promoting greater resegregation and at the same time, defunding public schools that serve all children. The voters in Massachusetts saw through the facade. The NAACP saw through it too.
Now Trump’s embrace makes it harder for the Wall Street crowd and the billionaires to pretend to be progressives. They aren’t and they never were.
To understand Greene’s argument, you must first read Rick Hess’s post-election article, in which he claimed that education is so far to the left that it can’t begin to understand the right. He had an audacious analysis of what he calls the split among Democrats about education:
Hess writes:
One of the reasons that right-left differences get ignored is that people in and around education think they have the whole spectrum covered: there is, after all, the fierce conflict between the “reform” camp and the union-establishment. What usually gets missed, however, is that for the past decade, this clash has primarily existed between two wings of the Democratic Party. The “reformers” have mostly been passionate, Great Society liberals who believe in closing “achievement gaps” and pursuing “equity” via charter schooling, teacher evaluation, the Common Core, and test-based accountability. And their opponents have been the Democratic Party’s more traditional, New Deal wing.
Greene writes:
If reformsters are Great Society Liberals, I am the Queen of Rumania. He is not the Queen of Rumania.
Some of us, like Greene and me, have called out the “reform” movement as a mighty hoax, a pretense of liberalism powered by billionaires, financiers, and rightwing think tanks. The same phony lingo about “closing achievement gaps” and “equity” has been used by rightwing governors, as they replace public schools with charter schools and vouchers. Ideologically, it is hard to decipher the “sides,” but one thing I can say with certainty is that the effort to privatize public education and eliminate teacher unions is not a project of Great Society liberals.
Greene continues:
But now everybody has to confront a grim reality– Donald J. Trump thinks charters and choice are awesome and the Common Core sucks (though he doesn’t really understand it). What’s a DFER to do? On the one hand, they are trying to look like Democrats. On the other hand, they agree with every dot and tittle of Trump’s likely ed policy.
There are any number of explanations– Trump has no actual convictions on any political scale, the backers for various policies have shifted, blah blah blah. I think the most likely explanation is that privatization was never a progressive idea, ever, but when faux progressives were controlling the political conversation, it behooved people in search of power and support to put on their own progressive masks.
So what’s the play now? Stop pretending to be progressives and throw in their lot with the Trumpians (who are themselves only pretending to be conservatives)?
But modern charter schools, the testing industry, the data mining of America– none of that was ever governed by a political ideology as much as it’s guided by a deep love of money. In this, as in many other areas, Trump has if nothing else ripped the pretense off a lot of high-flung baloney. Trump is about power and profit, and power and profit are all the motivation you need to come up with a program of privatizing, monetizing, and digitizing US education. You can add some political philosophizing after the fact, but it’s really beside the point.
Modern corporate reform is congealed around neither right nr left; it’s heart beats to the neo-liberal rhythm which means we shall have social programs (yay, liberals!) that are contracted out to the free market (yay, conservatives!) But neo-liberalism serves righties far better than it serves lefties. They get their money, but privatized programs have yet to show real quality.
And then there’s the dark underbelly of modern reform, particularly charter choice programs that remove democratic process from non-wealthy non-white neighborhoods, giving our lesser what we think is best for them and, in the case of No Excuses schools, the kind of tight domination and control that Those People need. This view of Those People is also not incompatible with Trumpism.
We can play the left-right game all day. Schools tend to attract people who are oriented toward helping and uplifting other people, so the school world should skew left. But schools are also old, hidebound institutions that rely heavily on tradition and stability– so, conservative. But that left-right dichotomy is not the problem reformsters face.
What they face is a unique and striking dilemma. Under Trump, they can have every policy they ever wanted, save Common Core. But they can only have the policies bare and stripped of any pretense. DFER and Jeanne Allen’s Center for Education Reform can have almost everything they want, but they can only have it in a Trump-tied bow. They can only have their policies by admitting that their policies are not progressive at all (and by admitting they’re totally okay with Trumpian awfulness as long as they get choice and charters). They can only oppose Herr Trump by disowning their own policies. Or they can dance around in a faux progressive polka, doing their best to respond to the music they never asked for, but which is everything they want. For grifters like She Who Will Not Be Named (formerly of DC schools) this is just a practical problem of angling for success; for sincere reformsters (yes, I believe such things exist), it’s a real moral dilemma.

it’s been fascinating to watch the first, halting steps of this polka…to see the reformers squirm when Black Lives Matter and the NAACP came out against charters recently, and accuse these 2 civil rights groups of “selling out” minorities for…well, they never really could come up with any reason for this sell out. Chris “Citizen” Stewart finally got so frustrated trying to defend charter schools that admit kids by lottery as a vehicle for “equity” that he just blocked me from his Twitter feed…Peter Cunningham, Stewart’s boss at The Education Post, has also gone curiously silent lately.
I think these folks know they are about to unwrap every Christmas present they ever wanted, but in exchange will have to hitch their wagon to Trump’s 4 horsemen. Mr. Jeffries is doing his best to lay down a little anticipatory “cover”, mostly to set the narrative that DFER and the rest of the corporate reformers are still progressives (they are not), but that will quickly disappear as the rats scramble for the cheese.
I can’t wait to see Jeffries and Cunningham spin the announcement of Rhee as Sec. of Ed.–I’m sure it will be framed as a brave and courageous attempt to protect poor children from the “failing public schools” and preserve the essential civil right of school choice (which isn’t essential, civil, or a right). The truth is that Rhee and Co. have always been vulture capitalists and corporate raiders more than political creatures–as Peter says, they aren’t blue, or red–they are green.
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“. . . they aren’t blue, or red–they are green.”
Can’t agree with the color description. Although the green symbolizes money and avarice, green is already a progressive political concept. Not sure what color to use. Gold? Nah, implies too much value. Silver? Not many associate that with money/value these days. Perhaps I wouldn’t use a color as a political description but just say the reformistas are greedy, self-centered folks who believe that the acquisition of almighty dollar is man’s highest pursuit (all the while spewing civil rights bullshit excuses).
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Duane: gold is a good color to refer to $$$$
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This is a really good piece. He nails what happened to “reform”.
What happened to reform is the “choice” faction took over. They never had a whole lot to offer public schools and now that has so narrowed to “choice” that there’s nothing left.
I feel like it was inevitable. If you have two factions and one is passionately and exclusively committed to charters and vouchers and the other is “agnostic” the agnostics will get rolled. And they got rolled.
“Reform” is ABOUT vouchers and charters. There’s nothing else left.
They still don’t get it. They lost in Massachusetts and Georgia because people noticed they had nothing to offer existing public schools and indeed could well harm existing public schools.
Eva Moskowitz defined “reform” in a nutshell. She said she’s meeting with Trump because she wants to “grow the sector”. That’s not “public education”. It’s charter schools. The last 15 years have been “liberal” ed reformers trading more and more of “public education” away in order to “grow the sectors” of charters and private schools. They have made compromise after compromise in order to advance and protect “choice” and now there’s nothing left to trade.
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No Problem — Maybe you can’t fool all of the people all of the time, but you can always fool enough of the electorate any damn day of the week, and twice on Tuesdays.
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I feel like states will diverge further way from the national movement- that’s actually happened in Ohio. We had a scandal at the state ed dept and there was a change in leadership. The difference is stark. They ACTUALLY work to improve public schools now. They meet with public school leaders. They survey the public. They no longer go on statewide “public schools suck!” tours. Even the furthest Right members of the assembly have toned it down. They got the message. They weren’t hired to privatize public schools. That isn’t the job we’re paying them to do.
There was always a disconnect between the reality of ed reform in Ohio and the national cheerleading team, but now it’s a yawning gulf.
It’s an interesting time. I think ed reform becomes irrelevant to public schools, and 90% of kids attend public schools. That’s a problem for ed reformers.
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I have been thinking a lot about recent education policy and Trump voters who have been described as being not college educated. Could it be that almost 15 years of NCLB-type reforms have played out to show little or no positive effect on the lives of those who would most stand to gain from a good foundational (K-12) education? Little in the way of expected social mobility? Grade school lives without art and music or athletics, and other traditional extracurricular activities?
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Personally, I like the idea of dumping NCLB and Common Core, and bringing back arts and music (though at our school, we actually still had art and music).
I’ve also been thinking about recent education trends, with respect to the election. All over the internet, I’ve been reading that we live in a post-fact society, and that is part of the reason that Trump was elected. This seems to be to be similar to some educational trends that I’ve seen – i.e. the idea that there is dichotomy between skills and knowledge, the idea that in the 21st century world we’ll be able to just google what we need to know (so we don’t need to know it), the idea that we should disparage a way of learning by calling it “rote learning” (when it is actually just memorization and practice.) I feel like I’ve seen these trends directly in my daughter’s education. For example, although my daughter studied the states in the US, she never had to memorize them, so she does not know them now. I think we should get back to facts and knowledge in our schools, because we can see now what all of that googling gets us in our “post-fact” world.
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How are they even credible opposing Trump? When he diverts federal funding from public schools to private schools on what grounds do they plan to object?
Public schools have lost funding every year for the past 8. NOW they object? They all just remembered 90% of kids attend the public schools they happily abandoned and wrote off to chase “choice”?
Oh, well. Too late for that.
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Have ed reform activists noticed that Donald Trump is taking direction from the exact same people, the same 10 individuals, that Obama relied upon?
Tell me again how this is a diverse and open movement with a lot of dissent and debate.
It’s a closed circle. It’s the same PEOPLE. No one else gets access. They think a D in front of their name means something to people outside DC?
Trump is reasonably looking at this as “Democrats want regulated privatization and Republicans want unregulated privatization” and he’s doing that because it’s true. They’re arguing over regulation. The basic premise in both camps is public schools should all be privatized.
We’re on our own in “the public school sector” and the saddest part is I think that might actually be BETTER for public schools. At least we won’t get active harm.
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“Reform” has always been about making deals, profit, opportunism and the destruction of collective bargaining. It has also been about deceit and hypocrisy. Whatever grifter Trump selects to lead the circus of the DOE, those of us that support public education must be prepared to stand our ground and resist bad policy that is doomed to fail. It is a pity that we must defend that to which we should be entitled and waste resources and time in the process.
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She who will not be named, was named on Morning Joe this morning with joy and an oh great by Mika Brzezinski. That was either proceeded or followed by Richard Haass talking about how, maybe it is time for a reset. with Russia! . Suggesting that Trump tap into someone like Kissinger. Anybody see the normalization happening here. If he just puts our home grown war criminal in a policy position than we can tolerate the rest of his overtly disgusting pics and the damage they will do.. `
These false narratives are always easier to see when it involves the things that hit home. Never as easy to spot when one is not directly involved. The Great Society is the New Deal they are one and the same and there is no connection between either of those political agendas and the right wing greed driven philosophy of Milton Friedman. known as neo corrupt. (The real name so Orwellian, so as not to be named) .
Those that push these right wing agendas never have been or will be liberals no matter what their stance on social issues. Or how slick their sales pitch. Speaking of sales pitches our fearless leader, who delivered us into this mess, through eight years of poor policy decisions ,was addressing the Asia Pacific summit .. He was giving one last pitch for keeping life saving drugs from being affordable at home and abroad, Explaining why our laws passed by an already, all too non representative process, were too protective of our health safety and working conditions. Protections that would be far better served by aligning them with the needs of Multi National Corporations..One last Hail Mary to convince you to believe him rather than your own eyes about the benefit of putting Americans in competition with slave labor around the world.
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Peter nails the political condition of public schooling with this:
“We can play the left-right game all day. Schools tend to attract people who are oriented toward helping and uplifting other people, so the school world should skew left. But schools are also old, hidebound institutions that rely heavily on tradition and stability– so, conservative.”
Tis quite a dilemna, eh!?! And not just for the reformistas but with those of us trying to fight off the edudeformer privateers and profiteers.
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It’s so hard to be a neoliberal and keep up that progressive facade.
Soon we will see all these “democrats” fall all over themselves to ingratiate themselves to Trump.
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Hess and Checker Finn have blamed teachers for othering Trump and stirring up the children in our care to needlessly fear the future. Teachers need to quit doing this, they say:
http://www.aei.org/publication/stop-teaching-anti-trump-bias/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=hess&utm_content=article
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I’ve said for a while on this blog that – despite some pretty words and the facade of an “expert” – Rick Hess is basically a phony. He’s an ideologue who masks as a “reformer.” Hess couldn’t cut it as a teacher, so he became a right-wing, market-biased pundit.
In terms of school vouchers and competition, Hess wrote this nonsense:
“The absence of competition means that public schools, like other government agencies, typically are not subjected to this kind of discipline. No matter how inefficient, employees have little to fear. Subjecting school systems to real competition would indeed produce more effective schools –and other benefits as well. It would provide quality control beyond that afforded by standardized testing, empower entrepreneurial educators to offer alternatives to reigning orthodoxies, and permit good schools to multiply without waiting for permission from resistant district leaders.”
In other words, fear in the workplace is a “good” thing. It leads to “effectiveness.” It causes “quality control.” It fosters the proliferation of “good schools.”
Total drivel. Nonsense. Bad logic. And bad for a democratic republic.
There’s a reason that Hess resides at the American Enterprise Institute.
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