Jeff Bryant pulls together persuasive evidence that Betsy DeVos energized a movement that was previously scattered and disconnected. People who had no idea that the privatization of public schools is a genuine threat became informed. Groups began forming at the grassroots level to defend their community’s public schools. Supposedly “progressive” Democrats supported privatization by charters because they were hoodwinked by fake reformers promising fake miracles. For those of us fighting privatization, DeVos clarified what is at stake: the survival of democratically-controlled, community-based public schools, responsible for all children.
Even Senators like Michael Bennett and Corey Booker voted against DeVos, even though they fundamentally agree with her view of school reform by school choice.
Make no mistake: School choice was born in racism and it promotes racism.
Jeff Bryant writes:
“Betsy DeVos may have won her contest in the Senate to become the new U.S. Secretary of Education, but her opposition wasn’t the only thing that went down to defeat that day.
“For decades, federal education policies have been governed by a “Washington Consensus” that public schools are effectively broken, especially in low-income communities of color, and the only way to fix them is to apply a dose of tough love and a business philosophy of competition from charter schools and performance measurements based on standardized tests.
“Since the 1990s, this consensus among Democrats and Republicans has enforced all kinds of unproven “reform” mandates on schools, and by 2012, as veteran education reporter Jay Mathews of The Washington Post noted that year, the two parties were “happily copying each other” on education.
“Democrats have in recent years sounded – and acted – a lot like Republicans in advancing corporate education reform, which seeks to operate public schools as if they were businesses, not civic institutions,” writes Valerie Strauss, the veteran education journalist who blogs for the Washington Post. “By embracing many of the tenets of corporate reform — including the notion of ‘school choice’ and the targeting of teachers and their unions as being blind to the needs of children – they helped make DeVos’s education views, once seen as extreme, seem less so.”
“But with the election of President Donald Trump and the ascension of DeVos to secretary, that consensus appears dead.
“She would start her job with no credibility,” Education Week quotes Democratic Senator Patty Murray of Washington. “A vote for Betsy DeVos is a vote for a secretary of education who is likely to succeed only in further dividing us on education issues.”
“The DeVos vote reflected the tribal, dysfunctional, polarized nature of our politics,” writes Woodrow Wilson Center senior scholar Linda Killian in USA Today. “It is a harbinger of things to come.”
“But what looks like the death of a political consensus on education could be the beginning of something else: an opportunity for progressives to press a new education agenda. Here’s what should they do.”
He proceeds to write about next steps. Read them.
Here is one you can take right now. Join the Network for Public Education. DeVos caused a huge spike in our membership. She has made parents and educators and graduates of public schools aware that they must stand together and fight the DeVos-Trump agenda of charters, vouchers, cybercharters, for-profit schools, homeschooling. Just remember when she speaks soothing words about public schools, she wants to take funding away from them to share with all those private choices.
When Eli Broad talks about charters, he is endorsing the DeVos agenda. When Democrats for Education Reform, Families for Excellent Schools, Stand for Children, Bill Gates, and other billionaires sing the praises of charter schools, they are singing from the DeVos privatization hymnal.
When Anthony Cody and I started the Network

Pyrrhic victories, we’re gonna need a lot of them to make positive change. Now is the time to sustain pressure. The next (predictable) battles will be against Price and Sessions.
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“The Hollowschoolyeh Chorus”
For the Lord Gates VAMnipotent raineth
Hollowschoolyeh, Hollowschoolyeh, Hollowschoolyeh Hollowschoolyeh
For the Lord Bets o’er DOE raineth
Hollowschoolyeh, Hollowschoolyeh, Hollowschoolyeh, Hollowschoolyeh
Kings of Things and Lords of Boards
Kings of Things and Lords of Boards
And They shall rain forever and ever
And They shall rain forever and ever
And they shall rain
And they shall rain
And they shall rain
Forever and ever
Hollowschoolyeh, hollowschoolyeh, hol-low-schoolyeh
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Well-done.
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Now if we could just get the Mormon Tabernacle choir to sing it.
I used to live in Utah and once heard them perform this (well, not this) in the Tabernacle. Words can’t do it justice.
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The Mormon Tabernacle Choir sang for the inauguration, and stood there on the stage as Trump proclaimed, “America First.” The LDS Church is a worldwide church, with more members outside of the U.S. than in it, and yet offered tacit support by being at that inauguration. I, for one, am outraged.
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I guess that means they would prolly not sing this version?
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The Tabernacle Choir may have all kinds of reasons to perform at the inauguration, such as a respect for the office of the presidency, irrespective of who holds it. They also performed at Obama’s inauguration, though the vast majority of Mormons wanted Romney to be president.
It’s not clear at if artists need to be political. They could just decide to rise above it, or provide the unifying theme Americans crave for. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir sings religious songs, Mozart, Cat Stevens. Songs for all.
But yeah, SDP, I dunno what they did to the Tabernacle, but hearing the choir in that building makes you think about supernatural powers—even if you “know” they don’t exist.
Recordings don’t match the experience, but still, here is one of the songs I heard there
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There were all kinds of “reasons” for MTC to perform, Mate, and one of the big ones was “respecting the office of the Presidency.” It was hollow, though, when they stood behind Trump as he used his inaugural speech to foment hate and bigotry.
“Come Thou Fount of Every Blessing” is truly one of their best. May I add this one https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QSiVjlknuSw, which they didn’t even do at the inauguration?
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Bill Gates is an investor in the largest seller of for-profit, schools-in-a-box. BIA is a business model, that the founder described, as attracting investors, with its anticipated 20% return.
The Gates Foundation has links to Conservative Leaders for Education. CL4E was founded by the sister of the president of Gates-funded NCTQ. CL4E posted, recommended candidates for Trump’s Sec. of Ed. which included, among others (1) DeVos (2) the president of the governing board of PARCC, who is a Fellow of the Gates-funded Aspen Pahara Institute (David Koch is on the Aspen board; Gates gave $15,000,000 to one of the owners of Common Core) (3) a former president of Pat Robertson’s university/former education consultant to the Gates Foundation.
On the other side of the aisle, the Center for American Progress, prominent in the Democratic Party/election loss, got $800,000 from the Gates’ Foundation, a couple of years ago.
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Gates SCHMATES….another DEFORMER making $$$$$$$ of the backs of kids and teachers. He is another reprehensible person.
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The Gates family lives in the state with the most regressive tax system in the U.S. The poor pay a rate up to 7 times the rate of the rich. Gates (just like his brethren, the Koch’s) opposes raising minimum wage and public pensions. Jaime Dimon, likely, felt slighted when Bill got the Medal of Freedom, from Obama.
When the 90% reclaim D.C., Bill ought to be stripped of his medal, immediately.
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“When the 90% reclaim D.C., Bill ought to be stripped of his medal, immediately.”
He’ll be stripped of much more. And to deal with less numbers, that 90% you just mentioned will also be the new tax rate for billionaires.
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That Gates got the Medal of Fiefdom from Obama is not at all surprising. Everyone knows he was basically running DOE and that Duncan was really only there to carry out Gates’ instructions — and play 1 on 1 with Obama at lunchtime.
Democratic Senators complain that DeVos has no qualifications to head DOE, but neither does Gates and I don’t recall any of them complaining about the dominant role he played at DOE (basically setting policy)
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This is most definitely a time for activism. “Reformers” can no longer hide behind civil rights as more parents see the negative, unequal impact of privatization. I hope NPE continues to grow to include many parents. I and certainly others have cross posted membership on social media. DeVos’s appointment is causing a massive backlash, and we need to capitalize on it.
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Christine Baranski of ‘The Good Wife’ has offered to play DeVos on ‘SNL.’ I am sure she could capture DeVos’ oblivious essence.
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I am not sure that I found the “next steps.” i did get to one proposed agenda from a Congressional representative from California. The Tankato agenda is here https://takano.house.gov/progressive-education-agenda
Readers will probably notice how this agenda incorporates some of the preconceptions, dubious ideas, and rhetoric from the Obama/Duncan/Gates era.
Here is an example, effectively revitalizing the Common Core and the dubious idea of “back mapping” from college and career ready criteria to preschool, year-by-year, grade-level by grade-level.
” IV. Ensure our K-12 public education system is preparing our students for college OR a career
College and Career-Ready Standards Public K-12 curricula should be aligned with common, college and career-ready standards.
Key Policies
Meaningful Standards – K-12 public schools, institutions of higher education, and industries must collaborate to identify standards that, when achieved, prepare students for college without need for remediation, OR for direct entry into the workforce.
Back-mapping – K-12 public school curricula must be back-mapped so that each year of school takes students a step closer to the end goal of being college OR career-ready.”
Here is another proposal, one that positions Career and Technical Education as if that has no bearing on the actuality of labor markets. The agenda promotes career and technical education for “underserved students” without indicating who those students might be. The proposal implies (through “OR”) that tracking for college-bound versus technical training should be restored as a national norm. There is also an unstated assumption that public schools can and should be responsible for job-specific training for private industry.
The agenda also promotes STEM and STEAM as if these emphases do not need to be questioned, and as if they are far more important that teaching for civic engagement and competence, far more important than teaching history and government.
“Career and Technical Education (CTE)
Providing high school students with real-world training and education, particularly in STEAM fields, will prepare them for postsecondary education and the workforce.
Key Policies
Access – We must ensure that all populations have access to CTE, particularly the most underserved students.
Partnerships – Secondary schools, college and universities, and private industry should form partnerships to develop relevant curricula and to offer apprenticeships and hands-on training to students.
Experienced Educators – CTE instructors must have both the subject-specific technical knowledge and appropriate pedagogical training to serve all types of students, including English learners and students with disabilities.”
I am left with the impression that the overall tone is an improvement but that this agenda is too much a legacy that keeps alive and gives credibility to some very dubious concepts. It does not chart a clear path away from the ESSA requirements.
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Thank you for emphasizing that the emphasis on STEM and/or STEAM denigrates the enormously important part of public education–history, geography, and civics.
Now more than ever, these MUST be taught.
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I thought Portman’s statement was interesting:
“I support Betsy DeVos for Secretary of Education because during the confirmation process she committed to strongly support public education and because of her support for local control, instead of having the federal government dictate education policy at the state and local level. I look forward to working with her to improve our K-12 public education system, make college more affordable, stand up for children with disabilities, and close the skills gap by promoting Career and Technical Education (CTE) to give young people more opportunities to succeed.”
Of course, she didn’t “commit to strongly support public education” but Portman is a skilled politician and he feels he has to SAY she did 🙂
Compare to Toomey, who was all charters ‘n vouchers.
I’d bet on Portman. He knows he has to mention K-12 public school systems to keep his job.
Someone should tell DeVos that she’s omitted 85% of students with her anti-public school stance. I guess she didn’t notice.
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“Bipartisan Reform”
When Demo’s look in the mirror
Republicans they view
The school “reforming” furor
Is really red and blue
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Compare Toomey to Portman:
“We have to disrupt this model, a quasi monopoly on education, there’s too many kids it is not serving well. It’s not a slander against individual teachers. It’s just a fact that those kids would be better off if they had a choice in the kind of school and the specific school that they attend. Betsy DeVos has devoted her adult life to give poor kids more options so that they can get better education and the education establishment will not abide that.”
Toomey also shared his vision for parents to choose primary and secondary schools in a similar way that students select a college:
“You can take your Pell Grant to any college you want. You don’t have to go to the government-owned university in your town. You can go to any college in America. And we think that’s fine. But on primary and secondary education, the education establishment won’t allow that. They want the kids to have to go to their school.”
He’s really far Right. He wants a voucher system. Did he run on that in Pennsylvania?
He doesn’t even mention Pennsylvania public schools. He offers nothing to public school parents other than private schools. Is this mainstream in a state like Pennsylvania, a Senator who seems to be unaware that public schools in his state exist?
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If you don’t like your school in Pennsylvania, you can take your child to a school in Arizona, just like college
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Rural and especially suburban voters in PA have had very little exposure to charters and vouchers. Less than 1% of children in the Philadelphia suburbs attend charters whereas more than 50% of the state’s’s charter enrollment is in the city. Toomey is safe on this issue as long as voters outside of Philadelphia and few small cities see vouchers and charters as not affecting them.
That said, recent state legislation capping property tax increases and the state AG’s tireless exposure of charter fraud and poor oversight is starting to raise awareness in suburban and rural areas. Suburban school districts are feeling increasingly pinched financially becuase of the property tax cap and given the small size of most suburban districts even small numbers of students going to cyber charters has a large effect on district budgets. Add in the constant charter fraud in special ed and it’s getting more difficult for charter operators to fly under the radar outside of cities.
The suburbs are the key to preserving the public school system in PA because they are have the money and influence to shape statewide education policy. Suburban school boards are increasingly vocal and active in taking on the state legislature over charters. The next step needs to be more parental engagement among suburban parents over these issues.
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Parents and boards of education are key elements to fight back against charters. They need actively resist charter infiltration, especially since the Pennsylvania legislature has so many members beholden to the charter industry. Charters will always seek “new markets.”
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Has DeVos offered a single benefit to public school parents, kids and teachers other than online school?
Again: do ed reformers have to offer some benefit or are we all just supposed to go along because they’re the self-proclaimed “Best and Brightest”?
“Great schools!” and “we love kids and you don’t” isn’t enough. It’s been 20 years.
Specifically, what do they offer public schools? Why should we invite them in? We may invite them in anyway out of politeness or recognition of political clout, but why should we do it other than that?
Give me one reason and it can’t be “because we have to convince the US Department of Education public schools have value”
We don’t have to convince them of that. I don’t care that much whether they believe it or not. They’re all but irrelevant to public schools at this point anyway.
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Spot on, Jeff Bryant.
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“Democrats have in recent years sounded – and acted – a lot like Republicans in advancing corporate education reform.” Oh that now, due to the extremes of the Republicans/Trump, it will be a true embarrassment for Democrats to see themselves so directly comparable in action and legislation.
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ciedie,
I have yet to see any embarrassment.
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“Bipartisan Reform” (Above) should have gone here
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I would not put much stock in Booker’s recent conversion. He played a big part in the increasing charterization of Newark Public Schools. He brought Anderson to Newark. Christie was instrumental in his election to the Senate.
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Booker is like R.I.’s Raimondo- never saw a hedge fund they didn’t like. Last year, Booker was the keynote speaker at CAP’s “Progress Party”. CAP ran the HRC campaign with Podesto, who was in a video asking donors to support school privatizing candidates (Chester Finn and Jeb Bush were in the same video).
CAP got $800,000 from the Gates Foundation, in 2014.
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With the new focus on education and school choice, it’s high time we started having these conversations after so much has happened in back rooms. The real nitty-grit showing the depth of Democrats selling out to billionaires is laid bare in the Podesta emails, but most media outlets avoid reporting on those private emails. There is plenty of other evidence, however, showing Democrats and Republicans alike are prone to ignore the teeming masses if privatizers keep the campaign cash flowing.
It’s progress if we’re starting to see some honest criticism of the two-party effort to deliver public education to the privatizers. It’s good that all Democrats voted against DeVos, but it’s awkward that they were all for charters and corporate testing for so long, but hopefully this is changing. The millions protesting sure hope both parties can start “draining the swamp”.
This strong piece by Valerie Strauss details how Dems made the environment ripe for a DeVos: https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2017/01/21/democrats-reject-her-but-they-helped-pave-the-road-to-education-nominee-devos/?utm_term=.7c4bd7ee8386
This scathing criticism of Obama and Cory Booker by Black Agenda Report has some fascinating stats on charter school penetration across the states: http://www.blackagendareport.com/devos_obama_booker_trump_villains
Jacobin echoes the basic sentiment: https://www.jacobinmag.com/2017/01/betsy-devos-public-schools-teachers-unions-charters-privatizations-democrats/
Graham Vyse in New Republic has a positive spin (mentioning Diane), he acknowledges Democrats lost their way but feels they could provide solutions going forward: https://newrepublic.com/article/139071/can-democrats-save-public-schools-trump-devos
Finally, my take on the “illusion” of school choice looks at the beating heart of the controversy – are charter schools and Common Core standards all a scam to rip off public money? https://medium.com/@NYArteacher/betsy-devos-the-illusion-of-choice-f2a0ea0044d4
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Help me here. I want to start a “send Betsy a pencil” Campaign. We can send our stubby used pencils to DOE, Rauner, Rahm, Trump, etc. Lets spread the word
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I love it Sunny! I will send some!
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Thanks Diane.
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Now that DeVos is sworn in, here are 7 things she should do immediately
http://thefederalist.com/2016/12/07/7-things-betsy-devos-needs-immediately-becomes-education-secretary/
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The first thing she should do, Charles, is resign. She is unqualified for the job. Wise people never seek or accept jobs for which they are unqualified.
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Nah, she needs to do only one thing: follow the footsteps of the national security advisor
http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/02/13/michael-flynn-resigns-national-security-adviser/
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