Teachers who teach children with multiple disabilities and children who are homeless may think that they have a tough job, but consider what a very hard time Betsy DeVos had in her first week as Secretary of Education, very likely the first paying job she has ever held. She visited a public middle school in D.C., where protestors harassed her and tried to keep her out. When she eventually entered the school, she said nice things to the staff, but after she left she insulted them as being in a “receive” mode. She gave a few interviews and said she hoped to launch more charter schools, more vouchers, more cybercharters, and presumably shrink the number of public schools as she opens up opportunities for students to go anywhere other than public schools.
In one interview, she told syndicated conservative columnist Cal Thomas that she did not think the protests against her were spontaneous. The implication was that those evil teachers’ unions had plotted against her. The other implication was that parents and teachers would welcome her noble presence in their public school, even though she was unimpressed with what she saw. Someone, she said, was trying to make her life “a living hell.” No matter what the plotters do, she pledged she would not be deterred from her mission of “helping kids in this country,” by enabling them to leave public schools for privatized alternatives.
She suggested to Thomas that it might be a good idea to bring tens of thousands of children to the Capitol to demonstrate for charters and vouchers. She said it had worked in Florida. Of course, this is now a standard part of the privatization script, using children as political pawns to demand more public funding for private choices, thus disabling public schools by diminishing their resources.
She pledged to support alternatives to public schools, without citing a scintilla of evidence that these choices would help kids and without acknowledging that the proliferation of choices harms the great majority of children who don’t choose to leave public schools. Her mindset is purely ideological. She did not offer any suggestions about how to help the vast majority of children who attend public schools. She has one idea, and she is sticking to it: choice. The absence of evidence for that one idea from her home state never comes up. Michigan has tumbled in national rankings as choice has expanded.
When Cal Thomas asked what could be done for children who had an “absent father,” she responded that this problem has to be addressed at the classroom level. “It’s not an easy or a single answer, but again it goes back to having the power to influence those things at the classroom level.” It is not clear what she meant or if she herself knew what she meant. How is the teacher in the classroom prepared to make up for an absent father? Is this what passes for profundity?
Then there was this very interesting exchange, in which Cal Thomas and Betsy DeVos exposed their deepest beliefs:
“Q. Throughout most of the public school system, which began in the late 19th century and flourished in the 20th, education included values, McGuffey Readers and even prayer and Bible reading, until the Supreme Court outlawed both in the ‘60s. Do you see a correlation between the loss of American values, a sense of morality, a concept of the transcendent, right and wrong, objective truth that have been banished in our relativistic age and lack of achievement in some places in our schools?
“A. I think it’s a significant factor. Many of the schools I’ve seen, especially the charters, have a focus on character development and again the whole child development. That’s one of the reasons parents are choosing alternatives like this.”
To begin with, public education got its start in the mid-nineteenth century, not the late nineteenth century.
I am one of the few living Americans who has actually read the entirety of the McGuffey readers. Children today would find them dull, simplistic, and obsolete.
The assumption that public schools lack values because they do not have Bible readings and prayers is nonsense. When I went to public schools in Houston in the 1940s and 1950s, we had daily Bible readings and prayers, but the schools were racially segregated. Few teachers had more than a bachelor’s degree. I would say without question that our public schools today have better quailed teachers today and a stronger value system than they did when we read the Bible and prayed every day. As a Jew in a Christian public school system, I ignored the implicit proselytizing, but from the perspective of the decades, I can say that our schools then did not practice what they preached. We never discussed current social or political issues. Too controversial. We were not well prepared for the real problems of our society.
The values of the dominant religion were imposed on me but I never had any wish to impose mine on anyone else.
Now, as we live in a religiously and culturally diverse society, Thomas and DeVos sound like two antiquarians. They want to turn the clock back 100 years, maybe two hundred years.
There is nothing innovative about DeVos’ ideas. She has lived in a billionaire bubble all her life, surrounded by her like-minded kith and kin of rich white Republican evangelicals. She has nothing to teach our teachers or students. She knows nothing about how to improve public schools. Her beloved charters, vouchers, and cybercharters have not proven to be better than public schools, and in many states, are demonstrably worse than traditional public schools with certified teachers.
We live in a big, ever-changing world, and it is far too late to go back to 1920 or 1820, no matter how devoutly DeVos would like to restore the suprenpmacy of whites and evangelical Christians. They too must learn to live and let live.

I bet: DeVos doesn’t even know how to boil an egg or turn on the stove. How can she know anything about educating our young?
LikeLike
Yvonne, you got that right! Why would she ever boil an egg when she has servants to do it for her?
LikeLike
Dear Dr. Ravitch:
Actually, she does not know how egg look like, left alone to ask the chef to cook for her. But I am sure that she had crepe, cake or pancake…
She is too rich to taste the wonder of poor people’s daily basis food = eggs. Love. May
LikeLike
I think she actually believes the protests against her were spontaneous. She’s spent her whole life and lots of her money (well, lots for us common folk, a drop in the bucket for her) to rig false information into her version of “facts” and create astroturf grassroots activists who supposedly demonstrate how “popular” her “ideas” are. DeVos is incapable of understanding that genuine grassroots movements actually sprout from authentic passions and interests.
LikeLike
DeVos should take a cue from her GOP cronies who just experienced similar outrage in their various respective Town Hall meetings yet didn’t go crying boo hoo hoo all the way home. Good thing DeVos didn’t have to be John King, Jr., and Merryl Tisch at the various New York Town Halls. Buckle up, snowflake; you (literally) own this now. Reap what you have sown. https://dianeravitch.net/2013/10/12/anthony-cody-explains-why-new-york-parents-booed-commissioner-john-king/comment-page-1/
LikeLike
Second this.
LikeLike
Like!!
Especially the “Buckle up, snowflake; you (literally) own this now. Reap what you have sown.”
Muy bien dicho.
LikeLike
You know, the right wing nuts like to use the term snowflake as a pejorative, but they don’t think far enough to understand that each is unique and individual. So I think I’ll embrace the term.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Some of the GOP people DID go crying “boo hoo,” though–such as Jason Chaffetz (I apologize for my state–some of us aren’t like him–I promise!). He made a lot of the same claims as DeVos, actually. Maybe they have the same propagandist.
LikeLike
Betsy DeVoss and her world are dangerous to our Republic.
She is a religious Domonist. Read the tenants of her religious views. They are frightening in their promotion of dominating the world and using power to privatize and own 7 pillars of world control.
LikeLike
YEP!
LikeLike
Public schools have always taught civics, personal responsibility and positive character development. Why should public schools teach anything about one particular religion? We are a nation of many religions, and religious instruction belongs in the home, not the public school.
I hope this week is the beginning of many tough weeks for DeVos. I hope parents, community and social justice groups stand up for the rights of children to free public schools. We need to keep the pressure on our policymakers and put them on notice that turning tax dollars over to private companies is unacceptable and not in the best interests of our young people. Charters have failed to deliver on equity and excellence. We need to start looking at community based schools for poor students.
LikeLike
The Supreme Court has ruled that public schools can teach about religion, and teach the Holy Bible as literature. (Also the Holy Koran, and the Hindu Vedas).
No education is complete, without a grounding in comparative religion. The study of Western Civilization itself, is inexorably linked to the study of religious history.
I believe sincerely, that all Americans should have a basic understanding of Islam, the religion of 20% of the world. Islam is one of the fastest growing religions in the USA.
The ACLU agrees, that the study of religion, is not only permitted, but desirable.
see https://www.aclu.org/other/joint-statement-current-law-religion-public-schools
LikeLike
DeVos doesn’t want to teach about religions but wants teachers to lead Christian praying sessions.
I don’t know what the link at ACLU is defensive about. Kids could always read whatever they wanted in school during the breaks—during those 5 minutes while sprinting from one building to the next. During class, though, they need to do what the teacher allows them to do. And the teacher cannot tell them to pray.
LikeLike
To Charles:
Seriously, IMHO, all learners should learn about humanity and its universal love for being earnest, and altruistic in humanity.
All religions are deviation from humane souls like all musical genres are deviation from the universal love = humanity.
We study the root from a tree, we will learn its branches and leaves from local space to far and wide forests on earth.
In short, all of us should instill a sense of rightness in our mind that:
DO NOT quickly believe in the saying from:
1. People with authority, scientific knowledge, and wealth (due to their own gain)
2. People with old age, claimed to be a Wise-man (due to his lust for control and power)
3. Any written old testaments (due to it is possibly falsified)
4. Any mystery, unfounded truth, and lack of proof of science (due to rumor or legendary).
Back2basic
LikeLike
Buddha’s advise sounds good. I’d apply 3 to Constitution, Bible.
LikeLike
Sorry- no one who works for Donald Trump can lecture anyone else about “character”
He lies constantly, he steals from people who do work for him by refusing to pay them, and he’s always insulting and demeaning people.
The Trump Administration probably don’t want to launch a “character” initiative. The President is a very bad role model.
LikeLike
So is that the sum total of what the DeVos US Department of Education offers public school parents and children?
A lecture on character?
The day my child needs a lecture on “character” from Donald Trump’s team will be a cold day in hell. If my son grows and up and behaves the way the President behaves I’ll be ashamed of him. I had a lot of problems with Obama as far as policy but my son admired Obama and I never had the slightest concern about that- it’s fine with me if he “acts like Obama”. It is NOT fine with me if he acts like Trump.
LikeLike
Haha, Trump and DeVos lecturing on character? Chiara, you are pulling my leg.
LikeLike
Welcome to the real world Betsy. Try teaching in an urban school dear. Detroit could be convenient for you. Sorry, but I don’t have an ounce of sympathy. You reap what you sow. Isn’t that in the Bible somewhere? Your return on investment in US senators paid off well. Now you have to dance to the music.
LikeLike
At first, I read your first sentence as “Welcome to the real world OF Betsy.” And was ready to make a minor correction of “Welcome to the UNreal world OF Betsy.
LikeLike
“Donald Trump has been lying about his intellectual prowess for years.
Trump simply watched as stories as far back as the 1970’s reported he had graduated first in his class from the prestigious Wharton School of Business at the University of Pennsylvania. As Salon reported in 2011, The New York Times published a profile of Trump in January 1973, writing, “Donald, who was graduated first in his class at the Wharton School of Finance of the University of Pennsylvania, joined his father five years ago.” The Times doubled down in 1976, writing, “He continued helping his father make deals while a student at the Wharton School of Finance at the University of Pennsylvania, from which he graduated first in his class in 1968.”
Looks to me like Donald Trump’s private school needs to work on character training.
He must have missed that day’s lesson.
Thanks but no thanks on the Donald Trump Ethics Standards for Public Schools. LOW. Very low. We can do better.
LikeLike
Thanks for the reminder of what I mostly try to forget – the nightmare of being bullied by an elementary school teacher for the sin of being Jewish. Appalled to hear various versions of similar behaviors more recently than the ancient times of mandated prayers in schools towards non Christian kids by teachers in public schools. More evidence of Christian hegemony, given new voice by DeVos.
What underlies her entire spiel on character is the absurdity of her positions – that teachers and schools are responsible for character building. In what universe does she live? Guess families are chopped liver!
What Chutzpah.
LikeLike
“Now, as we live in a religiously and culturally diverse society, Thomas and DeVos sound like two antiquarians. They want to turn the clock back 100 years, maybe two hundred years.”
Hell, I wouldn’t even give them credit for being antiquarians. Let’s call them what they are “regressive reactionaries” or “reactionary regressives”. They certainly aren’t conservatives as they wish to destroy one of this country’s main public good, the community public school.
And they want to MAGA (sic) to a time that never was and never will be. Such ignorant thinking, if one can call it thinking.
LikeLike
Do I really want to read what I know will be tripe in that Cal/Betsy interview??
LikeLike
DeVos and her minions will never turn back the clock to the 18th century after the birth of this nation, because that would go against her own agenda.
“Founders who fall into the category of Christian Deists include Washington (whose dedication to Christianity was clear in his own mind), John Adams, and, with some qualifications, Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson was more influenced by the reason-centred Enlightenment than either Adams or Washington.Dec 21, 2006
“For some time the question of the religious faith of the Founding Fathers has generated a culture war in the United States. Scholars trained in research universities have generally argued that the majority of the Founders were religious rationalists or Unitarians. Pastors and other writers who identify themselves as Evangelicals have claimed not only that most of the Founders held orthodox beliefs but also that some were born-again Christians. …
“But the widespread existence in 18th-century America of a school of religious thought called Deism complicates the actual beliefs of the Founders. Drawing from the scientific and philosophical work of such figures as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Isaac Newton, and John Locke, Deists argued that human experience and rationality—rather than religious dogma and mystery—determine the validity of human beliefs.”
https://www.britannica.com/topic/The-Founding-Fathers-Deism-and-Christianity-1272214
LikeLike
DeVos has many faces. She has been caught on tape saying that she and her husband have used their wealth to reshape public education because “ “Our desire (for education) is to confront the culture in ways that will continue to advance God’s kingdom.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qJYFPMLuVRE begins around 27:30.
Her hostility to public schools is evident in this speech prepared for the techies and entrepreneurs who attended the Texas South by Southwest education conference in 2015. In this presentation she manages to call public education an industry more than once, with comparisons to the industrial production of cars, vintage and modern. She says, in effect, that all of you educators are stuck in the industrial age with a factory model of education. She calls public education a closed market, a monopoly, a dead end.
She said our government “truly sucks.” She is pedaling anti-democratic concepts in favor of (subsidized) free markets in education. She refers to zip codes as if these tell us where to find good public schools—but she does not recognize that she also offers some proofs that money matters in public education. She says go find a public school with high performance and it is likely to be in the suburbs. She lets that hang as if relative weath has nothing to do with education
All of the boiler-plate rhetoric is there—lies about the test performance of DC public and charter schools, praise the no-nonsense Success Academy, for KIPP, and Kahn Academy for mastery of content. Tech and deregulation are at the center of all that is good and great in education. She illustrates the last point with a video clip of her infant granddaughters, one barely old enough to point to an ipad. She is teaching her sister, who is barely able to sit upright on her own, how to point to the ipad.
Sample the fare here, or if you prefer, watch the whole argument for removing Republicans and Democrats from decisions about public education.
A couple of the comments say she should be the next secretary of education. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=f_2nH4aLLDc
LikeLike
Incidentally, people in Ohio were told vouchers were for low income students.
The legislature got vouchers and guess what? They’re expanding them to higher incomes.
They just aren’t honest when they sell these “reforms” to voters. The goal is to privatize.
If they get vouchers for low income students they will immediately start lobbying for vouchers for higher income students, then voucher systems. The goal is to privatize. They won’t stop until they get there.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Now pushing to use TITLE I money for higher and higher incomes…
LikeLike
Vouchers are always the camel’s nose under the tent. The privatizers don’t give a hoot about poor kids and/or kids of color. They cynically use them to break the dam and open the floodgates so that everyone can get a voucher for a religious school.
LikeLike
“devoutly DeVos”
Kudos. 🙂
LikeLike
She had a bear of a week? How could she bear it?
LikeLike
Oy! Poor, poor Betsy. /s
“Betsy and the Terrible, Horrible, No Good, Very Bad Week”
(With apologies to Judith Viorst.)
LikeLike
Chuckle.
LikeLike
I’d really like to know how the ‘classroom level’ is to address the fatherless child or the single parent child.
And by her words, only charter schools teach character development.
LikeLike
According to Breitbart ( http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2017/01/18/education-nominee-betsy-devos-take-1-salary-confirmed/) Betsy DeVos will receive a salary of $1 (one dollar).
She is definitely not in job for the money.
LikeLike
Charles,
DeVos is worth $5 Billion! Who cares what she paid! She is a religious zealot who wants to destroy our public schools.
Pay is irrelevant.
Trump is not taking a salary but he continues to profit with hundreds of millions from his properties, including a Trump hotel in DC leased from the federal government. The lease prohibits participation by any elected official. Trump is violating the law by refusing to give up the lease. Foreign officials rent space there, which violates the emoluments clause of the Constitution.
LikeLike
She makes more in interest per day than she would get paid for a year as Sec. of Ed.
LikeLike
Didn’t trump say he wasn’t going to take a salary either and yet he has already cost the American taxpayer over $11 million in travel expenses? How decent of him. I wonder if DeVos plans to follow his sterling example.
LikeLike
In my experience, very rich folks who don’t take salaries never say no to expenses, and they justify premium expenses because they don’t take a salary. See how that works?
LikeLike
That’s not the only cost.
“Cost of Trump family security vexes New York and Florida officials”
https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2017/feb/20/trump-family-security-new-york-palm-beach-taxes
LikeLike
Yes, I saw the horrendous security costs attached to Eric T. business trip in Central America(?). I doubt he is staying in Motel 6 accomodations, hence his security is racking up the $$$ following him around.
LikeLike
Then there is the fact that no one seems to be tracking where the president’s paycheck goes. What if he donates it to his own alleged non-profit foundation and then uses that money to buy gold-framed portraits of himself?
LikeLike
Although I am entirely against any school that is allotted taxpayer money except public schools, the ideals and ideologues of the progressive left have put public education in this vulnerable position over the last 50-60 years.
We need to get back to the basics, allow students to decide what focus they want to pursue in high school, and bring back the right to discipline and expel students. Oh, and holding parents accountable for their children.
LikeLike
This expense account stuff has been going on in this country since George Washington offered to serve without a salary as General of the Continental Army, as long as his expenses were paid.
His expenses were so high (for the time) that when he was elected President and offered once again to serve without pay, only his expenses, the new Congress refused, and gave him a salary, instead.
http://www.accountingin.com/accounting-historians-journal/volume-17-number-1/george-washingtons-expense-account/
LikeLike
Betsy Devos is related to criminal blackwater mass murderer eric prince. Killed off whistleblowers.
LikeLike
I Googled “Blackwater whistleblowers getting killed or murdered” and couldn’t find anything. I did find that the whistleblower case against Blackwater is still pending.
http://www.mahanyertl.com/2017/military-private-security-private-military-contractor-whistleblowers/
Please provide links to reputable sources.
LikeLike