This article is a review of one of the most pretentious and preposterous reports I have ever read.
This report was very important in my life because it directly inspired me to write “Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools,” which came out in 2013. I wrote it in six months, writing every day. I wanted to challenge and correct the lies about America’s public schools that were entering the mainstream of thought through reports and commentaries like this one. I wanted to arm people with the facts, drawn mostly from U.S. Department of Education sources, so they could speak up against propaganda. It became a national best-seller and is used in many college courses.
In 2012, Joel Klein and Condoleezza Rice co-chaired a task force at the august Council on Foreign Relations.
The task force issued a report in which they asserted that America’s public were not just mediocre, they were dreadful. They were so dreadful that they were a threat to our nation’s national security. Seven of the task force’s thirty members dissented from the report.
How could we avert this terrible danger posed by public schools (menaced presumably by high-scoring nations like Finland, Japan, and South Korea)?
We must as quickly as possible encourage the spread of charter schools and vouchers, and we must promptly adopt the Common Core. There was also a wacky proposal for an “national security audit” of every school to determine whether they were getting high enough scores to protect our national security.
I lacerated the report. It disappeared beneath the waves, never to be cited.
If you should read the report, be sure to read the dissents, which are brilliant.
Here is the review:
In his Pulitzer Prize–winning book, Anti-Intellectualism in American Life, Richard Hofstadter characterized writing on education in the United States as
a literature of acid criticism and bitter complaint…. The educational jeremiad is as much a feature of our literature as the jeremiad in the Puritan sermons.
Anyone longing for the “good old days,” he noted, would have difficulty finding a time when critics were not lamenting the quality of the public schools. From the 1820s to our own time, reformers have complained about low standards, ignorant teachers, and incompetent school boards.
Most recently, in 1983, an august presidential commission somberly warned that we were (in the title of its statement) “A Nation at Risk” because of the low standards of our public schools. The Reagan-era report said:
Our once unchallenged preeminence in commerce, industry, science, and technological innovation is being overtaken by competitors throughout the world.
Our national slippage was caused, said the commission, by “a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a Nation and a people.” This mediocre educational performance was nothing less than “an act of unthinking, unilateral educational disarmament.”
Imagine the peril, the threat of national disaster: “our very future as a Nation and a people” hung in the balance unless we moved swiftly to improve our public schools. What were we to do? The commission proposed a list of changes, starting with raising graduation requirements for all students and making sure they studied a full curriculum of English, math, science, history, computer science, as well as foreign languages (for the college-bound), the arts, and vocational education.
It also proposed more student time in school, higher standards for entry into teaching, higher salaries for teachers, and an evaluation system for teachers that included peer review. Nothing was said about the current fad of evaluating teachers by their students’ test scores. The federal government distributed half a million copies of the report, and many states created task forces and commissions to determine how to implement the recommendations. Many states did raise graduation requirements, but critics were unappeased, and complaints about our educational failures continued unabated.
Somehow, despite the widely broadcast perception that educational achievement was declining, the United States continued to grow and thrive as an economic, military, and technological power. As President Barack Obama put it in his 2011 State of the Union address:
Remember—for all the hits we’ve taken these last few years, for all the naysayers predicting our decline, America still has the largest, most prosperous economy in the world. No workers are more productive than ours. No country has more successful companies, or grants more patents to inventors and entrepreneurs. We are home to the world’s best colleges and universities, where more students come to study than any other place on Earth.
How is it possible that this nation became so successful if its public schools, which enroll 90 percent of its children, have been consistently failing for the past generation or more?*
Now comes the latest jeremiad, this one from a task force sponsored by the Council on Foreign Relations and led by Joel I. Klein, former chancellor of the New York City public schools (now employed by Rupert Murdoch’s News Corporation to sell technology to schools and to advise Murdoch on his corporation’s hacking scandals), and Condoleezza Rice, former secretary of state during the administration of President George W. Bush. This report has the cumbersome title US Education Reform and National Security and a familiar message: our nation’s public schools are so dreadful that they are a threat to our national security. Once again, statistics are marshaled to prove that our schools are failing, our economy is at risk, our national security is compromised, and everything we prize is about to disappear because of our low-performing public schools. Make no mistake, the task force warns: “Educational failure puts the United States’ future economic prosperity, global position, and physical safety at risk.”
Despite its alarmist rhetoric, the report is not a worthy successor to the long line of jeremiads that it joins. Unlike A Nation at Risk, which was widely quoted as a call to action, this report is a plodding exercise in groupthink among mostly like-minded task force members. Its leaden prose contains not a single sparkling phrase for the editorial writers. The only flashes of original thinking appear in the dissents to the report.
What marks this report as different from its predecessors, however, is its profound indifference to the role of public education in a democratic society, and its certainty that private organizations will succeed where the public schools have failed. Previous hand-wringing reports sought to improve public schooling; this one suggests that public schools themselves are the problem, and the sooner they are handed over to private operators, the sooner we will see widespread innovation and improved academic achievement.
The report is a mishmash of misleading statistics and incoherent arguments, intended to exaggerate the failure of public education. Richard Haass, the president of the Council on Foreign Relations, introduces the report with this claim: “It will come as no surprise to most readers that America’s primary and secondary schools are widely seen as failing.” Many scholars of education would disagree with this conclusion; they would probably respond that the United States has many excellent public schools and that the lowest-performing schools are overwhelmingly concentrated in districts with high levels of poverty and racial isolation. Haass then writes, “High school graduation rates, while improving, are still far too low, and there are steep gaps in achievement between middle class and poor students.” He does not seem aware that, according to the latest federal data, high school graduation rates are at their highest point in history for students of all races and income levels. Certainly they should be higher, but the actual data do not suggest a crisis.
Of course, there are achievement gaps between middle-class and poor students, but this is true in every nation where there are large income gaps. While the task force points out the problems of concentrated poverty in segregated schools, exacerbated by unequal school funding, it offers no recommendations to reduce poverty, racial segregation, income gaps, or funding inequities. It dwells on the mediocre standing of American schools on international tests, but does not acknowledge that American schools with a low level of poverty rank first in the world on international tests of literacy.
The task force has many complaints: American students don’t study foreign languages; American employers can’t find enough skilled workers. Too many young people do not qualify for military service because of criminal records, lack of physical fitness, or inadequate educational skills. Not enough scientists and engineers are trained “to staff the military, intelligence agencies, and other government-run national security offices, as well as the aerospace and defense industries.” Thus, the public schools are failing to prepare the soldiers, intelligence agents, diplomats, and engineers for the defense industry that the report assumes are needed. This failure is the primary rationale for viewing the schools as a national security risk.
To right these conditions, the task force has three recommendations.
First, the states should speedily implement the Common Core State Standards in English and mathematics and add to them national standards in science, technology, foreign languages, and possibly civics.
Second, states and districts “should stop locking disadvantaged students into failing schools without any options.” The task force proposes an expansion of competition and choice, for example with vouchers—meaning that states and districts should allow students to attend private and religious schools with public funding. The task force also favors charter schools—privately managed schools that directly receive public funding. If all these private schools get an equal share of public dollars, the task force opines, this will “fuel the innovation necessary to transform results.”
Third, the United States should have “a national security readiness audit” to determine whether students are learning the necessary skills “to safeguard America’s future security and prosperity,” and “to hold schools and policymakers accountable for results.”
None of these recommendations has any clear and decisive evidence to support it.
The Common Core State Standards in reading and mathematics were developed over the past few years by groups representing the National Governors Association, the Council of Chief State School Officers, and Achieve, and funded largely by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation. The Obama administration encouraged adoption of these standards through its Race to the Top program. To be eligible for a share of the billions of dollars in competitive federal grants, states were expected to express willingness to adopt the standards, and forty-five states have done so.
They may be excellent standards, or they may not be. They may help improve achievement, or they may not. But no one knows, because the Common Core standards have never been implemented or tried out anywhere. If they are sufficiently rigorous, they might increase the achievement gap between high-performing students and low-performing students and might leave students who struggle with English even further behind than they are now.
Tom Loveless, an analyst at the Brookings Institution, recently predicted that the standards will have no impact on student achievement, but perhaps he is wrong. Until they are implemented somewhere, their value cannot simply be assumed. It must be demonstrated. Thus, the task force goes out on a limb by claiming that these untried standards are the very linchpin of defending our nation’s borders and securing our future prosperity.
Certainly the task force is right to insist upon the importance of foreign-language study, but it is wrong to blame the nation’s public schools for a shortage of specialists in Chinese, Dari, Korean, Russian, and Turkish. Although some American high schools teach Chinese, these languages are usually taught by universities or specialized language programs. It is peculiar to criticize public elementary and secondary schools for the lack of trained linguists in Afghanistan and other international hotspots.
Students who sign up to study a language this year have no way of knowing in which region or nation we will need linguists five or ten years from now. How are students or schools to know where the next military action or political crisis will emerge? Furthermore, the effort to expand foreign language instruction in K-12 schools requires not just standards, but a very large new supply of teachers of foreign languages to staff the nation’s 100,000 or so public schools. This won’t happen without substantial new funding for scholarships to train tens of thousands of new teachers.
Similarly, there is mixed evidence, to be generous, to support the task force’s recommendation to increase competition and choice. Although it cites a few studies that show higher test scores for some charter schools, most studies of charters show no difference in test scores between charter students and students in public schools. Vouchers have generally produced results no different from regular public schools. Milwaukee has had vouchers for twenty-one years, intended to allow disadvantaged students to escape from failing public schools, but on average the students in voucher schools achieve the same test scores as those in regular public schools. And Milwaukee, which has a very competitive environment of charters and vouchers, is, according to federal assessments, one of the nation’s lowest-performing urban school districts.
The task force’s claim that charter schools will be beacons of innovation rests on hope, not on any evidence presented in the report. The most “innovative” of the charters are the for-profit academies that teach online—a fast-growing sector that recruits students to take their courses by computer at home. These virtual academies have been the subject of negative stories in The New York Times and The Washington Post, criticized both for their focus on profits and for their poor academic results. The Task Force’s enthusiasm for charter schools is not surprising. As chancellor of New York City’s public school system, Klein enthusiastically supported charter schools and opened one hundred of them, regardless of community opposition. Another member of the task force was Richard Barth, the chief executive officer of the KIPP charter school chain.
The task force asserts that charters will lead the way to innovative methods of education. But the charters with the highest test scores are typically known not for innovation, but for “no excuses” discipline policies, where students may be fined or suspended or expelled if they fail to follow the rules of the school with unquestioning obedience, such as not making eye contact with the teacher or slouching or bringing candy to school or being too noisy in gym or the lunchroom.
Some of the high-performing charter schools have high attrition rates, and some have achieved high scores by excluding or limiting students who are apt to get low test scores, such as students who are English-language learners. There is no evidence that charters are more likely to teach foreign languages and advanced courses in science than public schools. The schools with the most extensive range of courses in foreign languages, advanced science, and advanced mathematics are large comprehensive high schools, which have been in disfavor for the past decade, after the Gates Foundation decided that large high schools were a bad idea and invested $2 billion in breaking them up into small schools. This program was abandoned in 2008.
The task force’s proposal for “a national security readiness audit” is bizarre. It is not clear what it means, who would conduct it, or who would pay for it. Will schools be held accountable if they do not produce enough fit candidates for the military, the intelligence agencies, the defense industry, and the foreign service? Some high school graduates do join the military, but no high school prepares its students for the diplomatic corps or the defense industry or the Central Intelligence Agency. Who will be held accountable if colleges and universities don’t produce an adequate supply of teachers of Turkish, Russian, Chinese, Korean, and Dari to the high schools? Should every high school offer these languages? Should universities be held accountable if there are not enough physics teachers? What will happen to schools that fail their national security readiness audit? Will they be closed?
Three big issues are unaddressed by the Klein-Rice report. One is the damage that No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top, which rely on standardized testing to measure the worth of teachers and schools, have caused to public education. The second is its misleading economic analysis. And the third is its failure to offer any recommendation to improve the teaching profession.
Instead of criticizing the ruinous effects of the Bush-era No Child Left Behind policy (NCLB), the task force praises it. This is not surprising, since Margaret Spellings, the architect of NCLB and former secretary of education, was a member of the task force. The task force chides public schools for losing sight of civics, world cultures, and other studies, but never pauses to recognize that NCLB has compelled schools everywhere to focus solely on reading and mathematics, the only subjects that count in deciding whether a school is labeled a success or a failure. NCLB has turned schooling into a joyless experience for most American children, especially in grades three through eight, who must spend weeks of each year preparing to take standardized tests.
In pursuing its policy of Race to the Top, the Obama administration has promoted the teach-to-the-test demands of NCLB. Most of America’s teachers will now be evaluated by their students’ scores on those annual multiple-choice tests. Students will, in effect, be empowered to fire their teachers by withholding effort or will bear responsibility if their lack of effort, their home circumstances, or their ill health on testing day should cause their teacher to lose her job. NCLB and Race to the Top have imposed on American education a dreary and punitive testing regime that would gladden the hearts of a Gradgrind but demoralizes the great majority of teachers, who would prefer the autonomy to challenge their students to think critically and creatively. This dull testing regime crushes the ingenuity, wit, playfulness, and imagination that our students and our society most urgently need to spur new inventions and new thinking in the future.
In its economic analysis, the task force is surely right that we need more and better education, though it does not propose—in this era of widespread cuts in budgets for education—that we must be willing to pay more to get it. Instead it offers a chart showing that the median annual earnings of high school dropouts and high school graduates have fallen since 1980. The same chart shows that the earnings of college graduates are higher than those with less education but have been stagnant since 1985. It is not clear why this is so. The task force report occasionally refers to income inequality and poverty, which surely depress academic outcomes, but never considers their causes or proposes ways to reduce them.
Surely the economy will need more highly educated workers and everyone should have the chance to go to college, but the task force does not adequately acknowledge the costs of higher education or suggest how they will be paid. Nor does it discuss projections by the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics that the majority of new jobs for the next several years will require on-the-job training, not a bachelor’s degree. According to the BLS, the economy will need 175,000 computer engineers, 582,000 nurses, 461,000 home health aides, 400,000 customer service agents, 394,000 fast food workers, 375,000 retail sales clerks, 255,000 construction workers, and so on.
While the report laments the inadequacy of current efforts to recruit and prepare teachers, it offers no recommendation about how to attract better-qualified men and women into teaching and how to prepare them for the rigors of the classroom. The only program that it finds worthy of endorsement is Teach for America, whose recruits receive only five weeks of training and agree to teach for only two years. This is not surprising, because Wendy Kopp, the founder and chief executive officer of Teach for America, was a member of the task force.
Without the added comments at the end of the report, signed by seven of its thirty members, the task force report might be perceived as an essentially urgent appeal for more testing of students, more top-down control, and more privatization of the public schools, that is, more of what the federal government and many state governments have been doing for at least the past decade. But two of the dissents demolish its basic premises.
In her dissent, Linda Darling-Hammond of Stanford University takes apart the claim that competition and privatization will produce great improvement. She points out that the highest-performing nations in the world (Finland, Singapore, and South Korea)
have invested in strong public education systems that serve virtually all students, while nations that have aggressively pursued privatization, such as Chile, have a huge and growing divide between rich and poor that has led to dangerous levels of social unrest.
Charter schools, she notes, are more likely to underperform in comparison to district-run public schools when they enroll similar students, and they are more likely to enroll a smaller proportion of students with disabilities and English-language learners. Darling-Hammond, who advised President Obama during his 2008 campaign, takes issue with the report’s praise of New Orleans, where nearly 80 percent of students are enrolled in charter schools. Charters in New Orleans, she observes, have not only been criticized for excluding students with disabilities, but New Orleans “remains the lowest-ranked district in the low-performing state of Louisiana.”
Whatever credibility remains to the report is finally shredded by task force member Stephen M. Walt of Harvard University. Walt faintly praises the task force for its “effort to draw attention to the issue of public education,” but then delivers a withering critique of its claims and findings. He does not see any convincing evidence that the public education system is “a very grave national security threat” to the United States. Walt writes that “the United States spends more on national security than the next twenty nations combined, has an array of powerful allies around the world, and remains the world leader in science and technology.” Walt is unimpressed by the task force’s indictment of public education. Not only do American schools rank among the top 10 percent of the world’s 193 nations, he writes, but
none of the states whose children outperform US students is a potential rival. Barring major foreign policy blunders unrelated to K–12 education, no country is likely to match US military power or overall technological supremacy for decades. There are good reasons to improve K-12 education, but an imminent threat to our national security is not among them.
Walt’s critique leaves the task force report looking naked, if not ridiculous. If the international tests are indicators of our national security weakness, should we worry that we might be invaded by Finland or South Korea or Japan or Singapore or Canada or New Zealand or Australia? Obviously not. The nations with higher test scores than ours are not a threat to our national security. They are our friends and allies. If education were truly the key to our national security, perhaps we should allocate sufficient funding to equalize resources in poor neighborhoods and make higher education far more affordable to more Americans than it is today.
If there is no national security crisis, as the task force has vainly tried to establish, what can we learn from its deliberations?
Commissions that gather notable figures tend not to be venturesome or innovative, and this one is no different. When a carefully culled list of corporate leaders, former government officials, academics, and prominent figures who have a vested interest in the topic join to reach a consensus, they tend to reflect the status quo. If future historians want to see a definition of the status quo in American education in 2012, they may revisit this report by a task force of the Council on Foreign Relations. It offers no new directions, no new ideas, just a stale endorsement of the federal, state, and corporate policies of the past decade that have proven so counterproductive to the genuine improvement of American education.

These … people … (steady there) ignore the actual performance of competition as a mode of creating progress. They cherry-pick the history of competition to show how competition is “good.” well, it is not good. It is not even acceptable is certain areas. Would you have your children compete at school, the one who wins gets to eat that day? Would business owners, like Donald Trump’s father, have his son compete with strangers to see who would inherit his millions? Mitt Romney’s dad? Anyone’s? As a rule you compete with strangers and collaborate with members of your in-group. The reason for this is competitions involve winners and losers and the number of losers is always … always larger that the number of winners. The majority of start-up businesses launched fail within the first few years. We have seen this play out in the charter school “industry.” A failing school fails because it fails the children who go to it. Do we want the majority of our students to fail? A more appropriate model would be medical schools. Most medical schools have a “failure is not an option” approach. Too much is invested in the education of doctors to have many drop out or fail, so they provide supports so that does not happen. I argue that all of our children are no different. We cannot as a society allow them to fail, so we should not, and school choice guarantees a large percentage of failing schools, and therefore failing children.
The fact that the plutocrats do not “see” this (more likely do and do not care) is a strong indicator that they are are just in it for the money.
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Thank you for saying that so well.
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Condolleeza Rice also argued that Saddam Hussein was a grave and immediate threat to our national security and she was instrumental in getting the American public to buy into the invasion of Iraq with her mushroom cloud rhetoric.
And we all know how that turned out: ISIS and other terrorist groups (ie, less security) and thousands of dead US soldiers.
But at least she is secure in her academic position at Stanford.
Rice attended a private high school. Maybe that’s why she is an expert on threatening national security?
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Rice and other neoconservative thinkers of their day were sure they could create democratic states in the Middle East that would lead the area to reproachment and peace on terms we liked. Had they been willing to admit that their design was to depose Hussien, an unfortunate result of Cold War politics, and replace him with a great leader who would rise to satisfy all the warring parties in Iraq, no one would have believed that this would work. So it did not. It was not so much that they were disengenuous about the weapons of mass destruction as it was that they lied about their intent. Just as modern school reformers do not really mean to help poor families, they did not really intend to find WMDs.
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“For bureaucratic reasons we settled on one issue, weapons of mass destruction, because it was the one reason everyone could agree on” — Paul Wolfowitz (Chief Iraq Warchitect)
“The Knowful Twits”
Knowful twits
Were Woefulwits
And Condoleezza Rice
WMD
And warring spree
Were kinda sleazy lies
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Thank you for your astute response to this flawed study. Conservatives have exploited fear and insecurity long enough. They have sounded the alarm bells too many times for us to believe that there is any credibility in their claims.
Privatization as it exists today is larger threat to national security than public education, which frankly, is the solution, not the cause. Enabling students to bail on public education through charters and vouchers is creating more problems than it solves. Instead of investing in better public education, privatization weakens public schools and creates a patchwork of schools of dubious quality with little to no accountability. Do these schools even teach American history and civics? We have no way to even know this. Will students graduating from a myriad of parallel schools heed the call in the case of a national emergency as the public school graduates from the greatest generation did in World War II?
What we know about privatization today is that it is based on false assumptions and lies. We now know that vouchers yield negative academic results, and charters have failed to deliver on their promises and have produced meager results. Our infatuation with privatization is more a symptom from our income inequality than any meaningful ideology. Privatization is not driven by concerned parents. It is driven by billionaires and corporations to gain access to public funds earmarked for America’s young people. It is another scheme to move a public asset into private pockets while suppressing democratic input. Privatization is a product of our oligarchy, not our failing schools.
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Here’s the Trump Administration statement on school choice week:
https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/president-donald-j-trump-proclaims-january-21-january-27-2018-national-school-choice-week/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=wh
As usual in ed reform, public schools are an afterthought. They’re referred to only to buttress the marketing campaign for charter and private schools. The federal government assures us that their 24/7 promotion of charters and private schools will not HARM our schools. That’s their best offer- they won’t destroy the schools our kids attend. a
What does the federal government offer public school families, you ask? Well, they offer support of charter and private schools, which by the magic of competition might or might not lead to some benefit for the 90% of children in the unfashionable public schools.
I actually don’t think they even see this in ed reform. The echo chamber is such they can’t imagine a scenario where public school families are anything BUT taken for granted, where public school families might demand that the people they’re paying in the government return some actual value to any public school, anywhere. They don’t value public schools so they can’t imagine that anyone else does.
I don’t think it’s true that Americans don’t value public schools, but of course I could be wrong and they could be right.
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I think Americans really do value the concept of public school, but they don’t like what public school has become due to the reforms and involvement of the federal government. That’s where I am. That’s where most of my friends are. We remember the kinder days of education when it was fun to go to school to learn and mandated tests and data were not the priority.
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I honestly don’t think the federal government is the problem, at least not exclusively. We could disband the federal DoE tomorrow and I firmly believe the State of Illinois and my local district would happily go right on with the testing and the computer “learning” and the “data” and all the other rephorms of the past couple decades. The feds may have freed the beast, but it rampages on its own now.
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“Government by and for the Corporations”
Government, of course
Is really not at fault
It’s government of Corps
That really makes the call
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I love the idea of Joel Klein, who ran the biggest school system in the country, talking about how awful the schools are and perceiving no irony whatsoever.
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I love the idea of Condolleeza Rice talking about threats to national security.
Irony, meet Iron.
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All of this is exactly why the USDE needs to be abolished. There are a few areas that need to be preserved and could be incorporated into other agencies for the good of the children. As long as we have politicians involved in education practices, there will always be big business trying to sell them the next panacea with the ulterior motive to make a quick buck. These hucksters. as rich as they may be, are only concerned with getting richer and nothing more. The Federal Government needs to gets it ugly tentacles out of our children’s classrooms. I think if Jimmy Carter were asked today, he would have great regret for how this agency has developed and has inflicted damage on our nation’s children.
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I think that’s like blaming Trump’s EPA when they fight any regulations against coal burning, fracking, and selling the mining rights in national parks.
Just because an agency has been misused by people who are corrupt does not mean that it is the oversight agency’s fault. The idea of an oversight agency is still valid. But the corruption in the oversight agency needs to be brought to light and not hidden. And the public needs to know that we have a President — along with his enablers in the Senate — who is willing to corrupt everything he touches.
And they do this so uninformed public will agree with them that we need to end the entire notion of having federal oversight, period.
Don’t be fooled. The answer to this corruption is not giving in. It is fighting it.
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I confess at the outset that I’m pretty ignorant of the complexities of what the Department of Education does. I know Title I funding was originally handled in another agency, possibly the Department of the Interior. And there may be good arguments that the funding aspects federal education policy, like Title I and college grants and loans, could easily handled in a separate department. It does seem to be the case that almost immediately from its inception, the US DOE has been used to attack the integrity of the public school system, beginning under Reagan and continuing under the academic standards initiatives that went on under pretty much every President after Reagan. Again, though, I assume there’s a lot of nuance here and that there are good arguments for why the DOE is an essential agency.
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Fed-level ed functions were identified 150 yrs ago; many of them were already cabinet-level, i.e., part of HEW as of 1953. What changed in ’79 was separating E from H&W, & bringing ed functions previously housed in other agencies under that umbrella. It makes sense from an organizational standpoint. Before that, there must have been many cases of partial duplication, conflicting regs, excess coordination.
So how did fed DOEd become so intrusive, over-reaching into state business? I think it gets back to intrusive legislation, especially NCLB.
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I remember a professor at my local college who thought that each successive generation after the civil war was more degenerate than its father. His entire justification for believing this was that Victorian age children learned to read more complex texts than do modern children. He was a very smart man and a good teacher of his subject.
Winston Churchill, esteemed for his leadership during the Battle For Britain, was also responsible for the sacrifice of a quarter of a million men in the attempt to take the Gallipoli Peninsula during the first war. As smart as some people are, they are often so infected with hubris that their clouded vision obscures their own mortality. History is littered with smart people who had the wrong impression of reality.
I have no doubt that the people who wrote this and similar reports honestly thought they were correct. It is hard to wrap your mind around your own limitations. Unless, of course, you are one of us mortals.
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As George W. Bush’s Deputy Chief of Nitwits ( Karl Rove) allegedly said
“We’re an empire now, and when we act, we create our own reality. And while you’re studying that reality—judiciously, as you will—we’ll act again, creating other new realities, which you can study too, and that’s how things will sort out. We’re history’s actors…and you, all of you, will be left to just study what we do’.”
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All the world’s a stage….Shakespeare
Karl Rove is a nitwit….SDP
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“The nitwit Sage”
All the world’s a stage
And President’s the play
And Rove’s the nitwit sage
With nothingness to say
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“The nitwit Sage” (take 2)
All the world’s a stage
And Empire is the play
And Rove’s the nitwit sage
With nothingness to say
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All the world’s a history stage
With Rove and Bush there on,
And reason slumps with crying eyes
For soldiers now are gone.
But once the headstrong leaders vow
To create history, come what may
They doom themselves to their mistakes
No matter what they say.
With apologies, SDP
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Market-based proposals for reform are being put into play, aided by both branches of Congress, Trump and DeVos, state legislatures, and the deep pockets of billionaires, many putting that money in “non-profit” foundations for the benefit of marketing their viewpoints.
One example is Greatschools.org, where school ratings from almost every state are available for a fee, and Zillow listings are posted for schools that are listed in the database. The rating scheme for schools is heavily weighted to favor test scores in ELA and math.
Advertising is all over this website in two forms, overt and covert. Overt ads come from many sources interested in the school-age market. Right now, “Tween Brands” clothing and accessories are featured. The other advertising is covert. It takes the form of parent-friendly and teen-friendly “staff-written” commentary on topics such as online learning, grit, applying to college, writing a great essay, and you can probably guess what else–or see for yourself.
Major “supporters” and funders of the Greatschools.org are known for being friendly to charter schools, on-line learning, and market-based education. These are the biggies, with their own logos: Walton Family Foundation, Laura and John Arnold Foundation, Bloomberg Philanthropies, Carnegie Corporation of New York, Einhorn Family Charitable Trust, the Leona M. and Harry B Hemsley Charitable Trust, Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation.
There are 14 others with active links to their websites (removed for this post). America Achieves, The Charles Hayden Foundation, Charles and Helen Schwab Foundation, Charles and Lynn Schusterman Family Foundation, David and Lucile Packard Foundation, EdChoice, Heising-Simons Foundation, Innovate Public Schools, The Joyce Foundation, Excellent Schools Detroit, The Kern Family Foundation, The Lynde and Harry Bradley Foundation, The Ralph M. Parsons Foundation, and Startup: Education.
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“The task force has many complaints: American students don’t study foreign languages.”
Why should we study foreign languages? We will likely not use them in our adult lives. Unlike let’s say Europe with over 100 languages and close proximity to other languages. A lot of people that speak other languages chose English as their second language. After 40 years I have forgotten most of the high school French I took.
“American employers can’t find enough skilled workers.”
American employers have a laundry list of “skills” required for any given job. They want people to have 3-5 years of experience at each of these “skills”, that only they can provide by the way.
A counter example is in a recent City of Round Rock, Texas, GIS Analyst job 80 qualified people applied for it. Most STEM jobs have way more qualified applicants than they need. I used to semi-jokingly say that companies want the applicant to be able to walk on water until I saw a job requirement list, where the last one (number 15) was, “Must be able to walk on water.”
“Too many young people do not qualify for military service because of criminal records, lack of physical fitness, or inadequate educational skills.”
Roughly 33% fail the ASVAB, entrance test for the US Military, the successor of the NAVBAT and the Army’s test, officially started its use in 1976, our bi-centennial. Of course nearly everybody takes this whether they plan on entering the US military or not. The same can be said for the SAT and not planning on entering college.
The ASVAB is based on percentiles and if we were to base high school graduation rates on these (as those who say we need to educate to be workforce ready) then we would graduate only 60-68% of our kids depending on which service one looks at. The Army minimum is 32nd percentile, the Marines is 33rd percentile, the Navy is 35th percentile, the Air Force is 36th percentile and the Coast Guard is the 40th percentile. We now graduate almost 85% (or the 15th percentile) so no wonder so many fail the ASVAB test.
The US military is the single largest employer of high school graduates in the country. The federal government is the single biggest employer we have in the US.
Insofar as not being in shape goes it may have more to do with the new definition of obesity and therefore more people are considered obese. Of course schools cannot singlehandedly change American culture back to where kids would walk to school and get exercise everyday by playing outside. I very rarely rode a bus in K-12. But then again my daughter rarely walked to school and spent a lot of time playing computer games and she is thin.
“Not enough scientists and engineers are trained “to staff the military, intelligence agencies, and other government-run national security offices, as well as the aerospace and defense industries.””
Schools cannot train people very well as technology changes too fast. The agencies/companies need to train their own people.
Therefore, all of conclusions stated here are false or not the fault of American schools.
“She points out that the highest-performing nations in the world (Finland, Singapore, and South Korea) have invested in strong public education systems that serve virtually all students,”
Yes and they are mostly homogeneous populations and the first two are small populations and South Korea has about 51 million people (1/6th our size), slightly bigger than Canada, which also does well on the PISA.
“First, the states should speedily implement the Common Core State Standards in English and mathematics and add to them national standards in science, technology, foreign languages, and possibly civics.”
One of the few (5 or so) people (Jason Zimba) responsible for coming up with the Math portion CCSS said that CCSS math was not meant to make one STEM ready, maybe the very best math students can handle a tech school.
Two unaccountable trade associations (lobbyist groups) the National Governor’s Association and the Council of Chief State School Officers are responsible for coming up with the standards. The states were not consulted on these standards and were bribed (coerced) to accept the standards before they were even written by the Race To The Top money.
David Coleman is the chief architect of CCSS has zero education credentials.
I got this CCSS information from Dr. Duke Pesta Youtube video. He talks about CCSS 6 years into it. He also has another video one prior to that video.
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Man, shiltz3, so much to address in your post.
Primero, eso de aprender otra lengua no es necesario para los ciudadonos do los EEUU muestra una ignorancia profunda de la concepción de lo que significa ser humano educado. No siempre es una función de aprender otra lengua para razones pragmáticas. El aprender de otra lengua es para llegar a otro nivel de ser, a otro nivel de entendimiento.
Really I wouldn’t expect you to remember much from your French classes 40 years ago (careful you’re showing your age-ya youngster) as even if you took four years in high school that would be only the equivalent of being in a French speaking country for a little over a month and a week. How much could you expect to learn in that time . . . . and then remember it 40 years later? It wouldn’t be much.
And your reliance on standardized test scores in purporting to evaluate education not only for the military but also across countries cannot be rationo-logically sustained as the whole standardized testing process is rife with error and falsehood so that any usage of the results, yes, any usage is COMPLETELY INVALID. See Wilson’s work to understand why: “Educational Standards and the Problem of Error” found at: http://epaa.asu.edu/ojs/article/view/577/700
If you would like I’ll give you a brief outline of that dissertation. Let me know.
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The Council of Foreign Relations education “report” produced under the “leadership” of Joel Klein and Condoleezza Rice was chock full of lies.
Klein and Rice perpetrated and perpetuated the myth that public education is in “crisis,” and without serious “reform,” “the U.S. economy will continue to suffer.”
Klein and Rice’s “reform” meant to impose the “business model” on public schools. This is the same “model” that led to big budget deficits, a ballooned national debt and a broken economy.
Joel Klein made the astonishing, and factually inaccurate, statement that “The forces committed to protecting the current, failed system — the unions, bureaucrats and politicians — are well-financed, well-motivated and extremely adept at pushing back.” But it is Klein and his acolytes who are “well-financed” and greedily motivated, and who promote their own brand of failure. As one New York teacher put it, “Klein’s…proud boasts of ‘historic’ success dried up once The New York State Department of Education recalibrated the test scores and New York City’s results fell like a lead balloon. Overnight, Klein’s claims of pedagogical wizardry evaporated. Klein’s New York City ‘Miracle’ went up in smoke.”
Klein blamed economic quagmire and dislocation on public education. He wrote that we used to “have a successful middle class,” but “that’s changed markedly since 1980.” Klein says “we’re rapidly moving toward two America’s –– a wealthy elite and an increasingly large underclass that lacks the skills to succeed.” His answer to the problem? The market, since “markets impose accountability.”
Klein never made any mention whatsoever of the supply-side economic policies pushed by conservative presidents, politicians and businessmen that were directly responsible for big budget deficits, millions of job losses, the most severe income stratification in the developed world, and our unsustainable national debt. He called for “radical reform” of public education (more tests, merit pay, vouchers, etc), but said not one word about reforming the banks, and derivatives trading, and skewed tax system, and regulatory enforcement that are sorely needed.
Condoleezza Rice was George W. Bush’s national security director before 9/11 occurred and during the launching of the war in Iraq, which she favored and supported. Rice helped to sell the American public the big lie of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, warning infamously that “ we don’t want the smoking gun to be a mushroom cloud.” Journalists who covered her reported that she “made public claims that she knew to be false.”
There’s little doubt but that Rice (and her colleagues) ignored repeated warnings about imminent terrorist threats. After 9/11, she said (repeatedly) that no one could have predicted that planes might be used as weapons, despite the fact that there were at least a dozen documented warnings of it. See CBS news:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wpQCNibf704
Initially, until public pressure forced the Bush administration to relent, Rice refused to testify before the 9/11 Commission. When she did, it wasn’t pretty. She wiggles and squirms, and tries to obfuscate and evade answering questions about the Presidential Daily Briefing (PDB) of August 6, 2001. That PDB was titled “Bin Ladin Determined To Strike in US” and warned that Bin Ladin was “determined…to conduct terrorist attacks in the US,” that he “prepares years in advance and is not deterred by setbacks.” The memo noted “patterns of suspicious activity in this country consistent with preparations for hijackings or other types of attacks,” and it warned that a group of “Bin Ladin’s supporters was in the US planning attacks with explosives.”
The two people who headed up the Council of Foreign Relations education task force had to know it was full of lies. If they didn’t, they’re inept. If the did, and let it go public anyway then they are charlatans of the first order and have no credibility.
Sheesh. These people.
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There is a crisis in our schools today, and it was created by the Education Deformers. Our math and English classes have been replaced by test prep. This is a quite serious situation. In English classes in particular, very little real learning is now taking place. Kids are reading isolated chunks of random text and bubbling in answers in preparation for taking tests. Traditional instruction–reading significant works in their entirety, doing creative writing and writing of reports and research papers–has just about disappeared.
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