Arne Duncan wrote a book about his seven years as Secretary of Education and is now promoting it and touting his record. You know, the record where teachers were demonized as lying to kids, kids were belittled as dummies, and parents were belittled for not embracing the Common Core.
Peter Greene read an interview with Arne and realized that he learned nothing from his experience.
He begins:
“Never mind a Secretary of Education who has never taught anything; I’m beginning to think it would be a step forward if we had a Secretary of Education who has ever learned anything.
“Arne Duncan was interviewed for the pages of US News, and the resulting piece reminds us, first, that there’s not nearly as much difference between Duncan and DeVos as some Democrats would like to believe, and second, that Duncan remain unrepentant and unenlightened about anything that happened under his watch. So join me in yelling fruitlessly at the computer screen as we walk through this trip down Delusion Lane.
“Chicken Little’s History of School
“Count Duncan as a member of the Century Club– that special group of reformsters that is certain schools haven’t changed in 100 years. Arne would also like to beat the expired equine about how “other nations out-educating, out-investing, out-innovating us.” Because, you know, we’re competing with India and China and Singapore for jobs. That’s certainly true, but at no point is it going to occur to Duncan that those countries compete by offering little or no regulation and workers who will do the job for pennies. In all the times I’ve heard the “we must change education to compete with China” refrain, not once have I heard an explanation of how education will help American workers better compete with people working under conditions we wouldn’t accept for wages we couldn’t live on. Arne wants us to now that our kids– his kids– are going to grow up in that world. And if you think Arne’s kids, raised in privilege and comfort, are going to be competing with some Chinese smartphone assembler for work, well– I have a bridge over a swamp to sell you.
“This guy. This frickin’ guy.
“Oh, and we are not in the top 10 internationally. Which– first, what does that even mean? Top 10 ranked by what? Because if, as I would guess, he means test scores, let me repeat for the gazzillionth time that we have never, ever been in the Top 10 for international test scores. Nor has Duncan ever offered a shred of evidence that being in the Top 10 of test scores translates into any sort of national achievement like higher GDP or higher standard of living or happier citizens or military might or best frozen desserts!
“Duncan’s Diagnosis and That Damned Status Quo
“Having failed to effectively define the problem, Duncan now goes on to offer his idea about the cause.
“This is not a cure for cancer, this is not rocket science. It’s total lack of political will. And I think the politics of the left and the right stand in the way of what’s best for kids.
“Well, actually, it is too rocket science. Duncan’s thesis is that fixing schools is actually quite easy; we’re just not willing to do it, because after all this time, he still doesn’t realize how complex and complicated it is to run an entire educational system. And Duncan doesn’t seem to know what he’s trying to change because he also notes “There’s a small number of political leaders willing to challenge the status quo.”
“Dammit, Arne.
“First, the status quo in education right now is the status quo you help make. Common Core, in its various bastardized forms and under its various assumed names, is the status freakin’ quo, and an ugly obnoxious one it is, too. Schools and teachers being evaluated based on bad uses of bad data generated by bad tests– that’s status quo, too. As is the draining of resources from public schools by private charterized schools. These are all problems, these are all status quo, and these are all a legacy in part of your administration.
“Second, the idea that you need political leaders to change the educational system shows a fundamental misunderstanding of how the education system (and, for that matter, the political system) works. You need teachers and education leaders and actual trained professional educators to change an educational system, yet another fact we can put on the list of Things You Don’t Understand. All these years, and you still treat teachers like the hired help, certain that your amateur insights are more important than anything they might have to say.
“Duncan also thinks we need Republicans to challenge their base, and I’m not sure where he’s coming from here, because other than a deadly aversion to the words “common core,” the GOP base is in tune with most of the Duncan program. Duncan offers Obama’s championing of merit pay as a profil;e in courage because “that’s very hard to do” and well, yes, it’s hard to do because we have lots of evidence that merit pay doesn’t work. There’s nothing courageous about standing up for a bad idea.”
I don’t think anyone told Arne that his own Department evaluated Race to the Top and concluded it was a flop.

It really is a terrible interview. It’s not just that it’s full of slogans and ed reform ideology that they present as fact, it’s that Duncan learned NOTHING.
He recited these exact same lines for 8 years.
It’s not surprising that ed reformers devalue experience. They don’t learn anything from it.
John Kasich is the worst “education” governor of my lifetime and I think a lot of people in Ohio would agree with me. Kasich simply does not care about public education. He put zero effort into it, hired a bunch of charter-cheerleading hacks and cut funding every year he was in office. Bad. Kasich is objectively BAD for public school children.
Duncan points to Kasich as a champion ed reformer. It’s just nonsense. NO ONE in Ohio would agree with that. Duncan just has no idea what he’s talking about.
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Ugh. I despise him and I’m angry with Obama for letting those 8 years happen.I expected better from him.
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It is pathetic that Obama fell for all the gibberish from this elitist, amateur.
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The. DFERS are so wrong. Arne is an idiot. Obama went to private, preppy schools.
Right now big issues between the progressive Dems and the NEO-Liberal, conservative DEM. Those “not so super, super delegates” are a HUGE issue.
Consumer Affairs … it’s good. Please pass it on. This kind of horror re: those online schools / classes needs to known by everyone.
https://www.consumeraffairs.com/education/k12-inc.html
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I think you’re being extremely kind to think President Obama “fell for” anything, instead of handpicking a neoliberal, corporate education reformer that shared both his ideological and policy goals.
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I will forever remember that the DFERS used Public Schools and Public School Teachers for political gain.
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Well written, Peter Greene, per usual.
Duncan and Company were such huge successes that we now have Trump trashing the country. Arne, face it, you blew it.
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No surprise here. The most corrupt people who have power are rewarded.
There is not a shred of accountability! THE RULE OF LAW, which has disappeared with Citizen United, and a congress, a president and a judiciary which has no responsibility to the the people.
Examples… look at the CEOs of the financial institutions that destroyed the economy. That debacle stole everything we had, homes, schools health care, and we the people paid the price.NO One WENT TO JAIL!
In my last tenure at East Side MIddle School, there were four principals and a superintendent that did as they pleased. Theft, mismanagement and the total shredding of civil rights of any teacher that they wished to eradicate — ALL went unpunished and , in fact were rewarded with career enhancements and promotion. Why the BULLY and lawless, Dr Levine went on to become superintendent in Brooklyn! The liar in chief, the corrupt superintendent at District 2, went on to become a chancellor in San Diego.
Duncan- Rhee- Moscowitz, liars all.
I bet readers here could add names galore!
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Too many are (sometimes inadvertently) in this corporate thought track relating things that have no relation. Imagine someone saying, “Hey, let’s track abstract artists by merit and pay them accordingly, and while we’re at it let’s evaluate and price each piece by a rubric.” Some may think it’s not a bad idea. Some others may possess functional neurons.
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Love your example–merit pay for abstract artists and rubric ratings of merit for the work they produce.
A version of this will resonate with many teachers of the visual arts who are still being rated in some states by the school-wide reading or math scores of students.
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Arne’s very existence kind of hinges upon learning nothing. He’s proven expert at it over the years. Great piece by Greene, who cuts through all the nonsense editorial writers and think tanks will never imagine is even there.
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Totally agree, Arthur. The SPIN is Arne’s coronation by the deformers.
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Arne is like Dick Cheney. Not matter what a disaster he was, he won’t fade into the woodwork and actually holds himself out as a success.
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“Several big names in education reform are teaming up to start a new organization designed to change how schools are managed in cities across the U.S. — and they say they’ve already raised $200 million.
The City Fund, as the group is being called, will push cities to expand charter schools and district schools with charter-like autonomy. It represents a big increase in visibility and influence for advocates of the “portfolio model” of running schools, a strategy that’s been adopted by cities like New Orleans, Denver, and Indianapolis.
The group was announced Tuesday morning on the blog of Neerav Kingsland, who leads education giving at The Laura and John Arnold Foundation. According to a separate presentation created by the group and viewed by Chalkbeat, the Arnold Foundation and the Hastings Fund have already given the group over $200 million. It’s unclear if the organization has raised additional funds.”
Exact same people push exact same privatization plan but call it something slightly different.
They include “district schools” because they recognize it’s politically smart, but existing district schools (and the students who attend them) are a dead-last priority in ed reform, which is reflected in the fact that ed reform has been terrible for existing schools.
If you live in one of those cities you should get yourself to a charter school. This is essentially an announcement that your school is disfavored and will be bled and left to die while they lavish attention and funding on the charter schools they support.
This isn’t “markets”. It’s a small group of people deliberately eradicating public schools.
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The cities in your post have mayoral control of education. The money will likely go to other cities where there is mayoral control because the billionaire can time their flow of funds to charter friendly mayors and to candidates for mayor who will take the bait. Thanks for the post and head up about another move to demolish public education by removing it to direct oversight by citizens.
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Mayoral control of local public schools is another grab for power and to insure the income flow of the few. When politicians entered higher education … NIGHTMARE.
Think: The SPIN of “Gentrification.”
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An ideologue with an internal positivity mantra: Yes I can, yes I did, yes you all can, except for about 20%, yes you all did, except for you know who, yes I know it’s true, I just know, yes it takes a lot of courage to just know you’re right, and yes I know, and I know that in itself is courageous, yes, yes we all did it, except for some. Victory lap. Quasar. Infinite space.
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¡Al infinito y más allá!
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un unicornio montando un unicornio sobre un arcoiris!
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If’n y’all cain’t speak Murican, take it somewheres else! 🤠
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As you well know Spanish was being spoken in America well before there was the country of America, eh!
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And other languages were spoken before Spanish.
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There isn’t a dime’s worth of difference between the 2010 plans to privatize schools ed reformers promoted and “portfolio districts”.
They changed the language slightly, but they hire exactly the same people with exactly the same agenda.
If you want to privatize schools you should welcome them, but don’t be fooled by them. Go into it with your eyes open. There won’t be a public school left in the cities they run in a decade. That’s by design.
At least know what you’re buying. Ignore the slick marketing. Read the plans.
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“Others involved include Chris Barbic of the Arnold Foundation; Kevin Huffman, the former Tennessee education chief; David Harris, who previously led the Mind Trust, an Indianapolis-based group; and Ethan Gray, the president of the nonprofit Education Cities.”
Well, this is certainly a lively and robust debate!
Not a single advocate for public schools is permitted to speak. 100% charter cheerleaders!
It will be terrible. It’s an echo chamber of true believers who give one another awards.
I feel bad for the kids and families in the public schools in these cities. They have no idea the wrecking crew is parachuting in, and they’ll only figure it out when they see their public schools abandoned as unfashionable and unworthy of support by the Best and Brightest. But it will be too late.
Best to get out of public schools now. The privatization lobby crew have announced we’ll be getting their “governance” scheme, like it or not.
I’ll make it easy for you. Their “governance” vision consists of government contracting to private entities. It’s a very, very old idea with some new slick salespeople.
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Duncan and King’s chief of staff was Emma Vahehra. She’s at the Center for American Progress.
Read the DNC/Podesto leaked tapes related to Neera Tandem (CAP’s head honcho before, during and after Hillary). CAP’s VP of Ed Policy is a former TFA’er.
Someone should ask CAP, “is your plan to keep peddling policy that destroys Main Street, anticipating Dem wins, just because Trump is so bad?”
If so, it guarantees further wealth concentration and prevents American progress.
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Where are all the progressive politicians standing up for public education?
I expect this kind of nonsense from Arne Duncan and CAP. They get paid a lot of money to spout it.
I want to hear a progressive politician standing up for public education. So far, I have Ralph Northam, Tim Kaine among the “moderates” who are standing up for public education.
And I have Cynthia Nixon and Bill de Blasio as the progressives. There should be far more progressive politicians talking about public education. Why is it ignored? Why aren’t they criticizing charters and endorsing the NAACP’s moratorium? Why aren’t they attacking Arne Duncan?
Being silent on public education is being complicit. And that is true whether you are a conservative or moderate democrat or a democratic socialist.
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I am sorry to tell you that Bill de Blasio has created a federal PAC to support “progressive” candidates, and the treasurer of the de Blasio PAC is Richard Buery, who is treasurer of KIPP Charter chain and former deputy mayor of De Blasio administration. De Blasio has left behind his anti-charter views.
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CAP, if it wanted to, could (1) delegitimize TFA and charter schools and (2) delegitimize Duncan (the state of Mass. accomplished it with the vote on Issue 2 and the state of Wash. accomplished it by re-electing the judges Gates opposed).
CAP, using rationale thought, could recommend taxing the rich instead of advertising on buses to pay school expenses. CAP could provide talking points for the common good, forcing corporate-funded media to write their own promotion for privatized public education.
Wouldn’t that make it a lot easier for moderate and progressive candidates and people like Diane and Peter Green to inform Americans about the loss of democracy and the financial exploitation of their children and communities ( Ohio’s $1 bil. Republican-led debacle)?
Here’s a thought, the well-funded MODERATE candidates could disavow CAP.
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In a related story, school in Pensecola, FL where a friend of mine used to teach has been disbanded by someone who is reportedly bringing in businessmen to run the place. All of the staff has been let go due to low test scores. Low income area, 95% free and reduced lunch…….. Sound like Arne to you? Is this what helps? We are seeing the contrary, but the business people who,are brought in do not have to play by the same rules as the veterans they replace. They get to make up their own narrative and sell books like Duncan.
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One of Duncan’s chiefs of staff, when she left the Dept. of Ed. went to work for Parthenon which merged with Ernest Young in 2014 so that they could expand into more lucrative businesses. No surprise, she formerly worked for the Gates Foundation. Duncan/ King’s final chief of staff went to work for the corporate-funded CAP.
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My experiences observing things in St. Louis make me think this goes beyond Arne Duncan and Obama. It has not been right wing forces so much that pushed the charter and testing solutions…there have often been wealthy corporate foundations as the driving force. They like to operate shrouded in secrecy. If an ex-student who is receiving support from the president of the board of edudation in his lawsuit has 12 bullets fired into him, there is no follow up about why. If a racist state board president, Peter Herschends is you ltubed photographed berating well behaved black children, as they ask for answers about the takeover of their schools demanded by Mayor Slay to set the stage for an increase in charter schools…….including putting Danforth’s daughter in charge of one of them, you can no longer find Antonio French’s you tubes……The Mayor changed the demographics of St. Louis, pretending to weep about a loss of population from 350,000 to 308,thousand, when a look at the census’s shows it was accomplished by losing a lot more women, children and black people than anyone else….he dares not brag about it, but some powerful people are very proud of that “accomplishment. The latest detail…..the Duck Boat cost 17 lives sinking in a storm, and though the KC Star pointed out that the Herschend family was the sole owner of the duck boats over a wide area, and a person from Philadelphia who 17 million dollars in 2009, and though the Herschend family sold the duck boat interests late in 2017, they are named in the 100 million dollar federal lawsuit….Ripley Entertainment Inc., Ride the Ducks International, Ride the Ducks of Branson, the Herschend Family Entertainment Corp., and Amphibious Vehicle Manufacturing are named in the federal suit. Despite the coverage in KC, the Post Dispatch has not said anything about the Herschend family 17 year connection to the tragic boatS——-more than a decade of those years, Peter Herschend was president of the state board of education…….It would not have been mentioned in St. Louis if I had not had a gut feeling about Herschend……and quickly found out……. 16 years as sole owners—a fact not exactly guarded, but like so many of the sleazy activities of these wealthy jerks…..deemed something nobody needs to be talking about.
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GENTRIFICATION = vouchers, online schools, common gore, test if it twitches, charter schools
It’s all a sham. Thanks, joe prichard.
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Of all the knavish puff excreted from Arne Duncan, the thing I dislike the most is when he says good teachers deserve higher pay. Too many are gullible enough to think he means what he says, to believe he just means raises for teachers. I am a “good” teacher. Arne Duncan and the bloodsucking testing VAMpires would not want or be able to determine my, uh, goodness. And I would never accept another dime added to my paycheck if it meant paying others less, reducing job security, or firing others and raising class size. Half truths are Duncan’s way, but that half truth bothers me above all.
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“Other nations are out-innovating us”. Um, what if wise policy calls for conservation of good practices, not innovation. The current fiasco in education is purely the result of innovation –harebrained innovation. Are we still mindlessly worshipping innovation these days?
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