Steven Singer writes his summary of 2018 here. He concludes with a list of his best posts, along with links.
He wrote:
I’m not going to mince words.
This year, 2018, has been a monster.
We’ve been fighting the dumbest and most corrupt President of our lives – Donald Trump. And we’ve been making progress.
Thanks to the midterm election blue wave in the U.S. House, Trump will finally have a check on his power.
We have more black and brown representatives, more women, more nationalities, ethnicities and faiths in the halls of power than ever before.
Charter schools and vouchers are more unpopular today than at any other point in history. High stakes testing is on the decline. And everywhere you look educators and education activists are being heard and making a difference.
But it’s taken an incredible toll on the activist community.
We have had to be out there fighting this ridiculous crap day-in-day-out 365 days a year.
And even then, we’ve suffered devastating losses – family separations at the border, children dying in detention, an increase in hate crimes and gun deaths, all while climate change runs rapidly out of control.
I wish I felt more hopeful. But as I cast my eyes back on the year that was, I’m struck with a sense of bone-deep despair.
I am confident Trump will go down and he will take so many with him.
But the forces of regression, prejudice and stupidity that forced him upon us don’t appear to be going anywhere.
Behind Donald is another Trump waiting to take his place. And behind him another one – like an infinite set of Russian Matryoshka dolls.
Oh, many of them look more appealing than Donald. They dress better, are more articulate and can remember all the words to the National Anthem. But they are just as committed to serving themselves at our expense.
So with that in mind, I invite you to join me on a brief look back at the year that was.
First, let me thank everyone who bought my book, “Gadfly on the Wall: A Public School Teacher Speaks Out on Racism and Reform” from Garn Press. It was amazing to have finally achieved the dream of being published (in paper with a binding and everything)! I never made anyone’s best seller list, but it was gratifying to have hundreds of copies make it into readers’ hands. I hope people found it helpful (and still do because it’s still out there where better books are sold).
Also, I got to check another item off my bucket list with the invitation to film a TED Talk at Central Connecticut State University. My topic was “The Plot to Destroy Public Education.” It’s been viewed almost 1,000 times. I invite you to watch it here.
As to the blog, itself, I’ve been writing now for four and a half years. This year, I’ve had more than 211,000 hits. To be honest, that’s quite a drop. In 2017, I had 366,000 hits. But I’m hearing about similar dips all over the blogosphere. Facebook changed its algorithm this year making it much harder for people to see the work of amateurs like me. Zuckerberg’s multi-billion dollar corporation doesn’t refuse to spread the written word – it just charges a fee that I can’t afford. Moreover, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) repealed Net Neutrality at about this time last year making things even more dodgy.
However, on the plus side, the blog is up to more than 1,429,000 hits total! That’s pretty good for a publication that’s only been around since July 2014. And it doesn’t count all the readers I get from articles reposted on the Badass Teachers Association Blog, Huffington Post, Commondreams.org, the LA Progressive, Alternet, BillMoyers.com or other sites.
In addition, about 500 more people followed me this year for a total of 13,361.
That should do it for an overview.
One final item before I get to the look back. I’m making a slight change this year to how I do things. Instead of publishing two separate articles – a Top 10 list and a List of Honorable Mentions – I’m combing the two into this one.
I’ll begin with three pieces that didn’t necessarily get the number of hits I thought they were worth. Then I’ll count down my 10 most popular pieces of 2018.
And then you will find some truly wonderful posts, which I urge you to open and read.

You continue to make a difference in these worst of times. Keep going.
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It’s every American’s obligation to fight for democracy. Thanks to Singer, Ravitch, Shor, Ultican, Schneider, Greene, Ressinger, Bryant, Phillis, Lofthouse, Chapman, Rendo and all of the others engaged in this battle for the soul of the nation, who endure great sacrifice to do so.
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The level of corruption really worries me, and it isn’t just Trump. The massive amounts of money pouring into our political system is doing real damage. I don’t think average people can tell the difference anymore between what is political marketing and campaigning and what is genuine advocacy on issues. It is SO slick, so professional, so well-funded.
Campaign finance laws and enforcement have been so gutted and made toothless that we basically have pols exchanging bags of money for laws out in the open and people are INUNDATED with this stuff.
With each political cycle people get more cynical and less trusting and the campaign industry- lobbyists, marketing people, think tanks- gets bigger and bigger.
I worry that we’ll have completely corrupted institutions. That nothing will be immune- not the political branches but also the judiciary and legal system and all the other “institutions” that people rely upon for information, sold to the highest bidder, with everyone on the payroll of oligarchs in one way or another.
I cannot (now) tell the difference between campaigns put out by the US Department of Education and campaigns put out by the ed reform billionaires. They use the same cherry-picked studies and stats, the same words and whole phrases. It’s frightening, the extent that it’s an echo chamber. I worry that kind of capture spreads and there are no independent voices at all, because everyone, everyone, is on the payroll.
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I will say this- the people who opposed excessive testing did a very good job. They’re great advocates.
They went up against the entire ed reform echo chamber and the entire testing industry and they scored real victories. Bravo.
That they were able to get colleges and universities to start thinking about their excessive reliance on standardized test scores is flat-out amazing. I never thought that would happen.
They got a real debate going, despite 40 years of lock-step acceptance of test scores as the be-all and end-all. That’s an accomplishment.
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We have plenty of bad and ugly around us that will continue to undermine democracy and public education. Billionaires and corporations continue to buy our policies in a stealth attempt to steal our valuable public asset, public education. The vandals and plunderers continue smash and grab our common goods.
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https://thehill.com/blogs/congress-blog/education/422847-democrats-in-california-need-to-lead-on-education
Arne Duncan, true to form, finally notices that public schools (still) exist, despite his best efforts, when public school teachers threaten to strike.
Ed reformers bravely advocate on behalf of public school students, but ONLY when doing so involves an attack on labor unions.
All of a sudden the echo chamber are deeply concerned about students in existing public schools, the students they completely ignore unless those students have teachers who are threatening to strike.
Didn’t the Obama Administration do enough damage to existing public schools over 8 years? They’re now going to lobby against our schools and teachers for the rest of their private sector careers, too?
Give us a break. Take some time off. Start a charter chain or something- go lobby for vouchers. Leave public school students OUT of the ed reform anti labor union campaign. You;ve done enough damage.
They add no value to any public school anywhere, yet we’re apparently stuck with them even when they’re out of office.
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You voice very well the frustration I feel.
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