Cathy Frye is an experienced journalist who switched careers. Three years ago, she was hired to work for the Arkansas Public School Resource Center as communications director. Before she was hired, she was asked if she had any qualms about charter schools, and she said no. When she quit her job in June 2019, she decided to tell what she had learned, and she started to report about her experiences on her blog.
Here is the lowdown. Eighty-five percent of the rural public school districts in the state belong to the Arkansas Public School Resource Center, but the APSRC is a Walton-funded school choice operation.
When Frye quit, she said she felt a burden lift.
No more working in an environment steeped in secrecy and paranoia. No more placating a male boss who acted more like an abusive stalker ex-boyfriend than an actual leader. No more weird workplace silos that left “team leaders” completely in the dark as to what other departments were doing. No more legislative education committee meetings that reeked of conspiracy, deception and stale men’s suits in dire need of dry-cleaning.
I think the turning point for me was when, at the beginning of APSRC’s annual membership drive in the spring/summer of 2019, Smith said on three occasions – in my presence – that “If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit.”
“Them” refers to public school districts – as in APSRC’s current member districts and potential member districts.
I spent decades looking for facts. I believe in transparent and ethical journalistic practices.
Baffle them with bullshit?
Um, that’s a hard no.
We’re talking about the education of Arkansas’ children. We’re talking about the teachers who work long hours for pitiful pay. We’re talking about inadequate funding, inadequate facilities and the fact that the state has taken its largest school district hostage just so that it can take it apart and reinstate segregation in the Little Rock School District.
There will be no “baffle them with bullshit” from my little corner of the universe.
Also, covering the 2019 legislative session left me disturbed and downright angry about what is happening in public education. The 2017 General Assembly gave me serious pause. The 2019 session revealed the seamiest side of the school-”choice” movement.
In this post and those that will follow, I’m going to share the details of my three years at APSRC. Since quitting, I’ve learned that most people – even those in education – don’t realize how APSRC is structured or how it operates. Yes, it’s a nonprofit primarily funded by the Waltons. But it’s also a powerful and influential force where the governor and state Legislature are concerned.
This is a blog that I will follow.
The Waltons, like their fellow billionaires the Kochs and the DeVos family, are dedicated to the destruction of public schools.
How clever to launch a “public school resource center” with which to peddle their anti-public school venom.

“The purpose of the APSRC is to provide comprehensive services to advance and support school-choice initiatives and the implementation of high-quality open-enrollment public charter schools in Arkansas, as well as providing a variety of support services critical to the fiscal and academic success of rural public schools in Arkansas.”
That “as well as” is just ed reform in a nutshell. Public schools are just a mechanism – a lever- to get to the privatization they’re all really working for.
It’s just so incredibly disrespectful to public school students and families.
Enlisted unknowingly in The Cause, and the cause is privatizing their schools. And they’re all paying for it! They’re literally paying people who work against their schools.
LikeLike
Feel like I’ve just read the first chapter in a fascinating novel. Will enjoy digging into this one!
LikeLike
“If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit.
Or in the words of a member of the Education Industry Association circa 1990, “Sell the sizzle as if it is steak.”
Thanks for introducing me to the blog of Cathy Frye. I read her harrowing account of being lost and barely surviving what began as a hiking trip in the desert.
LikeLike
“Smith said on three occasions – in my presence – that “If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle them with bullshit.”
For a strange reason, these reformers assume that people fall for bullshit. Cathy Frye sounds like a badass. 🙂
LikeLike
That seems to be the Reformers’ modus operandi
LikeLiked by 1 person
yes: in my experience the role of reformer chaos has been essential. Nothing stays in place, no programs or dictates or personnel — everyone truly has become “baffled” by the endlessly shifting b.s.
LikeLike
That’s why I call the Corporate Reformers “Disrupters.”
You can’t Reform something you know nothing about.
But you can blow it up by disruptive tactics.
That’s what they do.
LikeLiked by 1 person