Evie Blad of Education Week writes that a Biden-Harris administration may forge a new path on education issues. They have pledged to increase funding, regulate charters, and back away from standardized testing. They also have pledged to support the right to collective bargaining. This heartens advocates of public education, but frightens the corporate reformers who have controlled education for 20 years.
Twenty years of failed education policy is enough!
Democrats for Education Reform and the Center for American Policy, both committed to high/stakes testing and charters, are worried.
As he campaigned for the Democratic presidential nomination, former Vice President Joe Biden pledged that, if elected, his education department would be a sharp departure from that of President Donald Trump.
Rather than promoting private school choice, as the Republican incumbent has, Biden pledged to dramatically increase federal aid to schools, including ambitious calls to triple the Title I funding targeted at students from low-income households and to “fully fund” the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act.
But, as Biden accepts his party’s nomination this week, there also are signs that his potential future administration wouldn’t return lock step to the education policies of President Barack Obama. And some of a Biden administration’s education policy goals could take a back seat to the pressing matter of helping schools navigate the ongoing coronavirus pandemic, which may alter their operations and threaten their budgets for years to come.
Though he’s campaigned heavily on his experience as Obama’s vice president, Biden has departed on some key issues from that self-described supporter of education reform. Obama’s education department championed rigorous state education standards, encouraged states to lift their caps on public charter schools to apply for big federal Race to the Top grants, and offered charter school conversions as an improvement strategy for struggling schools.
By contrast, Biden called for a scale-back of standardized testing at a 2019 MSNBC education forum, and he criticized their use in teacher evaluations, a key policy goal of the Obama administration. Under the leadership of Biden’s campaign, Democrats formally introduced a party platform this week that criticizes high-stakes testing and calls for new restrictions on charter schools.
How much Biden’s policy would depart from the last Democratic president’s is up for debate. But the Every Student Succeeds Act, the federal education law Obama signed at the end of his last term, may offer levers to make some policy changes.
“Your job as a vice president is to toe the line of your boss,” said Julian Vasquez Heilig, the dean of the college of education at the University of Kentucky and a board member of the Network for Public Education, a progressive advocacy group. If Biden chooses, “he can be his own person on education.”
Praise and Concern
That suggestion of a new direction has won praise from groups like national teachers’ unions, which called for the resignation of Obama’s long-serving education secretary, Arne Duncan, when Duncan advanced a push for teacher evaluations and other reforms.
National Education Associationâ¯President Lily Eskelsen Garcíaâ¯called Biden and his running mate and one-time rival for the nomination, California Sen. Kamala Harris, a “dream team” that “respects educators and will listen to those who know the names of the kids in the classrooms.”
But Biden’s priorities, and the absence of discussions of school improvement during the Democratic primary, have also been met with concern from some education groups.
“If we only talk about the money side of the equation, that’s not enough by itself,” said Shavarâ¯Jeffries, president of Democrats for Education Reform. “That’s where we need our president to be a leader and hold those institutions accountable.”
The organization, which supports charter schools and data-driven school accountability efforts, has praised Biden’s push for more resources, but it has sounded the alarm about other changes recommended in the party platform.
That platform language reflects some of Biden’s comments during the primaries. In recorded interviews with the NEA, for example, he said a lot of charter schools are “significantly underperforming” and that charter schools “cannot come at the expense of the public school.”
Neither Biden nor Harris included language on charters in their plans as candidates. But the platform language-created with input from a “unity task force” assembled by the campaigns of Biden and Independent Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders-calls for a ban on federal funding for “for-profit charter businesses.”
The language also calls for “conditioning federal funding for new, expanded charter schools or for charter school renewals on a district’s review of whether the charter will systematically underserve the neediest students,” which has alarmed charter advocates who say the publicly funded, independently managed schools already face sufficient accountability.
Charter schools are largely governed through state and local policy. But a presidential administration can help shape public debate on the issue. And a Biden administration could scale back support for charter schools in its discretionary grant priorities and regulations or in its proposed budgets.
Time for fresh thinking! Time to build strong child-centered, community-based schools and throw off the obsession with standardized testing and privatization.
This makes me so hopeful. Jill Biden is a teacher and she may be a strong voice for public schools as well.
A family member, who lives in another state, recently told me how many people she knows are opting for private schools this year because the private schools are “ready” and the public schools are not. I tried to explain how private schools received PPE money and do not have the large populations of public schools – ugh!
Hopefully a more transparent, honest, educated and civic minded approach to overseeing schools is on it’s way.
Here is Gerry Brooks conversation with the CDC on school opening:
I was just talking to the VP of our public elementary school and she told me that many families were signing their children up at the local catholic school. The parents need/want to go back to work and the Parochial Schools are opening fully in our area while the county schools are online the 1st 2 grading periods. My bet is that the Catholic School will be bursting at the seams come September and will close down by the end of the month when a teacher dies of Covid. Of course they can always try to pray away the virus….I think I’ll stick with the science on this one.
A move away from high stakes testing-and-punishment and privatization would not just be a break from Obama policy; it would be a break from Bush policy. Annual testing and charters were always Republican policies, and always awkwardly draped over the Democratic Party the way the word ‘Democrats’ is awkwardly draped over DFER. A Biden-Harris administration has a chance to return to democratic and Democratic roots. I believe they will because, after 20 years of failure, the bloom is off the fake, plastic rose.
I’m hopeful too.
Remember: personnel is policy. If Biden and Harris hire out of the same ed reform echo chamber we will get the same policy we’ve gotten for the last 20 years.
If nothing else I’m hoping there’s a change because a change would allow some new people and new ideas in. Right now we get the same tired slogans and plans from the same revolving cast of ed reformers who all came out of the same orgs and lobbying groups and training programs.
I know there are talented people who work in and around public schools and right now they’re not permitted in to policy. Maybe we can find and hire them.
It would make SUCH a difference just to have some people who are positive and practical about public schools- Bush, Obama and now Trump are 100% negative about public schools and public school students. That takes a toll. It is quite literally disheartening.
I want a real advocate for existing public schools. Charter schools have advocates. Private schools and vouchers have advocates. Why are public schools not permitted to have advocates? How is that fair to public school students and families?
advocates who get LOTS of news airtime: time to repeatedly hear the message that our public
schools are not broken, our kids are not failing and our teachers are not bad
In the below link, Ali Velshir of MSNBC recalls that seven years ago, Chris Hayes called out the Republican party as transforming authentic conservative principles into the general ideas that underpin corruption: that “Much of movement (of) conservatism is a con and the base are the marks.”
FOR PUBLIC EDUCATION and the POST OFFICE: We here talk about the ‘double-speak, fox in the chicken house,’ etc., of the reform movement in education as they badmouth public education and try to hoodwink parents and authentic educators through the misuse of language like “choice” and “freedom” and other distracting and even false bells and whistles. Similar movements have gone on for a long time with regard to the U.S. Post Office. It doesn’t support itself financially, so let’s ruin it and then privatize it/aka get rid of it . . . .
I think we should ask ourselves in education: How different is that from the con-to-marks metaphor; and how much of it is an actual extension of the movement that Velshir and Hayes are calling out? That movement goes back to the Reagan era and probably before, but is further developed in the below clip from yesterday where Velshir sat in for Lawrence O’Donnell’s time slot. CBK
I’m in moderation again. CK
Don’t know if you saw this:
“A federal judge has ruled against U.S. Department of Education in a lawsuit over how much coronavirus aid public schools must set aside for private school students.
Public school groups and officials argued that the interim final rule from the department unfairly deprives their schools and disadvantaged students of crucial funding during the pandemic.
In a preliminary injunction halting enforcement and implementation of the rule while she considers the case pitting Washington state against the Education Department, U.S. District Court Judge Barbara J. Rothstein harshly and repeatedly rejected the department’s arguments.
She said that the agency subverted the intent of Congress and hurt students most affected by the pandemic, and that Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos did not have the authority to issue the rule in the first place”
“Hurt students most affected by the pandemic”.
Finally someone looked at how a ed reform affects students in PUBLIC schools. Sad that it had to be a judge, but at least public school students were considered by someone.
Diane, Have you seen this open letter to Biden/Harris from Chris Reykdal, WA State Supt of education? https://www.chrisreykdal.org/open-letter I think you’ll love it!
Linda Myrick
Sent from my iPhone
>
Great letter! I will post it.
This is a great letter. And I would add to it – a section about elementary education policies being developed by early educators with a shift back to play-based, nature-based developmentally appropriate practices K-3.
Biden is a person with a local community orientation. His political instincts are to focus on helping local public schools. He knows charter schools pull away local funds from community public schools. He doesn’t believe testing all children every year helps teachers or kids. He will make standardized testing a tool to examine how kids are doing and to determine who needs more help on a 3 year cycle. The money wasted on testing will go to new staff and helping teachers get the resources they need. Joe and Jill Biden n Kamala Harris will bring a practical plan that helps families and teachers Work together to ensure all students are learning.
To implement these goals, Biden and Harris will have to win by a HUGE landslide in the popular vote and the Electoral College, and the Democratic Party will have to gain the majority in the Senate and increase the majority in the House giving Biden and harris a powerful mandate that cannot be ignored.
But if Biden’s win is sliver close and/or Mitch McConnel is re-elected and the GOP still controls the Senate, forget it.
This is a positive start for public education to a potential Biden win. I recall that in 2009 Richard Rothstein pointed out that Obama’s transition team was pro-public ed. – until it wasn’t. We cannot stop making demands on Democrats that they abandon education privatization even if Biden wins. the NAACP’s moratorium on charter schools need to be on their day one agenda.
Case in Point DFER, Hakeen & Shavar Jeffries latest initiative to undercut pro public ed policy makers.
DFER’s Leaders of Color (LOC) 2018. DFER is hard at work seeding Democratic party electoral ballots with persons of color to run in local, state & national elections. Like the Broadies, Due to the lack of pro public school teachers/advocates entering races, DFER is filling those slots with their privatization trainees. DFER’s LOC has chapters in NYC, Queens, Brooklyn, Staten Island, Harlem, NOLA, & Memphis.
https://dfer.org/loc/ Look at DFER’s leaders of color page to find how they position their ed reform candidates.
Memphis TN: Marquita Bradshaw, a DFER Senate candidate came out of nowhere to win the Democratic nomination for the Senate to replace Lamar Alexander.
“Hakeem Jeffries’ brother Shavar Jeffries is heavily involved in DFER and both brothers are ed reform advocates.
“We founded Leaders of Color to create a pathway to leadership for Black and Brown folks who are hungry for change and tired of the lack of representation we experience at all levels of government,” said Shavar Jeffries, president of Education Reform Now and Education Reform Now Advocacy, which run the civic and electoral programs, respectively. “Today, we see that pipeline take hold in a powerful way, as our graduates shatter the glass ceiling for Black women in Tennessee.”
Leaders of Color Graduate Issac Freeman also ran unopposed for Democratic State Executive Committeeman in District 33. Five other Leaders of Color program graduates are on the ballot today; their races have yet to be called.”
TFA’s “Leadership for Educational Leadership” is taking credit for black women in leadership roles, listing all the TFA alumnae on state and local school boards
“Democrats will work to end the use of such high-stakes tests and encourage states to develop reliable, continuous, evidence-based approaches to student assessment that rely on multiple and holistic measures that better represent student achievement.”
ME: “Multiple and holistic measures that better represent student achievement.” Oh. You mean like classroom tests made by teachers.
DEFORMY POLITICIAN: No. We have to have external assessments.
ME: Why? We didn’t have them for most of our history.
DEFORMY: But look what happened when we didn’t have them.
ME: Yeah, we built the richest, most powerful nation on Earth.
Biden said he would put a public school teacher in as Secretary of Education. How about Carol Burris? Mercedes Schneider? Randi Weingarten?