Carol Burris and I wrote about our hopes for President-Elect Joe Biden’s Secretary of Education. She or he will have to do a lot of work to clear away the mess that Betsy DeVos made in her mad rush to direct public money to private, religious, and charter schools. It’s comparable to cleaning out the Augean stables, where the mythical king Elis kept 3,000 oxen for thirty years without ever cleaning them. It’s a Herculean task!
We began:
Betsy DeVos just got her pink slip. Throughout her four-year tenure, she did everything she could to undermine public education. Instead, she promoted the idea that schooling should be a competitive free-for-all in which parents shop for schools with tax dollars and then hope it all works out. Now it is time to end that war against public schools as she walks out the door. It is time to chart a course away from the failed reforms that began with George W. Bush’s No Child Left Behind (NCLB), accelerated with Barack Obama’s Race to the Top and brought us to the place we are today.
Although education has not been a major focus of this campaign, President-elect Joe Biden, unlike Obama, talked less about “reform” and more about increased support and funding for public schools — an acknowledgment of the critical role that money plays in achieving successful school outcomes. This is a turn from the Race to the Top era during which it was believed, without evidence, that “three great teachers in a row” and the forces of the marketplace could solve all of the problems that American students face.
We are optimistic about the Biden administration. At the same time, we know there is often a slip between the cup and the lip, and while a candidate can say all the right things during a campaign, personnel is policy. It is too soon to know in which direction policy will go.
For example, Biden has promised that his new secretary of education would have teaching experience. That is good news. But who that teacher is can make a world of difference. In our view, whoever Biden picks for the top spot at the department should have a clear record that indicates a pro-public education agenda, as well as an understanding that we cannot test our way to excellence or fix schools by threatening to close them.
Here is what we hope to see in our new president’s choice.
First and foremost, the new secretary must support the rebuilding of our nation’s public schools, which have been battered by the pandemic, two decades of failed federal policy and years of financial neglect. Even as the president heals the nation, the new secretary must heal our nation’s schools.
There is no doubt that our public schools face extraordinary challenges in re-engaging students and families both now and when the virus subsides. The pandemic has expanded opportunity gaps and learning gaps. Even under the best of circumstances, remote learning has been a poor substitute for in-person teaching. In communities where schools opened, the need to quarantine students and teachers exposed to covid-19 or to temporarily shut the school has resulted in interrupted educational experiences. Many districts have been slow to reopen because they lack the resources needed to make the physical space safe. With states’ revenue declining, the federal government will have to provide the needed funds needed to protect the health and safety of students and staff.
Educators will not only have to catch students up academically, they will also be challenged to meet the social and emotional needs of students, many of whom will be traumatized by their experiences during the pandemic. Many will have difficulty adjusting to a return to school. The new secretary, therefore, must acknowledge the impact of adverse childhood experiences and trauma on students’ ability to learn. The financial support dedicated to these efforts must provide flexibility for schools to decide how that money is best spent.
Second, our new secretary of education must recognize that neighborhood public schools governed by their communities are essential to the health of our democracy and the well-being of children. We need a champion of public education in the Department of Education who rejects efforts to privatize public schools, whether those efforts be via vouchers or charter schools.
Choice programs, whether charters or vouchers, result in increased stratification by race, socioeconomics and political points of view. Now more than ever, in a nation divided, we need to increase opportunities for students to attend public schools that build tolerance and understanding of different experiences and opinions.
At a time when so much must be done to rebuild our public schools when covid-19 subsides, our country cannot afford to provide tuition assistance to families that choose private and religious schools. We, therefore, expect that the new secretary will work with Congress to phase out the Scholarships for Opportunity and Results Act, the only federal voucher program, and oppose any congressional attempts to institute tax credit programs that are designed to subsidize private and religious school tuition.
We hope that the new secretary will insist that charter schools be subject to the same transparency, accountability and equity policies as public schools.
We expect the new secretary will encourage states to pass legislation putting districts in charge of authorizing charter schools and holding them to high financial transparency and accountability standards.
We also expect that the secretary will fulfill Biden’s campaign promise of no federal assistance to charters that operate for profit or are managed by for-profit entities.
The new secretary, we hope, will institute a moratorium on new grants from the federal Charter Schools Program at least until those reforms contained in the Democratic Party platform are enacted.
Third, the new secretary must end the era of high-stakes standardized testing — in both the immediate future and beyond. All federal tax dollars must be directed to helping our nation’s public schools recover — not wasted on the creation of new assessments as some have imprudently suggested.
After two decades of school accountability measures based on high-stakes testing, it is clear that these policies have proved to be ineffective levers for improving schools. The use of test results to evaluate teachers and put sanctions on schools has correlated with a decline in student performance on National Assessment of Education Progress tests, which are independent audits of student performance. The rapid and ill-advised implementation of the Common Core and its tests furthered that decline. This administration must focus on opportunity gaps, not test score gaps.
Fourth, the department’s new leader should promote diversity and desegregation (both among and within schools), and commit to eliminating institutional racism in school policy and practices. If we have learned anything in the past election, it is that our country is deeply divided along the lines of class and race. Diverse public schools where students learn together and play together — whether it be in the classroom or on the sports field — can break down social barriers, improve academic performance and increase tolerance. The benefits of attending socioeconomically and racially integrated schools remain throughout life.
Finally, our new secretary must believe in a philosophy of education that is child-centered, inquiry-based, intellectually challenging, culturally responsive and respectful of all students’ innate capacities and potential to thrive…
This is a historic moment for federal education policy. Now is the time to reverse two decades of failed federal mandates. Now is the time for a new vision of what education can be. And most important, now is the time to restore the original role of the federal government as a guarantor of equity, a source of funding for the neediest students and a source of accurate and timely research about the progress and condition of American education.
Don’t get your hopes up. Looks like Joe will appoint Romney head of HHS.
Probably a corporatist for Education who will pay lip service to public ED.
Well, Romney was the architect of the program that became Obamacare, so there’s that.
And Romney knows all about “human services” because, like Trump, he has always employed lots of servants at his estates.
What? Who is “Romney”?
https://buffalochronicle.com/2020/11/07/mitt-romney-has-been-asked-to-lead-health-and-human-services-in-biden-administration/
What a good idea! Obamacare was originally Romneycare.
My thoughts on the next secretary of education: https://dissidentvoice.org/2020/11/next-u-s-secretary-of-education-will-continue-to-promote-charter-schools/
This a thousand times. Thank you!
I assume that you concur with the principles of socialism at the same website, and described fully here. I am not naive enough to believe that all things wonderful will flow from the Biden presidency and especially in education where money and staff from the charter industry and other privatizers are sure to seek representation in federal policies, conspicuously by continuing to have earmarked funds diverted from public schools.
At the same time I think that the clear endorsement of socialism as if the best governing structure, articulated on this website, is negligent in reporting on the many vulnerabilities of that system especially to take over by dictators worse than Trump and his gullible followers. https://dissidentvoice.org/2020/11/what-now/
Bravo! Carol, Diane, this is magnificent!
Glad to see the top priority is getting schools open and addressing learning deficits, although I think it’s a shame that we are taking so long to do this.
FLERP, why do you ask about reopening schools, when it isn’t happening? 😐
Many schools in NYCare open partially now.
Eddie,
NYC public schools have already re-opened in a hybrid form. Changes are still being made so it is important to address how to do this better and more safely.
🤔
Thanks, dianeravitch and nyc school parent. Apologies to FLERP. I somehow, wrongly thought public schools were closed nation wide. 🤔
My choice is for a Secretary who has been in the classroom within the last 10 years (or at the very least in a school), has a proven track record of teaching students – especially how to read – especially students of color, and who will put the interests and choices of students and families ahead of institutions and organizations.
We know that the DOE will be more friendly to public education under Biden. We will understand better when Biden announces his choice to lead it. This link from the NEA describes to some degree what they believe will happen. Also, Dr. Jill Biden is a long time member of the NEA. Earlier this year she did virtual visitations to various public schools across the nation.https://educationvotes.nea.org/2020/09/23/what-will-a-biden-harris-secretary-of-education-look-like-the-opposite-of-devos/
This is an important statement. Many here and well beyond this blog hope your voices will be heard and acted upon.
There is so much federal and international nonsense about test scores in math and reading. We should not be adding to that mischief a scoring scheme for “social and emotional learning.”
I would like to see someone to take on a ready-to-use draft of federal federal legislation perhaps beginning with a line-by-line look to see if anything in ESSA has any merit at all. I think not, but ALEC, the charter school lobby and tech-is-us lobby of Bill Gates should not be the only sources of model legislation.
I would also like to see some recognition of serious distortions now present in the Civil Rights Data Collection (excessive attention to AP course work, algebra, and other curriculum matters) plus the whole new approach to federal funding of educational research at The Institute of Education Sciences, part of the U.S. Department of Education where the current pitch is: “Introducing Operation Reverse the Loss.”
This is a hangover from days gone by–task analysis–as if we can define discreet social emotional “skills” that can be taught in isolation and tested. There is a place for bean counters, but that role has been expanded far beyond its usefulness, especially when their data is used to make broad prognostications based on questionable assumptions.
“And most important, now is the time to restore the original role of the federal government as a guarantor of equity, a source of funding for the neediest students and a source of accurate and timely research about the progress and condition of American education.”
It will never happen but I would make the US Department of Education smaller. See if they can get any better at these three core jobs before adding others.
Other than civil rights protection, funding and collecting national information I would like to see them have no role in public schools at all. I just don’t think they’ve provided any practical value to public schools or public school students outside of those three areas- and those three are a big enough job! Do a great job on three things and drop the 5000 gimmicks and fads.
They should probably work on their public reputation too. There’s a whole generation of young people who think they’re an incompetent student loan collection agency. They’re kind of loathed.
I read Mercedes Schneider’s statement on this blog yesterday and the many comments that followed on who should be chosen as the next SoE. And now this sharp, timely editorial from Diane and Carrol Burris about what is most desired in the person who will be chosen to fill this vital cabinet position. Here is my choice:
Dr. Betty Rosa checks the boxes. Her name is not among the familiar favorites. But don’t leave her off the short list. She has a resume of excellence that highly recommends her for consideration.
Rosa began her work as a paraprofessional and teacher in what we would call “tough schools.” As she rose through the ranks of the NYC public school system to become a principal and district superintendent, she never stopped being a hands-on practitioner–leading her teachers and schools.
By the way, she holds graduate school degrees (MS, M.Ed and Ed. D.) from CCNY and Harvard. She has taught students research methods and guided them on dissertations.
Rosa was elected to the NYS Board of Regents in 2008 and became its Chancellor, the state’s highest ranking educator in 2016. The Regents are essentially an unpaid board of directors that formulates educational policies for the 700+ school districts that comprise the largest public school system in the country. Dr. Rosa has been a quiet consensus-builder who stays out of the spotlight. Her record speak for itself.
In August, she asked the Board of Regents to appoint her as Interim Commissioner of the State Education Department–the operational arm of the Board. This put her on the frontline in an unprecedented time of instability and crises– directing staff to met the challenges of Covid-19, school-reopening, remote learning, and the normally monumental educational concerns that must be addressed every day.
Full disclosure: I met Dr. Rosa (Betty) around 2014. I was taken by her principled opposition to the annual testing program and the inestimable harm it was doing to students, teachers and classrooms. In fact, in 2010, she told the NY Times that the test scores were not believable. She was surprisingly outspoken and supportive of parents who wanted to opt their children out of the statewide exams. She also pushed back against the ill-conceived common core.
I hope she will be given the opportunity to vie for the job of Secretary of Education. Her career education, experience, character and proven abilities make her worthy of discharging the awesome responsibilities of this position.
Fred
It is well past time to stop closing and privatizing public schools. That about sums it up. All the assessment data are merely for closing and privatizing schools. Time to get the data collectors and debt collectors and all the varied other business interest conflicts out of our government and stop closing schools.
What I didn’t see was something about compensation. It’s about high we show that we value public education as a nation and pay our teachers the equivalent amounts in salaries as we pay any other highly educated professional of whom we require they have graduate degrees. After all why are we paying a programmer for games 100K+ starting salaries – and a teacher 40K+? Let’s be serious! And, if we are asking all of the above from our secretary of ed, then then the effort required at the front of the classroom should be compensated adequately.
The United States has not had a Secretary of Education whose vested interest is in the education of ALL our children for at least 20 years. The damage done over all these years will take years and a strong willed person to do what is right and not what is politically expedient.
The students, teachers, administrators, and parents have been made so many promises of how great education in this country will be but the promises were never kept. It is time a promise for an great US educational system be kept. Our educational system needs to be fixed just as bad as the COVID-19 needs to be eradicated.
Excellent points!
The Secretary needs to be able to lead policy, but more importantly, the Secretary needs to LEAD PRINCIPLES AND PUBLIC LEARNING and OPINION – overtly pronounce them and educate the public so those principles guide policy and funding.
So – a few additional thoughts…for the first 100 days and year as Secretary – bully pulpit and policy:
Restore teaching as a PROFESSION and model respect for certificated bona fide PROFESSIONALS. Any attempt at adding support and not certificated staff to schools which may be necessary must be to support and complement professional teachers, not supplanting them. Incentive grants to colleges and states that promote certification programs and encourage enrollment.
Immediately restore the cuts and executive orders that ended CIVIL RIGHT PROTECTIONS
Work in concert with the Secretary of Housing to REBUILD NEIGHBORHOODS. Schools, housing, and attracting business are critical but not in silos. Desegregation was about integration but effects on neighborhoods are devastating.
Over-the-top funding for SCIENCE AND INNOVATION programs (for kids)! We need to restore reputation and integrity of science, the excitement of space exploration, and project-based learning (and assessments in lieu of standardized).
Support and fund PARENT PROGRAMS for birth to 5 and LITERACY IN THE HOME. (The largest national program for this was spearheaded by a most conservative Senator)
Define COMMUNITY COLLEGE and as public education (and free) and support and fund RETRAINING PROGRAMS
and…
Congressional investigation charter school fraud and effects of privatization on equity and funding of public schools (or enter the NPE studies into the Congressional Record)
“Fordham Institute
What the election means for charter schools, accountability, and other reform issues. That’s the topic of the latest Education Gadfly Show podcast, on which CharlesBarone
joins MichaelPetrilli and David Griffith”
If we keep hiring people out of the the ed reform echo chamber public school students will keep getting testing and nothing else.
It’s all they have for our students. It’s all they ever had. It’s a grim, joyless agenda and it does nothing for students in public schools.
I don’t know if Biden can find anyone outside this group but he should try. We really don’t need four more years of anti-public school people running public education policy.
It’s not fair to public school students.
Okay. Honeymoon is over. Go Bernie!
Bravo!