You know the old line, “Failure is not an option.” Well, we have federal education policy built on the idea that failure doesn’t matter. Failure is not only an option, it is the only option. No Child Left Behind failed; the same children who were behind were left behind. Race to the Top was a failure; no one reached “the top” because of its demands. Common Core was a failure: It promised to close achievement gaps and raise up fourth grade test scores; it did not. Every Student Succeeds did not lead to “every students succeeding.” At some point, we have to begin to wonder about the intelligence or sanity of people who love failure and impose it on other people’s children. Testing, charter schools, merit pay, teacher evaluation, grading schools A-F, state takeovers, etc., fail again and again yet still remain popular with the people who control the federal government, whether they be Democrats or Republicans.
Peter Greene sums up the problem with his usual wit and insight: Democrats need a new vision. They need to toss aside everything they have endorsed for at least the past 20-30 years. The problem in education is not just Betsy DeVos. The problem is the bad ideas endorsed by Ronald Reagan, George H.W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George W. Bush, Barack Obama, and Donald Trump. Will Biden and Cardona have the wisdom and the vision to understand that?
For four years, Democrats have had a fairly simple theory of action when it came to education. Something along the lines of “Good lord, a crazy lady just came into our china shop riding a bull, waving around a flamethrower, and dragging a shark with a head-mounted laser beam; we have to stop her from destroying the place (while pretending that we have a bull and a shark in the back just like hers).”
Now, of course, that will, thank heavens, no longer fit the circumstances. The Democrats will need a new plan.
Trouble is, the old plan, the one spanning both the Clinton and Obama years, is not a winner. It went, roughly, like this:
The way to fix poverty, racism, injustice, inequity and economic strife is to get a bunch of children to make higher scores on a single narrow standardized test; the best shot at getting this done is to give education amateurs the opportunity to make money doing it.
This was never, ever a good plan. Ever. Let me count the ways.
For one thing, education’s ability to fix social injustice is limited. Having a better education will not raise the minimum wage. It will not eradicate poverty. And as we’ve just spent four years having hammered into us, it will not even be sure to make people better thinkers or cleanse them of racism. It will help some people escape the tar pit, but it will not cleanse the pit itself.

And that, of course, is simply talking about education, and that’s not what the Dems theory was about anyway–it was about a mediocre computer-scorable once-a-year test of math and reading. And that was never going to fix a thing. Nobody was going to get a better job because she got a high score on the PARCC. Nobody was ever going to achieve a happier, healthier life just because they’d raised their Big Standardized Test scores by fifty points. Any such score bump was always going to be the result of test prep and test-taker training, and that sort of preparation was always going to come at the expense of real education. Now, a couple of decades on, all the evidence says that test-centric education didn’t improve society, schools, or the lives of the young humans who passed through the system.
Democrats must also wrestle with the fact that many of the ideas attached to this theory of action were always conservative ideas, always ideas that didn’t belong to traditional Democratic Party stuff at all. Jack Schneider and Jennifer Berkshire talk about a “treaty” between Dems and the GOP, and that’s a way to look at how the ed reform movement brought people into each side who weren’t natural fits. The conservative market reform side teamed up with folks who believed choice was a matter of social justice, and that truce held until about four years ago, actually before Trump was elected. Meanwhile, in Schneider and Berkshire’s telling, Democrats gave up supporting teachers (or at least their unions) while embracing the Thought Leadership of groups like Democrats for Education Reform, a group launched by hedge fund guys who adopted “Democrat” because it seemed like a good wayto get the support they needed. Plus (and this seems like it was a thousand years ago) embracing “heroes” like Michelle Rhee, nominally listed as a Democrat, but certainly not acting like one.
All of this made a perfect soup for feeding neo-liberals. It had the additional effect of seriously muddying the water about what, exactly, Democrats stand for when it comes to public education. The laundry list of ideas now has two problems. One is that they have all been given a long, hard trial, and they’ve failed. The other, which is perhaps worse from a political gamesmanship standpoint, is that they have Trump/DeVos stink all over them.
But while Dems and the GOP share the problems with the first half of that statement, it’s the Democrats who have to own the second part. The amateur part.
I often complain that the roots of almost all our education woes for the modern reform period come from the empowerment of clueless amateurs, and while it may appear at first glance that both parties are responsible, on closer examination, I’m not so sure.
The GOP position hasn’t been that we need more amateurs and fewer professionals–their stance is that education is being run by the wrong profession. Eli Broad has built his whole edu-brand on the assertion that education doesn’t have education problems, it has business management problems, and that they will best be solved by management professionals. In some regions, education has been reinterpreted by conservatives as a real estate problem, best solved by real estate professionals. The conservative model calls for education to be properly understood as a business, and as such, run not by elected bozos on a board or by a bunch of teachers, but by visionary CEOs with the power to hire and fire and set the rules and not be tied down by regulations and unions.
Democrats of the neo-liberal persuasion kind of agree with that last part. And they have taken it a step further by embracing the notion that all it takes to run a school is a vision, with no professional expertise of any sort at all. I blame Democrats for the whole business of putting un-trained Best and Brightest Ivy Leaguers in classrooms, and the letting them turn around and use their brief classroom visit to establish themselves as “experts” capable of running entire district or even state systems. It takes Democrats to decide that a clueless amateur like David Coleman should be given a chance to impose his vision on the entire nation (and it takes right-tilted folks to see that this is a perfect chance to cash in big time).
Am I over-simplifying? Sure. But you get the idea. Democrats turned their backs on public education and the teaching profession. They decided that virtually every ill in society is caused by teachers with low expectations and lousy standards, and then they jumped on the bandwagon that insisted that somehow all of that could be fixed by making students take a Big Standardized Test and generating a pile of data that could be massaged for any and all purposes (never forget–No Child Left Behind was hailed as a great bi-partisan achievement).
I would be far more excited about Biden if at any point in the campaign he had said something along the lines of, “Boy, did we get education policy wrong.” And I suppose that’s a lot to ask. But if Democrats are going to launch a new day in education, they have a lot to turn their backs on, along with a pressing need for a new theory of action.
They need to reject the concept of an entire system built on the flawed foundation of a single standardized test. Operating with flawed data is, in fact, worse than no data at all, and for decades ed policy has been driven by folks looking for their car keys under a lamppost hundreds of feet away from where the keys were dropped because “the light’s better over here.”
They need to embrace the notion that teachers are, in fact, the pre-eminent experts in the field of education.
They need to accept that while education can be a powerful engine for pulling against the forces of inequity and injustice, but those forces also shape the environment within which schools must work.
They need to stop listening to amateurs. Success in other fields does not qualify someone to set education policy. Cruising through a classroom for two years does not make someone an education expert. Everyone who ever went to the doctor is not a medical expert, everyone who ever had their car worked on is not a mechanic, and everyone who ever went to school is not an education expert. Doesn’t mean they can’t add something to the conversation, but they shouldn’t be leading it.
They need to grasp that schools are not businesses. And not only are schools not businesses, but their primary function is not to supply businesses with useful worker bees.
If they want to run multiple parallel education systems with charters and vouchers and all the rest, they need to face up to properly funding it. If they won’t do that, then they need to shut up about choicey policies. “We can run three or four school systems for the cost of one” was always a lie, and it’s time to stop pretending otherwise. Otherwise school choice is just one more unfunded mandate.
They need to accept that privatized school systems have not come up with anything new, revolutionary, or previously undiscovered about education. But they have come up with some clever new ways to waste and make off with taxpayer money.
Listen to teachers. Listen to parents in the community served by the school. Commit to a search for long term solutions instead of quick fixy silver bullets. And maybe become a force for public education slightly more useful than simply fending off a crazy lady with a flamethrower.
This whole effort has never made any sense. Consider any large scale effort run as a public service and then turned over to a “for profit” leader. Take, say 10% out of last year’s budget (as profits) and then try to run the same business on what is left. It would be a stretch to do that effort even as well as before. Sure there might be some savings through innovation, but 10%, not hardly.
The base motivation (and I do mean base) for this entire effort was and is greed. The financier/rentier class in this country had run through all of the private efforts and destroyed much of what there was: industries, real estate, insurance, healthcare, etc. and then looked for greener pastures … and there was this immense pile of public money being spent on education … by government … and we all know that government can’t do anything right. What a crock! What chutzpah … trying to rob a bank in broad daylight.
Why do you think there is so much corruption in the “charter school movement”? Gosh, could it be the motivation of the “charter school operators”? (Hint: Yes!)
All excellent points about privatized services- they’ve been a recipe for corruption and greed since Eisenhower warned of the military industrial complex.
I think greed isn’t the only motivation for privatization. Foundations & think tanks funded by Broad, Koch, Walton, etc. have sought to further their ideological influence over key institutions in the educational system.
These corporate and dark money groups deceive the public and politicians by co-opting and misusing the language of educational equity. They market myths and distort science using the same tactics as the oil industry that created generations of climate science deniers. Essentially, control over ideas is their goal and they will say and do anything to get it.
jcgrim *”They market myths and distort science using the same tactics as the oil industry that created generations of climate science deniers. Essentially, control over ideas is their goal and they will say and do anything to get it.”
. . . and tobacco, and so many others. Though I don’t know if any of these people are overtly fascist ideologues, they all seem to be working out of the same propaganda playbook . . . methods we see in Putin’s Russia, in people here in the US like Carl Rove, Newt Gingrich, Steve Bannon (et al), and all of the argument-twisting puppets who follow them.
Though Ayn Rand predated most of these, her blend of confusion, ignorance, radicalism, and resentment run through their foundations like political groundwater . . . making an ideology of what is worst and most selfish in us, thereby making conscience and character sure signs of weakness.
On the other hand, that whole movement and its propaganda methods, foreshadowed in Plato’s Sophist, are reflected incisively in Hannah Arendt’s “Origins of Totalitarianism.” You cannot read even a couple of paragraphs in that book without recognizing the political climate we live in today. CBK
An excellent no-holds-barred article. Greene writes:
(1) “The conservative model calls for education to be properly understood as a business, and as such, run not by elected bozos on a board or by a bunch of teachers, but by visionary CEOs with the power to hire and fire and set the rules and not be tied down by regulations and unions.”
(2) Then later, he writes that the Biden people “need to embrace the notion that teachers are, in fact, the pre-eminent experts in the field of education. . . . They need to accept that while education can be a powerful engine for pulling against the forces of inequity and injustice, but those forces also shape the environment within which schools must work.”
I see Greene as highlighting two related but quite different problems here. In the first quote, Greene’s focus is on BOTH
(a) the degeneration of authentic conservative principles that has resulted in a corrupt Republican party . . . a party that has wholly accepted similarly corrupt principles of capitalism AND
(b) legislators’ willful ignorance of the proper tensional relationship between business and a democratic/republican government–a kind of government that so many now seem to be in the process of OPENLY rejecting–I have yet to hear anyone say “I HATE DEMOCRACY” though they might as well have.
In the second quote, especially this: Biden’s people “need to embrace the notion that teachers are, in fact, the pre-eminent experts in the field of education.”
Yes, teachers are the experts in educating students. However, for many reasons, teachers have not been made aware of the crucial relationship of education to the maintenance of a healthy democracy.
So teacher expertise has been limited in that regard, which has left professional educators open to 50 years of propaganda against, and manipulation of, their profession . . . coming from #1/a-b above . . . those ignorant and neo-liberal capitalist-only people in political power.
One method of quashing the political voices of teachers, even if those voices were alive and well, has been to destroy teacher unions, or to weaken them from the inside by subtly changing their internal movements, by so-called private-public business partnerships, but also by sustained attacks in the press . . . parents and local people who sit on boards are often just as easily influenced by neo-liberal propaganda as teachers have been.
A fine article . . . I’ll forward it to the National Literacy Association who are also finally understanding their complicit place in the past . . . in endorsing a bit too wholeheartedly the fox-in-the-chicken-house model of doing literacy for merely “getting jobs.”
Yes, a major “restart” for education, including teacher-ed programs, including a look at for-profit colleges. We should expect conflict. Political change is not for sissies. CBK
The pandemic has provided an opportunity for big revisions in the U.S. education system. Here is a big change that would be easier to do now than it would have been before schools were restructured due to Covid 19:
They were invented to address the overcrowding that resulted from Baby Boomers entering elementary schools. Just at the point when their hormones start raging, we snatch kids away from supportive elementary schools where they know everybody and throw them into a place full of groups of strangers who change every 50 minutes or so. Little is done to facilitate the development of social skills because the curriculum must be covered according to schedule. This sink or swim approach is detrimental on many levels. The Baby Boomers are now retirees. Let’s go back to doing what we did before their numbers became a problem to public education. Does anyone even remember what that was anymore?? Most do acknowledge, however, that the kids who graduated from 8th grade back then were generally more literate than many of today’s high school graduates.
I heartily agree with Mr. Greene. I’m a recently retired teacher who saw it all, starting with Bush Sr. all the way through the Trump adm. My first seven years were at a low income school in a big city district while the rest of my teaching career was spent in a small high performing district in the suburbs. Recently I’ve periodically subbed in several different districts. Through all these experiences I’ve seen very few people in positions of power with much real experience as educators. By that I mean people with deep experiences as teachers and assistant principals. That is where the real work in education gets done. That’s where the rubber hits the road. That’s where you come to understand kids and where you learn what works and what doesn’t. My first three years of teaching was about keeping my head above water after which I thought I knew it all. At about year seven I realized teachers with three and four years of experience didn’t know much and when I got to year 10 I thought I knew it all until I got to year 15 and so on. Learning to teach and manage students is largely experiential and it isn’t easy. Too many people at the top have taken short cuts to get there and don’t have the respect of the people in the trenches who can look at the “great ideas” and see disaster before the ideas are implemented. There are certainly exceptions and I’ve worked for a few of them but the ed reformer crowd- wow. They don’t know what they are doing and don’t listen to people who do. Educators with deep experience just shake their heads and keep doing what works because they love teaching in spite of the crazy things that keep coming from district offices , the state and Washington DC.
You reference the podcast Have You Heard by Jack Schneider and Jennifer Berkshire. They very recently published a book, A Wolf at the Schoolhouse Door, that provides an in-depth history of the assault on public education, how this siege on our schools has never been more aggressive, and what the future may look like if we continue on the trajectory that those who put their faith in the free market and education are relentlessly pushing. Hopefully, Democrats will focus their vision on restoring faith in one of our most basic democratic institutions, the public schools serving all the children in the community.
Neo Liberals/DINOs don’t want “community” (Republicans and Tea Party folks don’t either). “Community” implies that one has respect for others. Sorry, but that doesn’t fit in with the free market ideals of the new world order where cash is King and winning is everything.
Time will tell about how Biden and Cardona will address public education. A lot is riding on the two Senate seats in Georgia as it will determine if funds will be available for Biden’s ambitious education agenda. I am not expecting miracles, but I do believe public education will be a main consideration of this administration.
I suspect Democrats will work with DFER once more, but, hopefully, they will shut down the charter slush fund. I also doubt that standardized testing will disappear, but there may be alternatives accepted as “accountability.” Democrats won’t want to alienate their big donors from Silicon Valley and Wall St, but how much of a role they will play remains to be seen. If Biden deviates too far from his promises, we should be prepared to push, pressure and protest.
retired I am not expecting miracles, but I do believe public education will be a main consideration of this administration.
Yes, hopefully. And why not? The education establishment in the US has been on the agenda of people like Koch for decades. CBK
Yes, Push. Pressure. Protest.
And be ready and able to punish – via working to primary politicians whose fealty is to the donor class, not the rest of us.
The WHOLE country needs a major restart on education: politicians (Republicans, Democrats, Independents, Green, Libertarians, etc), School Districts, Corporations, Parents, and Students. Not just one faction of the country. No one faction is to blame for the condition of education in this country. Pointing fingers is not the answers. Working together is the answer.
“Pointing fingers” means identifying where we went wrong.
Getting on the right track requires a full inquiry into mistakes and failure.
Thank you for this post and everyone’s comments! I like what Diane wrote at the end: “Listen to teachers. Listen to parents in the community served by the school. Commit to a search for long term solutions instead of quick fix silver bullets.” I recently wrote about how Dr. Mehta brings up the importance of listening to teachers in a recent article: https://aschoolnewsletter.substack.com/p/1229-human-schools?r=dv5qu&utm_campaign=post&utm_medium=web&utm_source=copy
Millions of dollars were spent during the election on advertising to try to convince people to vote a certain way. What if those millions of dollars were given to schools and communities as part of a long term approach to heal our nation’s divide?
I appreciate CBK’s comments that link education to democracy:
“Yes, teachers are the experts in educating students. However, for many reasons, teachers have not been made aware of the crucial relationship of education to the maintenance of a healthy democracy.” Might it help if the news media and professionals in the fields interviewed by the media became part of that feedback loop about the relationship between education and a healthy democracy?
librariesdigin Sometimes, an anecdote holds the power of the universal. This one hit home with me on that score:
When I lived in Northern Virginia, I read in the WAPO that PEPSI, a “contributor” to programs in the school, as well as cool drink stations, was giving out Pepsi-printed tee-shirts to all of the kids in a local high school (across the Potomac River in Maryland). One student decided to wear a tee-shirt with a COKE imprint . . . whereupon the principal sent him home.
This event revealed ever-so-clearly to me the difference between a mindset governed by capitalist ideas, and one governed by democratic ideas. CBK
Several states have left charter school expansion up to the state as it is much easier to corrupt state representatives. It is deliberate manipulation to bypass local governance. It is the local schools that suffer the loss when charter schools rob Peter to pay Paul. The local community should be able to decide how to spend locally collected school tax dollars, not the state.
Bravo Peter
Diane I cross-posted Greene’s article to the National Literacy Association blog where, it seems, literacy and adult education is undergoing a POLITICAL enlightenment and revolution similar to what’s going on in K-12. Below is a link and a post from their blog and research fields that may be of interest to those here:
Link: https://www.opendoorcollective.org/
Long, but worth reading: a post from the National Literacy Association blog:
ALL QUOTED BELOW
Hello, AAACE-NLA colleagues,
It’s New Year’s Day and — like many others — I’m at home with some time on my hands. So please pardon the long message below.
The recent discussion on the AAAACE-NLA group (about how adult education programs should work with employers) and other recent events in our nation related to social justice give us an opportunity. We can now discuss some sobering realities (“Inconvenient Truths for Adult Educators” ) in our adult education field and what adult educators might do about them. Having these discussions is especially important now, when forward-thinking adult educators and other stakeholders should be thinking about how to create a better system of adult basic skills development opportunities in the U.S. (I welcome you to join the Open Door Collective’s Labor and Workforce Development Issues Group atwhich has been developing resources related to these issues: https://www.opendoorcollective.org)
Sobering realities
· Since our founding as a nation, many U.S. workers have had to deal with unsafe and unhealthy working conditions, low wages, a lack of benefits, discriminatory practices, and lack of opportunity for career advancement. These challenges for our workforce are thus not new and in some ways have gotten worse in recent decades as worker wages have steadily declined, family-sustaining jobs have dwindled, and worker protections – including access to quality healthcare and labor union representation — have been eroded. In the past year this trend has been exacerbated and made more visible by COVID-19 and how our nation has responded to it.
What adult educators can do to support worker well-being
Space does not permit a full discussion here of “what we can do.” But here are some actions adult educators might take to help adult learners attain, retain, advance in, and retire from good jobs.
Inform ourselves about work previously done to develop worker-centered approaches to workforce education. This can be done through reading, study circles, and special conferences. For example:
a. The AFL-CIO’s 1999 “Worker-Centered Learning: A Union Guide to Basic Skills” (an update of a similarly-titled 1990 guide) argued that worker education should “aim for high skill, high wage jobs.” It says that “worker-centered learning” builds on what workers already know, addresses the needs of the whole person, involves workers and the union in program planning, uses participatory processes, provides workers with equitable access to education, reflects learners’ diverse learning styles and needs, involves workers in designing appropriate assessments, keeps learner records confidential, and integrates education with other supports for workers.
b. “The Change Agent” has covered these topics from a social justice perspective in its September 2017, March 2013, September 2009, and earlier issues.
c. “Focus on Basics” covered the theme of “workplace literacy” in its November 2004 issue.
d. My article “Hidden Treasures” in the Spring 2020 issue of the COABE Journal describes worker-centered workplace literacy efforts of the 1980s and 1990s.
Develop criteria and a “code” for deciding what kinds of work-related education to support and stakeholders to work with. The AFL-CIO’s Worker-Centered Learning has a section about “When to ‘Just Say No’” to an inappropriate partnership. (Other similar articles are also available.)
Build the expertise of our field, adapting previous models such as Equipped for the Future; the National Workplace Literacy Program; the international, national, and state workplace literacy conferences of the 1990s; special industry-focused initiatives (e.g., of trade associations like the National Retail Federation Foundation and US Department of Labor WIRED grants); union-based efforts of the AFL-CIO, state and local labor consortia, and individual unions; and research supports provided by universities and other institutions.
Be committed to not stopping just at “sounding the alarm” when we see problems in the workplaces and employers we might work with. Be prepared to try to deal with those problems in a productive, strategic, collaborative ways.
Build solidarity among adult educators and other stakeholders who want to help our workforce succeed in family-sustaining employment and contribute to a better economy and society. Working in silos or in competition with each other undermines our effectiveness.
All the best to all of you as we move into a new year and a better time.
Paul Jurmo
http://www.pauljurmo.info END QUOTE
A data-driven decision making (DDDM) analytics consultant from a giant tech consortium with close ties to the U.S. Department of Education, a charter chain CEO, and a voucher school owner walk into a bar. Playing darts, the charter contractor misses the bullseye by a full two feet to the left. The voucher contractor misses by two feet to the right. The DDDM consultant looks at the data and says, “We are expert dart players. We got a bullseye!”.
A charter chain CEO, a voucher school owner, and a DDDM consultant walk into a bar. There is no bartender, just a note on the bar that reads, “DANGER! This building is scheduled for demolition at precisely noon today!” They look at their phones and see that there is only one second until noon. Who survives?
Public schools.
A voucher school owner, a DDDM consultant, and a charter chain CEO walk into a bar. They have been walking into the same bar, causing injuries, repeatedly for twenty years. A public school teacher does not walk into the bar. Instead, she smartly ducks.
I have been calling “data-driven instruction” data-driven drivel. From now on, it’s data-doodled instruction.
“Will Biden and Cardona have the wisdom and the vision to understand that?”
Not just a NO, but a thousand font size HELL NO!
Tis absurd to expect an apple tree to produce watermelons.
I wanted my Democratic Party and my unions (Oakland Education Association, California Teachers Association and the National Education Association) all to defend public schools against the use of Federal policies supporting charter school growth; a growth that weakens and replaces public schools.
From its 1990s beginnings, the spread of charter school laws across the states was responded to by both my California Democratic Party and my state teacher organization, California Teachers Association leadership, as well as National Education Association leadership, as a harmless, benign threat, to teachers and their membership and the real threat to teacher unions was education voucher laws membership was told.
Union leadership response to charter school growth was two P.R. positions. First that teacher unions support “good” charter schools and second P.R./organizing campaign to organize the non-union charter schools. The unions position on charter schools was the Democratic position that teachers unions supported the good charter schools that are not for profit.
Last four years, damage of having Trump Secretary of EducationBetsy DeVos, promoter of privatizing public education with charter schools and vouchers, has unified opposition to Trump Administration by both my Democratic Party and my teacher unions.
Yet, please don’t mistake unity of my Democratic Party, and my unions, in opposition to Trump Administration as a willingness on the part of my Party/union leadership to protect teachers from reform-forces that support privately managed charter schools to compete with public school management for the public’s education dollar.
Not only is there NOT Democratic Party/Union leadership united on protecting public education from charter school growth. But there is leadership within my Democratic Party going by the name DFER or DEMOCRATS FOR EDUCATION REFORM. These DFER Democrats had greatly influenced the Education policy of the Obama Administration into supporting growing charter schools to compete with public school using FEDERAL EDUCATION DOLLARS. And this old guard is currently lobbying President-elect Biden to return Department of Education to education reform policies of Obama Administration that had favored policy of using FEDERAL DOLLARS to grow charter schools.
Will after Trump, my Democratic Party and my unions leadership, defend public education from the spread of reformers policies to privatize public education?
I will be communicating with my Democratic Party leadership and my unions leadership that I want my Party and my unions to protect public education and oppose privatization of public schools.
I hope you do the same in the New Year and most of all keep safe.
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