Peter Greene writes here about Michael Petrilli’s reflections on the evolution of the “reform” movement. Now that the “reform” movement has merged with Christian nationalists, book banners, Proud Boys, neo-fascists, and other vicious haters of democracy, public schools, and academic freedom, there is much to reflect on. Unfortunately, that’s not the reflection we learn about here. Let me add that when I was a board member a dozen years ago at the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, I formed a friendship with Mike Petrilli. I always hoped he would flip and join the public school side (his own kids are in fine public schools in Maryland). But a guy’s gotta make a living and the reformer world pays well. I’ve never given up hope for Mike.
Greene begins:
Mike Petrilli at the reformster-minded Thomas Fordham Institute has been taking a look at the current state of ed reform (apparently many of us are in that mood right now?) and it’s worth taking a look at what the guy in every education reporter’s rolodex thinks the state of ed reform is right now. And I promise what I think is an interesting observation at the end.
In “The Evolving Education Reform Agenda,” Petrilli starts with his previous argument that while the “Washington Consensus” is dead, ed reform itself is not. This hints at one of the challenges of the ed reform brand these days, which is that nobody really knows what the term actually means any more. He tries to address that in this piece.
Petrilli argues that the agenda has shifted (a more positive phrase than “we keep moving the goal posts”) from a focus on data and getting students to score proficient on state tests (circa NCLB) and then moved to trying to hold individual teachers responsible, a movement that Petrilli assess pretty frankly:
By the early 2010s, much of the conversation was about holding individual teachers accountable via test-informed teacher evaluations. Ham-handed implementation and poisonous politics led us to leave that misguided reform behind.
If only they had taken the policy with it, but its hammy hands are still felt by many teachers in many states. But one of ed reforms annoying features is that it never picks up after itself; it never puts as much energy into undoing its mistakes as it does into making them in the first place. Just imagine a world in which these thinky tank guys picked up the phone to call their contacts and say, “Look, that thing we convinced you to try? You’ve got to make people stop doing that.” Imagine if Bill Gates put the same kind of money into cleaning up his policy messes as he puts into pushing them.
Sigh. Anyway, Petrilli lists some other new-ish policy foci, like high quality instructional materials. He aptly notes that a new support for better school funding coincides with A) recognition by reformsters that funding does improve student outcomes and B) a desire to get charter and voucher schools more money (the old “choice gets it done more cheaply” talk is toast).
Parental choice? There’s still debate about using tax dollars to fund private and religious schools, particularly those that discriminate, says Petrilli, though I’ve missed the folks in the reformster camp arguing the anti-discrimination side. Unbundling is still a thing.
Testing and transparency? Reformsters still believe in the value of the Big Standardized Test, a point on which they remain resolutely and absolutely wrong, though they are now, he says, also interested in alternative assessments–but that’s still hung up on the obsession with test scores. Writes Petrilli, “How would assessments be different? If schools do well on “alternative measures” but not on test-score growth, then what? Should we ever consider such schools “good”?” I can help, Mike–the answer is “Yes.”
Greene goes on to explain that Petrilli thinks the new focus of reform must be to shift from policy to practice. This is an implicit admission that policy interventions have failed. Neither charters nor vouchers nor evaluation of teachers has been a successful. So now it’s time for reformers to change how teachers teach. But how can they do that when so few reformers have ever been teachers?
This is further complicated by the fact that the individual-to-individual practice end of the scale only happens if the individual has some credibility, and reformsters have always been hampered by their amateur status in education practice (I can think of exactly one who can legitimately claim classroom experience–and no, Temp For America doesn’t count), and that has been further hampered by their insistence that their amateur status actually made them wiser than the teachers who has actually spent their professional career in the classroom.
Greene thinks that reformers should listen to teachers, hire some.
But that won’t get to the root of the reformers’s dilemma. They are now in bed with rightwing fanatics who fought masks and vaccines, people who are racist and homophobic, people who ban books.
Their brand is spoiled.
The good news in this article is that the “Washington consensus” is dead. Democrats—with a few notable exceptions like Cory Booker and Michael Bennett of Colorado—do not support the attacks on public schools and teachers, no longer support charter schools, and adamantly oppose vouchers.

Because they are not failures, for them, so long as they rake in the D’Oh!
It is long past time to drop the Assumption of Good Faith and the Theory of Unintended Consequences and realize Their Agenda Is Exactly On Track.
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exactly said: “failure” on the part of reformers is only if they fail to rake in money
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Never assume ignorance or incompetence when profit and/or ideology are involved.
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Diane: I share your experience of being good friends with those who live across the political wasteland from me. I know so many people who are really good folks that seem to reject what I see as reasonable and kind, opting instead for political positions that seem fundamentally cruel to me. This disconnect goes deep in my youth.
I was about 18 when the parent of some friends accused me of being duped by communists for voicing the idea that perhaps Vietnam had been a mistake. Since then, I have noticed that the really good folks I know who have these ideas possess them despite good education and good intent. To a person, this group accepts some postulate regarding the political position that is demonstrably false. In education, the postulate is that public education is a fundamental failure and needs to be blown up. No proof is necessary. This is an accepted truth to be taken a priori. Like those who claim that life begins at conception (a similar postulate) there is no questioning that will dislodge the original idea.
I find this to be a sad circumstance.
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I was not even 18 yet when the little hardcover entitled “The United States in VietNam” [1/1/67, Delta]—authored by Kahin & Lewis, Asian-history specialists/ professors who were both parents of fellow high school students of mine, hit the decks & was immediately passed around at the high school & the local university. My parents at that time were still Republicans, still pro-VNWar. I read the book & kept quoting them passages; my mother eventually read it. It turned the tide for her. Not long after, she confided that during the ‘40s & ‘50s, the prevailing public attitude was, our political leaders have access to info we don’t have; we trust in their honesty and follow their lead. She added that in 1960, with the Gary Powers U-2 incident, she learned that the US Govt did indeed lie to the public. [Both my parents began a journey toward liberal, & became Dems during the GWBush admin.]
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I think we have to stop thinking that the current crop of “Eduformers” is driven by an intense desire to make education better for American youths. We seem to be stuck in that groove. If we were to assume, just hypothetically, that their motivation was to make money off of the public teat, I think their behaviors become more coherent. The only aspect of there being a “movement” or “industry” was simply because ambitious politicians decided that education reform was a horse they could ride to political success. Thus, we got legislation, large grants to write curricula, etc. This was not a bottom-up reform movement, more like a pack of carrion eaters unwilling to wait for an animal to die before they started to feed.
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I so agree, Steve. And I really do not believe that any of them ever cared a whit about improving public education for American kids. They were all from the neoliberal era, and all, always about blowing up public goods which ‘could be delivered more efficiently by the private sector’ [Friedman]. It was always capitalist ideology dictating practice, with no results-monitoring. For confirmation, look at how many decades it took for any results of their actions to make their way into enough studies to build the negligeable, barely-mediocre picture of reality. And we still have very few studies testifying to the undoubtedly-grotesque excess expenditures involved. And here we have Petrilli himself at this late date, admitting that policy always took precedence over practice. duh.
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Good article. To clean up failures would mean to admit failures. It’s not in the education deformers’ characters to do that. Instead, they fail upward. That’s what happened to the No Child Left Behind bunch. They go to work for people like Laurene Powell Jobs.
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All of deform has been based on erroneous assumptions. It has been promoted by wealthy non-educators that have so much money that they have been recklessly allowed to toy with the education of our country’s young people. There was never any proof that privatization would improve education, and there is lots of proof to the contrary. Just take a look at the devastating impact the privatization of public education has had on Chile and Sweden. There has been little analysis on the long-term impact of privatization of education on public education which is a keystone of democratic principles. The free market is no solution for education. It creates winners and losers, and the losers are generally poor people of color. This has been proven in every country that has privatized public education.
Accountability has always been a tool of choice to snare Black and Brown students into unaccountable, separate and unequal privately operated schools that make money for investors. This has process continues to be more exploitative than redeeming. It is ideology built on discrimination and racism. As for “cutting edge” accountability, we need to turn our attention to Florida. When Florida sneezes, all the hillbillies catch a cold. Florida is promoting its “new and improved” F.A.S.T. test. Now that students have been forced to spend a good part of the day staring at screens and producing lots of profitable data for wealthy people, testing can be embedded into the mandated,boring, behavioral electronic worksheets imposed on students.
Nobody knows the devious details of Florida’s new water torture tool. According to Florida Opt-Out, we can expect the accountability hammer will fall on schools after a couple of failed attempts to jump through proficiency hoops before schools get privatized in order to turn mostly Black and Brown students into a commodity that will produce profit for those all important investors.
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cx: This process (delete has)
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“wealthy non-educators that have so much money that they have been recklessly allowed to toy with the education of our country’s young people”
Yes, but, I would add that it has been the choice of this country to vote for people for 4+ decades who changed laws and policies to allow the proliferation of billionaires and multiple-billionaires to exist. Once you get enough of them onboard, govt no longer has control—it’s not a matter of being “reckless”—the recklessness was in allowing them to accumulate that absurd wealth in the first place. Once they’re out there, policies/ legislation are dictated by them, and your legislatures are captive to them.
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Retired Teacher,
You are right! The reforms are DEFORMS based on stupid assumptions.
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How can the public school reform movement be a brand, when it’s being driven/managed mostly by ALEC and the greedy Walmart Walton empire, libertarian theofascists, frauds, lunatics, and dangerously dumber-than-dumb MAGA morons?
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They’ve been claiming to be able to clean up the failing deforms for a few years now. From 2017:
Monday, May 22, 2017
Program:
9:30 am
Central Library
Kansas City knows both the pain of a failing education system and promise of renewal as its public schools system anticipates full state accreditation for the first time in nearly 30 years.
Amid debate about the effectiveness and direction of our schools nationwide, a lineup of top policy makers and analysts – including Kansas City Public Schools Superintendent Mark Bedell – examines the state of education today and issues ranging from test-based teacher evaluation to vouchers and charter schools. Discussions are moderated by noted education researcher Jay P. Greene, professor and head of the Department of Education Reform at the University of Arkansas, and Michael McShane, director of education policy at the Show-Me Institute. A light breakfast and box lunches are served.
The program schedule:
9:30 a.m.
Opening and welcome
9:45 – 11 a.m.
Panel 1: The Big Picture: What Does Failure Mean? Are Experts Really Experts?
Papers presented:
“The Limits of Expertise” by Frederick M. Hess, resident scholar and director of education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute in Washington, D.C., and author of the popular Education Week blog Rick Hess Straight Up, and American Enterprise Institute research assistant Paige Willey.
“The ‘Failure’ of Technologies to Transform Traditional Teaching in the Past Century” by Larry Cuban, emeritus professor of education at Stanford University.
“Teacher education: Failed Reform and a Missed Opportunity” by University of Virginia cognitive psychology professor Daniel Willingham.
Discussants: Kansas City Public Schools Superintendent Mark Bedell and Charles King, executive director of the Kansas City Teacher Residency program.
11 a.m. – 12:15 p.m.
Panel 2: Go Big or Go Home: The Federal Government’s Forays in Failure
Papers presented:
“No Child Left Behind” by Martin West, associate professor of education at the Harvard Graduate School of Education and past senior education policy adviser to the ranking member of the U.S. Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions.
“School Improvement Grants: Failures in Design and Implementation” by Ashley Jochim, research analyst at the University of Washington’s Center on Reinventing Public Education.
“Test-Based Teacher Evaluation” by Matthew Di Carlo, senior research fellow at the Albert Shanker Institute, a Washington, D.C. nonprofit established by the American Federation of Teachers.
Discussant: Melissa Patterson-Hazley, managing partner of Hazley & Associates and University of Missouri-Kansas City education instructor.
12:15 – 12:45 p.m.
Lunch
12:45 – 2 p.m.
Panel 3: The Challengers: Choice, Philanthropy, and Their Shortcomings
Papers presented:
“The Failure of Private School Vouchers and Tax Credit Scholarships” by Anna Egalite, assistant professor of education at North Carolina State University.
“No Excuses Charter Schools: The Good, the Bad, and the Overprescribed” by Matthew Ladner, senior research fellow at the Charles Koch Institute in Arlington, Virginia, and co-author of the American Legislative Exchange Council’s “Report Card on American Education: Ranking State K-12 Performance, Progress, and Reform.”
“Education Philanthropy” by Megan Tompkins-Stange, assistant professor of public property at the University of Michigan’s Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy.
Discussant: Awais Sufi, president and CEO of the new nonprofit SchoolSmartKC.
Co-presented by the Show-Me Institute.
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Out of all the presenters there were two, Jay P. Greene and the KC Supe adminimal that had public school K-12 teaching experience and that experience added up to 7 years (if I am remembering correctly) between them.
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The title of the conference was “Failures to Fixes”.
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While there are several references to failures, where are the fixes? It’s definitely not in “education philanthropy” or anything from the Kochs.
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“Greene goes on to explain that Petrilli thinks the new focus of reform must be to shift from policy to practice.” Wait. What? The assumption behind VAM test scores was to impact teacher practice. According to the old Petrelli, test scores measured whether a teacher was an excellent or a failed practitioner. It’s time to get him & his cohort PR hacks far away from anything related to education. Haven’t they done enough damage?
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Petrilli made $246,000 in 2020 as head of Fordham Institute
https://projects.propublica.org/nonprofits/organizations/311816446
That’s early 5 times the average teachers salary in the US.
It’s a good gig if you can get it
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Like any Press-to-digiter he gets paid the Big Bucks for his skill in misdirection.
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Nothing has changed. The ed reformers never intended to reform education; they intended to make a whole lotta money. They’re not merging with the Trump crowd or adapting to failures. They are unchanged. It’s simple: They are selling new tests, selling new online curricula, and selling new charters. When consumers realize sodas are terribly unhealthy, soda bottling companies sell flavored “water”. When schools realize standardized tests are terribly unhealthy, tech companies sell “next generation”
tests. My students have to take more tests than they did just a couple years ago, the online curriculum materials are new and (un)improved, and my billionaire bought school board is still trying to close public schools and open charters in their place. Wall Street never sleeps. Wall Street never changes. Wall Street never reforms.
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Greene’s filter should include the reformers driven by conservative Catholicism. Commonweal wrote on 10-4-2018 (“High-Priced Conference…”) about an event sponsored by Catholic University (located in D.C.) and Napa Institute (Napa, on a prior occasion, hosted a fundraiser for Trump).
The Conference was heavily laden with religious activities, confessions, masses, priests talking, etc. One of the sessions was moderated by a Meredith Olsen. Given the fact that Liz Koch, director of the Fred and Mary Koch Foundation was a panelist, it seems reasonable to assume that Olsen is the same person Greene mentions in his article.
It would be a shame to wake up in America one day and realize the most powerful political structure in every facet of citizens’ lives, including the driving force in privatized public education, was theocracy…wait….Paul Weyrich, co-founder of ALEC.
Btw- the conference title- “Principled entrepreneurship…” The Commonweal article shows us why we should all be concerned by the substantial shift in democracy when Koch money and influence aligns with a very driven religious sect.
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The preceding comment (9:10) refers to the Ravitch post referencing Maurice Cunningham
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These so-called “reformers” have nearly accomplished their goal of a two-tiered education system. While the masses move along a digitized, standardized assembly line, the CEO’s child enjoys far more enrichment and human interaction. But once this two-tiered approach was allowed, then why not a third? It was inevitable for fanatics to demand their child indulge in pseudo history – on the taxpayer dime. Meanwhile, as everyone fights for the upper hand, democracy loses.
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And, the theocrats want pseudoscience taught.
For the context, understand the goals of the Heritage’s (Koch) DeVos Center for Religion and Civil Society which is associated with Jay W. Richards who has links to Wedge Strategy (both of the latter two have Wikipedia entries).
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Educational Tierrorism —
We’ve always had a multi-tiered educational system, it’s just that we used to have a level base under the pyramid, supported by all, to which all had free and equal access if they so chose, and protected from pillage by the private-tiers.
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