Oklahoma State Superintendent Ryan Walters seems to have absorbed all his talking points from ALEC, the rightwing bill mill or he may just be trying to duplicate whatever Florida Governor Ron DeSantis is doing. All the talking points are there about critical race theory, “diversity, equity, and inclusion,” the “science of reading,” the fear of students turning transgender or being recognized as such, the readiness to censor anything that mentions sexuality or gender, and of course, vouchers for home schoolers and religious schools.
Superintendent Walters adds another item to his “reform” agenda: pay for performance, which has been tried for a century and never worked anywhere. It is hard to find an educational program that has been more thoroughly discredited, especially in the past dozen years. Performance these days equals test scores, and the teachers in the most affluent schools always come out in top, while those who teach the most vulnerable children are always on the bottom. No need to reinvent that broken wheel. Even Republican legislators know instinctively that “performance,” defined as test scores favors those in the whitest, most advantaged schools.
John Thompson, historian and former teacher, writes:
Last week, rightwing Oklahoma Secretary of Education Ryan Walters tried to “Shove ‘Choice’ Down the Throats of Unwilling Schools and Parents,” but he received serious pushback by influential Republicans for ignoring legislative norms in budget-making. This week, Walters’ revealed more of his plans to divide and conquer public schools, while ramping up the stakes for educators who don’t comply with ambiguous and weird mandates. The response by numerous Republicans, however, seems to indicate that a bipartisan effort against Walters’ and Gov. Kevin Stitt’s extremism is growing.
Walters started the Board of Education meeting, where his budget was presented with a prayer, which included a “reference to his school choice goals.” He then condemned “a loud and vocal crowd, a minority for sure, that say that all that is needed to fix the problems in education is to toss more money and to leave everything alone.” Walters then promised:
“There will be school choice. We will ensure that indoctrination and CRT (critical race theory) are eliminated in our state. We will also make sure that our kids are safe. There will be no boys in the girls bathrooms. There will be no pornography in our schools. We will make sure all of our vendors and the schools are focused on education and not diversity, equity and inclusion.”
Then, Walters met with rural superintendents in Atoka, the home of the Republican Speaker of the House Charles McCall, who has opposed voucher expansion. Walters explained that his “incentive pay plan that would reward a select few highly rated teachers in each school with up to $10,000 on top of their salaries.”
Walters then complained that:
“Tulsa has done so poor that if you took Tulsa Public Schools out of what we’re doing, we’re in the top half nationally. If you take Tulsa and OKC out, we’re in the top 15.”
So, the Tulsa World reported that Walters said:
“He would be open to pushing for Tulsa Public Schools to be broken up into smaller schools because of academic results there he says are dismal and parents who complain they are locked in because they can’t afford private school tuition and suburban schools bursting at the seams.”
At the same time, Walters’ allies are revealing more options for punishing educators who don’t comply with confusing mandates. While Walters seems to be backing off from his suggestion that all federal education funds be rejected, Sen. David Bullard filed a bill to “develop a ten-year plan to phase out the acceptance and use of federal funds for the support of K-12 education.” Sen. Shane Jett would “add seven more prohibited topics to House Bill 1775, which bans eight race and gender concepts from K-12 schools.” Jett and Rep. Terry O’Donnell seek to ban “teaching about sexual orientation and gender identity to elementary-age children,” And Jett “would outlaw any school policies that respect or promote ‘self-asserted sex-based identity narratives,’” as well as hosting “drag queen story time.”
Moreover, Sen. Cody Rogers “would prohibit school employees from calling students by names or pronouns that differ from the students’ birth certificates, unless having received written consent from the child’s parent.” Rep. Danny Williams would completely ban sex education from public schools.
Then, it was learned, Walters fired the Oklahoma State Department of Education’s Assistant general counsel Lori Murphy. The veteran attorney was “known for her support of transgender people and objections to the state’s rulemaking on classroom race and gender discussions.”
And the Tulsa World reported, the Oklahoma State Regents for Higher Education responded to Walters’ “urgent request” to audit spending on diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, programs. The Regents, “scrambled hundreds of employees to compile a 10-year review of its spending history on and current materials used for … DEI programs.” They found that DEI spending was “a third of 1%” of the budget.
But, on the eve of submitting his budget to the legislature, Walters, as well as his ally Gov. Stitt, faced more bad news. As the Oklahoman reports, Attorney General Gentner Drummond, who defeated Stitt’s appointee, John O’Conner, announced an “investigation into misspent education funds” which “hung over the state Capitol on Wednesday.” As an investigation by Oklahoma Watch and The Frontier found, Connors’ lawsuit led “some critics to question whether the lawsuit was an honest attempt to recoup the funds.” Consequently, The Oklahoman reported, “some high-ranking lawmakers appeared hesitant to heed funding requests from Oklahoma’s new state superintendent because of his alleged part in the controversy.” The reason was it was “a mix of Walters’s and Gov. Kevin Stitt’s staff, not a state agency [that] was overseeing the program.”
The Republican Chair of the House Appropriations and Budget subcommittee for Education, Mark McBride, said (and Speaker Charles McCall confirmed) he had been authorized to investigate the lawsuit, and was wrong in not doing so. But now, as Nondoc reports, A.G. Drummond said he “would pursue accountability for state officials, potentially including Walters owing to his prior role as director of an organization tasked with dispersing the funds.” (for what it’s worth McCall, a likely candidate for governor, attended the budget presentation.)
The Tulsa World added that Stitt had blamed the parent company of ClassWallet for the “unflattering audit of federal pandemic relief funds under Stitt’s control.” But, the audit was critical of how the Stitt administration spent $31 million to provide pandemic relief for students’ educational needs.”
Nondoc further explained that Walters’ presentation to the committee “took the opportunity with some of the lawmakers’ questions to expound on campaign rhetoric, including addressing questions regarding his ‘liberal indoctrination’ comments and past declarations to get federal funding out of Oklahoma public education.” And, his two-point plan, funding “science of reading” and pay-for-performance, drew plenty of criticism.
Republican Rhonda Baker, chair of the Common Education Committee, told Walters, “We have, as a legislative body, voted on the science of reading.” She added, “We’ve been very supportive of that, and we have made sure that there has been funding for that, so none of that is new. What is challenging, though, … is that we are not keeping teachers.”
Moreover, Democrat Rep. Andy Fugate said Walters performance pay plan would backfire by drawing teachers away from high-challenge schools and finding schools where “it’s easiest to teach.” Similarly, McBride said:
“Merit pay, I’m OK with it if you work in the oil field or some industry, but in education I just don’t see it working. … If you’ve got a classroom of troubled youth, how do you compare that to the classroom over here where the teacher’s got all the A and B students? It’s just almost impossible to me to evaluate that.”
I’ve heard mixed appraisals as to whether Walters really believes his own words. Regardless, as his ideology-driven claims become more extreme, it seems more likely that there will be more bipartisan pushback against Walters, Stitt, and MAGA true-believers. And, who knows, maybe it will open the door to Republican Adam Pugh’s bill, based on discussions with hundreds of superintendents and education leaders and over a thousand educators, that “would spend $241 million on teacher pay raises, guarantee 12 weeks of maternity leave for teachers and offer $15 million in scholarships to future educators who pledge to work in high-poverty schools,” while bestowing respect on teachers.

“…parents who complain they are locked in because they can’t afford private school tuition and suburban schools bursting at the seams.”
I know several mothers in my major city who say the same thing. Two of these mothers say their kids are afraid to go to school because of bullies against whom adminstrators never take effective action. Other mothers say their kids are not challenged because teachers spend almost all of their time on classroom discipline issues and trying to help kids who are way behind academically.
These mothers say other parents at these same schools have had these same complaints for several years, but nothing is ever done to improve them – parents’ compliants are just blown off because administrators know the parents have no options; they’re stuck. What should parents in these circumstances do? Their kids are growing up right now, and they don’t have the luxury of waiting for these public schools to improve, if they ever will.
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Public schools are required to take everyone who lives within the area. The means and hurdles for expulsion are pretty high. As for the volume of time spent on class management, that will always be a challenge. It’s impossible for all students to get equal amounts of attention. Doesn’t really matter where someone schools their children.
Administrators don’t blow off their concerns because the parents are stuck. It’s because the nature of a public school is that it has to do its best for every kid. Every kid.
I’ve been teaching for nearly thirty years and some students get more attention than other students. That’s driven by need, personality, habit and discipline. This even happens if I’m dealing with small classes (which occasionally occurs in my school).
If these parents have these problems and haven’t investigated options, I’m not sure what to say. Back in the Obama administration, every city opened large numbers of charter schools. Those schools are still highly present. I live near Detroit which is massively charterized. (Though it is remarkable that so many kids go to charters then come right back to public within two-three years.)
I’m not saying those concerns from parents don’t happen. I’m sympathetic. But in a system that tries to do its best by everyone, the rules hamstring schools quite considerably. We don’t have the option of turning kids away unless they commit truly egregious acts. That’s the law with compulsory, mandated education.
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These parents are strongly considering charters for next year. But Diane Ravitch opposes charters; if she had her way, they would all be closed and their students would be forced back into traditional public schools.
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No worry. The charter may reject them or might close the next and the kids will be out of luck. Don’t expect experienced teachers. Charter teachers have a high turnover rate. The KIPP high school in St. Louis just unionized to improve working conditions. Take your chances. If you live in a red state, the charters are in no danger. There will be more of them.
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Stick around and learn a little about education in America.
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Sarah rejects the concept of local democracy. She wants her tax dollars spent by people who have no accountability e.g. parish schools, some of which generate more revenue from tax-funded vouchers, than from people who put money in the collection plates.
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Sarah wants taxpayers to fund schools like the one in Tennessee which charges day students $31,330 and boarding students, double that. The school admitted its first Black student in 1971. News reporting today describes a couple of the school’s White students who made a video in which they threatened to “burn Black people on a cross.”
Pat Robertson is an alum of the school.
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Where is the evidence that the voucher schools do any better (dealing with the concerns that you mention) vs the People’s Public School System? Chloroforming the public with a barrage spoken “facts” and “figures” proves nothing. Would you be so kind and provide some evidence (links) that folks can check.
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Sarah– Disruption in the classroom has become a tougher nut to crack– even more so in the last decade when OCR div of Dept of Ed made it clear they intend to use the data they collect to open more investigations of potential discrimination in application of discipline policy. Because data supported that on average there were many more times the number of suspensions/ expulsions for black/ Latino/ SpEd students than could be explained by anything other than discrimination. And stats are clear: suspensions and expulsions do nothing to improve student safety or make school atmosphere more conducive for learning.
As expected, the incidence of suspensions/ expulsions has caved under that pressure. Yet many [most?] schools have been slow to develop alternatives that have been shown to work– presumably because they take leadership, time and money. The pressure from OCR seems [per anecdotal teacher & parent reports] to make many admins plug their ears & “blow off complaints”—because they have no ideas beyond suspension/ expulsion [or mainstreaming even emotionally-disordered SpEd students], and/or have no budget $$ to improve things.
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Worth a read, Baptist News Global, 12-19-2022, “Oklahoma could have the nation’s first publicly funded Catholic charter school.” The article continues, “For decades, Baptists have fought against funding for parochial schools of all kinds…On Dec. 1, Attorney General John O’Conner- who is Catholic”-
wrote a legal opinion supporting the change.
Ryan Walters attended the private Harding University which is affiliated with the sect- Churches of Christ which is the largest private university in Arkansas. Oklahoma Watch reports that he received $120,000 in 2021 from his employment an ed privatization non-profit funded by the Waltons.
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Pay for test scores died a long time ago. It’s the walking dead. The fool pushing it today wants to eat your brain because he doesn’t have one of his own.
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I sure would miss drag queen story time. It was always my favorite.
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