This is the 40th anniversary of the Reagan-era report called “A Nation at Risk.” The report was immediately hailed as a “landmark,” blasting the quality of the nation’s public schools. President Reagan wanted the report to endorse school prayer and vouchers. It didn’t. But it castigated the nation’s public schools as failures and complained about their low standards and mediocrity. The report had a dramatic effect. States reacted with commissions and plans to raise standards and toughen tests.
James Harvey, a member of the staff that wrote the report, argues that the misleading rhetoric, diagnosis, and recommendations of the “Nation at Risk” report led to an obsession with test scores, undermined vocational education, and cemented the simplistic mindset that produced “No Child Left Behind” and “Race to the Top,” while ignoring the serious social and economic conditions that hinder children’s lives. Even today’s culture wars targeting the schools can be traced to “A Nation at Risk.”
He explains here how the report cherry-picked its data and cooked the books to paint a fake portrayal of America’s public schools, a depiction that has had dire consequences for forty years.
This is a brilliant article. I urge you to read it.
Harvey writes here about how the report was written. Its effects were disastrous. He was a member of the staff that researched and wrote the report. His article appeared in Valerie Strauss’s “Answer Sheet” blog at the Washington Post. Valerie Strauss wrote the introduction.
In April 1983, a commission convened by President Ronald Reagan’s education secretary, Terrel H. Bell, released a landmark report about the nation’s public education system, “A Nation at Risk: The Imperative for Educational Reform.” It famously warned:
“Our nation is at risk. Our once unchallenged preeminence in commerce, industry, science, and technological innovation is being overtaken by competitors throughout the world. … If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.”
As I wrote in 2018, the authors used statistics to paint a disturbing picture of the country’s public system, though it turned out that a lot of the data was cherry-picked to confirm previously decided conclusions about the awful state of America’s schools. The piece I published, by James Harvey and David Berliner, explained how the report — and its aftermath in waves of school reforms — was bungled. It said, for example:
“The bumbling began immediately. Reagan startled the commission members by hailing their call for prayer in the schools, school vouchers, and the abolition of the Department of Education. The commission hadn’t said a word about any of these things.Indeed, the commission had been launched by then Secretary of Education Terrell Bell to fend off the president’s 1980 campaign proposal to abolish the department. In its report, it laid out a strong argument in favor of a vigorous federal presence in education to support vulnerable students, aid higher education and research, and protect civil rights. These suggestions were quickly relegated to the dust bin of history.”
Here is a piece about how the report was created and its impact. It was written by Harvey, who was a senior staff member of the National Commission on Excellence in Education, which wrote “A Nation at Risk”; Harvey contributed to it. He retired in 2021 as executive director of the National Superintendents Roundtable, a nonprofit organization that supports its members of approximately 100 school superintendents from 30 states.
By James Harvey
I recently came across Stephen Weir’s “History’s Worst Decisions and the People Who Made Them” and looked through it to see if “A Nation at Risk” and the 40-year educational disaster that is the modern education reform movement following its publication made the cut. Inclusion in his list, Weir wrote, demanded “idiocy” on a scale that “exacted a very high price, in lives or livelihoods.”
Compared to such appalling blunders as Napoleon’s 1812 decision to invade Russia, the little 36-page report that was “A Nation at Risk” was very small beer and wasn’t included. But just as most of Weir’s “worst decisions” rested on ignorance and pride, so too did the rhetoric and recommendations of “A Nation at Risk.”
The public and policymakers, by and large, have gone along for the ride.
National Commission on Excellence in Education
Early in his tenure as President Ronald Reagan’s education secretary, Terrell Bell, a former Utah state superintendent of education, visited the department’s research arm, the National Institute of Education (NIE), where I served as chief of staff. He wanted to talk about his hopes for the future. Bell, an experienced and canny bureaucrat, was taking over the very education department that Reagan had vowed to abolish during the 1980 presidential campaign. How to proceed?
Bell told us that he wanted to create a National Commission on Excellence in Education that would be charged with examining the state of America’s public schools. He asked Milton Goldberg, acting director of NIE, to get the commission off the ground and serve as its executive director. Goldberg turned to me and to another NIE aide, Peter Gerber, to help with establishing and staffing the commission.
Commission makeup
We went all in with creating a commission that represented the stakeholders in American schools. The 18-member commission included four college or university presidents, seven members representing K-12 school constituencies (from such groups as state and local superintendents, school principals and school boards), one teacher, two retired business leaders, a former governor, an entrepreneur. The chairman of the commission was David Pierpoint Gardner, who in 1983 was the University of Utah’s president before becoming the president of the University of California, but it was two other academics who had the biggest impact on the report-writing process. One was Gerald Holton, who served as a highly distinguished physics professor at Harvard University. The other was Glenn T. Seaborg, a Nobel laureate in chemistry who helped discover 10 elements on the periodic table many of us studied in high school, and who had advised the White House and State Department on the 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.
Development of the report
By my count at the time, “A Nation at Risk” ran through 13 drafts before it went to the printer. The staff thought the report would be based on the evidence we received during the first 12 months of the committee’s life from hearings and some 40 papers commissioned from academic experts. It wasn’t.
Without any real guidance from the commission members about what they wanted to say, I developed two successive white papers reflecting on what we had heard from experts on the complexities of the school “system” in the United States. The essence of the two lengthy papers was that American schools had accomplished great things for the United States and were now faced with the joint challenges of (1) successfully educating a more diverse and lower-income population through high school, and (2) improving standards or we risked becoming mired in mediocrity. Virtually every reference to the accomplishments of American schools and the challenges of diversity and poverty disappeared from the succeeding drafts.
At the meeting to discuss my second draft, Holton showed up with a brilliant polemic, a handwritten draft he had developed on the plane on the way to Washington from Boston. He read it aloud to the assembled commissioners. Castigating American public schools for the failures of American society and in particular the nation’s declining economic competitiveness, it became the foundation of “A Nation at Risk.”
There were at least three problems with what the commission finally produced. First, it settled on its conclusions and then selected evidence to support them. Second, its argument was based on shockingly shoddy logic. And third, it proposed a curricular response that ignored the complexity of American life and the economic and racial divisions within the United States.
Cooking the books
Holton’s draft went through 10 revisions as the commission cherry-picked and misinterpreted data to fix the facts in support of its argument. As James W. Guthrie, an academic who admired the report and thought it was on balance a good thing, put it: The commissioners “were hellbent on proving that schools were bad. They cooked the books to get what they wanted.”
The public was told that American students lagged seriously behind in international comparisons of student achievement, even though Sweden’s Torsten Husén, chairman of the International Association for the Evaluation of Educational Achievement (IEA), warned the commission not to do that. He said international achievement comparisons were an exercise in “comparing the incomparable” due to enormous differences in enrollment, curriculums, objectives, goals and the organization of school systems.
Seventeen-year-olds in the United States, the commission said, showed a steady decline in science achievement on tests administered in 1969, 1973 and 1977 by the National Assessment of Educational Progress. (Known as NAEP, the system of assessments is seen as the most consistent, nationally representative measure of U.S. student achievement since the 1990s and is supposed to be able to assess what students “know and can do.”)
What the report didn’t say was that the steady declines had been eliminated in the 1982 NAEP assessment, according to assessment expert Gerald W. Bracey. He also thought it odd that scores for 17-year-olds in science were highlighted while eight positive NAEP trendlines — for ages 9, 13 and 17 in reading, math and science — were ignored.
Shoddy logic
But it was the introduction of an argument based on appallingly shoddy logic that was the commission’s gravest sin. “Our nation is at risk,” declared the commission in the opening paragraph. And it went on, in a line I provided: “The educational foundations of our society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a nation and a people.” I included it because I was worried about standards and about maintaining the commitment of pioneering educational philosophers such as Horace Mann and John Dewey to schools as the fundamental engine of social progress.
But according to the commission writing the report, public schools were responsible for Japan eating our economic lunch and for “one great American industry after another falling to world competition.” This language transformed schools from engines of social progress to engines of economic competitiveness. Mrs. Smith in fourth grade and Mr. Brown in Grade 11 had a very heavy burden to bear. (Japan was actually in an economic downturn in 1983 when the report was released.)
In an excess of bombast, the report declared, “If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists today, we might well have viewed it as an act of war.” This language came perilously close to defining teachers and administrators as enemies of the United States.
What surprised me watching the individual members of the commission absorb this argument is that not a single public school educator in the group objected as the report with their names on it trashed their profession and cast educators as among the great economic villains of the United States. When I pointed out to Holton that our report ignored the appalling poverty, destitution and segregation in which so many American students lived, he shrugged. [Note: The Washington Post sought a comment from Holton but he could not be reached.]
Even amid the height of the Cold War, this was just a preposterous diagnosis of the ills of the American economy. As the eminent educational historian Lawrence A. Cremin had told the commission, the nation’s economic competitiveness depended on trade and monetary policy and on the decisions made in the White House and on Capitol Hill and by the departments of Treasury and Commerce long before it depended on public schools.
The sad truth is that the commission spent 18 months to produce a flawed report. In just a few weeks, a task force on education that was created for President-elect John F. Kennedy’s transition issued a 1961 report that came closer to the mark when it also called for excellence in education with the notation: “Millions of children, particularly in certain rural areas and in the great cities, are deprived of an opportunity to develop talents that are needed both for society and for their own lives. The Task Force Committee concludes that priority should be given to a vigorous program to lift the schools to a new level of excellence.”
The rhetorical differences between the measured tone of the Kennedy task force and the polemics of the excellence commission are noteworthy. Kennedy’s task force then went on to make recommendations about funding for all schools and specifically advocated for additional funding for schools in low-income rural and urban areas.
Misguided curricular response
As the commission polished up its analysis of how the nation was at risk and why schools were peculiarly at fault, how to address this crisis was a conundrum. Several drafts went by without any recommendations.
The comprehensive high school, which accommodated the educational needs of students interested in vocational education as well as those interested in pursuing college degrees, had long been hailed as one of the glories of American public education. But Holton arrived at a meeting with a series of curricular recommendations for all students that were slotted right in as the commission’s major contribution. He called it the “new basics” — essentially the high school curriculum required for students interested in attending Ivy League colleges. The new basics contemplated four years of English in high school, three years of mathematics, three years of science, three years of social studies and a half-year of computer science.
Everyone would follow this curriculum. For the college-bound, an additional two years of foreign language study was recommended. The commission was recommending that practically every secondary school student in the United States follow a course of studies in high school that serious scholars of American public schools (such as James B. Conant, a former president of Harvard), had recommended only for the 15 to 20 percent of high school students judged to be “academically talented.” It signaled the end of vocational education, in which millions of students would have thrived.
Consequences
It is unfortunate that a straight line can be drawn from “A Nation at Risk” to the culture wars now consuming American public schools. The line runs as follows:
An undertow trashing schools and government.
The report, while putting education near the top of the national agenda, has served as an undertow helping undermine confidence in educators and public schools while trashing government generally. The argument of wholesale school failure has been an essential bulwark of the effort to privatize public education by diverting public funds into school vouchers and unaccountable charter schools, particularly the scandal-plagued for-profit charter sector.
Vocational education, which flourished in public schools in the post-World War II era, in part due to the unflinching support of former Harvard University president James B. Conant, has withered on the vine. Both major political parties have essentially ignored the challenges facing working-class Americans by creating a school system that ignores their needs.
An obsession with achievement tests. We have become an achievement-test-obsessed society. As Jack Jennings, a keen observer of K-12 policy for nearly five decades has noted, a promising standards movement was “hijacked” by standardized testing that emerged from “A Nation at Risk.” No Child Left Behind, the K-12 education law signed in 2002 by President George W. Bush, and Race to the Top, the multibillion-dollar grant program of President Barack Obama, put high stakes on student standardized test scores in math and English language arts, crowding out other subjects. The aftereffects mean that the major question teachers and administrators must answer these days is: What’s the effect on test scores in English and mathematics? The arts, physical education, recess, social studies and history have been reduced as scores in the two tested subjects have come to define what’s important in today’s schools.
Villains in the culture wars.
“A Nation at Risk” also helped lay the foundation for 40 years of gaslighting Americans about the problems our society faces. Distracted by the false argument that most of our economic problems can be laid at the school door, policymakers have been able to ignore major problems including growing inequality, homelessness, drug addiction and the epidemic of gun violence in the United States.
Perversely, the report created the conditions in which, not content to blame teachers for school failure and the nation’s economic challenges, right-wing critics have now cast them in the role of villains in the culture wars. Leaders in many Republican-led states are restricting what teachers can talk to students about the real history of the country, race and racism, gender and identity, as well as restricting books and promoting curriculum that locks in their interpretation of American history.
Funding
One of the tragedies around “A Nation at Risk” was not simply that it misdiagnosed the problem and put forth ersatz solutions, but that it refused to face up to the financial implications of its argument. Staff suggestions that there be some budget response to the definition of a national catastrophe were dismissed by university presidents on the commission, perhaps because they were unwilling to see funding for higher education threatened by increased funding for K-12 schools.
Had the commission entered the treacherous waters of school finance — which promotes inequity in public education with a system that relies in large part on local property taxes — it would inevitably have had to deal with the troublesome issue of childhood poverty and unequal opportunity, a topic that commission leaders avoided.
In the end, this was a missed opportunity. The report was a product, like the other blunders identified by Stephen Weir, of decisions grounded in ignorance and pride. In this case, commission leaders, isolated from the real problems of the society about which they pontificated and arrogantly convinced that the answers they sought could be found in the faculty lounge, misread the nature of the problem, misinterpreted the cause and misled the American people.
The report should have been hailed as a landmine, not a landmark.
“the 40-year educational disaster that is the modern education reform movement ”
Exactly. Thanks to Ronnie, Bush, Duncan, Gates, Coleman, and the rest of the clown car.
Bob, thank you. That book, “A Nation at Risk,” is indeed a landmine, NOT a landmark. Reagan was a horrible potus. He was the spokesperson for the Far Right, who read the script.
He was a racist who consulted astrologers and fabricated stories about Cadillac-driving “welfare queens.” He was an eager player in the McCarthy Communist witch hunts. He had extreme senile dementia for his entire second term. He illegally sold arms to Iran so that he could fund Contra fighters who murdered whole villages of peasants, including children and babies. Before his handlers put him on script, he was talking about how Social Security was a Communist plot. And so, we build statues to him and rename the Washington, D.C., airport after him.
Don’t forget Teddy Kennedy joining forces with W. Ahh the benefits of a boarding school education.
Diane, you give me the opportunity to dust off my one time “quote of the year”:
If a foreign country had inflicted upon our public education system what Ed Reform plutocrats and their toadying political sycophants have imposed upon it, we would have considered it an act of war.
Yes!!!! Well said!!!
Excellent!
“undermined vocational education”
This is a biggie that is not remarked upon enough. A Nation at Risk, No Child Left Unpunished, the puerile Gates/Coleman bullet list, and the mandated testing not only led to a dramatic devolution in U.S. curricula and pedagogy as it became more and more test preppy and FAR LESS COHERENT, but it also led to a one-size-fits-all approach that dramatically devalued (and defunded) vocational education. Students ARE NOT WIDGETS to be standardized. An astonishingly diverse economic systems needs diverse outcomes from its educational systems–ones that suit the proclivities and potential of VARIED students. We need cosmologists AND cosmotologists.
We’ve been barreling over students off any sane road for decades now, and A Nation at Risk was the start of this. It is LONG PAST TIME to do away with the federal standardized testing mandate, which costs billions in direct costs, has incalculable opportunity costs, provides ZERO legitimately actionable information (because the tests are not valid), and has cored (hollowed out) the substance of U.S. curricula.
“Both major political parties have essentially ignored the challenges facing working-class Americans by creating a school system that ignores their needs.”
THIS!!!!
EXACTLY!!!!
cx, spelling: cosmetologists, ofc
I suspect that a “Cosmotologist” would be someone who specialized in 25-question quizzes about people’s sex lives. LOL.
I grew up in a blue-collar factory town, and my high school classmates pursued diverse paths in life right after high school: four year college, tech/vocational school, community college, military enlistment, straight into the paid workforce (back when well-paid factory jobs existed). There were some vo-tech classes at our high school. But by the 1990s vo-tech had been almost entirely eliminated. The push was college-for-all, the mindset being that blue-collar jobs were being eliminated by automation and offshoring to cheap labor countries. There was truth in that analysis, but it was always clear to me that shipping more young people to four year colleges was a huge waste of time and money. 95+% of kids who had the motivation and ability to succeed in four year colleges were already going that route, and increasing college attendance would not result in long-term economic gains for almost all of the new attendees.
That’s exactly what has happened. We still have a far higher percentage of young people going to four year colleges compared to European social democracies. Germany has it right: on-the-job training and apprenticeships are the best route for a majority of young people. The college-industrial complex in America is long overdue for a major downsizing.
AGREED 100%, Jack. And nice to see you here again. Warm wishes to you and yours.
Jack, well said.
I would also add that the hyper focus on early reading and basic math took away the super power of the American Public Schools where students participated in hands on activities and play that promoted critical thinking, a sense of community, and creativity. When I visited China, an educator there couldn’t understand why we had become hell bent on using Chinese practices for education conformity while they understood our entrepreneurial practices were the result of a much broader approach to learning.
Ironically, the Republican response to education in our state today is to trumpet their “new” ideas about vocational ed. They are too busy worrying over drag queens to understnd their ideas are decades old and that their intellectual ancestors caused the things they are complaining about. I keep using the word “ironically” these days.
It is interesting to note that of the entire group involved in creating this document, only one was a public school teacher – a high school French teacher. Generally, only college prep students will study a language, so this teacher would most likely have never seen vocational students, now would he have seen the most at-risk students, either.
This is a document that, when it came out, my colleagues and I responded with an “it’s garbage” kind of response and went on doing our teaching and ignored it.
Susan,
You ignored it but your governor did not.
Unfortunately, so very true. And look where it’s put us….
It marked the incursion of the Defense Industry Model (DIM) into public education policy and it was the first salvo fired by the Destroyers Of Public Education (DOPEs).
The DOPEs
LOL. Nailed it.
What was ACTUALLY responsible for Japan “eating our lunch” back then? American thinkers CREATED the quality control movement, took it to American industry, and American industry said, “No thanks.” Why? Because it was making money on repairs and parts and maintenance contracts for its breathtakingly expensive and unreliable products. People used to joke that Ford meant “fix or repair daily.” AND THINGS WERE MEANT TO BE THAT WAY BECAUSE THE AUTO INDUSTRY OF THE TIME MADE ITS REAL MONEY ON PARTS. Japan learned the quality control lessons taught by Shewhart, Deming, and Juran, which included, btw, increased worker autonomy and authority.
Bob,
As I recall, the Japanese auto industry introduced cars that got 30-40 miles per gallon, while the US auto industry stuck with gas guzzlers.
Yeah, and the Japanese started making small, reliable, replaceable copiers that didn’t need to be serviced, as opposed to the enormous monstrosities produced by Xerox, which was making its real money on breathtakingly expensive maintenance contracts and repairs on its hulking junk piles. Japan adopted quality control principles. Xerox went through bankruptcy.
Andrea Gabor wrote a book about Deming that has implications for education. The Japanese industry leaders absorbed his ideas about collaboration; we did not. We stuck with competition and stack ranking. Deming loathed merit pay, which destroys collaboration.
YES!!!
Gabor, “The Man Who Invented Quality”
Smart lady!
Slightly off topic, but education-
Took a workshop years ago on Japanese Lesson Study. Made so much sense- teachers observing lessons and collaborating to improve the lessons instead of this top-down garbage we have today. Who k owns better what goes on in a classroom and what works than the classroom teachers them selves?
Lesson study!!!! YES!!!!! So, so, so valuable, this practice. Teachers learning from, working with, their colleagues to plan and refine and brainstorm approaches to specific quotidian issues. OH YESSSSS!!!!
Competition is the focus of sports programs; collaboration and problem solving are the focus of theatre programs. Unfortunately, in most districts, sports programs are valued while theatre and art programs are not valued to the same degree. As the drama advisor in the district this is a constant source of frustration.
As I recall, there was also a total lack of market research on the part of the American companies who wanted to sell cars to Japan. I was living in Japan from 1986-89, and I remember my boss there talking about how Cadillacs were only popular with yakuza. Furthermore, the American companies did not even bother to switch the steering wheels to the other side of the car for the Japanese market (did they even know that they drive on the left in Japan?), nor did they have any idea of how narrow the streets are. Meanwhile, companies like Honda, Nissan and Toyota were researching to find out what American consumers wanted. But our companies screamed “Unfair trade practices!! Of course, there probably were some barriers from the Japanese side, but…
Where by the time we reached the 1990s, the Japanese economy stagnated while the peak of boomers and X-ers exposed to the broader form of public education curriculum began to thrive again. Funny how that narrative was ignored.
One of the worst consequences, not often written about but DISASTEROUS, has been the emergence of the Common [sic] Core [sic] in response to the call for “higher” standards, which then became, BIZARRELY, a kind of “default curriculum map” in ELA, leading to incoherence and lack of substance in ELA curricula and pedagogy, which became not bodies of content taught to kids but, rather, RANDOM EXERCISES ON ITEMS FROM THE PUERILE GATES/COLEMAN BULLET LIST.
Let me repeat that: The CC$$ led to the replacement of extended, coherent content in ELA with random exercises on random items from the puerile (and almost content free) Gates/Coleman bullet list. I call this the “Monty Python and Now for Something Completely Different” approach to curriculum planning. (BTW, it recently occurred to me what the name “Monty Python” was all about. Think: “the full Monty.” LOL.)
Turning ELA curricula into random exercises on random skills might not have been the intent, but that is EXACTLY what happened. I know, I was working at high levels in the educational materials (textbook and online) industry all during this period. I SAW THIS, UP CLOSE AND PERSONAL, as they say. It was shocking. The Common [sic] Core [sic] was a malignant cancer that ATE U.S. ELA curricula and pedagogy.
The devolution of U.S. ELA curricula and pedagogy was ENTIRELY PREDICTABLE from the way the game was set up by NCLB, in response to the Nation at Risk propaganda piece. Why? Well, the “accountability” insisted upon by the Ed Deformers held students, teachers, administrators, and schools accountable for what? For answering specific questions related to specific items on the Gates/Coleman bullet list. EVERYTHING depended on the students’ ability to DO THAT. And so U.S. ELA curricula became ABOUT DOING THAT. Textbook planners started beginning every project by making putting the CC$$ list in the first column of a spreadsheet and the places where each item was “covered” in the other columns. The stupid, almost entirely content free skills list BECAME THE DEFAULT CURRICULUM MAP. Goodbye curricular coherence and scaffolding.
And goodbye curricular substance
A “Now how not to be seen” moment indeed.
“. . . to the call for “higher” standards,. . . ”
Why “standards”? We had goals and objectives. This country became the supposed top dog nation of the world (at least self-proclaimed so) without standards. How could that have been without standards?
The reasons for the shift in terminology can be viewed as:
Because who can be against a “standard”? One must be for totally shoddy work if one is against the standard or doesn’t strive toward that standard, a sub-human actually.
But the main reason in my mind is so that whole false “measure student outcomes” nonsense is intimately tied to having a standard against which the student is “measured”. Wilson, myself have shown that is a false paradigm rife with onto-epistemological assumptions and errors. The standards and testing malpractice regime is the result.
Thank you, Duane. Yes. I agree about this “standards” nonsense. We need to replace those with general frameworks and to let three million flowers bloom.
The way I see it, Benjamin Bloom has something to answer to. Behavioral Objectives led me to choak on education curricula in college in 1973-78. Suggesting we should focus on specific student behaviors seemed to me to rob the student of his intellectual independence.
Long after U.S. and British psychologists had made the cognitive turn, behavioral objectives nonsense persisted in U.S. education, which shows both the faddishness of science, sometimes, and the backwardness of some educational “theory.”
Imagine telling teachers to forget about their students having MINDS because thinking about those is “unscientific” (minds not being directly observable and thus not subject to third-person observation and falsification). Idiocy.
Peter Greene nailed it in 2014. “Decoupling? Not going to happen. You can’t have a data system without tagging, and you can’t have a tagging system with nothing to tag. Education and teaching are just collateral damage in all this, and not really the main thing at all.” https://www.huffpost.com/entry/common-core-standards_b_5346907
At least when the whole race-to-space Sputnik craze hit education in the 1950s and early 1960s, efforts were made to invest in and fortify public education instead of dismantle and trash it . There was a sense of national purpose that included everyone. It was a collective mission. When the GOP gets involved in policy, it immediately wants to ration excellence and opportunity as a bonus to some and a liability to others, and it always conforms to race and class. This bias is often on display in policies championed by the right. Such is the objective of both ‘A Nation at Risk’ and the privatization of public education schemes of today, IMO.
Well observed. The contrast there is pretty dramatic, RT. It’s like the contrast between the response to the polio vaccine and the Trump- and DeStalin-inspired Denialism that killed so many Americans.
While any talk of “the good old days” should not be a part of any public policy debate, there are some conceptual issues that are worth pondering. Even with the divisiveness, injustice and exclusion many experienced to block their access to “the good old” part of “days,” many of those excluded still felt a bond to this nation, that the theoretical promise of America, if not open to them, was well worth attempting, at least for their children. The closest that existed to that ideal, although far from perfect, was the military. I think part of that is lost today because technology and modern life have de-homogenized cultural experience and expectations. “Shining cities on the hill” don’t exist. But examining why some of us believe they do to the point that they become the foundation of ignorance-based political strategies is worth study.
And here’s an example of how the same people use ignorance to ignore actual crises.
Creating a sense of crisis where none exists — or at a minimum, grotesquely amplify any issue — is a tried and true republican strategy, and this episode became something of a blueprint that was refined with Willie Horton. Be scared, very scared.
As the country was experiencing relative economic prosperity in the Clinton years, Robert Samuelson wrote The Good Life and Its Discontents in which he argued that the doom and gloom of republican rhetoric and an examination of historical economic statistics, collectively, things had never been better in US history for the broadest population, although there were great discrepancies that needed to be addressed. Samuelson identified the core reason when he observed, “it is not too much to expect that a successful society will create generally shared norms — beliefs that don’t have to be debated constantly — about the limits and purposes of government.” republicans will not allow this to happen. The crisis of economy went to the crises of terrorism/Muslims, wars, race, public health, and violence. They’re still harping on the latter, but it turns out reality is not measuring up to the rhetoric. New York City will always be a safer city than Bakersfield.
And now we have “woke” to fear. An amalgam of grievances no one can really define but it certainly has large parts of racism — Blacks and people who make rational, evidence-based assertions threaten those who had nothing to with creating the current situation — and even the assertion of these facts threatens republicans. Or LBGT rights — because this group of “others” somehow threatens every fiber of our society, even though I have to make great effort to see them while they mind their own business, something I would otherwise never have done because they do not threaten anything, anywhere. Or public health. That one’s gonna come back with a vengeance. We have large parts of our society who have absolutely no understanding of the scientific method and why it matters to all parts of our lives.
Without fear and the ability to employ many ways to stoke it, they have no agenda. That’s the lasting lasting lesson of “A Nation at Risk.”
Stoke fear and hatred of the other; promise a return to a mythical golden age (MAGA) once the enemies of the state are eliminated. It’s a tried-and-true formula.
My local TV station is owned by Sinclair Broadcasting. They always include horrible, violent national programming that focuses on some personal horror. Then, the ‘national desk’ chimes in with some one sided opinion about the increasing violence. They always present an undercurrent of fear and violence. Then, when we allow so many people to carry weapons, it makes susceptible people more prone to violence. Perhaps this part of the reason why people are getting shot for entering the wrong driveway or ringing the wrong doorbell.
BTW, Rick Scott is sponsoring a bill to fund ‘armed guardians’ in schools at a cost of $80 billion dollars. I wouldn’t be surprised if it is another attempt to push expensive privatization on public schools. Schools would be a lot safer if we had some common sense gun restrictions that were enforced without spending $80 billion dollars.
Greg, I shared Diane’s blog entry on my FB page. Your comment is succinct and connects the dots eloquently. May I have your permission to copy and post your comment (attributed to you) on the same FB post?
If you like anything that I may happen to write, you can use it and take credit for it if you want! Just glad I’m not alone.
Would never take credit, but definitely will quote you.
Last week I took a drive through the middle of Ohio, a bit off the freeways. The perversity of places like this being solid republican strongholds is out for everyone to see. Small communities surrounded by vast farmland, good roads, mostly well-kept homes, idyllic-looking enclaves, some areas of trailers and obvious poverty and/or hoarding, a snapshot of quintessential America. I wondered why they feared Blacks when there were none around. Or foreigners, who I assume work the fields during harvest time. I know they roam in roof-repair crews in the summer. If they needed guns for protection, I would guess the threats would be coming from within their houses or those peaceful ones down the road.
And I also assume the members of Congress make sure farmers get increased subsidies in bad times, much larger than the ones they get all the time. I assume they expect immediate and generous responses should they be hit by tornadoes, heat waves or floods. And I assume we would respond as best we could without complaining about who got what as long as it was legal and fair. I also assume they get outraged by government spending but love having the National Guard depot in town with state-of-the-art equipment that rarely gets used before it gets sold to local police forces to protect them against who know what. And they love their public schools but can’t stand the fact the urban schools are stealing resources from them to teach the next generation of welfare queens. It’s a crazy world, but seemingly simpler in some places for some reasons, or at least they have convinced themselves so.
•They don’t know that many welfare recipients live in rural areas, not just urban?
•I think some Texans questioned federal assistance for folks in NY, NJ after Hurricane Sandy.
Effective propaganda or marketing,
begins where critical thinking ends.
If critical thinking WAS the key
measure of expertise, the faux
experts, captured by “cooked books”,
would be revealed as no more than
tools of the state.
Go figure, it’s the state that
weilds its branding irons, defining
its experts.
“. . . as no more than tools of the state.
Go figure, it’s the state that
weilds its branding irons. . . ”
Who/what is the state to which you refer?
The State:
Political organization of society,
or the body politic, or, more narrowly,
the institutions of government.
Reblogged this on Lloyd Lofthouse and commented:
James Harvey, a member of the staff that wrote what ended up being called “A Nation at Risk”, reveals why/how our government in 1983, declared war on OUR public schools, our teachers, our family values, and our children.
A war that has made some wealthy while letting our schools rot, and turned our public schools into a Ukrainian battle field, under endless attack.
“The bumbling began immediately,” Harvey writes, when “Reagan startled the commission members by hailing their call for prayer in the schools, school vouchers, and the abolition of the Department of Education.”
Cherry Picking the Facts — Cooking the Books
“There were at least three problems with what the commission finally produced. First, it settled on its conclusions and then selected evidence to support them. Second, its argument was based on shockingly shoddy logic. And third, it proposed a curricular response that ignored the complexity of American life and the economic and racial divisions within the United States.” …
Gaslighting Americans about public schools: The truth about ‘A Nation at Risk’:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/education/2023/04/26/how-nationatrisk-report-hurt-public-schools/?
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My first year as a teacher was 1982-83. When I first read “A Nation at Risk” it fired me up to get involved and discredit the report. At that time in Charlotte-Mecklenburg we were recognized locally and nationwide as a success with our efforts in desegregation. There was a meaningful progressive vein in the district’s teaching culture that brought me to the district’s Teaching Learning Center. We discussed issues, influenced policy, introduced “site-based management”, and developed a class on teacher centered problem solving for school management. I was naive enough to believe that perhaps “A Nation at Risk” had motivated educators to realize progressive education. Alas, politics in North Carolina changed. A Republican Governor was elected for the first time in a century and the Democratic General Assembly, still influenced by Jim Crow Democrats, began to craft the pro-test, standardized, vision for K-12 education that led to legislation called the “ABCs” in 1993 that served as a model for NCLB 8 years later. In Charlotte, superintendents caught up in the standards mania closed the TLC. The demise of vocational education and rise of the severe college prep curriculum, along with a hyper focus on early reading and math, reduced opportunities for students in the state. A district with fewer than 20 Title One schools entering the 2000s soon had upward of 90. I find it ironic that while “A Nation at Risk” was willing to blame the public schools for the result of economic stagnation in the 1970s, later administrations chose to ignore giving the public schools credit for the robust economic growth of the late 1980s and throughout the 1990s. We have many more ways to measure progress nationally than we did in 1983, yet the same forces in the Reagan administration who cherry picked data to push the weak public school narrative now continue to misuse existing data today to promote privatization while charter schools and vouchers bring poor results. Although “A Nation at Risk” was a Reagan product, most of the “reform” efforts since have been profoundly bi-partisan. The Democratic Party has an opportunity to turn this tide, but are blinded by the corporate interests bellying up to the trough of subsidies from all levels of government. .
This was a “Sputnik” moment AND a Colin Powell “Weapons of mass destruction” moment.
The former was a wake-up call (and yet the dog died immediately, not the days later as Russia promoted) and there was a wave of change in schools’ attention to science, math, and innovation.
The latter thousand of service men and women died because of BAD INTEL and exaggerated data.
Both very foreshadowing of A Nation at Risk impact.
Like Sputnik, the “average American” who paid NO attention to schools prior to ANAR payed attention – including the Governors who ran with it and ran with it and ran with it. Like Sputnik there was a “wave of change in schools’ attention to high stakes testing, heavy-handed accountability, and co-opting of professional standards by the feds (CC)
Like WMD report it scared the “average American” who fell for the fiery rhetoric and went blindly into the era of “the education governors” and ESEA 1.0, 2.0, and 3.0
Sputnik 2. Poor Laika!
As a Math/computer science teacher throughout these times it was an exciting era at first. There was an influx of money with new computer labs and new equipment. It kept me on my toes as we progressed from HP “dumb terminals” to Commadores. Apple IIe, and IBM micros. Adjusting lessons to the different computers was a challenge as was instruction in BASIC to AP Pascal then C++.
My school had excellent programs in home economics, wood/metal shop and automotive shop. As State standardized testing increased and became a HS graduation requirement, the school’s emphasis changed. Scores on these tests were not only important to students but they were used to compare schools locally and statewide.
This emphasis on testing caused an overnight shift in curriculum. The home economics, wood/metal and automotive shops were closed and transformed into classroom space and computer science was out. Computer instruction was now just how to navigate the web and run the programs installed on the computer. The computers in the labs were moved to the library and as a resource. I became a Math/Math standardized testing teacher.
My own children, who attended school through these times, still complain (rightfully so) about the elimination of these programs.
That happened where I taught as well, largely i response to something called “the Diploma Project.” Our school had a well-thought-out math program that took children to Algebra when they were ready. Around 2009, owing to the adoption of the new “standards”, we began to teach all students Algebra I in the ninth grade, including about half of them who were not proficient at basic math. Soon there were math classes called Algebra II that were ways to get students to graduate so we would not be impaled on the pike of state sanctions. The result is that more kids take Algebra II today than used to, but they learn less about math.
Thanks, Mr. Tim. You recount exactly what happened. Sickening.
It was a perfect storm.
*A Nation at Risk put a media and public spotlight on schools (not education, but schools (and ANAR was predominantly high school focused)
*NCLB changed the stakes and put ranking and accountability ahead of learning and schools.
*Segregation and lingering effects of desegregation that diminished urban enrollments and neighborhoods AND suburban owning up to a black/white “achievement” gap
The result in 2002? Spotlight plus Feds plus “Failing schools immediate impact was ratings, rankings, “reconstitution,” the Michelle Rhee’s of the world smacked “Failure” on schools.
Ongoing storm effects since 2002?
A Nation at Risk negative spotlight + federal high stakes + school failure labels
= Common core cottage industry, neo-liberalism, privatization movement, franchise-charter schools, teach for America, higher stakes testing, high stakes teacher evaluation…
Then throw in the Tea Party and billionaires and we get today’s culture wars and overt (even campaigning on) staggering marginalization.
ANd, that’s why we do what we do to make a dent and hope for common sense.
They reached their conclusions and then they looked at the data. ‘Nough said.
Is it true that Laura Bush was friendly with a higher-up at McGraw Hill, whose testing division would benefit from mandated standardized testing? Or is that just a myth?
I don’t know if Laura Bush had a McGraw friend, but the Bush family was friendly with the McGraw family.
Also Neil Bush, who was dyslexic, started his own reading company.
Politicians and the media have been gas lit beyond redemption or salvation by the corporate testocracy. The standards-based, threaten, test, and punish reform movement just needs a few tweaks: vastly improved, objective, content based standards that are developmentally accurate, the elimination of any and all threats or punitive consequences, vastly improved, objective, content based tests that are developmentally accurate, and staggered, grade span testing:
Language Arts: Grades 3 and 6
Math: Grades 4 and 7
Science: Grades 5 and 8
Only two testing days; zero test prep pressure.