Last Sunday’s New York Times Magazine, the same publication that bravely published The 1619 Project, had a cover story about Randi Weingarten. It raised (and implied) the question of whether she is “the most dangerous person in the world.” The cover illustration had several placards, the most prominent saying “Stop Randi Weingarten.” My immediate thought, before reading the story, was that Randi’s life might be in danger, because the illustration and the title made her a target. This is no joke.
Randi has been a friend of mine for many years, and we don’t always agree. I have never persuaded her, and she has never persuaded me. We have had some strong arguments, but she’s still my friend. I believe passionately in the importance of unions, especially in a society with such deep economic inequality as ours. I wrote a letter to the editor about my objections to the article. I hope it gets published.
One important inaccuracy in the article: the author says that “only” 40% of American 8th graders are “proficient” in math, and only 32% are “proficient” in reading. This is a common error among journalists, critics, and pundits who misunderstand the achievement levels of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP). “Proficient” on NAEP is not grade level. “Proficient” on NAEP represents A level work, at worst an A-. Would you be upset to learn that “only” 40% of 8th graders are at A level in math and “only” 1/3 scored an A in reading?
Jan Resseger, in one of her most brilliant articles, wrote today:
Why Randi Weingarten Is Not a Symbol of What’s Dangerous in American Politics
I felt myself getting angry as I began skimming Jonathan Mahler’s New York Times Magazine article featuring Randi Weingarten. But as I read more carefully, I realized I had to give Mahler credit for recognizing Weingarten’s strong leadership on behalf of public schools and the school teachers she leads as president of the American Federation of Teachers—even in an article framing public school policy according to the standard Republican attack against the teachers unions:
“By now, Pompeo, Tim Scott, Marco Rubio, Ron DeSantis, Donald Trump and the rest of the Republican Party were busy elevating education to a central plank in its 2024 platform…. But Weingarten was building her own case. Public education was now itself a hyperpartisan issue, and she addressed it in hyperpartisan terms in a fiery speech at the National Press Club. Calling out by name some of the people who had demonized her since the pandemic, including Betsy DeVos, she described the ongoing effort to defund public schools as nothing less than a threat to ‘cornerstones of community, of our democracy, our economy and our nation.’ She pointed to studies that have shown that vouchers don’t improve student achievement, characterizing them as a back door into private and parochial schools that are not subject to the same federal civil rights laws as public institutions and can therefore promote discrimination. ‘Our public schools shouldn’t be pawns for politicians’ ambitions… They shouldn’t be destroyed by ideologues.'”
I have myself been delighted to see Randi Weingarten out there fighting for the educational rights of our children during the pandemic, pushing against the widespread blaming of teachers, and opposing the wave of culture war attacks on teachers and on honest and accurate curricula. She has been a far better defender of public schooling than Secretary of Education Miguel Cardona.
But there is a bias in Mahler’s piece that kept me extremely uncomfortable. While Mahler gives Weingarten some credit for defending her side of the debate, he presents his analysis primarily from the point of view of of Mike Pompeo, Tim Scott, Marco Rubio, Ron DeSantis, and Donald Trump.
We learn about “pandemic learning loss” as measured in National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) scores, but we don’t learn that the drop in scores is likely temporary—a one time drop due to Covid disruption. We learn about teachers unions fighting for better protection during Covid—fighting for mask and vaccination mandates. It is implied that teachers unions were partly to blame for school closures, but we read nothing about the struggles of teachers to provide for students’ needs during remote learning, including some pretty difficult periods when many teachers were teaching kids remotely in the same classrooms where they were simultaneously working in-person with groups of kids whose families sent them to school.
Mahler implies that teachers unions are a monolith. He does not tell readers that teachers join their union locals, which operate independently from the national American Federation of Teachers and the National Education Association—the two large teachers unions.
The culture wars comprise a substantial part of Mahler’s profile. He explains that Tina Descovich in Brevard County, Florida and Tiffany Justice, of Indian River County spontaneously decided to join up and create their own parents’ rights group, Moms for Liberty, but he neglects some important background: Moms for Liberty, Parents Defending Education, and No Left Turn in Education are, in fact, Astroturf fronts for a national culture war campaign being mounted by groups like the Manhattan Institute and the Heritage Foundation, with funding from DonorsTrust dark money and Charles Koch. Additionally Mahler reports that the American Federation of Teachers supported Terry McAuliffe against Glenn Youngkin, who ran a culture war campaign against honest teaching about race in American history in the campaign for Governor of Virginia. It should not be a bit surprising that, as a labor union, the American Federation of Teachers can legally endorse and support candidates, and that the AFT endorsed the candidate who stood with the American Historical Association, the American Association of University Professors, and PEN America on the issue of the school curriculum.
Mahler devotes a significant part of his report to what he describes as the “AFT’s left-wing local, the Chicago Teachers Union (CTU).” He adds that “like-minded left-wing slates have since taken control of AFT locals in several other cities, too, including Los Angeles and Baltimore.” Many supporters of public education would embrace the cause of these big-city teachers without identifying themselves as left-wing. Here is how Mahler describes CTU’s agenda: “They see public schools’ ongoing struggles to educate their students as inseparable from the larger societal and economic issues facing their working-class members and the poor communities whose children dominate their classrooms.” Mahler quotes the Chicago Teachers’ Union’s recent past president, Jesse Sharkey: “We are trying to promote a brand of unionism that goes all out in its fight for educational justice and is brave about taking on conflicts.”
The problem with Mahler’s analysis is that today’s debates about public education policy are far more complex and nuanced than a fight between Randi Weingarten as a symbol of teacher unionism and Ron DeSantis and Glenn Youngkin. Those of us who have followed the history of education policy battles through the past two decades of No Child Left Behind and Race to the Top are now watching the far right and dark money campaigns driving culture war chaos across the state legislatures as a path to the expansion of school vouchers. Without any direct connection to teacher unions, many of us share the enlightened assessment that has been articulated by the Chicago Teachers Union.
Mahler mistakes the significance of the recent election of Brandon Johnson, who is a former teacher and more recently an organizer for the Chicago Teachers Union, as Chicago’s new mayor. Mahler sees Johnson’s victory as a symbol of the power of teachers unions: “When Johnson narrowly won, it was a stunning upset…. the teachers’ unions had effectively elected the mayor of America’s third-largest city, who was himself an avowedly progressive union organizer promising to raise taxes on the rich, reform the police and increase funding for the city’s schools…. It was those who had underestimated the political power of the unions who were mistaken.” In reality the meaning of Chicago’s mayoral election was more likely a rejection of nearly a quarter of a century of mayoral governance of Chicago’s public schools, of test-and-punish school accountability, of the explosive growth of charter schools in Chicago, and of Rahm Emanuel’s 2013 closure of 49 elementary schools in Chicago’s Black and Hispanic neighborhoods.
In our alarmingly unequal society, where too frequently our children reside far apart in pockets of concentrated poverty or in pockets of wealth, we will not be able to close children’s opportunity gaps merely by improving the public schools alone. In a new book, The Education Myth, Jon Shelton, a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, identifies the No Child Left Behind Act as the embodiment of a deeply flawed plan to equalize school achievement: “At root, the very premise of the bill—that punishing schools for the scores of their students would improve the schools’ performance—was simply flawed, particularly when school districts did not have the ability to raise students out of poverty or alleviate the trauma of racism…. NCLB ignored the broader economic structures that might lead a student to succeed or fail in school as well as the relationship between where a student got an education and what job would actually be available to them.” (The Education Myth, p. 173)
I am grateful that, in the cities where their members teach, some teachers union locals are working actively to support efforts to ameliorate child poverty. That is not a left-wing cause; it is instead a goal for us all to embrace. As we publicly debate the needs of our children and our public schools, it is wrong to define the conversation as a mere battle between right-wing Republicans and the teachers unions
I have no love for Randi Weingarten, but suggesting she might be the most dangerous person in the world” is risible and should blow all credibility that NYT might have had out of the water. Maybe we should be looking more carefully at other NYT claims that might be equally hyperbolic.
To be clear, it’s a quote from Mike Pompeo. (It’s in quotation marks and the opening paragraph is: “When the former secretary of state and C.I.A. director Mike Pompeo, a man who had dealt firsthand with autocrats like Vladimir Putin and Xi Jinping, described Randi Weingarten as “the most dangerous person in the world” last November, it seemed as though he couldn’t possibly be serious.”)
It is also the TITLE of the article. With so many guns available, this is dangerous.
Yeah, when the press follows Mike Pompous’ lead, that’s all we need to know…
Too bad Randi Weingarten doesn’t feel the need to protect retired teachers from the serious harm about to happen to them led by the efforts of Michael Mulgrew to switch retirees from Traditional Medicare into Medicare Advantage. In fact Randi Weingarten has come out in public support about Mulgrew’s push for the switch. Randi Weingarten has been a disaster for NYC teachers during her tenure as President of the UFT. She appointed Mulgrew interim acting for her remaining year as President when she left that position to become the President of the AFT. Once appointed as a union President it is essentially a lifetime appointment since the vast resources of a union make it impossible for any individual to successfully campaign against a sitting president. It’s easy to say all the right things when it is all but impossible to lose an election. Apparently it is a lot more difficult to bargain effectively to benefit membership. The 2005 contract took away seniority rights, allowed for the creation of “rubber rooms” that were filled with expensive senior teachers, etc. and so on. A total disaster.
Never before do I recall a union fighting to reduce the benefits of a retired member.
Michael Mulgrew is trying to outdo her.
That does not make Randi Weingarten “the most dangerous person in the world.”
If there was a list for the most dangerous people in the world, she wouldn’t be in the top 100.
At this time, I think Putin is the dangerous person in the world.
Kim of North Korea would be second on my list.
I’d vote for Traitor Trump to be in 3rd place
Fourth place would belong to one of CEOs of one of the biggest oil companies on the planet.
DeSantis, Abbott, Greene, et al, would be on that list where we wouldn’t find Randi’s name.
Because of the blind push for profit from tech companies in the rush to develop what they call AI, their names would be on the list where we wouldn’t find Randi’s name.
The allegations you’ve blamed on her, if true, only affects New York (one state, one city), not the world.
Just think if Randi Weingarten gets a hold of a nuclear weapon. In Woody Allen’s 1973 film, “Sleeper,” Allen makes reference to Al Shanker: They are members of an underground rebellion at odds with the police state the United States had become after the massive destruction caused when “a man named Albert Shanker got hold of a nuclear warhead.” end quote
Just kidding, overall, Randi is a good fighter for teacher rights and public schools.
I get that “proficient” shouldn’t be understood to mean “at grade level.” But I have a hard time accepting that 40% of American students are at “A” level in math. That certainly hasn’t been the case at my kids’ schools, or at any school I attended.
I don’t know what is happening at your school. I do know what the NAEP Proficient measure means. I was on the NAEP board for seven years.
You believe that 40% of American 8th graders are getting As in math?
I know what the NAEP definitions mean.
One would think. Yet again, if it means “A” level work, then 40% of 8th graders should be getting As in math.
FLERP!,
Say what???
Is it really your contention that you should trust that all students who get “A grades” are better mathematicians than all students who don’t?
The students who get A grades are better STUDENTS, but that nothing to do with whether or not they can do math.
I scored in the 99% percentile on the SAT math section many, many decades ago but was absolutely floored at the difficulty of the questions in my kid’s 8th grade Algebra Regents. Which is supposed to be 9th grade standards, but many 8th graders take, and had more difficulty than my high school trig class.
It’s so ridiculous because most so-called successful folks today – aside from engineers – couldn’t do most of the math most high schools are expected to know and would not test “proficient” on those standards.
I guess I hadn’t considered that standardized tests might be a better measure of math ability than grades. I was told standardized tests are worthless and simply indicate how affluent student households are. Maybe you’re right.
NAEP scores do not measure individual students or schools. They are national samples and no student takes the entire test.
nycpsp– Your comparison of hisch math in your day vs your son’s synchs with a study published last summer by Education Next https://www.educationnext.org/half-century-of-student-progress-nationwide-first-comprehensive-analysis-finds-gains-test-scores/ Their meta-analysis “brings together information from every nationally representative testing program consistently administered in the United States over the past 50 years… Across 7 million tests taken by U.S. students born between 1954 and 2007, math scores have grown by 95 percent of a standard deviation, or nearly four years’ worth of learning.”
(I found it interesting that a rah-rah ed-reform publication like Education Next [run by Hoover Institution] came to such a stirring endorsement of US pubschsystem.)
I did not read that article but I don’t believe it literally meant she is the most dangerous person in the world. I do think she is/was a terrible union leader and I do believe Michael Mulgrew is even worse.
I don’t even know where to start…
1. Randi Weingarten has been an exceptional champion for the public schools. The “most dangerous person in the world”? Are you kidding me?How her work with AFT can be blamed for reading scores when the privatization movement has been chopping at the root of the education tree for the past 40+ years just boggles the mind. This is further evidence that the media, particularly the big outlets, simply work lazily toward confirmation bias instead of exploring the data that shows this age of vouchers and charter grifts has not worked. How can that claim be a rhetorical tool when the Republican Party threatens the well being of our country and the world? So our grade level reading seems to be stuck at around 60%? What about a greater than 50% failure rate among the charters, or like you share here, 70% of voucher money going to kids in private school already.
2. At some point the teacher unions need to recalibrate their approach to supporting teachers nationally. Perhaps the NEA and AFT should get over past grievances and work together to help teachers in right to work states. We pay dues as well, but the legal and resource support has been inadequate. I could not afford to be a member of NEA when I was a teacher in North Carolina, and the professional organization leadership was so weak that I had little incentive to join. I was told as a young teacher it would be liability support, but as a Principal in my last year in Alabama when I got into political hot water, I never got a call back from the local NEA rep even though I was a member in good standing. I believe in Unions and I understand the difficulty working with “right to Work States”, but somewhere there has to be a creative way to bring teachers across the country together as a unified voice to promote public schools. The major Unions could roll up their sleeves and get this done.
3. This pandemic reading loss is a joke. No one, I mean no one, has experienced a pandemic of this magnitude in our lifetime. Add to that a president who didn’t give a damn about the American citizenry and sowed division in an attempt to get good economic reports for his political well being. In Huntsville, it wasn’t the teachers who closed the schools, but the administration and with good reason. We simply were working through a societal crisis with our eyes closed and the partisan divide driven by Republicans meant we could not come together for a solution. This myth that Florida somehow came out okay when they refused to close is another problem. Florida has the fourth highest mortality rate among all of the states and is 3rd worst in total deaths. Florida had good 4th grade NAEP results, because they retain so many 3rd graders, and terrible eight grade results. This almost never gets reported while DeSantis is running around stating he “gets things done.” To proclaim that somehow teacher unions hurt our student outcomes means that the press willingly remains ignorant about testing instruments and progress in schools. Polls consistently show parents are over 70% satisfied with their child’s school (Compare that to any public institution: Congress? SCOTUS? Wall Street? Presidents, Governors, or Mayors?) Criticism for schools is one thing, blatant malpractice in journalism is another.
I agree with everything that you state….. BUT….. she is very complicit with accepting money from the Gates Foundation (and other NGO’s/tech industry) and ushering in the extreme testing regime/CC and other big education deforms that have been detrimental to public education. These deforms have driven parents to seek out Charter schools and driven the talk of vouchers for Private/Independent schools. NO!, she is not the most evil person in the world, but she doesn’t own up to her big part in the destruction of public education and the degradation of the teaching profession.
Totally agree with you. I repeat she has been a disaster for public education and especially for NYC teachers.
There is plenty of blame going around, but I don’t believe that given the political and financial heft of the corporatists who basically bought both parties for privatization Weingarten was in a fair fight. That being said, the unions need to develop strategies to support all teachers.
Paul, re: #1. Sometimes I wonder if the sudden political spotlight on K12 ed has caught MSM completely flat-footed. All this attention has only become a focus of campaigns and state legislation over the last 3 or 4 yrs.
For most of the dozen+ yrs I’ve been following Diane’s blog, it was my only regular source for pubsch ed news from around the nation. WaPo had just “The Answer Sheet” [Valerie Strauss], Jay Mathew’s weekly column, and the occasional local ed news. (They’ve since beefed it up with several ed reporters regularly covering the nation, causing me to subscribe.) The NYT so-called Education Section has been, still is paltry output usually of low quality.
And my sense 12+ yrs ago was that national K12 ed coverage had been this way forever– an afterthought for voters as well as MSM. If that’s true, we will be waiting a while yet for more research-based, nuanced ed reporting.
I was listening to AL Franken the other day and he was complaining about MSNBC’s tendency to simply repeat the same story all day just with different hosts. They need to diversify to the states and education could be a big part of that. After Morning Joe they need to get out into the country. So much of the media apparatus is dependent on other media as sources rather than actual reporting.
Paul, re: #3. It drives me nuts when MSM repeats rw anti-teachers union propaganda in their hat-tip to “Republicans say” bothsiderism. So absurd in the context of a country where more than half of states are right-to-work, meaning their “unions” have no clout– & often enough, no bargaining rights—unions in name only, hardly ‘controlling’ the pubschsystem. This article is over a decade old, but I expect is still pretty accurate: https://fordhaminstitute.org/national/research/how-strong-are-us-teacher-unions-state-state-comparison [FL’s teachers union as one might guess is nearly weakest in nation, 2nd only to AZ.]
It’s hard for me to believe Alabama is as high as twentieth. In what should have been a confidential conversation, our AEA rep in Huntsville repeated a comment I made about principal perception of the superintendent’s leadership to her and she repeated the comment verbatim in front of all principals in the district.
What is dangerous in politics is the outsized influence that billionaires have on our policies. Vilifying unions is the agenda of the 1%, and it is sad that The ‘NYT’ cannot objectively report on a story, and, in this time of political extremism, may incite others to act against Randi Weingarten. Unions are perfectly legal in this country. Thanks to them we have a forty hour work week, the weekend, vacation time and disability coverage among other reasonable benefits. Also, there is a strong correlation between states with a stronger union presence and better performing students, but I am sure The ‘NYT’ won’t be reporting it. Working people have a right to collectively organize for better working conditions and pay.. The fact that the ‘NYT’ is critical of unions shows they are simply parroting GOP talking points.
BRAVO Diane Ravitch…well stated !
I watched congressional Republicans grill
Randi on CSPAN about why she she supported closing schools during the pandemic. They were unwilling to accept information that did not support their views. I haven’t agreed with Randi about everything, but the discourse has turned toward the ridiculous with the crazies involved. I send my sincere support to Randi Weingarten.
While I’m no fan of Randi, to put her in the category of the leaders of North Korea, Russia, Turkey, Iran, Hungry and the list goes on is ridiculous.
That said, she has been the worst advocate for NYC teachers when she folded to Bloomberg, Klein, Gates and Duncan. And now her attack on retired NYC teachers along with Mulgrew.
Her election year after year is fixed, the same way she found ways to keep Unity under tight control. If anything, she has used the same tactics as the above named monsters to control the messaging in such publications as NY Teachet and UFT Facebook. Many dues paying educators are being banned after questioning our health care policies. So let’s not put her and Mulgrew on any pedestals!
I have only worked in right too work states, but have never understood why unions keep the same leaders in office year after year. That is common in Southern state “”professional organizations as well.” I assume it’s because nobody else wants the job.
Unions leaders protect their caucus. The UFT in NYC is the perfect example. There has NEVER been an election where the current leader served out their term resulting in two, or more, people running for President who would be new to the job. Each sitting President retired with about one year remaining in their tenure and appointed an interim acting for the final year before elections are held. Once appointed as interim acting they talk tough and so on with numerous articles in the union newspaper and emails for the year leading up to the election. With the vast resources of the union behind them it is virtually impossible for individuals to challenge an interim acting President successfully. Once appointed as President of the UFT, and the AFT for that matter, it is essentially a lifetime appointment.
What does membership think of that?
Regrettably most members just vote the existing leadership. Maybe with the disaster that union leaders are trying to impose on retirees members will pay attention and vote for a change in leadership. Not holding my breath.
Considering the crisis that exists with teaching at this time, one might think unions could get their act together nationally. In the Southern states, it simply seemed that leadership was about preserving status over membership. There just doesn’t seem to be effective advocates for those in the classroom.
To see how retirees are going through hell right now is truly disgusting thanks to Mulgrew and the Unity caucus. Many of us in our 70s and up worked for very low wages compared to our counterparts with the promise of Medicare–not Medicare Advantage. This is criminal. Aetna has turned down so many proven and lifesaving treatments like seeded radiation for breast cancer that they had to be sued.
Why does the NAEP continue to use the rating “Proficient”? It is misleading. To my ears, “Proficient” sounds like a reasonable term for a student’s level of achievement. Since the term is consistently misunderstood by the media andthe general public, can’t it be changed to something more easily understood? If the term denotes an “A” level of achievement, it should be made more obvious that “proficiency” is the top achievement level that all students are not expected to reach.
Who should do this?
Margaret,
I have contacted officials at the National Center for Education Statistics, directly connected to the National Assessment Governing Board (which oversees NAEP), to recommend changing the word “proficient.” It is now widely and erroneously seen as “grade level,” when it means a high level of academic ability. A reader here, Paul Bonner, suggested that “proficiency” be replaced by “mastery.” The official thought that was a great idea. Government moves slowly. Let’s watch and see.