Oklahoman John Thompson writes about the conflict enveloping the Tulsa public schools: Ryan Walters, the extremist Secretary of Education, wants to take over Tulsa’s public schools. Opposition to Walters’ plans by Tulsa’s parents and political leaders is growing. State takeovers if school districts have historically failed but Walters doesn’t appear to know it.
Thompson writes:
Oklahoma Secretary of Education Ryan Walters has a history of threatening the accreditation of the Tulsa Public schools, promising to fire its superintendent, Deborah Gist, and driving “Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion” (DEI) out of the classes, as well as mandating his ideology-driven curriculums. Walters’ attacks grew dramatically as he responded to the news in June that he might be in danger because his department’s “administration of federal GEER funds is being investigated by FBI agents and the Oklahoma Attorney General’s Office, according to people with direct knowledge of the inquiry.”
For instance, Walters said at a Moms for Liberty event, “Tulsa Public Schools is getting money from the Chinese communist government,” He said, “They funneled it through a nonprofit — I mean, money-laundered it through a nonprofit in Texas.”
But then Walters said he “had been in regular communication with Houston [HISD] about their school takeover.” According to HTUL news, he has said “there’s currently a standards team and textbook committee to gather information on possible vendors like Hillsdale College and PragerU.”
Immediately afterwards, journalists, educators, and public school supporters studied the history of Broad Foundation takeovers in Dallas and the HISD. Even better, they spoke out in ways I had never seen in Oklahoma’s edu-politics. For example, TPS board member, Jennettie Marshall, “said during the board’s 90-minute discussion of the district’s accreditation status. ‘We are under attack. If you’re not keeping up with Houston, … if we continue the course we’re on, that’s where we’re headed. That shouldn’t be.’”
Just as important, the Tulsa World balanced its excellent reporting with editorials and publishing letters to the editors. The following 13 headlines were cited in just one day, August 18, 2023, of the paper’s E-Edition:
Letter: Many good things, successes happening in Tulsa Public Schools
Letter: State School Board needs to show support for Tulsa community, stop antics of top official
Letter: Tulsa Mayor G.T. Bynum must be more forceful defending Tulsa schools
Letter: Tulsa Superintendent Deborah Gist deserves credit for leading through times of crisis
Letter: State Education Department ought to help improve schools, not tear down
Letter: State superintendent has no specific plans for Tulsa schools, only insults
Letter: State superintendent’s attack on Tulsa schools harms students across the state
Letter: Tulsa clergy leaders urge state to build bridges with TPS, not hurl rocks
Letter: Oklahoma education crisis comes from state superintendent pushing a personal agenda
Editorial: Silence is no way to improve schools or defend representative democracy
Editorial: Losing control of Tulsa schools to state bureaucrats bad for city and students
Ginnie Graham: Manufactured crisis in schools takes time away for big-picture discussions
Opinion: Set aside political rhetoric, provide Tulsa schools help to keep good teachers
The first thing that stands out stands out about the World’s coverage is its excellent journalism, and its fact-checking of Walters. The first thing that stands out from the World’s opinion pieces and letters to the editor is the strong wording when opposing Walters’ threat to the Tulsa Public Schools. The letters opposed Walters’ “antics;” his “personal agenda;” his “political rhetoric;” how he “has no specific plans for Tulsa schools, only insults;” and how he “harms students across the state; as well as how he should “help improve schools, not tear down;” and how the mayor “must be more forceful defending Tulsa schools.”
The editorials criticize the “silence” of political leaders, who belatedly pushed back against Walters, saying the “TPS needs partners, champions and advocates to improve — not political firebombs and quiet bystanders.” Another argued that Walters’ “political rhetoric” hurts the retention of good teachers; and that it hurts the city. Ginnie Graham described the chaos that she witnessed when enrolling her child in school, and explained:
The TPS administrators are completely overwhelmed by the firehose of misinformation, distortions and lies coming at them. Their time is monopolized by people seemingly hell-bent on tearing down the district, rather than offering a helping hand or even sitting down for an informative discussion.
And TPS School Board Chair Stacey Woolley closes her editorial with:
Your TPS Board of Education has a plan. Walters does, too, but not one that works on behalf of Tulsans.
I didn’t sign up for this takeover and neither did you. As a community, we must stop it: www.protecttps.com

Having Christian Comic Book Curricula thrust upon them is not going to help this district.
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And a new school year begins today (in the midwest at least).
Perfect term in one of the letters: A “Manufactured Crisis” (or as we hear a lot about our state officials – “A solution looking for a problem”
That’s their M.O.
Fear mongering.
Scare tactics: “They are ‘grooming’ your children.”
Acronyms.
Typical legislator response for evidence: “A parent who wants to remain anonymous told me…”
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Here’s what I have always thought when anyone mentions “grooming the children.”
Johnny, button your shirt correctly.
Jane, brush your hair.
Children, wash and dry your hands.
Max, pull your trousers up to your waist and buckle your belt correctly.
Marlene, wipe the dust off your blouse.
Children, sit up straight.
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lol. yes
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It is a sad state of affairs when right wing extremists can use almost any pretext to seize a school district, particularly if the district is Black and Brown majority. It is even sadder when these vandals are in leadership positions, and they can mislead the public to distract from their own potential malfeasance.
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We can hope that the strategic error made by right wing religionists/GOP was to attack 3 sizable demographic groups at the same time, women, Black people and those suspicious of religion’s power.
May Pat Buchanan live long enough to witness his failure.
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“Oklahoma Secretary of Education Ryan Walters. . . promising to fire its superintendent, Deborah Gist.”
I thought Gist was part of the problems with edudeformers. Jeb Bush gal?
Wouldn’t it be a good thing to get rid of her?
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ordinarily it would. But we have to unite and stop the rightwing attacks on our democracy. Then, we need to replace the corporate reform mentality she brought to Tulsa. After all, it did so much damage that I bet Tulsans are ready to move past reward-and-punish.
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Walters should take a look at NJ’s takeovers in Newark, Jersey City, Paterson—the costs and lack of results.
Say, could we get China to put money into many US school districts? /s
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