Peter Greene critiques the conservative idea that states should support public schools and all sorts of choice. Greene explains why this idea erodes the quality of public schools, which enroll the vast majority of the nation’s students. Conservatives blame teachers’ unions for whatever they dont like about pibkic schools, but Greene denonstrates that they are wrong. Open the link to read the full article.
He writes:
In the National Review, Michael Petrilli, Thomas Fordham Institute honcho and long-time reformster, poses the argument that folks on the right don’t need to choose “between expanding parental options and improving traditional public schools.” Instead, he asserts, they “can and should do both.”
On the one hand, it’s a welcome argument these days when the culture panic crowd has settled on a scorched earth option for public schools. As Kevin Roberts, Heritage Foundation president, put it in his now-delayed-until-after-it-can’t-hurt-Trump-election-prospects book, “We don’t merely seek an exit from the system; we are coming for the curriculums and classrooms of the remaining public schools, too.” For many on the right, the education policy goal is to obliterate public schools and/or force them to closely resemble the private christianist schools that culture panickers favor.
Pertrilli is sympathetic to the “let’s just give parents the money and be done with it” crowd.
We’ve inherited a “system” that is 150 years old and is saddled with layers upon layers of previous reforms, regulations, overlapping and calcified bureaucracies, and a massive power imbalance between employees and constituents, thanks to the almighty teachers unions.
Sigh. Reforms and regulations, sure, though it would be nice for Petrilli to acknowledge that for the last forty-ish years, those have mostly come from his own reformster crowd. And I am deeply tired of the old “almighty teachers unions” trope, which is some serious baloney. But his audience thinks it’s true, so let’s move on.
Petrilli’s point is that conservatives should not be focusing on “school choice” alone, but should embrace an “all of the above” approach. Petrilli dismisses Democrats as “none of the above” because of their “fealty to the unions,” which is, again, baloney. Democrats have spent a couple of decades as willing collaborators with the GOP ; if they are “none of the above” it’s because they’ve lost both the ability and authority to pretend to be public education supporters. The nomination of Tim Walz has given them a chance to get on the public education team, but let’s wait and see–there’s no ball that the Democratic Party can’t drop.
Petrilli sits on a practical point here (one that Robert Pondiscio has made repeatedly over the years)– public schools are a) beloved by many voters, b) not going away, and c) still educate the vast, vast majority of U.S. students. Therefore, folks should care about the quality of public education.
Petrilli then floats some ideas, all while missing the major obstacle to his idea. There are, he claims, many reforms that haven’t been tried yet, “including in red states where the teachers unions don’t have veto power.” I believe the actual number of states where the union doesn’t have veto power is fifty. But I do appreciate his backhanded acknowledgement that many states have dis-empowered their teachers unions and still haven’t accomplished diddly or squat. It’s almost as if the unions are not the real obstacle to progress.
His ideas? Well, there’s ending teacher tenure, a dog that will neither hunt nor lie down and die. First of all, there is no teacher tenure. What there is is policy that requires school districts to follow a procedure to get rid of bad teachers. Behind every teacher who shouldn’t still have a job is an administrator who isn’t doing theirs.
Tenure and LIFO (Last In First Out) interfere with the reformster model of Genius CEO school management, in which the Genius CEO should be able to fire anyone he wants to for any reason he conceives of, including having become too expensive or so experienced they start getting uppity.
The theory behind much of education reform has been that all educational shortfalls have been caused by Bad Teachers, and so the focus has been on catching them (with value-added processing of Big Standardized Test scores), firing them, and replacing them with super-duper teachers from the magical super-duper teacher tree. Meanwhile, other teachers would find this new threatening environment inspirational, and they would suddenly unleash the secrets of student achievement that they always had tucked away in their file cabinet, but simply hadn’t implemented.
This is a bad model, a non-sensical model, a model that has had a few decades to prove itself, and has not. Nor has Petrilli’s other idea– merit pay has been tried, and there are few signs that it even sort of works, particularly since schools can’t do a true merit pay system and also it’s often meant as a cost-saving technique (Let’s lower base pay and let teachers battle each other to win “merit” bonuses that will make up the difference).
Petrilli also argues against increased pay for teacher masters degrees because those degrees “add no value in terms of quality of teaching and learning” aka they don’t make BS Test scores go up. He suggests moving that extra money to create incentives for teachers to move to the toughest schools.
Petrilli gets well into weeds in his big finish, in which he cites the “wisdom of former Florida governor Jeb Bush” and the golden state of Florida as if it’s a model for all-of-the-above reform and not a state that has steadily degraded and undercut public schools in order to boost charter and private operations, with results that only look great if you squint hard and ignore certain parts(Look at 4th grade scores, but be sure to ignore 8th and 12th grade results). And if you believe that test results are the only true measure of educational excellence.
So, in sum, Petrilli’s notion that GOP state leaders should support public education is a good point. What is working against it?
One is that his list is lacking. Part of the reform movement’s trouble at this point is that many of its original ideas were aimed primarily at discrediting public education. The remaining core– use standardized tests to identify and remove bad teachers– is weak sauce. Even if you believe (wrongly) that the core problem of public education is bad teaching, this is no way to address that issue.
Beyond bad teachers, the modern reform movement hasn’t had a new idea to offer for a couple of decades.
Petrilli also overlooks a major challenge in the “all of the above approach,” a challenge that reformsters and choicers have steadfastly ignored for decades.
You cannot run multiple parallel school systems for the same cost as a single system.
If you want to pay for public schools and charter schools and vouchers, it is going to cost more money. “School choice” is a misnomer, because school choice has always been available. Choicers are not arguing for school choice–they’re arguing for taxpayer funded school choice. That will require more taxpayer funds.
You can’t have six school systems for the price of one. So legislators have been left with a choice. On the one hand, they can tell taxpayers “We think school choice is so important that we are going to raise your taxes to pay for it.” On the other hand, they can drain money from the public system to pay for charters and vouchers all while making noises about how the public system is totes overfunded and can spare the money easy peasy.
I can offer a suggestion for conservatives who want to help public schools improve.
Get over your anti-union selves.
Please open the link to finish the article.

Petrilli: People should eat all the cookies they baked and save some for later. People should fish all the salmon out of the streams and ensure that the wild harvest is sustainable. The area of a circle equals x^2, where x is one side of the circle. Unborn baby sings like Elvis. It’s time to use Musk’s technology to harvest the cheese the moon is made of. CRT is the reason for the turnip shortage. If you give tax breaks to rich people, this makes poor people wealthier.
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More brilliance from the National Review, which presents, hilariously, what Repugnicans consider to be intellectual takes on political and economic issues. The truth: The National Review’s raison d’etre is Reichwing apologetics consisting of vague, unwarranted assertion, libertarian/Randian dogma, and pretense to moderation and the Golden Mean.
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Love the logic, Bob!
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I expect that based on such reasoning prowess, I will be offered the editorship of the National Review.
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Bob,
Brilliant sum-up of Petrilli. He gets paid handsomely to come up with logical reasoning at the level of a 6 year old.
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“He gets paid handsomely”
Acting as a court singer to the oligarchical class is extremely lucrative. And these days, one doesn’t even have to render the stroking of the rich in verse. Never was quite my thing, but to each his own.
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Petrilli gets a lot of mileage as an education “expert” with his BA in political science. He has moved up the ranks in the so-called reform world because he is a prolific writer and sharer of his opinions. The US has very little to show for its past twenty years of privatization of education except that it has cost a lot of public money and has in many cases defunded and damaged the public schools most students attend and need. Now that vouchers are all the rage in red state America, these states that have blindly jumped on this reformy bandwagon will pay dearly for such reckless policy. In Florida where the model of anything goes privatizaton is king, the cost this year is estimated at about $4 billion dollars. Soon red states will feel the financial pinch of their representatives bad decisions, and some of them may face fiscal disaster. Parents of the children whose education has been diminished by these horrible, shortsighted, politically driven policies should vote their so-called representatives out of office.
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150 of the 1800 schools in New York City are in the Affinity Distrct, the schools, public schools, are “managed” by six not-for-profits,” the union contract and the nyc Ed department gives the schools wide discretion in curriculum and structure, in other words, charter-like public schools, actually far more innovative than charter schools.
Unfortunately the current mayoral control model abjures the Affinity model. If you’re interested google NYU Metro Center-Norm Fruchter-Affinity for a detailed description- there is hope😑😑
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Greene is a public asset. His humor and penetrating attack on idiots and their pretensions place him among the must-read authors discussing modern education.
Petroleum is less important as a thinker. He does sound slick and oily, but how ideas just sort of float around and pollute the water.
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For the most part I agree with Peter Green here. However, I would like to parse one of his points. The inability to fire a poor teacher is not simply because an administrator can’t do his or her job. It’s hard. Even in “right to work” states there is a complex due process that is often dismissed at the district level once due diligence has taken place. I for one think we are focusing on the wrong end of the problem when we obsess over those teachers who are not doing their job. As if the school will magically bring in “master teachers” once we weed out the problem. I wasted many hours as a principal being required to document poor teacher performance where I could have made more progress establishing time for struggling teachers to collaborate with teachers who demonstrate success, and I’m not referring to test results. I once attended a conference where Harry Wong stated that data shows that focusing on our “turkeys” doesn’t move the dial. Another example of this is the success of such countries as Finland and Singapore being due to their focus on opportunities provided for professional growth, collaboration, and preparation. Sure there are teachers who can’t cut it, but there are far more who simply do not receive the resources and support to help them grow in their pedagogy. There is plenty of blame to go around for the public schools’ challenges, but it is over simplistic to think that the persistence of poor teaching exists due to administrative negligence. Peter Green is correct to point out that government focus should be entirely on public schools that have the resources and are provided the time to be successful.
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Interesting observations. I have always been of the opinion that whether a teacher is “effective “ is very squishy.
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I have found neither data or observations to get to the heart of good teaching. Ongoing intellectual interaction with a school community is what I always found to motivate inquiry.
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Some districts use the mentor model to help new teachers adjust to the demands. It is a collaborative model, and we should offer more of it. Teachers have so little non-teaching time in their day that it is not easy to arrange, but the benefit is that it may help newbies avoid mistakes and be better problem solvers. My district had a mentor program for first year teachers.
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I got to go to China a while back where we observed classrooms with three teachers in the same classroom at different stages from novice to master teacher. I thought that to be a good model for building the teaching culture within a school.
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One thing that is always glossed over is that Petrilli represents the folks who WANT a dual school system because they want to have one system for the haves – if their kids are easy to teach or if their parents can afford tutors to supplement the ignorant inexperienced teacher/cultists who only know one way to teach and who believe that all 5 year olds who aren’t learning when they use that one way are “bad” and “not trying hard enough”. And another system for the have nots so those charters can dump all the kids they failed while scapegoating the 5 year old kids themselves for their abject failure to thrive which was their own fault since the charter teachers tried every humiliation and punishment tactic they knew to get them to “try harder” to be scholars and those kids were just “bad” according to charter school CEOs.
Petrilli and his ilk know that the “haves” can be taught cheaply, especially because their parents can subsidize and that leaves much profit for the the privateers to skim off and still brag that they can teach any kid (with the media censoring any mention of the 50% or 75% of kids who disappeared whose parents pleas are ignored because those families don’t matter).
But those unethical anti-public school folks need the kids who are left behind to be at underfunded public schools so that the folks like Petrilli can compare the two and falsely present them as teaching the same kids as charters but failing at it.
Petrilli NEEDS public schools to be the dumping ground for the kids the charters he promotes don’t find profitable to teach. He needs public schools to scapegoat because his career depends on not mentioning the elephant in the room – that the measure of a school is not how well a school can teach the kids it doesn’t dump. It’s how well the school can teach all kids. Instead, Petrilli celebrates the charters that dump huge percentages of the most vulnerable kids back into the underfunded public school system as doing something right that he loves! It’s clear Petrilli has the same ill will toward those kids as the charter CEOs he fawns over do — those kids are useful pawns and their failures in public schools is necessary just like their being dumped by charters who care about bragging rights is also necessary in Petrilli’s view. Those kids are useful to him if they fail in public schools and are not useful to him if they fail in charters that he celebrates for dumping them.
Petrilli wants a dual system, but it is far better for him and the people whose generosity subsidizes his generous compensation if those public schools are underfunded and set up to fail. Success would be detrimental for the health of the privatization movement, which tells you a lot about the ethics of these folks.
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It is no accident that as the school population becomes more diverse and Black and Brown, the resources dwindle. The inner city schools get the fewest resources, but have the greatest needs.
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I think you just nailed Petrilli to the metaphorical cross. Bueno!
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I’ll add a simile. Petrilli is like a wife beater who thinks he can still have a good marriage if his darn wife would just admit it’s okay to beat her.
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As I have noted before, Michael Petrilli passes himself off as “one of the nation’s most trusted education analysts.” And he’s not trying to be funny.
Although it surely is a joke.
Petrilli has continuously passed off conventional conservative dogma as “reform.” Little if any of it is grounded in factual reality.
Pertilli says, despite a wealth of evidence to the contrary, that “our education system is tattered. Some of it is fine, but too much is mediocre or worse.”
He attacks inner-city schools, with hardly a mention of poverty or degraded environmental conditions, and then says also that “our suburban schools are just getting by. They may not be dropout factories, but they’re not preparing anywhere near enough of their pupils to revive our economy.”
As if public schools CAUSED recessions, or the pile-up deficits and debt, or the ballooning of trade deficits, or the off-shoring of jobs.
Petrilli has attacked teachers and their “unions” for “their gold-plated health care benefits or retirement pensions or lifetime job protections.”
Say what?
Petrillli loves him some vouchers, even though vouchers siphon money from public education, and public schools have long been considered to be a cornerstone of the social contract –– promoting the general welfare –– of a democratic society.
Petrilli could care less.
Petrilli is a conservative charlatan. A huckster.
He is not an “analyst,” just a deceitful hack.
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Well said!
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Petrilli is not a conservative. He’s a reactionary, regressive revanchist.
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