Before the inauguration of Trump, The New York Review of Books invited me to write about his education agenda. I read three important documents in which his views and goal were spelled out: the education chapter in Project 2025; Agenda 47, Trump’s campaign document; and the website of the America First Policy Institute, the organization led by Linda McMahon, Trump’s choice for Secretary of Education. The three documents overlap, of course. Trump intends to privatize education; he despises public schools. He wants to eliminate the Department of Education. He and his supporters are obsessed with “radical gender ideology,” and they blame public schools for the very existence of transgender students. The election of Trump, it was clear, would mean the end of civil rights protections for LGBT students and a determined effort to defund and destroy public schools.
I posted the article yesterday.
The NYRB invited me to participate in an interview.
This article is part of a regular series of conversations with the Review’s contributors; read past entries here and sign up for our e-mail newsletter to get them delivered to your inbox each week.
In “‘Their Kind of Indoctrination,’” published on the NYR Online shortly before Donald Trump’s second inauguration, Diane Ravitch writes about the troubling future of American public education. Referring to the president’s infamous remark from his first campaign—“I love the poorly educated”—Ravitch warns that his second term is likely to lead to “more of them to love.”
A historian of education, Ravitch worked on education policy in both George H. W. Bush’s and Bill Clinton’s administrations. She has spent her career analyzing the national and state policies that reshape public schools, like laws that implement high-stakes testing or that divert taxpayer money to charter schools. In addition to writing nearly two dozen books—including The Troubled Crusade: American Education, 1945–1980 (1983), Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools (2013), and, most recently, Slaying Goliath: The Passionate Resistance to Privatization and the Fight to Save America’s Public Schools (2020)—Ravitch posts regularly about American education policy on her widely read blog. Her memoirs will be published later this year by Columbia University Press.
I reached out to Ravitch to discuss the current state of American education, the forces threatening it, and her vision for how public schools can better fulfill their democratic promise.
Regina Martinez: How did you start writing about education? Were you influenced by your time in public schools in the South?
Diane Ravitch: I started writing about education when I was in college. The first paper I ever wrote was for a political science class in my freshman year at Wellesley in 1956. It was about the politics of the Houston public school system in the early 1950s, when I was a student there. Voters elected a new school board every two years, and control went back and forth between a group of far-right extremists, who saw Communists lurking everywhere, and moderates who just wanted to make sure that the schools were running well. At one point, books about Russia were removed from the high school library’s shelves. Under the moderates, we heard assembly speakers who spoke of racial and religious tolerance; under the Minute Women, the female wing of the John Birch Society, we were warned to beware of Communist influence. Also, while I was attending them, the schools were racially segregated.
In “Their Kind of Indoctrination,” you write, “One can only imagine the opprobrium that will be visited upon teachers who are not certified as patriots.” How do you imagine this will impact the teaching profession? What might it mean for teacher recruitment in the future?
The threat of political surveillance is chilling, as it would be in every profession. In many states, especially “red” states, teachers have to be careful about what they teach, what reading they assign, and how they handle topics related to race and gender. Trump recently issued an executive order stating that he would cut off the funding of schools that “indoctrinate” their students by teaching about “radical gender ideology” and racism. His effort to impose thought control is illegal but that hasn’t stopped him from trying.
This sort of political censorship is happening in K–12 schools but also in higher education. The number of people choosing to prepare to be teachers plummeted in the wake of the Bush-Obama emphasis on standardized testing. The threat of political loyalty screening can only make matters worse.
One of President Trump’s recent executive orders reauthorized federal agents to detain children at schools. What actions if any can schools, families, and students take to resist the incursion of the security state into schools?
The determination of the Trump administration to raid schools is terrifying for children and for their teachers, whose job it is to protect their students. Imagine a child being arrested in his or her classroom. It is indeed frightening. Many districts have urged teachers to get legal advice from the district legal officers. At the very least, educators should demand to see a warrant. If ICE agents are armed, resistance may be futile. Elected leaders will have to develop contingency plans, if they have not done so already.
You worked on education policy under both President George H. W. Bush and President Bill Clinton. What, if anything, was different about your work between a Republican and a Democratic administration? How do you think the Department of Education—and federal education policy more generally—has changed since the early 1990s?
I served as assistant secretary for education research and improvement under President Bush. Then President Clinton appointed me to the national testing board, known as the National Assessment Governing Board. There was a continuity of policy from the first President Bush to Clinton, and then from Clinton to the second President Bush to President Obama.
The first President Bush wanted to reform American education through voluntary measures. He convened a meeting of the nation’s governors in 1989, and they agreed on a set of six goals for the year 2000. He thought that the goals could be reached by exhortation, at no cost. The goals were indeed aspirational (they hoped, for example, that American students would be first in the world in mathematics and science by the year 2000), but no one had a plan for how to reach them, nor was there any new funding. President Clinton got credit for drafting them, so he and Bush shared that commitment. He was willing to spend real money to help states improve their schools, and added two more goals (one about teacher training, another about parent participation). He also believed that the nation should have national standards and tests. None of the goals was reached by the year 2000, except for having 90 percent of students graduate from high school. But that goal was a matter of definition. If it meant that 90 percent should graduate high school in four years, we did not meet that goal. If you counted the students who graduated in five or even six years, we surpassed it.
Since you launched your education blog in 2012, it has become a popular forum for discussions about education and democracy. Looking back, are there any positions you’ve shared on the blog that you would reconsider or approach differently today? Are there positions you took or predictions you made that you’re particularly proud of?
I started blogging two years after publication of The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Have Undermined Education. In that book, I renounced views that I had advocated for decades: competition between schools, relying on standardized testing as the measure of students, merit pay, and many other policies connected to accountability and standardization.
What I have learned in the past fifteen years has made me even more alarmed than I was then about the organized efforts to destroy public education. That book has a chapter about “The Billionaire Boys Club.” I focused on the venture philanthropy of the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation, the Eli and Edythe Broad Foundation, and the Walton Family Foundation. These billionaires used their philanthropy strategically to fund privately managed charter schools, high-stakes standardized testing, and a system that evaluates teachers by the test scores of their students and closes schools where students got low scores. I opposed all of these measures, which were endorsed by both the second Bush administration and the Obama administration. I demonstrated in that book and subsequent books that these strategies have been failures and are enormously demoralizing to teachers. They also turned schools into testing factories, crushing creative thinking and the joy of teaching and learning.
In the years since, I have learned that “the Billionaire Boys Club” is far larger than the three families that I mentioned. In my last book, Slaying Goliath, I tried to make a list of all the billionaires and the foundations that support charter schools and vouchers, and it was long indeed. Even now, I continue to come across billionaires and foundations that should be added to the list. What I suspected was that charter schools paved the way for vouchers by treating schooling as a consumer good, not a civic responsibility. What I did not realize was that the voucher movement is even more powerful than the charter movement. Its constituency is not just right-wing billionaires like the Koch brothers and the DeVos family, but Christian nationalists, white supremacists, extremist organizations like the Alliance Defending Freedom and the American Legislative Executive Council, affluent parents who want the state to subsidize their private school tuition, and Catholic leaders who have always believed that the state should underwrite Catholic schools.
There has been a lot of discourse recently about declining rates of literacy due to AI, the pandemic, phones, or a host of other causes. How significant do you think this risk is? What might be done to reverse the trend?
I too am concerned about declining rates of literacy, as well as declining interest in literature. In my field of study, I believe that standardized testing has been a culprit in shortening the attention span of children of all ages. Students are expected to read short snippets, then to answer questions about those limited passages. In the early decades of the twentieth century, the College Board sponsored college entrance examinations in which students were assigned works of literature in advance, then asked to write about what they had read. Teachers and professors read their essays and graded them. Now the exam answers may be read by a machine or by a person hired off Craigslist to read swiftly, giving only a minute or two to each written answer.
In my dreams, I would change expectations and ask high school teachers to assign books that are worth reading, then require students to write three or four pages about why they did or did not like the book.
While I welcome the expansion of the canon to include works by women and by people of color, I would also welcome a revival of interest in the great works that were once considered the classics of Western literature. In too many high schools, the classics have not just been marginalized, they have been ousted. That is as grave an error as ignoring the works of those who are not white men.
Given the increasing momentum behind the privatization of education, how do you envision the next generation advancing public school advocacy? What do you anticipate will be their greatest challenge?
Public schools are one of the most important democratic institutions of our society. In many states, they enroll 90 percent of all students. They have always enabled children and adolescents to learn together with others who come from backgrounds different from their own. There is a major movement today, funded by right-wing billionaires, to destroy public schools and to replace them with religious schools, private schools, and homeschooling. It is called “school choice,” but the schools choose, not the students or families. Private schools are allowed to discriminate on any grounds and are not bound by federal laws that prohibit discrimination and that protect those with disabilities. Racial and religious segregation will increase. More students will attend schools whose purpose is indoctrination, not building a democratic society.
The greatest challenge facing those who believe in the value of public education is that the money behind privatization is enormous, and it is spent strategically to win political allies. To my knowledge, there is no billionaire funder for public education as there are for privatization. In the world of public education advocacy, there are no equivalents to the Koch money, the DeVos money, the Walton money, the Texas evangelical billionaires Tim Dunn and Farris Wilks, the Pennsylvania billionaire Jeff Yass. I have been president of an organization called the Network for Public Education since 2013, and our annual budget is a pittance compared to the privatizers’ organizations. One pro–school choice organization spent as much on their annual dinner party as our entire annual budget.
The other side of this struggle to save public education is the reality that important Democrats still believe that school choice helps poor Black and Hispanic kids, despite overwhelming evidence that this claim is not true and is in fact part of the hustle. Representative Hakeem Jeffries, Senator Cory Booker, Governor Jared Polis, and Senator Michael Bennett are a few of the Democrats who have dampened the interest of their party in fighting for public schools.
What makes me hopeful is that the reality is becoming clearer with every passing day: those who are concerned for the common good must support public schools, not undertake to pay the tuition of every student who chooses not to attend public schools. Privatization benefits some, not all, not even most. Public money should pay for public schools. Private money should pay for private schools.

Thank you for this clear overview of where we find ourselves in education.
“The commingling of children of varied religions, ethnicities, and races, it was long believed, would shape a shared American culture.”
Our public schools, that once were the envy of the Western world, helped build our nation. They helped prepare our young people to be responsible, productive citizens. Unlike many European countries with rigid educational systems, the US provides multiple opportunities for young and older students to gain an education with greater flexibility. Our system of public education aspires to be both resilient and inclusive. Our public schools bring diverse students together to promote tolerance, understanding and opportunity for all.
“No one who endorses this radical education agenda, to my knowledge, has tried to explain the contradiction at its center: federal funding is to be used as leverage over public schools that teach “inappropriate” subjects, but also handed over to states and localities for parents to dispense in any way they like, hollowing out public schools regardless of their stance on gender, American history, or anything else.”
There is no understanding the right wing’s core hypocrisy. As mentioned in the article, they want education to support their beliefs. They simply want to rebrand public education to reflect their own values of patriotic jingoism and Christianity mixed with racism. It is exactly what schools will reflect in radical red states they gain control over Title 1. They will pervert the purpose of the compensatory funds which are to assist school districts in providing greater equity and access to disadvantaged students.
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The GOP would turn categorical federal funds–Title 1 and special education–into “block grants” to states, which would be able to use the money for anyone and any goal, no restrictions. Title 1 might become funding for vouchers for rich kids.
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Dr. Ravitch,
I taught a course on assessment when I was a teacher educator, and I used to have students read “The Language Police.” Students were always particularly fascinated with Appendix I of the book.
After reading your article, “Their Kind of Indoctrination,” it made me think this topic could be an addition and perhaps expansion of “The Language Police.” If, for instance, you were to release a 25th anniversary edition of “The Language Police,” might you consider adding an additional chapter or two, perhaps a new forward, etc. to the book? Just a thought…
From a curricular standpoint, it’s one of my favorite books.
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This is my favorite of Diane’s books as well.
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Joe, that thought crossed my mind.
Imagine banning the word “gender”!
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I have gotten a great deal from all of Diane’s books that I have read.
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“What I suspected was that charter schools paved the way for vouchers by treating schooling as a consumer good, not a civic responsibility. What I did not realize was that the voucher movement is even more powerful than the charter movement. Its constituency is not just right-wing billionaires like the Koch brothers and the DeVos family, but Christian nationalists, white supremacists, extremist organizations like the Alliance Defending Freedom and the American Legislative Executive Council, affluent parents who want the state to subsidize their private school tuition, and Catholic leaders who have always believed that the state should underwrite Catholic schools.”
Diane: Another way to say the bold type above is to say that hyper-capitalization has occurred in the form of consciousness as transactional-only.<–emphasize “only.”
Trump gives us an extreme example of this “condition of consciousness” in his relationship with Ukraine and President Zelinsky, and again with his suggestions about Gaza. It’s a tradeoff where, in his case, even THAT is a lie based, on the intention of grift or putting one over on Zelinsky at some point (for past “disloyalties”) and just pushing the people of Gaza out to nowhere land. It’s a kind of mental genocide. I think it’s not like this everywhere in the world, nor with all teachers (yet); but in any case, and if it lasts, the trend is towards self-destruction and is fueled by such a trade-off, I’ll get mine first, even extortionist-only mentality-again “only,” and as all-encompassing where no other horizon of living and thinking can be recognized.
There is much more going on, especially with Trump where his past experiences and psychological influences are concerned; however, everything that occurs is also encapsulated in a question of getting something, preferably for nothing (totalitarianism), but at least set up in a transactional relationship where the value or quality of what he wants and gets (and the values he projects onto others) is limited to garish material goods alone or some sort of obscene self-aggrandizement poured down an apparently endless and empty rabbit hole. Books? What possible good are they.
A brief personal story: When I was moving across country, someone broke into my van. The police came and got me and as I approached the van, I was so very worried that someone would have stolen my books. But not to worry. The only damage they did to them was to put out a cigarette on my copy of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics. CBK
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Yes! We have dumbed down curricula all in the name of reading (Not literacy). We have made grades the coin of the realm while inflating their value beyond recognition. We have turned school into another environment overwhelmed by devices and devoid of social interaction, especially in underprivileged communities. We have forgotten the importance of play and creating in intellectual development reducing interest in learning. It is time we understood that without vibrant public schools we create a more dependent citizenry in a caste system, where only the wealthiest matter. The world is an exciting place full of possibility, but if we don’t expose our children to it, then we all suffer. Life is precious and public education should be allowed to lead the exploration.
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Look at the 2021 IRS 990 tax filings for Success Academy Charter schools and you will see how much money they received from super-rich funders mentioned in Diane’s article and where these charter schools spend these funds. A few highlights from their returns.
Revenue:
1:Contributions and grants: $35,044,000 ( previous year-25.6 million)
2: Program Service Revenue: $364.1 million (funds received from NYS?)
3: investment income: $73, 000
Expenses:
1: Management: $63.8 Million (S.A. manages the schools and receives this money from the revenue they collect, I presume).
2:Advertising and promotion: $5.7 Million ( I never heard of a real public school spending funds to advertise)
3: Office expenses: $11.5 million
4: information tech: $13.6 Million
5:travel: $1.1 million
6: food services: $1.3 million
All this money without much government oversight! It took Scott Stringer-our, former Comptroller, several years to get permission to perform a partial audit because S.A. fought him in the courts, claiming he did not have jurisdiction over charter schools because they are private schools!!!! Of course, they also consider themselves to be public schools in order to receive per-pupil tax-levy funds from the gov’t!
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Wow! That’s the budget of a well endowed independent school. So why can’t we fund the public schools?
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Thank you, Diane, for this excellent summary and for what you have done since you left the Federal government. My educational career also began in the ’50’s when “progressive” education was still around–and being targeted at Ohio State, where I attended, and elsewhere. I wrote my graduate school paper on the university’s decision to close its “university” k-12 school–a wonderful educational laboratory.
But, I was lucky enough to be able to teach to kids’ interests and needs, not standardized tests. We were still being taught at OSU to avoid using “multiple guess” tests, and I did. I was lucky enough to have a role in building a union from the weak teachers’ “association” we’d inherited. Through that union we were able to preserve and expand a holistic education for Central Ohio students.
I retired from teaching when the testing mania was getting a firm grip. This is a very, very important topic these days, as I see our biggest national problem as providing holistic information for our citizens and voters. Our media is splintered, so we more or less all get different news and ideas. Our kids are not getting good enough educations and information in history & government.
Now we are faced with a national–internal–threat that we may not be able to withstand because our society lacks the information, inspiration, and cohesion to respond.
I wrote a recent newspaper column on our national need to organize our opposition, develop strategies and tactics, and save our republic. It was published in the USA Today online and the Chillicothe Gazette.
Jack
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