In addition to blogging at Curmudgucation, Peter Greene is a Senior Contributor to Forbes, where this review appeared.
He reviewed my book in Forbes. You may be tired of seeing the wonderful reviews of my book by fellow bloggers. I agree with you….but…the book has been overlooked by the mainstream media. It is the first book I have published that was not reviewed by the New York Times.
I am thrilled that well-informed bloggers have taken the time to read and review it.
Peter Greene writes:
Diane Ravitch is one of the biggest turncoats in education policy history, and American education is better for it.
She tells the story in her newest book, her memoir An Education. From humble beginnings in Houston, she moved on to Wellesley, where she rubbed elbows with the likes of future Madeline Albright and Nora Ephron. Upon graduation. she married into the prestigious Ravitch family. Casting around for a career, she gravitated toward education history, starting with researching and writing a massive history of New York City public schools, launching her career as an academic.
She was in those days considered a neoconservative. She believed in meritocracy, standards, standardized testing, and color blindness, and these beliefs combined with her academic credentials formed a foundation for a burgeoning career of advocacy for the rising tide of education reform. By the time the 1990s rolled around, she was tapped for a role as Assistant Secretary of Education under President George H. W. Bush. She appeared in television, met and socialized with top political leaders, enjoyed other odd in-crowd perks like a visit to George Lucas at Skywalker Ranch. She was brought onto an assortment of conservative think tanks, served in various commissions and agencies under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, and wrote several books that brought rounds of interviews on major media. She was a committed supporter and promoter of No Child Left Behind, which included all the emphasis on standards and testing that she thought she wanted to see in education.
When she graduated from high school, her English teacher gifted her with two quotes. The second was from Alfred, Lord Tennyson: “To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield.” Those turned out to be prescient words for a woman who was about to engage in a public re-evaluation of her entire body of professional beliefs.
Michael Bloomberg was elected mayor of New York City and brought in Joel Klein to run the schools, and for four years Ravitch watched the ideas she championed implemented, and she saw the down side. She was critical, though carefully so (it was still not common knowledge that she had years ago left her husband for a woman). But she could see that Bloomberg and Klein were “faithfully, if erratically, imposing the right-wing policies that I had once endorsed and demonstrating their ineffectiveness.”
In the following years, Ravitch “step by step” abandoned her long-held views about education. Those long-held views had been her bread and butter, the web that sustained personal and professional networks. And Ravitch was willing not just to break those ties, but determined to “expose the big money propelling the cause of what I called corporate education reform.”
Her 2010 book The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education was a shot across the bow of education reform, signaling a new set of beliefs. “Why did you change your mind,” she was frequently asked.
I changed my mind when I realized that the ideas I had championed sounded good in theory but failed in practice. I thought that standards, tests and accountability would lead to higher achievement (test scores). They didn’t. Even if they had, the scores would not signify better education, just a fortunate upbringing and the mastery of test-taking skills. I originally thought, like other so-called reformers, that competition and merit pay would encourage teachers and principals to work harder and get better results. They didn’t. The teachers were already working as hard as they knew how.
Ravitch came to view the punitive attempt to use test scores to determine teacher careers as demoralizing, destined to discourage young people from choosing the profession. The “toxic policy” of high-stakes testing was ‘inflicting harm on students and teachers.”
Ravitch became a key figure in the movement to support public education in the US. She co-founded the Network for Public Education and spoke out repeatedly against the education reform movement. Her blog became a popular outlet that connected many of the far-flung supporters of public education.
Ravitch has written page upon page critiquing the education reform movement of the past few decades, and in the final chapters of this memoir, the reader can find a clear, crisp encapsulated version of her conclusions and beliefs about the top-down government mandates and big-money attempts to dismantle the public school system and replace it with a multi-tiered privatized system. This brisk, readable book provides a historical recap of the ed reform movement and the resistance to it, as well as the rich history of a woman who, more than any other observer, has examined the pieces of the movement from both sides.


As a retired, 32 year public HS teacher, I want to say–Thank you Diane, for your years of support, encouragement & enlightenment for educators. You are an example to all people who are sentient enough to learn from data and history, that we all can change our minds & belief systems if open-minded enough to realize that change is growth & that is a good thing. We need more of that type of thinking now more than ever!
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100% agree with you!
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great review. Do not apologize for posting what you want to on your own site.
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“ICE WILL SURROUND THE POLLS!”
“We’re going to have ICE surround the polls in November,” Trump champion Steve Bannon declared on the Tuesday February 3 episode of his War Room podcast.
With ICE agents surrounding polling stations in Blue States and in some Red States, people of color will not come to the polls because of “The Kavanaugh Arrest”, which results from Supreme Court Justice Kavanaugh’s ruling that ICE can arrest people just because of the color of their skin or if they are overheard speaking a foreign language.
The presence of masked and armed ICE agents surrounding the polls will do two things that will assure that Republicans will win the elections: 1. It will keep citizens of color away from the polls because they fear being arrested just because of their skin color; and 2., it will result in low voter turnout which always favors Republicans.
“We’re not going to sit here and allow you to steal the country again,” Bannon boasted, citing the false claims about Trump’s loss in the 2020 election. “And you can whine and cry and throw your toys out of the pram all you want, but we will never again allow an election to be stolen.”
Bannon’s comments came just a day after Trump declared — again — that Republicans should “nationalize voting,” escalating concerns that the president is plotting to interfere in this year’s midterm elections.
By calling for Republicans to “take over” the control of elections, Trump is advocating that Republicans violate Article I, Section 4, Clause 1 of our Constitution which gives states — not the federal government and not any political party — the power to control elections.
That means that Trump is blatantly violating his Oath of Office in which he swore to “protect, uphold, and defend” America’s Constitution.
BUT THE DITHERING DEMOCRATS IN CONGRESS WON’T DO ANYTHING except — as Bannon points out — WHINE.
Oh! Wait! Maybe the Democrats might be so bold as to write an angry letter to Trump…which Trump will wipe his butt with.
Just at this point in our nation’s history when our Republic needs brave, selfless heroes like our Founding Fathers were, all we have is the weak, timid, and self-serving Democratic Party.
(Copy this and share it with your representatives in Congress.)
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Awesome review of a tremendous book. If you haven’t read this yet, treat yourself!
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BUY it & read it! (&, also, if you have a library system that purchases books based on the recommendations of its patrons, ask them to buy the book so even more people can read it.)
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100% agree!!
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Bravo! This is a ggd review of an excellent book that testifies toa great career. jf
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