Archives for category: Personal

Last May 10, Jeanne Allen of the Center for Education Reform sent a tweet my way. Allen is a big advocate for every kind of school choice, except for public schools. Before she started her current gig, she worked for the far-right Heritage Foundation. For years, her organization has been a big cheerleader for charters and has opposed any effort by states to regulate them or hold them accountable.

This was the tweet.

In case you are not on Twitter, she wrote:

And she never mentions the millions in her bank account that pay for her Brooklyn brownstone. Didn’t come from writing books or academia. Perhaps the union?

I responded that I paid for my home myself.

But there is more to the story. I bought the Brooklyn brownstone in 1988, at a time when I was allied with conservative groups. In other words, I was on Jeanne Allen’s side. Checker Finn and I had formed the Educational Excellence Network, to advocate for standards, testing, accountability, and a liberal arts-focused curriculum. Charters did not exist. In 1991, I went to work for the George H.W. Bush Administration.

Jeanne, why would “the union” have purchased a home for me in 1988, given the fact that I was widely seen as a conservative and was on your side?

In another tweet, Jeanne asserted that she visited my home, but I couldn’t remember that she did. I hosted a few gatherings for conservatives, so it is possible she was there. It was thirty-one years ago, so I hope she will forgive me for not remembering her being there.

It was indeed a beautiful home. I sold it six years ago and now live in a beautiful apartment. I paid for that too.

Behind her insinuation that the union paid for my home is the assumption that everyone is motivated solely by money. Everyone is for sale. She projects her own views. The opposition to charters and vouchers is not motivated by money but by a commitment to the common good. Jeanne sees only self-interest and personal pursuit of gain. She has no idea what the common good is. Like her idol, Betsy DeVos, she scoffs at the very idea of society and commitment to ideals larger than self-interest and pecuniary gain.

This is what the Corporate Disrupters can’t understand. Dedication motivates people more surely than money. There are rewards in this life that are greater than money. Neither she nor DeVos nor the Waltons understand that.

 

Peter Greene enjoyed reading the collection of my essays published by Garn Press.

He is a discerning reader and a no-nonsense critic.

To earn his approval is high praise indeed.

I am immensely flattered by his comments.

This is an inspiring video.

It will activate couch potatoes.

Johanna Quaas is 92 years old.

Remind me why some schools are cutting physical education to make time for more testing.

 

My father was born in Savannah, Georgia. He was the youngest of a very large family and the only boy. He was called “Cracker” all his life because of his home state. As a teen, he longed to be on the stage, and he dropped out of high school to give it a try. He was briefly in vaudeville, where he teamed up with a tall beautiful brunette from Savannah named Lillian Wise. They had an act called “The Wise Crackers.” Whether it lasted more than a few weeks or months or longer, I can’t say because I don’t know. He always loved to do the soft shoe and make jokes, mostly corny ones.

His favorite singer was Beatrice Kay, one of the great stars of vaudeville. Growing up in the 1940s, we heard her records on our old Victrola again and again (none of us children had money to buy our own records).

Here were two of his favorite songs: “Mention My Name in Sheboygan,” which Kay performed here, long past her prime and one of her rare appearances on video. Another was “She’s Only a Bird in a Gilded Cage.”And of course, “After the Ball Is Over.”  My Daddy also loved Sophie Tucker (we met her once when she stayed at our neighbors’ home while performing in a nightclub act at the Shamrock Hotel in Houston), Al Jolson, and Eddie Cantor. I must have heard every song Al Jolson recorded. And who could ever forget Sophie Tucker’s theme song, “Some of These Days”? 

Many years later, living in Brooklyn, I was rummaging in a used bookstore on Fulton Street and found a fifth edition of Richard Wright’s Black Boy, inscribed by Sophie Tucker and dated “Chicago 1945.” It now rests on a shelf with first editions, a treasure.

There is something I must explain about my taste in entertainment. I don’t like horror films, and I don’t like graphic violence. That considerably narrows the range of what I watch. I want to be entertained or learn, not to be terrified or depressed by what I choose to see.

Having said that, I confess that one of my TV favorites (now an oldie) was “The Wire.” It is a series about the long-running struggles between drug dealers and the police in Baltimore. It aired several years ago, back before there was streaming. This was the series that overcame my aversion to verbal vulgarity because the usual curse words are spoken constantly and eventually I barely noticed them. There is a lot of violence but it is not gratuitous. It is what you would expect to see, given the subject matter.

The stories in “The Wire” are gripping, and the characters are sharply drawn. My favorite character was Omar, a good-bad guy. My favorite scene is set in the local high school. The local police chief has come to address the students in the gym. They are seated around him, on all four sides of the room. He can’t get many words out because the students are unruly, throwing paper balls and other objects across the room and raising a ruckus. He can’t control them. They ignore him. Then the principal walks in. In contrast to the police officer, who is a strong tall white man, she is a small, slightly rotund African American woman. The minute she walks to the center of the room, the students fall silent. The room is hushed, and the students listen to her every word. I have never forgotten that dramatic portrayal of authority.

My current favorite is “Miss Fisher’s Murder Mysteries.” Phryne Fisher is a lady detective in Australia in the 1920s. In every episode, she solves a murder. She is played by the gorgeous Australian actress Essie Davis. She is the epitome of style, wearing a different and elegant outfit in every scene. She can do anything: she flies a plane, she drives a racing car, she can handle weapons with ease, she is an expert in every imaginable activity, she is totally fearless and always beautiful. The local police inspector reluctantly allows her to solve murders, then realizes she is a great asset and invites her to help him. Miss Fisher is thoroughly modern in her mores and her intelligence.

Another program I enjoy is “Call the Midwife.” It appears on public television. It is a series about midwives who live in a convent in Britain in the 1950s and deliver babies in a working class district. The stories are often inspiring, sometimes sad, but always about the values of kindness, humaneness, caring, and love.

i have also enjoyed “Last Tango in Halifax,” which is streaming. It is a BBC series about an elderly man and woman who had been crazy about one another as teens, lost touch, married other people, and found each other 60 years later and fell in love. Both have incredibly dysfunctional families, and everyone has secrets. One plus: no matter how difficult your family, you will feel like it is completely normal after watching a few episodes of this show.

That’s what I like. What do you like?

 

I was born 81 years ago in St. Joseph’s Hospital in Houston, Texas, at 12:01 am.

Eighty is the new 60. No, the new 50. Or 40.

I am third of eight children.

My mother was born in Bessarabia and came to this country when she was 9 years old. She was a very proud graduate of the Houston public schools. My grandfather in Houston was a tailor. My father grew up in Savannah. He was a mischievous boy, I hear, and he dropped out of high school.

I attended Houston public schools from kindergarten through high school graduation. I then had the good fortune to be accepted to Wellesley College, which changed my life.

I will spare you the rest of my story. I am one-third of the way through a memoir, and I will turn to that after the publication in January of Slaying Goliath. 

If you share my values about the importance of public schools, the necessity of being good citizens, the recognition that all children need good nutrition, good health, play and a rich education, I think you will love the new book. It is unlike anything I have written in the past. It is a story of the heroes of the Resistance, the individuals and groups who have fought to stop the privatization of their public schools, to block insane federal mandates, and to demand that they get the resources they need to become far better than they are now.

If you want to say “Happy Birthday,” please send a donation to NPE Action.

That is the part of NPE that is involved in raising consciousness and building the resistance to privatization.

We are making a difference.

The elite disrupters of public schools are on the run, thanks to the dedication and persistence of the Resistance. Students, parents, teachers, retired teachers, principals, the millions who owe a debt of gratitude to their community’s public schools and want to see them thrive.

Thank you.

Diane

 

Checker Finn and I used to be best buddies back in the days when I was on the other side (the wrong side) of big education issues. We became friends in the early 1980s. We created something called the Educational Excellence Network, which circulated a monthly newsletter on events and issues back in the pre-Internet days. I was a member of the board of the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation, which was created and chaired by his father and led by Checker. Checker had worked for Lamar Alexander when Lamar was Governor of Tennessee, and he recommended me to Lamar when Lamar became George H.W. Bush’s Secretary of Education. I accepted the job of Assistant Secretary of Education for Research and Counselor to the Secretary, the same job Checker had held during the Reagan administration, when Bill Bennett was Secretary of Education. We both served as members of the Koret Task Force at the Hoover Institution. As a member of Checker’s board, I opposed accepting funding from the Gates Foundation, since I thought that as a think tank, we should protect our independence and we had plenty of money. I opposed TBF becoming an authorizer of charters in Ohio, where TBF was theoretically based even though its main office was in DC. I was outvoted on both issues. As a member of the Koret Task Force, I was in regular conversation and discussion with the best conservative thinkers. Over time, however, I lost the conservative faith. I changed my mind, as I described in my book, The Death and Life of the Great American School System: How Testing and Choice Are Undermining Education. 

I became and remain a deeply skeptical critic of all the grand plans to reinvent American education, especially those that emanate from billionaires and from people who are hostile to the very concept of public education.

To my surprise, I read an article recently by Checker that captured my skepticism about the Big Ideas imposed on schools and teachers. This one was called the New American Schools Development Corporation. It was spun off during the brief time that Lamar Alexander was Secretary. It was David Kearns’ pet project. David was a former CEO of Xerox who agreed to serve as Lamar’s Deputy Secretary. He was a wonderful man and I enjoyed getting to know him. He thought like a CEO and he thought that the best way to spur innovation was to hold a contest with a big prize. (Race to the Top did the same thing and flopped.)

Checker relies on the work of a wonderful scholar named Jeff Mirel of the University of Michigan. Jeff, a dear friend of mine, died earlier this year, far too young. He was a strong supporter of public schools and a first-rate historian. I miss him.

As Checker show, the NewAmerican Schools project failed. But the $50 Million that Kearns raised from private sources was eagerly snapped up.

My reaction to Checker’s article was this: Twenty or thirty years from now, someone will write a similar article about charter schools and ask, “How could people have been so dumb as to believe that you could ‘reform’ American education by letting anyone get public money to open any kind of school? Why did they think it was a good idea to let entrepreneurs and for-profit entities open schools? Why did they allow corporate chains to take over community public schools? Why did they allow religious zealots to get public money intended for public schools? They must have lost all common sense or any sense of history!”

 

 

 

 

Let us pause and remember the men and women who lost their lives while serving in the military.

The older I get, the more I hate war.

I despise those who see war as a political tactic, those who stir up war talk to get votes.

Those who drop bombs and fire missiles to raise their poll numbers are contemptible.

There is evil in the world, for sure.

I saw it when I visited the “killing fields” in Cambodia last year.

There is a high school in Pnomh Penh that was turned into a torture camp by the Pol Pot forces.

The walls of the school are lined with photographs of hundreds and hundreds of men, women, and children, taken just before they were killed. Horrifying.

It is our challenge to be on the side of kindness, justice, charity, love, and forgiveness.

That may be hard. But in a time when so many nations have weapons of mass destruction, we have no choice.

“We must love one another or die.” (W.H. Auden).

He also wrote, in another version of the same poem, “We must love one another and die.”

Both statements are true.

 

 

 

I will be speaking at Pennsylvania State University in Harrisburg on April 25 at 7 pm.

I am speaking at Mukund S. Kulkarni Theatre, Penn State Harrisburg.  The address is 777 West Harrisburg Pike, Harrisburg, PA  17057.

Here is the link for the event on the campus website:  https://harrisburg2.vmhost.psu.edu/calendar/event/diane-ravitch

if you are nearby, I hope you will come and learn about the issues facing Pennsylvania and my new book, which won’t be published until next January.

 

 

 

I owe a huge debt of gratitude to Bob Shepherd. Bob is a professional writer, editor, graphics designer, and teacher. He has also worked in the design of assessments and curriculum. You have surely seen his many comments on this blog. He is a polymath.

A few months ago, I received a note from Bob offering to edit my new book as a gesture of appreciation for my work. I have never met a Bob except over the Internet. In 2006, he helped me with my book “The Language Police.” This time, he took on what turned out to be a nearly full-time job, reading, editing, suggesting better language, deleting my many superfluous commas, and so much more. He is a true professional. The book is now almost completely finished. I don’t know yet when it will be published and must wait to hear from my editor. I don’t even know the title. What I feel sure about is that it will change the landscape. My last ask to Bob was to request his reaction to several quotes that I wanted to use at the front of the book. He shared with me his laws of quotation and attribution. He said I could share them with you.

 

Bob’s Shepherd’s Laws of Quotation and Attribution in the Age of the Internet
1. In the age of the Internet, all quotations should be suspect but aren’t.
2. All quotations get improved by repeated transmission.
3. Few quotations on Internet threads resemble, even remotely, their originals, in the original source materials.
4. When in doubt, attribute a quotation, randomly, to one of the following: Aristotle, da Vinci, Lincoln, Bentham, Mill, Wilde, Churchill, Yeats, Russell, Einstein, or Gandhi. Any such attribution will be widely believed, which is all that matters.
5. When making such an attribution, don’t give the source because there isn’t one.
And finally, this, which I will leave unsourced because I am too lazy to look it up:
“You can’t believe most of what you read on the Internet.”
–Abraham Lincoln