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NEPC Blog
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NEPC's Blog Post of the Day features a selection of interesting and insightful blog posts that apply a researcher perspective to important education policy issues. Find our list of daily blogs at https://nepc.colorado.edu/blog.
Nancy Bailey's Education Website: The So-Called Science of Reading’s New Focus on Babies
Nancy Bailey's Education Website: The So-Called Science of Reading’s New Focus on Babies
At the Thomas B. Fordham Wonk-a-Thon, where they ask what should happen next, Elliot Regenstein, a lawyer, states that The science of reading doesn’t start with kindergarten—it starts at birth. Fordham should look in the rearview mirror at the consequences of forcing young children to read before they’re ready, as NCLB and Common Core both began pushing overly demanding standards and high-stakes assessments on early childhood. The Science of Reading is troubling because it pressures early learners to read, everyone on the same page and earlier than ever before, often through heavy phoneme drilling. After all these years, few consider whether five-year-olds may need more time or whether the introduction of formal reading instruction should, in fact, be delayed until first grade, as it used to be. High-stakes standards have been foisted on students for years. The expectation is that children move along learning at the same pace, which isn’t how children learn at all. Isn’t it time such standards share the blame for poor NAEP scores? Instead, Regenstein is promoting what already doesn’t work with kindergartners to the earlier years! We never used to expect kindergartners to read, and yet now that’s the norm. If children need more time, however, they may never catch up, feeling like failures. No wonder kids don’t like to read anymore (Horowitch, 2024). This “reading starts at birth” jargon is often deceptive. Of course, learning to read involves many language elements that begin at birth, especially oral language. Children hear stories read to them and connect pictures with words. They eventually recognize the letters of the alphabet, practice sounds, and learn to print their names. Pick up a child development book like Your Baby and Child From Birth to Age Five by Penelope Leach, or Child Behavior From Birth to Ten by Ilg and Ames —my personal favorites —and you can document what to expect from a baby from the moment they’re born. Instead, the push is now for higher standards in preschool —and for babies, even earlier! One envisions parents holding their infants in front of the computer screen for baby phoneme instruction. Regenstein preaches more standards out of sync with earlier child development. It’s like pressuring kindergartners to read isn’t enough; they’ve got to go lower. Some of Regenstein’s points are decent. Expanding free preschool, providing access to great early childcare for all children, and ensuring that early childhood teachers have credentials are long overdue. He can yell that from the hilltops. But it’s presumptuous to assume that teachers haven’t known how to work with children in developmentally age-appropriate preschool settings. Is he aware of the HighScope Perry Preschool Project? The study showed: HighScope’s longitudinal study confirms the lifetime effects of high-quality early childhood education, such as intellectual and social development in childhood and future school success, economic performance, and reduced commission of crime in adulthood. The Perry Preschool Study indicates that the return to the public on its initial investment in such programs is substantial. See: Educating Young Children by Mary Hohmann and David P. Weikart (p. 358-9, 1997) for great early-childhood friendly activities. Regenstein’s messaging goes off track. His emphasis on standards and statewide assessments for the preschoolers is nauseating. He and his EduWonk friends are caught up in the world of NAEP to define children as failures who need more of what never worked to begin with! In his Fordham report he says: Implement statewide assessments that track progress toward kindergarten readiness goals. These assessments should include a focus on essential pre-literacy and early literacy skills—helping teachers to improve their engagement with children and giving policymakers a window into what is working and what isn’t. We know what great early learning involves; what’s needed is the will to do it, and for policymakers to follow a child’s development to be connected to how they learn and quit pressuring children to learn earlier. The disturbing words Regenstein uses include alignment, more instructional minutes which likely means drilling children on sounds, and data driving, and tracking, which raise privacy issues, all which promotes cookie cutter results. If standards are out of line with a child’s development, children who may learn to read well if formal instruction begins later, may be pegged unnecessarily with a learning disability. While child development experts have clearly outlined the stages children move through to learn and grow, and it’s well understood that children don’t arrive at these stages always at the same time, the SoR is claiming a revolution, rehashing the old, and pushing children to read at an earlier age, now preschool, even at age three or earlier. But high stakes standards are nothing new. They haven’t worked with older students so why would they work with early learners? Here’s a great way to help your babies read. Reference Horowitch, D. (2024). The Elite College Students Who Can’t Read Books. The Atlantic, https://readwise.io/reader/shared/01ja6jx0b0ytqhe120wq9hdtdv/  
dlvr.it
February 4, 2026 at 7:56 PM
Shanker Blog: When Educators Confront Authoritarianism
Shanker Blog: When Educators Confront Authoritarianism
Our guest authors are Adam Fefer, senior researcher at the Horizons Project and a political scientist; and Maria Stephan, co-Leader of the Horizons Project, a member of the Freedom Trainers, and an award-winning author and organizer. How Educators Strengthen Democracy Educators are critical to the maintenance of democratic institutions, norms, and freedoms. They provide students with knowledge (e.g., of history and the constitution), skills (critical thinking and media literacy), values (tolerance and civic virtue), and dispositions (to actively participate and deliberate in civic life). Public educators have the great advantage of being embedded in and frequently interacting with their communities, and are typically seen as trustworthy. Public schools are one of the most common places for voting to occur. Apart from educators generally, educators’ unions can strengthen democracy, for example because union members are more likely to vote. When labor unions and professional organizations push for democratic change, these movements tend to have much higher rates of success and long-term sustainability. Democracy is not only strengthened by educators, but academic freedom is itself a component of democracy. Indeed, a free society is incompatible with heavy-handed restrictions on what can be taught, researched, and disseminated, as well as with state control and surveillance of schools and universities. The Varieties of Democracy (V-Dem) project contains more than 10 indices that seek to measure academic freedom across time and place. One example is the “Freedom of academic and cultural expression” index, a scale between 0 (freedoms not respected) and 4 (fully respected). This index documents the following recent declines in the US: from 3.2 to 3.0 between 2016-17, an increase to 3.3 in 2021, then a decline to 2.4 in 2023 and 2.1 in 2024. These coincide with declines on similar indices, like the “Freedom to research and teach” index, as well as with much steeper declines in places as diverse as Brazil, Hungary, and Indonesia. Authoritarian governments, leaders, and movements clearly recognize the democratic role played by educators. In fact, the origins of mass education are arguably rooted in elite fears of the masses and desires to turn them into obedient citizens. A recent book by American Federation of Teachers president Randi Weingarten, Why Fascists Fear Teachers shows how attacks on education — discrediting, defunding, and censoring — are a key part of the “authoritarian playbook.” Educators’ unions have played a key role in resisting these attacks. An understanding of how educators have resisted authoritarianism abroad offers insight and inspiration for efforts at home. What Educators Have Done Educators have employed diverse strategies and tactics in contexts where (a) democracies became more authoritarian (‘backsliding,’ e.g., Brazil under Bolsonaro) and (b) autocracies became more authoritarian (‘consolidation,’ e.g., Russia under Putin). This includes the use of well-known tactics like protests, strikes, media appearances, and petitions. But it also includes more subtle tactics like wearing symbols, critically or selectively teaching state-mandated materials, whistleblowing to expose educators’ complicity in authoritarian abuses, and the organization of alternative education forums. Even in cases of “ordinary” statements or protests, the specific appeals that educators make as well as the alliances they form with other actors (both inside and outside of the education system) have often been crucial to their success. Teachers Against Fascism: Norway under Nazi Occupation A first example of educators standing up for democracy comes from Norway during the 1940-45 Nazi occupation. Teachers played a critical role in resisting authoritarian attempts to reshape education and society. In 1942, Vidkun Quisling, the Nazi-backed Norwegian puppet leader, mandated that all teachers join a new state-controlled union. In response, an underground network in Oslo mobilized between 65-85% of Norway’s teachers to write letters publicly rejecting the fascist union. Educators wore paper clips to signify that they were “bound together” in defiance of the Nazi occupation. The Quisling regime responded by closing schools for a month, sending children home en masse. This led nearly 200,000 parents to write letters expressing their frustration with the decision. Teachers defied the shutdown by continuing to teach in private. Meanwhile, the Quisling regime proceeded to jail around 1,000 educators, whose salaries continued to be paid by supportive networks. Nearly half of these teachers were sent to concentration camps, which prompted students and farmers to protest alongside their train routes. These courageous, varied efforts undermined Quisling’s efforts at controlling Norwegian education and society more generally. The Norway case illustrates how autocrats regularly attempt to break teachers’ unions; American teachers must stay vigilant and preempt these efforts. In addition, the role of Norwegian parents was critical, especially in terms of their alignment with educators. Educator and Student Collaboration: Chile under Pinochet From 1973-90, Chile was ruled by the military dictatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Because educators and students were perceived as incubators of socialism, the Pinochet regime fired, arrested, exiled, and “disappeared” them. It assigned military rectors to supervise universities, mandated coursework that was meant to build ideological support for the regime and help students identify so-called “subversives,” and dissolved specific disciplines and majors. By the early 1980s, students at the University of Chile occupied the French embassy and UNESCO headquarters in Santiago, drawing international attention to their plight. Students demanded the removal of pro-government student leaders and the restoration of academic freedom, and they went on hunger strike to protest the expulsions of their peers. Meanwhile, university faculty formed resistance groups that criticized not only academic unfreedom but Chile’s 1981 authoritarian constitution. One faculty group created an academic journal with UNESCO support that regularly criticized the Pinochet regime. However, much of these actions were initially done by individual student or faculty groups, as opposed to in collaboration with each other. In 1987, the University of Chile’s new rector fired large numbers of administrators and professors and expelled large numbers of students. In response, faculty went on strike and protested—alongside students—to demand the rector’s resignation, while administrators repeatedly voted to endorse these strikes at meetings. The regime responded by closing universities, which only intensified the protests. Other universities across Chile publicly voiced their support, while physicians at state-run hospitals walked out in response to the regime’s plan to fire university medical staff. Independent Chilean magazines and church publications highlighted student demands and news of the protests. Meanwhile, CBS broadcasted the protests in the US, and prestigious organizations like the American Association for the Advancement of Science sent letters to Pinochet in support of the protesters. After 10 weeks of protests, Pinochet replaced his appointed rector with a well-respected civilian and philosophy professor. Although Chilean educators faced a very different ‘regime’ context from the US—in that Chile was a ‘closed autocracy’—there are clear parallels in terms of what authoritarian leaders in both places have sought to undermine. Just as in Chile, the (mis)perception that educators and students are socialists who endanger national security is very salient today in the US. Pinochet’s efforts to appoint military rectors at universities is not wholly unlike the Trump administration’s demand that Columbia University’s Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies Department be placed under external, “academic receivership.” Chains of Solidarity: Hungary under Orbán A third example comes from Hungary, where Viktor Orbán’s government has worked to centralize its control over not only the political system but also the education system, punishing educators it portrays as promoting leftist ideas. In 2016, educators founded an organization called Tanítanék (meaning “I wish to teach” in Hungarian) to support their colleagues whose firings were politically motivated. Tanítanék has legally and materially supported teachers on strike as well as those arrested for civil disobedience. The organization’s mailing list is over 90,000 large. More recently, in September 2022, five Hungarian teachers were fired for striking, which sparked mass protests by tens of thousands of teachers, parents, and students. Their demands were broad, including the reinstatement of those dismissed, higher salaries for educators, and an end to Orbán’s authoritarianism. Protesters marched to government buildings and formed human chains, blocked key bridges, and engaged in symbolic acts such as burning threatening letters from the government. The 2022 protests were some of Hungary’s largest since the end of communism in 1989. The “Orbán model” has inspired would-be authoritarians in Europe and the Americas. This playbook has involved undermining independent institutions, attacking the media, and using far-right nationalist rhetoric to stoke division and delegitimize opponents. American educators can learn much from the solidarity and creativity exhibited in Hungary, where Orbán’s grip on political power is much more pronounced than that of MAGA in the US. Refusing to Teach Regime Doctrine: Venezuela under Chávez A different example comes from Venezuela, where educators resisted the teaching of regime-friendly materials in creative ways. After rewriting the constitution and undermining independent checks on his power, Hugo Chávez (1999-2013) sought to radically reshape Venezuelan education. In 2007, the Chávez regime introduced a new curriculum that arguably lacked any legal basis. Its content was highly ideological, essentially portraying Venezuelan history as culminating with Chávez, who brought about the liberation of the masses. Educators undermined Chávez’s new curriculum in a number of ways. In 2012, when researchers conducted over two dozen interviews with Venezuelan educators, only a minority reported using the new textbooks. Most within this minority still complemented their lesson plans with non-governmental materials, rarely used the official history materials, or simply ignored parts of the curriculum they found unacceptable. (Argentine teachers used very similar tactics under Juan Perón’s 1946-55 government.) Chávez’s limited success in changing Venezuelan education was arguably due to the actions of teachers, who benefitted from a history of strong unionization and shared backgrounds at teacher training institutes. Attempts by the Chávez regime to foster obedience and weaken teachers’ organizational capacities resonate with contemporary efforts in the US. This case highlights the significance of resisting authoritarianism in spaces, such as classrooms, that are often seen as apolitical. Autocrats regularly sanitize and falsify history, which educators are in a unique position to resist. As racism, homophobia, and transphobia intensify via the classroom, educators will play a key role in advancing an accurate portrayal of where the US has been as well as where it might go. Teaching Against the Kremlin: Russia under Putin As Vladimir Putin strengthens his iron grip over Russian politics and society, local educators have deployed creative forms of resistance against governmental attempts to rig elections and silence critics. Some educators have become whistleblowers, speaking with journalists and researchers to expose efforts to coerce them into engaging in election fraud. At the same time, prominent teachers have posted YouTube videos appealing to their colleagues, imploring them to be exemplars of honesty to their students and not give into Putin’s pressure. A recent documentary Mr. Nobody Against Putin (2025) follows school videographer Pavel “Pasha” Talankin as he exposes the Kremlin’s indoctrination campaign in classrooms. Risking arrest and state repression, Pasha leaked his footage to a Western producer to expose how Russian children were being manipulated into obediently supporting the war on Ukraine. Pasha also staged a number of subversive acts, including replacing the Russian national anthem at a school ceremony with Lady Gaga’s rendition of “The Star-Spangled Banner” and delivering a veiled farewell speech at graduation, after which he fled Russia. The Russia case resonates with recent attempts to pressure American state- and local-level leaders to falsify the 2020 election. Much attention has focused on the courage of election commissioners and poll workers, but American educators may also play a key role in indirectly resisting anti-democratic abuses, for example by shaping social norms around election integrity and influencing public discourse. Standing up for Minorities and Academic Freedom: Turkey under Erdoğan Another example comes from Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s (2014-) unprecedented assault on higher education in Turkey. In January 2016, over 1100 Turkish academics signed a petition that criticized the Erdoğan regime’s repression of minority Kurds. In response, Erdoğan accused the signatories of treason and of supporting terrorism. State prosecutors and loyalist university administrators began investigating the signatories while pro-government media launched a smear campaign against them. Signatories faced forced resignations, criminal investigations, imprisonment, and threats from ultra-nationalist groups. Erdoğan’s campaign escalated after the failed July 2016 coup attempt, after which he declared a nearly two-year state of emergency, firing thousands of educators. In response to the Erdoğan regime’s attack on academics, many academics formed coordinating committees and support networks to assist individuals during their legal proceedings, as well as providing expelled educators with financial support. Turkey’s largest union, the Education and Science Workers’ Union, played a key role in these support and coordination efforts. In addition, alternative education centers were established in a number of cities, which provided open lectures, conferences, workshops, and summer schools. In Turkey one observes just how much authoritarian leaders detest those who criticize their efforts at state violence. Much as Turkish academics were targeted for denouncing the decades-long marginalization of Kurdish people, so too have American educators and students been targeted for their support of Palestinian freedom and self-determination. The United States Today, educators in the US are challenging discriminatory and anti-democratic policies and practices using a variety of means. The Iowa State Education Association filed lawsuit challenging a censorious book ban, while an Idaho teacher refused to take down a sign that read “everyone is welcome here,” prompting her community to mobilize in support. In Chicago and Los Angeles, teachers unions have reaffirmed and reinforced sanctuary policies to protect students and families from ICE raids at schools and offered “know your rights” guidance in the face of federal rollbacks of “sensitive locations” protections. Meanwhile, hundreds of parents, teachers, and school administrators in Sackets Harbor, NY organized and marched to secure the release of a family from immigration detention. At the university level, in early 2025 the American Association of University Professors released a statement called “Against Anticipatory Obedience." Connecticut colleges and universities have campaigned to boycott Avelo airlines, which has a contract with ICE to conduct deportation flights. And all but two universities rejected a compact with the White House that would have offered them expanded access to federal funding in exchange for changing their admissions policies to disfavor international and historically marginalized groups. These actions highlight the many ways that educators across the US and globally have stood resolutely in the face of government-sponsored attacks on democratic norms and institutions. The range of activities they have undertaken—from the wearing of symbols to collective noncooperation—have encouraged unity, solidarity, and defiance in the face of state repression and abuses of power. When part of a broad movement for democratic renewal as well as for social and economic rights, educators have sometimes done the unthinkable, defeating dictators and paving the way to more free and just societies.  
dlvr.it
February 3, 2026 at 7:56 PM
Janresseger: Disillusionment: The Charter School Dream Has Utterly Collapsed
Janresseger: Disillusionment: The Charter School Dream Has Utterly Collapsed
Launched in the mid-1990s, charter schools—publicly funded but privately operated—have been authorized to operate in 44 states with a mixed academic record and an appalling absence of public oversight by the state governments that made these public–private partnerships possible. In July, the Network for Public Education (NPE) released Decline, the first installment of a new report, Charter School Reckoning: Decline, Disillusionment and Cost, which concluded: “Once heralded as a bold experiment in innovation and opportunity… (the charter school sector) is now characterized by stagnation, retrenchment, and rising school closures. Between 2022 and 2025, growth has nearly halted, and closures—often sudden and disruptive—are accelerating. Federal investment, rather than adapting to the sector’s shifting realities, has ballooned to half a billion dollars annually, funding schools that never open, quickly fail, or operate with minimal oversight and accountability.” In Disillusionment, the second installment of the Charter School Reckoning report, released last week, NPE addresses the question of why support for charter schools has declined over the educational experiment’s 30 year lifespan. Back in the mid-1990s, charter school advocates imagined they would be: “nimble, innovative, community-driven alternatives to traditional public schools—laboratories of experimentation led by teachers and grounded in equity.”  Why didn’t the dream work out? With examples from across the states, NPE tells a four part story of the collapse of the charter school dream—a combined policy failure that has created an education sector dominated by fraud, corruption, and the theft of public tax dollars. Each section names the dream and exposes its collapse: First:   “Aspiration: Charter schools will be teacher-led schools, rooted in community needs, where parents have a real voice.  Reality: About half of all charter schools are run by charter management organizations—some are for-profit corporations; others are nonprofit. All are disconnected from families and communities.”  We learn that, “In 1995, two years after Michigan passed its charter law, multi-millionaire businessman J.C. Huizenga, son of the founder of the for-profit garbage collection corporation, Waste Management, opened his National Heritage Academies… Today, more than 60% of Michigan’s charter schools are run by for-profit companies.”  And, “In New York City, Eva Moskowitz, who heads the Success Academy chain, took home $1,018,977 in compensation in 2023—more than twice the salary of the Chancellor of the city”s nearly one-million-student public school system.” Second:   “Aspiration: Less regulation of charter schools will unleash innovation.  Reality: Less regulation has resulted in mismanagement, profiteering, and scams.”  “Even if it can be argued that freedom from labor laws provides helpful flexibility, it is hard to see how exemptions from bidding laws, public oversight, and authorizer accountability—or the allowance of related-party transactions and for-profit management without financial transparency—are necessary ingredients for educational innovation.” “Ohio… has some of the most problematic charter laws in the nation. Roughly half of its charter schools… are operated by for-profit corporations, which flock to states with weak oversight and generous funding for charter schools. Across the country, for-profit entities manage charter schools in thirty-six states.” Third:   “Aspiration: Renewable charter contracts with supervision provided by outside authorizers will create schools accountable to families and the public.  Reality:  Authorizer laws, which vary by state, have resulted in a steady stream of income for authorizers, weak oversight and, in some states, authorizer shopping that allows failed schools to continue… Only two states—Virginia and Kansas—grant local school districts exclusive authority to issue charters… Elsewhere, states have opened the authorizing business to a wide array of players—from small nonprofits to cash-strapped colleges—that can authorize charter schools, sometimes with little expertise in school oversight. When this broad access is paired with generous authorizing fees, a lucrative market emerges.” Fourth:   “Aspiration: Charter schools will be run by teachers and parents, thus escaping bureaucracy.  Reality: Charter boards are nearly always composed of unelected individuals who may not even live in the state in which the charter is located. Often, they are connected to the school’s founders or management organization.” This section features a shocking story from Oklahoma: “Oklahoma’s largest virtual charter, EPIC Charter Schools, was technically governed by a nonprofit board—Community Strategies Inc.— but the real power rested with EPIC Youth Services… a private, for-profit management firm owned by the schools’ founders, David Chaney and Ben Harris. EYS took 10 percent of all taxpayer funding received by the charter school as a ‘management fee.’ According to Community Strategies Inc.’s 2020 Form 990, the taxpayer income to the school was $393,403,534, meaning the for-profit took in more than $39 million that year.” I urge you to read the mass of stories reported from across the states in Disillusionment, published last week as the second installment of the Network for Public Education’s excellent comprehensive report. Reading the same story about state after state clarifies the danger of public policy based only on a lofty dream. For me, as an Ohioan, it is fascinating to consider that nothing has changed since, 26 years ago, in a 1999 Akron Beacon Journal bombshell report, Whose Choice?,  Dennis Willard and Doug Oplinger exposed David Brennan’s White Hat Management Company: “White Hat runs 11 schools with 3,267 students and is projected to take in $16 million—or almost one of every three taxpayer-funded charter dollars… By next fall, Brennan and White Hat could have more than 30 charter schools in Ohio. By law, only nonprofit organizations, and not private for-profit companies, can start a charter school. But the nonprofits and Education Management Organizations work hand-in-hand, often so close it is difficult to determine which came first or if they truly are distinct entities.  For example, identical contracts for several White Hat Management-managed schools were submitted together to the state board, although the schools are supposed to be run by independent governing authorities—the private equivalent of school boards. These governing authority members, unlike public school board members, can have a financial interest in the schools, give contracts to friends and relatives without competitive bids, and are not required to undergo criminal background checks.” The Network for Public Education’s new report concludes with recommendations for reform. As a cynical Ohioan, I wish I could imagine state legislators, susceptible to the power of lobbying and contributions to their political campaigns, who would be likely to adopt the reforms listed at the end of the report.  The recommended reforms are a guide, however, to what the public ought to demand when an appealing dream for public policy is proposed without the provision of necessary regulation and public oversight embedded as part of the plan. In the case of charter schools, we ought to have known that when tax dollars are dangled in front of entrepreneurs, the kind of well-staffed, innovative, nurturing programs we dream about for children would likely evaporate into profits.  
dlvr.it
February 2, 2026 at 7:55 PM
10th Period: School Privatizers Cost Public School Kids $1.6 Billion, or a Fully Funded Public School System
10th Period: School Privatizers Cost Public School Kids $1.6 Billion, or a Fully Funded Public School System
Look, I like Greg Lawson as a guy. We’ve been on panels together and fought over things on the radio and in other places. But man, he really, really thinks y’all are stupid. In an op-ed he had published in the Columbus Dispatch yesterday where he argued that public school districts whine too much about money, he made the following claim: “State K-12 spending in 2023 was 39.5% higher than in 2010 — and school spending in 2024 and 2025 shows no sign of cooling off: “State funding for primary and secondary education totaled $11.64 billion in FY 23; was $13 billion in FY 24 (a $1.36 billion or 11.7% increase); and is estimated at $13.42 billion in FY 25, the second year of the state budget (a $415.8 million or 3.2% increase).” See, Greg wants you to conclude something from these numbers: that public school districts are swimming in money and their griping over vouchers and his budget-sucking agenda is bullshit. It’s those greedy bastards in your local school districts that are causing your property taxes to skyrocket. What he leaves out is that the numbers he’s using to make the districts-swimming-in-money claim include money for charter schools and vouchers. That’s right. He’s writing an entire article complaining that school districts whine too much about vouchers taking away money from public school kids by citing K-12 expenditure data that … includes money going to vouchers and charter schools. Can’t make it up. I’ll break down his ridiculous claim in two parts. Part I — Overall K-12 Funding First, let’s look at the overall claim — massive increases to K-12 spending. Forget about the fact that the voucher and charter money need to be deducted out of that number. Let’s just look at Greg’s topline claim — the state’s spending tons more now than 15 years ago on K-12 education, so quit whining! Yes. Spending is up. But you know what else is up? Inflation. See, in the 2009-2010 school year, the state spent a total of $7.9 billion on K-12 education. In the 2024-2025 school year, that number was $11.5 billion. Big jump, right? Well, if you adjust for 2025 dollars, that $7.9 billion spent on K-12 education in 2009-2010 is the equivalent of $11.9 billion, or about $400 million more than what the state spent on K-12 education last school year. Let me repeat that. The state is spending the equivalent of $400 million less on K-12 education than they did 15 years ago, adjusted for inflation. Funny Greg didn’t mention that. Part II — Privatizers Force Property Tax Increases Now let’s look at charters and vouchers. Let’s just set aside how poorly charters prepare kids, or how the EdChoice program is an unconstitutional scheme that provides not a single dollar to a parent or child and voucher test scores aren’t great either, compared with school district counterparts. Let’s just look at the money. In the 2009-2010 school year, Ohio sent $768 million to charter schools and vouchers. Last school year, that number was $2.3 billion. For those of you scoring at home, that’s a more than 100% increase in funding for these privatization efforts … above inflation! So while in 2009-2010 the state spent about same percentage of their K-12 spend on the percentage of kids who attended public schools at the time, last year the state spent 77% of their K-12 spend on the 84% of kids who attended public schools. This cut in the share of state funding going to public school students can be directly tied to the state more than doubling the inflationary increase on charter schools and vouchers over the last 15 years. Bottom line: What has this meant in funding for Ohio’s public school kids? Well, in 2009-2010, the state, after deducting charter school and voucher funding, provided $7.1 billion for Ohio’s public school students. Adjusted for inflation, that’s $10.7 billion in today’s dollars. (I would also like to add that the 2009-2010 school year was the first year of the Evidence Based model of school funding that I shaped as the Chairman of the Primary and Secondary Education Subcommittee on the Ohio House Finance Committee. We pulled off this investment — greater than last school year’s investment, adjusted for inflation — in the middle of the Great Recession. So it’s not like we had shit tons of money lying around the way lawmakers do now. Which should tell you about the priorities back then vs. today.) I digress. Last school year, Ohio’s public school students received $9.1 billion. That means that Ohio’s public school students are receiving $1.6 billion less, adjusted for inflation, than they did 15 years ago. Should I mention here that not a single penny of the more than $1 billion going to vouchers is publicly audited to ensure the money goes to educate kids rather than Lambos for Administrators? Anyway. Put another way: If Ohio lawmakers and governors had simply kept the same commitment to charter schools and vouchers that they did 15 years ago and kept pace with inflation on their K-12 spend, Ohio’s public school students would have received $1.6 billion more last year than they actually did. In other words, we’d have a fully funded Fair School Funding Plan. I’m not asking the legislature or Governor to do anything crazy here. No elimination of vouchers and charters. This is simply doing inflationary increases and making sure the percentage of state funding going to each sector (public, charter and voucher) matched the percentage of kids attending each sector. Yes, ladies and gentlemen, if the state had actually let “money follow the child”, Ohio’s public school students would have a fully funded Fair School Funding Plan and there would still have a $1.2 billion charter and voucher program! Instead, state leaders have so overvalued private school vouchers and charter schools that now we have an unconstitutional EdChoice voucher program that doesn’t send a single dollar to a parent or student, charter schools that spend about double the amount per pupil on administration that public schools spend while tragically failing to graduate students, and a school funding formula that’s severely underfunded for the 84% of students who attend public school districts. While Greg might tell school districts, “Quit your bitching!”, I might humbly suggest that school districts haven’t bitched enough. So when people complain about property taxes, directly point fingers at the Ohio legislature and Governor because they’re doing what they’ve always done — force you to fund the only thing — public schools — the Ohio Constitution requires them to fund. It’s governmental malpractice. And our kids are the ones who suffer.  
dlvr.it
January 30, 2026 at 7:55 PM
The Reliable Narrator: What’s Missing in the “Science of” Education Reform Movements? Often, the Science
The Reliable Narrator: What’s Missing in the “Science of” Education Reform Movements? Often, the Science
In an analysis of how media represents teachers and education, Silvia Edling argues, “Newspapers do not just write about education, they also represent to their readers what education is ‘about.’” Edling notes that teachers and education are often characterized by stereotypes, focusing on “four inter-related propensities”: * Viewing education as being in more or less permanent crisis * Taking the role as a spokesperson for teachers and on behalf of the field of education * Excluding the knowledge and experiences of teacher(s), educators and/or educational researchers in the public press * Simplifying the notion of being a good teacher through stereotypes and dualistic frameworks that overlook task and relational complexity. At the core of effective journalism is the importance of compelling stories. However, one truism offers a problem with relying on narratives without ensuring that the broader evidence supports the anecdote: “a lie can travel halfway around the world while the truth is still putting on its shoes.” For media coverage of education, the softer version may be that an exciting story can attain a status of fact before educational research can confirm or refute the narrative as an outlier or misinformation. One challenge is, of course, that journalism works much more quickly than scientific research, and this is compounded by the inherent complexity of conducting education research and then applying that evidence to the real world. For about a decade now, education reform has mostly invested in an expanding “science of” movement that began with the “science of reading” and now includes an international focus on the “science of learning” as well as a parallel “science of math” movement. The origin stories of the “science of reading” movement is grounded, in fact, in the journalism of Emily Hanford, notably Hard Words, the ironically named Sold a Story podcast, and There Is a Right Way to Teach Reading, and Mississippi Knows It. As I have detailed, the Mississippi “miracle” and reading crisis narratives generated and perpetuated by the media are missing one key ingredient—scientific evidence for the hyperbolic claims and narratives. In fact, the current “science of” movements fail all four of Edling’s concerns by presenting a crisis absent research to support the claims; creating non-education reading “experts” among journalists and advocates for commercial programs; cherry-picking teacher voices while also misrepresenting teacher expertise through stereotypes and caricatures; and framing both the crisis and solutions in simplistic either/or rhetoric along ideological lines (progressive v. traditional framed as vibe-based v. scientific). While the most recent wave, for example, of reading reform reaches back to 2012, the tipping point was Mississippi’s 2019 grade 4 reading scores. Since Mississippi has a long history of unfairly being cast as “last in the nation in education,” that these grade 4 scores suddenly rocketed into the top 25% of state scores certainly qualifies as a compelling story. It also doesn’t hurt that the appearance that Mississippi had proven that “poverty is an excuse” adds fuel to the hyperbole fire. Quickly, a “science of” narrative erupted, resulting in copy-cat legislation and the same unverified story about a reading crisis and the Mississippi miracle across local, regional, and national media. The “science of” story has, in fact, traveled around the world several times at this point, but the key element remains missing—the science. For example, The Reading League and the 95 Percent Group have become powerful advocacy organizations that make narrow and absolute claims about the need for science-only reading instruction linked to the promise that 95% of student will become proficient readers. Again, ironically, neither of these positions (or the advocacy of the organizations) is grounded in the science. First, The Reading League simultaneously demands only scientific evidence (first image) while advocating for practices and programs (for example, decodable texts and O-G phonics) that literature reviews on the current state of reading science refute (second image): And, even more problematic, the 95% claim is not a scientific fact, but a very weakly supported and likely aspirational argument with only a few research studies behind the over-sized claim. As I have noted, the only evidence I have found is a a blog post cited by NCTQ, who twisted the stat to 90% and issued a report on teacher education that failed to match claims with the science. Recently, the science is now catching up with the Mississippi story—although education journalism has remained silent on the current body of research that contradicts the story. First, if we stick to the science and not the story, poverty is not an excuse when considering reading proficiency; in fact, over 60% of measurable student achievement is causally linked to “social capital family income variables that influence the development of background knowledge. Background knowledge is a known predictor of standardized test results. Family income variables are immutable by schools. Only public policies, outside the control of school personnel, can influence family income.” In fact, these researchers reject continuing to base education reform on testing data such as NAEP: Policy makers and education leaders should rethink the current reliance on standardized test results as the deciding factor to make decisions about student achievement, teacher quality, school effectiveness, and school leader quality. In effect, policies that use standardized test results to evaluate, reward, and sanction students and school personnel are doing nothing more than rewarding schools that serve advantaged students and punishing schools that serve disadvantaged students. Next, two analyses of reading reform—one targeting the larger early reading reform movement and another specifically addressing Mississippi reading reform—find that the early grade reading score increases are not linked to changes in teacher training, reading instruction, and reading programs, but are grounded in grade retention policies. In the broader study, Westall and Cummings found that only states with grade retention in their reading reform achieved increased reading proficiency scores, and those increases faded from elementary to middle school (paralleling the drop from top 25% to bottom 25% of states in NAEP from grade 4 to grade 8 by Mississippi and Florida). They, however, drew no conclusions about why retention appears to result in higher scores. Now, however, Howard Wainer, Irina Grabovsky and Daniel H. Robinson offer a conclusive connection between retention and reading scores: But it was the second component of the Mississippi Miracle, a new retention policy, perhaps inspired by New Orleans’ Katrina disaster a decade earlier, that is likely to be the key to their success…. Prior to 2013, a higher percentage of third-graders moved on to the fourth grade and took the NAEP fourth-grade reading test. After 2013, only those students who did well enough in reading moved on to the fourth grade and took the test. It is a fact of arithmetic that the mean score of any data set always increases if you delete some of the lowest scores (what is technically called “left truncation of the score distribution”)…. It is disappointing, but not surprising, that the lion’s share of the effects of the “Mississippi miracle” are yet another case of gaming the system. There is no miracle to behold. There is nothing special in Mississippi’s literacy reform model that should be replicated globally. It just emphasises the obvious advice that, if you want your students to get high scores, don’t allow those students who are likely to get low scores to take the test. This message is not a secret…. The science now suggests that reading proficiency score gains do not equate with improved reading proficiency due to classroom teaching learning reform. Mississippi reform is a statistical veneer for a harmful policy. Notably, the current science on grade retention also confirms a body of evidence that retention does more harm than any possible good: [T]hird-grade retention significantly reduces annual earnings at age 26 by $3,477 (19%). While temporarily improving test scores, retention increases absenteeism, violent behavior, and juvenile crime, and reduces the likelihood of high school graduation. Moreover, retained students exhibit higher community college enrollment but lower public university attendance, though neither estimate is statistically significant. We are left with a significant problem and a question that must be answered: Since, as Edling shows, media controls what most people know and believe about education, teachers, and students, why are journalists committed to a story not grounded in evidence while also ignoring the science that seems essential for creating an authentic “science of” education reform movement? --- Recommended Research Highlights “Science of Reading” Fails Equity, Teacher Autonomy, and Social Media Discourse  
dlvr.it
January 29, 2026 at 7:56 PM
Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice: What the History of Supermarkets Teaches Us About AI in Schools (Andrew Cantarutti) (Guest Post by Andrew Cantarutti)
Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice: What the History of Supermarkets Teaches Us About AI in Schools (Andrew Cantarutti) (Guest Post by Andrew Cantarutti)
Andrew Cantarutti has taught in Canadian public and private schools for over a decade. Being a writer and high school teacher is highly demanding but he has carried it off well. He writes at: “The Walled Garden Education.“ He published this piece October 7, 2025. The modern supermarket began, oddly enough, with a single store in Memphis, Tennessee. In 1916 Clarence Saunders opened Piggly Wiggly: the first self-service grocer. Before then, shopping meant visiting the butcher, the baker, and the greengrocer separately. Saunders’ innovation was simple and radical: let customers pick their own goods off the shelves. It saved time, cut costs, and felt liberating. Almost overnight the idea caught on and similar self-service stores popped up across the country. That convenience unlocked further innovations. Refrigeration and cold logistics — the so-called “cold chain” — expanded rapidly, allowing “fresh” fruit and leafy greens on supermarket shelves year-round instead of only in season. What began as an advance in service soon became infrastructure: refrigerated warehouses, temperature-controlled shipping, and an appetite for predictable, year-round supply. Those systems let supermarkets scale and centralize supply chains, but they also shifted costs and consequences off the shopping floor and into the global environment. PBS’s recent reporting on supermarkets and refrigeration summarizes the scale plainly: the cold chain already accounts for 8% of electricity use globally, and that footprint is a serious climate problem. Nicola Twilley (author of Frostbite: How Refrigeration Changed Our Food, Our Planet, and Ourselves) put it bluntly in her reporting on the subject: “If the rest of the world builds a U.S.–style cold chain … there won’t be a harvest to store in it.” Those infrastructural shifts changed diets and health. The supermarket’s capacity to stock highly processed, shelf-stable products, engineered for taste, convenience, and long shelf life, reshaped eating habits. A well-established body of epidemiological research now links high consumption of ultra-processed foods to a range of poor health outcomes: cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes, and more. In other words, the convenience of packaged food came with demonstrable, population-level costs. The ripple effects reached across borders and into labour systems. Global demand for inexpensive seafood helped create vast, efficient supply chains that cut costs by offshoring production and squeezing margins. Investigations and human-rights reports have repeatedly documented forced labour and other serious abuses in parts of the Southeast Asian seafood and shrimp industries — problems that are inextricably linked to the global appetite supplied by large retailers. In short: lower prices and year-round availability in the supermarket aisle are not magically produced; they’re the endpoint of complex, often exploitative supply chains. The through-line is straightforward and, sadly, predictable. Each convenience — self-service, refrigeration, global sourcing, processed food — solved a short-term problem for shoppers and firms. Each also created new dependencies: on energy-hungry infrastructure, on centralized logistics, on large corporate suppliers, and on production practices that externalize environmental and human costs. The lesson is fairly simple: what looks like a small convenience in the present can, when scaled and institutionalized, reshape entire ecosystems in ways that are costly to reverse. --- So what does this have to do with artificial intelligence in schools? AI arrives promising the same kinds of immediate wins supermarkets once offered. It promises automated grading, instant feedback, individualized practice, and teaching aids that can ostensibly reduce teacher workload and personalize learning at scale. These promises are attractive — who wouldn’t want better feedback and more time to teach? But the supermarket analogy compels us to look beyond convenience. Three linked risks emerge from the comparison. * Environmental impact is not negligible. Large modern AI models, and the data centres that host them, consume substantial electricity for both training and inference. Peer-reviewed work first raised the alarm several years ago about the carbon cost of training large models, and follow-up studies and commentaries have made the point more urgent: AI’s energy demands are real, yet measurement and transparency remain uneven. Recent reporting and research suggest that the footprint of large models and the data centres that serve them could become even more significant as their adoption scales. We should treat institutional adoption of energy-intensive tools as not only a pedagogical decision, but an environmental one. * Market entrenchment can erode alternatives. A handful of powerful vendors already host the most capable models; if school systems quickly adopt a narrow range of commercial AI tools, they risk creating the same vendor concentration supermarkets created for food supply. That entrenchment narrows the field for smaller pedagogical innovators and shapes classroom practice around the affordances and incentives of a few corporate platforms. Once students, teachers, and assessment systems become organized around a particular AI workflow, rolling back or diversifying becomes costly, both technically and culturally. That dynamic is quietly as consequential as any technical limitation. * Negative externalities and second-order harms are likely and sometimes delayed. Supermarkets altered diets in ways that only became obvious decades later; AI may change cognitive practices — revision habits, problem-solving persistence, and assessment integrity — in ways that are slow to materialize but hard to reverse. Technological dependence, novel forms of cheating, bias and fairness issues, and subtle changes in attention are plausible harms that are more easily prevented than undone. The risk is not that AI will do nothing good; the risk is that institutional endorsement before harms are understood will entrench those harms.   From those risks follow three practical takeaways for schools. 1. Treat AI adoption as an environmental as well as a pedagogical decision. Ask vendors to disclose energy use and commit to sustainability practices before procurement. Prefer lightweight solutions, local-oriented models, or hosted options with clear, transparent carbon accounting. Schools should insist on that transparency as a condition of adoption. 2. Counter optimism bias with rigorous impact assessment. New technologies glitter: they promise efficiency, novelty, and competitive advantage. Humans tend to overestimate short-term benefits and underestimate long-term costs. School systems should normalize pre-procurement impact assessments that go beyond functionality and price, explicitly measuring pedagogical effect, equity, privacy, and other likely externalities (including environmental cost). That kind of evidence should drive procurement decisions. 3. A practical rule of fiduciary prudence: delay institutional adoption long enough for evidence to appear. When major new technologies arrive, there is an asymmetry of risk: early institutional adopters create dependence and expectations among students and parents that are very difficult to reverse. A rule of thumb like “wait at least 12 months before formal classroom endorsement” is not anti-innovation; it is fiduciary. It buys time for independent studies, for vendor transparency, for small-scale pilots to reveal unintended harms. In the case of AI, where misuse can quickly become normalized (cheating, dependence, biased feedback), waiting a year can make the difference between reversible experiment and systemic entrenchment. --- A note about risk, prudence, and progress The supermarket story is not an argument to reject convenience wholesale. Supermarkets solved real problems. But their evolution also shows how immediate gains accumulate into systemic consequences — environmental, economic, and cultural — that were not obvious on day one. AI in education may bring benefits, but the question for school leaders is whether those benefits outweigh long-term costs, and whether we can deploy the technology in ways that preserve alternatives, protect learners, and limit ecological harm. A modest policy of prudence is not bureaucratic fear; it is responsible stewardship. Schools have a duty to protect learners and the public trust. Our children’s cognitive development, privacy, and the planet’s health are not appropriate variables in a vendor’s marketing plan. If the supermarket era teaches one clear lesson, it’s this: convenience that scales without constraint becomes hard to unmake. If we adopt AI, we should only do so with evidence, with contract safeguards, and with an eye to the alternatives we risk losing.  
dlvr.it
January 28, 2026 at 7:56 PM
Sherman Dorn: Repertoire
Sherman Dorn: Repertoire
On one of the social media platforms I visit, there was a set of threads recently on the science of reading and three-cuing, a now-disdained prompt for early readers having difficulty with a word. As I understand it, three-cuing is a set of three prompts to guess the word. I’m not a fan of encouraging students to flail, so I’m not all that disappointed that this is now discouraged. But the discourse around it suggests that the vast majority of elementary teachers were using three-cuing in the first part of this century, and that it was destroying the teaching of reading. There’s nothing but anecdotal evidence I’ve seen about the extent of three-cuing, and so I’m not sure how seriously to take the claim of its near-universal use. Surveys of instructional practices tend to be self-reported and related to specific research projects, not mapping out what teachers are doing in detail nationwide. But that is also true for almost every instructional technique in history: we don’t really know how widespread any instructional approach was. The best we can do is to know if there’s evidence it did exist in a time period and some evidence about the geographic and other dimensions of extent. I think of Barbara Finkelstein (1989) and Larry Cuban (1993) as the historians who have tackled century-long sweeps in teacher practices (Finkelstein for the 19th, Cuban for the 20th), and while their language is not the same as mine, that’s roughly the nature of their claims. There is a different way of talking about school practices that have enormous stability, and that’s the term “grammar of schooling,” coined by David Tyack and colleagues (Tyack & Cuban, 1995; Tyack & Tobin, 1994). That term refers to any practice that has had enough of a feedback mechanism that a broad set of the population defines school in part by that practice. A good example is grading; giving students A-F grades is a sufficiently well-rooted practice that any school that attempts variation often faces resistance from both parents and teachers, even if the variation is only for the youngest students. But the concept of grammar of schooling is usually applied to structural elements of practice, not instructional details. Perhaps more importantly, historians (and many others) need a way to describe instructional practices that were neither uniform nor random. In any era, it’s likely that most teaching falls within a limited set of practices, if for no other reason than the conservative nature of schooling across generations, or what Lortie (1975) called the apprenticeship of observation. Cuban focuses on what he sees as a teacher-centered versus student-centered spectrum. I think one could also describe categories of practices rather than dimensions. But regardless of how one wants to lump practice, there is a useful term to describe this state of affairs without uniformity but with patterns: repertoire. Charles Tilly (1993) wrote the best definition that I have seen in social history: The word repertoire identifies a limited set of routines that are learned, shared, and acted out through a relatively deliberate process of choice. Repertoires are learned cultural creations, but they do not descend from abstract philosophy or take shape as a result of political propaganda; they emerge from struggle. (p. 264) In the hands of Tilly, speaking about repertoires of contention and civil strife, he finished the second sentence as “they emerge from struggle.” But we can think about historical repertoires as referring to many types of social patterns. A repertoire would thus be a common set of activities and norms that overlap without necessarily being tightly bounded or without variation. We can use the concept of the repertoire of school practices to examine the shifting set of overlapping practices that (have) had some foothold for years or decades. We can productively ask six questions about any part of the repertoire of practice, or rather any specific practice: * What were the boundaries of the practice in time and place? * What was the practice? Not quantitatively, in all likelihood, but what is the evidence of who engaged in such practices, who were the recipient/audience/target/respondent of them, and what the context was? (This includes evidence of changes in the practice during its use.) * What were the alternative practices within that span? * What is the evidence of overlap between practice and other features of schooling: what else was an important development in education that was related in some way to the practice in question? * What were the enablements and barriers to these practices? That includes what changes allowed the rise or heralded the end of a common practice, but also more mundane questions of what was necessary for a practice, and what made it more difficult? * What were the meanings of the practice, for those who engaged in it and those who were the recipient/audience/target/respondent?   Because of the loosely-defined nature of many historical schooling practices, the questions that we can feasibly answer are somewhat limited in scope. These questions are mostly descriptive, but they might help us understand something about instructional practice when the details are missing. References Cuban, L. (1993). How teachers taught: Constancy and change in American classrooms, 1890-1990 (2nd ed.). Teachers College Press. Finkelstein, B. (1989). Governing the young: Teacher behavior in popular primary schools in nineteenth-century United States. Falmer Press. Lortie, Dan C. (1975). Schoolteacher: A sociological study. University of Chicago Press. Tilly, C. (1993). Contentious repertoires in Great Britain, 1758-1834. Social Science History, 17(2), 253–280. https://doi.org/10.2307/1171282 Tyack, D. B., & Cuban, L. (1995). Tinkering toward utopia: A century of public school reform. Harvard University Press. Tyack, D., & Tobin, W. (1994). The “grammar” of schooling: Why has it been so hard to change? American Educational Research Journal, 31(3), 453–479. https://doi.org/10.2307/1163222  
dlvr.it
January 27, 2026 at 7:55 PM
Curmudgucation: Are Education Savings Accounts Actually Vouchers?
Curmudgucation: Are Education Savings Accounts Actually Vouchers?
Short answer: Yes. Long answer to follow. An Education Savings Account (ESA) may turn up in your state as an Education Freedom Account some kind of Scholarship or some other shiny name. And school choice advocates really, really don't want you to call it a voucher. Why not? Well... Distinguishing between vouchers and ESAs matters because word choice can introduce misrepresentation of and opposition to a parent empowerment program that would otherwise be well-received. In other words, there is very little support in this country for vouchers, especially when you call them "vouchers." People appear to understand that a voucher program takes taxpayer dollars away from your public school and hands it instead to some private (probably religious) school.  Voucher fans do a lot of language testing, determining that lots of folks think that ESAs are vouchers, and Colyn Ritter at EdChoice (formerly the Milton Friedman Foundation) sees that as a problem. While many of us in the education policy sphere can very succinctly explain the difference between a voucher and an ESA, there is plenty of evidence to show that this distinction is not as easily grasped by various media outlets or skeptics of educational choice programs. I'm not sure the voucher crowd can explain the distinction all that succinctly. But even if they can, I'm not sure the distinction matters all that much. A classic school voucher allows your student's share of taxpayer dollars for school to go to a private school instead of the public school. An ESA allows your student's share of taxpayer dollars for school to go to a private school or education supplies or a whole list of other allegedly education-related expenses instead of the public school. The truly wonky may also try to describe different pathways that those taxpayer dollars travel.  It comes down to this-- an ESA is a type of voucher that provides greater flexibility in how the taxpayer dollars can be spent than does a classic voucher. But both are vouchers-- instruments that give a family control of a certain number of taxpayer education dollars. The money follows the student, who could be said to be carrying a backpack full of cash. For the average human, the only distinction is what the family may spend the taxpayer dollars on, and that's simply a difference of degree, not of type.  It is a bit ironic that voucher fans are concerned about imprecise language here, as an ESA does not really resemble a savings account, isn't an actual scholarship, and doesn't confer any special freedom.  But charges that voucher opponents are trying to muddy the water or confuse the public are just silly. The public has made the connection mostly on their own, in part with the help of school choice fans who have described vouchers and ESAs with the same language. And if voucher opponents like me had that kind of power, I would have done far more to the public perception of vouchers than just confuse the different varieties.  We call ESAs vouchers because they are vouchers--instruments for directing taxpayer dollars away from public schools and toward private vendors. If that causes branding problems for supporters, well... you can tell people that a pig is a watermelon, but when slice it up and serve it, they'll still taste pork.   
dlvr.it
January 26, 2026 at 7:55 PM
Cloaking Inequity: Job-Ready Is a Trap: What You Really Need to Survive the AI Economy
Cloaking Inequity: Job-Ready Is a Trap: What You Really Need to Survive the AI Economy
Every semester, I hear some version of the same question from students, parents, or policymakers: “Why should I have to take biology if I’m not going to be a doctor?” or “Why do students need electives in college that have nothing to do with their major?” On the surface, these seem like practical questions. College is expensive. Time is limited in high school. Why not focus on the courses that directly lead to a job? But beneath those questions lies a deeper misunderstanding of what education is, and what kind of society it’s meant to sustain. We live in an era obsessed with specialization. Students are encouraged to choose a major early, stack credentials quickly, and enter the workforce as efficiently as possible. Legislators tout degrees that “align with industry needs.” University marketing teams highlight job placement rates as if education were a manufacturing process. Somewhere in all this, we began to lose sight of what higher education was designed to do: not only to prepare people to work, but to prepare them to think. That capacity to think independently is becoming even more essential in an age of artificial intelligence. AI will automate many technical tasks that once defined professional expertise, but it cannot replace the creativity, empathy, or moral reasoning that define human intelligence. Critical thinking, interdisciplinary understanding, and ethical judgment are what will keep people relevant. At the same time, misinformation about science, politics, and history spreads faster than ever. People must be able to recognize credible evidence, understand complex explanations, and resist the lure of conspiracy. An educated society is not simply one that can build new technologies—it is one that can question how and why those technologies are used. The Purpose of Biology Class Isn’t Just Biology Let’s start with that biology question. No, not every student who takes Biology 101 will become a biologist. That’s not the point. You take biology so you can make sense of the world you live in, a world that runs on DNA, bacteria, climate systems, and pandemics. When COVID-19 hit, the world suddenly divided between people who understood the basics of viral transmission and those who did not. People who had taken, and absorbed, introductory biology courses had a framework to interpret information about vaccines, mRNA, or herd immunity. They could discern fact from fiction because they’d already learned the scientific process: hypothesis, evidence, replication, peer review. Biology doesn’t just teach you about cells or species; it teaches you how we know what we know. That matters in a democracy where public health depends on informed consent and civic participation. You take biology so you can read the news critically, vote responsibly on science-related issues, and recognize the difference between expertise and opinion. A well-educated citizenry needs that foundation. Without it, misinformation flourishes. And when obvious misinformation drives public policy, lives are at stake. The Case for Electives Then there’s the question of electives: Why should I have to take a philosophy class, or literature, or political science, or history, if I’m majoring in computer science or accounting? Because you’re not just training for a career—you’re training for citizenship, leadership, and life in a rapid evolving technological society. Electives expose you to perspectives beyond your own. They introduce you to ideas you may not agree with, histories you’ve never heard, cultures you’ve never encountered, and ethical dilemmas you might one day face. A student once said, “I don’t see why I need to take a sociology course. I’m majoring in business.” She was asked what she thought business was about. She said, “It’s about making money.” The instructor smiled and said, “No—it’s about people. People who buy, sell, work, and lead. If you don’t understand people, you’ll never understand business.” That’s what electives do. They widen the lens. They challenge you to connect dots between disciplines, to think across boundaries, to see how technology, economics, history, and culture shape one another. That’s not fluff, it’s the foundation of innovation. The most creative breakthroughs in science and technology have come from people who could think metaphorically, draw analogies, and recognize patterns beyond their field. Steve Jobs, who famously dropped out of Reed College, still credited an elective calligraphy course for inspiring the design of Apple’s typography and visual interface which led to the fonts we have on computers today. Einstein played violin to relax his mind and often said that creativity in physics came from imagination, not formulas. The most practical minds are often the most curious and well-rounded. The Problem With “Job-Ready” Education Policymakers love the phrase “job-ready.” It’s politically convenient and economically reassuring. But the world doesn’t stand still long enough for anyone to stay “ready” for a single job. Entire industries rise and fall within a decade. The jobs many of today’s college freshmen will hold in 2040 don’t even exist yet. I remember being invited to a dinner with mayors from the Dallas area where the focus wasn’t on how to make students more “college-ready,” but on how to make them instantly employable. The mayor and local business leaders wanted high schools to produce students who could walk directly into manufacturing jobs so companies wouldn’t have to invest in training. Their goal was clear: shift the cost of workforce development onto the public education system. But the skills they wanted schools to teach were narrow and short-lived. When those factories closed or relocated, many workers discovered that their specialized training didn’t translate to the next job. What had once been a ticket to employment became a trap, leaving families and communities struggling to adapt to an economy that had already moved on. That conversation in Dallas revealed something deeper about how we talk about education and work. When we reduce learning to the immediate demands of an employer, we risk building an economy of dependency rather than empowerment. True readiness is not about mastering a single skill set; it is about cultivating curiosity, adaptability, and the ability to learn in new and unpredictable contexts. The most valuable workers in the coming decades will be those who can think critically, solve complex problems, and reinvent themselves as the world changes. Preparing students for work without preparing them for change is not workforce development, it is short-term thinking disguised as progress. Education that endures must teach people not only how to make a living, but how to keep learning long after their first job disappears. Technical proficiency is essential, but it’s not sufficient. A software engineer who can’t communicate with a team is less valuable than one who can. The same is true across every field: collaboration, judgment, and empathy are what make technical skills meaningful. This is especially true now that artificial intelligence is beginning to replace many of the very people who once built it. Companies are discovering that advanced AI systems can write code, troubleshoot errors, and even optimize design processes faster and cheaper than large teams of engineers. The result is a paradox—AI is creating new opportunities while simultaneously reducing the need for human labor in some of the most coveted technical professions. That shift underscores why human intelligence—our ability to reason, question, and connect across disciplines—matters more than ever. AI can generate solutions, but it cannot understand values, ethics, or the broader social consequences of those solutions. It cannot mentor a colleague, mediate a conflict, or imagine a better way forward when the data points in different directions. The people who will thrive in the future are not those who simply know how to use the newest tools, but those who understand when, why, and whether those tools should be used. Education that privileges adaptability, reflection, and communication is not a luxury; it is the foundation for surviving—and shaping—the next wave of technological change. A narrowly trained workforce can build systems, but only a broadly educated citizenry can build a democracy. Education as a Public Good The attack on the liberal arts—philosophy, history, literature, and the sciences not tied directly to profit—didn’t come out of nowhere. It reflects a larger cultural shift toward treating education as a private investment rather than a public good. If college is just a transaction, e.g. pay tuition, get a credential, earn a salary, then of course people will question the value of courses that don’t seem to have a direct payoff. But if we see education as a civic foundation, the question changes: What kind of society are we building when we decide what’s “worth learning”? Do we want citizens who can analyze data but not discern truth? Who can code a program but can’t recognize propaganda? Who can design a bridge but can’t recognize injustice? The ancient Greeks called it paideia—the cultivation of mind, body, and spirit necessary for self-governance. Thomas Jefferson called it the “cradle of democracy.” W.E.B. Du Bois argued that education must not simply teach work, but life. When we narrow education to career training, we shrink the human spirit and weaken the civic fabric. A well-rounded education isn’t an indulgence—it’s an insurance policy against ignorance. It gives you tools to engage in complex debates, from climate change to criminal justice reform, from artificial intelligence to free speech. It gives you empathy, context, and critical thinking. When you study biology, you learn how systems interact. When you study history, you learn how ideas evolve. When you study literature, you learn how language shapes reality. When you study economics, you learn how incentives shape behavior. When you study philosophy, you learn how to think about thinking. Together, these disciplines build a kind of intellectual resilience that no single major can provide. A student who only learns what’s “useful” for their career may succeed for a few years. A student who learns how to learn—who develops curiosity, adaptability, and moral clarity—can thrive for a lifetime. Conclusion: Beyond the Transcript Higher education’s greatest outcomes aren’t always on the transcript. They’re in the capacity to hold two ideas at once without panic. To disagree without dehumanizing. To see the complexity in a headline and ask better questions before reaching for easy answers. That’s what electives do. That’s what general education does. That’s what a biology course does for a non-scientist. They remind us that being educated isn’t about memorizing content—it’s about learning how to live intelligently in a complicated world. When people ask, “Why should I take biology?” or “Why do I need electives?” I answer: because democracy needs you to. A democracy survives only when its citizens can tell the difference between evidence and emotion, between expertise and conspiracy, between science and superstition. You take biology so you can understand public health debates. You take history so you can recognize when we’re repeating it. You take art so you can imagine alternatives. You take philosophy so you can think clearly when the world gets noisy. So maybe the real question isn’t “Why should I take biology?” but “What happens to a society when people stop asking questions?” That’s the danger of reducing education to job training: it produces skilled workers, not thoughtful citizens. And without thoughtful citizens, democracy itself begins to fail. A college degree should be more than a ticket to employment, it should be a gateway to understanding. A well-rounded education is the cornerstone of a well-functioning republic. We need engineers who read history, artists who understand data, teachers who know science, and citizens who can think for themselves. Because in the end, an economy runs on skills. But a democracy runs on wisdom.  
dlvr.it
January 23, 2026 at 10:34 PM
Teacher in a Strange Land: Are Schools the Problem?
Teacher in a Strange Land: Are Schools the Problem?
I was somewhere between irritated and curious when I saw the headline: America’s Children Are Unwell. Are Schools Part of the Problem? The subhead: From A.D.H.D. to anxiety, disorders have risen as the expectations of childhood have changed. Well, yeah. A.D.H.D. is now better defined and diagnosed. And I certainly believe that anxiety is on the rise with our youngest people—their world came crashing down five years ago with a global pandemic. Although I don’t think the subhead writers were thinking of this, anxiety must be through the roof for children of the undocumented, attending school while praying that their mom will come home after work and that they will still be citizens after the Supreme Court gets another whack at the Fourteenth amendment. But have our expectations of children really changed? And are schools at fault? Annoying headline aside, there’s a lot of alarming data in the article: ‘One million more children were diagnosed with A.D.H.D. in 2022 than in 2016. The numbers on autism are so shocking that they are worth repeating. In the early 1980s, one in 2,500 children had an autism diagnosis. That figure is now one in 31. Nearly 32 percent of adolescents have been diagnosed at some point with anxiety; the median age of “onset” is 6 years old. More than one in 10 adolescents have experienced a major depressive disorder, according to some estimates.’ It’s actually an informative read. Diane Ravitch deftly reviewed the piece in a blog post entitled Our Pressure Cooker Schools Are Destroying Children and Childhood. In fact, people have been writing about the ever-growing pressure on kids to excel for decades (especially those in high schools where getting into the Ivies or considering a gap year is common). A couple of decades ago, ironically, we were talking about high-pressure Asian schools and why Singapore topped the international test scores. Was that what our kids needed—a literal kick in the pants? More competition? And why wasn’t the school providing that? Here’s the thing: Schools in general—more about that word in a minute—aren’t the cause of students’ mental health issues. Schools do what they can with what they’re given, and what they are directed to do, for the most part. First, a “school” is not precisely defined. Let’s say a good school has competent teachers, capable and cooperative support staff, thoughtful administrators, a clean and safe facility and enough resources to serve the kids assigned there. Those features can all be undone by bad policies and the social factors surrounding the school. When the halls are lined with buckets catching snowmelt, when there is no library or science equipment, when one of the children hid a gun in his backpack—where do we place blame? On voters who turned down the school bond issue? On the beleaguered principal? The careless parents who set a bad example? State legislatures that take money away from high-poverty public schools and give it to those who can afford private schools? To say that “schools” are responsible for an uptick in mental health issues for students is not only unfair—it’s not accurate. The world—especially in 2025—is a scary place. For many (not all, but many) kids, school is the safest place for them to be, and I include in that number children who live in nice houses and have plenty to eat. Have our expectations for children changed? Yes, and often in damaging ways. Just talk to teachers. They’ll tell you that kindergarten is the new first grade. They’ll share stories of kids whose behavior is driven by shame and frustration. They’ll tell you that 15 minutes of outdoor play is a benefit, not a waste of time better used on worksheets. They’ll testify that building a cooperative community is always the first step toward learning, in pre-school and in chemistry class. They can tell stories about seeing kids work through an academic roadblock, with patience and humor—not shaming and blaming. Veteran teachers will also pinpoint the time at which screen time and access to inappropriate, even dangerous, content began to change the way kids talk to and about each other. Maybe we start addressing mental health issues by understanding just what it is that is making children anxious and distracted, and putting our attention and resources there. Don’t misunderstand—I’m not saying that schools (in addition to all the other jobs they’re expected to do) can “fix” a child with failing mental health. But schools can be a significant factor in contributing to a child’s sense of security, belonging and worth.  
dlvr.it
January 22, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Progressive Magazine: A Quiet Revolution Is Improving Schools
Progressive Magazine: A Quiet Revolution Is Improving Schools
Recently, opinion pieces in mainstream media outlets have begun speculating that education policy will be an important factor in the 2026 midterm elections, and that Republicans are owning the Democrats on the issue. In October, The New York Times pundit David Brooks urged Democrats to reprise bipartisan policy ideas from the Clinton-Bush-Obama years of governing schools based on how their students scored on standardized tests. Drawing from recent assessments that show test score gains in a few Southern states, Brooks concluded, “the party that dominates the rural areas [i.e., Republicans] has a proven educational agenda while the party that dominates the urban areas [Democrats] doesn’t.” Similarly, in The Hill, Ben Austin, a former campaign staffer for Kamala Harris, lamented that Democrats “have lost their way” on education, because “it is politically untenable for Democrats to oppose all forms of school choice when Republicans are offering a free market smorgasbord of choice.” What these commentators ignore are the results of a quiet revolution in blue states—and a few red states—that are implementing a school improvement plan commonly called the community school approach. A community school uses an evidenced-based strategy to improve student outcomes by drawing from the resources and voices of the surrounding community to support the full range of needs and interests of students and families. This approach, in which policies and programs are developed based on community input and multifaceted student outcomes rather than just test scores, is the antithesis of what has driven bipartisan education policies for the past thirty years. Up until now, education policy has emphasized top-down, heavy-handed governance and privatization schemes such as charter schools. In 2021, California launched a $4.1 billion grant program to spur a two-year expansion of community school implementations across the state. The grants of up to $500,000 per school annually are used to help sustain or expand existing community school initiatives. The same year, Maryland enacted its Blueprint for Maryland’s Future that included, among other measures, implementations of the community school strategy in schools across the state that have the highest concentrations of low-income students. In New York City, more than one in every four public schools is a community school. The early results of efforts to measure the impact of community school initiatives have been impressive so far.  A 2025 research study, conducted by the Learning Policy Institute (LPI), of the first cohort of California’s grant-funded community school initiatives found positive impacts on a range of student outcomes, including reduced chronic absentee rates, reduced suspension rates, and increased academic achievement scores. The academic gains were largest among historically underserved students, such as Black students, English learners, and socioeconomically disadvantaged students. In its study, LPI compared changes in student outcomes between schools that received the grants to implement the community school approach and a matched group of similar schools that did not. The analyses found that the community schools demonstrated a 30 percent reduction in chronic absences, on average, greater than their matched comparison schools. These improvements in regular attendance equated to more than 5,000 more students attending school regularly. Schools using the community school approach also experienced a 15 percent reduction in average suspension rates. The reductions were especially significant among Black students, English learners, and socioeconomically disadvantaged students, whose suspension rates are typically the highest. And schools implementing the community school approach experienced small but statistically significant gains in math and English language arts test scores. These increases are equivalent to what would have come from an additional forty-three and thirty-six additional learning days, respectively, compared to their matched schools where achievement in both subjects declined during the same time. In Los Angeles, where teachers have made community schools expansion a key demand in contract negotiations, measures of student performance are showing “year-over-year growth [that] is outpacing that of the state, and students are now performing at higher levels than they did pre-pandemic,” LAist reported in 2025, although there are multiple factors driving improvement. The progress in Los Angeles is occurring while national standardized test scores, according to Education Week, are “stuck at historic lows” in reading and have barely “crept up” in math. According to a 2020 analysis conducted by the nonprofit, nonpartisan research organization RAND, schools in New York City using the community school strategy experienced similar positive results. Compared to similarly matched non-community schools, community schools saw higher graduation rates; decreased chronic absenteeism, especially among Black students and high school students in temporary housing; fewer disciplinary incidents among elementary and middle school students; and significantly improved measures of student achievement—such as math scores, credit accumulation, and on-time grade progression. Although the community school approach has shown promise, Republicans at the national level want to cut federal support for it. When Secretary of Education Linda McMahon presented the Trump Administration’s 2026 budget for education, funding for the federal government’s modest Full Service Community Schools (FSCS) program was zeroed-out. The Republican-controlled U.S. House of Representatives fell in line with the Trump Administration and eliminated the FSCS program, while the Senate, also controlled by Republicans but requiring sixty votes to pass budget bills, voted to retain the program, but at a reduced funding level. What are Republicans calling for instead? Months after McMahon presented the 2026 budget that eliminated funds for community schools—as well as funding for homeless students, teacher preparation, rural schools, after-school programs, and instruction in literacy, civics, and the arts—the Education Department announced a record $500 million in funding for privately operated charter schools. For years, the federal government has spent billions on expanding the number of charter schools in the country, and the results have been wasteful of education funding. A 2025 analysis by the Network for Public Education found that “more than one in four charter schools close by the five-year mark. By year ten, the failure rate jumps to nearly four in ten; five years later, almost 50 percent have closed.” The study concluded, “Over the years, charter closures have broken their promises to more than one million children whose parents believed they had enrolled their children in a better, stable alternative to their local public school. In the marketplace model of schooling, when it comes to charter schools, it is buyer-beware.” Another school choice idea launched by Republicans at the national level in their “One Big Beautiful Bill” is the Educational Choice for Children Act, which creates a federal school voucher program through a tax shelter for wealthy people. Republican lawmakers in mostly red states have enacted similar voucher programs that divert public funding for education to private schools. The results of these school voucher efforts have been disastrous for children and communities. According to Michigan State University professor Josh Cowen, voucher programs tend to be used by wealthier families to help pay private school tuition for students who were never in public school. These programs have caused some of the largest academic declines on record in education research—on par with the impact that Hurricane Katrina had on students in New Orleans. Voucher programs also reduce available funding for public schools, according to the Economic Policy Institute, and they pillage public school revenues as students are drained away from district enrollments. So it’s clear Republicans don’t have a plan to improve public education. They have a plan to privatize it and throw families into a chaotic marketplace that increases their risks of being poorly served. Where Brooks, Austin, and their like-minded colleagues do have a point is that Democrats have failed to counter the Republican messaging about accountability and choice with a strong stand for community schools. Were they to do that, it could turn the quiet revolution of community schools into a resounding, nationwide movement for change.  
dlvr.it
January 21, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Nancy Bailey's Education Website: High Expectations and High Standards: The Chatter is Nothing New!
Nancy Bailey's Education Website: High Expectations and High Standards: The Chatter is Nothing New!
For Americans who care about their public schools and have watched them poked at over the years like an abused dog in a cage, Idrees Kahloon’s piece in The Atlantic, “America is Sliding Toward Illiteracy,” is one more painful read among many. This chatter is nothing new. It’s a worn-out rerun, demeaning to teachers, parents, and children, and meant to destroy America’s free public schools. This isn’t about lifting public education but ending it. We’ve been here before. The difference is that we now have an administration that is callously dismantling the U.S. ED, sending money to the states that will likely be used for vouchers, and surreptitiously ending child protections. Historian Diane Ravitch states: …I have read the same story hundreds of times. In the 19th century, these warnings that children were not learning anything in school were commonplace. The cry of “crisis in the schools” appeared frequently in every decade of the 20th century. We are only 25 years into this century, and similar views appear in the popular press regularly. Instead of complaining about our schools and lambasting them nonstop, the critics should be complaining about poverty and inequality. These are the root causes of poor student outcomes. Kahloon chatters about the impact of iPhones on kids, citing Jonathan Haidt’s research, which many agree with and others describe as “complicated.” His subtitle is the same old chatter: Declining standards and low expectations are destroying American education. And later: In short, schools have demanded less and less from students—who have responded, predictably, by giving less and less. Have schools demanded less and less? Ask kindergartners now expected to do first-grade work, including reading, whose parents still must fight for recess. Where’s the developmental “science” surrounding that? Or ask high schoolers pressured to choose a career and ranked according to the number of college advanced placement classes they take. For thirty years, schools have been controlled by this same chattering with promises to fix them. If those promises had been sincere and effective, we’d be celebrating public schools. Instead, we watch Education Secretary Linda McMahon, head of a wrestling organization, a person with no education degrees or experience, put the final touches on their destruction, ending student protections, for even the most vulnerable students (Stetler, 2025). Low expectations and high standards chatter became President George W. Bush’s hallmark school reform under No Child Left Behind and never, despite Kahloon’s claim to the contrary, has it left. Researchers at the time questioned whether the standards were attainable (Hoff, 2006). Yet, Kahloon positively highlights NCLB chatter that includes: the “soft bigotry of low expectations.” American writer, progressive activist, and educator, Jonathan Kozol stated in The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America: It is one of those deadly lies, which, by sheer repetition, is at length accepted by large numbers of Americans as, perhaps, a rough approximation of the truth. But it is not the truth, and it is not an innocent misstatement of the facts. It is a devious appeasement of the heartache of the parents of the poor and, if it is not forcefully resisted and denounced, it is going to lead our nation even further in a perilous direction (p.284). Did students struggle to read in 1992? Even when there has been good news about schools, it’s suppressed. Kahloon states: Test scores from NAEP, short for the National Assessment of Educational Progress, released this year show that 33 percent of eighth graders are reading at a level that is “below basic”—meaning that they struggle to follow the order of events in a passage or to even summarize its main idea. That is the highest share of students unable to meaningfully read since 1992. Gerald Bracey, the late Stanford Ph.D. psychologist who researched public schools, wrote in What You Should Know About The War Against America’s Public Schools, …in July 1992, an international study of reading skills appeared. It showed American students among the best in the world. The Department of Education called no press conference. No media reported the study. Over two months elapsed before Education Week found out about it—by accident. A friend of then-Education Week reporter Robert Rothman sent him a copy from Germany (p.60). Bracey explained how this news got pushed under the rug, and if one listens to Kahloon it’s still collecting dust there. What about standardized tests? Years of high-stakes testing, moving children like regimental soldiers through each grade level, and including students with disabilities, changes how children perform on tests. It ignores how they learn individually and how additional time, good teaching and support can help them succeed. Kahloon notes that it was punitive. But he never mentions huge class sizes. Nor does he discuss the critical importance of well-prepared teachers or what they think as they vacate classrooms across the country. What are school districts spending money on? Kahloon brings in Michael Petrilli, the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, an education-policy think tank, and they chatter about the huge amount of school spending, always a Republican talking point. They negatively allude to the use of COVID funding for better HVAC systems, like clean air isn’t important in schools. But neither discuss here billions spent on Chromebooks and online learning over the years. Who’s evaluating the K-12 education technology spending that reached $30 billion in 2024 alone, and which is  projected to nearly double by 2033 (Prothero, 2025)? Who is considering how online reading programs affect student reading ability? How much more will be poured in AI without concern for the risks to children?. Why doesn’t anyone consider Common Core affecting instruction since 2010? Nor is there a peep about corporate driven Common Core State Standards begun in 2010 often described as age and grade inappropriate. Common Core still dominates the curriculum and online instruction to this day. Kahloon ignores the bad effects of third grade retention on states whose reading scores he brags about. One of the worst omissions is that he fails to mention the loss of school libraries and librarians in many schools. If there’s anything that causes a student to slide into illiteracy, it’s not having access to books! The disparaging of public schools will continue until they are no more.  Sadly, policymakers, may listen to Kahloon, unless they wake up. Americans look to raise standards higher! In Virginia they’re revising their goals upward. One only hopes with a new pro-public school governor things might improve. In Oklahoma, sadly, they’re upping the ante. In Florida they’re bringing in New York’s controversial Success Academy charter school. Instead of helping students and supporting teachers and lifting them from poverty, this chatter that teachers don’t hold students to high standards, tests must be high stakes, every child on the same page at the same time, or public schools fail is a scheme. It was a scheme with A Nation at Risk and NCLB and it is still a scheme. References Kahloon, I. (2025, October 14). America is Sliding Toward Illiteracy, Retrieved from  https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2025/10/education-decline-low…. Stetler, P. (2025, November 1). The Slow Death of Special Education. The Atlantic, Retrieved from https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2025/11/special-education-…. Hoff, D.J. (2006, November 22), Researchers Ask Whether NCLB’s Goals for Proficiency Are Realistic. Education Week, Retrieved from https://www.edweek.org/policy-politics/researchers-ask-whether-nclbs-go…. Kozol, J. (2005). The Shame of the Nation: The Restoration of Apartheid Schooling in America. New York: Crown Publishers. Bracey, G.W. (2003). What You Should Know About The War Against America’s Public Schools. Boston: Pearson Education, Inc. Prothero, A. (2025, October, 10). Schools Spend $30 Billion on Tech. How Can They Invest In It More Wisely? Education Week. Retrieved at https://www.edweek.org/leadership/schools-spend-30-billion-on-tech-how-….  
dlvr.it
January 20, 2026 at 10:33 PM
First Fish Chronicles: My Testimony to the United States Senate
First Fish Chronicles: My Testimony to the United States Senate
My warning to the senators about the 4 crises resulting from technology use that is altering childhood and the urgent need to do something...now. Testifying before the U.S. Senate, January 15, 2026 Today was an exhilarating day. Though I felt a lot of anticipatory nerves as I prepared to the hearing, once I sat in that chair, I was not at all nervous. Not one bit. It’s easy to tell the truth. e --- Here is a link to the video recording of my statement. Here is a link to the full hearing. My full statement: Chairman Cruz, Ranking Member Cantwell, and Senators– Thank you for the invitation to testify today. My name is Emily Cherkin. I am a parent, author, speaker, and on faculty at the University of Washington. I do not accept funding from tech companies for my work. I am here with a warning: technology is fundamentally changing childhood, and in the process, undermining parents and threatening the very health of our democracy. Let me paint you a picture. Today, in America: * 40% of two-year-olds have a personal tablet. * Children 8- to 18-years-old average 7.5 hours a day on screens– outside of school hours. * Nearly 90% of American public schools provide children with internet-connected devices for “learning.” * Occupational therapists teach young children how to turn the pages of a book. * Preschool teachers report that toddlers don’t like getting their hands dirty. * I know one teen who is so addicted to his phone he seals it in a Ziploc bag and brings it into the shower with him. * 26% of 13- to 17-year-olds use ChatGPT to do their schoolwork– which they access on the laptops the school gives them. * My own university students have never received handwritten feedback on their papers. * Elementary school children are literally falling out of their chairs in classrooms because they lack the core strength to sit for long periods of time. * One child viewed more than 13,000 YouTube videos in less than three months– at school on his school-issued laptop. * The juxtaposition of childhood innocence and technology’s overreach can be seen in this anecdote: Middle schoolers, still losing their baby teeth, think it’s funny to imitate the sex noises they hear from watching online content. t But doesn’t technology make our lives easier and prepare our children for the future? Unfortunately, no, in spite of the rosy claims made by technology companies. As a result, the wholesale re-structuring of childhood around screens is catastrophic for children and families and has led us to four crises: Crisis #1: Youth mental health First, a mental health crisis. Screen use before two years of age is linked to accelerated anxiety by age 13. Today, one in three teen girls has seriously contemplated suicide. The youth mental health crisis is so dire it elicited a warning from the surgeon general. Crisis #2: Learning Second, we face a learning crisis. As schools double down on EdTech products, reading and math scores are plummeting. One study found that investing in air conditioning yields a 30% increase in learning outcomes over investing in tech. We are quite literally wasting education dollars on ineffective technologies. Crisis #3: Creativity Third, a crisis in creativity. A 15-year-old in Kentucky told me older kids feel like the lucky ones. In an afterschool elementary school drama class she teaches, she said to the younger children: “Let’s pretend we’re flying!” They looked at her and asked, ‘How?’“ If children can’t pretend to fly, they cannot imagine, and therefore, cannot innovate. Technology access in childhood does not enhance creativity; it kills it. This threatens the future of entrepreneurship in America. Remember, today’s tech giants had analog, play-based childhoods. If children can’t pretend to fly, they cannot imagine, and therefore, cannot innovate. Technology access in childhood does not enhance creativity; it kills it. This threatens the future of entrepreneurship in America. Remember, today’s tech giants had analog, play-based childhoods. -Emily Cherkin, to the United States Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, January 15, 2026 Crisis #4: Democracy Finally, the enmeshment of technology in childhood is creating a crisis for our democracy. Thomas Jefferson said, “An informed citizenry is at the heart of a dynamic democracy.” When children spend hours being fed algorithmically-driven rage-bait content designed to increase engagement, they lose the ability to form their own opinions, detect bias, and think critically. All of this is by design, of course. Technology companies build their products to hook and hold our attention, and children’s brains are especially vulnerable. To make their products safer, tech companies would have to compromise profits. And they don’t want to. As a result, the business model of Big Tech and EdTech is fundamentally at odds with child development and its intrusion into family life undermines the choices parents can make. This is not a kid problem. It is an adult problem that is impacting children. But parents especially need your help. * Parents may delay access to smartphones and social media, only for their children to view TikTok videos on a friend’s phone. * Parents block YouTube at home, but the school laptops give children direct access. Senators, I invite you to think about your own childhoods: the teachers who inspired you, the awkward social moments, triumphing over a difficult high school essay, making– or not making– the basketball team. We remember these moments because in the discomfort, we learned something. When we seek benefits from the convenience of technology, we forget the benefits of struggle. We have reached a moment that demands we slow down and build things, even when the tech industry insists on the opposite. Legislation like the Kids Off Social Media Act is a start– and I believe we can go further. Just as we have done with regulating alcohol and tobacco access, we can do so with social media too. Parents are not naive. We know that our children will use technology for work and life in adulthood. We just want to ensure they have a childhood first. ############ Panel of experts at the January 15, 2026 hearing before the U.S. Senate  
dlvr.it
January 16, 2026 at 10:34 PM
Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice: A Crucial Lesson I Learned as a Young Teacher
Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice: A Crucial Lesson I Learned as a Young Teacher
By the fifth year of teaching at Cleveland’s Glenville High School in the early 1960s, I had learned one of the most important lessons a teacher can learn in an urban high school. I carried that precious knowledge with me to Cardozo and Roosevelt High Schools in Washington, D.C., and subsequent teaching I have done, including Los Altos and Menlo-Atherton High Schools in the San Francisco Bay area and, yes, also to Stanford University. That lesson I did not learn from courses in my undergraduate teacher education program at the University of Pittsburgh in the 1950s. Nor did I learn that lesson as a student-teacher during my senior year of college. And my guess is that even in the initial years of my teaching career, I failed to learn this important lesson. OK, what’s the lesson? Never ask permission to do something for your students, just ask for forgiveness afterwards. For those teachers who reflect on their experiences in classrooms, they learn that they are gatekeepers to what enters and exits their rooms. While there is so much that teachers have no control over in teaching such as the students they have, the classroom they are assigned, the daily schedule they follow, events occurring inside and outside the school, and the school organization within which they teach–they do, however, have a crucial slim margin of precious autonomy once they close their classroom doors. As gatekeepers to the classroom, teachers learn in fits and starts, by trial and error, that they determine what content/skills they teach, how they get taught what parts of the required textbook they can skip. They learn to convey attitudes and values about life and subject-matter within the confines of that 900 square-foot classroom. Although that freedom is constrained, this priceless autonomy can jump-start learning for both teacher and students. And in learning how to teach and work with students and colleagues in these schools over decades, I also extracted a small measure of freedom outside of my classroom. And that is where my hard-earned organizational lesson of never asking permission to do something in your classroom but asking for forgiveness afterwards-–came into play. Here is one instance of that lesson, as I recall it. For seven years at Glenville High School, I taught history to about 150 students a day during five lessons. In those years, it became clear to me that I needed more than the textbooks and meager supplies that the school and district supplied me. Sure, I used the textbooks but I also created additional readings from other sources. Thus, I needed reams of paper. Of equal importance, I needed a machine that would make copies of these readings for my students. I did locate paper and machines, sweet-talking my way into gathering them by bending school and district rules. A case in point. At the end of one school year, I got access to other departments’ store rooms. In two of them, I found reams of unused paper and took some of those 500-sheet packages to a closet in my classroom. After school began in September, the principal called me into his office and showed me telephone messages and memos that he had received from district officials and teachers demanding an explanation for my “unprofessional behavior,” that is taking unused reams of paper without permission. My relationship with the principal was a warm, supportive one in which he judged me to be a hard-working young teacher who was part of a faculty cadre in the urban high school that helped many students get their diplomas and enter college. So he faced a dilemma in having to do something stern in responding to his superiors and other faculty without alienating an entrepreneurial teacher, given district office complaints about my “unprofessional behavior.” I, too, faced a dilemma. In a scarcity economy which is what urban schools were then insofar as supplies, teachers had to be enterprising without constantly opening their own wallets to buy things for their classes (which many did). I scrounged, begged, and borrowed to the hilt with colleagues and friends but it wasn’t enough. And yet I didn’t want to stop reproducing these readings to supplement the textbook because these readings drawn from primary sources in U.S. history seemed to be paying off in increased student attendance and class participation. Yet my boss was upset. I had to mollify him since district officials and teachers were pestering him to do something to stop my “unprofessional behavior.” So after much thinking about how schools worked and what I had learned about authority structures in schools and districts, I apologized and asked the principal to forgive my indiscretion. He reported to his superiors that I had apologized for my actions even promising not to repeat it. That ended the incident.  But that lesson I never forgot: Never ask permission to do something for your students, just ask for forgiveness afterwards, I learned it from my seven years teaching at Glenville in Cleveland, and afterwards in Washington, D.C., where I taught four years at Cardozo High School with two more at Roosevelt High School. Moreover, I remembered that lesson when I served as Arlington County’s (VA) Superintendent for seven years and, finally, from teaching and doing research as a university professor for two decades. I consider that lesson about being both entrepreneurial and a member of a team precious wisdom about how organizations operate and the people that staff them, think and act. Sure you can tell such wisdom to novices taking teacher education courses in undergraduate or graduate courses but those newbies lack the organizational savvy to make sense of it. They lack the mindfulness drawn from pondering one’s experiences in a school and classroom over time. And I would guess that even Teach for America recruits don’t learn that lesson in their summer training or in the two years they spend as classroom teachers. It takes around five years, I believe, to acquire that organizational understanding and thoughtfulness about teaching in schools to grasp the full meaning of that lesson. So, I suggest to those who wish to teach beyond a couple of years, “Never ask for permission to do something for your students, just ask for forgiveness afterwards.” That is the wisdom, seasoned by experience, in organizational dynamics that I learned as a young teacher.  
dlvr.it
January 15, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Christine Sleeter: Christian Nationalism and School Times for End of Times
Christine Sleeter: Christian Nationalism and School Times for End of Times
My Substack posts usually review research or other forms of evidence related to a practice in education that is under attack. For this post, however, I am interviewing Dr. Kevin Kumashiro about his insightful framing of Christian nationalism in education today. Kevin Kumashiro is the former Dean of the School of Education at the University of San Francisco, and an internationally recognized expert on education policy, school reform, teacher preparation, educational equity, and social justice. He just recently released a report entitled School Times for End Times: A Brief History of U.S. Christian Nationalist Activism and Public Education. You can access the report, which is free, online. Okay, let’s get into it. Kevin, can you briefly first describe School Times for End Times for our readers? Kevin: Thanks so much for interviewing me, Christine! School Times for End Times: A Brief History of U.S. Christian Nationalist Activism and Public Education is my attempt at mapping out about three and a half centuries of Christian Nationalism in the U.S. from the colonial era to the present, particularly its impact on public schools. I try to show aspects that repeated or cycled over time as well as aspects that were laid as precedent or groundwork for the current moment that we are in. Christine: Okay. What led you to write this report at this current time? Kevin: Although I had done some research on the Christian Right over the past couple decades, it was the 2024 elections that really sparked my interest in doing a deeper dive into history. I was especially curious about the blueprint for the incoming administration as laid out in Project 2025 and why it was that Christian Nationalist organizations (among others) would be so invested in such a wide range of issues, such as taking over and downsizing the government while expanding the military; cutting taxes for the rich while cutting services for the poor; and attacking courts, the news media, cultural arts, climate science, public health, higher education, and of course, public schools, in addition to attacking various marginalized groups. This report is my attempt to connect these dots. Christine: What kind of things surprised you as you were researching this project? And what didn’t surprise you? Kevin: I grew up observing Christian holidays in schools and attending Bible studies when I was a young kid and again as a college student, and I’d already done some research on the Christian Right before this report. So to be honest, I started this project thinking I knew quite a lot about Christian influences over schools and was surprised by just how much I didn’t know. One example is that Christianity—at least, certain versions of Christianity—has been very pervasive in education, both historically and institutionally. Historically, Christianity’s influence predates the beginnings of public schools in this country, while institutionally, as public schools emerged and evolved, Christianity would shape any number of aspects, from why we have schools and who should make decisions to what we should be teaching and by whom. A second example is that there’s always been conflict between different groups of Christians. Even early national struggles over questions about freedom of religion were less between Christians and non-Christians and more between different groups of Christians over whose version of Christianity would dominate in public spaces. But in recent decades, we see intentional bridge-building that would culminate into a much more politically united New Christian Right (the social movement that first emerged in the post-Civil Rights Movement era). Christine: Can you give a quick example of that bridge-building? Kevin: There were efforts throughout the 20th century to bring together different denominations, but arguably the most impactful would be when various Christian leaders worked collectively to build a unified base to elect Ronald Reagan as president in 1980—which, by the way, was when we also saw the first iteration of the “Mandate for Leadership,” the predecessor to Project 2025. Bridge-building leads to my third surprise, which is that Christian Nationalist tenets (like the idea that the United States was founded as a Christian nation) are very widely embraced, including by non-Christians. Christian Nationalist organizing may involve a small minority of people, but its ideology is shaping a much larger population. You also asked, what was not surprising? Based on my previous research, I was expecting to and did see that Christian Nationalist engagement in education has fallen into two categories over time. One is de-institutionalization, or pulling back from the public sector, such as by creating Christian schools, homeschooling, and using vouchers to fund those; and the other is re-Christianization, or making public schools more and more guided by what some believe to be Christian ethics, particularly school curriculum. I was nonetheless surprised by just how numerous these strategies have been over the last century and how they have laid the groundwork for today’s policy landscape. Christine: Okay, thank you. What do you want readers most to walk away with? I read the whole report, I actually went through it and studied it, and there’s a lot in there. What do you want readers to walk away with? Kevin: I feel like there’s two big takeaways that I really hope readers walk away with. First is that the strategies of the New Christian Right have consistently occurred in two spheres—structural and cultural. The structural or legal sphere has focused on changing leaders and laws—from taking over elected school boards and shaping judicial appointments to establishing court precedents and developing model legislation (for easy adoption in states across the country)—and is the sphere that activists across the spectrum tend to prioritize and that the New Christian Right has undoubtedly been quite successful at. But of no less importance is what helps make possible these successes, which is the cultural or narrative sphere that has focused on shaping how people make sense of ourselves and our world. The New Christian Right has quite effectively done this by fomenting culture wars as a way to build a political base, particularly culture wars regarding gender and abortion, queer and trans people, and immigrants and refugees. I bring these up because, although these strategies have been very effective for Christian Nationalist organizations, they clearly can be effective for counter-movements as well. Christine: Thank you. There were things in the report that struck me. One of the things that really struck me was the extent to which Christian nationalists see their role as hastening the end of times. And this is something I really hadn’t thought about. It’s an entirely different goal than I and most people I know have for the country and for our political action. How do you see building bridges of communication across that chasm of purpose, or do you see a possibility there? Kevin: I would say, yes and no, depending on who we’re talking about. Like you, I was struck by the significance for Christian Nationalists of the notion of the End Times, which I’ll put simply as: there are some Christians who believe that the times that we’re in—the world as it is now—is filled with un-Godly evil, sin, danger, suffering, but that these times will end, signaled by the second coming of Christ that brings about salvation for the chosen. What I found interesting is the significant theological disagreement among Christians about what precedes that end and what role Christians (and non-Christians) play in accelerating its occurrence, such as the difference between post-millennialism and pre-millennialism, or, for instance, the difference between trying to make the world more Christian versus trying to protect one’s own group in a forthcoming battle between good and evil. All to say, there has always been diversity within organized Christianity, and that has included large social movements whose activities reflected what some of us see as priorities and values of a democratic and equitable society—such as the Social Gospel Movement of the late 19th and early 20th centuries that provided, among other things, social services for those in need. I imagine that there are similar groups today with whom we can find common ground around what it means to support everyone in finding wellness, health, liberty, joy, and the like—even if other groups may be closed to such bridge-building. An even larger group for bridge-building are the many Christians and non-Christians who I mentioned earlier as not identifying with Christian Nationalism but are nonetheless embracing Christian Nationalist tenets, even if unknowingly so. This is a large swath of the U.S. public that might want to come on board with a more democratic vision for public institutions and education in general if we can leverage our skills as critical educators to coalesce. Christine: Yeah, because the whole idea that, I think about how our work ought to be to try to make things better for people, and yet there are those who think that our work should be to hasten the coming of the next Armageddon. Kevin: Yes, I think that connects to why the struggles over public schools have been so central to Christian Nationalist movement building. Before the United States was formed and before we had public schools, education consisted mainly of literacy instruction in some churches and homes with curriculum centered on the Bible. Early education for many White colonists, in other words, had a religious purpose of warding off the Devil and sinfulness, and as such, was considered an extension of the church. As common schools (the predecessors to public schools) were created, some Christians expected these schools to play a similar role in providing Christian education, and for a while, the schools did precisely that. However, since their beginnings, the common schools and the subsequent public schools have been sites of ideological and political struggle over what should be taught, and how, and by whom, and with what materials, and so on, including debates over what type of Christianity should be taught, in alignment with which denomination, or whether Christian ethics should be taught at all. In fact, just as the American Enlightenment would inform government, so too would it inform education, including the embrace of science as a tool for knowledge production; of various forms of diversity, including religious diversity; and of participatory democratic principles. Looking less and less like an extension of the local church, public schools would quickly come to be seen by some as anti-Christian, or at least, as antithetical to certain Christian ethics. As I mentioned earlier, Christian Nationalism thus developed a two-prong strategy of withdrawing (deinstitutionalization) while simultaneously trying to take over (re-Christianization). Christine: I knew that there’s Christian stuff embedded within schools, like, you just look at what the holidays are, but I was struck by you pointing out that schooling isn’t religiously neutral, and that Protestantism, which I grew up with, is embedded in the curriculum and so forth, which makes the idea of non-sectarianism a lot more complicated than I had thought. Having grown up Protestant, I got to feeling like the fish in the water that can’t see the water, because that’s what they’ve been in all the time. What do you see as a way forward? Kevin: A huge takeaway for me in preparing this report is the cyclical way that Christian Nationalism evolved over time, namely, by responding to increased democracy and diversity with increased regression. In other words, at times when sectors of society were advancing protections and support for marginalized groups or religious diversity, you see a doubling down on some of the most regressive aspects of Christian Nationalist tenets—from White supremacy, anti-indigeneity, anti-Blackness, and anti-immigration to male supremacy and rigid gender and sexual regulation—as during the founding of this country, and then a century later post-Civil War with Reconstruction, and then another century later during the Civil Rights Movement, and of course, right now as well. So, hmm, how to move forward? One of the things that gives me hope is that the United States will only continue to become more diverse by race, by gender/queer/trans identities, and by religion/faith, and that this is happening at a time of historic levels of mass mobilizing. Christian Nationalism may be elevated to political dominance now, but its ascension cannot help but to be temporary as its tenets and political projects themselves are contested from within and without. I hope that my report adds to the growing body of work in the public space that reveals how its increasingly violent regression is and has repeatedly been an anxious attempt to cling to power as it declines, not unlike the warmongering of the neocons in this moment when the American empire is in decline, or the recent historic upward redistribution of wealth and plundering of natural resources in a moment when neoliberalism and corporatocracy are being exposed. I think our job is not to retreat, but to keep naming the moment (calling out the hegemony of things like empire, oligarchy, nationalism) and building the world as it could be. Christine: That’s really helpful. You begin and end the report by discussing a range of attacks on education and democracy today, including anti-DEI, censorship, privatization, and defunding initiatives. How does the history of Christian nationalism help us understand recent developments in legislation in the courts? And you may have already responded to that. Kevin: The longest section of the report covers the last 80 years, with particular focus on the groundwork being laid for the legislative and Supreme Court bombshells of recent years. For example, following the 1954 Brown v. Board of Education decision, Christian Nationalists engaged in three strategies that still reverberate today. One was to turn to academic frameworks to make certain policy priorities sound more palatable, as when resisting mandatory desegregation by drawing on academics championing school choice and vouchers. A second strategy was to engage in long-term, sometimes decades-long strategies that lay the groundwork for changing law and policy, including establishing court precedents, developing model legislation, shaping judicial appointments, and taking over school boards and other efforts to dominate electoral politics. A third strategy was to inflame culture wars as a way to build their political base, as when shifting from defending racial segregation to opposing abortion. Versions of all three strategies continue to operate with much success. Christine: So, those of us who are concerned citizens and are going, oh my god, what can we do? Kevin Kumashiro: It’s easy for me to feel demoralized or overwhelmed when I look at how resourced and impactful Christian Nationalist activism has been recently. However, history makes clear that this ascension was not inevitable—it was the result of bridge-building and organizing, of strategizing and advocating collectively in legal and cultural spheres, and of movement building, particularly regarding the institution that aims to shape the minds of the next generation, namely, education. The future will similarly be shaped by social movements and educational systems—and that’s where we play a role today: learning from the past to engage in movement building for a more just world. Christine: Okay, wow, there’s a lot of work to do. Thank you so much!  
dlvr.it
January 14, 2026 at 10:33 PM
10th Period: State Spending on Public School Students Lowest Since 1997
10th Period: State Spending on Public School Students Lowest Since 1997
After I dealt with the Buckeye “Institute” argument claiming that Ohio’s spending more on K-12 education than ever so school districts should quit whining about their funding, I thought I should expand my look at inflation-adjusted K-12 education spending beyond Buckeye’s arbitrary starting point of 2010. I wanted to answer this simple question: What year since 1975 has the state spent the closest to last year’s amount on its public school children, adjusted for inflation? Would it surprise you to learn that last year’s amount is the lowest spending amount since 1997 — the year the state started using taxpayer dollars to subsidize private school tuition? Would it also shock you to learn that the amount spent on K-12 public school students has dropped a whopping 16% since Ohio broke open the unconstitutional EdChoice voucher program to make it universal in 2019? Yeah. Didn’t think so. What the data show clearly is that almost every additional dollar going to the state’s K-12 funding since the state started the voucher program in 1997 has gone to fund kids who don’t attend the state’s public schools1. The money has instead funded notoriously poor performing, privately run charter schools or unconstitutionally subsidize private school tuitions of students who, in the overwhelming number of cases, never stepped foot in the public schools. This is one of the reasons why Ohio’s EdChoice program has been ruled unconstitutional — because it has meant that the state has essentially flat funded public school students over the last 28 years while providing billions of dollars to subsidize private school tuitions — not a penny of which has ever been publicly audited. What year did public school students receive the most state aid, adjusted for inflation? The 2003-2004 school year — the school year immediately after the fourth and final Ohio Supreme Court ruling that found Ohio relied too much on local property taxes to pay for schools. How much more did the state send to public school students than last year? Try $3.2 billion. In fact, every school year between the 2001-2002 and 2007-2008 school years saw more money going to public schools than the so-called “record” amount sent to all schools (public, charter and private schools) last year. Again, this is adjusted for inflation. One more interesting tidbit: The 2009 budget (for the 2009-2010 and 2010-2011 school years) provided more state aid to public school students than any biennial budget since the expansion of the unconstitutional EdChoice program in 2019. That’s right. Adjusted for inflation, the state provided more state funding to students in public schools during the height of the Great Recession (when the state saw a $3.1 billion drop in revenue) than it has in any budget since 2019. While I’m proud of the commitment we made to public school students in that incredibly challenging 2009 K-12 budget that I shepherded through the Ohio House, I’m dismayed that state officials have failed so miserably to build upon that success. It’s shameful. And it’s also why we’ve dropped from the nation’s 5th best education system in 2010 to 20th in EdWeek’s final Quality Counts report in 2021. As I’ve said many times before, Ohio’s legislators and governors have so overvalued poor-performing Charter Schools and unconstitutional, publicly funded private school tuition subsidies that communities are left to unfairly shoulder the burden of funding our state’s 1.6 million public school students. And that is why Ohioans are paying $5.1 billion more in property taxes than they did in 2010. Which is about 43% more than a simple inflationary increase, in case you were wondering. 1 I get that adjusted for inflation, the state is spending $108 million more today than in 1997. But on an annual basis, that’s $3.85 million a year, or roughly $2.41 per Ohio public education student. So. Yeah. Flat funding.  
dlvr.it
January 13, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Janresseger: New Plan to Decimate U.S. Dept. of Ed. Exposes Trump Administration’s Deficient Educational Vision
Janresseger: New Plan to Decimate U.S. Dept. of Ed. Exposes Trump Administration’s Deficient Educational Vision
In his newest book, Dangerous Learning, constitutional law professor Derek Black summarizes what has happened to public education in the United States during the lifetimes of most of us who are reading this post today: “Brown v. Board of Education and its progeny fundamentally altered the way society thinks about education, not just of Black children but of all children. Laws prohibiting discrimination against students based on sex, language status, ethnicity, alienage, disability, poverty, and homelessness all grew out of the foundation Brown laid. For the past half century, the federal legal apparatus as well as several state regimes have aimed to deliver equal educational opportunity.” (Dangerous Learning, p. 275) In 1979, during Jimmy Carter’s administration, Congress created the U.S. Department of Education to fulfill that mission by pulling together the federal agencies administering programs to increase educational opportunity for groups of children who had historically been marginalized. It should, therefore, not be surprising that President Donald Trump, who has spent the year trying to stamp out every program or policy that protects equity and supports inclusion and diversity in public schools and across U.S. colleges and universities, has now implemented a plan to end the U.S. Department of Education. Because federal law prescribes that only Congress can close a federal department or close one of the offices that Congress established within a federal department to manage particular programs, Trump began by keeping all the departments and offices but eliminating the people who do the work through the massive staff layoffs we have been watching all year long. Those layoffs, of course, constitute illegal impoundment of federal funds, and some of them have been temporary blocked by Federal District Courts. Then last Tuesday, Education Secretary Linda McMahon announced a further effort to phase out the Department under a new plan which complies with the law because it involves mere “interagency transfers” that will house Department of Education (DOE) programs in other departments, with some DOE staff moving with the programs to run them in their new setting. Although the transfers were announced last week, the interagency agreements were signed, according to Education Week, on September 30. Chalkbeat‘s Erica Meltzer explains: “These changes were done administratively.  Senior officials said the Economy Act gives the Education Department the authority to contract with other federal agencies.”  The Washington Post‘s Laura Meckler and Danielle Douglas-Gabriel add: The interagency agreements amount to a work-around under which policy decisions will remain with the Education Department but the programs will be administered elsewhere. Staffers who work on the programs are expected to move to the new agency.” Meckler and Douglas-Gabriel summarize the restructure announced last Tuesday: “Under the new agreements, the Labor Department will inherit the Office of Elementary and Secondary Education, including 27 K-12 programs, and the Office of Postsecondary Education, which administers 14 programs to help students enroll in and complete college. The Education Department will move the Indian education program to the Interior Department, child care access and foreign medical education to the Department of Health and Human Services, and foreign-language education to the State Department.” “There was considerable speculation that the $15 billion program to support students with disabilities would be included in the announcement, but it was not. Other major functions of the Education Department, including its Office for Civil Rights and the federal student aid program, also were not affected by Tuesday’s changes, but a senior department official told reporters that officials are still exploring options for moving those programs elsewhere in the government.”  The Office for Civil Rights has already been decimated by the elimination of seven of its twelve regional offices and the layoff of most of its staff. The NY Times‘ Michael Bender describes a senior official at the Education Department justifying the restructure as an attempt to “streamline bureaucracy so that ‘at the end of the day,’ it means more dollars to the classroom.” Bender quotes Secretary McMahon’s rationale: “Cutting through layers of red tape in Washington is one essential piece of our final mission.” The attempt by Secretary McMahon and her staff to justify the interagency agreements as a step toward reducing the federal bureaucracy is laughable. The Associated Press’s Colin Binkley highlights another of McMahon’s bizarre rationalizations for the restructure. McMahon resurrects the old “falling test scores” argument as though moving around federal offices will have some kind of miraculous effect on the nation’s economic inequality, which, according to research (here or here), is the primary factor causing overall disparities in students’ aggregate test scores. Binkley describes McMahon as predicting that, without federal oversight, the states are likely to use federal dollars to help the students most in need: “McMahon has increasingly pointed to what she sees as failures of the department as she argues for its demise. In its 45 years, she says, it has become a bloated bureaucracy while student outcomes continue to lag behind. She points to math and reading scores… which plummeted in the wake of pandemic restrictions. Her vision would abolish the Education Department and give states wider flexibility in how they spend money that’s now earmarked for specific purposes, including literacy and education for homeless students. That, however, would require approval from Congress.” An extremely serious concern is what the proposed restructure says about the Trump administration’s narrow and inadequate understanding of the purpose of public education as mere workforce preparation.  Why is the Office of Primary and Secondary Education, which administers the enormous Title I grants that help promote equity in school districts serving concentrations of our nation’s poorest children, being moved to the Department of Labor?  The Washington Post‘s Meckler and Douglas-Gabriel quote a Department of Education official “who argued that education’s purpose is to prepare students for the workforce. ‘Nowhere is that better housed than the department of labor,’ she said.”  The reporters name the broader purpose of some of the programs being moved to the Department of Labor: “The K-12 grant programs that Labor stands to take on address a plethora of subjects not directly related to the workforce, such as support for children in poverty, after-school programs and aid for rural education.”  Historically, public schooling has been understood as the primary institution that forms students as the citizens of our democratic society—with workforce preparation merely one component of that mission. The U.S. Department of Education was created to pull together the administration of federal programs that help public schools across the states serve and welcome every student and protect each student’s civil rights.  In a formal statement last week, Republican Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick strongly opposed the new interagency agreements designed to phase out the U.S. Department of Education: “The United States Congress created the U.S. Department of Education for very good reason. And for millions of families, particularly those raising children with disabilities or living in low-income communities, the Department’s core offices are not discretionary functions. They are foundational. They safeguard civil rights, expand opportunity, and ensure that every child, in every community, has the chance to learn, grow, and succeed on equal footing. Working alongside our early childhood educators, local school partners, and disability advocates as Co-Chair of the Bipartisan Disability Caucus, I’ve seen exactly how essential these programs are. Altering them without transparency or congressional oversight would pose real risks to the very students they were created to protect.  I will not allow it — and I urge all of my colleagues to stand with me.”  
dlvr.it
January 12, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Shanker Blog: Maryanne Wolf Knows Her Proust and Her P.O.S.S.U.M.
Shanker Blog: Maryanne Wolf Knows Her Proust and Her P.O.S.S.U.M.
Our guest author is Harriett Janetos an elementary school reading specialist with over 35 years of experience. In this essay Ms. Janetos reflects on Maryanne Wolf’s paper Elbow Room: How the Reading Brain Informs the Teaching of Reading recently published by the Albert Shanker Institute. This essay originally appeared in the author's Substack Making Words Make Sense.  Multicomponent instruction means making room for ALL the components of literacy--taught at the right time in the best way. It provides the bridge between Balanced Literacy and Structured Literacy. I have lived my life in the service of words: finding where they hide in the convoluted recesses of the brain, studying their layers of meaning and form, and teaching their secrets to the young. Maryanne Wolf, Proust and the Squid   THAT WAS THEN: THE BIG FIVE I discovered Maryanne Wolf’s book Proust and the Squid through a recommendation from one of the professors in my reading specialist credential program. It confirmed the importance of code-based beginning reading instruction emphasized in the books by cognitive psychologist Diane McGuinness, which I had discovered shortly before entering my credential program. Wolf reminds us: Three concepts are critical and emerge over this early period: (1) that words represent things and thoughts (2) that words are made up of individual sounds (3) that these sounds are represented by letters, which when written together make words But it also explained how we develop this code knowledge as a necessary precursor to knowing what Proust knew: Reading is that fertile miracle of a communication in the midst of solitude. In a recently published paper, Elbow Room: How the Reading Brain Informs the Teaching of Reading, Wolf takes her keen understanding of the reading process and connects research to practice, the translation we desperately need that is so often missing from our preservice programs and PD sessions. First, she describes the reading circuit: I’ll begin as Emily Dickinson might have responded, had she been a neuroscientist instead of a poet: “Tell all the truth, but tell it slant; Success in Circuit lies.” In this paper, the circuit refers to the brain’s circuit for reading . . . The ‘slanted truth’ is that, unlike oral language, there is no genetic program for written language to unfold naturally in the child. Reading is not natural at all. Rather, it is an invention that the brain learns due to a wonderful design principle, which allows the developing brain to form new connections among its original, genetically programmed processes like language, cognition, and vision. In other words, when a child learns to read, the brain learns how to connect the multiple processes that contribute to a new circuit for written language. It is one of the too little-sung miracles that young human beings can build a brand new circuit for reading that will elaborate itself over time with everything the readers read. What is notable in this paper is how methodically and meticulously Wolf connects literacy components in order to rise above the war-ravaged reading camps which we have been entrenched in over several decades. She reveals how each camp can bring its particular strength to the discussion, allowing multicomponent instruction to prevail. From the Albert Shaker Institute’s introduction to the report: Elbow Room is an invitation to move beyond false binaries in literacy debates and to see reading development as dynamic, requiring multiple emphases and areas of expertise in our teachers. The key for educators is knowing what to prioritize — when, and for how long — based on each learner’s strengths and needs . . . Wolf honors what educators already know, while inviting them to keep expanding that knowledge. Therefore, please don’t read Wolf’s paper looking to find your particular thing that you prioritize in reading instruction, whether it be meaning-making at the expense of establishing foundational skills, or extensive phonics instruction without application to text, or knowledge-building that crowds out literature. Wolf states: The key for a teacher’s ability to teach the majority of our nation’s children is a systematic expansion of knowledge about all the processes involved in decoding and comprehension, while never cherry-picking a few of the processes based on the teacher’s original method of teaching. In my own 127-page instructional guide to reading, I use some version of the word integrate over a 100 times, which reflects my devotion to multicomponent instruction. However, once we democratize these literacy components, we also need to recognize that there is a time and place for promotion and practice of certain skills independently, instruction that evolves as children move through the grades. But like a close-knit family, the other literacy members are never far away and continue to act in supporting roles. This point is central to the elegant elbow metaphor Wolf uses where she illustrates how the foundational skills forearm initially rests on the comprehension forearm to emphasize how the former has an active role in beginning reading instruction while relying on comprehension for support. Then, as the foundation is laid, this forearm slowly rises, allowing the supporting role of comprehension to switch places and assume an active role while the foundational skills arm acts as support. Wolf explains: This is the visual depiction of the changing dynamic between the early emphases on the expanded foundational skills and fluency (left arm) and the gradually increasing emphases on more sophisticated comprehension processes (right arm). It is a visual mnemonic for the way the skills and processes change their emphases over time while always leaving room for the other to develop with the increasing demands of text content. Moreover, rather than emphasize the National Reading Panel’s Big 5 (phonemic awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension), both Wolf’s paper and my instructional guide reflect more elemental factors. My six chapter titles—Making Sense of Words We Hear, Say, See, Understand, Remember, Analyze—incorporate the components Wolf discusses under her acronym POSSUM (phonology, orthography, semantics, syntax, understanding, morphology). She writes: Our understanding of foundational skills has changed over time from the more traditional view that was articulated by the National Reading Panel two decades ago . . . In a more expanded view, each of these areas is broadened, deepened, made more specific and more inclusive of spoken language processes. THIS IS NOW: MAKE ROOM FOR THE MARSUPIAL  It is this new understanding of foundational skills that Wolf emphasizes, illuminating the interconnectedness of reading and its implications for instruction. It reminds me of the seven blind mice in Ed Young’s book—how we’ve been touching different parts of the elephant, siloing reading skills without recognizing their contribution to the whole literacy animal. Here is her goal: I hope to illumine how the developing circuit includes the major emphases in the seemingly divergent approaches: specifically, the critical role of foundational skills (as seen in systematic, structured literacy approaches) and the critical role of word- and text-level knowledge (as seen in balanced-literacy and whole-language approaches). P.O.S.S.U.M P. Phonology, Phoneme Awareness, Prosody, Pragmatics O. Orthographic Patterns S. Semantics S. Syntax U. Understanding the alphabetic principle and meanings within text M. Morphology Wolf explains how an outsized emphasis on either code-based or meaning-based instruction can diminish the development of skilled reading by crowding out important literacy components. The balance emphasized in the National Reading Panel (NRP) report never quite saw the light of our classrooms where insufficient training—or in some cases, sheer intractability—kept us off-balance. From the NRP: Teachers must understand that systematic phonics instruction is only one component—albeit a necessary component—of a total reading program; systematic phonics instruction should be integrated with other reading instruction in phonemic awareness, fluency, and comprehension strategies to create a complete reading program . . . It will also be critical to determine objectively the ways in which systematic phonics instruction can be optimally incorporated and integrated in complete and balanced programs of reading instruction. Wolf expands upon this concern: Most phonics instruction does not give sufficiently explicit attention to connecting decoding processes to the various semantic, syntactic, and morphological aspects of word knowledge, all of which contribute to fluency at both the word and connected text levels. Further, there is often insufficient attention to immediately applying fluent decoding skills to stories and connected text – an area where balanced literacy and whole-language trained teachers excel. The skills of these teachers should never go unutilized. FROM WORD TO WORLD: THE CODE AND THE CONTEXT  In the recent webinar, The Science of Reading in Real Life, Sharon Vaughn (Executive Director of The Meadows Center for Preventing Educational Risk at The University of Texas at Austin) explains the interconnectedness of literacy components as spanning word to world. Like Maryanne Wolf, Sharon Vaughn is rejecting the dichotomy that has polarized our discussion related to the reading wars, which—like so many other aspects of life—cannot be conveniently colored black or white. Can we let the Goldilocks Effect guide our teaching instead of being bound by binary thinking or bullied into stating our support for one reading camp or another? Here is Wolf’s rationale for multicomponent instruction: Why we teach the code: As demonstrated in decades of research, this developmental process is jump-started through approaches that emphasize the direct teaching of the connections between the visual representations of letters and the phoneme-based representations of the sounds of their language. Phonics-based approaches revolve around building up these connections. Why we teach the context: The upshot, therefore, is the need to connect explicit knowledge about decoding principles to explicit knowledge about the meanings of words (and their multiple meanings in different contexts—polysemy); how they are used grammatically; how morphemes change their meaning and use; and how they all work together in connected text and literature. The decodable books—many in mint condition—that I send home for my students to read to a print partner are from the Reading First era two decades ago that followed the NRP recommendations. These books contain high-interest stories with varying degrees of decodability, so I’m very glad I salvaged them when we shifted to a new ELA program ten years later. Then—when we shifted yet again, I asked the district’s warehouse to send me all their boxes of unused books. This means I have access to three different series to give my students plenty of opportunities to interact with both fiction and nonfiction text. One series in particular has excellent informational pieces, which supports knowledge-building in my second-grade intervention sessions so that my phonics instruction targets decoding impediments related to reading multisyllabic words within the context of disciplinary content. The decodable books my district adopted ten years ago to align with the Common Core State Standards have made this possible with accessible (albeit challenging) informational text interspersed with more easily decoded stories. Here are the topics I can choose from—disconnected, sadly—but supporting knowledge-building nevertheless: Native Americans, U.S. geography, natural resources, Civil War, laws, U.S. landmarks, money, fossils, planets, gravity, rocks and minerals, inventions, communication, sound, farm tools, extreme weather, energy, matter, penguins, animal habitats, germs, libraries I mention this resource because my lessons revolve around books of various types to meet my instructional goals. I am convinced that this context is crucial for my students’ engagement as well as their reading development. Depending on my grade-level goals and the skill levels of my students, my routines look like this: * Dictation of word chains (shifting by just one phoneme to reflect minimal contrast) formed from the words in the decodable story to be read, thus integrating phonemic awareness with orthographic patterns as well as semantics. * Application of phoneme-grapheme connections through invented spelling during independent writing. * Integration of phonology, orthography, morphology, and semantics in all word-learning activities to promote orthographic mapping and facilitate automatic word recognition, beginning with monomorphemic words for emergent readers and progressing as quickly as possible to multimorphemic words. * Coordination of semantic maps to integrate vocabulary with knowledge-building in order to facilitate a deep understanding of text. * Implementation of partner reading of both decodable and grade-level text to practice orthographic patterns taught and promote fluency with complex vocabulary and syntax in order to facilitate comprehension. * Utilization of paragraph shrinking for multi-paragraph text, which involves being able to decode the words, understand the words, and analyze the syntax of individual sentences—as well as the relationship between sentences—to unlock the structure and meaning of the paragraphs.  The best part of multicomponent instruction for the time-strapped teacher is that it is not only effective but also efficient, and this efficiency allows students more time to engage in wide reading. I have seen silent phonics lessons (an oxymoron) involving filling in worksheets with various spelling patterns where the words were not voiced; and I have also seen vocabulary taught with reference only to orthography and semantics —ignoring the phonology of the words— which is necessary for orthographic mapping. Integrating phonology with phonics—and both with vocabulary instruction—facilitates automatic word recognition and frees up time for reading connected text. Maryanne Wolf asks us to think of these processes that underlie comprehension like an orchestra playing a symphony. She notes that the various processes are like different instruments coming in and out to interact with each other to contribute to the whole. I appreciate a similarly evocative description of multicomponent instruction from Jan Wasowicz (The Language Literacy Network) who also compares reading instruction to conducting an orchestra. In a recent post on the SPELLTalk listserv, she writes: Multicomponent literacy instruction and instructional simultaneity does not mean ‘everything, everywhere all at once.’ It’s more like preparing an orchestra: at first, instruction works with a smaller section of instruments (e.g., phonology, orthography, and meaning to read and spell words), while other sections (e.g., morphology, syntax, and higher-order language skills) are being tuned separately. As students gain proficiency, more instruments are added until eventually the full ensemble is ready to perform together in harmony. And to complete this analogy to an orchestra, the image is also reflected in the introduction to the paper: At different points in development, one emphasis may carry the melody while the other plays harmony, yet neither is ever absent from instruction. THE PEACENIKS FORGE A PATH FORWARD  For over half a century a divisive, Hydra-headed type of debate over the teaching of reading continues to divide our nation’s educators. --Maryanne Wolf Jan Wasowicz and Maryanne Wolf are members of a group called The Peaceniks. In an article about speech-to-print vs. print to speech, they are described as a group of researchers and practitioners who are looking to end the divisiveness of the ‘reading wars’ — and help children learn to read and write with competence and pleasure. Maryanne Wolf’s paper is the closest thing to a peace treaty I’ve come across to end these wars. At the very least, she provides a convincing rationale for declaring a ceasefire and putting all of our energy toward a truce. We now have enough evidence supporting the importance of laying a solid foundation in code-knowledge in order for our students to unlock the meaning of text, so an emphasis on the importance of phonics instruction has not been displaced by her proposal, merely given its proper place within the entire spectrum of the reading experience. We know that we must not give foundational skill development any more time than it requires (get in, get out—move on—as Mark Seidenberg advises), and we must never sideline the importance of any literacy component. The foundational skills and comprehension processes inherent in reading instruction exhibit active coordination, not competition. The teacher, like a good coach, understands the synergistic roles of reading components and sends the right unit out at the right time to achieve the team’s ultimate goal: helping students finish in the win column. Can we put down our old reading glasses and pick up a new pair that is neither rose-colored nor reductionist? As Esther Quintero from the Albert Shanker Institute—who shared this impactful paper with me along with her own valuable insights (for which I am very grateful)—summarizes: I think understanding Elbow Room requires easing some of the mindsets and language we usually bring to conversations about reading. It’s not about throwing out what’s established, but about freeing that knowledge from the straitjackets that have formed around it. The paper feels like an invitation to think with more flexibility — to let connections, rather than divisions, come into view. It feels like a fresh start. Here’s to a fresh start to teaching reading! Phonemes need letters. Phonics needs semantics, syntax, and morpheme knowledge. Words need stories. The reading brain connects all of these processes, and so should our teaching. --Maryanne Wolf Always striving to make sense—please let me know when I fail.
dlvr.it
January 9, 2026 at 10:33 PM
David Labaree on Schooling, History, and Writing: Public Goods, Private Goods — The American Struggle over Educational Goals
David Labaree on Schooling, History, and Writing: Public Goods, Private Goods — The American Struggle over Educational Goals
This post is a paper I published in 1997 in American Journal of Educational Research.  Here’s a link to a PDF of the original.  It became the framing chapter in my 1997 book, How to Succeed In School Without Really Learning.   Here’s the abstract: This article explores three alternative goals for American education that have been at the root of educational conflicts over the years: democratic equality (schools should focus on preparing citizens), social efficiency (they should focus on training workers), and social mobility (they should prepare individuals to compete for social positions). These goals represent, respectively, the educational perspective of the citizen, the taxpayer, and the consumer. Whereas the first two look on education as a public good, the third sees it as a private good. Historical conflict over these competing visions of education has resulted in a contradictory structure for the educational system that has sharply impaired its effectiveness. More important still has been the growing domination of the social mobility goal, which has reshaped education into a commodity for the purposes of status attainment and bas elevated the pursuit of credentials over the acquisition of knowledge. This paper is by far the most cited piece I ever published and also by far the most difficult piece to write.  It went through years of drafts, comments, and rewrites, and it spent long periods sitting in a drawer, waiting to be rescued from incoherence.  This was an argument that just wouldn’t come together. Like most of my books, How to Succeed emerged from a class I was teaching.  (The Trouble with Ed Schools came from a class on ed schools; Someone Has to Fail came from the History of US School Reform; and A Perfect Mess from the History of US Higher Education.) In this case to source was the School and Society course that was required for all teacher education students at Michigan State, which I taught for 10 years.  When you teach a core class, you find yourself taking the assigned readings and trying to weave them together into a coherent story.  The story I wanted students to take away from each of my classes was a conceptual framework for understanding some key component of the educational system.   For the prospective teachers in School and Society, I wanted them to gain a rich feel for the complexity of the system in which they were going to pursue their careers.  The core aim was to turn them away from seeing schooling as a unitary, coherent structure for reliably producing a singular outcome and move them toward seeing it instead as a dynamic system that was animated by impulses that were inherently at odds with each other.  My feeling was that this could enable teachers to tap into particular components of the system that they could use to pursue their own classroom aims.  The idea is to harness the system’s own dynamics in order to be able to help shape the system’s outcomes.  Don’t try to roll back the tide.  Learn how to surf. Nice idea; hard to put into practice.  When I was writing my first book, The Making of an American High School, my friend and colleague David Cohen helped me realize that at the core of the story I was telling about the evolution of the high school was a tension between politics and markets, between school’s founding mission to create citizens for the republic and the interests of student consumers who sought to gain individual advantage from a high school degree.  Later my friend and colleague David Hogan helped me understand that I needed to unpack the idea of markets into two incompatible components, one focused on promoting an efficient economy and another focused on sorting individuals into social positions.  Out of this — eventually — emerged my framework of three educational goals:  democratic equality, social efficiency, and social mobility. I first started drafting this paper in the early 1990s, without much success.  After several efforts, I showed a draft to David Cohen.  He suggested that we go out for a glass of wine to talk about the paper, which in retrospect was not a good sign.  Good news can be delivered anywhere.  Bad news from a friend calls for indirection and a supportive setting.  As we finished up our first glass of wine, David leaned forward and said. “Sometimes where you’re writing something, it just doesn’t work.  So sometimes you just need to put it in a drawer and let it go.  That’s what I think you need to do with this.”  Lord.  Say good-bye to my big idea.  I dutifully put the paper in a drawer and moved on.  Two years later, in January of 1996, I entered into my first ever sabbatical.  Time to try again.  This time — finally — it seemed to come together.  So I sent it off to AERJ.  And now that I was on a roll, I also wrote a proposal for the How to Succeed book, which was a collection of previously published papers about credentialing that now had a framing chapter in the goals paper.  After a revise and resubmit, AERJ accepted the paper (thanks to editor John Rury, who made sure it got good reviewers) and Yale offered me a book contract (thanks to editor Gladys Topkis, who also found good reviewers).   Part of the problem that was hanging me up all along was getting hooked on the idea that the political aims of education were the good guys in the story and the market aims were the bad guys.  What helped me move ahead was the recognition that democratic equality and social efficiency both viewed education as a public good; both provided rationales for why it makes sense to invest in the education of other people’s children.  So that made social efficiency look more positive to me than it had before.  One of the reviewers of the paper for AERJ, Norton Grubb, helped me see this, which helped shape the final version.  (He identified himself to me after the fact.)  Later on, after the paper appeared in print, I came to a more nuanced view, in which all of the goals are seen as legitimate aims for schooling and all of us has a stake in each of them.  We all want a society where our fellow citizens are civic minded, our fellow workers are productive, and our children get a fair chance to get ahead.  The problem is not that the the consumer interest in education is inherently a bad thing.  That’s the inevitable consequence of schooling in a liberal democracy.  The problem is when the three goals get out of balance, when the consumer interest and education as a private good trump education as a public good.  After publishing How to Succeed I went on to write The Trouble with Ed Schools, which had nothing to do with the three goals mantra of its predecessor.  But I kept using the goals paper in my classes because both I and my students found it useful in thinking about the dynamics of schooling.  When I began writing the text of Someone Has to Fail, based on the school reform class I had been teaching for a decade or so, I was surprised to find that the three goals shtick still hadn’t run its course.   I rediscovered it as a useful way to think about the evolution of American schooling as a system over the last 200 years.  The driving force in shaping the development of the system over this period, I came to see, was the consumer urge to have a form of schooling that would give individuals an edge in their competition for social position.  The broader social goals of citizenship and economy were the concerns of school policymakers and reformers, but the consumerist position was the power behind demand by families for a form of schooling that could preserve social advantage for some and provide social opportunity for others.  The consumer was still king. PUBLIC GOODS, PRIVATE GOODS: THE AMERICAN STRUGGLE OVER EDUCATIONAL GOALS Americans love to beat up on their schools. Particularly in the last couple of decades, we have taken schools to task for a multitude of sins. Consider a few of the major types of complaints that have been lodged against them:  Schools have abandoned academic standards; schools have undermined American economic competitiveness; schools are disorderly places that breed social disorder; schools waste massive sums of money; schools no longer provide a reliable way for people to get ahead; schools reinforce social inequality in American society. Many of these charges are unfair or even demonstrably false,[1] but the result of these complaints has been a lot of hand-wringing and an endless series of calls for fundamental reform. Big problems call for big changes, and a wide range of such changes have been suggested:  Restructure the organization of schools; permit parents to choose which school their children attend; promote specialized magnet schools; establish autonomous charter schools; create black academies; professionalize teaching; require competency testing for teachers; open up alternative routes to teaching; upgrade the professional education of teachers; establish national achievement tests for students; require performance testing as a prerequisite for endorsed diplomas; equalize school funding; make funding dependent on school performance; extend the school year; reinforce basic skills; increase vocational education; beef up the academic curriculum; develop national curriculum standards; increase multiculturalism within the curriculum; end bilingual education; stabilize the American family; provide economic opportunities for the poor; institute prayer in schools; attack the roots of racism; promote traditional values; and so on. This widely varied array of proposed reforms, in turn, is grounded in an equally varied array of analyses defining the roots causes of problems with schools. Some argue that the root problem is pedagogical, arising from poor quality and preparation of teachers and from inadequate curriculum. Others argue the that the central problem is organizational, arising either from too much bureaucracy (the absence of market incentives) or from too much loose coupling (the absence of effective administrative control). Still others charge that the primary cause of educational deficiencies is social, arising from chronic poverty, race discrimination, and the preservation of privilege. Yet another view is that the key problem is cultural, the result of a culture of poverty, disintegrating family values, and a growing gap between school culture and popular culture. In contrast with these perspectives, I argue that the central problems with American education are not pedagogical or organizational or social or cultural in nature but are fundamentally political. That is, the problem is not that we do not know how to make schools better but that we are fighting among ourselves about what goals schools should pursue. Goal setting is a political and not a technical problem. It is resolved through a process of making choices and not through a process of scientific investigation. The answer lies in values (what kind of schools we want) and interests (who supports which educational values) rather than apolitical logic. Before we launch yet another research center (to determine “what works”[2] in the classroom) or propose another organizational change (such as school choice or a national curriculum), we need to engage in a public debate about the desirability of alternative social outcomes of schooling. Schools, it seems, occupy an awkward position at the intersection between what we hope society will become and what we think it really is, between political ideals and economic realities. This in turn leads to some crucial questions:  Should schools present themselves as a model of our best hopes for our society and a mechanism for remaking that society in the image of those hopes?  Should schools focus on adapting students to the needs of society as currently constructed?  Or should they focus primarily on serving the individual hopes and ambitions of their students?  The way you choose to answer this question determines the kind of goals you seek to impose on schools. The terms of this choice arise from a fundamental source of strain at the core of any liberal democratic society, the tension between democratic politics (public rights) and capitalist markets (private rights), between majority control and individual liberty, between political equality and social inequality. In the American setting, the poles of this debate were defined during the country’s formative years by the political idealism of Thomas Jefferson and the economic realism of Alexander Hamilton (Curti, 1959). The essential problem posed by that tension is this:  Unfettered economic freedom leads to a highly unequal distribution of wealth and power, which in turn undercuts the possibility for democratic control; but at the same time, restricting such economic freedom in the name of equality infringes on individual liberty, without which democracy can turn into the dictatorship of the majority. Each generation of American reformers has tried to figure out a way to preserve the Jeffersonian ideal of political equality in the face of the Hamiltonian reality of economic inequality – and to do so without stifling the productivity of the market economy. Yet in spite of a wide variety of plausible and innovative attempts to find a remedy, this dilemma has outlasted all efforts at reform. Political equality and social inequality simply to not mix easily; and institutions that arise from efforts to pursue both of these goals reflect this continuing tension.[3] Grounded in this contradictory social context, the history of American education has been a tale of ambivalent goals and muddled outcomes  Like other major institutions in American society, education has come to be defined as an arena that simultaneously promotes equality and adapts to inequality. Within schools, these contradictory purposes have translated into three distinguishable educational goals, each of which has exerted considerable impact without succeeding in eliminating the others, and each of which has at times served to undermine the others. I call these goals democratic equality, social efficiency, and social mobility.[4]  These goals differ across several dimensions: the extent to which they portray education as a public or private good; the extent to which they understand education as preparation for political or market roles; and the differing perspectives on education that arise depending on one’s particular location in the social structure.[5] From the democratic equality approach to schooling, one argues that a democratic society cannot persist unless it prepares all of its young with equal care to take on the full responsibilities of citizenship in a competent manner. We all depend on this political competence of our fellow citizens, since we put ourselves at the mercy of their collective judgment about the running of our society. A corollary is that, in the democratic political arena, we are all considered equal (according to the rule of one person, one vote), but this political equality can be undermined if the social inequality of citizens grows too great. Therefore schools must promote both effective citizenship and relative equality. Both of these outcomes are collective benefits of schooling without which we cannot function as a polity. Democratic equality, then, is the perspective of the citizen, from which education is seen as a public good, designed to prepare people for political roles. The social efficiency approach to schooling argues that our economic well-being depends on our ability to prepare the young to carry out useful economic roles with competence. The idea is that we all benefit from a healthy economy and from the contribution to such an economy made by the productivity of our fellow worker. As a consequence, we cannot allow this function to be supported only by voluntary means, since self interest would encourage individuals to take a free ride on the human capital investment of their fellow citizens while investing personally in a form of education that would provide the highest individual return. Instead, society as a whole must see to it that we invest educationally in the productivity of the entire workforce. Social efficiency, then, is the perspective of the taxpayer and the employer, from which education is seen as a public good designed to prepare workers to fill structurally necessary market roles. The social mobility approach to schooling argues that education is a commodity, whose only purpose is to provide individual students with a competitive advantage in the struggle for desirable social positions. The aim is get more of this valuable commodity than one’s competitors, which puts a premium on a form of education that is highly stratified and unequally distributed. This, then, is the perspective of the individual educational consumer, from which education is seen as a private good designed to prepare individuals for successful social competition for the more desirable market roles. In an important way, all three of these goals are political in that all are efforts to establish the purposes and functions of an essential social institution. But one major political difference among them is positional, with people in different positions adopting different perspectives on the purposes of education. The democratic equality goal arises from the citizen, social efficiency from the taxpayer and employer, and social mobility from the educational consumer. The first goal expresses the politics of citizenship, the second expresses the politics of human capital, and the third expresses the politics of individual opportunity. Of the three approaches to schooling, the first is the most thoroughly political in that it sets as its goal the preparation of students as actors in the political arena. The other two goals, in contrast, portray education as a mechanism for adapting students to the market. And this suggests another major differentiating factor, the way in which each goal locates education in the public-private dimension. For the democratic equality goal, education is a purely public good; for social efficiency, it is a public good in service to the private sector; and for social mobility, it is a private good for personal consumption.[6]            THREE DEFINING GOALS FOR AMERICAN EDUCATION      This paper takes the form of an essay about the historical roots of these three educational goals, the impact they have had individually and jointly on the structure and process of schooling in the U.S., and the implications of this analysis for contemporary efforts at educational reform.     In this section, I examine the nature of each of the three purposes of American education and the impact that each has had on schools. In the sections that follow, I explore the interaction of these three goals, showing how they have in some ways reinforced each other and in other ways undermined each other. This situation raises important questions. How can schools realistically be expected to promote all of these goals at the same time and remain coherent and effective?  Yet at the same time how can they promote one at the expense of the others without eliminating important outcomes and abandoning important constituencies?  I argue that incoherence and ineffectiveness are important consequences of this standoff among conflicting goals, which in part help explain many of the problems afflicting American schools. But I argue that the most significant problems with education today arise from the growing dominance of one goal over the others. The social mobility goal has emerged as the most influential factor in American education. Increasingly it provides us with the language we use to talk about schools, the ideas we use to justify their existence, and the practices we mandate in promoting their reform. As a result, public education has increasingly come to be perceived as a private good that is harnessed to the pursuit of personal advantage; and on the whole, the consequences of this for both school and society have been profoundly negative. Democratic Equality There is a strong ideological tradition in American history that sees schools as an expression of democratic political ideals and as a mechanism for preparing children to play constructive roles in a democratic society.[7]  For the Whig leaders who founded the common schools in the mid nineteenth century, this political goal provided the most compelling justification for schooling (Kaestle, 1983; Cremin, 1980). Although its relative weight among the trio of American educational goals has gradually declined over the years, it has continued to play a prominent role in shaping educational rhetoric, school practice, and the structure of the credentials market. And at times, such as the 1960s and 70s, it has reasserted itself with considerable vigor and effect. This, the most political of the major purposes of American education, has taken three related but distinct operational forms within schools: the pursuit of citizenship training, equal treatment, and equal access. Let us consider each of these in turn. The best single explanation for the founding and early diffusion of common schools in this country is that they were seen as an essential to the process of nation building and the related process of training for citizenship (Meyer et al., 1979). “It may be an easy thing to make a Republic,” wrote Horace Mann in 1848 (1957, p. 92); “but it is a very laborious thing to make Republicans; and woe to the republic that rests upon no better foundations than ignorance, selfishness, and passion.”  From the perspective of the common school founders, the new American republic in the mid nineteenth century was still on shaky ground and its survival depended on a citizenry with a fully developed sense of civic virtue. They felt schools could help counteract the growth of selfishness (arising from a burgeoning capitalist economy) by instilling in their charges a personal dedication to the public good. They could make republicans who would be able to function in a market economy without losing their sense of citizenship in the commonwealth (Kaestle, 1983; Cremin, 1980; Labaree, 1988). Citizenship training has continued to play a significant role in the ideology and practice of American education in both rhetoric and practice. No pronouncement about education or call for educational reform has been complete without a prominent reference to the critical consequences of schooling for the preservation of democracy. Even the authors of the influential national report A Nation at Risk, who focused primarily on economic consequences, felt compelled to stress that “A high level of shared education is essential to a free, democratic society and to the fostering of a common culture” (National Commission on Excellence in Education, 1983, p. 7). Curriculum in American schools expresses this concern, both through specific courses (such as social studies, civics, government, and American history) that are designed to instill in students a commitment to the American political system, and more broadly through a continuing strong emphasis on liberal arts over narrowly specialized education. The rationale for liberal arts is that all members of a free society need familiarity with the full range of that society’s culture in order “to participate intelligently as adults in the political process that shapes their society” (Gutmann, 1987, p. xi; Hirsch, 1987), and as a result of this emphasis the U.S. promotes general education at even the highest levels of the system, in comparison with other countries, where specialized instruction begins much earlier (Turner, 1960). The recent movement to raise educational standards has made it clear that the call for increased “competency over challenging subject matter” is intended in part to “insure that all students learn to use their minds well, so they may be prepared for responsible citizenship” (National Education Goals Panel, 1995, p. 11). A second political goal for schools has been the pursuit of equal treatment, which originated in the same concern about preserving the republic that motivated the push for citizenship training. Fearful of the social differences and class conflict that arose from the growth of capitalism and immigration, the founders of the common school argued that this institution could help provide citizens of the republic with a common culture and a sense of shared membership in the community. Horace Mann stated the case for education’s equalizing role with characteristic eloquence. Noting “that vast and overshadowing private fortunes are among the greatest dangers to which the happiness of the people in a republic can be subjected,” he argued that “surely, nothing but Universal Education can counter-work this tendency to the domination of capital and the servility of labor,” acting as “the balance-wheel of the social machinery” (1957, pp. 85-87). The common school movement promoted these ends by establishing universal enrollment, uniform curriculum, and a shared educational experience for their students (Katz, 1978, 1987; Katznelson & Weir, 1985; Labaree, 1988). Over the years, this commonality has given way to an educational process that is increasingly stratified according to characteristics such as age, academic achievement, educational level, curriculum level, institutional prestige, and social class – largely in response to pressure to promote the social efficiency and social mobility goals (Katznelson & Weir, 1985). But in the early twentieth century, reformers sought to mitigate this process of stratification and restore equal treatment through a variety of leveling mechanisms, including pressure for social promotion of students from grade to grade, the easing of academic standards, the sharp increase in nonacademic curriculum options, grade inflation, and the institutionalization of the comprehensive high school (Labaree, 1984, 1988, 1996). More recently, schools have sought to apply this egalitarian goal to groups whose ascribed status denied them equal educational standing in the nineteenth century. The recurring demand for equal treatment has removed the Protestant bible, public prayer, and other divisive religious practices from the public schools. It has motivated a powerful movement to provide equal educational experiences for all people regardless of race, ethnicity, and sex – resulting in the formal desegregation of schools and in attempts to remove race and gender stereotypes from textbooks, incorporate the experiences of nonwhites and females in the curriculum (through the movement for multiculturalism), and reduce discriminatory practices in the classroom. It has led to attacks on tracking and ability grouping because of the potentially discriminatory effects of these practices, fostering in their place such alternatives as heterogeneous grouping and cooperative learning. It has brought about the nationwide effort to reintegrate special education students in the regular classroom, so that handicapping conditions will not consign students to an inferior education. It has spurred the movement by states to equalize financial support for school districts despite unequal tax bases. It has promoted programs of compensatory education and affirmative action in order to make certain that educational equality is not just a formal possibility but a realizable outcome. And it has helped support the recent demand by reformers that all students be held to the same high level of educational performance standards. In addition to citizenship training and equal treatment, the goal of democratic equality has taken a third form, and that is the pursuit of equal access. It is in this form that the goal has perhaps exerted its most powerful impact on the development of American schools (Cohen & Neufeld, 1981). Equal access has come to mean that every American should have an equal opportunity to acquire an education at any educational level. Initially this led to the effort that occupied school reformers for most of the nineteenth century, trying to provide enough schools so that every child could have a seat in an elementary classroom at public expense. After this end was largely accomplished late in the century, the focus of educational opportunity efforts expanded to include the high school, with dramatic effects. What had been a tiny sector of public education, enjoyed primarily by the elite, grew rapidly into a mass system of secondary schooling, with secondary enrollments doubling every decade between 1890 and 1940. Then after the Second World War, higher education became the object of the demand for equal access, leading to an extraordinary expansion of enrollments to the point where attendance at a postsecondary institution became the norm rather than the exception (Labaree, 1990). This pressure to provide access to American schools on a continually widening scale has necessitated an enormous and ever-increasing outpouring of public funds. In addition, the requirement that education at all levels should be open to all segments of the population – and not just the most privileged or even the most able – has exerted a profound effect on all aspects of the institutional structure. It has led to the mass production of teachers, the proliferation of programs and courses, the search for ways to improve pedagogical efficiency, the concern about enhancing administrative control, and the stress on fiscal parsimony – all in order to meet the educational problems raised by the sheer quantity and diversity of the pool of students (Cohen & Neufeld, 1981). Social Efficiency On the one hand, Americans have sought to make schools an institutional expression of their democratic and egalitarian political ideals and a social mechanism for realizing these ideals. Yet, on the other hand, they have also sought to make schools a mechanism for adapting students to the requirements of a hierarchical social structure and the demands of the occupational marketplace. This second educational goal, which I refer to as social efficiency, has exerted its influence on American schools through structural pragmatism – operationalized within schools in the form of vocationalism and educational stratification. Let us consider each of these in turn. The social efficiency goal has shaped American schools by bending them to the practical constraints that are embedded in the market-based structuration (Giddens, 1984) of economic and social life. One clear sign of this influence is the historical trend toward vocationalism. In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, a heterogeneous alliance of leaders from business, labor, and education launched an effort to make the school curriculum more responsive to the needs of the occupational structure. While these groups disagreed about the desired effect of this effort on social mobility, they united in the conviction that schools were in danger of becoming socially irrelevant and economically counterproductive unless they succeeded in better articulating educational content with future job requirements (Lazerson & Grubb, 1974). Then as now, the simple reality was that students eventually leave school and enter the workforce, whether or not their schooling prepared them to carry out this work effectively. In its narrow form, the movement for vocationalism sought to shift the curriculum away from courses that trained students in traditional academic subjects and broadly defined liberal learning and toward programs that provided training in the skills and knowledge required to carry out particular job roles. The result was the creation of a series of strictly vocational programs – which quickly became an enduring part of the American curriculum, particularly at the secondary and (later) community-college levels – preparing students for such future jobs as auto mechanic, lathe operator, beautician, secretary, and draftsperson. The value of these programs, from the perspective of social efficiency, is that they offer a thoroughly practical education, which provides a steady supply of employees who are adequately trained to fill particular jobs. Nothing could be more impractical, from this perspective, than the kind of general education promoted by democratic equality, in which graduates would emerge as an undifferentiated group with a common set of broad competencies that are not easily adapted to the sharply differentiated skill-demands of a complex job structure. For example, following this logic, Michigan’s governor in 1996 moved to shift funds from adult education into job training, since, as the head of the state Jobs Commission put it, “It’s more important to align adult education programs with the needs of employers rather than to educate people for education’s sake” (Cole, 1996). Yet the impact of vocationalism on schooling has been much broader than what is reflected in this explicitly vocational curriculum, which has never accounted for more than a small minority of the courses taken by high school students. For example, only 16 percent of the Carnegie units accumulated by 1992 high school graduates were in vocational courses (National Center for Education Statistics, 1995, table 132). The true significance of vocationalism is visible in the philosophical shift that took place in the general aims of American schooling in the period following 1890. The essence of this shift was captured by the president of the Muncie, Indiana school board, who in the 1920s told Robert and Helen Lynd (1929, p. 194), “For a long time all boys were trained to be President… Now we are training them to get jobs.”  More important than the inclusion of typing classes alongside those in history was this fundamental change in the purposes of schooling – from a lofty political goal (training students to be citizens in a democratic society, perhaps to be president) to a practical economic goal (getting students ready to enter the work force, preparing them to adapt to the social structure). This change affected students who were going to college as much as those in the auto shop. The social efficiency argument for education is found at the heart of nearly every educational address delivered by a governor or president, every school board’s campaign for a millage increase or bond issue, every educational reform document. Consider the florid but not atypical language found in the opening words of  A Nation at Risk, the report that kicked off the movement in the 1980s and 90s to raise educational standards: Our Nation is at risk. Our once unchallenged preeminence in commerce, industry, science, and technological innovation is being overtaken by competitors throughout the world…  We report to the American people that…the educational foundations of our society are presently being eroded by a rising tide of mediocrity that threatens our very future as a nation and a people. ( National Commission on Excellence in Education, 1983, p. 5) Other documents in the standards movement have also prominently touted the economic benefits of raising academic requirements. The National Education Goals Panel (1995, p. 11), for example, asserts in Goal 3 that “By the year 2000, all students will leave grades 4, 8, and 12 having demonstrated competency over challenging subject matter…so they may be prepared” not only for “responsible citizenship” and “further learning” but also for “productive employment in our Nation’s modern economy.”  What makes this kind of appeal such an irresistible part of educational rhetoric is its immense practicality. The logic is compelling:  Schooling supplies future workers with skills that will enhance their productivity and therefore promote economic growth. This logic allows an educational leader to argue that support for education is not just a matter of moral or political correctness but a matter of good economic sense. Schooling from this perspective can be portrayed as a sensible mechanism for promoting our economic future, an investment in human capital that will pay bountiful dividends for the community as a whole and ultimately for each individual taxpayer. After all, the majority of taxpayers at any one point in time do not have children attending the public schools. These citizens are not deriving direct benefit from the education provided by these schools, and they may well feel that the indirect political benefits promised by the democratic-equality rationale are rather remote and ephemeral compared with the immediate loss of income occasioned by an increase in school taxes. For this group, the social efficiency argument may well strike a chord with them by pointedly asserting that their jobs, their pensions, and their family’s economic well-being depends on the ability of schools to turn out productive workers.  At the same time, public officials who have to approve the annual budget for education – which swallows up fully one-third of all state and local revenues (National Center for Educational Statistics, 1995, table 33) – also find the social efficiency rationale helpful because of the way it reassures them that this expenditure is not a waste of public money but instead a sound investment. Over the years, the idea that schools should be making workers more than making republicans has undermined the ability of schools to act as a mechanism for promoting equality of access and equality of treatment. The notion of educational equality is at best irrelevant to the expansion of GNP, and it is counterproductive in a capitalist economy, where the pursuit of competitive advantage is the driving force behind economic behavior. Thus, under the pressure to be economically productive, schools have adopted a structure that is highly stratified. One form this has taken is in the emerging hierarchy of educational levels, leading from elementary school to high school to college and then graduate school. The upward expansion of enrollment in this hierarchy over time, while increasing the average years of schooling for the population as a whole, has also provided access to higher levels of education at which individuals can be distinguished from the herd, with the key division being between those who persist in education and those who drop out at an earlier level. From the perspective of democratic equality, this educational division represents a serious political and social problem. But from the perspective of social efficiency, the vertical distribution of educational attainment is quite desirable, since it reflects the vertical structure of the job market and therefore helps efficiently allocate individuals to particular locations in the workforce, as students move horizontally from a given level in the educational hierarchy to a corresponding level in the occupational hierarchy. And in the view of social efficiency, this allocation is seen to be both logical and fair, because those who have advanced farther up the educational ladder are seen as having learned more and therefore having acquired greater human capital – which promises to make them more skillful and productive employees. These quantitative distinctions are further enhanced by the qualitative differences that have emerged between schools within each level of the educational system. For example, employers and students alike know that all colleges are not created equal. A degree from an Ivy League college is worth considerably more in the job market than one from a regional state university, since employers assume that a graduate from the former is smarter and better educated, which then makes that graduate a potentially more productive employee. As a consequence, college graduates are stratified in a way that reflects the stratification within the white collar sector of the occupational structure. A similar logic is at work in stratifying high schools, with a diploma from a wealthy suburban high school granting the bearer greater access to advanced education and good jobs than a diploma from a high school in a poor inner-city neighborhood. Again, democracy and efficiency are exerting conflicting pressures on American education to move toward greater equality on the one hand and greater inequality on the other. Even within individual schools, the academic experience of students (beginning in the 1890s) has become increasingly stratified (Oakes, 1985). Ability grouping and curriculum tracking guarantee that even those who have completed the same number of years in school will frequently have had educational experiences that are quite different in both academic content and economic value. The result is the same as with stratification between levels of schooling and between schools at the same level. With students sorted according to both putative ability and the requirements of different job roles (high reading group vs. low reading group, academic track vs. vocational track), schools create educational channels that efficiently carry groups of students toward different locations in the occupational structure. Thus while the goal of democratic equality promotes schools that prepare students for the full range of political and social roles in the community, the social efficiency goal promotes a structure of schooling that limits these possibilities in the name of economic necessity. One thing to keep in mind, however, is that although social efficiency promotes the sorting of students, and although this sorting often leads to the limitation of opportunities for these students, at the same time this goal provides strong support for the social value of student learning at all levels of the system. From the social efficiency perspective, society counts on schools to provide the human capital it needs to enhance productivity in all phases of economic life, which means that schools must assure that everyone engages in serious learning – whether they are in college or kindergarten, suburb or inner city, top track or bottom track. In this sense then, social efficiency treats education as a public good, whose collective benefits can only be realized if instruction is effective and learning is universal. As we will see next, none of this is true in the case of the third goal. Social Mobility Whereas social efficiency argues that schools should adapt students to the existing socioeconomic structure, the social mobility goal asserts that schools should provide students with the educational credentials they need in order to get ahead in this structure (or to maintain their current position). Both of these goals accept the inequality at the heart of a market society as given, and both are eager for schools to adapt themselves to the demands of such a society. Where they differ is in the vantage point they assume in looking at the role of schooling in a market society. The efficiency goal focuses on the needs of the social system as a whole (adopting the perspective of the provider of educational services – the state, the policymakers who lead it, and the taxpayers who support it – and of the employer who will put the graduates to work), but the mobility goal focuses on the needs of individual educational consumers. One sees the system from the top down, the other from the bottom up. One sees it as meeting a collective need, and the other as meeting an individual need. As a result, from the perspective of the efficiency goal, it does not matter who ends up filling which job. As long as all jobs are filled with competent people, the individual outcomes of the allocation process are seen as irrelevant to the efficient operation of the system. But from the perspective of the mobility goal, the outcome for the individual is precisely what matters most. The result is an emphasis on individual status attainment rather than the production of human capital. One useful way of capturing these differences is to note that the social efficiency goal (like the democratic equality goal) conceives of education as a public good whereas the social mobility goal conceives of it as a distinctly private good. A public good is one whose benefits are enjoyed by all the members of the community, whether or not they actually contributed to the production of this good. Police protection, street maintenance, public parks, open-air sculpture, and air pollution control are all examples of public goods that potentially benefit all members of a community, whether or not they paid the taxes that were necessary to provide these services. In the language of public goods theory, public goods offer people a “free ride” (Olson, 1971). Schools that focus on giving everyone the skills required for effective citizenship (as proposed by the democratic equality goal) are public goods, for  they offer a free ride to all children regardless of ability to pay and at the same time provide a benefit to all members of society (a sustainable political system, competent and informed fellow citizens) regardless of whether they or their children ever attended these schools. Schools are also public goods if they provide the human capital required by the economy and effectively fit students into slots in the occupational structure (as proposed by the social efficiency goal), since the community as a whole is seen as reaping the benefit from this institution in the form of a growing economy and a stable economic future. Once again, the benefits are collective in that they accrue to everyone[8] whether or not he or she contributed to the support of these schools or even attended them. Childless adults and families with children in private schools all enjoy the political and economic benefits of public schools when viewed from the perspective of democratic equality and social efficiency. However, one reaches a very different conclusion when looking at schools as a private good (Hirschman, 1970). The consumer perspective on schools asks the question, “What can school do for me, regardless of what it does for others?”  The benefits of education are understood to be selective and differential rather than collective and equal. The aim of pursuing education is for the individual student to accumulate forms of educational property that will allow that student to gain an advantage in the competition for social position. This means that what I gain from my educational experience is my own private property, and the more of this property that I can acquire the better chance I have to distinguish myself from the rest of the pack and win the social competition.[9] The impact of this perspective on schools is profound. One such impact is to promote the stratification of education – which, as I noted earlier, is also promoted by the social efficiency goal. The last thing that a socially mobile educational consumer wants out of education is the kind of equal educational outcome produced in the name of democratic equality. Thomas Green and colleagues (1980, p. 25), in their book Predicting the Behavior of the Educational System, put it this way:  “What parents want is not that their children have equal opportunity, but that they get the best that is possible, and that will always mean opportunities ‘better than some others get.’”  This can only take place if education is structured in such a manner that the social benefits of education are allocated differentially, with some students receiving more than others (Collins, 1979; Boudon, 1974). In their role as self-interested educational consumers, therefore, parents want an educational system that is stratified, and this stratification takes the same three forms identified previously in the discussion of  social efficiency (Hogan, 1987). First, they demand that schooling take the form of a graded hierarchy, which requires students to climb upward through a sequence of grade levels and graded institutions and to face an increasing risk of elimination as they approach the higher levels of the system. The result is a system shaped much like a pyramid. As students ascend through high school, college, and graduate or professional school, they move into an atmosphere that is increasingly rarefied, as the numbers of fellow students begin to fall away and the chance for gaining competitive advantage grows correspondingly stronger. And from the social mobility perspective, the chance to gain advantage is the system’s most salient feature. There is convincing evidence that consumer demand for this kind of educational distinction (rather than a societal demand for human capital) has been largely responsible for driving the extraordinary upward expansion of education in the U.S. during the last 150 years (Brown, 1995; Collins, 1979; Labaree, 1988; Hogan, 1987). For as enrollments have moved toward universality at one level (first the grammar school, then the high school, and most recently the college), the demand for social distinction necessarily has shifted to the next higher level. Randall Collins describes the social consequences of this ongoing effort to establish and maintain relative educational advantage: As education has become more available, the children of the higher social classes have increased their schooling in the same proportions as children of the lower social classes have increased theirs; hence the ratios of relative educational attainment by social classes [have] remained constant throughout the last 50 years and probably before (Collins, 1979, p. 183). Second, since each level of the system constitutes a rather large category offering at best rather crude distinctions, consumer-minded parents or students also demand a structure of education that offers qualitative differences between institutions at each level. As a result, they want to attend the high school or college that has the best reputation and therefore can offer its graduates the greatest distinction in competition with graduates from the lesser institutions (Kingston & Lewis, 1990; Cookson & Persell, 1985; Levine, 1986). This kind of reputational difference can lead to preferential access to jobs and further education. Which is why the value of a house in any community depends in part on the marketability of the local school system; and why wealthy suburban communities aggressively defend the high status of their school systems by resisting any efforts to reduce the striking differences between systems – such as efforts to redistribute tax revenues in order to equalize per capita school spending, or to bus students across district boundaries in order to reduce class and race discrepancies between schools (Kozol, 1991; Rubin, 1972). At the college and graduate level, the same kind of concern leads to an intense effort by consumers to gain admission to the most highly regarded institutions (Klitgaard, 1985). Parents are willing to spend as much as $30,000 a year to send their child to an Ivy League school, where the reputational rewards are potentially the greatest (Fox, 1993; Griffin & Alexander, 1978). As a result, universities are well aware of how important their reputational rank is in helping them maintain market position. “In the competition for resources,” says the spokesman at Pennsylvania State University, “reputation becomes the great variable on which everything else depends. The quality of students, faculty and staff an institution attracts; the volume of research grants and contracts, as well as private gifts; the degree of political support – all these and more hinge on reputation” (Eng & Heller, 1996). Within this status-conscious world of higher education, high tuition may not be a deterrent but an attraction, since it advertises the exclusivity and high standing of the institution (which then offers discounts under the counter in the form of scholarships).[10] Third, consumers demand a stratified structure of opportunities within each institution, which offers each child the chance to become clearly distinguished from his or her fellow students. This means they want the school to have reading groups (high, medium, and low), pull-out programs for both high achievers (gifted and talented programs) and low achievers (special education), high school tracks offering parallel courses in individual subjects at a variety of levels (advanced placement, college, general, vocational, remedial), letter grades (rather than vague verbal descriptions of progress), comprehensive standardized testing (to establish differences in achievement), and differentiated diplomas (endorsed or not endorsed, Regents or regular). Parents are well aware that the placement of their children in the right ability group or program or track can give them an advantage in the competition for admission to the right school and the right job and as insurance against early elimination in education’s process of “tournament mobility” (Rosenbaum, 1976; Oakes, 1985; Griffin & Alexander, 1978). As a result, they actively lobby to gain the right placement for their children; and they vigorously resist when educators (pursuing a more egalitarian vision) propose elimination of some form of within-school distinction or another, such as by promoting multi-ability reading groups, ending curriculum tracking, or dropping the gifted and talented program (Wells & Serna, 1996; Cusick, 1992). However, since the consumer approach to education is so highly individualized, the kind of pressure that it exerts on schools in any given case depends on the particular social position of the individual consumer. For those at the middle and lower ends of the social structure, the aim is social mobility, a chance to move up; but for those toward the upper end, the aim is to hold onto an already attractive position and try to transfer this advantage to their children through the medium of education. Bourdieu (1986) defines the latter strategy succinctly as the effort to transform economic capital and social capital into cultural capital. In order to pull off this transformation, the advantaged call for an educational system that offers a variety of vertical options, which allow them to get their own children into the upper levels of whatever options are available – the most advanced degrees (M.D., J.D., Ph.D.), the most exclusive institution at a given educational level (an Ivy League college), and the top curricular stratum within a given institution (the gifted program). But for the more disadvantaged families, these upper-level options are a longshot at best, and as a result they may well see such options as a refuge for the privileged that undermine the chances for their own children to gain access to more basic forms of educational property:  a decent elementary school, a high school diploma, a vocational program at the community college. The social mobility goal, therefore, by portraying education as a consumer commodity, produces different kinds of effects on education depending on the social class of the consumers in a given educational setting, since the social position of these consumers affects their perception of their own educational needs. One result is that pressures for intensive competition and radical stratification of education are likely to come more strongly from the those at the top of the social scale than from those at the bottom. It is elite parents that see the most to gain from the special distinctions offered by a stratified educational system and therefore they are the ones who play the game of academic one-upmanship most aggressively. It is they who can afford to bid up the price of a house in the right school district and of a diploma from the right college. In fact, the social mobility perspective often puts groups in conflict with each other, such as when working class parents press to get their children greater access to educational benefits (by being bused to a better school or being provided with stronger preparation in basic skills) and upper-middle class parents press to hold onto the educational advantages they already have (by preserving their monocultural neighborhood school or establishing a gifted program) (Oakes, 1985; Wells & Serna, 1996; Rubin, 1972, 1976). This fractured and contradictory impact of the social mobility goal on schools, arising from its view of education as a private good, distinguishes it from both of the other goals, whose view of education as a public good leads to a more coherent and generalized form of pressure on education grounded in the perceived needs of the community as a whole. Another major impact of the social mobility goal on education derives from the way it treats education as a form of exchange value, in contrast with the other two goals, for whom education is a form of use value. In the latter cases, the citizen and the taxpayer (or employer) place value on education because they consider the content of what is learned there to be intrinsically useful. Both look on education as providing students with a useful array of competencies – that are required either for constructive citizenship in a democratic society (democratic equality) or for productive work in a market society (social efficiency). However, things look different from the perspective of social mobility. The value of education from this point of view is not intrinsic but extrinsic, since the primary aim is to exchange one’s education for something more substantial – namely a job, which will provide the holder with a comfortable standard of living, financial security, social power, and cultural prestige. Jobs tend to be allocated to a significant extent based on the quantity and quality of education that the applicants have, characteristics that determine a person’s location in what Thurow (1977) calls the “labor queue.”  And the easiest and most common way for employers to measure these educational differences is by examining the level and institutional prestige of a candidate’s educational credentials (Spence, 1974). They assume that by selecting candidates with the best credentials (those at the head of the queue) they are obtaining employees who have acquired the highest level of productive skills; however, they rarely look beyond the credentials to test this assumption (Berg, 1971). As a result, educational credentials come to take on a life of their own. Their value derives not from the useful knowledge they symbolize but from the kind of job for which they can be exchanged. And the latter exchange value is determined by the same forces as that of any other commodity, through the fluctuation of supply and demand in the marketplace – the scarcity of a particular credential relative to the demand for that credential among employers (Collins, 1979).[11] From the perspective of social efficiency, the use value and exchange value of education are inextricably linked, and therefore this distinction does not pose any educational or social problems. Drawing on neoclassical economics, the proponents of this goal argue that the exchange value of a diploma is simply a reflection of the human capital that it embodies. Accordingly, a higher degree is seen as worth more on the market than a lower degree because it represents a greater amount of usable knowledge, of knowledge that is economically productive (Becker, 1964; Schultz, 1961). However, there is a wealth of evidence to the contrary, suggesting that, from the moment educational credentials came to be a primary mechanism for allocating people to jobs, the exchange value of these credentials began to separate from the learning that went into acquiring them. This emerging independence of educational exchange value from its connection to usable knowledge is the most persuasive explanation for many of the most highly visible characteristics of contemporary educational life – such as, overcredentialing (the chronic overproduction of advanced degrees relative to the occupational need for advanced skills) and credential inflation (the rising level of educational attainment required for jobs whose skill requirements are largely unchanged) (Collins, 1979; Dore, 1976; Freeman, 1976; Rumberger, 1981; and Shelley, 1992). Consider the effects of all this on education. When they see education through the lens of social mobility, students at all levels quickly come to the conclusion that what matters most is not the knowledge they learn in school but the credentials they acquire there. Grades, credits, and degrees – these become the objects to be pursued. The end result is to reify the formal markers of education and displace the substantive content. Students learn to do what it takes to acquire the necessary credentials, a process that may involve learning some of the subject matter (at least whatever is likely to be on the next test) but also may not. After all, if exchange value is key, then it makes sense to work at acquiring the maximum number of markers for the minimum investment of time, money, and intellectual energy. The payoff for a particular credential is the same no matter how it was acquired, so it is rational behavior to try to strike a good bargain, to work at gaining a diploma, like a car, at a substantial discount. The effect on education is to emphasize form over content – to promote an educational system that is willing to reward students for formal compliance with modest performance requirements rather than for demonstrating operational mastery of skills deemed politically and socially useful (Steinberg, 1996; Sedlak et al., 1986; Powell et al., 1985; Cusick, 1983). One final consequence of the social mobility goal is to pressure education to take on a meritocratic form. From the perspective of the consumer, education is an arena for zero-sum competition filled with self-interested actors seeking opportunities for gaining educational distinctions at the expense of each other. This is especially true for families from the upper middle class, whose experience demonstrates the enormity of the potential benefit that can accrue from education and whose privileged starting position means that they also have a long distance to fall if the educational outcomes do not turn out in their favor. In this Hobbesian setting, the competitors are equally worried about winning and losing, about taking advantage of others and having others take advantage of them. The resulting atmosphere of mutual wariness leads to a collective call for the educational system to organize the competition in a relatively fair and open manner, so that the competitors with the greatest individual merit will be most likely to emerge at the top. This approach to establishing a fair structure for educational competition takes a meritocratic form in large part because of the dominant place that meritocratic ideology occupies in American life. It is an ideology that captures in idealized form the entrepreneurial traits and values rewarded by a capitalist economy and projects them onto social life in general:  the capacity and desire to struggle for advantage in a fiercely competitive social hierarchy, where success or failure is determined solely by individual merit. Whereas proponents of democratic equality have seen schools both as a hothouse setting for the practice of their political[12] ideal (and as an institution that could produce the kinds of citizens required by a democratic society), proponents of meritocratic principles have seen schools as a proving ground for their market ideal (and as an institution for producing individuals who can function efficiently in a market society). Over the years the meritocratic principle has embedded itself within the structure and process of American schooling in a multitude of ways. The self-contained classroom, the graded curriculum, simultaneous instruction, and individual evaluation – the basic pedagogical pattern of modern schooling – emerged in short order after the introduction of the common school. This pattern was ideally suited to the construction of a model educational meritocracy (Hogan, 1987, 1989, 1990, 1992; Labaree, 1988, 1996). It placed students into groups based on similarity of socio-cognitive development and educational preparation, exposed them to the same course of instruction, and then rated them on the basis of their individual performance. The resulting structure, as Parsons (1959) and Dreeben (1968) have noted, has proven over the years to be an ideal environment for fostering interpersonal competition and individual achievement. By partially buffering students from the effects of ascriptive social influences (such as age and social class), this form of school places students in the midst of a meritocratic game characterized by a degree of formal equality that is unrealizable in real life. It accomplishes this by means of physical isolation from society, a strong norm of achievement as the legitimate criterion of evaluation, an academic curriculum (which provides a formally neutral field of competition), and a set of abstract and distinctively academic rewards. Of course, meritocracy is much more visible in the upper levels of the stratified structure of schooling than in the lower levels. It is in the gifted programs, the advanced placement tracks, the wealthy suburban high schools, and the elite universities that competitive achievement is most intense; but in the remedial classes, the vocational track, the poor inner-city high schools, and the open-admission colleges, the urge to compete is weaker, and the struggle for academic achievement is relaxed. Students from the lower and working classes see the possibility of social mobility through education more as a frail hope than a firm promise, since the experience of their families and friends is that the future is uncertain and the relevance of education to that future is doubtful. As a result, they are less likely to delve headlong into the meritocratic fray within education, often looking at educational achievement as a lost cause or a sucker’s game (Eckert, 1989; Connell et al., 1982; MacLeod, 1995; Oakes, 1985).  Despite the weak hold of the meritocracy on the lower levels of the educational system, however, American education defines itself in meritocratic terms and derives a considerable amount of cultural power from its position as the institution that tries hardest to achieve the meritocratic ideal (Bowles & Gintis, 1976; Carnoy & Levin, 1985). The impact of this effort on the classroom is profound. We see it in the stress on evaluation – ranging from the informal question-response-evaluation triad that characterizes so much of classroom interaction to the formal standardized tests that play such a significant role in American schools. We see it in the stress on competition, over such things as who can give the right answer, who can finish first, or who can attain the highest grade. We can see it in the process of “normalizing judgment” (Foucault, 1977) – rating the performance of each student relative to the others on a bell-shaped curve of student scores – that is embodied in that characteristically American form of testing, the norm-referenced multiple-choice examination. We can see it in the construction of merit-based hierarchies of learners, such as ability groups and curriculum tracks and the whole panoply of other forms of educational stratification. And we can see it in the emphasis on knowledge as private property, which is accumulated for one’s personal benefit (under conditions in which sharing is cheating) and which has a value that is measured in the currency of grades, credits, and credentials. Historical Patterns of Goal Ascendancy Now that I have reviewed the basic characteristics of the three major goals embedded in American education, I would like to consider briefly the relative prominence of individual goals at different points in recent history.[13]  At one level, the history of educational goals in the U.S. is a story of shifting priorities, as particular goals come into favor, then slide into the background, only to reemerge later with renewed vigor. These kinds of pendulum swings are what gives the history of educational policy and reform its episodic quality, with old issues resurfacing regularly in policy talk and with old reforms continually recycling through the educational system (Tyack & Cuban, 1995). In the common school era (the mid nineteenth century), democratic equality was the dominant goal of American education; the primary outcomes education was asked to produce were political and moral, the preservation of the commonwealth in the face of the rise of capitalist social and economic relations. Issues of social efficiency and social mobility were visible but muted. But late in the century, both of the latter rose into prominence. The potential for getting ahead via education grew increasingly into a potent reality, and the growing enrollments in the upper elementary grades began to precipitate a consumer demand for distinctive credentials at the high school and college level. At the same time, educational leaders were growing concerned about how to deal with an increasingly large and heterogeneous group of students at the high school level and how to prepare these students for entry into an increasingly differentiated work force. As a result, the progressive era (at the start of the twentieth century) was dominated by social mobility and social efficiency concerns, and school curriculum and educational opportunity became markedly more stratified – with the invention of tracking, vocationalism, ability testing, and the comprehensive high school. The democratic equality strain of progressivism largely lost out to the kind of administrative progressivism that pushed these changes (Tyack, 1974). By the 1960s and 70s, however, the tide turned toward democratic equality (in conjunction with social mobility) as the national movement for racial equality infused schooling and spilled over into efforts to provide an education that was socially inclusive and offered equal opportunity across lines of class, gender, and handicapping condition as well as race. Then in the 1980s and 90s, the momentum shifted toward the movement for educational standards, which emphasized social efficiency (again in conjunction with social mobility). The standards effort reflected a growing concern about economic competitiveness and the need for education to supply the human capital required for increased economic productivity; it also reflected a growing worry about the exchange value of high school and college credentials in the face of their wide availability. At another level, however, the history of American educational change is less a story of pendulum swings than of steady evolutionary growth[14] in the influence of one goal, social mobility – both in conjunction with and at the expense of the others. From this perspective, the most striking thing about that history is the way the consumer conception of education has gradually come to dominate the structure of American schooling as well as the policy talk about schools. It seems increasingly that no reform is possible, and neither of the other two goals can be advanced effectively, without tapping into the concerns raised by social mobility:  the need for education to maintain its value as a consumer good that can provide individuals with social advantage. The prominent role played by consumer-generated market pressures is one of the key things that makes American education so distinctive in comparison with educational systems elsewhere in the world. As Ralph Turner (1960) has argued, American education is uniquely influenced by a concern for promoting what he calls “contest mobility,” with the result that the system emphasizes winning over learning and opportunity over efficiency. A number of scholars have pointed out the ways that American educational institutions act in a peculiarly entrepreneurial manner in an effort to cater to the demands of their consumers. This market sensitivity is the result of a number of factors, including:  weak state and even weaker federal influence; radically decentralized control; vulnerability to local political and parental influence; a dependency on per-capita funding (via state appropriations or tuition); the need to attract local support for millage and bond elections;  the absence of general standards for curriculum and academic performance; the tradition of relatively free student choice in selecting classes, programs, and institutions; open access to higher education without effective standardized screening mechanisms; and a highly competitive buyers’ market at the post-secondary level (Brown, 1995; Trow, 1988; Collins, 1979; Labaree, 1990).  And as we have seen, the result is that American education at all levels is infused with market structures and processes that emphasize consumer choice, competition, stratified curriculum, the preservation of local autonomy (for schools districts and individual institutions), and a rapid response to consumer demand (Hogan, 1989, 1990, 1992; Cohen & Neufeld, 1981; Labaree, 1995). THE PECULIARITIES OF SOCIAL MOBILITY: INTERACTION EFFECTS Part of the reason for the powerful influence of the social mobility goal in the American setting is its remarkable flexibility. Over the years, people from a diverse array of political persuasions have incorporated this goal into their educational rhetoric. The reason for the heterogeneous uses of this goal can be found in the contradictory elements that lie at its core. In the next section and the one that follows, I explore the nature of these contradictions by examining how the social mobility goal at times works to reinforce democratic equality in opposition to social efficiency and at other times works to reinforce social efficiency in opposition to democratic equality. Social Mobility vs. Social Efficiency The social mobility goal for schooling, arising from the values and beliefs inherent in meritocratic ideology, embodies the liberal vision of free choice and limitless possibilities that has helped make capitalist democracy such an appealing model for the organization of political and socio-economic life. This ideology promises students that through schooling they can achieve anything within the limits of their own desire and personal capabilities. The social efficiency goal, arising from the sobering reality of social inequality within the socio-economic structure of such a society, represents the collective limits that confine these possibilities. This structure provides schools and colleges with practical inducements to imitate society’s hierarchical form and adopt educational practices that will meet that society’s basic structural needs – that is, to reproduce the current social structure by ensuring that children are competently prepared for and efficiently allocated to the society’s full array of occupational roles and social positions. These two visions of schooling – one optimistic and expansive, the other pragmatic and restrictive – inevitably come into conflict over the course of development that schools should follow. In fact, much of the visible conflict about American education has boiled down to this difference between mobility and efficiency. Politically this conflict has taken the familiar form of a dispute between liberals and conservatives. (A classic example is the long-standing fight over whether to increase the access to higher education beyond the minimum needed to meet employer demand (Labaree, 1990).) However, a key to the power of the social mobility goal to shape the course of American educational history lies in the educational concerns that it shares with the democratic equality goal.[15]  One of these is a strong shared interest in expanding access to education, and another is a joint understanding that, at least for the near term, schools should be made more meritocratic. For those concerned with promoting democracy, the effort to provide ever-widening access to education is essential for the production of capable citizens who are able to participate politically on equal terms. For those concerned with promoting social mobility, such a trend toward greater access is necessary if everyone is going to have an equal chance to get ahead. Although meritocratic schooling can and does undermine democratic equality by promoting unequal educational and social outcomes (as pointed out in the previous section), it nonetheless represents progress toward democratic equality to the extent that it introduces individual achievement as the basis for allocating educational rewards in place of allocation based on ascribed characteristics such as class, race, and gender. Consider, for a moment, the basic political and ideological characteristics that define each of the three educational goals. The educational program for democratic equality has a political identity that is democratic and a social ideology that is egalitarian. The program for social mobility promotes classical liberal politics (based on personal liberty, free markets, and individual choice) and meritocratic ideology (promoting equal opportunity for individual advancement rather than equal outcomes for all). The political and social common ground between these two approaches is a territory that historians have generally referred to as progressive, which is a compromise between democratic and liberal politics and between egalitarian and meritocratic social ideologies. In contrast, the educational program for social efficiency projects conservative politics (grounded in preserving elite political control through the retention of differences in political competency and access) and a social vision that is reproductive (reinforcing the existing structure of social inequality by adapting newcomers to play needed rather than desired roles within this structure). The two issues that constitute the area of overlap between the democratic equality and social mobility goals – educational opportunity and individual achievement – define the core of a consensus that has driven progressive educational politics in this country for the last century and a half. A disparate array of constituencies have rallied behind this program. Organizations representing the working class, ethnic minorities, and women have all seen this educational agenda as a means for becoming participants in the political process and for gaining access to the more attractive social positions. For the middle and upper classes, the progressive program offered the chance to move up the ladder another rung or two or to reinforce an already comfortable social position with the legitimacy that comes from being seen as having earned this position through educational achievement. The successes scored by this coalition have been extraordinary. These include:  the phenomenal expansion of educational enrollments over the years and the continual extension of educational opportunity upward into the secondary and tertiary levels; the sharp and largely effective attack on de jure racial segregation in schooling and similar efforts to reduce segregation and enhance educational opportunities for women and handicappers; the dramatic growth in the public subsidy for education at all levels; the explosion in the number of educational course, program, and institutional choices offered to students; the emphasis on general over specialized education at all levels in order to preserve student options; the openness with which the educational system welcomes back students who had dropped out and then decide to re-enter the system; and the capacity of the system to consider both individual merit (grades, achievement tests, SATs) and community right (affirmative action, social promotion, open admissions) in determining access to higher levels of education. Most important of all these successes, however, is the strong trend in the United States toward a system of allocating status on the basis of a formal educational voucher of individual merit – that is, hiring persons because of their educational credentials rather than their ascribed characteristics. In this sense, the rise of the credentials market itself is perhaps the proudest achievement of this progressive coalition. As Hurn (1985, pp. 135-136) has noted, allocation by credentials, in spite of its limits and negative side effects, may still be the most progressive option available, since it keeps opportunity open by intervening in the process of simple status ascription. The primary opposition to this progressive strand of American education politics has come from the proponents of social efficiency. This group is also a complex coalition. There are policymakers (politicians and educational bureaucrats), who are worried about the high cost of supporting many parts of the educational establishment when the economic utility of this investment is slight. There are employers and business leaders, who fear that their immediate manpower needs are not being filled by persons with appropriate skills or that they will have to provide training for employees at their own expense. There are educational administrators, who are concerned about how to justify the social investment in schools and how to carve out a stable share of the competitive educational market. There are middle and upper class parents, who are less concerned about getting ahead (given their children’s reasonably secure future) than about containing the cost of public subsidies for the less fortunate. And there are working class and lower-middle class educational consumers, who are more worried about getting a job than about getting ahead and who therefore want an education with clear and immediate vocational prospects. In addition, at the most general level, social efficiency in education is a concern for any and all adult members of American society in their role as taxpayers. As citizens, they can understand the value of education in producing an informed and capable electorate; as consumers, they can understand its value in presenting themselves and their children with selective opportunities for competitive social advantage; but as taxpayers, they are compelled to look at education as a financial investment – not in their own children, which is the essence of the consumer perspective, but in other people’s children. The result is that adults in their taxpayer role tend to apply more stringent criteria to the support of education as a public good than they do in their role as consumers thinking of education as a private good. Grubb and Lazerson (1982, p. 52) put the problem this way:  In contrast to the deep love we feel and express in private, we lack any sense of ‘public love’ for children, and we are unwilling to make public commitments to them except when we believe the commitments will pay off. As a result, cost-benefit criteria have dictated the kinds of activities the state might support… Thus the taxpayer perspective applies a criterion to the support of education for other people’s children that is both stingier than that arising from the consumer perspective and also loaded down with an array of contingencies that make support dependent on the demonstrated effectiveness of education in meeting strict economic criteria – to boost economic productivity, expand the tax base, attract local industry, and make the country more competitive internationally, all at a modest cost per student. For taxpayers in general and for all of the other constituencies of the social efficiency goal for education, the notion of education for social mobility is politically seductive but socially inefficient. Sure, it is nice to think that everyone has a right to all the education he or she wants, and of course everyone would like to get ahead via education; but (say those from the social efficiency perspective) the responsible deployment of societal resources calls for us to look beyond political platitudes and individual interests and to consider the human capital needs of the economy as a whole. From this pragmatic, fiscally conservative, and statist perspective, the primary goal of education is to produce the work force that is required by the occupational structure in its current form and that will provide measurable economic benefits to society as a whole. As a result, efficiency advocates (in response to perceived necessity) work directly counter to many of the goals of mobility advocates – holding up the limited possibilities to be found among existing job openings as an antidote to the limitless optimism of the progressives, and promoting social reproduction rather than political empowerment or individual opportunity. While the progressives are actively raising students’ hopes, the conservatives are arguing for the necessity of, in the words of Burton Clark (1960), “cooling out” many of these same students. Be realistic, say the conservatives; we only need a few doctors and lawyers compared to the number of required clerical workers and machine operators, so schools should be trying to direct students into practical studies that will prepare them efficiently for attainable positions. The struggle between conservatives (representing the goal of social efficiency) and progressives (representing the common ground between the goals of democratic equality and social mobility) has often been fought in this country over the issues of tracking, guidance, and vocationalism (Oakes, 1985; Church & Sedlak, 1976; Lazerson & Grubb, 1974; Katznelson & Weir, 1985). The former argue for guiding students into tracks (on the basis of individual abilities and preferences) where they are taught the vocational skills required for a differentiated array of existing jobs and then channeled directly into these jobs. The latter see this process as a mechanism that blocks individual chances for social mobility and political equality by means of a self-fulfilling prophecy – predicting a working class job role for a working class student and then preparing him or her in such a way that any other outcome is unlikely. The impetus for this form of social efficiency has generally come from the institutional leadership in American education (as agent for the taxpayer, policymaker, and employer), and educational consumers have generally resisted this effort with vigor and considerable success. The history of American higher education makes this pattern particularly clear. The land grant college, teachers’ college, and community college were all invented in large part as a mechanism for providing practical vocational training that policymakers and educators felt was required in order to promote social efficiency. In each case, however, students successfully sought to convert these vocational schools into general-purpose institutions for promoting social mobility. They achieved this end by expressing a clear consumer preference for programs leading to the bachelor of arts degree over those that provided particular job skills. These students have understood the status attainment implications of the debate over vocationalism. Vocational training has meant preparation for the lesser positions in the occupational structure, while a B.A. has provided an entree to the higher levels of this structure. Both forms of education are vocational, in the sense of being oriented toward work; the difference is in whether a student’s education blocks or facilitates access to the more attractive forms of work (Labaree, 1990, 1995; Dougherty, 1994; Brint & Karabel, 1989). The end result of this conflict between progressive and conservative visions of schooling has been a peculiarly American educational structure, characterized by a bold mixture of purposes. On the one hand, education reflects the conservative vision:  Its structure has a pyramid shape similar to that of the occupational structure; tracking within this system is the norm; there are a large number of potential exit points from the system; and there are also a variety of cooling out mechanisms that encourage students to use these exits and go to work. On the other hand, education also has a progressive cast to it: Tracking and other school choices are formally voluntary; the barriers between tracks are low; the opportunities for achieving higher levels of education are realizable; and for every exit there is the possibility of reentry to the system. As a result, in American education high levels of educational and social attainment are a real possibility for students no matter what their social origins. The educational system never absolutely precludes this possibility; its defining characteristic is openness and a reluctance to make any form of educational selection final, the pattern that Turner (1960) calls “contest mobility.”[16]  Yet the probability of achieving significant social mobility through education is small, and this probability grows considerably smaller at every step down the class scale. The reason for the latter is that students from the lower classes tend to exit from the system earlier than those from the upper classes, and the chances of succeeding grow more difficult with every attempt to reenter the system after exiting. In short, the surest way to succeed is to get it right the first time by staying in the fast track at each step along the way, as market-wise consumers from the upper middle class are so good at doing (Kerckhoff, 1993; Oakes, 1985; Wells & Serna, 1996). This conflicted image of the American educational system – as a mechanism for attaining social status that offers unlimited possibilities and restricted probabilities – finds a reflection within the central character of this system’s social mobility goal. For this goal occupies a political and ideological middle ground between democratic equality and social efficiency. On the one hand, it shares some of the concerns of the former and, in combination with it, has helped energize powerful movements of progressive educational reform in this country. In important ways, social mobility has exerted an effect on education that is diametrically opposed to the effect of social efficiency. First, social mobility promotes expanded access to education, while social efficiency opposes this in order to hold down costs. Second, the mobility goal supports the concentration of resources on the highest levels of education (which provides access to the best jobs), while the efficiency goal supports education of high quality at all educational and occupational levels (to provide society with a full range of good human capital). Third, the mobility goal undercuts learning by promoting the acquisition of credentials with the minimum academic effort, while the efficiency goal reinforces learning by asserting the need to upgrade the skills of the workforce.[17] But at the same time, other characteristics of the social mobility goal show a remarkable similarity with the social efficiency approach. The mobility and efficiency goals are both grounded in a pragmatic vision that sees the necessity for schools to adapt to the structure of inequality. Both subordinate schools to the needs of the market. And both lead to a highly stratified structure of education. The social mobility approach to education implies a pyramid of educational opportunity, parallel to the pyramid of available jobs, with the educational credentials market providing the link between the two. This model requires a high rate of educational attrition in order to be effective. Since there are only a small number of the most desirable jobs at the top of the occupational pyramid, education can only provide access to these jobs for a small number of students. Allowing a large number of students to attain the highest levels of education would be counterproductive in that it would put a crowd at the head of the labor queue (Thurow, 1972), providing no one in that crowd with a selective advantage in the competition for the top jobs. Therefore education can only promote social mobility (and simultaneously preserve the positional advantage of the privileged) to the extent that it prevents most students from reaching the top of the educational pyramid. It carries out this mobility and maintenance function by encouraging students to exit at lower levels of the system and by stratifying the credentials earned by students at each educational level (via curriculum tracking within schools and prestige ranking between schools). The result is that, in the name of social mobility, Americans have sought to push their education system in a direction that is in many ways directly opposite to the direction urged by the logic of democratic equality. Let us consider the implications for American schooling of the tension between these two goals. Social Mobility vs. Democratic Equality The social mobility goal has a mixed relationship with the three elements that define the goal of democratic equality. Whereas social mobility shares with its partner in the progressive agenda a concern for equal access, it stands in opposition to the notion of equal treatment and it works directly counter to the ideal of civic virtue. Equal Treatment:  As I suggested at the end of the last section, the effort to create a school system that promotes social mobility is antithetical to the ideal of equal educational treatment. The whole point of such a system is to provide some students with the chance to achieve a higher social position by acquiring an education that is somehow “better” than the education acquired by most other students. To meet this purpose, then, schooling must be highly stratified. In this sense, the social mobility goal is congruent with the social efficiency goal. As shown earlier, stratification has become thoroughly embedded in American schools over the last century in large part because this kind of structure answers to the demands of both goals. While much of this stratification took place in response to the perceived human capital needs of the economy – for example, through the introduction of the vocational track – much of it occurred in response to consumer demand. Students who want to get ahead through schooling (and their parents, who want to create possibilities of success for them) have sought to transform common schooling into uncommon schooling. They have actively pursued educational advantage and spurred educators to meet this demand by developing such opportunities. Civic Virtue:  Schooling students for citizenship means to implant within them the seeds of civic virtue. Yet schooling for social mobility undercuts the ability of schools to nurture the growth of this character trait and the behaviors it fosters: devotion to the political community and a willingness to subordinate private interests to the public interest. Unlike the pursuit of democratic equality, the social mobility goal focuses on the needs of the market rather than those of the polity; and unlike the pursuit of social efficiency, it adopts a perspective on the market that is aggressively individualistic rather than collective. In combination, these mobility-oriented traits form a powerful value, characteristic of capitalist ideology, which Macpherson (1962) calls “possessive individualism,” asserting that it is desirable and legitimate for each person to pursue competitive success in the market. This goal has proven to be a strong force in shaping American schools. It has lured students away from the pursuit of civic virtue by offering them the chance to use schooling as a kind of “cultural currency” (Collins, 1979) that can be exchanged for social position and worldly success. From the perspective of democratic equality, schools should make republicans; from the perspective of social efficiency, they should make workers; but from the perspective of social mobility, they should make winners. In the latter view, the individual sees schools as a mechanism for producing neither a democratic society nor a productive economy but a good job. The most salient outcome of attending school becomes the diploma, whose usefulness derives from its ability to provide the owner with cultural advantage in the competition for positions of privilege within the social structure. In this sense then, social mobility is unique among the three goals in the way it has promoted the commodification of American education. For while social efficiency has subordinated schooling to the human capital demands of the economy, giving educational primacy to the vocational use-value of school learning, the social mobility goal has turned schooling into a cultural commodity, whose value arises less from its intrinsic usefulness than from its exchangeability. School is worth pursuing, from this point of view, because its credentials can buy success. And the ability of these credentials to buy success is determined by the forces of supply and demand in the credentials market that mediates between schooling and the economy. In conjunction with social efficiency, the other market-centered educational goal, social mobility has had the effect of radically narrowing the significance of citizenship training within American schools over the years. Once seen as the overarching goal of the entire educational effort, schooling for citizenship increasingly has been confined to one part of the curriculum (social studies) or even perhaps a single course (civics) while market-oriented practices have become more pervasive (Katznelson & Weir, 1985; Beyer, 1994). Citizenship training has become entombed in such denatured rituals as participating in the Martin Luther King Day assembly, studying the sanitized stories in the history textbook, and learning about the three branches of government. As a practical matter, what schools identify and reward as good citizenship in their students today is often just organizationally acceptable conduct – behaving in accordance with school rules rather than showing a predisposition toward civic virtue. This shift away from the common school vision of schools as “republican machines” appeared as early as the third quarter of the nineteenth century, when schools began to downgrade the significance of shaping student behavior by construing it as a way to promote organizational efficiency rather than a way to promote the character traits required for a democracy. Under growing pressure from a meritocratic (social-mobility based) vision of schooling, educators increasingly began to focus instead on fostering individual academic achievement.[18] Classroom Learning:  Although the social efficiency goal directs student attention away from civic virtue and toward the needs of the economy, it nonetheless reinforces the salience of learning, even if it reduces the range of useful learning to the limits defined by vocational skill requirements. However, as suggested earlier, the social mobility goal effectively undermines the intrinsic value of any learning acquired in school. For if the ultimate utility of schooling for the individual educational consumer is to provide him or her with the credentials that open doors to good jobs, then the content of school learning is irrelevant. What matters is not real learning but what Sedlak and his co-authors (1986) call “surrogate learning:”  “As long as the tests are passed, credits are accumulated, and credentials are awarded, what occurs in most classrooms is allowed to pass for education” (Sedlak et al., 1986, p. 183). The essence of schooling then becomes the accumulation of exchange values (grades, credits, and credentials) that can be cashed in for social status rather than the acquisition of use values (such as the knowledge of algebra or the ability to participate in democratic governance), which provide capacities and resources that an individual can put directly into practice (Steinberg, 1996). As noted earlier, neoclassical economics sees no tension between use value and exchange value, since the latter is assumed to reflect the former. Marx (1967), however, effectively challenged this assumption. In a capitalist society, he argued, the market abstracts social products from their original context and particular function, reifies this abstraction by making it into a generic commodity, and makes it equivalent to all other commodities by assigning it a monetary value.[19]  This is as true of educational credentials as it is of any other social product, such as an agricultural crop, that is created in response to market demand (Goldman & Tickamyer, 1984). From this perspective, schooling for democracy or efficiency is like farming for subsistence. The purpose of the latter is to feed one’s family or community; therefore the farmer has an incentive to plant the full range of crops required to sustain life. Schooling for mobility is like farming for the market. The purpose here is not to grow food but to produce widgets, a generic commodity that can be exchanged for money. Under these conditions, the farmer has an incentive to grow whatever crop will yield the best price on the market. The fact that the farmer’s family members cannot live on soy beans or feed corn does not matter, since they use the money generated by their cash crop to buy what they need to live. Similarly, in schools that operate under a social mobility mandate, students and educators alike have little incentive to see learning as much more than an arbitrary mechanism for accumulating merit points that eventually add up to a diploma. A large number of recent reports and studies point to the relatively low level of academic achievement registered by contemporary American students.[20]  These writers explicitly or implicitly blame a wide variety of factors for this problem: under-educated and under-skilled teachers; distracted, spoiled, and unmotivated students; an educational organization clogged with politics, bureaucracy, and unionism; and an unchallenging, watered-down curriculum. But I am suggesting that it is more valid to point the finger at a powerful purpose for schooling that is at core anti-educational. By structuring schooling around the goal of social mobility, Americans have succeeded in producing students who are well schooled and poorly educated. The system teaches them to master the forms and not the content.[21] As Boudon (1974) has argued, the actors in this educational system are making rational choices. If the goal of schooling is credentials and the process of acquiring these credentials is arbitrary, then it is only rational for students to try to acquire the greatest exchange value for the smallest investment of time and energy. The result is what Sedlak et al. (1986) call “bargaining” and Powell et al. (1985) call “treaties” – in which students seek to strike a good deal with the teacher (less work for a good grade) and the teacher has a weakened rationale for trying to hold them to high academic standards. As Sedlak and colleagues suggest, the essence of this marketplace behavior in schools is captured by a question that echoes through American classrooms: “Will this be on the test?”  Under the bargain-basement educational conditions fostered by the pursuit of social mobility, whatever is not on the test is not worth learning, and whatever is on the test need only be learned in the kind of superficial manner that is required to achieve a passing grade. Equal Access:  The mobility and efficiency goals for education have pushed the common school goal of democratic equality into a corner of the American schoolroom. Citizenship has largely given way to self interest and economic necessity, and equal treatment has succumbed to the powerful pressure (from both consumers and employers) for educational stratification. The only component of the political purposes of schooling that still exerts an undiminished influence on the schools is the ideal of equal access. The expansive political hopes of the common schoolmen over the years have become lodged in this part of the original dream. Yet the influence of this remaining hope on the schools has proven to be substantial, and this influence is perhaps most visible in the way it has undermined the effectiveness of schools at promoting either mobility or efficiency. From the perspective of the mobility and efficiency goals, democratic pressure for equal access to schools has simply gotten out of hand. The problem is that in a society that sees itself as devoted to political equality, it is politically impossible to contain the demand for schooling for very long. Equal access is compatible with either mobility or efficiency, as long as it is interpreted as providing an unlimited possibility for educational attainment combined with a limited probability of acquiring the highest levels of such attainment. Under these conditions, equal access education can still provide opportunity for mobility to a few individuals and can still fill the personpower needs of the pyramid-shaped occupational structure. But the continuing tradition of democratic equality interferes with this comfortable scheme of meritocratic achievement and human capital creation by making it appear hollow for society to offer people broad-based access only to those levels of education that are not associated with the better jobs. In the late nineteenth century, when the experience of elementary schooling was shared by the many and high school was enjoyed by the few, a high school diploma was a ticket to a good position, and thus access to high school became a hot political issue. To keep high school attendance at a low level was a difficult policy to defend in democratic terms, since attendance at that level was precisely what made the notion of equal access socially meaningful. In the mid twentieth century, the same political dilemma confronted policymakers, only this time the target was the college. If high school was generic and college was special, then college credentials were the most valuable, and access to college became the focus of political attention. In both cases the pressure for equal access translated into a demand not just for some form of education but for the level that was most salient for status attainment. And the most useful stratum of schooling for social mobility was that relatively rarefied stratum whose credentials had the highest exchange value (Labaree, 1988, 1990). This pressure for access to the most valuable educational credentials has resulted in the paradox that bedevils modern societies with formally meritocratic opportunity structures:  Levels of educational attainment keep rising while levels of social mobility remain the same. Raymond Boudon’s (1974) simple arithmetic model of educational opportunity and meritocratic status attainment demonstrates why this is so. Politically-induced opportunities for higher-level educational attainment have been growing faster than structurally-induced opportunities for higher-level status attainment; there are more diplomas than good jobs. The result is a stable rate of social mobility and a declining exchange value for educational credentials. CONCLUSION: CONTRADICTION, CREDENTIALISM, AND POSSIBILITY Three purposes have shaped the history of American schooling – democratic equality, social mobility, and social efficiency. In this paper, I have explored some of the ways that these purposes have exerted their separate effects on schools and also the ways that they have interacted over time. Sometimes the effects were additive. For example, mobility and efficiency both promoted educational stratification, and democracy and mobility both exerted pressure for open access. But in other ways, these purposes pushed schools in opposite directions. For example, democracy promoted commonality while the other two promoted differentiation, and democracy and mobility stressed possibilities while efficiency stressed limits. Altogether, these alternative goals have affected American education in a variety of ways, both negative and positive. On the negative side, they have led to internal contradiction and rampant credentialism, but on the positive side they have also provided workable mechanisms for combating these problems. Contradiction One obvious effect of the three goals has been to create within American education a structure that is contradictory and frequently counterproductive. In response to the various demands put upon them, educational institutions are simultaneously moving in a variety of directions that are often in opposition to each other. For example, we systematically sort and select students according to individual merit and then undermine this through homogenizing practices such as grade inflation, social promotion, and whole-class instruction. We bring the entire array of social groups in a community together under one roof in a comprehensive regional high school and then make sure that each group has a distinctly different educational experience there. We offer everyone access to higher education (at the expense of admissions standards, academic rigor, and curriculum prerequisites) while assuring that the social benefits of this access are sharply stratified (at the expense of equal opportunity and social advancement). We focus on using education to prepare people for work (thus undercutting other conceptions of what it means to learn) but then devote most of our effort to providing a thoroughly general education that leaves most graduates unprepared to carry out work responsibilities without extensive on-the-job training. And so on. As a result of being forced to muddle its goals and continually work at cross-purposes, education inevitably turns out to be deficient in carrying out any of these goals very effectively. Pushing harder for one goal (for instance, seeking to promote advanced opportunities for high achievers through development of a “gifted” program) only undercuts another (e.g., trying to promote equal learning opportunities for handicappers through inclusive education). What looks like an educational improvement from one perspective seems like a decline from another. All of this pushing and pulling leaves educational institutions in a no-win situation, for whatever way they move, they are goring someone’s ox. And wherever they choose to stand, they are in a hopelessly compromised situation in which they fulfilling none of the three goals effectively. Instead they must settle for a balancing act among competing pressures, an effort that satisfies no one but instead aims only to create the minimum conflict. So if schools do not seem to work very well, one key reason is that we continue to ask them to achieve ends that are mutually exclusive. Credentialism The primary medium through which Americans have expressed their peculiar mix of goals for schools – sometimes mutually reinforcing and sometimes contradictory – has been the market for educational credentials. This market, as Collins (1979) and Boudon (1974) suggest, is the mechanism that connects schooling and the economy, translating educational attainment into social attainment according to its own internal logic. The centrality of the credentials market derives from the key role played by the social mobility goal in the ideological development of American schooling. After all, in a school system that is determined primarily by the requirements of democratic equality, the problem of occupational placement is irrelevant, and thus the market valuation of educational credentials has little impact on the way schools work. Conversely, in a school system determined primarily by the demands of social efficiency, the problem of filling jobs is paramount, and thus the credentials market is wholly subordinate to the requirements of the occupational structure; under these restrictive conditions, schools produce the precise number of people with the appropriate skills for each of the existing job openings. In either case, the result would be that the credentials market exerts no independent effect on schools, and therefore inefficiencies such as credential inflation – which Boudon’s model predicts and American consumers experience – are simply impossible. In the American setting, however, where the standoff between democracy and the market economy prevents the hegemony of either, social mobility emerges as an intriguing alternative goal for schools. Drawing from both poles of the American ideological spectrum and blurring the differences between these poles, this goal establishes the credentials market as a zone of individual enterprise, located between school and economy, where a few students with “merit” can make their way. In this zone the dominion of social efficiency is relaxed, because here there is no one-to-one relationship between school-acquired skills and jobs. Instead, this relationship is mediated by market forces of supply and demand. The salience of the credentials market creates a realm of possibilities for status attainment and elevates schooling into an instrument for achieving the American dream. Portraying the social structure as a structure of opportunity which can be negotiated by those with the most valuable credentials, the social mobility goal puts a democratic face on the inequalities of capitalism. Yet at the same time, this market preserves the probability of social stasis and social reproduction, since the likelihood of getting ahead is limited by the social structure’s pyramid shape. Countering the pessimism inherent in the goal of social efficiency, the credentials market offers unlimited possibilities for status enhancement; and countering the optimism embodied in the goal of democratic equality, this market provides for only one certainty, and that is the persistence of stratified outcomes. If the social mobility goal holds the crucial middle ground between two opposing purposes for schools, then the credentials market holds the middle ground between two institutions (school and work) that reflect these crossed purposes. In spite of its involvement in the reproduction of inequality, education still represents the political hopes of Americans who see a higher purpose to social life than the achievement of social efficiency. As Carnoy and Levin (1985) have pointed out, schools continue to provide Americans with a social experience that is markedly more egalitarian and more open to free choice and possibilities of self realization than anything that is available to them in the realm of work. The credentials market, then, necessarily becomes the place where the aspirations raised by education meet the cold reality of socio-economic limits, where high educational attainment confronts the modest possibilities for status attainment. The credentials market exists in a state of partial autonomy. Constrained by the institutions that bracket it, this market also exerts an independent impact on both of these institutions. Understanding the nature of the latter impact is crucial to an understanding of the relationship between school and society in the United States. As Collins and Boudon show, the inner logic of the credentials market is quite simple and rational:  Educational opportunities grow faster than social opportunities, the ability of a particular diploma to buy a good job declines, so the value of educational credentials becomes inflated. I have tried to show how this outcome is the natural result of contradictory tendencies woven into the fabric of American life. I have also tried to show how this product of the credentials market has shaped both schools and the economy.[22] Credential inflation affects schools by undermining the incentive for students to learn. The social mobility purpose has already reduced this incentive by making credentials a more important acquisition for students than knowledge and skills. But the devaluation of these credentials then makes it seem like a waste to expend even the minimal effort required to pursue surrogate learning and the acquisition of grades, credits, and diplomas. Credential inflation also affects the larger society. It promotes a futile scramble for higher-level credentials, which is very costly in terms of time and money and which produces little economic benefit. Yet, since the effect of putting a lid on this inflation would be to stifle opportunities for social mobility, there is unlikely to be the political will to implement this ultimate solution to the problem. Instead, the credentials market continues to carry on in a manner that is individually rational and collectively irrational, faithfully reflecting the contradictory purposes that Americans have loaded onto schools and society alike. Possibility Conflicting goals for education can produce a contradictory and compromised structure for educational institutions that sharply impairs their effectiveness. They can also – through the medium of the consumer-driven mobility goal that plays such a key role in this compromised structure – lead to kind of credentialism that is strikingly counterproductive for both education and society. The fact that educational goals are in conflict, however, is not in itself an unmanageable problem. We cannot realistically escape from it by just choosing one goal and ditching the others. Any healthy society needs an educational system that helps to produce good citizens, good workers, and good social opportunities. Preparing young people to enter into full involvement in a complex society is itself a complex task that necessarily requires educators to balance a variety of competing concerns, and the educational institutions that result from this effort necessarily are going to embody these tensions. But I have argued in this paper that the biggest problem facing American schools is not the conflict, contradiction, and compromise that arises from trying to keep a balance among educational goals. Instead, the main threat comes from the growing dominance of the social mobility goal over the others. Although this goal (in coalition with the democratic equality goal) has been a major factor in motivating a progressive politics of education over the years, the increasing hegemony of the mobility goal and its narrowly consumer-based approach to education has led to the reconceptualization of education a purely private good. We are now, in the late 1990s, experiencing the sobering consequences of this ideological shift. We find credentialism triumphing over learning in our schools, with a commodified form of education winning an edge over useful substance. We find public schools under attack, not just because they are deemed ineffective but because they are public.  After all, if education is indeed a private good, then the next step (according to the influential right wing in today’s educational politics) is to withdraw public control entirely and move toward a fully privatized system of education.  Charter schools and consumer choice are the current icons. The word “public” itself is being transformed, as public schools are renamed “government” schools (with all the stigma that is carried by this term in an anti-government era), and private charter schools are being christened “public school academies” (the title accorded them by law in Michigan). Accordingly, the government is asked to abdicate its role in educational matters while the consumer is crowned king. Fortunately, the long history of conflicting goals for American education prepares us for such a situation by providing us with countervailing values. These arise from our belief in the publicness of the public schools, a belief that is reinforced by both of the other goals that have competed with social mobility within our politics of education. Both the democratic equality tradition and the social efficiency tradition are inherently hostile to the growing effort to reduce public education to a private good. Neither is able to tolerate the social inequality and social inefficiency that are the collective consequences of this shift toward private control. Neither is willing to allow this important public function be left up to the vagaries of the market in educational credentials. As a result, we can defend the public schools as a public good by drawing on the deeply rooted conceptions of education that arise from these traditions:  the view that education should provide everyone with the capacities required for full political participation as informed citizens, and the view that education should provide everyone with the capacities required for full economic participation as productive workers. Both of these public visions have become integrated into the structure of American education. They are exemplified in a wide range of daily educational practices, and they are so firmly fixed in our conception of school that it is difficult for most of us to imagine a form of education that is not shaped by them. All of this provides us with a potent array of experiences, practices, arguments, and values that we can use in asserting the importance of education as a decidedly public institution. It enables us to show how the erstwhile privatizers are only the latest example of a long-standing effort to transform education into a consumer commodity, and to demonstrate how this effort has already done considerable damage to both school and society – by undermining learning, reinforcing social stratification, and promoting a futile and wasteful race to attain devalued credentials. In short, the history of conflicting goals for American education has brought contradiction and debilitation, but it has also provided us with an open structure of education that is vulnerable to change; and it has given educators and citizens alike an alternative set of principles and practices that support the indivisibility of education as a public good.  
dlvr.it
January 8, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Diane Ravitch's Blog: NPE Releases a New Report on Charter Schools and Their Lack of Accountability
Diane Ravitch's Blog: NPE Releases a New Report on Charter Schools and Their Lack of Accountability
I was present in the very beginnings of the charter school movement. I advocated on their behalf. I and many others said that charter schools would be better than public schools because they would be more successful (because they would be free of bureaucracy), they would be more accountable (because their charter would be revoked if they weren’t successful), they would “save” the neediest students, and they would save money (because they wouldn’t have all that administrative bloat). That was the mid-1980s. Now, more than 35 years later, we know that none of those promises were kept. The charter lobby has fought to avoid accountability; charters pay their administrators more than public schools; charters demand the same funding as public schools; the most successful charters avoid the neediest students; and–aside from charters that choose their students with care–charters are not more successful than public schools, and many are far worse. Charters open and close like day lilies. This week, the National Center of Charter School Accountability, a project of NPE, published Charter School Reckoning: Part II Disillusionment, written by Carol Burris. This is the second part in a three-part comprehensive report on charter schools entitled Charter School Reckoning: Decline, Dissolution, and Cost. Its central argument is that a once-promising idea—charter schools as laboratories of innovation—has been steadily weakened by state laws that prioritize rapid expansion and less regulation over school quality and necessary oversight. Those policy and legislative shifts have produced predictable results: fraud, mismanagement, profiteering, abrupt closures, and significant charter churn. The report connects the above instances with the weaknesses in state charter laws and regulations that enable both bad practices and criminal activity.  As part of the investigation, the NPE team scanned news reports and government investigative audits published between September 2023 and September 2025 and identified $858,000,000 in tax dollars lost due to theft, fraud, and/or gross mismanagement. The report contrasts the original aspirations of the charter movement with today’s reality, shaped in large part by the intense lobbying of powerful corporate charter chains and trade organizations. It also examines areas that have received far too little attention, including the role of authorizers and the structure and accountability of charter-school governing boards. It concludes with ten recommendations that, taken together, would bring democratic governance to the schools, open schools based on need and community input, and restore the founding vision of charter schools as nimble, community-driven, teacher-led laboratories grounded in equity and public purpose. This new report can be found here. Part I of Charter Reckoning: Decline can be found here.  
dlvr.it
January 7, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Cloaking Inequity: What Would James Baldwin Do?
Cloaking Inequity: What Would James Baldwin Do?
I still remember the day my mother handed me a worn paperback by James Baldwin. It had the scent of aged paper and sunlight caught in its fibers, the smell of a book that had been passed through more hands and histories than I could imagine at the time. Opening it felt like stepping into a world both familiar and completely unknown, a world where language could reveal truths that people feared to speak aloud. I did not understand then how deeply Baldwin would shape my thinking about America, leadership, identity, and moral responsibility. What began as a simple act of sharing a book became the doorway to a lifelong conversation. This December, as I sit with the memory of his passing, I find myself returning to Baldwin with a sense of obligation rather than nostalgia. His voice has a way of resurfacing whenever the country loses its moral compass, which seems to be happening more frequently. For my leadership class this semester, I demonstrated a Cambridge style debate and used Baldwin’s famous exchange with William F. Buckley. Watching Baldwin in that moment, surrounded by history and tension, reminded me again that he spoke not to impress but to clarify. He understood the difference between persuasion and revelation. James Arthur Baldwin was a novelist, essayist, playwright, poet, and civil rights advocate whose work continues to unsettle and illuminate. His novel Go Tell It on the Mountain is often listed among the twentieth century’s greatest works, yet it is his essays that keep commanding the world’s attention. When the nation reaches another moment of confusion, Baldwin’s words rise again like smoke curling from an old fire, carrying heat long after the flames have disappeared. He never wrote to soothe. He wrote to awaken. He knew that truth rarely receives applause in its own time. It becomes prophecy only after people finally learn how to hear it. So the real question is not what Baldwin would do today. The deeper question is what he would expect from us. He did not want disciples. He wanted witnesses. He believed the measure of a person was not their admiration for him but their willingness to confront what he revealed. Baldwin’s work is not an artifact to revisit for comfort. It is a mirror that refuses to let us look away. He Would Tell the Truth, Even When It Burns Baldwin believed truth telling was a form of love, although not the gentle kind that avoids discomfort. It was the type of love that insists on honesty because anything less would be a betrayal. He confronted America’s contradictions without hesitation, and he refused to allow the country to claim innocence where harm had been intentional. Racism and inequality did not persist because Americans misunderstood them. They persisted because certain Americans benefited from their continuation. Baldwin understood that injustice is not a mistake. It is a choice. If Baldwin were writing today, he would not dilute his critique. He would witness the polarization of public life, the addictive pull of manufactured outrage in social media, and the deterioration of trust in institutions. He would not be distracted by the performance of elections and politics. His concern would be the moral condition beneath the noise. Baldwin once wrote that any profession reveals its ugliness to those who pursue it seriously. He believed the same about a nation. The question is whether we possess the courage to see what is revealed when the mask falls. Silence, for Baldwin, was not a neutral position. He believed that refusing to speak in moments of crisis was an act of complicity that protected the status quo. His words were instruments of accountability. Every essay and interview was crafted to provoke a reckoning. He wrote as if the conscience of the nation depended on his honesty. In many ways, it did. He Would Call Educators and Artists to Account Baldwin saw educators and artists as guardians of a society’s soul. He believed that education was more than the transfer of information. It was the cultivation of consciousness. Students were not meant to be trained into acceptance but challenged into awareness. This belief feels increasingly urgent in a period when debates about curriculum, inclusion, and censorship echo through classrooms and boardrooms. Baldwin would remind us that education grounded in fear rather than curiosity produces citizens who cannot face the truth. Imagine Baldwin in a school board meeting today confront Moms for Liberty. He would not raise his voice. He never needed to. His authority came from clarity, not volume. He would ask why a society afraid of its own history believes that young people should be sheltered from it. He would challenge the idea that banning books protects children from harm. He would argue that avoiding complexity only deepens it, and that students become stronger when they learn how to grapple with difficult realities rather than escape them. Baldwin felt similarly about the banning of art. He believed art was a public responsibility. It was not created to distract people from hardship but to reveal the hardship with dignity and intelligence. Artists were meant to expose the truths that others refused to see. In Baldwin’s eyes, the work of creation was inseparable from the work of liberation. Art was both witness and teacher. He believed it had the power to reshape consciousness when society grew numb to its own reflection. He Would Tell Us to Love America Enough to Criticize It Baldwin’s love for America was fierce and carefully examined. He did not romanticize the nation and wrap himself in fake patriotism and thin blue lines. He challenged it precisely because he believed in what it could become. He wrote that he loved America more than any other country, which is why he insisted on the right to criticize it perpetually. He believed that patriotism built on denial was a fragile form of loyalty. Only honesty could strengthen the nation’s moral foundation. In a moment when cynicism is often mistaken for realism and political outrage has become an entertainment business, Baldwin’s commitment to nuance feels almost revolutionary. He would tell us that progress is not achieved through memes or reels. It requires the slow and steady work of confronting social and governance failure. He would refuse to give despair the final word, even when evidence of injustice seemed overwhelming. Baldwin understood that despair can lull a society into resignation, and resignation is far more dangerous than hostility as it leaders to authoritarianism. He believed democracy fails when people stop participating in its protection. It does not collapse only through dramatic actions from the top. It erodes through inattention at the bottom. I believe that Baldwin would ask us to care about government institutions and fixing them instead of blowing them up even when they disappoint us. He would ask us to hold the nation accountable not because it is flawless but because it remains unfinished. He Would Ask Us to Face Ourselves Baldwin argued that political change and personal change are inseparable. He believed that systems are extensions of individual choices, fears, and fantasies. He wrote that not everything faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. That sentence remains one of the most honest statements about social transformation. It reminds us that the work of justice requires introspection as much as activism. He warned that racism, sexism, homophobes, anti-semitism and all the forms of hatred distorts both the one who hates and the one who is hated. Baldwin insisted that love was not sentimental rhetoric. It was a discipline that required vulnerability and truth. He believed that a society could not heal unless its people confronted the truths they hid from themselves. He believed that the greatest battles are fought within the individual long before they surface in the public arena. Imagine Baldwin scrolling through our digital world on his iPhone 17. He would observe the speed, the fragmentation, and the performance of conviction this his tailored algorithm would confront him with. But his attention would return to a single question. Are we willing to confront ourselves with the honesty we demand from others. He would say that a nation in denial cannot repair what it refuses to see. Healing requires courage, and courage requires truth. He Would Write, Speak, March, and Hope Baldwin never relinquished hope, although his hope was never naive. It was shaped by struggle and sharpened by heartbreak. He believed in the possibility of human redemption even when the country appeared determined to repeat its own mistakes. Hope, for Baldwin, was a form of resistance that refused to surrender to despair. It was an insistence that change remained possible even when progress faltered. If Baldwin were alive today, I believe not only would be omnipresent on social media, he would still be writing in cafes, speaking in classrooms, and walking through the neighborhoods that shaped him. He would still be in conversation with young activists who carry the weight of a new era. He would tell them that the struggle for justice is not a sprint. It is a relay that moves across generations. He would remind them that despair is not an option for those who believe in the possibility of transformation. Baldwin understood that the moral project of a nation is never complete. It advances, retreats, and advances again. He believed that democracy survives only when enough people care to protect it. He believed that change requires imagination, courage, and an unshakable commitment to truth. Baldwin’s hope was not fragile. It was forged in fire and carried by purpose. So what would James Baldwin do in our current moment. He would write. He would teach. He would testify. He would call us to a higher level of honesty. And he would leave us with the question that echoes through every era of American life. Do we really want to be changed. That question is no longer for Baldwin. Its the legacy he left for us.  
dlvr.it
January 6, 2026 at 10:34 PM
Curmudgucation: The Push to End Public Schools
Curmudgucation: The Push to End Public Schools
Despite the fact that the words "school choice" still get tossed around, most of the noisiest figures in the school choice movement have no actual interest in choice, no desire to see traditional public education existing side by side with a variety of different education options. Instead they're pushing for institutional capture, a system of taxpayer-funded private schools that push right wing christianism and christian nationalism alongside a public system that has been largely dismantled even as it has been brought into line with that same right wing ideology. If you want to see this laid out, I cannot recommend enough a new ProPublica piece by Megan O'Matz and Jennifer Smith Richards. What they make exceptionally clear is that Linda McMahon did not go to Washington to shut down the Department of Education, but to dismantle public education entirely. You should read the article. Really. And let me tempt you with some highlights that show where McMahon and her crew of joyful vandals are headed. O'Matz and Richards note that McMahon has brought on at least 20 appointees from way out in right field including, as we have noted before, Lindsey Burke, the education chief at the Heritage Foundation who's serving as Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy and Programs (even though she's still listed in her Heritage Foundation post). She was the author of Project 2025's education plan, which (spoiler alert) looks a lot like what is happening.  Burke remains a huge fan of voucher programs; O'Matz and Richards correctly describe a recurring theme of getting more families to leave public school. Quoting Burke in a speech last year, "I'm optimistic that, you know, five years from now a majority of kids are going to be in a private school choice program." Noah Pollack was a co-founder of Jewish Voices for Trump and an "advisor" to multiple right wing groups; he's now a senior advisor of the Ed Department. O'Matz and Richards found this quote from a 2024 podcast appearance, at which he bemoaned what he sees as progressive control of schools: And so the work that I do is trying to come up with creative policy ideas to stop that, to turn back the tide, to figure out ways that conservatives can protect these institutions or build new institutions. The writers also track McMahon back to her work with the America First Policy Institute, an advocacy outfit formed in 2020 as a sort of holding pen for Trump admin folks and other MAGA. AFPI produced a paper in 2023 that rejects the notion of any sort of collective responsibility for educating all children argues that “the Bible makes it clear that it is parents alone who shoulder the responsibility for their children.” That message is very much at the heart of the dismantling movement, which is all about a policy of "I'll take of my own kids and what Those People do is not my problem." This aspect of vouchers is not discussed nearly enough-- when you accept a voucher for your child, everyone else gets to wash their hands of you. You are on your own and your child's education is your problem, and not the government's or anyone else's. There's lots more-- did I mention that you should read this piece-- but I want to highlight one more. One of the few figures in the story that was willing to talk to O'Matz and Richards was Tiffany Justice, co-founder of Moms for America who was featured prominently in the department's "End DEI" initiative and is hooked up with Heritage these days.  Asked what percentage of children she imagines should be in public schools going forward, Justice, who is now with The Heritage Foundation’s political advocacy arm, told ProPublica: “I hope zero. I hope to get to zero.” “If America’s public schools cease to exist tomorrow, America would be a better place.”  That's what they want. Not choice. Not diversity. Not a broad expanse of many educational approaches and ideas. Just one choice. Theirs. And an end to public schools.    
dlvr.it
January 5, 2026 at 10:33 PM
Nancy Bailey's Education Website: Remembering Why There’s a Special Education Law
Nancy Bailey's Education Website: Remembering Why There’s a Special Education Law
Donald Trump is destroying programs that help Democratic and Republican kids, including special education. He seems not to understand why laws exist to protect students. Linda McMahon is eliminating the U.S. ED, without Congressional approval, which oversees critical federal laws for public schools, including the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act (IDEA). She fired the special education staff, mostly ending the department. Health and Human Services (HHS) might manage special education, but HHS is a massive program with problems. The Arc, an organization that supports those with intellectual and developmental disabilities, describes why this wouldn’t be a good idea. …this move might be viewed as promoting a medical model of disability—one that treats disability as a diagnosis to be managed rather than recognizing students as learners with potential. Framing students with disabilities through a medical lens risks stigmatizing, segregating, and isolating them from their peers. It undermines decades of progress toward ensuring that students with disabilities are seen and supported as general education students first. Some believe states will provide better accommodations. But history shows this has failed before. It’s why a federal mandate was created. McMahon’s reckless changes, ending special education without viable solutions, demonstrate a lack of concern for a vulnerable population. Those who have worked in the field over the years — parents and teachers — can certainly think of ways to help public schools better address student needs, including those with special education needs. But that’s not what this is about. McMahon has no professional educational background to understand schools, students, children with disabilities, or the history of special education, or to make meaningful changes. She’s in this role to end services. She repeatedly brags about this claiming the U.S. ED isn’t necessary. Instead of better funding for special education, which parents and teachers have demanded for years, she’s giving $500 million to charter schools, and, sadly, some Democrats will be onboard. They’ve wanted to privatize America’s schools for many years. However, in all the years since their existence, charter schools have rarely been a solution for children with disabilities. Students are often counseled out and rejected, especially those with emotional and behavioral disabilities, ADHD, and intellectual and developmental disabilities. Private schools are supposed to serve children with disabilities but religious schools are exempt. And who’s monitoring these schools which often don’t have the resources or the qualified staff to run good programs. Also, importantly, charter schools and private schools don’t always include students with disabilities in general classes, called inclusion. Charter schools segregate children into disability groups for those with dyslexia, or schools for intellectual and developmental disabilities, much like the 1800s when children stayed at home or were primarily given religious classes. Children don’t get opportunities to socialize with their peers and without oversight, these schools might not assist children to learn and find independence. McMahon, by not enforcing the law that mandates public schools open their doors to children with disabilities, creates a dangerous situation, that will result in children with disabilities sliding backwards in time. Make no mistake, special ed. has consistently been underfunded, but the belief that every child can learn and be educated is a promise Americans should support and protect. Parents are told the law remains, but a law must be enforced, or it will likely fall apart. Reviewing history is necessary to remember why such a law became significant. Warning! The following links include pictures and videos that are difficult to view. Burton Blatt’s Christmas in Purgatory In 1965, Burton Blatt and photographer, Fred Kaplan, began a research project at a Connecticut center for the developmentally disabled. They visited five state institutions in the east that housed individuals with developmental disabilities. Kaplan carried a miniature spy camera on his belt, secretly snapping pictures as they toured the facilities. They never identified the institutions, likely understaffed. You can view Christmas in Purgatory HERE. Burton Blatt increased our awareness of the inhumane treatment of those with disabilities, his legacy is described here.  As an advocate of deinstitutionalization, he helped initiate community living programs and family support services. In his clinical work he emphasized the provision of education to children with severe disabilities, those whom he called “clinically homeless.” As a national leader in special education, he called for programs to integrate students with disabilities into public schools and worked to promote a more open society for them.  Willowbrook State School Robert F. Kennedy, Sr., visited Willowbrook, a New York State school, in 1965. After visiting the school, he said: I think that at the state institution for the mentally retarded, and I think that particularly at Willowbrook, we have a situation that borders on a snake pit, and that the children live in filth, that many of our fellow citizens are suffering tremendously because lack of attention, lack of imagination, lack of adequate manpower. There is very little future for these children, for those who are in these institutions. Both need a tremendous overhauling. I’m not saying that those who are the attendants there, or who run the institutions, are at fault – I think all of us are at fault and I think it’s just long overdue that something be done about it. Reporter Geraldo Rivera followed in 1972 reporting Deinstitutionalization didn’t happen over night. Special education has evolved and must continue to improve. Sadly, the drive to end public education and more specifically special education will destroy this initiative. Privatization is about monetizing schools, a danger for children with disabilities, especially those with developmental disabilities. Parents are reminded that IDEA is still in place, but without federal enforcement it could be hard to get services. Here’s what to watch for and what we’ve already seen. * More unaccountable charter and private schools that exclude children with disabilities. * A reduction or end to IEP (Individual Educational Plan) or 504 plan meetings. * More charter and private schools lacking inclusion, e.g., Schools for Dyslexia, Autism, etc. * Vouchers that won’t cover the total cost of private school tuition. * Private schools that reject students with disabilities, especially those with more severe disabilities. * Fewer qualified special education teachers. * More unaccountable homeschools. * The threat of another eugenics movement. * Children with difficulties in the classroom being ignored because there are no special education services. * Unproven online programs or cyber schools known to fail. * An increase of religious schools and curriculum. * Abuse, as there will be less oversight, less teacher preparation, and more behavioral difficulties. * Children sent home or expelled from school for acting out and not following rules. * A return of badly run state institutions with little oversight. For many who remember 1975 and the beginning of Public Law 94-142, who fought for children with disabilities to be served in their public schools, ending the All Handicapped Children Act —now IDEA (the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act) —is a bitter pill. How will America turn this around? There doesn’t seem to be any silver lining at this time. The best hope is for a new President who makes education, public schools, and special education a priority.  
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 10:33 PM
Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice: The Screen That Ate Your Child’s Education (Jean Twenge)
Larry Cuban on School Reform and Classroom Practice: The Screen That Ate Your Child’s Education (Jean Twenge)
[Jean] “Twenge is a psychology professor at San Diego State University and the author of “10 Rules for Raising Kids in a High-Tech World.” This op-ed article appeared in The New York Times, November 16, 2025. The standardized test scores of American students had been rising for decades. Then they began to slide, dropping to their lowest point in two decades in 2023 and 2024. This is not a problem confined to the United States. Worldwide, the performance of 15-year-olds in math, reading and science reached a nadir in 2022. These dismal results are at least partly a result of the Covid-19 pandemic. Missed instruction during those years may still be having an impact on academic performance. But that’s only part of the story. The decline in test scores started well before the pandemic, around 2012. One obvious culprit is smartphones, which became popular just as test scores started to decline. Since 2017, I’ve been doing research on what smartphones do to our mental health, and I recently started to study how they affect academic performance. The negative impact of smartphones on learning is one reason many school districts have instituted a bell-to-bell ban on smartphones in K-12 education, including all public schools in New York State, which also banned students’ personal laptops, tablets and smart watches. That’s progress, especially when 83 percent of K-12 teachers surveyed by one major union think that smartphone bans are a good idea. But they are not a complete solution, because phones are not the only electronic devices students use at school. These days, nearly every middle and high school student — and a good number in the elementary grades as well — brings a laptop or tablet to school and uses it at home for homework. Many of these devices are provided by schools. You might think that these school-issued devices allow only a limited number of functions, like access to classroom Canvas pages and Google Docs. If you assumed that, you would be wrong. Sylvie McNamara, a parent of a ninth grader in Washington, D.C., wrote in Washingtonian magazine that her son was spending every class period watching TV shows and playing games on his school-issued laptop. He often had no idea what topics his classes were covering. When she asked school administrators to restrict her son’s use of the laptop, they resisted, saying the device was integral to the curriculum. In a survey of American teenagers by the nonprofit Common Sense Media, one-fourth admitted they had seen pornographic content during the school day. Almost half of that group saw it on a school-issued device. Students watching porn in class doesn’t just affect the students themselves — picture being a teenager in math class trying to concentrate on sine and cosine while sitting behind that display of flesh. It is disturbing on a number of levels. Even when laptop abuse doesn’t reach this point, it still consumes a substantial amount of instructional time. One study of Michigan State college students — nearly all legal adults presumably more capable of focusing their attention than young teens — found that they spent nearly 40 percent of class time scrolling social media, checking email or watching videos on their laptops — anything but their classwork. School laptops are also distracting at home. Many allow unfettered access to YouTube, tempting students to watch an endless loop of videos instead of doing their homework. Just the other day, my daughter told me she was watching the violent cop show “The Rookie” on her school laptop at home. Apparently the device did not block access to the streaming service Disney+. How can we expect 13-year-olds to focus on their assignments when a vast library of entertaining video content is a tab away? It seems ridiculous to have to say this, but digital distraction is terrible for academic performance. The more time college students spent doing something else on their laptops during class, the lower their exam scores, even after accounting for academic ability. This also applies to teenagers around the world. A 2023 UNESCO report concluded that too much device use can hurt academic performance, mostly because of increased distraction and engagement in nonacademic activities. In a study published in October in The Journal of Adolescence, I found that standardized test scores in math, reading and science fell significantly more in countries where students spent more time using electronic devices for leisure purposes during the school day than they did in countries where they spent less time. The situation in Finland, once known for having one of the best school systems in the world, is telling. In 2022, teenagers in Finland admitted to using their devices during the school day for noneducational purposes for nearly 90 minutes. Perhaps as a result, the test scores of Finnish students plummeted between 2006 and 2022. In countries such as Japan, where students spend less than a half-hour on devices for leisure during the school day, academic performance has remained fairly steady, especially in math and science. If tablets and laptops are behind even a small portion of the decline in academic performance, parents and educators will need to work together to find solutions. At the moment, parents are virtually powerless: They can’t install parental control software on school devices. Nevertheless, many districts try to foist responsibility back onto parents by telling them, as my children’s district does, that “there is no substitute for parental supervision. Be knowledgeable of what sites your child goes to online.” How, exactly, are we supposed to do that when we can’t install control software and given that it’s not possible to hover over our teenagers every minute? If school districts want to improve their test scores — and most are desperate to do so — changing the way students use school-issued devices is critical. To start, school I.T. departments should lock down devices much more securely so students can’t use them to watch TV shows, play games or continuously consume videos. Whatever efforts schools are making in that direction right now are frequently evaded by tech-savvy students. There should be districtwide policies that specifically disallow these types of uses and instruct teachers to embed educational videos on the classroom page instead of giving students unlimited access to YouTube. Districts and teachers should also consider scaling back on the number of assignments that require a device to complete in the first place. A paper math worksheet or a handwritten response to a reading assignment is one less opportunity for kids to use a device chock-full of digital distractions, and one less opportunity to cut and paste an essay written by ChatGPT. Parents should also have the option to opt out. I’ve spoken with many parents whose children struggle to focus while using laptops, only for school administrators to tell them the devices are required. Angela Arsenault, a state representative in Vermont, is planning to introduce a bill to give parents the ability to opt their children out of receiving school-issued devices. A version of the bill was first introduced in 2015, a stark illustration of how long this has been an issue. Districts could even eliminate school electronic devices entirely. Many parents and teachers might protest that this would have an adverse impact on learning or tilt the scales in favor of wealthier students who have access to their own devices, but several studies suggest it might instead improve learning. One study of nearly 300,000 fourth and eighth graders in the United States found that students who spent more time using digital devices in language arts classes performed worse on reading tests. A 2018 meta-analysis found that reading on paper, compared with reading digitally, led to significantly better comprehension among students, from elementary school to college. Across 24 studies, college students who took handwritten notes were 58 percent more likely to get A’s in their courses than those who typed notes on laptops. In contrast, students who typed notes were 75 percent more likely to fail the course than those who wrote them by hand. Although it once seemed like a good idea to give every child his or her own device, it’s clear that those policies have been a failure. It may be possible to harness the power of school devices more judiciously, with little to no device use in lower grades, and high school students given laptops strictly limited to relevant apps. We could go further, creating completely device-free schools with rare exceptions for students with special needs. It would be back to the textbooks, paper and pencil of previous eras — when the most significant classroom distraction was students passing notes. Many adults struggle to concentrate on work when social media, shopping and movies are just a click away. Imagine how much more difficult it is for a 16-year-old, much less an 11-year-old, to focus in the same situation. Asking students to drill down on their schoolwork amid an array of digital distractions isn’t just bad for test scores; it is inimical to learning. And it is fundamentally unfair to our children.  
dlvr.it
December 22, 2025 at 10:33 PM
The Reliable Narrator: The “Southern Surge” in Reading: Another Media Manufactured Mirage
The Reliable Narrator: The “Southern Surge” in Reading: Another Media Manufactured Mirage
Growing up in the South, I was often warned not to beat a dead horse. A lifelong love of science fiction and fantasy, however, has made me aware of zombie narratives and that sometimes the dead are the living dead. In my career of literacy, the phonics gambit is just that—a zombie advocacy that just will not die. The newest media iteration of the phonics gambit has been christened the “Southern surge” in reading, celebrated again in Chalkbeat: The ‘Southern surge’ offers lessons for student learning — but we don’t fully understand it yet. This “Southern surge” narrative tends to center Mississippi but also includes Florida, Alabama, and Louisiana (the most recent “miracle” state based on an incomplete or misleading use of NAEP scores). Like many media manufactured narratives, the “Southern surge” in reading falls apart when the data are carefully examined. While I give the Chalkbeat article some credit for admitting that the so-called “surge” is not fully understood, Barnum—as Hanford did when christening Mississippi a “miracle” in 2019 (“What’s up in Mississippi? There’s no way to know for sure what causes increases in test scores”)—gives the “surge” narrative nearly complete credibility even with the headline hedge and a couple points made then glossed over (“Eighth grade results have been less impressive for these Southern exemplars, though”). Here are the (likely fatal) flaws in the “surge” narrative: * Although Barnum cites an important and comprehensive analysis of reading reform, he fails to acknowledge its most important findings: States adopting reading reform (often popularly associated with Mississippi’s model even when states explicitly do not mimic those reform policies, such as California) has seen short-term test score gains in reading (note that score gains are not necessarily higher reading proficiency); however, while Barnum lists several reading policy components (“third grade retention, phonics-based curriculum, and statewide teacher training”), this study directly states that only retention is associated with higher scores (with the researchers noting their study did not identify why). * Barnum notes the drop by Southern states’ grade 8 reading scores, but fails to acknowledge that this data point may suggest that retention is inflating scores, not increasing reading proficiency. Notably states such as Florida and Mississippi have had these reform for over one to two decades without the “surge” appearing in grade 8 data. * The retention component also is troubling since these states continue to retain students as high rates. If the other policies were working, we should expect retention numbers to decrease significantly, but they have not. * Possibly the most damning ignored data from NAEP, however: Across all states, but including the so-called “surge” states, the race and poverty gaps remain persistent, typically the same as in 1998. There are statistical realities also being ignored in the “surge” narrative. Test scores for the lowest performing students are easier to improve that top-scoring students, for example. But likely more significant is that early literacy test scores are strongly correlated with student biological age (England has almost twenty years of data on phonics checks that show this); therefore, when grade retention removes the lowest scoring students from the testing population (grade 3 retention laws impact grade 4 NAEP testing) and reintroduces them when they are biologically older, the possibility is that scores are being artificially inflated. Reading “crisis/miracle” narratives and the phonics gambit should be dead horses; these unfounded claims have existed in the US well back into the 1940s, recurring decade after decade. At best, “we don’t fully understand it yet,” and at worst, too many people profit off this zombie narrative, and children, teachers, and schools will continue to be sacrificed instead of putting these stories in the ground where they belong. --- Recommended The “Science of Reading” Ushers in NAEP Reading Decline: Time for a New Story Fact Checking “The reading wars are ending. Phonics won.” (Washington Post Editorial Board) Misunderstanding Mississippi’s Reading Reform: The Need to Resist Copycat Education Reform The Phonics Gambit: The Zombie Reading Policy that Fails but Won’t Die  
dlvr.it
December 19, 2025 at 10:33 PM