Sunday, September 1, 2024

ICYMI: Labor Day 2024 Edition (9/1)

It's that time again. Put away your white, set out the grill, and try to remember that the labor movement in this country created a whole lot of things that we now take for granted. Once a year seems hardly often enough to take that out and look at it.

In the meantime, here's the reading list for the week.

School vouchers are conservative billionaires’ Trojan horse

Josh Cowen's new book The Privateers is about to drop, so he's doing press and talking to people and getting the word out about vouchers and the culture panic. Here he is talking to Maureen Downey.

Dune buggy boondoggle shows a crying need for better school voucher oversight

Laurie Roberts of AZCentral tells the story of how dune buggies became an educational expense (the occupational therapist said so) and were initially paid for with voucher money. The state board has reverse that decision, but the whole mess is a look at how the vouchers are really working in Arizona.

The Perpetual Dream: Machines That Think, Diagnose, and Teach

Larry Cuban looks at the dream of taking human touch our of human service.


Alec MacGillis at The New Yorker takes a deep dive into the closing of a Rochester school and the larger issues racing towards us over school closings.

The Donald Trump-Moms for Liberty-Heritage Foundation Project 2025 Alliance

Maurice Cunningham at the Bucks County Beacon reminds us just who partners with Moms For Liberty, and what the goals are.

Moms for Liberty goes to war with New York school over five library books

The Independent reports on yet another M4L attempt to stamp out reading Naughty Books. Only this time it's not going over so well.


At their big gathering, M4L leader tell Huffington Post that there is no such thing as a transgender child. It goes downhill from there. Turns out that "safe and welcoming" are danger words at a school.

With schools, money does indeed matter; so does how we spend it

From the Seattle Times, a piece that pushes back on the continued assertion that money doesn't matter (so schools shouldn't get more of it).


Paul Thomas reminds us that diagramming sentences doesn't help develop writing skill (it does not-- don't @ me) and quotes some expertise from 70 years ago.

Teens are losing interest in school, and say they hear about college 'a lot'

Make of them what you wish, but NPR writes up some results from a major poll of students, and some things are not looking up since last year.

Challenging The Myths of Generative AI

Addressing some of the myths surrounding AI. "Most concerning is the illusion that LLMs are retrieving information rather than constructing word associations within a broad corpus." Excellent AI read.

The Harris-Walz Vision for Public Schools

Jennifer Berkshire writes for The Nation about how Harris-Walz could (finally) be a course correction for the Democratic Party.

Breaking Down the Harris/Walz Education Plan

Nancy Bailey looks into the details of the Harris-Walz education proposals.

Youngkin’s Privatization Team Makes Its Move on Virginia’s Public Schools

Having had a chance to see how school takeovers pretty much never work, Virginia is ready to try their hand. Cheryl Binkley at 4 Public Education.


Mark Hlavacik and Jack Schneider at Kappan break down decades of schools-are-failing coverage and how they have affected discussions about public education.

DeSantis and M4L target incumbent school Board members in Florida. They win anyway.

Missed this last week, but here's Sue Kingery Woltanski's breakdown of the Moms for Liberty candidates fared in Florida (spoiler: not well).

Rockets on butterfly wings

Benjamin Riley takes a look at an AI guide that actually brings a little sanity to the discussion.

New Book Bans Have Begun in South Carolina

Oh, South Carolina. Steve Nuzum examines the new wave of anti-reading activity.

States want to reduce qualifications for teachers. That’s a huge mistake.

The Center for American Progress is emblematic of Democrat wrong headedness about public education. But Paige Schhoemaker DeMio of CAP is on point with this op-ed. Deprofessionalizing teaching is not a solution for anything.


It's Williamsburg, of all places. But there's a lot to see in this Politico piece about how to discuss difficult topics with sensitivity towards all audiences.

Who Are the Adults in Charge?

TC Weber builds a great piece out of reaction to my post about calling students by their names. He also says many nice things about me, making me both grateful and embarrassed. But the post is a good one.

Masculinity in an Age of Individualism

From The Dispatch, by Joe Pitts. I don't think about "masculinity" as a thing nearly as often as I think about "humanity," but I found a lot to chew on in this essay about the non-toxic version of masculinity.

At Forbes.com, I looked at two reports-- one suggesting that teacher strikes do, in fact, work, and one warning about some hazards of AI in the classroom

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1 comment:

  1. Really good NPR article about teen interest in school: “Care about me as a person." That’s what teens value most in teachers. “Know who I am, know what's important to me, know what my goals and dreams are, and help me understand what I have to do to reach them.”
    Rebecca deCoca

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