Sunday, October 12, 2025

Selling The House

It has been eighteen months or so since my mother moved into an assisted living facility, and so this summer we started the prospect of selling the house. 

It is not the house I grew up in. I tell the story as, "Yes, I went off to college, and while I was gone, the family moved." My parents married when they were babies, and we had lived in four different homes before they finally got to build and settle into the home that was what they really wanted, designed to fit on a slice of land in the country. They were, I realize with a bit of a shock, about the same age my grown children are right now. The house they built is now five decades on the planet.

I didn't grow up in this house, but my children did. It was where my daughter led countless cousin parades through the kitchen and around the living room, where my son and his cousins played on an ancient Flash Gordon pinball machine. I played with my nieces and nephews in that living room. Eventually another generation of small children also played there; there was always a collection of books and toys for the littles. The barn held the old cars, the restored 1914 fire engine, the rehabilitated roto-tiller, the riding mowers. There was a garden, a semi-successful blueberry patch (well, the deer enjoyed it, anyway). 

In college, this was where I brought friends to visit and eat Thanksgiving dinner and, at least once, sleep over outside on a large patch of comfy moss. When my first job ended, this house was my home for the year it took to find steady employment again. The house held a collection of oddities-- an old family heirloom grandfather clock, a large ship model, a massive collection of big band and jazz records, large numbers of my father's self-designed bookshelves. 

All of those items have been emptied out, dispersed to family or sold in auction. There are still two dressers left that I have to pick up. My grandfather bought them for my parents at a yard sale almost seventy years ago for some ridiculous price, like five dollars, with the understanding that they could replace them with something better when they were able. They never did. 

It's hard to see the place empty, harder than I thought it would be. A place is just a large physical object, and it gets most of its character from the people who are there, and when the people aren't there, the place isn't the same. When you go back to your old college without your old classmates there, it's just different, even unnerving, like sitting your foot down and unexpectedly finding no step beneath it. 

It's one of those challenges they don't tell you about in teacher school-- every year, your school, your classroom, is a new and different place. And on the flip side, if you stay long enough, you become a familiar part of the building, a thing former students can take familiar comfort from when everything else has changed. But for the teacher, every year the school morphs slowly into some other place entirely, similar physical settings repeatedly recast with new humans to give them life and breath.

The house is currently empty, hollowed out, not actually anyone's home, for much of my family a sort of phantom limb. It looks like it will sell, that it will become a whole other place for a whole other family, and that is how houses work. The house I'm typing this in, my home, was once someone else's home, only the faintest trace of those folks here. That is how houses work. 

We like to think of the large physical pieces of this world as comfortably permanent, and we are periodically reminded that they are not, and that the living people who animate them will come and go and change and grow. I don't want my daughter to be dressed up and commanding her brother and the rest of the tiny troops to line up-- I don't want that to be forever, but I feel a tinge of loss that the physical location of those parades will be scrubbed of their imprint. It's fine. That's what memory is for-- to hold onto the threads and breath of the past. Physical objects, places-- they can promise to hold the imprint of events and people, but their grip never turns out to be as tight as we imagine it will be.

The road back to the house used to be dirt; in wet seasons, there would be three ruts, the middle one to be used by traffic in either direction. Pray you didn't meet one of the neighbors headed the other way. In winter the road would freeze, and if you couldn't quite make it to the top of the hill, you'd have to back out, head craned back over your shouldre, trying not to end up in the ditch. In my '79 Opel I perfected a mid-hill 180 spin. Over the years that road got better, and just a year or two ago the township paved it. So soon I won't be needing to drive back that twisty, treacherous dirt road anymore, but then, that road doesn't exist any more. 


ICYMI: Cross Country Edition (10/12)

The Board of Directors has developed a real taste for the long distance run, and we are lucky enough to be in a district with an elementary cross country program. This is their second season, and they remain into it. They like to run and run and run and it turns out that running is best with a bunch of other kids to run with. Yesterday was the big invitational that usually marks the end of the season. There might be one more small meet next week, but that's it. They will be sad to be done. "I'll bet they're tired after all that running," say other parents, with unspoken acknowledgement that a tired child at the end of the day can be a real blessing. But no. No, they are not. Just cranked up and ready for more. There aren't many things cooler than watching a young human do something they love.

The list this week is, for some reason, huge. Dig in.

Neighborhood schools are closing across Arizona. It’s because of vouchers.

Beth Lewis points out just some of the damage being done by Arizona's taxpayer-funded voucher program.

Privatizers in Mississippi are getting extra-pushy about taxpayer-funded vouchers, but plenty of regular folks on the ground are saying , "No, thank you." Devna Bose reports for Mississippi Today.

Debunking David Brooks on Education

It's a delight to have Mark Weber ("Jersey Jazzman") blogging again, and this piece that dismembers David Brooks' attempt to pile up some baloney about NCLB and Democrats and test scores--well, it's a delight, too. 

The Inconvenient Success of Mississippi

Jennifer Berkshire looks at why Mississippi's push for vouchers is a little complicated. For one thing, it calls to abandon public schools just as Mississippi is touting a miraculous leap forward in those very schools. 

Wyoming library director fired amid book dispute wins $700,000 settlement

Terri Lesley was fired--and harassed-- because the library system she directed was found to have Naughty Books that made some folks Very Sad. And now the county will have to pay a pretty penny for their mistreatment of her, Mead Gruver at the Associated Press.

Lawsuit: South Carolina book ban regulation is unconstitutional

Meanwhile, in South Carolina, folks are suing the book banners in federal court. Steve Nuzum has the details.

If You Use AI to Grade Student Writing, Stop or Quit Your Job

John Warner with some straight talk. Companies have been pushing computer assessment for student writing for years (I think I've written about it a gazillion times here) but the marketing of AI has goosed robo-grading again. Don't do it. 

Work Hard, Burn Out, Repeat: The Culture Schools Won’t Quit

TC Weber on the teaching culture of trying to Do It All while you Suffer For Your Art. A lot to chew on here.

Making America Hungry Again

Andy Spears wants to know what is healthy-making about policies that starve food banks and students.

‘Hostile takeover:’ Charter operator files to occupy three Sarasota schools

Florida keeps dealing with the fallout of a policy that says public schools must hand over taxpayer-owned property to private charter school companies. Make it make sense. Reported by ABC7.

School Vouchers Cost States Like Florida a Fortune. They Don’t Improve Education, Either.

At USA Today, parent Scott Olson explains why taxpayer-funded school vouchers are a big fat money-sucking mistake. 

As book bans decline, concerns mount over librarian and teacher self-censoring

This is from The Hill, so I'm not sure I buy the "bans are waning" line, but the continued chilly atmosphere and self-censorship in schools definitely deserves discussion. Lexi Lonas Cochran reporting.


Who knew that gifted and talented programs would become an issue in the NYC mayor's race? Jose Luis Vilson takes that moment to consider some of the issues wrapped up in gifted and talented programs, and the genius of students who never get to show their genius.

Perverse Incentives in Florida’s Middle School Math Acceleration

Sue Kingery Woltanski has found some accountabaloney so stinky that even Patty Levesque can tell something's not right. 

Five Ways the Department of Education Is Upending Public Schools

I've already written about the dynamite ProPublica article by Megan O'Matz and Jennifer Smith Richards. Now check out a follow-up piece they wrote about federal education shenanigans.


Anna E. Clark considers if K-12 and higher ed could benefit from teaming up to deal with fallout from the Trump regime.

‘It feels like I am being forced to harm a child’: research shows how teachers are suffering moral injury

Okay, so this is from June and Australia. But I've long been interested in the idea of how moral injury--the injuries suffered by being required to do something you know is wrong--affects teachers. So I can't pass up this article about actual, research on the question.

Success Academy rally and their history of violating laws

Leonie Haimson reports on some September shenanigans from Eva Moskowitz and Success Academy. Do it Eva's way, or else.

South Bend forum speakers see charter schools and vouchers as threats to public education

In Indiana, some public discussion about the problems with privatizers in education.

New Book Documents Trump Administration’s Actions to Destroy Diversity in Higher Education

Jan Resseger reviews The Fall of Affirmative Action; Race, The Supreme Court, and the Future of Higher Education. Some scary stuff here.

Silencing Mockingbirds

Jess Piper was a high school English teacher before she became a political activist, and this story from the classroom illustrates again the effects of the Big Standardized Test on how literature is taught in this country.

Observations of Young Children Writing Undermine Goldenberg and The “science of reading” Contention that “Phonics is the On-Ramp to Reading”

Denny Taylor's latest post is long and wonkish, but it has a lot to say about how children may really learn to read and write (and about the "science" thereof).

Petition Panic: The Manufactured Outrage Against Two ASD Teachers

From Alaska, Matthew Beck provides another example of using culture panic to harass educators.


Thomas Ultican provides some history about public education and battles centered on religious differences.

SecEd Maddow Makes College Presidents an Offer They Can’t Refuse

Rick Hess uses some satirical edge to point out that conservatives may well rue the day that using bribery and extortion to shape college teaching became a policy idea.

1 in 5 high schoolers has had a romantic AI relationship, or knows someone who has

Lee Gaines at NPR reports on some new research and yikes! And if that stat in the headline seems alarming, note also that there appears to be a correlation between school use of AI and students having a social "relationship" with AI.

Why Smart People Believe Stupid Things

An interesting take from Chris Stewart (yes, that Chris Stewart) and the study of Stupidology.


The Oatmeal offers a take on AI art, and it's a pretty good one. Not just about the choice to create it, but how it makes us feel as an audience. With pictures!

Robin Williams’ Daughter Tells Fans to ‘Stop Sending Me AI Videos of Dad’: It’s ‘Gross’ and ‘Not What He’d Want’

Yeah, using AI to bug folks with AI fake zombies is now a thing. Don't let it be your thing.

The quantum of intelligence

Ben Riley loves to dive into the deep end. This time, he considers quantum physics, cognition, and AI and then tries to connect some dots. Real thinking stuff (and I mean that in all the ways). 


I stumbled across this piece from way back in early 2023, roughly a thousand years ago as AI goes, but it's worth a read. Lauren Goodlad and Samuel Baker at Public Books contemplate the crap that would come from the automating of writing.

School offers hikes instead of detention. Teachers are seeing results.

Paywall free, this piece by Kyle Melnick profiles a school in Maine that has tried something different for problem students, and it's not terrible.


One of the first books I latched onto when I started wading into the world of education reform was 50 Myths and Lies That Threaten America's Public Schools by David Berliner and Gene Glass. When I was asked to contribute to a Berliner-edited collection of essays about public ed, it felt like a huge step up for me. NEPC offers some remembrances. Diane Ravitch also noted his passing.

At Forbes.com this week, I wrote up the defeat of New Hampshire's anti-DEI law by a federal judge. May the courtroom losses continue.

For this week's music, let's go back to 1977 and that other re-visioning of The Wizard of Oz. 


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Friday, October 10, 2025

Should Students Get Help From AI, Or From Bob?

There are a variety if "guides" out there to try to provide some sort of structure and sense to the question, "Should a student use AI on this assignment?" None of them are very useful.

Let's take this example:













That "Generative AI Acceptable Use Scale" has been run in EdWeek and used by at least one actual instructor. It was adapted by Vera Cubero (North Carolina Department of Public Instruction) and based on the work of Dr. Leon Furze, Dr. Mike Perkins, Dr. Jasper Roe FHEA, and Dr. Jason Mcvaugh. That's a lot of doctors. And yet.

The disclosure requirements are cute, in that way that classroom teachers recognize not so much as "I'm sure you will follow these requirements" so much as "I'm going to express my expectations clearly so that later, when you try to ignore them, there will already be a foundation for my complaints about what you've done." 

But lets expand on the guidelines themselves. Because in my rural area, I can envision a student who lives without enough reliable wifi to connect to ChatGPT, but happens to live next door to a smart graduate student-- let's call that grad student "Bob."* 

So with the AI guide in mind, let's craft some rules for Acceptable Use of Bob for assignments.

No Bob Use, also known as the Don't Cheat option, is of course the preferred default.

Bob-Assisted Idea Generation and Structuring. In this option, Bob would come up with the idea for your paper, and/or provide you with an outline for your work. The continued acceptance among AI-mongers that idea-generation and structuring are not really part of the writing process, and therefor it's okay to have Bob do that part for you--well, it makes me cranky. In fact this touched enough of a nerve that I'll make an entire separate post about it. You can read that now or later-- TL:DR, having Bob doing all the start-up work for your assignment is not okay.

Bob-Assisted Editing. In this option, Bob reads over your work and tells you what to fix. He can't add whole new sections, but he can do anything else to "improve the quality" of your work. 

Bob for Specified Task Completion. Maybe when I gave you the assignment I said, "Go get Bob to make your charts" or "Have Bob collect all your research materials" or some other specified task. Why this is Level 3 when it seems like potentially the least objectionable use of Bob I do not know. But this is probably a good time to mention that while Bob is smart, he also has a serious drinking problem, and whatever task he completes for you, you'd better check over carefully, because I'm going to hold you responsible for the part of the assignment that I told you to have Bob do.

Full Bob Use with Student Oversight. In this option, you just have Bob do the assignment for you. How having Bob as your "co-pilot" as a way to enhance your creativity is beyond me; maybe the creativity part comes when you explain why you should get credit for Bob's work. If Bob screws anything up, it's on you, though I cannot for the life of me figure out what I am assessing when I give you a grade for Bob's work. 

In fact, that's a problem for most of this. I am trying to assess certain skills and/or knowledge of you, the student. Bob isn't even in my school, let alone in my gradebook. So how do I award a grade to student based on Bob's work?

If you agree that the thought of a student running off to have neighbor Bob complete some-to-all of that student's assignment seems like an ethical and assessment problem, then someone explain to me why using AI is any different or better. I have no doubt that it will be some-to-all degree of difficulty to keep some students from getting Bob to help them complete their assignment, but that doesn't mean I should create a formal structure for how much of what kind of cheating they will be using in my class. 


*I generally default to "Pat" or "Sam" or other gender non-specific names, but "Bob" is objectively more funny.

No, AI Should Not Write Your Outline

When folks go casting about for some use for AI in schools, the two items that frequently come up are brainstorming and outlining. This is a lousy idea.

You can convince me that AI brainstorming is no worse than handing a student a list of possible topics for an assignment, though not as good as a suggestion or two from a teacher who is familiar with the student's interests and strengths. 

But outlining the work? No, no, a thousand times, no.

Part of demonstrating understanding of complex ideas is showing that you have a grasp of how they fit together, how one connects to another. That structure and connection is what drives the organization of a piece of work. The structure and organization also reflect the process of deciding what to include and what to leave out. Without selection and structure of ideas, you end up with a pile of unvariegated details in a paper best entitled (as I often told me students) "A Bunch of Stuff About This Topic."

This has been my eternal beef with the traditional shake and bake "research" assignment in schools. You know the one-- go find some sources about your topic, then write a paper in which you re-state what they say, but in such a way that you aren't technically plagiarizing. 

What is always taken from sources (usually just one) is not simply facts and data, but organization and structure. When an author goes to write, say, the sixty gazillionth biography of Abraham Lincoln, the author's most important work is to first decide what the point, the thesis, of their book will be, then to use that filter to select which details and source materials from Lincoln's life to include (a process that is often looplike-- search through materials, develop a thesis, look at more materials, modify the thesis, and on and on) and then figure out how to best arrange the details to support that thesis. There may be more looping back; in the writing, the author may decide that Source Material X doesn't really fit, so it's rejected. The author may also decide that to build a bridge between Point A and Point C they need to do additional research to find material out of which that bridge can be built.

When some high school student grabs the resulting biography for their own paper about Lincoln, they are taking not just facts from the book, but the thesis, the organization, all the decisions about what to leave in and what to take out. And that student is unaware of it all, because if the author did the job well, the book will seem like it just had to be the way it is, that there could be no other way to write about Lincoln. 

Except that, of course, it is the result of deliberate choices made by the author, including uncountable choices that all other Lincoln biographers chose to make differently. It's not just the bricks you collect, but how you choose to put them together. 

The foundation one builds decides much of what house can be built atop it. To imagine that AI can build the foundation and that leaves the student free to make any sorts of choices about the structure built atop it is just silly. The notion that structuring the product is a minor part of the job, and the actual marking of words on a page is the major portion is just wrong. If the writer has been thorough with the selection and structure of the work, the actual writing portion is a smaller part of the labor or creation. 

Most writing problems are thinking problems, and a major portion of the thinking takes place before the actual placing of words on the page begins. To outsource that to a machine that doesn't even think is a recipe for bad writing, and worse, for a product that cannot be reasonably used as an assessment of the student. Which takes us back to the post I was writing when I started writing this one.

Thursday, October 9, 2025

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.  

Wednesday, October 8, 2025

Liberal Redneck - School Voucher Scams

This is from a year ago, but comedian Trae Crowder captures the reality of taxpayer-funded vouchers. Some salty language, but it's always nice when someone outside the education world gets it. 



Tuesday, October 7, 2025

Saving Time With AI

As AI-mongers continue their full court press to crack the education market, we keep hearing the same pitch over and over again--

AI will help save teachers time. 

Here are a few things to keep in mind the next time you hear this pitch.

Automation and time saving

If you have been in the classroom for more than a couple of weeks, you know this scenario, which has been running since the first teaching aid was created.

"Here's some new stuff," declares your administration. "Use this. It will save you lots of time." Then, under their breath as they head out the door, "Once you get it set up." Getting the tech set up and ready to use? A zillion hours. Time to get the bugs out and establish comfort using the tech. Another zillion hours. Time saved once it's up and running? Fifteen minutes a week. Only that's not really saved, because admins figure that since you have this new time-saving tech, you can pick up this additional work that will only take a zillion hours out of your week.

Now comes AI, which will save you all this time doing things like creating lesson plans, once you get better at creating prompts. Except that you will need to double check every single thing it extrudes, because all it will do is make stuff up, and some of that stuff will be real and some will not. Because, no, ChatGPT will not go examine a bunch of material on your chosen topic, determine which materials are most sound and accurate, study up on what would be most developmentally appropriate for your students, and run this past a comprehensive examination of the best pedagogical techniques. No, it will show you what a possible lesson plan would look like, based on probably word strings. It will not "care" about any of that other stuff. Just saying.\

A solution on the prowl

When you have a solution in search of a problem, you always have the same tell. Instead of starting by asking, "What would be the best way to solve this problem," we get the question, "How would our piece of tech solve this problem?"

In the sales biz, this is called assuming the sale. We've skipped right over the question of whether or not we should buy this "solution" and skipped ahead to the attempt to show the benefits of this tech we'll assume you've already adopted. 

If we are so concerned about teacher burnout and teacher's need for more time to do the work (a problem since forever), then let's start by asking, "How could we help teachers have more time to do the work, and maybe not get so crispy around the edges doing it?"

And the thing is, we know the best answers, and they aren't "an unreliable plagiarism machine." The answers are to reduce class size, hire more teachers, have administrators or aides take over non-teaching jobs, and, in some schools, all the little things that would occur to you if you considered teachers trustworthy professionals deserving of support and respect and not serfs who must be micromanaged. 

The fact that we didn't have any of that conversation around any version of that question tells me that "AI will save teacher time" is a baloney sales pitch, which suggests something else...

Your best foot

You're trying to sell your product as a solution to some problem in education, and the best you can come up with is "It will save time"? Besides the whole "quickie lesson plans" argument, I've seen a smattering of "help with differentiation" and "whip up some very pointed worksheets," but for something that is supposed to be the Swiss Army Knife of ed tech, AI just doesn't seem to have found very many excuses to be shoved into school problems to solve. 

You could use it to grade student writing, but it's pretty hard to pretend that isn't simple dereliction of duty. Anecdotally, I'm hearing about plenty of spectacularly lazy administrators using it to write emails, and in that case, it really would be a time saver to have your chatbot read and respond to the administrator's chatbot, creating a closed loop that causes a big time suck to vanish into its own nether regions.  

Look, here's how ed tech adoption really works in the field. New tech is introduced. Maybe with no training, so it falls into instant disuse. Maybe it piques teacher curiosity and she trains herself (which involves hours playing with it instead of dealing with that huge stack of papers on her desk). Maybe there's enough training that she has a handle on it.

But ultimately the school year is grinding away, and as a teacher has to perform a zillion different tasks and either A) she reaches for the tech because it would be helpful or B) she doesn't, because it wouldn't. 

There is another ed tech adoption scenario, which is the one where someone comes to run a training and explains that this tech would be really useful if you just changed the entire way you do your job. "Our new hammer is a chisel, and if you just change how you build houses, the chisel will be really helpful." AI hasn't been pitched this way because the folks selling it can't come up with any alternate school universe scenarios, either. 

Mostly AI for schools is being pitched by people who don't appear to know enough about teaching to know how an AI could be helpful and so are left to vaguely gesture in the direction of "saving time by doing stuff that, you know, teachers could be not doing." If people really wanted to give teachers more time to do the work, they could talk about staffing or class size or human support staff, but none of that is going to move product.


Monday, October 6, 2025

MS: Pushing for Privatization

Douglas Carswell at the Mississippi Center for Public Policy is excited about all the great privatization pushing that's been going on in the state lately.

MCPP is one more right wing thinky tank connected to and funded by all the usual folks; extra points for having taken on Carswell, a leader of the Brexit movement, as their president and CEO. 

This guy

Mississippi is a state that really aligns certain right wing priorities-- get rid of taxes, get rid of public schools, and just generally get rid of government, all of which is, I'm sure, fully disconnected from the state's past as a place where a lot of white folks really don't want to be told that they have to provide certain public services for those not-white folks. With all that in mind, they would really like to move to universal taxpayer funded vouchers and, really, a pure voucher system where no schools are funded at all and parents get a couple of bucks to go out and do who knows what for their children. 

Carswell sent out his weekly update, declaring that "school choice is our top focus" and "remains our north star." 

The House Education Freedom Committee heard some folks talk about choice, including Mississippi Center for Justice Director of Education Equity Dr. Kim Wiley, who described how Arizona's voucher system has become a budget-eating monster. 

But Carswell wants to underline an appearance from Erika Donalds, Florida's big-time money-making school choice advocate, who apparently appeared on this occasion wearing her Moms for Liberty hat. Donalds certainly earned that hat, who knew and worked with that crew even before they started the M4L shtick. It's just that you don't see her waving the M4L hat around very often. They also heard from Patrick Wolf, Arkansas's go-to guy for shoveling privatization baloney (sometimes he even writes up some "research"). Lindsey Burke, the education chief at the Heritage Foundation (where she authored the education parts of Project 2025) and now Deputy Assistant Secretary-- she has also stopped by.

Caswell explains how choice would work, and provides some specific answers. Particularly notable is his explanation of how choice wouldn't lead to overcrowding:

Under our proposal, schools would get to set capacity limits and decline additional students if full. Schools could also reject students with significant disciplinary issues, maintaining safe and focused learning environments.

This is remarkably frank; school choice would be the school's choice. "We're just too full," they could say. Or "We think your child would be detrimental to our school's learning environment." Which seems fine, because exclusionary education has never been a problem in Mississippi in the past, right? Not that I should pick on Mississippi-- virtually every taxpayer-funded voucher program includes provisions that allow private schools to exclude whatever students they want to exclude. School choice is school's choice. That right of the school to discriminate is, in practice, given far more weight than any supposed "parent power." But Caswell is a bit unusual in laying it out so plainly.

Caswell also argues that all the other states that surround them are doing it, which is quite the argument to make in the Deep South, with its collective history of educational inadequacy.

Caswell offers other weak sauce as well. Folks say that choice programs defund public schools, "but that's misleading." "Misleading" is a great word for when you want to say "Well, they're not wrong, but I'd rather get you to look at something else." Caswell offers the free market argument-- if public schools don't want to get defunded, they should beat the competition. Of course, they're not competing on a level field-- they can't, for instance, reject students for whatever trips their fancy. Caswell also throws in his version of "fund students, not systems" which is an education version of "I want insurance to fund my broken leg, not my doctor" as if the system is not the "how" of serving the student.

This is particularly odd coming from Mississippi, where the public school system has produced the "Mississippi miracle" which conservatives are holding up as proof of the awesomeness of phonics and Science of Reading, and while there may be a mountain of baloney behind that "triumph," it is being touted as an achievement by the system.

Caswell asserts that school choice works. It's pretty to think so, but that's not what the evidence says. But for an outfit that would like to do away from any instruments that require taxpayers to support education for other peoples' children, a voucher system that pays parents to give up their right to a free guaranteed education is just the thing. 

There are education reformsters who pursue choice because they believe in the magical marketplace or the benefits to students, or at least talk the talk. MCPP is not one of those. They barely discuss the educational aspects of their policy plans, which are coming on the heels of their successful drive to eliminate income tax in the state. They keep talking about "access to the educational opportunities that their kids deserve," but of course those opportunities will only be available to certain select children. 

It's worth noting that Mississippi was always a big state for segregation academies, and some private schools that are essentially segregation academies are still thriving in the state. I bet those private schools will be more than happy to get big fat taxpayer subsidies under a universal voucher plan. Like a little mini-brexit with a state payoff. 



Sunday, October 5, 2025

ICYMI: Applefest 25 Edition (10/5)

Every year, on the first full weekend of October, my small town turns itself over to Applefest, a small town festival hung on the hook that Johnny Appleseed lived around here for a few years before his big move into the West. There are vendors, food, a race, a car show, music, and just a lot of stuff. For a couple of days we close down the main street and just walk around. I can't honestly argue that we have something other big festivals in small towns lack, but the town makes a fine scenic backdrop and it is a good time. I run into former students who come back for it and just generally enjoy the hubbub before we turn sleepy again. So that's my weekend. Feel free to visit us next year.

Now for this week's reading list. But first, an image. Do with it what you will--




















‘Absolutely devastating’: Rural schools say $100K visa fee could make it hard to hire teachers

Remember all those schools using immigrants to fill teaching positions. They might have a problem now. Erica Meltzer reports for Chalkbeat. 


Surprise. Mark Kreidler at Capital and Main explains the why of this.

PEN America warns of rise in books 'systematically removed from school libraries'

The latest PEN America update isn't very encouraging, but at least we have some idea of what is actually going on.

Oklahoma AG requests investigation of education department, 1 day after Walters resigns

Ryan Walters may be done with Oklahoma, but the attorney general is not done with him. 

Standards-Based Grades Get a C-

Teacher Andrew Barron explains why he lost faith in standards-based grading. 

Federal court tosses Moms For Liberty associate’s case against Lowell Area Schools

It's always encouraging when the Moms lose one, and lose they did with the case of a Mom who wanted the freedom to harass the school endlessly.

Cory Doctorow: Reverse Centaurs

Cory Doctorow offers a useful framework for explaining when AI is hurting and not helping.

SEL by Another Name? Political Pushback Prompts Rebranding

Arianna Prothero at EdWeek looks at how schools are handling the demonization of Social and Emotional Learning, including rebranding it.

Vouchers would hurt rural Idaho students. That's why we're suing

Rep. Stephanie Mickelsen explains why Idaho's voucher program is a threat to rural students, and what she is trying to do about it.

Do ‘Good’ Schools Stay ‘Good’? And Do ‘Bad’ Schools Stay ‘Bad’?

At The74, Chad Aldeman looks at some data about whether or not schools stay in the top or bottom of the rankings over time.

From Wal-Mart Checkout to the Education Industrial Complex

TC Weber finds connections about connections everywhere he looks in the education world.

The Republican Effort To Remake Schools In God’s Image

Nathalle Baptiste at Huffington Post looks at the continued attempts to jam christianism into the classroom,

How about a Pause on the Race to Embed AI in Schools?

Nancy Flanagan has stayed away from AI commentary, but this time she's leaning into it. And maybe AI-in-school fans should just ease up a bit.

Companion Specious

Audrey Watters looks at some of the more objectionable uses of AI, including the push to use it to save teachers time.

Coalition of Billionaires Masquerades as Mass Reads Coalition

Maurice Cunningham tracks down the people actually behind the Massachusetts push for reading reform, and it's the same old cranky rich guys.

Larry Cuban has unearthed an old pledge for school reformers, and it's not half bad. Course, I'm not sure many modern reformsters have seen it, let alone signed it.

Ohio has worked hard to become the Florida of the North when it comes to education. Jan Resseger has some of the receipts from the latest efforts.

Planning to Fail: How HB1’s Flawed Analysis Left Florida Taxpayers Holding the Bag

Sue Kingery Woltanski breaks down the damage being done by Florida's universal voucher expansion.


I taught Hamlet for decades, and it was a different play every year. Ted Gioia offers some thoughts about what it has to say right now.

The Concert for George Harrison ended with this rendition of an old standard by Joe Brown. Always gets me right here. 

You can always have my latest stuff clogging up your email by subscribing to the newsletter. Free now and always.

Friday, October 3, 2025

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. 

Artificial What Now?

Adam Becker's More Everything Forever is a sobering look at our tech overlords, their crazypants dreams, and the reasons that those dreams are less likely than an actual autonomous automobile. It's a pretty depressing books because two things come through. 

One is the enormous power these folks wield over the world we all have to live in; it's power they absolutely believe they should have, based on their certainty that some people are better than others and they are the best of all. 

The other is just how dopey these guys are, how enbubbled and disconnected from-- and even hostile to-- the lives of regular humans. These masters of the universe have all sorts of big dreams, like immortality (really) and not many solid ideas about how to achieve these dreams, even as they ignore many of the counter-ideas (Elon Musk's colonization of Mars? Not going to happen ). 

But what is extra astonishing in the book is that even as they are all-in on a future of AI, especially Artificial General Intelligence, they really don't seem to know what, exactly, that means. AGI? Maybe it means roughly "an artificial machine that can do everything a typical human adult can do" but holy smokes is that vague. 

As a species, we are generally pretty fuzzy on what "intelligence" actually means, with a whole variety of theories about what it is and how it can be measured. And the thing is that these silicon valley overlords seem to know way less about it than people who make even a half-hearted attempt to study this stuff.

Many experts, Becker points out, are certain that the path to AGI does not lie along increased capabilities to current models. They can keep making ChatGPT "smarter," but it will never get any closer to AGI, because that is a difference of kind, not of degree. Check out this piece from Ben Riley in which an AI insider explains that LLMs can't reason like humans

I find the continued attempts to "resurrect" the dead via AI particularly telling. The latest example come in The Atlantic, with multiple attempts to resurrect the dead compared to a sort of Frankenstein complex. It's an apt comparison, as Frankenstein arguably made the mistake of not considering the internal life, the motivations and intents, of his creation. Failing to understand or anticipate those aspects, the doctor rejects the creature that embodies them and creates disaster.

AI creates a variation on that problem. Your dead loved one is not there, the AI completely empty of any motivations or intentions. But for some of these folks, that doesn't seem to matter-- the other "person" is only real to the extent that we experience them. They have no life or existence beyond providing input for our senses; they literally turn off and cease to exist when they are not performing for their maker. 

It is deeply reminiscent of a sociopath's belief that other people are not real, that they exist only as props in a story that is all about MMEEEEEE! And that leads me to wonder if these overlords that Becker describes do not perhaps view actually flesh and blood humans in the same way, and that's why AI seems so human to them-- not because of the depth of humanity in the bots, but the meager view with which they view other humans.

I don't mean to suggest that everyone who gets suckered by a chatbot is a sociopath. But I do think AI moves most easily into places where humanity has been hollowed out, and I wonder if peoples' willingness to imagine that the bot is intelligent, to fill in the blanks of its internal life, isn't one more sign that connection and humanity have been hollowed out in our society in ways that are not good for us.

The quest for Artificial General Intelligence is a chance for us to reflect on what Organic General Intelligence might be. We're often sloppy about our judgment ("People who don't know what I know are dumb") and it's that same sloppiness that leads some folks to assume the AI has any I in it at all, even though AI has no reflection, no intent, no social reconfiguring, no wisdom, no actual knowledge, but just a capability of imitating what an answer to your prompt would, statistically, look like. 

I recommend Becker's book because even though these guys are terrifying in their power and entitlement, it is also useful to understand that they are also clueless about critical factors in their imagined future. It's a reminder that we need not follow these wealthy dopes into their empty, hollow future. 

Thursday, October 2, 2025

"Reinventing Education for the Age of AI" (or Building a Better MOOC)

There are just so many, many bad things being written about AI and the education world. So many unserious bits of advice being taken seriously. So many people who appear to be intelligent and well-educated who are harboring fantasy-based ideas about what AI is and what it does. 

We need to keep talking about them, because right now we are living through a moment in which the emperor has new clothes, but a new horse, a new castle, and a new inclination to make everyone share his sartorial choices (and winter is coming). But the fantasy is so huge, the invisible baloney stacked so high, that people are concluding that they must just be losing their minds.

So let's look at this one, with the inspiring title "The AI Tsunami Is Here: Reinventing Education for the Age of AI." Published at Educause ("the Voice of the Higher Education Technology Community"), this monstrosity lists six authors even though it's a seven-minute read. Two authors-- Tanya Gamby and Rachel Koblic-- are mucky mucks at Matter and Space, a Manchester, NH company that promises "human-centered learning for the age of AI." Furthermore "By combining cutting-edge AI with a holistic focus on personal growth, we’re creating an entirely new way for your people to learn, evolve, and thrive." The emperor may have a new thesaurus, too. Matter and Space are central to this article.

Also authoring this article we get David Kil, entrepreneur and data scientist; Paul LeBlanc, president of Southern New Hampshire University, a university big in the online learning biz, also based in Manchester, and the board chair at Matter and Space; Georg Siemens, a figure in the Massive Online Open Course (MOOC) world (the one that was going to replace regular universities but then, you know, didn't) and is a co-founder and Chief Science Officer of Matter and Space.

So what did this sextet of luminaries come up with? Well, the pitch is for "interactionalism—a human-centered approach to learning that fosters collaboration, creativity, adaptability, feedback, and well-being."

The authors yadda yadda their way through "AI will do big and we are on the cusp of huge changes etc" before launching into their actual pitch for changing the model. Higher education, they argue, still uses a "broadcast-era model." Instructor delivers, students receive, exams assess. Feedback is sparse. They arguably have a point, but we are in familiar ed reform territory here-- present a problem, and then, rather than searching for the best solution, start insisting that whatever you're promoting is a solution.

They want to beat up the old model a bunch. The downlink aka delivery of stuff is one size fits all and broad. The uplink aka assessment is narrow. The feedback loop is narrower still. This was designed "for an industrial economy that prized efficiency and standardization over curiosity, adaptability, and genuine thinking." What about the "vision of truly personalized learning"? Welll.... You can't realistically talk about personalized learning if you aren't going to balance it with recognition that learning, particularly for younger humans, is a social activity. And they're going to head further into the weeds:
The world in which this system was built no longer exists. Knowledge is everywhere, and it's instantly accessible. Memorization as a primary skill makes little sense when any fact is a click away. Modern work demands collaboration, adaptability, and the ability to navigate uncertainty—skills developed in interaction, not isolation. And now AI has entered the room—not simply as a tool for automating tasks, but as a co-creator: asking questions, raising objections, and refining ideas. It is already better than most of us at delivering content. Which forces us to ask: If AI can do that part, what should we be doing?
That is a lot of stuff to get wrong in just one paragraph.

"We don't need to know stuff because we can look it up on the internet" is one of the dumbest ideas to come out of the internet era. You cannot have thoughts regarding things you know nothing about. The notion here is that somehow some historically illiterate shmoe with an internet connection could be as functionally great a historian as David McCullough. 

"Modern work demands..." a bunch of social skills which will be hard to develop sitting in front of a computer screen--but I have a sick feeling they have a "solution" for that. And sure enough--instead of a social process involving other humans, you can get the "social" element from AI as a "co-creator." AI creates nothing. It can ask questions, but it can't raise meaningful objections and it can't refine ideas because it does not think. And this next line--

"It is already better than most of us at delivering content." How? First of all, it's not a great sign that these folks are using "content" instead of "information" or "learning." Content is the mulch of the internet, the fodder used to fill click-hungry eyeball-collecting ad-clogged websites. Content is not meant to engage or inform or launch an inquiry for greater understanding; it's just bulk meant to take up space and keep things moving, roughage for the internet's bowels. Second, AI delivers content along the same "broadcast-era model" the authors were disparaging mere paragraphs ago. And finally, AI can't even deliver "content" that is reliably accurate. AI's closest human analog is not a scholar, but a bullshit artist--and one that doesn't know anything about the topic at hand.

So we are not off to a great start here. And we have yet to define "interactionalism," which we are assured is "more than a teaching method" but "a set of principles for designing the skills and knowledge learners need—and the mechanisms by which they acquire them—in a world where human and machine intelligence work together." What does "designing knowledge" even mean?

Well, here come the three pillars of interactionalism. Buckle up:

Dialogical learning. Learners and AI agents engage in two-way conversational exchanges. There are no one-way lectures. Every presentation invites questions; every explanation invites challenges. Learners' questions inform the assessment of competence just as much as their answers. Feedback is continuous, as it is in the workplace.

I'm going to skip over the glib assumption that feedback is continuous in the workplace. Instead, I want to know why a computer makes a better partner for the Socratic method than an actual human, whose knowledge of the topic being dialogically learninated might produce some more useful and pointed questions than one can expect from a chatbot.

Interactive skill building. As AI takes over more routine tasks, uniquely human skills—such as questioning, adapting models to context, and exercising judgment—become central. These are practiced continuously and in conversation with AI tools long before students face similar exercises in the real world.

What do you mean "long before students face similar exercises in the real world"? Are you seriously suggesting we bubble up some young humans and have them practice humaning with an empty stochastic parrot rather than with other humans? Do you imagine that young humans--including very young humans-- do not practice "questioning, adapting models to context, and exercising judgment" on a regular daily basis? Have you met some young humans? 

Meta-human skills. Beyond subject mastery, students develop metacognition (thinking about their thinking) and meta-emotional skills (managing their emotions), as well as the ability to design and refine AI agents. Proficiency in these skills enables learners to shift from being passive users to active shapers of their digital collaborators.

A bicycle, because a vest has no sleeves. Meta-cognition, emotional management, and refining AI "agents" do not become related skills just because you put those words in the same sentence. Is the suggestion here that learning to be humans has utility because it help you help the AI better fake being a human, because that would be some seriously backward twisted shit that confuses who is supposed to be serving whom.

So those are the pillars. But this new approach requires a new kind of curriculum that is "dynamic, learner-adaptive, and co-created." It's going to have the following features:

Dynamic, adaptive content. The curriculum is a living entity, updated in response to new discoveries, industry changes, and students' needs. It is modular in design and can be easily revised.

Yes, this again. Fully adaptive course content has always been out of reach because it costs money, but perhaps if AI ever becomes anything less than grossly expensive, maybe the chatbot will do it instead. Of course, someone will have to check every last bit for accuracy so that students aren't learning, say, an entirely made-up bibliography. 

Co-creation of learning pathways. Students collaborate with instructors to set goals and choose content. Peer-to-peer design, shared decision-making, and ongoing negotiation over scope and depth are the norm.

We see a pattern developing here. Not the worst idea in the world (at least on the college level, where students know enough to reasonably "choose content"), but what reason is there to believe that involving AI would make this work any better than just using human beings?

Multiple perspectives and sources. Moving beyond single textbooks or single voices, learners explore diverse viewpoints, open resources, real-world data, and contributions from experts across fields.

Again, why is AI needed to pursue these goals that have been commonplace for the last sixty years?

Formative, responsive assessments. Evaluation is integrated into the learning process through self-assessment, peer review, and authentic tasks that reflect real-world applications.

In the K-12 world, we were all training to do this stuff in the 90s. Without AI.

Cultivation of self-directed learning. Students learn to chart their own learning journeys, gradually assuming more responsibility for outcomes while building skills for lifelong learning.

See also: open schools of the 1960s.

For instructors, this shift is profound. They move from being content deliverers to facilitators, mentors, and curators of learning communities.

Good lord in heaven. Is there anyone in education who has not heard a discussion of relative merits of "the sage on the stage" versus "the guide on the side." But the authors promise that classrooms will focus on "what humans do best: discussion, debate, simulation and collaboration." Students will shut their laptops and work together "on challenging applications of their learning, supported by peers and guided by faculty who know them not just as learners, but as people."

These promises have been made and remade, debated and implemented for decades. What do these folks think they have that somehow makes this "profound" shift possible?

AI-- an enabler of scale!

"Intelligent agents" will provide personalized, support, feedback and intervention at scale. 
The most revealing form of assessment—a probing, ten-minute conversation—can now be conducted by dialogic agents for hundreds of students, surfacing the depth (or shallowness) of understanding in ways multiple-choice tests never could.

No. I mean, wise choice, comparing chatbots to the worst form of assessment known to humans, but still-- no. The dialogic agent can assess whether the student has strung together a highly probably string of words that falls within the parameters of the strings of words in its training bank (including whatever biases are included in its "training"). It certainly can't probe. 

And even if it could, how would this help the human instructor better know the students as learners or people? What is lost when the AI reduces a ten minute "conversation" to a 30 second summary?

And how the hell are students supposed to feel about being required to get their grade by chatting with a bot? What would they learn beyond how to talk to the bots to get the best assessment? Why should any student make a good faith attempt to speak about their learning when no responsible human is making a good faith attempt to listen to them?

The goal, they declare, is to move education from content acquisition to the "cultivation of thinking, problem-solving, self-reflection and human traits that cannot be automated," capabilities that enhance not just employability but well-being. Like these are bold new goals for education that nobody ever thought of repeatedly for more than half a century. And then one last declaration:

AI doesn't diminish this mission—it sharpens it. The future of teaching and learning is not about keeping up with machines, but about using them to become more deeply and distinctively human.

How does AI sharpen the mission? Seven minutes later we still don't have an answer, because there isn't one. The secret of better, deeper humaning is not getting young humans to spend more time with simulated imitation humans. 

It's fitting that a co-founder of Matter and Space is a veteran of the MOOC bubble, a "brilliant" idea that was going to get education to everyone with relatively low overhead costs. MOOCs failed hard, quickly. They turned out to be, as Derek Newton wrote at Forbes, mainly "marketing tools and revenue sources for “certificate” sellers." Post-mortems of MOOCs focused on the stunningly low completion and retention rate, and many analysts blamed that one the fact that MOOCs were free. I think it's just as likely that the problem was that MOOC students were isolated, sitting and watching videos on a screen and completing work on their own. Education is a social process. If nobody cares if you show up or try, why should you show up or try?

An AI study buddy does not solve that problem. In education, AI still only solves one problem--"How can I increase revenue by simultaneously lowering personnel costs and increasing number of customers served?"

The authors of this piece have, on one level, described an educational approach that is sound (and popular for decades). What they have not done is to make a compelling case for why automated edu-bots are the best way to pursue their educational vision-- they haven't even made a case for why edu-bots would be an okay way to pursue it. Wrapping a whole lot of argle bargle and edu-fluff language around the same old idea-- we'll put your kid on a computer with a bot-- does not make it a good idea, and you are not crazy for thinking it isn't. 



Wednesday, October 1, 2025

FL: Anti-Woke College Not Working Out So Well

You will recall that a couple of years ago, his head filled with fantasies about running for President as a smarter, more stable Trump, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis decided to take over small, liberalish New College and make it proof of concept for Unwoke Higher Ed. He put former Speaker of the House and then education chief Richard Corcoran in charge and sat back to watch the antiwokeness flourish.

Now Inside Higher Ed reports that the flourishing isn't quite happening. 

The gutting of anything woke-ish happened, with things like gender studies being trashcanned. Corcoran got it into his head that maybe they could beef up the athletic program (from scratch), which resulted in some aggressive recruiting of athletes who were not exactly the cream of the academic crop. In the process, New College even reinvented affirmative action. New College trustee and culture panic manufacturer Chris Rufo explained in the New York Times
In the past, about two-thirds of New College’s students were women. “This is a wildly out-of-balance student population, and it caused all sorts of cultural problems,” said Rufo. Having so many more women than men, he said, turned New College into “what many have called a social justice ghetto.” The new leadership, he said, is “rebalancing the ratio of students” in the hopes of ultimately achieving gender parity.
Too many women equals too much liberal stuff (because for MAGA, the problem with liberalism is that it's not manly enough, and if all of this seems to imply some misogynist ideas about the relative merits of male and female thought, well, yes) so affirmative action for dudes is more important than, say, admission based on merit.

DeSantis wanted this all to work so badly that New College got a blank check from the legislature, and Josh Moody at Inside Higher Ed reports that the school has been using that check and loading it with zeros. Annual cost per student at other Florida state system schools = $10,000. At New College it's more like $134,000. No, that is not one my typos.

Part of the expense appears to be related to retention and graduation problems. Enrollment dipped, and New College offered guaranteed admissions to certain local students. Moody quotes a faculty member:
“It’s kind of like a Ponzi scheme: Students keep leaving, so they have to recruit bigger and bigger cohorts of students, and then they say, ‘Biggest class ever’ because they have to backfill all the students who have left,” they said.

Nathan Allen, who was VP of strategy at New College for 18 months after the takeover told Moody that he thinks legislators may be running out of patience:

“I think that the Senate and the House are increasingly sensitive to the costs and the outcomes,” Allen said. “Academically, Richard’s running a Motel 6 on a Ritz-Carlton budget, and it makes no sense.”

Costs are up, ranking is down, they can't hold onto students, and the Mighty Banyans (really) still don't have a winning basketball team. And nobody wanted to talk to Moody to say nice things about the school. It would appear that going woke might not be the only way to go broke.