Monday, July 3, 2023

Would Legalizing Discrimination Improve Education

Corey DeAngelis is one of the young choice bros, working for the DeVos American Federation for Children, CATO, Reason, Education Freedom Institute, etc etc. And while I can remember a time when one could have a civil Twitter exchange with him, nowadays he's followed by a fairly aggressive Twitter swarm. But he's one of the young guns in the privatizing world, a mover and shaker and "choice evangelist" that has been there to boost every piece of privatizing legislation of the past couple of years, so it's worth taking a look at some of his earlier pieces of work to get insights into his thinking. 

So we head back to 2016 and the Foundation for Economic Education, a libertarian thinky tank founded in 1946; they cut their teeth on opposition to New Deal stuff. In 2016, their chief was Lawrence Reed, who had previously run the right-tilted Mackinac Center and was also a senior fellow at the Heritage Foundation.

The DeAngelis piece has a catchy title-- Legalizing Discrimination Would Improve the Education System-- and a thesis that Milton Friedman, the granddaddy of the Let's Just Get Rid Of Public Schools movement, would appreciate. 

Friedman's view on segregation and vouchers has been debated. Friedman was anti-segregation, and also anti-forced desegregation. His championing of school vouchers came along at just the right time for folks who were looking for ways to avoid the results of Brown v. Board; whether that was just a remarkable coincidence or Friedman taking advantage of culture wars to promote an anti-public ed policy depends on how much credit you want to give the man. 

Likewise, Friedman either argued that A) school vouchers would inevitably lead to more segregation or B) school vouchers would lead to more integration, or possibly C) he didn't really care one way or the other. Your choice will depend on A) what pieces of stuff you read and B) how important it is to you to preserve his standing as a sainted father of rational and objectively true belief in a Free Market that should be Ruling Society. 

If he was using culture war panic over segregation to feed a privatization agenda, he certainly wouldn't be the last.

At any rate, DeAngelis offers a more civilian-accessible version of how the voucher system could be expected to weed out Bad Discrimination. 

We can all agree that the intentions behind this policy are well-meaning. We don’t want public funding to go to schools that are run by malevolent people. For simplicity, let’s assume that people running private schools are indeed racist, sexist, evil individuals. Even if we allow all types of discrimination, the evil individuals in charge of the private schools will financially pay for the act.

For example, let’s assume that the people in charge of school X are racist. They can choose to hire a teacher of race 1 or race 2. If they are racist against race 2, they will likely choose to hire race 1, regardless of the actual quality of the teacher. If an alternative school, Y, does not practice the same discrimination, they will benefit by having a larger pool of teacher candidates. Ultimately, this would lead to a competitive advantage for school Y for not being racist! Families would recognize this advantage, choose school Y, and force school X to face a shutdown condition. Allowing families to choose their schools will only work to eliminate unhealthy discrimination such as racism in hiring.


It would be generous to call this idea ahistorical. The post-Brown landscape, complete with segregation academies and racially gerrymandered districts, provides ample evidence that there is a robust market for racist schools. Furthermore, the current landscape provides ample evidence that there is a robust market for schools that discriminate on the basis of religion or LGBTQ status.

But DeAngelis is going to say "Bad discrimination will be quelched by the market" and move on.

Then he shifts to examples of "healthy discrimination." He offers basically two types.

First is what we might call "magnet school" discrimination. If you're setting up a school for the performing arts, it would not be healthy to force the school to accept students and faculty who have no background in the performing arts. He uses a sports school example along the same lines.

Second is "ability level and learning styles" discrimination. If we accept students with low achievement levels just because they are athletes, that would be hard on top academic students and teachers. 

This "healthy discrimination" is also to be done away with, leaving students to just crash on the rocks and, as he admits, "hurt their confidence level."

But behind his distinction between healthy and unhealthy, there are other distinctions. Like the distinction between discrimination based on relevant factors (like background in the material the school teaches) and discrimination based on irrelevant factors (race, religion or sexual orientation of the student). 

Or instead of "healthy" and "unhealthy" we could say "legal" and "illegal." "Not a performing artist" is not a protected class. "Not in the top percentile of academic achievement" is not a marginalized group. But DeAngelis, like Friedman, wants government out of the whole thing.

Although there are certain types of unhealthy discrimination, it is not optimal for bureaucrats to determine which types are permissible for the rest of society. Instead, we should allow families in society to choose the schools that do not partake in the discriminatory practices that they deem to be non-permissible.

And here we are, back at the same old problems. First, there's the libertarian paradox--if we allow people the freedom of choice to discriminate as they wish, that automatically robs other people of their freedom to choose. Second, if a bunch of people choose poorly, all of us suffer (including losing our freedom to choose). Society has a vested interest in limiting the spread of racism and ignorance, not just because those are morally and ethically bad, but because they make society work worse. Unhealthy discrimination is unhealthy for society as a whole.

In all fairness, it's not just a libertarian problem. It's also a democracy problem; freedom to have your voice is great and necessary, but when you use that voice to promote damaging vile stuff, we have a problem. Plenty of districts have managed to implement and maintain discrimination using democratic processes.

But as hard as the problem is to wrestle with, "Just let the free market sort it out" is not a solution. To be clear, legalizing discrimination would not improve education--it would (as it always gas) provide coiver for bigotry and unhealthy discrimination, thereby making education so much worse for people who get the short end of the stick.

And I'm not sure that DeAngelis and Friedman actually think the free market really will solve segregation, so much as they think the free market should be the primary value driving policy, and if that results in segregation and inequity, oh well, that's just the price of Freedom. 



Sunday, July 2, 2023

Music vs. Sports

Among the various ways to divide Americans into two groups, I like my brother's model. He has long argued that everyone is either a band geek or a sports geek. 

Band is a cooperative venture (yes, this would include chorus, too). You work together with the other people in the group; the trombones don't try to "beat" the clarinets--okay, sometimes they do, but they generally stop because for the group to succeed, everyone has to do their part. Everyone has to work together and put the achievement of the group first. 

Sports are a competitive venture. You're there to beat the other side, not to work along with them. Your success requires their defeat. You get better by learning how to defeat strong opponents.

Bands are not zero sum. If four bands play in a single concert, they can all be excellent and successful. There is an infinite supply of audience applause.

Sports are zero sum. Somebody can only win if somebody else loses. 

There are occasional attempts to bring elements of one into the other. There are, for instance, actual band competitions in which bands play "against" each other and some band wins. These are stupid. Why should a band that delivered a great performance be told that they're losers (those of you who are sports geeks are right now saying "because that's how the world works"). These competitions inflict a more subtle harm; there is a whole body of band composition that is designed not around a great musical idea, but around elements that a band would need to demonstrate to win a competition. These compositions are kind of lousy.

Meanwhile, it's the band geeks of the world that invented participation trophies and other ways to try to convince people who clearly lost the competition that they are somehow winners (you band geeks are saying "But why should someone who played their guts out be told they suck"). But if we tell folks involved in a competitive situation that they didn't lose when they clearly did, that's no help in dealing with reality, nor in improving.

Each has elements of the other. Sports teams have to cooperate within themselves in order to win. Not only that, but in the competitive world, the people who can best understand, appreciate, and respect   what you're doing are your opponents. Band members, sometimes openly and sometimes subtly, jockey and compete for leadership positions within the group. We may be working together in this band, but we also know who the best players are.

There's some complexity and nuance here, but we're still talking about two fundamentally different ways of viewing how the world works. People steeped in the competitive model can be dumbfounded, frustrated, or even dismissive of people who don't seem to understand that it's a dog-eat-dog world. People steeped in the cooperative view can be dumfounded, frustrated, or even dismissive of people who insist that battling is the only path forward.

In education, the folks who insist that a competitive marketplace is the only way to get better are speaking a foreign language to those who believe in the cooperative model. Meanwhile, those competitive folks can't figure out why so many educators don't understand that it's impossible to get better if you aren't trying to beat someone. And both suspect that the other side is just pretending to believe in a model that, dammit, no rational human being who can actually see the world would honestly believe.

The model you see depends a lot on how the world was revealed to you when you were young. But I think the big trick is to grow past that model so that you can see the value of both. There are times when the competitive model is the way to go, and times when cooperation is the secret.

When considering competition, consider what the terms of engagement will be--what will the basis of the competition be? My town has an annual America's Got Talent style singing competition where the actual terms of the competition are getting audience support, and so the context actually measure which contestant is best able to get the most supporters to come sit in the audience. So it's not really a vocal competition (which is a mystery anyway, because how does one objectively measure the "best" singer); it's a popularity competition. In any competition, you have to ask if you're really competing over what you say you're competing over.

In education, leaders keep trying to set up competitions between schools and districts based on educational excellence, only instead they're really competitions to see who can get students to get the highest scores on a single math and reading test given once a year. The competition is not really about what it pretends to be about.

Cooperation has its own pitfalls. I play in a community band, and we long ago made the conscious decision that we were more interested in being an inclusive community activity than the most awesomest band in the state. So we have welcomed (and continue to do so) players who don't bring a lot of musical aptitude to the table. That's an appropriate choice; we're a community volunteer organization making music, not a professional team trying to get to the Super Bowl. But you can worry so much about avoiding competitiveness that you stop paying any attention to relative achievement at all.

But in education it's possible to lose the plot, to worry so much about not subjecting students to competition that you stop subjecting them to any meaningful evaluation. I get the impulse to eliminate gifted and talented program, especially when the competition for spots is based on dubious measures (my own district for years appeared to base the program on the student's parents' job). But that doesn't really help anyone. 

Policy and politics folks seem to skew to the sports side. You can certainly see it in moments like the Moms For Liberty professional coms advice to never apologize, because it shows weakness. And you can't beat people that way. The mindset, so very common in the public-facing world of politics and policy, is at odds with teachers, who are largely cooperative model types, and often have trouble dealing with the various actors currently trying to beat teachers, beat public education. 

It's not a perfect model, but it's another way to understand some of the gulfs that energize some of our debates. As always, the solution is moderation, balance, and bridges built by grownups who are willing to live with nuance and complexity. 

ICYMI: Glass Slipper Edition (7/2)

 Wrapping up the first weekend of the local production of Cinderella. This time I'm just doing some trombone honking in the pit. Find a way in your life to make something, whether it's music or art or a cabinet or a project. I added this to my rules for life list years ago because for a teacher, who rarely gets to see the end project of what you work on, it's nice to have a project that makes something and has a finish point. It is particularly helpful during weeks when people are chiseling away at some of the progress we have made as a country. 

Anyway, here's some reading from the week.


Steve Nuzum watched some of that thing going on. He has both some reporting of what was said, and some good insights into the baloney that was sliced.

Vermilion Education’s Debut At Pennridge School District Flops

The Bucks County Beacon (which has a once-a-month spot for me) has been on an absolute tear this week. Here's a great piece about Vermilion, the baby consulting company (aka one guy who used to work for Hillsdale) and their first contract. It's a mess. Fun fact: the one guy is with the Moms for Liberty this weekend for a session on how to get your "flipped" schoolboard on the right ideological path. You should read about this guy if for nom other reason than he could be coming to your district some day.

A breaking point: A look at the reasons why some Rochester-area teachers have left education

That's Rochester, Minnesota. This is a good nuts and bolts look at the teacher exodus in that state. No surprises here, but at least it confirms what we already know.

The teaching profession is facing a post-pandemic crisis

Matt Barnum (the most reliably on-the-ball reporter at Chalkbeat) did a two-part series at Chalkbeat looking at the troubles with the profession. Some solid data here. The follow-up piece proposes some solutions.

As Always, Budgets Reflect Priorities. For Florida’s Public Schools, the 2023-24 Budget Is NOT Worth Celebrating.

Sue Kingery Woltanski breaks down the Florida budget, and separates depressing truth from the hype. Oh, Florida.


This piece ran on All Things Considered on NPR. Beth Wallis looks into an under-discussed issue with the lousy family leave policy in so many schools. (E.G., the board of directors were born in early June, just as summer vacation started, and that was no coincidence.)

Teacher Gregory Sampson got some email from the College Board folks. Apparently they intend yet another expansion of their product line. 

What Feeds Bias in Education World?

Nancy Flanagan takes a thoughtful look (which is what she does with great regularity) at bias of all kinds in the education world.

Pulling Back The Curtain On The Leadership Institute’s Dominion Over Moms For Liberty

Another Bucks County Beacon piece, this time from Maurice Cunningham, a leading scholar of dark money in education. This time he takes a look at what's really going on with the Moms.

Charter school lost case over skirts rule for girls, but debate over charter autonomy isn’t over

The AP's take on the Peltier case, including an observation from Preston Green. Good summary of the issues at play.

Is Mississippi Shifting to Online Teacher Education with Reading Universe?

It's just amazing how so many states, faced with a teacher exodus and trouble filling spots, makes stupid decisions. Nancy Bailey looks at the latest bright idea in Mississippi.

What makes a social studies textbook "woke" in Ron DeSantis' Florida

Judd Legum at Popular Information takes a look at what, exactly, bothers the DeSantis administration about some of those naughty textbooks getting woke cooties on people.

Why state schools Supt. Ryan Walters sees an opening to push Christianity in schools

Ben Felder at The Oklahoman with a good piece placing context around Education Secretary Dudebro's drive to push Christianity into public schools.

The Blessings of Liberty Still Exist– But for How Long?

Yes, there was already a Nancy Flanagan piece on the list. But they're both good. And with the Supreme Court shredding on this July 4, it's worth thinking about. Also, I totally play in the local version of the band concert she describes.

When One in Nine Children Lives in Poverty

At Notes from the Education Trenches, some thoughts about poverty and its impact on students and learning, plus some disturbing stats.

Judge Strikes Down AR Law Banning Gender Care: Details from the Ruling

The indispensable Mercedes Schneider takes a look at the decision that struck down (and struck it down hard) the Arkansas anti-trans care law.

AI-Generated Books of Nonsense Are All Over Amazon's Bestseller Lists

Yes, this is happening. Amazon pay for play added to AI nonsense equals more nonsense

Summer Schools Can Boost Learning, But Only If Students Attend

At EdWeek--don't use a free paywall pass for this. I just wanted to show you the leading contender for the silliest headline of the year, so far.

This week at the Bucks County Beacon, I did a big fat deep dive into the Moms For Liberty story. And at Forbes, I was doing news-- the SCOTUS decision not to weigh in on Peltier and the nature of charter schools, and the attempt to get vouchers in PA

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Tuesday, June 27, 2023

ID: A Baffling Hiring Decision And Another Type Of District Takeover

There's another type of school takeover happening out there, and for one example we'll look to Idaho. There the West Bonner County School District has decided they'd like to hire Branden Durst as their next superintendent. It's a baffling decision, but it tells us a lot about the way some winds are blowing these days.

Who is Branden Durst?

The broad outlines of his career are pretty simple. Born in Boise. Attended pacific Lutheran University (BA in poli sci with communication minor), grad school at Kent State and Claremont Graduate University (public policy, international political economy), then Boise State University (Master of Public Administration). In 2022, he went back to BSU for a degree in Executive Educational Leadership.

His LinkedIn account lists 20 "experience" items since 2000, and Durst seems to have bounced quickly from job to job until 2006, when he was elected as an Idaho State Representative for four years. Then in 2012 he was elected to the state senate, a job that he held for one year. He did all that as  Democrat; in 2016, he switched his party to the GOP.

Then independent consultant, a mediator for a "child custody and Christian mediation" outfit. Then an Idaho Family Policy Center senior policy fellow. IFPC advocates for the usual religious right causes, but they have a broader focus as well: "To advance the cultural commission." They see the Great Commission in a dominionist light-- the church is to teach "nations to obey everything Jesus has commanded." And they suggest you get your kid out of public school.

Durst's current gig is with the Idaho Freedom Foundation, a right tilted thinky tank that wants to "make Idaho into a Laboratory of Liberty by exposing, defeating, and replacing the state's socialist public policies." The run a Center for American Education which, among other things, maintains a map so you can see where schools are "indoctrinating students with leftist nonsense." They recommend you get your child out of public school

Nowhere in any of this will you find Durst holding any sort of education or school-related job. He's never been a teacher or any kind of school administrator. Not so much as a two-year Teach for America tourist visit to the job. He did claim, at some point, to have worked as a substitute teacher and coach.

You would think that would be kind of a red flag.

Speaking of baggage...

Durst comes with some baggage. That one year tenure in the Senate? Durst resigned because the press got ahold of the fact that he was actually was living in Idaho only part time; his wife was working as a teacher near Seattle was living there at least part of the time with his family. KTVB, the station that followed the story, "observed his home looked empty of furniture when stopping by to knock on the door last week." Durst insisted that his bed and clothes were there. And he blamed the split living arrangement on Idaho schools:

There's a big difference between living out of your district for an entire year, and having a family member who is a teacher that doesn't get treated well because they live in Idaho and have to find employment someplace else. I think there's a big difference, Durst said.

For a while, it looked like he would fight the charge. But in the end he resigned his seat.

2022 was not a great year for Durst. After the Idaho Senate failed to advance the parental rights bill that he was promoting, Durst confronted Senator Jim Woodward with enough aggressiveness that Woodward called the cops on him. After blowing off a meeting with GOP leadership, Durst blasted senators on social media. The Senate GOP majority wrote a letter condemning Durst for "spurious attacks against members of the Senate, meant to coerce votes and influence elections." In a press release, GOP leaders condemned Durst and said his actions "demonstrate egregious conduct unbecoming of anyone, especially a former legislator and current statewide political candidate."

The "candidate" part refers to Durst's run for the office of state superintendent. He told EastIdahoNews, “Parents are tired. They don’t feel respected or trusted and they want some real change in their school superintendent. They’re all talking about the same things. They want to stop the indoctrination that’s happening in their schools, they want to (be able) to make decisions for their kids." He ran on three priorities-- end common core, stop critical race theory, and school choice ("fund students, not systems"). He came in second in the GOP primary, losing to Debbie Critchfield by about 25,000 votes.

Durst had remarried in 2016 (in Washington state), and in 2022, his wife and ex-wife got into a scuffle that almost blew up into abuse allegations against Durst and his wife over a whack with a wooden spoon on a 14-year-old child. He explained later, “The child wasn’t being respectful, wasn’t obeying … It wasn’t even very hard, but things can happen in the political world where things get taken out of proportion, and that’s what happened here." Certainly his candidacy made the story bigger than it might otherwise have been.

His candidacy for school superintendent

Durst's proposed contract had some unusual features. One was that he would be hard to fire-- the trustees would need a super-majority to vote him out. The draft contract also required the district to provide his legal counsel, requiring the district to protect Durst and his wife from “any and all demands, claims, suits, actions, and legal proceedings brought against the Superintendent for all non-criminal incidents arising while the Superintendent is acting within the scope of his employment.” (This seems to speak to his experiences with his ex-wife). The proposed contract also included a vehicle, a housing allowance, and district-provided meal services. Plus an ability to work remotely. 

All of this would be contingent on Durst being provisionally certified to hold a superintendent's position. That's usually given to someone with relevant experience in education, but Durst says he's like to see the process opened up so that districts can have "the flexibility they need to make the right hiring decision for them." One has to wonder what sort of district feels that the best fit for them is someone with no actual qualifications. 

West Bonner School District has issues of its own

The district has been through three superintendents in one year. The interim superintendent was Susie Luckey, who has spent nearly four decades in the district as teacher and principal. She was the other candidate considered for the job--the one that the board didn't hire.

I told you all about Branden Durst not to badmouth him. I probably disagree with him on pretty much everything about education, but I don't have any reason to think he's an evil man. But one has to wonder what exactly qualifies him to be a school district superintendent.

So, why?

Trustee Keith Rutledge voted for Durst (it was a 3-2 vote), and explained via email to The Spokesman:

“He has a vastly superior understanding of the legal, financial, administrative, and educational philosophy aspects of the job,” Rutledge wrote, adding that Durst is popular among Bonner County voters and “has the broad support of the nearly 13,000 residents of our district.”

That last is an apparent reference to Durst's campaign for state superintendent; he took 60% of the vote in Bonner County. Given that Durst has no apparent experience in the legal, financial or administrative aspects of the job (certainly not more than a four-decade veteran of classroom and administration), it seems likely that it's Durst's philosophy that attracted the board, and we've seen where he comes from in that department.

Educational philosophy is certainly part of the superintendent job, but there are also a host of nuts-and-bolts, day-to-day, keep the lights on and the buses running aspects to the job. It takes practical acumen to make it possible for teachers to do their jobs and students to get what they need. 

Some community members say he's just what they need. Jim Woodward, the GOP lawmaker that Durst accosted, has a different assessment, per the Coeur d'Alene Press:

"I think is that he's an emotional person," Woodward said Thursday. "He couldn't control himself in the Senate committee room. How would you do any better in a school setting? He can't control himself and I think the real takeaway here is not only that he has a history of different problems in interacting with people. But he also is not qualified for … being a superintendent of a school district."

This kind of district take over--the installation of an unqualified leader with the "right" philosophy--is usually attempted by states (see, for instance, the takeover of schools in Lorain, Ohio). But nowadays, as hard-right candidates take over school boards, they are performing their own version on the school takeover, installing district members who are ideologically pure, even if they have no real qualifications for the job. Heck, it worked for Betsy DeVos's bid for the US Secretary of Education post.

That's a feature, not a bug

The conservative agitation group, Moms for Liberty, told us this was the goal. This was Tiffany Justice on the Steve Bannon show:

BANNON: Are we going to start taking over the school boards?

JUSTICE: Absolutely. We're going to take over the school boards, but that's not enough. Once we replace the school boards, what we need to do is we need to have search firms, that are conservative search firms, that help us to find new educational leaders, because parents are going to get in there and they're going to want to fire everyone. What else needs to happen? We need good school board training. We need lawyers to stand up in their communities and be advocates for parents and be advocates for school board members who are bucking the system.

There are multiple problems with this, starting with the idea of having public schools run by people who want to either convert them to centers for promoting only a single point of view (theirs) or else simply gut them and replace them with private schools. But for parents, the problems become more practical-- a school where things don't work because the person in charge doesn't know how to make them work. 

Despite some uproar over literal backroom shenanigans, the trustees appear committed to hiring Durst. For his part, Durst says he's ready to talk to those who oppose his hiring and convince him of his good intentions. Which is at least non-combative, but intentions and goals and philosophies don't, by themselves, run a district.

I'll let a parent that The Spokesman spoke with have the last word here.

Hailey Scott-Yount, a mother with two kids attending school in the district, said picking Durst as superintendent was “asinine.”

“Why on earth would you hire a mechanic to bake your wedding cake?” Scott-Yount said. “It’s terrifying.”

Sunday, June 25, 2023

OK: AG's Office Says State Failed In Attempt To Smear Teacher

In September of 2022, one Oklahoma English teacher was having a rough time. I'll refresh your memory before I tell you about the latest chapter in this tale.

Summer Boismier was a teacher at Norman High School who drew flak for covering some books in her classroom with the message "Books the state doesn't want you to read." Apparently even worse, she posted the QR code for the Brooklyn Public Libraries new eCard for teens program, which allows teens from all over the country to check out books, no matter how repressive or restrictive state or local rules they may live under.

She was suspended by the district, which said that this was about her "personal political statements" and a "political display" in the classroom. Boismier told The Gothamist
 
I saw this as an opportunity for my kids who were seeing their stories hidden to skirt that directive. Nowhere in my directives did it say we can't put a QR code on a wall.

But Oklahoma school districts are on edge since the state Board of Education downgraded two districts' accreditations for allegedly violating the law (a policy that the governor just applauded). Never mind that this is a policy that just makes it harder for teachers to do their jobs.

The district's suspension was brief, but rather than report back to work, Boismier resigned. As the Washington Post reported

She recognized the school district was in a tight spot and said she placed most of the blame on Oklahoma Republicans for fomenting what she described as a growing culture of fear, confusion and uncertainty in schools.

Amid that climate, Boismier said, she doesn’t feel like she has a place in an Oklahoma classroom.

None of that was enough for Walters. The events surrounding Boismier attracted plenty of attention, and so, Candidate Walters popped up to put his two cents in via a letter that he posted on Twitter.

In the letter, he called for Summer Boismier (he called her out by name) to have her teaching license revoked. "Ms. Boismier's providing access to banned and pornographic material is unacceptable."

The letter also includes this line:

There is no place for a teacher with a liberal political agenda in the classroom.

Walters, who once wrote "I will continue to teach my students the United States is the greatest nation in the world," is at least honest in saying that it's the liberal view that must be prohibited.

Meanwhile, after Walters tweeted out her name and his non-reality-based accusations, Boismier has endured a flood of vulgarity and death threats.

“These teachers need to be taken out and shot,” “teachers like this should not only be fired but also should be swinging from a tree,” “If Summer tried this in Afghanistan, they’d cut out her tongue for starters,” are just a minuscule fraction of the threats pouring into Summer Boismier’s inbox.

Great game here. Draw a target on someone's back and just let your followers try to make her life hell. Again, this provides a lousy atmosphere for teachers to try to teach in.

Walters is still, a year later, trying to strip Boismier of her license, which shows... I don't even know. That trying to act Highly Principled can end up looking like meanspirited petty bullshit? But Assistant Attorney General Liz Stevens says that Walters' office did not make its case. Boismier did not violate the state's reading repression laws.

I find that the State Department of Education has failed to prove by clear and convincing evidence that (Boismier) has willfully committed an act of moral turpitude and then violated the standards of performance and conduct for teachers.

The Oklahoma AG office of Gentner Drummond has been butting heads with the Christion nationalists currently running the state, but Secretary Dudebro remains unimpressed, telling the USA Today folks, "I appreciate the transparency today and we will be finalizing the revocation of her license in August. Accountability is tough and we will not have indoctrination in the classroom."

I would point out that this is a lousy way to recruit and retain teachers, but Walters, who has called teachers "terrorists," is clearly not interested in teachers or public education or anything other than promoting christianist indoctrination in his state. 






ICYMI: Tech Sunday Edition (6/25)

The Institute's Chief Marital Officer (CMO) is the wicked step-mother and I'm tooting in the pit orchestra, and today kicks off the final week of rehearsals before Cinderella opens here. We are going to have us some fun times. In the meantime, here's some reading from the last week.


Georgia has one of those teacher gag laws, and now somebody want to try it out on a woman who read her class My Shadow Is Purple, a very non-porn book. Southern Poverty Law Center has the story\.

In Pennridge, teachers clash with the school board over the promise of an ‘ideology-free’ curriculum

Vermilion, the Hillsdale-linked consulting firm, has been hired to take a gander at curriculum in Pennridge School District, and it's pretty clear already that outside of loving God and Merica, this guy hasn't much of a clue. Maddie Hanna reports for the Philadelphia Inquirer,


Great interactive explainer from the Keystone Center for Charter Change, an organization exists because Pennsylvania charter laws are among the worst in the country. (Go, us!) 

Cradle to Grave Surveillance

Thomas Ultican looks into the folks at Global Silicon Valley and their work at digitizing everything there is to now about students. Prepare to be alarmed.

How Community Schools Can Transform Parent Involvement for the Better

Jeff Bryant at The Progressive talks about how parental involvement can be a positive for all involved. It's community schools.

A 'new breed' of charter schools is spreading Christian nationalism — at taxpayers’ expense

Jeff Bryant again, looking at the NPE report on the rightward lurch of the choice world.

Utah school district returns the Bible to shelves after appeals and outcry

Not a big story this week, but just in case you were wondering how that Bible ban turned out.

Teacher Was Fired From Private School After Questioning Her Salary — Her Boss Said That God Told Him She Was Not Passionate About Her Job

Yeah, that's pretty much the whole story in the headline. More details here if you want to be further angered.

A look at the trial — and ruling — that could change Pa.’s school funding system forever

Part of a PBS series about education, this takes a deep dive into the case that ended with courts declaring PA's school funding system unconstitutional. Lots to digest here, just in time for this year's battle over the state budget.

Inside Florida’s ‘underground lab’ for far-right education policies

Kathryn Joyce at Hechinger's with a great dive into Sarasota County, where a Moms For Liberty co-founder is board president and a parade of right wingers are always busy.

I Know It When I See It

Nancy Flanagan looks at the crusade against pornography in schools.

Orwellian Language and the Moral Perversion of American Politics

Jan Resseger looks at Chris Rufo and other educational "leaders" whose abuse of the language is part of the problem they present.

TFA Does Soul Searching, Changes The Least Significant Thing Possible About Itself

Gary Rubinstein started out with TFA, then decided to become a teacher for reals. From that vantage point, he has always kept a sharp and critical eye on TFA shenanigans, including their latest Big Deal.

Censors lose in the end

At Brutal South, Paul Bowers gets ready to fight back against one more book ban (this time it's Ta-Nehsis Coates).

Activist or Advocate – Defending Public Education in Florida

How does one advocate or do the activism in state so hell-bent of privatizing public education. Sue Kingery Woltanski examines the puzzle. 

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Saturday, June 24, 2023

PA: Bad Voucher Bill on Fast Track

The folks at Education Voters of Pennsylvania report that GOP leaders have made a voucher plan one of their big priorities for the 2023-2024 state budget. It's a bad bill.

HB 795 is the latest version of the Lifeline Scholarship Program, a bill that has been kicking around Harrisburg for several years. But the new version includes some significant changes from past years.

Last year, it was HB 2169. That version of the Lifeline voucher was an education savings account, a chunk of money that parents could spend on all sorts of education-flavored products and services. HB 2169 was a bad idea for many reasons (for one thing, the dollar amount was based on state-wide average spending per pupil, meaning many districts would have lost way more money than their usual cost per pupil). But the bill also had a few safeties in place, like a requirement that every single account must be audited every two years and a restriction that families couldn't double dip by taking both a Lifeline scholarship and a EITC voucher (the state's long-existing tax credit scholarship voucher program).

The new version of Lifeline vouchers is a traditional voucher; it's money that can be spent on tuition at a private school and "school-related fees." Getting accepted by that private school is, of course, your problem.

The restriction against double dipping is not in this bill; families would now be free to grab multiple piles of taxpayer dollars. Nor are there any income requirements; if you're wealthy, you can still grab a voucher or two. The voucher is still designated for all students in schools at the bottom 15% of schools, a super-cynical approach, since no matter how well schools are all doing, there will always be a bottom 15%.

The "nonpublic" schools accepting vouchers do not have to be vetted in any way; it just has to notify the state, promise to be non-profit (it can, of course, still be run by a for-profit entity), and comply with non-discrimination laws. It can thrown out of the program if it "routinely" fails to comply with those requirements and if it fails "to provide a scholarship recipient with the educational services" the voucher paid for. 

The bill does have the usual non-interference clause-- the nonprivate school is declared absolutely not a state agent, and nobody in Harrisburg "may regulate the educational program of a participating nonpublic school that accepts money from a scholarship recipient beyond what is necessary to administer the program." So if they want to teach flat earth or creationism or the inherent superiority of the Aryan race or that LGBTQ persons are evil deviants, they can still collect those tasty public taxpayer dollars.

The dollar amounts are tiered:

For a student in ½ day kindergarten: $2,500.

For a student in full-day kindergarten through grade 8: $5,000.

For a student in grades 9-12: $10,000.

For a student with special needs (regardless of grade): $15,000.

Pennsylvania is, of course, facing a court-ordered requirement to fix their unconstitutionally inequitable school funding system. Diverting more taxpayer dollars to private schools, including schools that can indoctrinate and discriminate, hardly seems like a great way to go about fixing the problems. 

But lobbyists are working Harrisburg hard to push this private school taxpayer subsidy plan, trying very hard to sell the idea that "fully fund your public schools" somehow means "send more funding to private schools." If you are in Pennsylvania, phone or email your local lawmaker or the governor himself, who unfortunately appears to be a fan. Maybe point out that it was indeed great that the state was able to pull together the resources to fix I-95 so quickly, and that the solution to that problem was not to give every driver a voucher to go set up a private road of their own.