Sunday, August 13, 2023

ALEC Has Bad Plans for Education

The American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is, says The Nation, "a toxic alliance of corporations and state legislatures that work together to ensure that corporate interests stay at the top of legislative agendas across the country."

It's a group where conservative lawmakers and corporate leaders sit down together and draft model legislation that the legislators then carry off to propose back home. ALEC is one reason that nearly-identical conservative bills pop up in many states at the same time. 

The Center for Media and Democracy runs a whole website devoted to ALEC shenanigans. From that site, we can learn that ALEC is funded by many of the usual gang--Koch, Bradley, Searle and Coors plus money laundered by way of groups like DonorsTrust and Donors Capital Fund. You can also check to see which legislators from your state are ALEC members.

ALEC has a variety of "task forces" including one devoted to education, and they want all the usual rightward things. But you don't hear a lot about it directly because ALEC is pretty diligent about keeping out riff raff and journalists. 

However, if you're a legislator, you can just waltz right in, which is what two Democratic state reps from Wisconsin did. Francesca Hong and Kristina Shelton signed up and went to the annual ALEC meeting (in Orlando). The Wisconsin Examiner wrote up their little adventure (Shelton also tweeted the events), and the whole thing is worth a read, but I want to focus on the education part.

On education, Shelton says, the organization has heavily promoted school privatization proposals, including education savings accounts and universal private school vouchers, such as were included in a sweeping education bill in Arkansas, the LEARNS Act, enacted earlier this year.

“They’re no longer interested in sort of nibbling around the edges on school vouchers,” Shelton says. “They’re going all in — removing the income limits, moving to those education savings accounts, wildly expanding public investment for religious schools … [and] dismantling any sort of bureaucratic accountability measures.”

Hong says the education proposals have also been made with reference to the difficulties that employers have had filling job openings.

“The framing of it didn’t come off as full, ‘We’re attacking public schools,’” Hong says. “This is how we’re going to get more workers is to essentially make schooling and education’s sole purpose is to be producing workers.”

Nothing new there, though they don't always say the quiet part out loud. Shelton told Wisconsin Examiner that people were remarkably open and frank with the two lawmakers (assuming, perhaps, that they were among friends). 

But there you are. Universal vouchers. No government oversight. Taxpayer dollars for religious schools. Education focused on making meat widgets for corporate consumption. A future in which every state is Arkansas. That's the assortment of destructive, counter-democratic, privatizing ideas that ALEC has in mind. And if they aren't already pushing them in your state legislature, they'll get to it any day now. 


ICYMI: Final Stretch Edition (8/13)

Final stretch for the summer, and I can't say I'm sad about it because this has been a less-than-optimal summer here at the institute. But we have your reading for the week. I'll remind you that if you find something in the weekly compendium that strikes you as valuable, you can support the writers by sharing them on whatever social media platforms you're using these days. Cutting through the online fog is hard, and you help by amplifying the things that you think should get through that fog.

School choice debate not over as Nevada’s governor has a plan to fund private school scholarships

The AP looks at the Nevada governor's latest attempt to make vouchers happen in his state.

Staff sues Woodland Park school district over new 'punitive' media policy

From the Gallery of Bad Policies, we have Woodland Park schools in Colorado, where the district has declared that teachers and staff can't post anything about the district without superintendent approval. 

Idaho Professors Sue Over Law Threatening Prison for Teaching About Abortion

Meanwhile, college professors in Idaho are pushing back against a "don't mention abortion" law. Kylie Chung reports at Jezebel.

“Betsy DeVos Was a Disaster. I Think Erika Donalds Could Be Worse.”

Kiera Butler at Mother Jones with a well-detailed look at Erika Donalds, the queen of school privatization in Florida. The hook (that she could be Trump's next education secretary) is a stretch, but the rest of this is excellent. Bonus: at last, a mainstream outlet covers the actual origins of Moms For America.

Next frontier in Fla. education wars: Climate

Arianna Skibell at Politico looks at one of the effects of letting PragerU into Florida classrooms.

Florida says it doesn’t want indoctrination in schools — but look at the materials it just approved

If you can use an introduction to PragerU and their propaganda machine, Valerie Strauss at the Washington Post has you covered.

AI Chatbot ‘Ed’ Will Be L.A. Unified’s Newest Student Adviser, Superintendent Says

EdWeek picks up a piece from the LA Times about the newest step forward in the dehumanizing of student care.

A new AI app lets users ‘text’ with Jesus. Some call it blasphemy.

Fiona Andre at Washington Post writes about one more awesome use of AI, which could not possibly end terribly I'm sure.

Arkansas education department nixes AP African American Studies course at last minute

Well, hell. Allegedly the state has said that students can take the course--they just won't get graduation credits from it. We'll see.

Teach for America Promised to Fix the Teacher Exodus Before Anyone Even Noticed There Was One. Now It’s Choking on Its Own Failure

Steven Singer looks at TFA and the teacher exodus and how the bad ideas of one hjelped feed the other.

Big-City Mayors Are Getting Kicked Out of Schools

Interesting take from Alan Greenblatt at Governing-- are we finally getting mayors out of the school-running business (at which they mostly sucked)?

John White, “Chief Success Officer”(?)

The indispensable Mercedes Schneider takes a look at the highly dispensable, and yet somehow still failing upwards, John White

Critical thinking education trumps banning and censorship in battle against disinformation, study suggests

What's most effective way to combat misinformation? Probably not banning the source. From PsyPost, a look at a study on the topic.

Progressives Are Defeating Conservatives in School Board Elections—Even in Ohio

Some folks have been saying this all along (I see you, Jennifer Berkshire)--being a far right book-banning anti-LGBTQ right winger is not a winning strategy on the local level. From David Pepper in Washington Monthly.


Jill Filipovic at the Atlantic questions trigger warnings and whether they might have had the opposite of their intended effect.

Democratic lawmakers attend ALEC meeting to see what might be on the Legislature’s agenda

What a fun piece. A couple of Democratic lawmakers report from inside a gathering of the corporate right-wing bill mill. It is... illuminating.

Banned in Boston (Globe) II: the Barr Foundation/Hostetter 2021 Political Team

Maurice Cunningham with more view inside the dark money machinery that the Boston Globe carefully avoids noticing.

The Case for Vouchers Collapses

At Carolina Forward, an explanation of why voucher programs are a bad idea for education policy.

Grand jury investigating bid-rigging involving DeSantis’ education department

Billy Townsend was following this story forever, but now the feds are involved in the wacky story of that time that competing corrupt officials got in each others' way. Because Florida.

The Education Policies Governor Ron DeSantis Has Enacted in Florida Are Just Plain Scary

These things hit the fan one at a time, so it helps every so often to back up and look at a slightly bigger picture. Jan Resseger is here to help do that.


Speaking of summing up a barrage of bad policy ideas, Gary Rubinstein takes a look at the junk that's hitting Houston schools after the state takeover.

Middle Schoolers: The Myth and the Reality

Should officials loosen work requirements so that 14 year olds can work in bars? Should officials have their heads examined? Nancy Flanagan with some reality checks about middle schoolers.

Ron DeSantis Announces He Will Live As Slave For One Year To Prove It Not Bad

The Onion. Enjoy.

Meanwhile, at Forbes. com, I look at a study that shows social-emotional development really matters

Join me on substack. It's free!


Saturday, August 12, 2023

Children's Books To Really Avoid

Want to talk about books that really shouldn't be allowed in your school's library?

AI "publishing" is just as busy a business as the various versions of AI homework-- well, the generative language algorithm has spurred the proliferation of euphemisms for "cheating." I have lost track of how many ads I have seen for an AI product that can "help" me "create" my book. Reuters wrote a whole story about how some salesman became a children's book author with the "help" of ChatGPT  

Using the AI software, which can generate blocks of text from simple prompts, Schickler created a 30-page illustrated children’s e-book in a matter of hours, offering it for sale in January through Amazon.com Inc's (AMZN.O) self-publishing unit.

In the edition, Sammy the Squirrel, crudely rendered also using AI, learns from his forest friends about saving money after happening upon a gold coin. He crafts an acorn-shaped piggy bank, invests in an acorn trading business and hopes to one day buy an acorn grinding stone.

Sammy becomes the wealthiest squirrel in the forest, the envy of his friends and "the forest started prospering," according to the book.


Recognize that when the story says Schickler "created," it means he gave ChatGPT a prompt. And yet he says, "I could see people making a whole career out of this." But a human "author" is really just another customer for the AI grift, and is not really necessary at all. 

Meet Bold Kids publishing.

I can't tell you much about them, because they don't appear to have a website. Nor do any of their books have an author. Their blurb on their Amazon page says this:

At Bold Kids, we take stride in ensuring that children can learn and find our books useful. Our books are specially made for young readers who actively want to learn more about interesting and quite intriguing children's book topics. With a special care dedicated to specific grades, curriculums, and subjects, we can ensure that children can learn something new inside our books.

If that sounds as if it comes from that special place in the uncanny valley between "English is not my first language" and "I am not actually a human being," well, let's take a look inside the books. 

Sondra Eklund is a librarian in charge of selecting children's and young adult books for a large public library system. She ordered Rabbits: Children’s Animal Fact Book and on her blog (a great resource for book reviews) wrote about what she found inside. First she was struck by poor wording and organization; then she got to some Very Special pages:

A rabbit has a male and female counterpart. A male rabbit is called a buck. The two types of rabbits have different characteristics. A doe is a baby rabbit, while a buck is a mother. All types of rabbits live underground, except for the cottontail, and their habitats are often called warrens.

If you’ve ever had the pleasure of feeding a rabbit, you’ve probably wondered how they reproduce. The answer is simple: they live in the wild! Despite being cute and cutesy, rabbits are also very smart.

They can even make their own clothes, and they can even walk around. And they’re not only adorable, but they’re also very useful to us as pets and can help you out with gardening.

Amazon carries the books (though none that I found with a "look inside" feature. Eklund notes that they are carried by some major vendors and distributors like Ingram, but are "non-returnable" which generally means they are Print On Demand--the book isn't printed until someone orders it. POD is not automatically bad (I've self-published a few books that way), but it is certainly the model preferred by many AI "publishers." Give a prompt, generate a manuscript that then lives on a hard drive until you can convince someone to buy it. 

Bold Kids appears to have almost a thousand books in print. Earliest I could find was published back in September of 2018. Best title: Sheeps: Children's Book Filled With Facts, which on Goodreads (yes, there are 940 Bold Kids books listed on Goodreads) comes with the totally child-friendly blurb: "Sheeps are a domesticated ruminant mammal, and they are part of the Artiodactyla order, a group of even-toed ungulates. They have a long, lanky body, and are generally docile and peaceful."

Or perhaps you'd like Mountain Lions: Discover Pictures and Facts About Mountain Lions For Kids! A Children's Jungle Animals Book because who isn't interested in the animals of the North American jungles?

Or their "children's physics" book Light Energy, with this blurb on OverDrive

Did you know that light is an amazing form of energy? The speed of light is so fast that nothing can slow it down, including the human body! The study of light is called photonics. It teaches kids about the nature of light and how we can make it useful in our daily lives. However, you should remember that it has no mass. There is no way that we can live without it. In fact, we can't even see the Sun without seeing the moon.

World War 2 For Kids!

World War II is one of the biggest wars the world has ever seen. It’s a war everyone should know about, and your child can learn some cool, and not so cool facts about this war. Get a copy of this today so you can teach your child about this war, and the aspects of this.

Capitalism: Discover Pictures and Facts About Capitalism For Kids!

Many children hear about capitalism in schools, but do they know what it really means? Well, they can learn about this type of government, and what it means for them in this. They will learn about the ins and outs of this type of government, and why some criticize this structure for what it entails.

I could go on all day, but you get the idea. They also offer at least a couple of titles in Spanish and German. 

Here at the institute, we're well aware that terrible children's books that appear to have been cobbled together with clip art and terrible writing are not a new thing (or even just mediocre frankenbooks--looking at you, DK), but generative language algorithms (which possess no intelligence, artificial or otherwise) have unleashed a whole new level of terrible. Combine that with what Cory Doctorow has called the enshittification of Amazon, resulting in an "endless scroll of paid results, where winning depends on ad budgets, not quality" and you get just a whole new level of bad.

Eklund points out many of the warning signs with Bold Kids. No authors. No professional reviews. POD or other signs of self-publishing (which is another crappy side effect of the AI explosion; I keep hearing that publishers are being inundated with algorithm-produced manuscripts, making it harder than ever for new human authors to break through). 

The whole business is a reminder that what generative language algorithms can do is crank out tons of crap very quickly. It's flooding the internet, and it's trying to flood the world of print as well. Here's hoping that librarians don't get too busy trying to clamp down on mentions of race and LGBTQ persons so that they can keep libraries free of just plain old junk. 

Friday, August 11, 2023

Yes, Engage

Intuitively, you'd think that student engagement was a clear positive. As a teacher, I certainly found it easier to teach a student who was engaged and involved than one who was checked out.

And there is, in fact, a boatload of research that supports what we intuit. But there is also research that suggests no correlation, that engagement does not raise grades or improve understanding. For a certain brand of conservative, engagement is a fuzzy-headed idea, part of that whole misguided approach to engender warm fuzzy feelings in students instead of just teaching them to read and math.

The whole business of trying to promote engagement is a thorny one as well. It can be an unfortunate first cousin of that terrible educational idea--"making the material relevant." If you decide you're going to make the material relevant, you've already lost because your premise is that it's not inherently relevant and only becomes relevant when you perform some teacher trick. So if you're trying to make course content interesting or engaging, you're in trouble. You should know why the material is important for your students; if you don't know why, instead of trying to make up a reason, ask yourself why you're bothering to teach it.

Not everyone has the same version of the engagement challenge. Most (not all) primary students will engage with the dirt; high school students, not so much (there is research that supports the notion that students get less engaged as they move through the system).

Engagement is tricky because it's so relationship-based, so what works for one teacher-student combination may not work for another. Then there is the special form of teacher ju-jitsu involved on getting a student to engage with the content even as they avoid engaging with the teacher, which is a necessary trick to master unless you want to move yourself from teaching to gatekeeping ("Nobody can come to the content except through me"). 

For all of these reasons, some teachers will skip the whole engagement thing. "It's just my job to stand up here and dispense the content, and if students don't get it or even care if they get it, that's not on me." This attitude is encouraged in schools that have gone for scripted programs in a box, as scripts generally don't include "engage students here." The pedagogical approach that assumes that learning can be engineered, a set of responses programmed into students, doesn't particularly care about engagement, either. In fact, since engagement sometimes means pushing back 

But beyond the question of whether or not engagement matters, there's another reason that students should be encouraged, nudged and otherwise convinced to engage.

Because this is their life.

Students and the adults around them can slip into the mistake of thinking that their lives are waiting for them somewhere in the future, that all of this--living as a child, working through school, acquiring skills and knowledge--is just stocking up for some day years from now when their lives will actually begin.

But this, right now, is the student's life. Not all of it, maybe not even the most important part of it, probably not the best parts that will ever be, but not some sort of null sidebar either. 

Do not sleepwalk through your life. Do not check out and figure that somehow, later, further down the road, you'll claim your life and start living it. 

This lesson is not on the Big Standardized Test, but I don't think anybody is too young to hear it, or at least some scaled down version more easily comprehensible for children. Be present. Pay attention. Be engaged, not because it might raise your tests score, but because this is your life, not just something to try to skip to the end of. 

And all of that goes double for teachers. One of the most important ways to convey this to students? Model it. Engage with your life. 


Wednesday, August 9, 2023

Is This Your School Board?

This was passed along to me as a screenshot of a reply on Facebook. I know who the individual is, and this is not my first encounter with their work. But I'm not interested in targeting the individual; what I really want you to look at is the ideas and attitude included.

Here's the reply:

I'd have to disagree with you on this one. So called "educators" that are introducing students to homosexuality are the ones that need arrested.

All of these students that turn homosexual or transgender come from broken homes. They are hurting people. They are looking for hope, but what they are being offered is a life of misery. They are searching for fulfillment that they will never find without Jesus.

Brainwashing teachers need locked up. They take advantage of hurting kids and ruin their lives. Hurting kids need help. True help. 

This is one of those ideas that won't die, the notion that nobody is born LGBTQ, but rather all LGBTQ persons were "recruited," probably as children, and probably because they were already messed up. 

Another post from this person:

Yes, my voting as an elected official is based off my faith in God. The only foundation for truth is in the Bible. Nothing makes sense without God. Education has no value without first establishing a basis of truth--the Bible.

CHRISTIANS, WAKE UP!

This person is a school board member, and their misinformation and personal version of religion do indeed inform their choices as a board member. And if you're thinking this sounds like your conservative grandfather, well, this is a young person. 








This person is running for re-election in the fall, and they're doing so with a full slate of like-minded candidates, ready to ban some books and clamp down on any teachers who so much as suggest that LGBTQ persons exist (as anything other than twisted and damaged wretches).

Is this person running in your district? If you don't know, you should. Folks of this christianist bent are running all over the country, some with a pleasant mask to cover their radical tilt and some letting their anti-freak flag fly. But elections have consequences, and so does voting on the assumption that school board candidates are uniformly bland and unlikely to have any sort of major effect on what happens in your local schools. 

Is this person running in your district? If you don't know, you should find out before you vote. This is not a season to sleep through one more election.

UT: State Board Member Attacks Teachers

It was, the Utah State Board of Education concluded, within a board member's rights to make statements as an individual, even if she exercised her First Amendment Rights by saying something really troubling and false. And so, this time, Natalie Cline doesn't even get a slap on the wrist.

What did Cline say this time? In a July 4 Facebook post, Cline wrote:

Schools are not only complicit in the grooming of children for sex trafficking, but they are aiding and abetting this evil practice by giving kids easy access to explicit, unnatural, and twisted sexual content and brainwashing them into queer, gender bending ideologies.

That's a lot. But the state board stopped short of actually censuring her for either that post or an incident in which she allegedly made some comments about an employee that she found insufficiently female. Cline had jumped the gun and declared herself cleared of all charges based on a preliminary report, but the final finding was mild. She's got a First Amendment Right to say things, it said, but it would be nice if those things were both civil and accurate.

The Utah Education Association issued a release saying it "vehemently opposed" her remarks, as well they should be. 

We are deeply troubled by USBE's failure to find her toxic words in violation of its standards and its unwillingness to take action or censure Cline.

"I am horrified that an elected official entrusted with overseeing education policy in our state would blatantly disregard teachers' tireless efforts and intentionally create an environment of mistrust and hostility detrimental to the educational process," President Renee Pinkney said.

Cline was elected to the state board in 2020, and if nothing else, you can't say she wasn't up front about what she saw as the major issues for education in Utah. Here are some of the answers Candidate Cline offered the website Ballotpedia in response to their standard questions.

What are three key messages of her campaign?

* I will fight for - TRUE Local Control of Curriculum, Assessments, and Spending; Strong Supports for Educators; Parental Voice and Choice in their Children's Education; & Parents and Teachers Deciding Together what is BEST for the Child

* I will fight to - Protect the Innocence of Youth, their Mental Health, and Data Privacy

* I will fight to - Restore Freedom in Education! NO... Anti-American Curriculum, Political Indoctrination, or Sexualized Lesson Plans

What areas of public policy is she passionate about? Take a deep breath...

I am concerned about the increasingly politicized nature of our schools and the rapid advancement of programs and curriculum created by special interest groups to sexualize our children, confuse them about their gender, and indoctrinate them in Anti-American revisionist history and Karl Marx's Critical Race Theory that assumes all white people are inherently racist. Children are not inherently racist or sexual. To teach them otherwise is abusive and harmful to their mental health. I am also passionate about protecting children from an increasingly technology-driven school experience. This too is harmful to the mental health of many of our children. Technology is useful in its proper place, but can often get in the way of curriculum that builds character and understanding in our students. Deep learning comes from a study of classical literature, history from original source documents, and traditional math, science, and the arts. It's time to get back to the basics. To do this we must return decision making power to those closest to the child - the parents and teachers. We must send more money to the local districts and let them choose their standards, curriculum, and assessments. We must provide the help, support, and training our teachers need!
We must return to teaching the principles of freedom that made our country great and restore within our students a love for America!

Cline, a registered nurse, said that she has been fighting for "family-friendly policies at the international and local level for the past decade," and if so, she hasn't left much of a digital footprint beyond Higher Ground, a sort of organization/website that sounds the alarm that "the public school system is out of control" and has become a "cultural tsunami." 

Cline's Facebook page is loaded with Kim Ells and Chris Rufo and a variety of hard right influencers, and Higher Ground is more of the same. SEL, DEI and whole child mental health are all about indoctrinating children. Comprehensive sex ed is part of a plan to erase sexual inhibitions and boundaries so that evil adults can prey on children. Standardization is about socially engineering children (don't think for a moment that these folks have forgotten the evils of Common Core). There's the outsourcing of decisions to "experts" (I think I agree with her a bit on the scare quotes, since so many edu-experts are not actual experts at all). 

And this is interesting-- the group opposes "exploiting children for socioeconomic agendas," which includes the "college and career readiness" umbrella as well as school choice.

Yes, Cline and folks in her orbit turn out to be an example of how this far right ideology does not always get along with school choice.

If the government funds it, they reason, the government controls it. "Parents give the government access to their children at home and in private school settings in exchange for state-sourced school choice money," says the site, but there are always "strings attached."  Vouchers, charters, home school funding, etc are "only the illusion of choice" because the government controls what it pays for. The "educational-industrial complex" has grown and been co-opted, so "the window for truly free market solutions has been effectively sealed." We're supposed to depend on God, not the government.

Your children are worth infinitely more than the government is willing to pay you to have access to them.

If all this sounds like the belief system of a person who would be a bad fit for the state's education board, well. Cline's latest dustup is certainly not her only one. Within her first eight months in office, the board (which has 15 members in all) issued statements condemning her various comments, which have been anti-LGBTQ and anti-Black Lives Matter. The Utah Pride Center, Equality Utah, the Black Lives Matter chapter for the state, and the NAACP branch for Salt Lake City had all spoken out against Cline’s remarks within her first month in office. In a particularly nasty incident, she accused a teacher, by name and without evidence, of promoting communism; the teacher's district denied the allegation, but of course the teacher was subjected to a barrage of online attacks. There was a petition calling for her removal, but unless she does something like knock over a bank, nobody really has the power tyoi do that. Elections matter.

Nothing seems to have chastened Cline or slowed her roll. Her Facebook page is still loaded with far right material, including the usual celebration of standing out because you are a put-upon minority fighting for what is right. "You were born to stand out." "Do what is right, let the consequence follow. God will protect you in doing what's right." "If they succeed in silencing me, they succeed in silencing you!" Posts offering "more PROOF of GROOMING/INDOCTRINATION." 

There's just a lot. Like someone who found a copy of "Narwhal: Unicorn of the Sea" (great books-- the twins love them) in which the pronoun "themself" is used instead of "himself" (our copy, fwiw, has "himself"). "This," Cline explains, "is about grooming children into radical gender-bending ideology. It is the science of indoctrination posing as a literacy program to improve reading." That's why she voted against the Kids Read Now $4.5 million grant to send books directly to kids' homes (part of Science of Reading initiative). 

Utah doesn't have any Moms for Liberty chapters, and Cline and her supporters don't seem all that interested in the kind of political game playing that M4L is busy with. This all seems much more over on the religious Q-anon end of the spectrum.

After he launched critical race theory panic, Chris Rufo said his next move would be to get folks stirred up over LGBTQ issues, so he's probably pleased with Cline's trajectory in Utah. She seems entirely sincere, but this level of fear and concern has to be exhausting. How tiring can it be to believe that most of the country is against you, that there is a vast conspiracy bent on consuming children, that there is a groomer around every corner (and how ignorant to believe that LGBTQ persons only exist because they were "recruited" as children). How hard is the work of collecting and creating proof, of casting educators and schools as evil menaces. How dispiriting to worship a God so tiny that He has to be defended from things like pronouns in children's books. 

I've known folks like Cline, and I imagine that she gets her energy from envisioning a story in which she is a beleaguered crusader for all that is Good and True, so righteous that she strikes fear into the large dark army arrayed against her. That's a perch from which it can seem perfectly okay to slander the entire school system, but it has to be exhausting, and I'm not sure what good it does the children of Utah. Cline is next up for election in 2024. This kind of over-the-top attack on schools is just wrong; let's hope voters put a stop to it. 

Tuesday, August 8, 2023

Is Education Reform Evolving?

Has the education reformster movement evolved over the past forty-ish years? In a recent piece for Education Next, Rick Hess argues that there has been a major shift in the "school improvement" world. I'm not convinced. But Hess is someone I think of as worth taking seriously, so I'm going to go ahead and take a closer look at what he sees, and why I see something else.

Hess's idea is pretty simple: Back in 1983, the focus of education reform was on tweaking the traditional system. A Nation At Risk, says Hess, "was married to an intense faith in the conventional schoolhouse." Nowadays, the focus is on burning down and replacing the public education system via vouchers etc. 

The upshot is that, 40 years on, we’ve exited one era of school improvement defined by the attempt to bolster the “one best system” and entered one notable for attempts to dismantle it.

I don't think so. While the history of modern reformsterism is admittedly complicated, featuring alliances that involve both reformsters using others and others using reformsters, I think there's a pretty clear through line that has always been there.

We can go back to the days before A Nation At Risk and talk about the granddaddy of burn-it-all-down reform, Milton Friedman, who was pretty clear--for a really long time--about A) liking vouchers and B) why he did:

He and his libertarian allies saw vouchers as a temporary first step on the path to school privatization. He didn’t intend for governments to subsidize private education forever. Rather, once the public schools were gone, Friedman envisioned parents eventually shouldering the full cost of private schooling without support from taxpayers. Only in some “charity” cases might governments still provide funding for tuition.

Friedman first articulated this outlook in his 1955 manifesto, but he clung to it for half a century, explaining in 2004, “In my ideal world, government would not be responsible for providing education any more than it is for providing food and clothing.” Four months before his death in 2006, when he spoke to a meeting of the conservative American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), he was especially frank. Addressing how to give parents control of their children’s education, Friedman said, “The ideal way would be to abolish the public school system and eliminate all the taxes that pay for it.”

In 1955, Friedman's idea was perfectly positioned for segregationists looking for a way to circumvent Brown v. Board (for a good look at this, read Steve Suitts slim but thorough Overturning Brown). I don't want to argue whether Friedman was a segregationist or not; it's enough that he never explained who the nation could end both public education and segregation. 

But beyond the world of people who didn't like public ed because it spent their tax dollars on or set their children next to Those People's Children, folks mostly liked their public schools. So for people who wanted to take back public schools for God, people who wanted to break open an untapped multi-billion dollar market, and people who shared Friedman's dream of an end to public education and the taxation that supported it, there was one major obstacle-- the public belief that public schools are not only good, but a necessary good for society. 

A Nation At Risk was the first major shot at removing that obstacle. As Anya Kamanetz, who did some digging into the report, reported on the 35th anniversary:

But what I learned in talking to two of the original authors of “A Nation At Risk” was that they never set out to undertake an objective inquiry into the state of the nation’s schools.

Cherry-picked data. Repeatedly debunked conclusions. Produced under a President who had already called for the end of the Department of Education. And a prediction of imminent doom that has never actually come true in forty years. And nothing concrete that would actually point to actionable steps for improvement. While the public was waggling its eyebrows at striking pull quotes like the whole "if another country did this to us it would be an act of war" or the mellifluous "rising tide of mediocrity," actual educators in actual schools were looking at all this and asking, "And you would like us to do.... what, exactly?"

But ANAR launched a modern reformster movement. Kamenetz quotes Mike Petrilli of the very reformy Fordham Institute calling ANAR a "touchstone" and pointing out that it's in the Fordham mission statement

The question here, looking at Hess's thesis, is this: was that movement aimed at improving public schools?

I accept that, at every turn in those years (I started teaching in the fall of 1980), there were people who meant well. I believe that there are free market true fans who believe with all their hearts that free market forces and competition would truly improve public education. I believe that there are standards and data cultists who believe that measuring and testing and data crunching would lead us to better schools. I think they are absolutely wrong, but let's skip that for a minute.

But I also have no doubt that, for a huge chunk of the reformster crew, ANAR marks the beginning of a long, patient attempt to move the Overton Window on education, that window through which one views which policies are politically viable. In the 90s, CATO was still singing the Friedman song-- abolish the whole thing. But the window wasn't there yet.

Every wave of ed reform has been used to turn the baseless assertion that "American public education is failing" into conventional wisdom, a thing that people repeat and accept without any critical consideration. And every tap of that "failing American schools" hammer has moved the Overton Window closer to the point where the dissolution of public schools, once an unthinkable "solution," has become more and more thinkable.

No Child Left Behind was premised on the notion that schools were failing and had to be fixed. The standards movement was premised on the notion that schools were failing and had to be fixed. Race to the Top and the Common Core--both based on the notion that schools were failing and had to be fixed. Hess's phrase-- "school improvement"-- was never how the reform movement identified itself.

My colleagues and I watched, first incredulously, then with mounting frustration, realizing that policies like No Child Left Behind's mandate that all students must be scoring above average on the Big Standardized by 2014 were not designed to fix anything, but simply gather more data "proving" that we were failing. There was no help for us in the classroom anywhere in these policies--just threats. Get those scores up, or else. The early part of the millennium saw the activation of so many teachers as they realized that the game had been rigged for them to fail and for public education to pay the price. Meanwhile, all the "or elses" were simply normalizing the idea of public school alternatives. Tap, tap, tap on the Overton Window.

Reformsters made alliance for a while with people interested in social justice, a politically advantageous move in the Obama years, but then an unnecessary one in the Trump era. School choice, tried out in a variety of forms, never really made a convincing case for social justice or equity or better education or more efficient use of taxpayer dollars, and while, again, I'll agree that some people sincerely believed that school choice would serve those goals, they also provided cover for the folks who just wanted to keep tapping away at that window.

When COVID hit and school buildings were shut, folks on the far right sensed an opportunity to smack that window with a sledgehammer. Tap, tap, BAM! Now ed reform barely pretends to be interested in choice as anything other than a way to dismantle public education, top privatize not only the business of providing of education, but the responsibility for it, while using taxpayer dollars to subsidize private, mostly Christian schools. 

I'll say it again--all along this path, there have undoubtedly been reformsters who sincerely believed that their particular brilliant idea would fix public schools. At the same time, many were working on the same old voucher idea by tweaking the branding (since vouchers still weren't politically viable). Maybe call them scholarships, or savings accounts? Maybe we don't need vouchers to get rid of public ed--just  sell other alternatives, like computerized algorithm-driven programs. 

Standing here in 2023, it's pretty easy to see a straight line running from Milton Friedman through A Nation at Risk right up to the current Burn It All Down Moment. When Chris Rufo said "To get universal school choice, you really need to operate from a place of universal school distrust," he was simply describing the long march toward Friedman's dream. 

There have always been seams in the various reformy alliances. In the Obama years, social justice types chafed at working with "racists" as free marketeers tired of the touchy feely stuff. Charters brought together people who really believed in charters and people who considered them a half-measure until vouchers could be implemented. Right now, I have a read-between-the-lines tension between the experienced grownups of ed reform and the new burn-it-all-down dudebros taking center stage.

The reform movement has never been a homogenous whole, but instead has married together a variety of interests. The balance between those partnerships is sometimes hard to read-- are Christian nationalists using the choice movement, or is the choice movement using Christian nationalists? Only a few of those interests have ever been in the promise of quality education for all students. And the part of the movement that Hess depicts as a new evolution, a new idea about reform, a new emphasis on replacing public education--that has always always been there. It's not a new idea at all; for many folks it has always been the only idea that matters.