Thursday, October 19, 2023
Let's Have Education Choice: Part I (Premises)
Sunday, October 15, 2023
OK: State Issued Prayer And True Threats To The Church
ICYMI: Bad Week For The World Edition (10/15)
Texas Took Over Its Largest School District, but Has Let Underperforming Charter Networks Expand
Charles Koch's audacious new $5 billion political scheme
Nonprofit near Kansas City seeks to become ‘epicenter of the school-choice movement’
A transgender student, her crusading mom — and an English teacher caught in the middle
Why what looked like good news for charter schools actually wasn’t
Has F.A.S.T. Testing Lived Up to Its Promises
You may recall that Florida was going to fix the problems of time-consuming high stakes testing by using a new system, with more testing. How has this been working out? Sue Kingery Woltanski has the unsurprising results.
Everything I Need to Know, I Learned in My School Orchestra
Saturday, October 14, 2023
Dear Voters: Please Pay Attention
Friday, October 13, 2023
TX: How Bad Is The Newest Voucher Proposal
(1) determine the methods of instruction or curriculum used to educate students;
(2) determine admissions and enrollment practices, policies, and standards;
(3) modify or refuse to modify the provider’s, vendor’s, or participant’s religious or institutional values or practices, including operations, conduct, policies, standards, assessments, or employment practices that are based on the provider’s, vendor’s, or participant’s religious or institutional values or practices; or
(4) exercise the provider’s, vendor’s, or participant’s religious or institutional practices as determined by the provider, vendor, or participant
Thursday, October 12, 2023
OK: Trump Judge Stalls Decision On Gag Law Injunction
What Koch Wants From Candidates
The Very Rightward Washington Examiner just ran an op-ed from Craig Hulse entitled "How GOP candidates can win on education." Like most such pieces, it would be better titled "These are policies we want these guys to support, so we're going to argue that supporting them is a way to win elections." It's marketing, not analysis, but in this case it's worth looking at for a second because of Hulse's job.
Craig Hulse is the executive director of Yes Every Kid. He's been a busy guy. He's been back and forth through the revolving public-private door. Staff assistant for Congress, legislative liaison for Nevada governor, state policy advisor in Nevada, Nevada state director of StudentsFirst, director of government relations for Las Vegas Sands, public policy/public affairs manager for Uber, the Ready Colorado choicer advocacy group, state government affairs for JUUL, policy and government affairs for Tesla--most of them for a little over a year. His job is to oversee "the lobbying team with efforts across the United States to direct education and influence campaigns to shape education policy that is open to the free flow of ideas and innovation."
Yes Every Kid is the education wing of the kinder, gentler Kochtopus. It was a sort of prequel to Koch's 2020 announcement that the country was too partisan and he was, by golly, going to stop contributing to that. He followed that announcement up by throwing a giant pile of money behind GOP candidates, including those endorsed by Trump. A cynic might conclude that Koch's change of heart was just a rebranding exercise, a shiny coat of lipstick on the same old pack of porcine politics.
So what does this arm of Kochtopus want the GOP to do?
2023 has been a banner year for education freedom, with nearly all families in nine states now empowered to direct education funding in a way that best meets their kids’ needs. These state laboratories of democracy are innovating, and voters are responding. With all this progress, it’s no surprise that Republicans are seen as more trustworthy than Democrats on education — a development that will have major implications for next year’s presidential election.Second, allow families to enroll students in schools outside their attendance zone. And he offers this striking analogy. "Imagine if, on a hot summer day, you could be denied access to a public pool or park because you live in the wrong neighborhood." I'm pretty sure lots of folks have no trouble imagining what that would be like, and that experience of Those People's Children being chased out of local facilities tells you something about the actual obstacles that this idea would face. Or history from Little Rock. Or the many post-Brown stories of cities where white students were allowed to switch schools, and Black students were not. Not saying this is the worst idea; I am saying that it would take a lot of thought and enforcement to keep it from being anything other than another mechanism for white flight.