The Legislature shall provide for the establishment and maintenance of the state's education systems including: (a) a public education which shall be open to all children of the state' and (b) a higher education system. Both systems shall be free from sectarian control.
Wednesday, April 23, 2025
UT: Court Strikes Down Voucher Program
Monday, April 21, 2025
Moms For Liberty University
Moms for Liberty, through M4LU seeks to be the go-to resource for parents to learn more about the issues and ideologies facing their children in the classroom, and to gain practical tools to navigate those issues.
Punctuation errors in the original.
The program director is Melissa Karwowski. She is touted as having "a diverse background in marketing, operations, data analytics, and tech consulting." Her sister-in-law started the M4L chapter in Washington County, PA (southwest of Pittsburgh) where Karwowski lives.
She appears to be the same Melissa Karwowski whose LIinkedIn profile shows her working the tech side of multiple industries, most recently working as Director of Operations for IndeVets, an outfit that appears to provide floating employment for veterinarians. It appears that she was also a Mary Kay lady at one point. She's a military spouse (there's a nice piece in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette about her welcoming her husband home in 2018). They have three children. She has a couple of degrees from Robert Morris University--one in business administration, and one in data analytics, both from 2021.
While this very much appears to be the same woman who is program director, her LinkedIn does not mention the M4LU job at all.
So the program director seems a bit more qualified to manage digital resources than an actual university, which seems about right. But she also doesn't appear to have been the first person in the job. January and February lecture videos are hosted by Robin Steenman, who introduces herself as M4LU director. Steenman may be familiar as the M4L leader in Tennessee who led the book banning charge there.
The "university" launched in January. As Jennifer Vilcarino noted at Ed Week, M4LU is not actually accredited. Karwowski describes the goal a little more specifically:
Radical ideologies that have been building for decades are being daily inculcated in our children’s minds. What are the seeds being sown in our children today in America? If we as parents are to combat these efforts, we must understand the ideology. We must become experts ourselves. That is the goal of M4LU.
The website lists two "semesters" for 2025, but the format seems much more like a "topic of the month" structure. January-- Social Emotional Learning. February-- Critical Race Theory. March-- Restorative Justice. April-- Gender Ideology. May-- Comprehensive Sex Ed. In the fall, things get a bit more esoteric. August-- Generative Curriculum. September-- Graphic Content in Libraries. October-- Ethnic Studies. November-- Marxism.
For each topic, there's a group of resources. There's a "smart book" that provides a history and background of the topic from the far right perspective. This includes talking points arranges according to the points to which one is responding. The resources include presentation slides, and a set of videos. There is also a set of "white papers" and some books for recommended reading, plus a whole laundry list of related links (CRT gives links to videos that Williamson County M4L created when they were trying to ban the Wit and Wisdom books series, including a Riby Bridges bio-- that was three years ago).
The "experts" cites are the usual crew. James Lindsay, Chris Rufo, Parents Defending Education, the American Enterprise Institute, and plenty of Heritage Foundation stuff. There are also "watch parties for films every month or so.
As mentioned, there's a live lecture with each month, apparently filmed at a studio in Nashville (for $25 you can be part of the studio audience)
I could get into the specifics, but-- okay, just one. To respond to the argument that restorative justice is a good idea because children who commit offenses do so because of social factors beyond their control and punishing them just makes matters worse, the resources suggests you say that "Bad social circumstances caused by government policy make it more likely that members of certain groups will commit crimes."
The newly made materials for this endeavor are slick and professional looking, the website also slick and easily navigated. However, you can't squint hard enough in a million years to make this look like a university. What it is is a deep resource library being rolled out a month at a time. It is a library of all the usual complaints and grievances of the culture panic crowd, presented in an academic-looking form that should be welcome by the "I'm not trying to stir up trouble, I just want to answer some questions" crowd.
M4LU told EdWeek that it includes counter perspectives, and that's true, though it's also clear that those perspectives are there in a Know Your Enemy function and not to be engaged as ideas that reasonable people might hold. M4LU frequently credits itself with an "academic" approach, but I'm not sure that they know what that means. Granted, it's a vague sort of term, but I've never understood it to mean "we have already decided the conclusion and we will now just build a scaffold to support it and discredit all others." I think maybe they think "academic" means "not screaming," and M4LU does seem to clear that floor-level bar.
M4L remains far more interested in using culture panic to stir up political activism than it is interested in actual education or, for that matter, liberty. M4LU is one more aspect of that mission to outrage and agitate MAGA ladies. If you want to get a picture of what the current talking points and arguments are, this website is just the thing. But a university it is not.
Sunday, April 20, 2025
ICYMI: Easter 2025 Edition (4/20)
Teachers, parents give West Ada school board an earful over classroom sign
The AI vicious cycle
Friday, April 18, 2025
The AI Used By Privatizers
We help MAGA advocates, think tanks, and influencers dominate the battlefield with AI that delivers real results.
Discover your next secret weapon.
The company appears to have been founded in March of 2024 by founder Daniel Poynter. Poynter is a 2008 graduate of Purdue (Philosophy) with a MacArthur Young Innovator award. Since 2004 he's been a busy guy; he has 18 jobs on his LinkedIn profile, including gigs like web developing, IT stuff, digital literacy, coaching for social entrepreneurs, and founding/running Carbon Neutral Indiana ("fun and effective climate action") an outfit that seems to deal with educating ordinary folks and brokering carbon credits for other folks.
His head of engineering is John Bohlmann, a top-of-class computer grad from Purdue (2011) who has done a mountain of tech work.
If "you're a think tank or advocacy organization, fighting for the spirit of 1776," T4F offers three main services--
AI-powered research, AI-powered advocacy, and AI training.
This breaks down to "value" services like AI-compiled contact lists. For example, they helped the Mackinac Center for Public Policy (the pro-privatization pressure group) "get contact information, even once unavailable residential mailing addresses, of thousands of elected officials in Michigan." They helped School Boards for Academic Excellence (the anti-woke school board association) find thousands of school board members in 19 states.
They can automate workflows:
Free up time, cut costs, and scale faster with AI-powered automation.
Your team is wasting hours on manual, repetitive tasks - hours that could be spent growing your movement, winning more fights, and driving real impact.
For example, they helped EdChoice data mine public comments at public school board meetings and "uncover a new source of public sentiment." They helped the team of Heritage Foundation and EdChoice "find and analyze media coverage of school choice debates."
They can offer this creepy service:
Increase Your Influence with AI-Powered Social Network Analysis
Power isn't just about what you know - it’s about who you know.
Our AI-powered Social Network Analysis (SNA) helps you map relationships, uncover hidden influencers, and identify leverage points to maximize your reach and impact. Whether you’re engaging donors, studying the opposition, or finding ins to key decision-makers, SNA gives you a strategic advantage.
Real Results
Increase meetings with high-net-worth donors
Identify key decision-makers and their trusted connections
Map opposition networks and uncover their coordination strategies
They can also provide AI guidance on demand, including strategizing and leadership advice The specifics here are particularly alarming:
We advised a Governor’s Office on how AI can uncover regulatory overreach by comparing agency rules to the original laws passed by elected representatives.
We identified how a national non-profit can automate the monitoring of hundreds of university websites, saving over $1.5 million.
The website includes some chirpy endorsements, including kudos from Paul DiPerna of EdChoice, Jason Bedrick of The Heritage Foundation , and Jarrett Skorup of the Mackinac Center for Public Policy. Bedrick's endorsement includes
I strongly recommend Technology for Freedom to any think tank or advocacy organization looking to enhance their research capabilities through AI while maintaining academic rigor...
So if you've been up late thinking about all the scary ways AI can be used, add outfits like this (I'm betting this isn't the only one). Let's salute the brave new world where political advocacy is an arms race between competing bots. Should be delightful. Also, folks who keep insisting that AI will be objective and fair and unbiased really, really don't get it. Don't think of AI as a dispassionately objective arbiter; think of it as a for-hire creature that will do whatever it is hired to do, dispassionately freed from any conscience or scruples. AI is not Spock; it is Javier Bardem in No Country for Old Men, or Arnold Schwarzenegger in the first Terminator. And some folks have already hired it and put it to use.
Thursday, April 17, 2025
Yes, Middle Schoolers Are Hard To Teach, and Nobody Is Really Lazy
Wednesday, April 16, 2025
Two Sigma Cyber-Tutoring For The Poors
Much of the US education policy has been driven by a simple enough issue-- a lot of people who would like to spend as little as possible educating other people's children. Especially when those other people are poor and/or of color.
The last few decades of the school choice movement has been driven in large part by Milton Friedman's dream of a country where the government is not involved in schools at all and an education is a consumer good that parents are fully responsible for purchasing on their own. That would, as with any other market sector, result in tiers of service. The well-to-do would get nice schools, and the less well-to-do would get the Dollar Generals of education, and people located in certain communities would get the equivalent of food deserts for education-- little chunks of the market that no vendor wants to serve.
But the dream has some obstacles to overcome. One of the largest is that we like the idea of America as a nation that educates everyone, that schools are our great equalizing engine and we've worked hard to pursue that idea. It's hard to reconcile ourselves to saying, "From now on, you only get the education that your parents can afford, and if that's not much, well, now you know what your station is in life." To give up on equity in education for all is to give up on the whole "all humans are created equal" thing.Yes, lots of folks have always believed that some people are better than others, and that the betters should rule over the lessers (and we're living with the effects of that right now)-- but it's still hard to say it out loud and admit that we aren't quite who we like to think we are.
So the attempt to install a tiered education system stalls on the messaging problem. How can we short-change the not-so-wealthy families of this country while somehow making it look like we aren't, that our cool new system is still making a quality education available to all?
One proposed solution is microschools. Microschools are the answer to the complaint, "What good does a voucher do me when there isn't a private school that will accept my child within fifty miles of me?" You can start a microschool with a computer, an internet connection, any adult to be a "coach," and a license for some set of software. Gather a few neighborhood kids around the computer desk and voila! You have your own private school! (The overlap between microschool fans and those still angry about COVID distance learning is a monument of cognitive dissonance).
The other idea used to paper over the inherent inequities of a market-based commodified education system is tutoring, Betsy DeVos liked to harken back to the days when Alexander the Great skipped public education and was tutored instead by Aristotle. Let's do that!
Specifically, we find folks touting Two Sigma tutoring, a magical kind of tutoring that creates magical education achievement. There are tutoring companies waving the Two Sigma Tutoring flag all over the place, including Sal Khan presenting a TedX Talk on how his AI-flavored Khanmigo tutoring service would provide the Two Sigma Solution.
When you hear about Two Sigma tutoring, you're hearing about a 1984 essay by Benjamin Bloom that has become a classic. In it Bloom argues that super-duper tutoring can raise student performance by two whole standard deviations. That would mean, for instance, that students scoring in the 50th percentile would be moved up to the 98th percentile (God only knows what would happen if all students were given the 2 Sigma treatment).
If that sounds like it might be bunk--well, yes. Education Next has a new piece by Paul T. von Hippel that is the most thorough look at Bloom's work that you could ask for. Bookmark that puppy for the next time some tech company shows up to sell your district AI-driven Two Sigma tutoring.
I'm not going to cover the whole article, but here are just a few highlights to keep in mind.
A chart often shown to illustrate Bloom's "findings" (including by Sal Khan) is not an illustration of actual data, but Bloom's hard-drawn illustration of "this is what it would look like."
Bloom's essay leans on the work of two grad students working with a tiny sample size. As von Tippel notes, these grad students, having supposedly discovered the secret of super-tutoring, did not go on to make it big in the tutoring world.
There was a lot more than simple tutoring involved. Extra tutor training, tests, feedback, and, most crucially, a focus on topics about which the tutees initially knew nothing; when student knowledge starts at zero, you have a lot of room to improve dramatically.
The two-sigma effects obtained in the 1980s by Anania and Burke were real and remarkable, but they were obtained on a narrow, specialized test, and they weren’t obtained by tutoring alone. Instead, Anania and Burke mixed a potent cocktail of interventions that included tutoring; training and coaching in effective instructional practices; extra time; and frequent testing, feedback, and retesting.
And for the purposes of all the AI-powered tutoring being hyped, Bloom's results relied entirely on tutoring by actual human beings. Though von Tippel doesn't get into this, I will-- any value of one-on-one tutoring includes a closer connection between tutor and student, increasing the tutor's ability to get a sense of what is going on in the student's head, which in turn makes it easier to address precisely what the student isn't getting. AI can't do that.
What von Tippel does point out is that chatbots aren't necessarily very good at this. He found that a chatbots "quickly get lost when trying to teach common math concepts like the Pythagorean theorem." And he rightly questions how well students will engage with a chatbot tutor. Ultimately, he's pretty gentle with the two sigma promise of AI, calling it "rash," when perhaps "highly improbable" or even "bunk" might be accurate.
But what can AI tutoring do? It can allow supporters of commodified education to point and say, "See? Top-quality education available at low, low prices, so we are absolutely fulfilling our promise to get every child a decent education." The supporters will probably not go on to say, "And I don't have to pay for it, which is awesome."
Every bit of the school choice "revolution" is about creating a multi-tiered system of education, pretty much like what we have for higher education (complete with the chance to take on crippling debt in hopes of getting ahead in life).
AI just facilitates that, providing one more way to paper over the idea of abandoning the lessers. I will believe otherwise the day I see wealthy parents pulling kids out of elite academies and plunking them down with an AI tutor instead. "Why would I send you to Philips Exeter when you can get an equally awesome education here at home on your Macbook and AI-ristotle?"
This is the choice argument again and again-- not that choice won't usher in an age of upper and lower strata in education, but that the lower tiers will actually not be so bad. Separate, but equal, one might say, even if such claims seem rash. Or even bunk.
Tuesday, April 15, 2025
Moms For Liberty and the Salvador Gulag
According to Catalina Stubbe, under the guise of sex education Florida schools are teaching boys to masturbate. This may be the result of demonic forces she saw at work in her own child’s classroom. When her seven-year-old’s maths homework repeatedly featured the number 666 (interpreted by some to signal the devil) she knew there were leftists behind it.
She hung out with Heritage Foundation for their 50th anniversary. She went on the Matt Gaetz Show to argue for the end of the Ed Department. She went to the UN to talk about parental rights (of course, not if the parents are parents of LGBTQ kids, or if the parents are themselves some unfavored minority). She stumped for Dear Leader in 2024, and then posted this on the gram--
Our @POTUS is hands-down the greatest in history and let’s be real, the most handsome too! At 78, he’s defying time with a jaw-dropping glow and an energy that’s straight-up electric. Charismatic doesn’t even cover it, he’s got that magnetic charm that lights up every room, a sharp wit that keeps us all hooked, and a vigor that puts people half his age to shame. The way he commands attention with that dazzling smile and unstoppable drive? Absolute perfection. We’re witnessing a legend who’s rewriting what it means to lead with style and grace!
In March pf 2024, she was at CPAC. So was Nayib Bukele, who at the time was mostly known for A) the kind of conservative dictatorship that has become popular on the right and B) his attempt to convert El Salvador's currency base to bitcoin, a bold idea that has turned into a demonstration of why that's a bad idea. (I'll let someone else see if there are dots to be connected between the failure of a grand cryptocurrency grift and the launch of a gulag-for-profit grift.)
While Bukele was at CPAC, Catalina Stubbe connected with him for some interview time.
The results were reported by FSSPX News (that's the Society of Saint Pius X, a canonically irregular traditionalist Catholic outfit):
From February 21 to 24, 2024, the Salvadoran president attended the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC) which was held in the United States. During the event, he was questioned by Ms. Catalina Stubbe, member of the Moms for Liberty organization – responsible for dissemination in the Hispanic community.
He explained that he thought it was “important that the curriculum does not carry this gender ideology and those types of things,” and assured that “parents should be informed and have a say in what their children will learn.”
He added: “I think it is important that God be reintroduced into schools, that morality and civics are reintroduced, that traditional elements – like mathematics and history – are taught. … Nobody is against modernization: what we are opposed to is the introduction of unnatural, anti-god, anti-family ideologies which have no place in our schools.”
The Minister of Education, José Mauricio Pineda, confirmed on social networks that “all traces of gender ideology have been removed from public schools.”
So while you're managing your anger over a third world dictator who throws around accusations while running a gulag for the US's unconstitutional rendering of whatever brown people they don't like this week, remember that this is yet another appalling ally for the "cheerful warriors" of Moms for Liberty. It is possible that in all my reading I missed the Bible passage in which Jesus said that we should round up people who bother us and stick them in some torturous prison. And M4L love for only certain parents is old news by now.
Meanwhile, Moms for Liberty's website still features their bullshit origin fable about how a couple of moms just took $500 and a t-shirt design to launch their group, and not the actual story of how some experienced political operators got backing to launch their next attempt to mobilize GOP women. Along the way they've allied themselves with some pretty awful people, but cozying up with a dictator who hopes to get rich torturing political prisoners is an even worse look.