Monday, December 1, 2025

Trump Is Not Sending Education Back To The States

The continued dismantling of the federal Department of Education is both a con and a lie, one more piece of a quilt of patchwork policies all built around a simple idea-- some people are better than others, and the uppity lessers really ought to learn their place. And the rhetoric being used to sell the dismantling is a lie.

The over-simplified version of the department's origin comes in two parts. First, Congress created some major funding streams meant to level the playing field for students and families, and with those funding streams, some civil rights laws to make sure states leveled their own playing fields for schooling and education. Second, Jimmy Carter, who had promised a cabinet-level ed department (and who wanted to be re-elected) proposed the department as a way to collect, organize, and administer the various policies.

The department's job was never supposed to be to determine what an excellent education should be. It was supposed to make sure that whatever a good education was presumed to be in your state, everybody got one. So even if a child was presumed to be a poor Lesser, a future meat widget, a child whose special needs made them harder to educate-- no matter what, the district and state were supposed to have the resources to meet the challenge. The quality of a child's education was not supposed to depend on their zip code. 

This does not fit well with the current regime's conception of civil rights, a conception rooted in the notion that the only oppressed group in this country is white guys, or their conception of democracy, a conception rooted in the notion that some people really are better than others and therefor deserve more power and privilege. (Nor does the regime love the idea of loaning people money for college and not collecting it).

So they've undone the second step of the department's creation, and parceled out a bunch of programs to other departments, a move that philosophically advances the idea that education has no point or purpose in and of itself, but exists only to serve other interests.

For example, as Jennifer Berkshire points out, now that the Department of Labor exists to serve the interests of bosses, its interest in education centers on producing more compliant meat widgets to serve boss's interests. Meanwhile, the ed programs now farmed over to the Department of Health and Human Services can be reorganized around RFK Jr.'s interest in eugenics and identifying those lessers whose proper place in society is, apparently, on a slab. 

That unbundling of education programs from the department only undoes the second phase of the department's origin. But Secretary Linda McMahon's assertion that these interagency agreement will "cut through layers of red tape" or "return education to the states" is thinly sliced baloney. It's a lie.

"Instead of dealing with this government department, you will deal with this other government department" does not even remotely equal "You will now have less red tape." In fact, given that you may have to track down the correct department and then deal with people who don't have actual expertise and knowledge in education may spell even more red tape.

"We moved this from one government department to another government department" is definitely not the same as "we sent this back to the states." 

Some programs may be sent back to the states in the sense that the feds would like to zero out the budget entirely which means the states that want to continue those programs will have to create and fund the programns on their own. If you tell your kids, "I'm not making you supper tonight," I guess that's kind of like saying "I'm sending the supper program to you."

But the big ticket items, like IDEA and Title I will still be operating out of DC until such day as Congress decides to rewrite them. And given Dear Leader's shrinking political capitol, I'm not sure that gutting IDEA is high on his To Do list right now. 

Matt Barnum suggests that gutting the department is largely symbolic and that actual schools won't feel that much of a difference. On the one hand, that's true-ish. "What is less clear," Barnum writes, "is the Trump administration’s longer-term ambitions." I'm not sure that's all that mysterious. The far right's goal, often in tandem with the modernn ed reform movement, is to get government entirely out of the education business while turning education into a get-it-yourself commodity. If government is involved in education at all, it would be 1) to provide a school-shaped holding tank for the difficult students that private schools don't want and 2) to provide taxpayer funding for schools that deliver the "correct" ideological indoctrination. 

The parcelling-out of the department may only be a small step in that direction, but its long-seething right wing critics can see it as a means of shushing those annoying voices that keep bringing up rules and civil rights and stuff.

The best hope at this point is for a chance to build a new version of the department under a new administration (in an imaginary world in which the Democrats don't face plant in 2028). But one of the worst things about the department has been the irresistable urge to use those massive grants to force DC-based education ideas on states, and this attack on the department doesn't really address that problem at all. 

What this latest move clearly does not do is send education back to the states, which is, acfter all, where education esponsibility already rested. The regime may be rtying to hamstring and privatize education, but they aren't sending it anywhere. It's an unserious lie from unserious people. Stay tuned. 

Sunday, November 30, 2025

ICYMI: Pops Concert Version (11/30)


I play in a 169-year-old town band, and the day after Thanksgiving we present one of our biggest concerts of the year. It's a huge treat for us and audiences seem to enjoy it as well. It is how I wrap up the Thanksgiving holiday, though we get an extra-long weekend because here in NW PA, tomorrow is a day off from school because it's the first day of deer season. Hope your celebrations, whatever form they may take, have been pleasant as well.

Here's your reading list for the week.


ChatGPT has a teacher version now, and it stinks, Carl Hendrick points out some of the more egregious flaws (beyond, you know, using a bot to do your job).

The Quiet Collapse of Information Access

The AI School Librarian blog takes a look at some issues around access to information. Kind of scary stuff here.

EdTech companies are lobbying their way into your kids' classroom. Who's vetting them?

Well, you already know the answer, but Lily Altavena at the Detroit Free Press looks at the details.

What the Success Academy Scandal Says About the Charter School Model

Yes, there was a scandal, again, as Eva Moskowitz was caught, again, requiring her staff and students to be taxpayer-paid lobbyists for her charter chain. Ismael Loera at The Fulcrum connects the dots to the bigger picture.

Gratitude and Canned Goods—Teaching Children to Care

Nancy Flanagan considers one of those holiday traditions-- trying to get students to care about other folks and then do something about it.

The Elimination of the Professional Status of America’s Helpers!

Nancy Bailey looks at the details of the latest Trumpian kneecapping of teachers and other helping professions. Who was deprofessionalized, and what will that mean?

What to Know About Trump’s Definition of Professional Degrees

Another take on the same issue, from Jessica Blake at Inside Higher Ed. The whole thing may be a little more complicated than your social media threads make it out to be.

New Plan to Decimate U.S. Dept. of Ed. Exposes Trump Administration’s Deficient Educational Vision

Jan Resseger provides an excellent collection of reactions to and comments on the Trump plan to gut the Department of Education

The Education Department’s Forgotten Antiracist Origins

This New York Times essay from Anthony Conwright explains the history behind what the Department of Education was for in the first place. 

Teachers are outing trans students thanks to state’s new “Don’t Say Gay” law

Here's how Texas's Don't Say Gay law works out on the ground, with trans students outed and deadnamed. Greg Owen at LGBTQ Nation reports, and it's not pretty.

Souderton residents say school board’s Thanksgiving Eve appointment is a ‘lame-duck power grab’

Many conservative school board majorities were canned in the last election, but some aren't going to let a little thing like the will of the voters stand in their way.

Colleges Are Preparing to Self-Lobotomize

"After three years of doing essentially nothing to address the rise of generative AI, colleges are now scrambling to do too much." Michael Clune explains the trouble in the Atlantic.

Relationships First: A Skeptic’s Look at AI in Schools

Sue Kingery Woltanski is the skeptic, and this post offers some practical resources and questions to consider.

On artificial time

Chatbots can't wait, because they can't quite detect the passage of time. Ben Riley with more useful tech insights.

The Radical Power of Gratitude to Rewire Your Brain and Life

Thom Hartmann on research that suggests gratitude is actually good for you. 

From blast!, the who that demonstrates just how much you can do using a marching band as your building blocks.




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Thursday, November 27, 2025

Warding Off Classroom AI

There's a lot out there from folks trying and suggesting and selling ways for teachers to put their fingers in the dike holding back the allegedly inevitable AI tide. 

But I think playing AI whack-a-mole with computerized detector bots and policies designed for the express purpose of curbing chatbot cheating are not the way to go. Simply forbidding it is as effective as was the banning of Cliff Notes or Wikipedia. Numerous bots claim they can catch other bots in action; I am unconvinced and too many students have been unfairly and incorrectly accused. Trying to chase the chatbots away is simply not going to work. More than that, it is not going to help students grasp an education.

Cheating has always had its roots in a few simple factors. Students believe that success in class will be either too hard or too time-consuming for them. Students believe the stakes are too high to take a chance on failure. And students do not have a sense of the actual point of education.

I usually explain The Point like this-- education is the work of helping young humans figure out how to be more fully their best selves while working out what it means to be fully human in the world. That's a big soup with a lot of ingredients (some academic and some not), and the required ingredients vary from person to person. 

Because it's human.

As I've now said many times, AI most easily rushes into places where humanity has already been hollowed out. And unfortunately, too often that includes certain classrooms.

We've had chances to work on this before. Nancy Flanagan (and many others) tried hard to bring some attention to using the pandemic to reset schools into something better than either tradition or reform had created. But everyone (especially those in the testing industry) wanted to get back to "normal," and so we passed up that opportunity to reconfigure education. And so now here we are, facing yet another "threat" that is only threatening because we have created a system that is exceptionally vulnerable to AI.

Modern ed reform, with its test-centric data-driven outcome-based approach has pushed us even further toward classrooms that are product-centered rather than human-centered. But if class is all about the product, then AI can produce those artifacts far faster and more easily than human students. 

Carlo Rotella, an English professor at Boston College, published a New York Times piece that argues for more humantity in the humanities. He writes:
An A.I.-resistant English course has three main elements: pen-and-paper and oral testing; teaching the process of writing rather than just assigning papers; and greater emphasis on what happens in the classroom. Such a course, which can’t be A.I.-proof because that would mean students do no writing or reading except under a teacher’s direct supervision, also obliges us to make the case to students that it’s in their self-interest to do their own work.

Yup. Those the same things that I used to make my high school English class cheat-resistant for decades. Writing in particular needs to be portrayed as a basic human activity a fundamental function with lifetime utility. 

In education, it's important to understand your foundational purpose. It is so easy in the classroom to get bogged down in the daily millions of nuts and bolts decisions about what exactly to do-- which worksheet, what assignment, how to score the essay, which questions to ask, how to divide up the 43 instructional minutes today. Planning the details of a unit is hard--but it gets much easier if you know why you are teaching the unit in the first place. What's the point? I hate to quote what can be empty admin-speak, but knowing your why really does help you figure out your what and how.

If you have your purpose and your values in place, then you can assess every possible pedagogical choice based on how it serves that central purpose. The same thing is true of AI. If you know what purposes you intend to accomplish, you are prepared to judge what AI can or cannot contribute to that purpose. And if your purpose is to help young humans grow into their own humanity, then the utility of this week's hot AI tool can be judged.

Ed tech has always been introduced to classrooms ass-backwards-- "Here's a piece of tech I want you to use, somehow, so go figure out how you can work it in" instead of "Think about the education problems you are trying to solve and let me know if you think this piece of tech would help with any of them." 

But I digress. The key to an AI-resistant classroom is not a batch of preventative rules. The answer is to create a classroom with such a thoroughly human context, values, and purpose that AI is required to either provide something useful for that context, or is left out because it doesn't serve a useful purpose. The big bonus has nothing to do with AI, and everything to do with a more deliberately human approach to educating young human beings. 

Wednesday, November 26, 2025

Reformster Nostalgia And New Old Mistakes

There's been a recent uptick in reformster nostalgia, a wistfulness among Ye Reformy Olde Garde for a rosy past when there was a bipartisan consensus surrounding swell reform ideas like the free market and testing and the free market and No Child Left Behind and school choice and testing (e.g. Arne Duncan op-ed).

Mike Petrilli (Fordham Institute) has been substacking and gathering an assortment of all the old players to comment of education issues, running the gamut from A to B on various education policy debate topics, and in connection with that had a conversation over at Ed Week with Rick Hess (American Enterprise Institute) under the headline "Can School Reform Be Bipartisan Again?" Which is a question that certainly makes some assumptions, but let's take a look at what's going on.

Petrilli's stated motivation is fine. For one, he notices that substack is emerging as a way for people to scratch their writing and reading itch without having to slog through a variety of social media (some of which have become extra sloggy), and he joins a large club there (I know because I attend all the meetings myself). He also misses "the early days of Twitter and blogging, when we had robust debates about policy, tactics, and direction." Also understandable, and he explains what happened:
Unfortunately, as social media became a cesspool and the reform movement fractured along ideological lines, those conversations became full of vitriol and then largely went silent.

Sure. The ed reform coalition has always been complicated. The spine back in the day was a combo of free marketeers. social engineers, and tech/data overlords. Then Trump was elected, and then the culture wars were launched. Point to the moment when Jay Greene left academic reformsterdom and went to the Heritage Foundation and started writing pieces like "Time for the School Choice Movement to Embrace the Culture War."

It's not just that the ed reform movement became infected with Culture Panic. It's that the Culture Panic crowd is, almost without exception, a bunch of very unserious people. 

Over the past decade-plus, I've come to understand that the reformster tent is large and contains many different ideas and motivations. The reformster crowd includes folks who have some core beliefs and values that I believe are fundamentally flawed and the way to conclusions that I deeply disagree with. But they are people that I can have a conversation with, who use and receive words like their purpose is to convey meaning and not as some sort of jousting tool. 

The culture panic crowd is not serious about any of it. They are veiled and obtuse, deliberately misunderstanding what is said to them and using words as tools to manipulate and lever their desired results. They aren't serious about choice or educational quality or anything other than acquiring a dominant cultural position and personal power. There have always been some culture panic types within the reform tent (e.g. Betsy DeVos), but for half a decade they have been large and loud within the movement. "Let's use choice to encourage embettering competition" was replaced with "Get those trans kids off the track team." One of those is wrong, and one of those is simply unserious. 

Petrilli points to what he calls "reform fatigue," the result of two or three decades of hard push by reformsters. He calls it society's tendency to want the pendulum to swing back to the middle. "Eventually, the public grew tired, and the opponents of reform became more motivated than we, its defenders." 

He and Hess also point to the argument that Bush-Obama school reform was "simplistic and self-righteous," and Petrilli acknowledges the self-righteous part. Without naming Duncan, he says

I cringe when some reformers return to that self-righteous language, especially versions of “We know what works, we just need the political will to do it.” It’s a lot more complicated than that.

Petrilli also gives the movement credit for getting "big things" right, like the idea that "The American education system, with its 14,000 districts, elected school boards, and entrenched teachers’ unions, is not going to improve without external pressure." And he points to "student achievement" growing during the 1990s and 2000s, by which he actually means test scores.

Well, I think he's off the mark here. Fatigue? Simplistic? No, the reason that reform flagged was because it didn't work. Focusing on high stakes testing didn't achieve much, and most of what it did achieve was to damage school systems in numerous ways, from the narrowing of the curriculum to teaching an entire generation that the point of education is a Big Standardized Test. That and it became evident that test scores were a boon to data-grabbing tech overlords and people who simply wanted a tool for dismantling public education. 

The premise of a necessary "external pressure" is also problematic. Petrilli suggests that the pressure can come from "top-down accountability or bottom-up market competition," but I don't believe either of those will do what he imagines they will. Top-down accountability guarantees policies that are mis-interpreted as they pass down through layers of bureaucracy and which result in a compliance culture in thrall to Campbell's Law. Market competition is a terrible fit for education (see Greene's Law-- the free market does not foster superior quality; the free market fosters superior marketing). One of the bizarre fundamentals of the reform movement is the notion that educators are not doing a better job because they have not been offered the optimum combination of bribes and/or threats. 

Petrilli and Hess do not confront one of the fundamental flaws of reform, which is the notion that the Big Standardized Test is a good and effective measure of educational achievement, as if the question of how to measure something as vast and variable as the effectiveness of education is all settled. When David Brooks says that Republican states are kicking the Democrats' butts in education, all he's doing is comparing scores on a single math and reading test. As a country we have repeated this so many times that it is accepted wisdom, but the Big Standardized Test is just an emperor behind the curtain with no clothes. Will raising this student's BS Test scores give the student a better, richer, fuller, happier life than they would have had with their old lower scores? There isn't a shred of evidence for that assertion, but in the meantime, we keep pretending that a single mediocre math and reading test tells us everything we need to know about education.

Petrilli makes a passing reference to how unions never liked "testing, and especially accountability" (he has maybe forgotten their full-throated, member-opposed embrace of Common Core), which is just a rage-making assertion, because teachers and their unions have never, ever been against accountability. What they have opposed is accountability based on junk that has no connection to the work they actually do. Let's not forget that test scores soaked in VAM sauce gave us accountability measures that fluctuated wildly or that had to be run through other mechanisms in order to "evaluate" teachers via students and subjects they didn't even teach. The "accountability" created under Bush-Obama involved an awful lot of making shit up. 

Did test scores go up for a while? Sure. I was there. They went up because we learned how to align the schools to the test. Not to the education-- to the test. 

Petrilli muses about the nature of the reformster coalition, like the old one with members on the "ideological left, including Education Trust and other civil rights organizations" and I must confess that I never saw much "left" in the reform coalition. Petrilli says maybe we'll get back to a world where the parties fight over the center and then business groups and civil rights groups will become involved, and maybe, though reform has had plenty of chance to demonstrate how it can lift up minorities and the poor and it, well, didn't do that. If "populism" stays big, Petrilli muses, maybe they'll have to get involved with parents' groups and alternative teacher organizations "like the one that Ryan Walters now runs."

Well, except that would take them right back to a tent full of unserious allies who are not on the left, but are further right than Ye Old Reformy Garde. 

I'm inclined to ignore the right-left thing when it comes to ed reform. I think it's more accurate to frame the sides as pro- and anti- public education, and pro-public education voices have always been in very short supply in the reform coalition. Instead, reform positions on public education range from "Let's rebuild everything" to "Let's dismantle it and sell the parts" to "Burn it all down." 

Petrilli's smartest bit comes at the end:

For the people in the trenches, I’d encourage them to remember that student learning depends on student effort. And whenever they face a big decision related to curriculum, instruction, discipline policy, grading, AI policy, or anything else bearing on the day-to-day realities of schools, they should ask themselves: Is this going to make it easier or harder for my teachers to motivate their students to work hard and thus to learn?

This is actually pretty good, and it points to my suggestion for the imaginary new revived ed reformster coalition.

Include some actual teachers. 

I get there is a challenge here. In the same way that policy wonks and bureaucrats don't have real on-the-ground knowledge of teaching, teachers don't have real on-the-ground knowledge of policy wonkage and promotion. But ed reform continually misses the viewpoint of the people who have to actually implement policy ideas. 

Ye Olde Reformy Garde has come a distance since the days when they were hugely dismissive of teachers. Many have caught on to the fact that maybe deliberately alienating the people who have to implement your policy ideas is a poor choice. Maybe, just maybe, they've deduced, most teachers are in the profession because they really want to do a good job, and not because they are lazy sinecure-seeking slackers. 

But reformsters still miss the actual aspect of how their ideas play out on the ground, and those insights could save everyone a great deal of time. 

And no-- all those education reform leaders who spent two years with Teach For America do not count. Two years is bupkis; a real teacher is barely clearing her career throat after two years. 

Would working teachers just defend the current system so fiercely that no reform could happen? Of course not-- walk into any school in the country and the teachers there could tell you ten things about their system that should be fixed. Would teachers support accountability? Of course-- if it were real and realistic. Teachers have a powerful desire to teach next door and downstream from other teachers who are doing a good job. 

Lord knows I have no nostalgia for the old days of reform, when every year brought new policies that, from my perspective, ranged from misguided all the way to ethically and educationally wrong. Neither am I nostalgic for the days before modern reform. Public education has always needed to improve, and it always will, because it is a human enterprise. 

It would be great to have a reformy movement based on asking the question "How can we make schools better," but way too much of the reformster movement has been about asking "How can we get free market activity injected into the public school system" with answers ranging from "inject market based school choice" all the way to "blow it all up." It has marked itself by and large as an anti-public school movement since the moment that the A Nation At Risk folks were told their report had to show that public schools were failing and we were subjected to decades of pounding into the "common knowledge" that American schools are failing. And if the reform movement wants to revive itself, I suggest they start by owning all of that. 

We could have school choice, if that was what we really wanted, and we could have it without the segregation effects, the inefficiency and wasting of taxpayer dollars, without the pockets of really terrible education, without the instability of bad amateur players, without, in short, all the effects we get by trying to create free market school choice (I've explained how elsewhere).  But the reformster movement has long seemed far more interested in the Free Market part than the Improving Education part. They have spent forty years explaining that public education is failing because that's the justification for going Free Market (and national standards and high stakes testing) and yet it turns out that none of those things have been particularly helpful at all.

I do sense a new trend in Ye Reformy Olde Garde, and it's there in Petrilli's last paragraph-- a focus on policies "bearing on the day-to-day realities of schools." It's a good choice which might yield some productive discussions, particularly if those discussions are expanded to include people beyond the A to B gamut, because I know where you can find about 3 or 4 million people who are familiar with those day-to-day realities. 

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Grok Hilarious Fiasco Is A Serious Reminder

Grok is the Elon Musk version of AI, a chatbot that is supposed to be less woke. But lately it has also been a hilarious Elon Musk fanboy that will always tout the awesomeness of its owner.

It has boasted that Musk is "among the top 10 minds in history, rivaling polymaths like da Vinci or Newton." Also, he would beat Mike Tyson in a fight. Bruce Lee, too. Given the choice between Musk, Peyton Manning and Ryan Leaf in an NFL draft, Grok said, "Elon Musk, without hesitation." Musk is lean and muscular with extensive martial arts training, says Grok. Given the choice between switching off Musk's brain and wiping out the entire nation of Slovakia, Grok would vaporize Slovakia.

And that's before we get to ruder stuff, like Grok's assertion that Musk could be the best in all of human history at drinking piss and performing blow jobs. 

People started goading Grok with prompts like those asking Grok to praise Musk's ideas that he didn't actually have (e.g. historical theory about England's break with the Catholic church). At this point it's such a popular game that I'm not even sure if other examples are real, like Musk could be raised from the dead faster and more efficiently than Jesus-- but it sure seems they could be. Musk's crew, for its part, has been scrubbing away the brown-nosing Grokspeak, and Musk himself posted on X that “Earlier today, Grok was unfortunately manipulated by adversarial prompting into saying absurdly positive things about me. For the record, I am a fat [expletive].”

This is all a reasonably hilarious reminder of how over-the-top lying can get, as well as a look at how tragic it can be coming from someone who has more than enough resources to feel that he is--and has--enough. 

But it is also a reminder that one of the oldest computer principles still applies to one of the newest advanced technologies--

GIGO. Garbage In, Garbage Out.

Decades ago we used to hear those words as reminder that you have to be careful about what you feed your program because otherwise it will give back junk. Nowadays, we have to confront another aspect of GIGO-- when the people in charge of the program feed it garbage on purpose.

It was enough of a signal when Musk announced that he would make Grok "less woke," but now we've got a demonstration of how deliberately unmoored a chatbot can be, and not just because it's in its nature to make shit up, but because it can be "adjusted" to make shit up to fit a particular bias. 

I am daily frustrated by people who have fallen into the notion that AI chatbots are somehow paragons of objectivity that scan the web for the best evidence, weigh it logically, and deliver an unadulterated evaluation of the some total of human knowledge on whatever you have asked. They aren't, and they don't, and, in fact, you can "adjust" them so that they will always tell you that a certain man-baby is the most awesome human being to walk the earth--literally. 

Understand that this particular Elon-centric "adjustment" is so over the top that almost nobody would mistake it for an objective True answer. But you must ask yourself-- how many more subtle and less obviously bonkers "adjustments" could be made to the program that would not be obvious to you at all?

Even if you are deliberately trying to create an unbiased program, you will fail, because your own biases are reflected in everything that you "understand" about the world and what is in it. The notion that you can build a machine out of your biased pieces of mental lumber and come up with a house that is perfectly square is silly (also, the idea that perfectly square is how to build a house is yet another bias).

On the other hand, if you would like to build an AI chatbot machine that was biased in your preferred direction--well, that is totally achievable. It might take some practice to build the bias in subtly enough that you don't get caught, but with a little practice on top of huge amounts of wealth and compliant underlings, I'll bet you can get there.

We've talked a lot about AI as plagiarism machines and bullshit extruders and cognitive automaters, but we should be sure to include high-powered lie generators on that same list. Because as long as humans are on one end of the machine accepting output as an objective representation of reality and powerful folks are on the other end scripting the objective reality they would prefer, we are looking at some toxic high-tech GIGO.

ICYMI: Health Care System Edition (11/23)

My 92-year-old mother has spent most of this week in the hospital, and as always when I encounter the health care universe, part of me wonders how the hell people who don't have A) decent insurance, B) relatively easy access to a health care facility, and C) someone who can spend days sitting with them in the room, keeping them company, and translating and advocating-- I mean, my mother has all of those things, and it's still not super-easy. What the hell hope do people without those resources have? What a screwed-up system we have in this country, and yet some people insist on defending it avidly (and some other people would like to change the education system to more closely resemble it). 

So it's been a week here and it's not over, and if the blog has seemed a little quiet, that's why. I love you all, but I love my mom more. But I still have some pieces for you to read. 

School voucher confidential: Yes, the other parents are talking about you

Austin Gelder and Elizabeth L. Cline at Arkansas Times get commentary from a bunch of actual Arkansas parents about the state's voucher program. Nice change of pace, that, and not nearly as snotty as the headline might lead you to believe.

Learning with AI falls short compared to old-fashioned web search

Shiri Melumad has done some actual research indicating that people get more knowledge from a Google search than they do from an AI summary. And isn't that a low bar to fail to clear.

Are States Equipped to Track Students’ Paths From Classroom to Career?

Evie Blad at EdWeek asks many questions about the cradle to career data pipeline-- but not the most important one which is "Should we do this?" Informative yet awful.

RIP Department of Education

Jennifer Berkshire explains how education policies will be handled by the Department of the Boss.

‘Selling off the Department of Education for parts’: The agency’s major overhaul faces fierce backlash

If you want some official reactions to the news, 19th News has them.

I’ve already seen the impact from Charlotte’s Border Patrol surge

Juston Parmenter writes an op-ed for the Charlotte Observer (yes, that Charlotte) about the effects of the border patrol incursion. (Spoiler alert: the effects are not good).

Wall Street Is Paywalling Your Kids’ Sports

From The Lever, by Luke Goldstein. Turns out private equity has found yet another turnip to squeeze. And it includes not allowing you take recordings of your own child playing the sport.

Ohio is passing a law about a school exam question - A strange story behind a testing fiasco

When the Big Standardized Test screws up, does it take the state legislature to fix it? Ohio is working on the question.


Thomas Ultican notices that Erik Hanushek is out making wacky predictions again. What he's saying, and why you can safely ignore him.

Uncredible! ASD Debunks AG Cox’s Hillsdale Allegations, Citing Bishop-Era Policy

Continued noise and kerfluffle from the far right over Hillsdale pamphlets handed out in Anchorage schools.


Second part of a Jan Resseger series. It includes a link to Part I if you missed that, which you should,

Open Enrollment/Predator Schools

Andru Volinsky explains the trouble unleashed in New Hampshire by a state supreme court decision that facilitates an ALEC open enrollment scheme.

What is going on in Florida?

A lot, and almost all of it is unprincipled, anti-public education, and ugly (but not all of it). Sue Kingery Woltanski has the rundown, including the part where someone wants all public schools converted to a classical education. Plus the part where the state voucher system made $270 million go missing.

In Florida school wars, are locals finally pushing back?

Well, we can hope. Column by John Hill in Tampa Bay Times.

State Spending on Public School Students Lowest since 1997

That's the year they started voucherizing education. Ohio continues to shaft public school students, and Stephen Dyer has the numbers.

Federal judge rules law requiring display of Ten Commandments in Texas classrooms unconstitutional

This really shouldn't be news, but here we are-- no, you can't inflict your own particular religion on all school students.

Tennessee parents sue to stop voucher program

Opening shots fired. We'll see where the courts land on this one.

AI Suckage Round-up

An awful lot of news related to the awfulness of AI and its unfitness for education. Here we go--

‘We could have asked ChatGPT’: students fight back over course taught by AI

As I've repeatedly argued, you can't expect students to feel as if they should make an honest human effort when the people in charge of the course won't

AI Companies Are Treating Their Workers Like Human Garbage, Which May Be a Sign of Things to Come for the Rest of Us

Indeed. Joe Wilkins at Futurism

A general understanding of the human

Ben Riley hits several points, including classroom tech.

OpenAI Blocks Toymaker After Its AI Teddy Bear Is Caught Telling Children Terrible Things

Frank Landymore at Futurism says that at least OpenAI knew enough to pull the plug on sex fetishj instructions for children.

The résumé is dying, and AI is holding the smoking gun

See also: college recommendation letters.

The Great AI Bubble

Carole Cadwaller, the woman who used a TED talk to call Sam Altman a data rapist, explains the AI bubble and the economic disaster it will unleash.

The more that people use AI, the more likely they are to overestimate their own abilities

Ther's now some nifty research suggesting that AI will make your Dunning-Kruger problem even worse. "ChatGPT explained it to me, so now I am a freaking expert!!"

I started putting a music video into each of these weekly roundups because these days we can surely use a reminder about some of the nice, even beautiful, things that we humans create beyond policy arguments and political detritus. These are pieces of music I like, some for ages, and some newly discovered. Recommendations are welcomed. This week, it's Zak Abel, a performer I know nothing about, but I do like his song.



As always, it would be delightful if you subscribed. Always free.

Tuesday, November 18, 2025

FL: No, Not That Kind Of Religious Freedom

There are just so many advocates for religious freedom who have no actual interest in religious freedom at all. And a whole lot of them hold office in Florida.

We've seen this before. Back in 2024, Florida's legislators thought they had a clever idea for getting Christianity injected into the classroom with the passage of a law allowing volunteer chaplains (or chaplain wannabes) in schools. The law was very explicit in placing no requirements for "chaplains" to belong to a particular faith, but as soon as the Satanic Temple announced an interest in signing up some volunteers for chaplaining, Governor Ron DeSantis announced that the state was "not playing those games" which appeared to mean the game of declaring yourself a religion without his personal seal of approval of your faith. 

Religious freedom, he appears to believe, is only for the religions that he approves of.

Now, here we go again. State officials are upset that their voucher program designed to funnel public taxpayer dollars to private religious schools has started funneling money to the wrong religion!

Attorney General James Uthmeier, Chief Financial Officer Blaise Ingoglia, and Agriculture Commissioner Wilton Simpson, all GOP DeSantis buddies, want to know why the hell the state is funding Islamic schools in the state. 

“Sharia law seeks to destroy and supplant the pillars of our republican form of government and is incompatible with the Western tradition,” said Uthmeier on the Twitter. “The use of taxpayer-funded school vouchers to promote Sharia law likely contravenes Florida law and undermines our national security.”

“Schools that indoctrinate Sharia law should not be a part of our taxpayer-funded school voucher program,” posted Agriculture Commissioner Wilson Simpson, a big time voucher supporter.

Mind you, there's no actual evidence that the schools, Hifz Academy and Bayaan Academy, are teaching shari'a law. And, as the Sun Sentinel editorial board points out, so what if they are? 

Some of the outrage fuel appears to be coming from RAIR Foundation USA. RAIR Foundation is "a grassroots activist and investigative journalism organization made up of everyday Americans leading a movement to reclaim our Republic from the network of individuals and organizations waging war on our nation — on our Constitution, our borders, and our Judeo-Christian values." RAIR was founded by social media influencer Amy Mekelberg (known for years as Amy Mek until HufPost unmasked her). RAIR now supposedly stands for Rise Align Ignite Reclaim but originally stood for Resistance Against Islamic Radicals. RAIR is on the Southern Poverty Law Center list of hate groups.

School Choice began as a movement to rescue children from failing public schools, but it has also become a taxpayer-funded pipeline for Islamic indoctrination.

So the message from some on the right continues to be that religious freedom is great, but only when it applies to the correct religion. It is okay to spend taxpayer dollars on private religious schools, but only as long as those schools practice the correct religion. And the state will decide whose religion is correct and whose is not. 

This is exactly what the First Amendment is for, and exactly why there should not be programs designed to redirect taxpayer dollars to private religious schools-- because the inevitable result is for the state to inject itself into a discussion about whose religion is acceptable and deserves to be supported by the taxpayers. And those taxpayers might themselves have a few words to say about having their tax dollars go to support a religion they disagree with. School voucher systems are set up so that christianists must pay to support Islamic schools, anti-semites must pay to support Hebrew schools, Southern Baptists must pay to support Catholic schools, and non-religious folks must pay to support all manner of religious schools. The solution is there in the Constitution and in most state constitutions as well-- keep the government out of the private religious school business entirely.