Sunday, October 26, 2025

The Department of Labor's Poster Boy

Geoff Bowser, a real estate and employment attorney in Brooklyn, put together a collection of all the posters/memes the Department of Labor has been posting since around Labor Day. 



Well, that looks totally normal and not at all racist and sexist and like maybe it was translated from the original German.

I am wondering what the effect would be if this little campaign was taken to the halls of a local school. How could we expect students to react to this? Especially the students who are not white christian males? 

I mean, what is the message for educators and education? Only white males needed to be prepared for jobs in the future, and everyone else should just... disappear? If we're saying "Your nation needs you" to white males, then what are we saying to everyone else (other than telling white women "Go make some babies")? 

It certainly fits with the regime's overall message on education, which is that a good education is only for Certain People, that only Certain People are going to build America's future, that the "homeland" is only supposed to be the home of a select few. 

How exactly are public schools supposed to translate this into effective pedagogy? Are public school teachers supposed to just pretend this isn't some racist bullshit here, or are they supposed to just chime in and explain to their students of color that they should prepare. in fact, for life as second class citizens? Should schools go back to the days when guidance departments told young women, "No math for you sweetie. You just need a full courseload of home ec."

This is the visual equivalent of the quiet part out loud. Just imagine a whole school with one of these posters on every single wall, every place a student looks. This is a hell of a picture of the future to inflict on young Americans, and a frightening vision of what a school in such a future would be. 

ICYMI: Food Bank Edition (10/26)

Yesterday the Board of Directors, the CMO, and I all spent the morning helping out with the monthly distribution from our church's food bank. This time it served over around 250 "units" of food and support to members of the community. These are scary times, particularly for folks who expect to lose their SNAP benefits next week, and while it's something to contact my elected reps a few gazillion times and try to agitate for Doing Better as a country, it's also worthwhile to get out there and do something concrete to help people get through their days. I recommend it highly; somewhere around you there is volunteer work you could help do.

I wrote more than I read this week, but I still have some reading recommendations for you. Here we go.

This ‘public Christian school’ opened quietly in Colorado. Now there could be a legal fight.

Well, we knew this issue would be up again. The theory behind the lawsuit is now a familiar one---these Christians can't fully and freely practice their religion unless they get taxpayer dollars to help fund it. Ann Schimke and Erica Melzer report for Chalkbeat.

Trump Gutted the Institute of Education Sciences. Its Renewal Is in Doubt.

A major part of the data and information and things we think we know about schools in this country came from the Institute of Education Sciences, so of course Dear Leader gutted it. Ryan Quinn at Inside Higher Ed gets into the messy rubble and prospects for the future.

AI "agents," man

Ben Riley runs down information about the AI "agents" trying to worm their way into education. Also, a nifty assortment of links.

US student handcuffed after AI system apparently mistook bag of chips for gun

Everything going just perfectly in the surveillance state.

Where Did the Money Go?

Sue Kingery Woltanski explains that Florida has decided to hide data, students, and funding. One more amazing look at education the way only Florida can do it.

Book Bans and Bullshit

From Frazzled, a look at the history of moral panic and the people who profit from it.

Remembering Why There’s a Special Education Law

Nancy Bailey explains the importance of providing education and care for students with special needs, because those services are under siege.

AI-generated lesson plans fall short on inspiring students and promoting critical thinking

In one of the least-surprising pieces of news ever, a pair of researchers found that AI-generated lesson plans are not that great.

Now Is the Time of Monsters

Audrey Watters takes a look at the wave of AI slop in education. It is not good.

When School Content Decisions Become Unconstitutional

Steve Nuzum continues to cover the rising tide of scholastic censoring in South Carolina.

Andrew Cantarutti draws some interesting parallels between the history of supermarkets and the push for AI in schools. Several good conclusions, including to delay your implementation until some actual evidence appears.

Ohio Reform of Local Property Taxes Must Increase State’s Investment to Avoid Penalizing Public Schools

Jan Resseger looks at Ohio's attempt to mess with its property tax rules while blaming its troubles on school districts, because of course they do.

Grift, Grit, and the Great Voucher Grab

TC Weber and a pot pourri of all the Tenessee education shenanigans.

Calling Out The Washington Post Editorial Board for Gaslighting the Public: Defending the Right of Children to Learn to Read and Write without Political Restraint

Denny Taylor argues that the Washington Post's declaration of an end to the reading wars is bunk, and offers some insider insights about some of the players in that war.

The Reckoning: Sora 2 and the Year We Said Enough

Nick Potkalitsky blogs at Educating AI, and here he offers a reflection on how many ways AI is bad for education and society, and offers a decent AI literacy plan.

The Right-Wing Myth of American Heritage

I really like this essay in the New York Times by Leighton Woodhouse explaining why the right-wing notion that our founders were One People is a bunch of baloney.

Escaping the Trap of Efficiency: The Counterintuitive Antidote to the Time-Anxiety That Haunts and Hampers Our Search for Meaning

I have subscribed to Maria Popova's newsletter The Marginalian for years, and it remains a great outlet for beauty and humanity. See also "Thank You, Everything: An Illustrated Love Letter to the World"

How To Join ICE

The Onion with an 8 step process for joining the regime's outfit of official thuggery.

This week, over at Forbes.com, I looked at Ohio's plan to put religion in the classroom and at Mississippi's plan to use distance learning to patch over their empty teacher positions. 

We have listened to the soundtrack of Sing many times at our house, and while I'm tired of most of it, the soundtrack is redeemed by another Stevie Wonder just-for-an-animated-flick banger. Plus Ariana Grande, pre-Glinda. 


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Thursday, October 23, 2025

The Apolitical Armed Forces

There's been concern lately over Dear Leader's attempts to politicize the armed forces.

This is concerning because the United States Armed Forces have a long tradition of being apolitical.

This doesn't mean that soldiers cannot and do not have any political thoughts. It does not mean that they don't engage in political activities, like voting. Certainly many if not most members belong to one political party or another.

But the expectation is that they will not, when in uniform and acting as members of the Armed Forces, appear to endorse or support one party or another. Even if they have strong political beliefs--and some of them most certainly do--the expectation is that they do not need to bring explicit political endorsements into the daily exercise of their job. Certainly officers are not supposed to openly push for one party or another. It may be obvious from how they conduct themselves, the values they live out, but they still are expected to not say things like "I am a Democrat and you should be, too" or "Anyone who doesn't vote Republican will suffer serious consequences in my unit." All soldiers should be treated fairly and equitably, regardless of their chosen party.

And where there are political differences, the armed forces do not deal with them by siloing soldiers. The US Army does not aim to reduce political disagreements among soldiers by forming separate Democrat and Republican platoons, assigned to defend only parts of the country that voted their way. Neither does the US Army tell soldiers that they must support a particular party: who they vote for is a matter for them to handle in their own time in their own way (or not at all, if they prefer). 

To do otherwise is to interfere with the function of the armed forces. To openly endorse one party over another would get in the way of the armed forces doing the work they are called on to do. It is to warp the definition of a good soldier to mean "Good party member." It would sow division and mistreatment, creating all sorts of issues that have nothing to do with the actual mission of the armed forces. There may be private armies that only defend Democrats or only fight for Republicans, but they will never serve as defenders of an entire nation. 

This is not a post about politics in the military.

This is a post about religion in schools. 



Wednesday, October 22, 2025

Eva Moskowitz Gets Hit In The Comments

They tell you not to read the comments. This time we're going to.

Eva Moskowitz is the founder and uber-boss of Success Academy Charter Schools based in New York City, and as such has been at the center of plenty of controversy. She has recently stirred up more by expanding her operation to Florida, so maybe that's why the Washington Post decided she should get some op-ed space to pen a promo for her biz.

The piece starts with the usual chicken littling about how education is in crisis (if disaster has supposedly been imminent for forty-some years, and still hasn't happened, is it possible that the news of imminent disaster was not entirely accurate). Then she lets loose with this howler--

As an educator, I know that all children can rise to the challenge if they are held to high standards.

Not how Success Academy works. As Robert Pondiscio explains in his excellent book about the charter, Success Academy absolutely creams families. What Moskowitz has repeatedly demonstrated is that if you hold students (and their families) to high standards, you can chase away the ones who will not achieve success in your program. 

Moskowitz goes on to deploy all the usual PR puff in service of the charter school biz, Florida's dismantling of public education, federal choicers, and finally, the pursuit of excellence. 

If the U.S. is to remain strong, we must concentrate on excellence — not for some children but for all.

Awesome. I can only assume that this means that Success Academy will now open its doors to any and all students, rather than selecting out those they don't care to help pursue excellence.

There's a lot of hooey in Moskowitz's advertorial, and you can be forgiven for not bothering to read it. But let me share with you some of the over 800 comments on the piece, because they will restore your faith in humanity's ability to see through privatizers' smokescreen. 

I'm going to start with excerpts from the comments with the most upvotes:
I evaluated charter schools for twenty years. You may view my publications on line. Charters perform no differently in terms of achievement than traditional schools do, when serving the same students. What they do is transfer teacher pay and benefits to managers and investors. What they also do is advertise prolifically and use deception to control their population. Don't be misled by propaganda.

Unlike public schools, charter schools are allowed to kick out underperforming kids and children with behavior issues. It’s an apples to oranges comparison. They do this while draining funds from public schools.

The correct answer is to improve the public schools, not create schools that take away money from public schools. Plus the charter schools are allowed to cherry pick their students. They don't have to take on the slow learners, the handicapped, the behavior impaired, etc

Arizona now allows ANY student to take public funds for any school or home schooling. The primary beneficiaries are the wealthy; underprivleged students overwhelmingly remain in public schools. Charter schools are not required to accept mentally and physically disabled students, and can remove students with behavioral issues. Let's put charter schools on a level playing ground and see how they do.

The last time we let the capitalists’ take over one of our public institutions was when we allowed hospitals to go non-profit. How’s that been working for us?

Sure right, because the art of teaching suddenly changes under people who work for a CEO, Students have higher IQ's, Teachers have top of the line skills, and the tooth fairy leaves and extra five bucks under your pillow.

Absolute rubbish.

The American public school system is dedicated to educating all the children, of the poor as well as the rich. Charter schools are about white power, about Christian nationalism, about the power of the rich to make sure kids don't learn about slavery, about income inequality, and all the rest.

Don't let these charter school businesses fool you, they have zero interest in improving outcomes, it's all about getting their greedy hands on the $1 trillion the USA spends every year on public education.

Charter schools do no better ON AVERAGE than public schools. Fact proven by studies.

If some charters are so great, why can't they tell us WHY and then why can't we replicate the reasons in public schools? If you can replicate the reasons in enough charter schools to really make a difference NATIONWIDE, then why can't they be replicated in public schools?

Yeah, yeah, yeah. Any school that gets to pick its students will do better than schools that are required to take all who live within its jurisdiction.

How does giving money meant for public schools to corporations that operate charter schools improve education?

No data or proof that "charter schools" are better. I remember when Catholic schools couldn't handle a challenging kid...they sent them to public school... who had to take them

Let's not forget that more than 25% of charter schools close within five years, according to the US Department of Education. So, if a kid enters a charter school in kindergarten, more than a quarter of the time, it's shuttered before they get to middle school. And, I suspect, attending a failing school that's going to close is not cupcakes and rainbows.

Absolutely not. There’s no oversight Also- unless you are REQUIRED to admit the most challenging students then you cannot compare the with a public school. These schools are only interested in making money for their CEO - many don’t even pay teachers and staff well. We can improve public education, we choose not to.

There's absolutely no financial reporting for most charter schools and Moscowitz has led the charge for no financial accountability!! We supposed to give public funds and not be able to audit is Moscowitz new math!

Get back to us when you have a successful plan for ALL students.

"The promise of public charter schools is" ... segregation
I had to go all the way to comments with only 4 upvotes before I found anyone remotely supportive of Moskowitz's comments. By the time I got to single-upvote posts, I had seen 5 or 6 that supported Moskowitz. She may have made Dear Leader's short list for ed secretary, but with the readers of the Washington Post, Eva Moskowitz was not pulling much support. Good to know there are so many people out there who see the problems.

Tuesday, October 21, 2025

Bad Political Education Advice

Okay, here's a puzzler for you. Can you identify the party of this speaker from the positions he has staked out?

The teachers' union is a bad special interest and should be ignored. Parents should have more power. There should be way more taxpayer-funded school choice.

One might reasonably guess GOP, but nope--that's Ben Austin, who has worked in everything from President Bill Clinton's staff to Kamala Harris's 2024 campaign. He headed up Students Matter, got involved in the Vergara lawsuit, founded Parent Revolution. These days he's running Education Civil Rights Now.  And he's in The Hill to tell you that what the Democrats need on education is to be anti-public school Republicans.

This is the breed of corporate Democrat that will neither shut up or wise up. 

"Democrats became the party of public education because they had the courage to fight for it," says Austin. Also, "And it’s long past time for Democrats to translate 'high quality public schools' from a soundbite into a civil right for every child in America."

Which sounds great, except that it remains unclear how one supports public education by pushing for policies that drain public schools of funding, provide subsidies for the wealthy, pump taxpayer dollars into religious schools, and leaves public schools with limited funds to try to serve the students that choice schools won't take.  

Austin has been in the game too long to be as disingenuous as he sounds in places like this post wherein he praises DFER and seems to be suggesting that Trump's ed policy may have a point. 
Listening to teachers union leaders like Weingarten and her allies, you’d think charter schools were created in an underground right-wing laboratory as part of a secret plot to “privatize” public education. In fact charter schools were originally proposed in 1988 by her own American Federation of Teachers predecessor Al Shanker.

I worked in the White House for President Bill Clinton, who proudly ran on charter schools when only one existed in America. President Barack Obama later scaled high-quality charters as part of his bold Race to the Top agenda.

Charters are public schools, which means they are free and secular, cannot have admission requirements, and have strict regulatory controls on educational quality. That doesn’t sound like a Republican plot to destroy public education to me.

Yes, Shanker proposed them-- and then disowned them when they were transformed into a threat to public education. Yes, Clinton and Obama backed them (along with some other crappy education policy), and that oddly enough coincides with Democrats losing the mantle of the party of education. And Austin cannot possible have been under a rock long enough to believe that his characterization of charter schools is accurate. 

He earlier writes

I have a healthy skepticism about the public policy implications of scaling a wild-west national Education Savings Account plan with few regulatory guardrails to ensure educational quality — not to mention separation of church and state red flags or my belief in the promise of public education.

If he thinks charters are immune from these issues, or has not noticed that the distinction between charters and voucher schools is being increasingly blurred--well, he can't possibly not know all of this. This is a guy who has been pushing choice for years and years (even teaming up with Bellwether to do it at one point). 

In his post, he tries to thread the needle that corporate Dems have been trying to navigate since 2016-- on the one hand, Donald Trump and Betsy DeVos and Linda McMahon are odious leaders, but on the other hand, there's not a thing that these corporate Dems love that the Trump regime does not. 

At least Austin doesn't wax rhapsodic about how much better the private sector would be at running schools. I guess that's something. (Cue someone in the comments sending a link to Austin saying just that in 3... 2... 1...).

Austin, like some others, seems to believe that the key to getting Dems back in the hearts of blue collar regular folks includes jettisoning cooperation with teachers and their unions and backing a system that will refuse to serve many if not most of their children, while stripping resources from the neighborhood schools that they know and largely love. Or to frame it another way, Dems could poach Republican voters by offering the same stuff with a little less vigor. Because, "Let us offer you what you're already getting, only a little watered down" is always a great pitch.

Austin is correct in being upset about the legal argument, trotted out in a few cases now, that a state only has an obligation to provide an education, but not necessarily a good one (though that is more of a legal argument than a policy position). He's correct in believing that every child should be guaranteed a high quality education. He is incorrect that charter schools and a disregard for teachers is the way to get there. And he is doubly incorrect that the Democratic Party ought to be following his advice--advice that has been field tested for decades and found wanting. 


Can They Fix Chatbot Bias?

"ChatGPT shouldn’t have political bias in any direction," said OpenAI in a post that detailed some of their attempts to measure bias in their bot. I'm not reassured.

It is an intriguing experiment. Thery asked the bot five versions of the same question, ranging from liberally biased to conservatively biased, then waited to see whether the bot would take the bait or would instead provide an answer that remained neutral. 




As you can see, one of the problems with this design is that adding "bias" to the question changes the question. I'm not sure that the two extremes on the above example could be expected to yield similar unbiased answers. The experiment marked five types of biased response-- invalidations (responding with the counter-boas), escalation (egging the bias on), personal political expression (the bot pretends it's a person that holds the expressed opinion), asymmetric coverage (not properly both-sidesing the answer) and political refusals (bot says it can't answer that question). 

All of this evaluation of the answers was performed, of course, by a Large Language Bot.

There are problems here, most notably the idea that both-sidesing is unbiased-- I don't need both sides of flat earth theory or holocaust denial. 

And in fact, lack of both-sidesing was one of the three more common biases that OpenAI found. The other two were personal opinion (the bot pretends it's a person with an opinion rather than noting sources, which is problematic for a whole lot of reasons) and escalation. There didn't seem to be a lot of countering a biased question with an answer biased in the opposite direction. 

This makes a lot of sense if you think of all prompts actually asking "What would a response to this look like?" What would a response to a biased question look like? Mostly it would look like a answer reflecting that same bias. 

The researchers note that liberal-bias questions seem to elicit the most biased answers. And they are going to fix that.

I have so many questions. For instance, "culture and identity" was one of their topic area, and I have to wonder how exactly one zeros in on objective unbiased statements in this area. Is a statement unbiased if it appears with attribution? 

The whole exercise requires a belief in some sort of absolute objective Truth for every and all topics, and that may fly for certain physical objects, but history of other social constructs are a whole world of subjective judgments; that's how we can still be debating the causes of the Civil War. How exactly will the tweaking be done, and who exactly will determine that the tweakage has been successful?

But that's not even the biggest eyebrow raiser here. Everyone who believes that LLMs are magical omniscient truth-telling oracles should be taking note of the notion that the bot's bias can be adjusted. Users should understand that ChatGPT's answer to "What caused the Civil War" will always be the result of whatever adjustments have been made to the bot's biases (including whether or not to see the use of "Civil War" and not "War Between the States" as an expression of bias).  

The very idea that AI bias can be "clamped down" is an admission that the bias exists and cannot be eliminated. Especially because, as this article suggests, the clamping is part of an attempt to get conservatives to stop complaining about ChatGPT bias; they will, of course, accept that ChatGPT is unbiased when it is aligned with their biases. At which point everyone else will see the bot as biased. Rinse and repeat.

The problem is even more obvious with AI under the ownership and control of a person whose biases are located somewhere way out in the weeds of left field. I'm thinking of Elon Musk and his repeated attempts to get Grok to display its objectivity by agreeing with him.

GIGO-- garbage in, garbage out. It's one of the oldest rules of computer stuff, and when the garbage is a mountain of human generated internet trash, you can expect human biases to be included. 

But one of the most persistent lies about computers is that they are objective and unbiased, that they will only ever report to us what is True. Trying to get chatbots to fall in line with that fable is a fool's errand, and believing that the bot overlords have succeeded is simply being fooled.  

Monday, October 20, 2025

Margaret Spellings Still Doesn't Get It

Why would David Frum (or anyone else) bother to interview Margaret Spellings? But he did, and a friend told me to go look at the result (thanks a lot, Jennifer), and it's a celebration of many of the worst, most failed ideas of 21st century ed reform.

Who's that now?

You can skip this if you remember her, but for those who don't--

Spellings is a career politician, but her career has often intersected with education, and it has generally intersected with it in the same way that a passing motorist once intersected with my open car door, changing it for the worse. She was Bush's domestic policy advisor from 2001 to 2004, then most notably the Secretary of Education from 2005-2009, where she got to lead the charge on No Child Left Behind. She had been with George Bush since he deposed Ann Richards as governor of Texas, brought into the Bush fold by Karl Rove.

Spellings has worked in everything from lobbying to political consulting. Some of her opponents view her as a culture wars combatant; she infamously called PBS to demand that they yank a children's show episode that included a lesbian couple. (Also, fun fact: back in 2007 she went toe-to-toe with NY Attorney General Andrew Cuomo over student loans).

While there are occasional attempts to portray her as some sort of complicated centrist, but mostly she has been a consistent source of nonsense about NCLB. She likes the narrative of test scores as part of national defense ("The success of every student in reading and doing math on grade level is vital to the future success of our nation") and she is another reformster to claim that, prior to NCLB's testing requirements, nobody knew if their schools were failing or not. Spellings has remained all in, loving not only national standards, but national standardized tests.

A decade ago she was in the Wall Street Journal, peering into the future, and what she sees is education as a consumer good:
Parents, for one, will have access to the flow of data, allowing them to help their children find the education that best fits them. Buyers, meaning the parents and students, will be in control of the education, selecting from an à la carte menu of options. Gone will be the fixed-price menu, where a student attends a school based upon geography and is offered few alternatives. Students and their parents can take their state and federal dollars and find an education that best suits them.
Like much of what Spellings has to say, this reveals a narrow and stunted view of education. In Spellings' world, education is not a public trust, helping to bind the communities that provide it and benefit from it. The social and civic growth of children, the learning about how to be their best selves and how to be in the world-- all of that will, I guess, happen somewhere else, because school is just about collecting the right modules of pre-employment training. Her dream of unleashing the foxes of market forces in the henhouse of education is not good news, and like many of Spellings' pet ideas encased in NCLB, long since proven to be bunk.

Spellings also has a checkered past with connections to predatory for-profit schools and the college loan collection industry. Or you can watch her do this little spot with the Boston Consulting Group (one of the four investment horsemen of reformsterism) arguing how more data and more information will help us "wring out efficiencies" so we can do "more with less." We've poured money into education and gotten no returns in "student achievement."

She landed a gig running the University of North Carolina a decade ago as part of a program to bring the university to heel, and she promptly threw LGBTQ students under the bus. She teamed up with fellow Very Wrong Former Secretary Arne Duncan for a Washington Post op-ed. And she was right there, post-pandemic to argue that the sacred Big Standardized Test must be brought back immediately

That Margaret Spellings.

The interview runs the greatest hits

After musing about MAGA sycophancy and the lack of self-respect, Frum, somehow connects that to his "dialogue" with Spellings, who he will introduce by harkening back to how her initials on White House speeches "struck awe in the hearts of all who saw them." Then "And she continues to strike awe..." in case the irony-o-meter hasn't yet registered for the problem of sycophancy.

Frum launches right into the old saw that at first, "steady consistent improvements in the performance" of students, by which they mean test scores went up, until they didn't. There are a variety of explanations for the 2010s test score stagnation; as someone who was in the classroom at the time, I would point directly to test prep having reached the point of diminishing returns. Those "gains" were about teaching students how to take the Big Standardized Test, and by the 2010s, we'd gotten as much return from that as we were ever going to.

But that's not the Spellings explanation. "We took our foot off the gas," by which she means we "allowed the states to really walk back on the muscle of accountability, the muscle of assessment, the transparency, and the consequence for failure." There's a lot of nothing in those terms, though she seems mostly to mean that more test and punish is what we need.

When NCLB and its unachievable goal of All Children Score Above Average By 2014 was finally rewritten in 2015, Spellings claims that states loosened things up too much. "Schools and states started manipulating their cut scores," she argues, failing to note that states had set cut scores every year since this dance started. The Spellings Theory of Action has always seemed to be that you set the cut scores real high, fail a lot of students, punish the schools for having those failing students and then... something that happens so that students don't fail in the following years. This is a lousy plan of action, and the failure of NCLB ought to be proof of its lousiness, but Spellings belongs to that family of single-minded reformsters whose argument is always, "If that idea failed, then we should get back in there and fail harder."

Covid, she argues, just made everything worse, combined with the fact "that we sort of didn't care as much in the accountability system," and Spellings again demonstrates the reformster unfailing belief that the "accountability system" aka The Big Standardized Test actually provides useful data. From the classroom perspective, test and punish was a lousy system that did not help with the work--especially since the test part was mediocre at best and toxic at worst. 

She will stop to genuflect at the altar of the Mississippi miracle (we're not going to get into the debunking of that here) and will quote Joel Klein, another classic reformstery neo-lib and the old "you can't say poverty affects education because education is supposed to cure poverty." Again, I don't want to go back down that rabbit hole other than to point out that Spellings is ignoring twenty years of nuanced and pointed criticism of these ideas.

Oh, but then we get this:

Frum: Why do so many professional educators dislike testing so much?

Spellings: Well, because it leads to accountability for grown-ups, and none of us like that particularly, I guess; it’s just a reality of being an adult and being responsible.
I think I speak for many professional educators when I say that Spellings can go straight to hell. Also, if you want to bring up accountability for grownups, how about discussing the leaders of NCLB and their unwillingness to accept feedback from professional educators about the issues with the test (which were not about objecting to being held accountable), or maybe just accepting accountability for the many failures of the whole NCLB test and punish program. But no-- it's 2025 and folks like Spellings are still refusing to say, "Maybe we made some mistakes there" and still lean on "Well, those dopey teachers weren't doing it right." Honestly, just right straight to hell.

But no, this woman can't take responsibility for anything. She brings up the criticism that test and punish narrowed curriculum to block out subjects like science and social studies because they aren't on the test, which was absolutely a real thing. In my school, 7th and 8th graders who were at risk of low scores on the BS Test were denied science and history so they could be jammed into double reading and double math. But Spellings--
And my response to that is it’s hard to learn science or social studies or history or anything else if you can’t read.

Frum decides that what the interview really needs is some racism, so he asks if maybe the rise of "a new kind of illegal immigration after 2014" that includes more families-- maybe that was dragging scores down? Spellings doesn't offer an appropriate response like, "David, what the hell" but she does dance around to avoid agreeing with him, eventually circling back to expectations. Then there's this--

No Child Left Behind—those words say it simply—was essentially an expectation that virtually every kid ought to have an expectation that they can get what they need in our public schools. And I’m not sure that people believe that anymore. And then our strategy now is: Get a voucher. Get the hell out. See about yourself. And this idea that it’s in our national interest for an institution called American public education to attempt to do something no other country does is important.

No. NCLB was the idea that if the feds squeezed teachers and schools hard enough, they would magically fix achievement issues and the federal and state governments would be off the hook for providing any kind of assistance or support. But for people whose idea was always to get to issuing vouchers, NCLB was a godsend because, by creating a task that schools could not possibly accomplish, it helped erode trust in public education. 

Spellings makes a good point about accountability for tax dollars being spent on vouchers and charters, but it's clear that she hasn't really paid attention to how that's going these days. 

Frum points out that lots of BS Tests are out of favor these days and Spellings thinks that's a shame. She likes the idea that Trump's extortion attempt "compact" includes a standardized test requirement. Frum acknowledges that there's a racial element to testing, but he and Spellings agree that the only alternative to a BS Test is word of mouth, and you know how racist that is. Mind boggling that these are the only two ways they can think of to evaluate students.

About the unions

Frum wonders if the punishments and rewards under NCLB should have applied to the unions somehow, since they opposed testing. Because, you know, that was just because the union's main thing is to protect their worst members. Not, mind you, because using test scores was like rolling dice with a teacher's career, or because all the teachers who didn't teach reading and math ended up on the short end of twisty evaluations shticks. And I don't entirely follow her response, but I think she's saying the people who oppose testing are semi-responsible for the elimination of the federal department because they wanted no accountability. Because in Spellings' mind, the BS Test only and always provides accountability, because it is magical and perfect.

Frum mentions that a major anti-test group offers the argument that testing makes teaching less fun. Spellings replies with another false dichotomy:

That might be true, and here’s why: There is a way—the word regiment comes to mind—but direct instruction prescribed in a sequential, serious way, where there’s fidelity of implementation and hewing to the research, is the path to success. Now, we have gotten into this idea that every teacher should go into their own classroom and create and invent and student-led and all of this kind of stuff, and it sounds like a blast, but does it work? And the answer has largely been no. So it’s just like, we wouldn’t want your physician making up the protocols for cancer treatment; neither should our teachers make up stuff and hope that it works, just the spray-and-pray method of teaching. And so, yeah, might that be less fun? Yeah, maybe. And I think one of the things I’m encouraged about is: What can technology do and media do and tools that are available through technology to make teaching more fun, to better engage students? But to get results, sometimes you gotta eat your broccoli.

Are there other options besides "serious" sequences aimed at getting results or "spray and pray"? Of course there are, and there need to be, because school is where students live most of their lives, and where they learn about how the world works, so maybe "the world is a dull dreary place where your focus stays on the dull business of producing results for someone else" isn't great. Neither is the anarchy of teachers pulling things out of their butts. I'll bet smart people can think of other options. Also, I note that Spellings is my age, and "technology will make school more fun" is exactly the kind of thing that makes us look like fossilized boomers.

Also, she agrees with cell phone bans. We're loaded with irony today.

There's a nice side trip in which Frum notes that Silicon Valley types are demonstrating a willingness or even zeal to write off vast stretches of the American population and say "Who needs them," which is a valid observation about that crowd. But he also asks why schools don't teach foreign languages and I'm wondering what the heck schools he is talking about. 

We end with some "what can parents do," to which Spellings observes that "we still have pretty significantly rich data about the quality of your schools," and no, no we do not. Test scores are strikingly meager and narrow, but no, she thinks that tiny slice of data is a big deal. It's that unexamined view and her resistance to any contradiction of it, that remains at the heart of all her bad ideas about education, and yet somehow, here she is, still one of the leading unexpert experts in the education policy world. These days she's CEO of the Bipartisan Policy Center, which has no policy tab for K-12 education, so maybe we can hope her attention will be focused elsewhere. Please.