September 13, 2016
This article is also posted at Defend Public Education!
On September
9th, the Answer Sheet ran a column in the Washington Post under the
title “What if Randi Weingarten were U.S. education
secretary?” The article
is an interview with American Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten
by author C.M. Rubin, author of several education books, two on-line series on
global education, and publisher of the online blog CMRubinWorld. She is a Fellow
of the Disruptor Foundation.
Right off,
Ms. Weingarten launches into her usual spin, that, while mistakes were made in
education under President Barack Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan
with “too many tests” and inequitable funding, things are being “reset” with
the Every Child Succeeds Act of 2015. The specifics of the disaster of Race to
the Top, especially for low-income school districts that have seen dozens of
schools closed and public schools being put on starvation budgets to expand
privatization with charters, are not mentioned. According to Ms. Weingarten,
U.S. education is on course to a brighter tomorrow with ESSA.
Asked, “Does the current state of our
underprivileged school systems help foster radicalism?" Ms. Weingarten
says she does not know of “any empirical data that would answer your question.”
She then makes a series of platitudes about how unfortunate the underfunding of
schools in low-income communities is with no mention of who is responsible for
this situation. Apparently listening to communities is not part of her job
description!
This
is followed once again with praise that ESSA has returned responsibility for education to the states “including
standards and accountability, teacher development and evaluation, and interventions.”
In other words, were she to become Secretary of Education, nothing would be
done to promote public education on the federal level, but education would now
fall under reactionary “states
rights” provisions.
Weingarten then praises the
AFT’s participation in the
Partnership for 21 Century Learning whose goal
is using corporate education reform methods to move education from the three R’s
to the four C’s (communication, collaboration, critical thinking, and
creativity). Randi
Weingarten is a P21 Strategic Council Member. Note P21’s Six Essential Elements and
Actions Steps are heavily infused with Gates
models of blended learning and global education goals. Its founders are a who’s who of corporate education reform. Secretary of Education John King
has made P21
schools the focus of this year’s seventh annual
(started by Arne Duncan) Back-To-School Bus Tour by the U.S. Department of
Education. (Note P21 members listed in the
previous link.)
The
interview then goes on to a discussion of the effects of poverty on the
education of students from low-income families. Once again she gives a series
of platitudes that are a response to the rising opposition to corporate
education reform. No mention is made here or in any part of the interview about
the role of charters in draining funds from public schools, particularly in
low-come communities. Instead, she mentions community schools, many of which
outsource support services to nonunion businesses, as one band-aid for
underfunded schools.
She also says,
“testing should not be the be-all and end-all of education”, apparently hoping
people have forgotten her active opposition to the Opt Out movement led by parents in various parts of the
country.
On the next question, Weingarten says teachers are underpaid but does not say what should be done about this. She agrees with corporate education reformers that the teaching profession needs "fixing". As her solution, she cites the AFT’s “Raising the Bar” report of a few years ago that called for all new teachers to pass an exam akin to bar exams for lawyers as a way to “improve teacher quality”. More tests!
Tellingly,
she cites a poll by TeachStrong as proof that three-quarters of teachers are undervalued in terms
of how they are treated and supported. TeachStrong is a coalition of forty
businesses (including leaders of corporate education reform) and corporate unions (AFT and
NEA) who are providing the education program for a Hillary Clinton
administration. Many of TeachStrong's partners are funded by the Gates, Broad, and Walton Foundations.
Ms.
Weingarten concludes the interview by dodging a question about competition for
resources between public, private and charter schools, only stating public
schools should be fully funded.
The Hillary
Clinton campaign has revealed it collection of education advisors. As described by blogger Peter Greene, they are:
Chris Edley Jr., the president of the Opportunity Institute, a California-based think tank that works mostly on
early-childhood and college access initiatives
Lily Eskelsen García, the
president of the National Education Association
Randi Weingarten, the president of the American
Federation of Teachers
Carmel Martin, the executive vice president
for policy at the Center for American Progress and onetime adviser to former
Education Secretary Arne Duncan
Catherine Brown, the former vice president of
policy at Teach for America and current vice president of education policy at
the Center for American Progress
Richard Riley, the secretary of education under Bill Clinton who's
known for his views that don't neatly fit into the pro-reform or pro-teachers'
union wings of the Democratic Party.
In the words of Peter Green, “If you
want to vote for Clinton because you don’t want the world to burn, that’s fine.
Just don’t imagine that public education is going to have a friend in the White
House.”
With her early endorsement of Hillary Clinton, Randi Weingarten has been rewarded with “a
seat at the table” with other corporate education reformers. The Washington
Post interview shows that if she were appointed Secretary of Education, Randi
Weingarten would be no different than John King or Arne Duncan.
____________________________________________________________________________________________
If you want
to cut through the historical revisionism and obfuscation about Randi
Weingarten’s history with corporate education reform, see these articles at
Defend Public Education:
The Broad Foundation and the Unions – February 24, 2013
Which Side Are You On? – July 14, 2014
Randi Weingarten: Sleight of Hand Artist –
Part 1 – April 19, 2015
Randi Weingarten: Sleight of Hand Artist –
Part 2 – April 22, 2015
The previous link is discussion of an interview with Rick Hess that Randi
Weingarten did before an audience at the right-wing American Enterprise
Institute. Rick Hess recently issued a document called The Reform Agenda which
Peter Green analyses here: Hess: The Reform Agenda.
Turning Collaboration Into a Bad Word – December 17, 2015
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