EVERYTHING YOU WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT CURMUDGUCATION AND PETER GREENE BUT WERE AFRAID TO ASK
A Witty, Mildly Exasperated Field Guide for the Perplexed
If you have ever wandered into the thorny wilderness of American education policy and thought, “I wish someone would explain this nonsense with clarity, sarcasm, historical memory, and perhaps a trombone solo,” then congratulations: you are ready for Peter Greene.
Or, more precisely, you are ready for Curmudgucation, Greene’s long-running blog and commentary hub devoted to public education, classroom reality, policy foolishness, and the noble art of saying, “Wait a minute, that sounds terrible,” before an entire state legislature turns it into law.
Peter Greene is a retired English teacher, writer, public-school advocate, union veteran, theater director, local columnist, trombone player, and self-described curmudgeon — though “curmudgeon” undersells him. He is less “angry man yelling at cloud” and more “experienced teacher calmly identifying the cloud as a privatization scheme funded by billionaires.”
This is your unofficial, unauthorized, and entirely-too-honest guide to the man, the blog, the mission, and the faint smell of dry-erase markers that seems to follow the whole enterprise.
Who Is Peter Greene, Really?
Peter Greene is what happens when you combine a veteran English teacher, a small-town columnist, a public-school defender, a working musician, and a man who has spent enough time around education reformers to develop a highly calibrated nonsense detector.
He started life in New Hampshire, finished growing up in Northwest Pennsylvania, attended Allegheny College, student-taught in Cleveland Heights, began his teaching career in Lorain, Ohio, and eventually returned home. There, after some subbing, some uncertainty, and a mobile home in a trailer court, he landed in the same school district from which he had graduated.
Then he stayed.
For decades.
Greene taught English for 39 years, mostly at the high school level, though he also survived middle school — an experience he has memorably compared to having someone scream in your ears all day. This is not an insult to middle school teachers. It is a salute from a man who has seen the lava flow and lived.
Over the years, he taught various forms of English, advised yearbook, student council, and stage crew, directed local theater, wrote a weekly newspaper column, served as president of a striking teachers’ union, and remained rooted in his community. He sees former students and their families regularly, which is either the dream of public education or a reminder to behave yourself in the produce aisle.
He is also a trombone player.
This matters.
Not because trombone playing is central to education policy, but because it tells you something about the man. Trombone players are ensemble creatures. They understand timing, support, tone, breath, and the importance of not coming in too early unless you want everyone in the room to notice. These are useful traits in both jazz bands and school board meetings.
What Is Curmudgucation?
Curmudgucation is Peter Greene’s blog, founded as a place to blow off steam and stand up for public education. In practice, it has become one of the more distinctive voices in education commentary: sharp, funny, plainspoken, teacher-rooted, and allergic to jargon that arrives wearing a consultant lanyard.
At Curmudgucation, Greene writes about the issues that define modern education debates:
- School vouchers
- Charter schools
- Standardized testing
- Common Core
- Teacher pensions
- Privatization
- Education technology
- Federal and state policy
- The strange belief that schools can be fixed by people who do not understand schools
The blog’s name tells you the tone. It is cranky, yes, but not merely cranky. It is cranky with receipts. Cranky with classroom experience. Cranky with paragraph structure.
Curmudgucation is not the work of someone throwing tomatoes from the balcony. It is the work of someone who spent nearly four decades inside the system and can tell the difference between a real solution and a PowerPoint with stock photos of smiling children.
The Curmudgucation formula is simple:
- Take a complicated education policy.
- Read the fine print.
- Notice the thing everyone else politely ignored.
- Explain it in human language.
- Add one raised eyebrow.
- Repeat until democracy improves or coffee runs out.
Greene’s gift is that he makes policy legible. He translates the bureaucratic fog into sentences that teachers, parents, taxpayers, and regular citizens can understand. If a policy is built on bad assumptions, he says so. If a reform idea is a rerun wearing a new hat, he says that too. If someone has discovered a way to monetize children while calling it “choice,” he will probably have a post up by breakfast.
Why Do People Read Him?
People read Peter Greene because education policy often sounds like it was written by a committee of sleep-deprived grant writers trapped inside a spreadsheet.
Greene cuts through that.
He writes like someone who knows that schools are not abstractions. They are buildings full of actual children, actual teachers, actual families, actual cafeteria schedules, actual substitute shortages, actual heating problems, and actual human beings trying to do complicated work under conditions frequently designed by people who have not used a hall pass since 1978.
His writing appeals to educators because he understands the daily reality of teaching. He knows that reform debates are not theoretical when they land on a teacher’s desk as a new mandate, a new test, a new rubric, or a new initiative named something like “Pathways to Excellence 2.0.”
He appeals to parents because he does not patronize them. He explains what is happening, why it matters, and who benefits.
He appeals to policy watchers because he is not easily impressed. He has seen many bright shiny ideas come and go. He knows that in education, “innovation” often means “we found an old bad idea in the basement and gave it venture capital.”
Most of all, people read Greene because he manages a rare balance:
- He is critical without being joyless.
- He is funny without being cruel.
- He is skeptical without being nihilistic.
- He is hopeful without sounding like a motivational poster in the teachers’ lounge.
- He is pro-public education without pretending public schools are perfect.
That last part matters. Greene is not defending public education because he thinks every school system is flawless. He defends it because he knows public schools are one of the last major democratic institutions where the public still has a claim, a voice, and a shared responsibility.
And that is exactly why so many people keep trying to carve them up.
The Man Behind the Blog
Peter Greene’s biography is not the sort of polished professional origin story that begins with “I always knew I wanted to transform systems.” Mercifully.
His story is more human than that.
He taught. He married. He parented. He divorced. He remarried. He became part of a blended and growing family. He worked in his community. He played music. He directed theater. He wrote newspaper columns. He made mistakes. He admits as much. In his own writing, he is candid about not being perfect, not being a “super-teacher,” and not always being the ideal version of himself.
That honesty is part of the appeal.
Greene does not write like a guru. He writes like a person who has lived long enough to become suspicious of gurus.
He describes teaching as a form of guerilla warfare: staying low, doing what you can for students, choosing battles carefully, and responding when the battle chooses you. Anyone who has ever worked in a school knows exactly what he means. Teaching often involves quietly doing the right thing while pretending the latest directive from central office makes total sense.
It is an art form.
His worldview is grounded in lived classroom experience. He is an optimist about the future and a realist about the present, a combination that prevents both despair and nonsense. He knows the system can be better. He also knows it will not be improved by people whose main experience with schools is flying over them on the way to a conference.
Where Does Peter Greene Write?
Greene’s writing appears in several places, each with its own flavor. Think of them as different sections of the same orchestra, with Curmudgucation as the trombone section — impossible to ignore, and frankly, better that way.
| Platform | What It Is | Typical Focus |
|---|---|---|
| Curmudgucation — Blogger | The original home base | Long-form commentary, policy critiques, education reform analysis |
| Curmudgucation — Substack | His more current newsletter-style outlet | Recent education battles, vouchers, politics, public-school advocacy |
| Forbes | Business and policy-facing commentary | Education finance, privatization, charters, federal policy, market-based reform |
| The Progressive | Social and political commentary | Equity, student rights, democratic values, public education as a moral issue |
| Bucks County Beacon | Regional and state-focused analysis | Pennsylvania politics, local education fights, policy with national implications |
This range matters because Greene is not writing only for teachers. He is writing across audiences. He can speak to educators, parents, policymakers, business readers, activists, and citizens who have just realized that the phrase “education savings account” may not mean what they were told it means.
At Forbes, he often explains the business and policy mechanics behind education reform. That is where his writing frequently follows the money, asks who profits, and examines how certain reforms are sold as efficiency while functioning as extraction.
At The Progressive, his work tends to lean into the moral and civic stakes of schooling: student dignity, equity, public obligation, and the rights of vulnerable students.
At Bucks County Beacon, he often addresses Pennsylvania-specific issues that, like many Pennsylvania-specific issues, turn out to be national problems wearing a local jacket and muttering about the Turnpike.
And at Curmudgucation, he is most fully himself: part teacher, part columnist, part town-band philosopher, part policy bloodhound.
What Are His Big Themes?
Peter Greene returns again and again to several core concerns. These are not hobbyhorses so much as recurring alarms, because the house does keep catching fire in remarkably similar ways.
1. Public Education Is a Public Good
Greene’s central belief is that public education matters because it serves the public. Not just individual consumers. Not just test scores. Not just workforce pipelines. The public.
Schools are where communities invest in all children, not only the children whose parents are skilled at navigating application portals, transportation logistics, and fine print.
For Greene, this is the heart of the issue. Public education is not a product. It is a promise.
2. “Choice” Often Comes with a Price Tag
Greene is especially known for his critiques of vouchers and school choice programs. He does not object to parents wanting good options for their children. Who would? The issue is whether public money is being redirected into private systems with less transparency, less accountability, and fewer obligations to serve every child.
In Greene’s world, when a reformer says, “The money should follow the child,” a sensible citizen should ask:
- Follow the child where?
- Into whose account?
- Under what rules?
- With what oversight?
- What happens to the children left behind?
- Why is there always a hedge fund guy nearby?
That is the Curmudgucation instinct: ask the question that ruins the brochure.
3. Standardized Testing Is Not the Same as Learning
Greene has long criticized the overuse and misuse of standardized testing. Not because assessment is inherently evil, but because test-driven systems often narrow education, distort incentives, and pretend that easy-to-measure outcomes are the same as meaningful learning.
Teachers know the difference between a student who has grown as a writer and a student who has learned to survive a prompt. Policymakers sometimes do not.
This is where Greene’s classroom background matters. He knows that education is not a dashboard. It is a relationship-heavy, context-rich, deeply human process that resists being reduced to a color-coded data wall.
4. Teachers Are Professionals, Not Delivery Systems
Another recurring theme: teachers are not interchangeable content dispensers. They are professionals with judgment, experience, local knowledge, and human insight.
Greene writes against systems that treat teachers as obstacles to reform rather than the people best positioned to understand what students need. His work pushes back against the casual de-professionalization of teaching — the idea that anyone with a script, an app, or a five-week training program can replace deep experience.
Teachers, in Greene’s view, are not widgets.
Also, they know where the copier jams.
Respect them.
5. Beware the Reform Rebrand
Education reform has a strange habit of renaming old ideas and pretending they are fresh. Greene is particularly good at spotting this. Whether the label is “personalized learning,” “innovation,” “accountability,” “choice,” or “efficiency,” he reads past the label and asks what is actually happening.
Is power moving away from democratic oversight?
Is public money moving into private hands?
Are teachers being blamed for structural problems?
Are students being reduced to data points?
Is someone insisting this is “for the kids” while refusing to meet with actual children, parents, or teachers?
These are the questions Greene keeps asking, and they remain annoyingly useful.
What Are His “Top” Posts?
There is no single official list of Peter Greene’s greatest hits. Curmudgucation does not function like a pop chart, though one imagines a Billboard ranking of education policy takedowns would be a public service.
Still, several categories of Greene’s writing have become especially influential among educators and education-policy readers.
His best-known areas include:
- Critiques of Common Core
- Arguments against voucher expansion
- Analyses of charter school policy
- Pieces on teacher pensions and retirement systems
- Posts about the lived reality of teaching
- Essays on public education as a democratic institution
- Explanations of how reform language hides privatization goals
- Posts amplified by major education voices such as Diane Ravitch
His most widely read pieces are often those that land at exactly the right moment: when a new policy is being sold hard, when a legislative proposal sounds harmless but is not, or when teachers need someone to articulate what they have been muttering into their coffee for weeks.
The “Ravitch bump” is real, too. When Diane Ravitch shares a Greene post, it tends to travel quickly through education circles. Think of it as the education-policy version of a lightning strike, but with more footnotes and fewer venture capitalists.
Why the Trombone Matters More Than You Think
Let us return to the trombone.
Peter Greene plays in a 164-year-old town band and in a traditional jazz band. This is not merely charming trivia, though it is definitely that. It also tells us something about his orientation toward community.
Town bands are not glamorous. They are local, durable, communal, and slightly miraculous. They survive because people keep showing up. They require cooperation across generations. They depend on memory, practice, and the shared belief that some things are worth sustaining even if nobody gets rich doing them.
This is not a bad metaphor for public education.
Public schools, like town bands, are imperfect human institutions. They can be out of tune. Someone may miss an entrance. The percussion section may become overconfident. But they belong to the community. They exist because people before us built them, and people now must decide whether to maintain them or sell the brass section for parts.
Greene’s writing carries that same sensibility. He is not dazzled by disruption for disruption’s sake. He understands the value of institutions that serve ordinary people over time.
Also, trombones are funny. This cannot be ignored.
The Curmudgucation Ethos
If Curmudgucation had a mission statement, it might be:
Public education matters. Teachers matter. Students matter. Democracy matters. Bad ideas should be named clearly. And if you can make a decent joke while doing it, civilization is not yet lost.
Greene’s work is rooted in the belief that education is not just a technical problem to be solved by metrics, markets, and management theories. It is a civic commitment.
He resists the idea that schools should be treated like businesses. He resists the notion that teachers should be managed like underperforming sales reps. He resists the fantasy that children are standardized units traveling through a production pipeline toward “college and career readiness,” preferably by third quarter.
Instead, he writes from the stubborn, humane conviction that children are people, teachers are professionals, and public schools are one of the few places where a society reveals what it truly believes about fairness, opportunity, and obligation.
That may sound lofty.
Greene usually makes it sound like common sense.
That is the trick.
Is He Just Angry?
No.
This is important.
Peter Greene can be sharp. He can be sarcastic. He can be deeply impatient with bad policy, bad faith, and bad arguments dressed up in reform language. But his writing is not powered by rage so much as by care.
Anger burns out. Care endures.
Greene has been writing about education for years because he cares about the profession, the students, the communities, and the democratic promise embedded in public schooling. He is not merely against things. He is for something.
He is for public schools that serve all students.
He is for teachers being trusted to teach.
He is for communities having a say in their schools.
He is for transparency when public money is spent.
He is for the idea that education should be humane, broad, rich, and meaningful — not just efficient, measurable, and marketable.
His curmudgeon persona works because it sits on top of something warmer: a stubborn belief that we can do better and a refusal to pretend that doing worse is innovation.
A Brief Field Guide to Reading Peter Greene
For new readers, here is how to navigate the Greene ecosystem without wandering into the reeds.
| If You Want… | Start Here |
|---|---|
| The classic voice | Curmudgucation on Blogger |
| The newest commentary | Curmudgucation on Substack |
| Business and policy analysis | Forbes |
| Moral and social-justice framing | The Progressive |
| Pennsylvania-focused education politics | Bucks County Beacon |
| A sense of the person behind the writing | His “About Me” material and local columns |
The best way to read Greene is not necessarily by searching for one definitive post. It is by following the pattern of his thinking. Watch how he reads policy language. Watch where he directs attention. Watch the questions he asks.
Soon enough, you begin asking those questions yourself.
That is when the Curmudgucation begins to work.
Final Thoughts: Why Curmudgucation Still Matters
Peter Greene is one of the rare education commentators who manages to be deeply informed without becoming bloodless, funny without becoming unserious, and passionate without becoming preachy.
He writes like a teacher because he is one. Not in the past tense, really. Retirement may remove a person from the classroom schedule, but it does not always remove the classroom from the person. Greene still carries the habits of a good teacher: explain clearly, question assumptions, notice who is being left out, and never trust a shiny new program until you know who is selling it.
Curmudgucation matters because public education is constantly being explained by people who do not seem to understand it very well. Greene offers a counterweight: the perspective of someone who spent a lifetime in schools, knows the stakes, and can still summon enough humor to keep the reader from screaming into a stack of benchmark assessments.
He is the teacher who stayed after school to help you revise your essay, then went home and wrote 1,500 words explaining why the state’s new accountability plan is a flaming shopping cart.
He is the trombone in the back row, not always polite, absolutely necessary, cutting through the noise.
And Curmudgucation is not just a blog.
It is a public-school smoke alarm.
It is a faculty-room truth serum.
It is a long-running reminder that when something in education sounds too neat, too profitable, too punitive, or too obviously designed by someone who has never had to get 28 ninth graders through the last period before winter break, somebody ought to say so.
Peter Greene says so.
Usually with better syntax than the policy deserved.
Sources and Links
The following sources support the biographical details, publication history, writing platforms, and education-policy themes discussed in the article.
Primary Sources
1. Curmudgucation — Main Blog
Curmudgucation is Peter Greene’s original blog and the central source for his education commentary, including posts on public education, school reform, testing, vouchers, charter schools, and teacher policy.
- Link: https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/
- Use in article: Supports descriptions of Curmudgucation as Greene’s main education blog and commentary platform.
2. Curmudgucation — “About Me” Page
Peter Greene’s own biographical page provides many of the personal details referenced in the article, including his background in New Hampshire and Northwest Pennsylvania, Allegheny College, 39 years in the classroom, teaching English, union involvement, theater, trombone, family, local writing, and his explanation that the blog is about “blowing off steam and standing up for public education.”
- Link: https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/p/about-me.html
- Use in article: Supports biographical details about Greene’s teaching career, community involvement, musical life, family, and stated purpose for the blog.
3. Curmudgucation on Substack
Greene also publishes Curmudgucation as a Substack newsletter, where he continues writing about current education policy issues, public schools, vouchers, politics, and reform debates.
- Link: https://curmudgucation.substack.com/
- Use in article: Supports references to Substack as one of Greene’s current publication outlets.
Publication and Contributor Profiles
4. Peter Greene at Forbes
Peter Greene’s Forbes contributor page identifies him as a Senior Contributor covering education. It also notes his long career as a high school English teacher in small-town Western Pennsylvania.
- Link: https://www.forbes.com/sites/petergreene/
- Use in article: Supports references to Greene’s Forbes work and his focus on education policy, classroom impact, school reform, and public education issues.
5. Peter Greene at The Progressive
The Progressive’s author page for Peter Greene identifies him as a writer focused on education and public schools. It also connects him with The Progressive’s public education coverage.
- Link: https://progressive.org/topics/peter-greene/
- Use in article: Supports references to Greene’s writing for The Progressive and his role in broader public-school advocacy.
6. Peter Greene at Bucks County Beacon
The Bucks County Beacon author page describes Greene as a recently retired secondary English teacher of 39 years who lives and works in Northwest Pennsylvania. It collects his education-related commentary for the outlet.
- Link: https://buckscountybeacon.com/author/petergreene/
- Use in article: Supports references to Greene’s Pennsylvania-focused education writing and local/state policy commentary.
7. Bucks County Beacon Writer Spotlight: Peter Greene
This profile highlights Greene’s education writing for Bucks County Beacon and discusses his focus on education issues in Pennsylvania and beyond.
- Link: https://buckscountybeacon.com/2023/10/bucks-county-beacon-writer-spotlight-peter-greene/
- Use in article: Supports claims about Greene’s role as an education commentator and his Pennsylvania-centered policy work.
Social and Professional Presence
8. Peter Greene on X / Twitter
Greene’s X profile uses the handle referenced in his “About Me” page, @palan57, and identifies him with education commentary, writing, and related outlets.
- Link: https://x.com/palan57
- Use in article: Supports references to Greene’s public-facing social media presence.
9. Peter Greene — Muck Rack Profile
Muck Rack aggregates Greene’s professional writer profile and identifies him as a retired teacher, writer, education commentator, and contributor to outlets including Forbes and The Progressive.
- Link: https://muckrack.com/peter-greene
- Use in article: Supports overview claims about Greene’s professional identity and publication history.
Suggested Citation Format
For a simple web article or blog post, you could list the sources this way:
Sources: Peter Greene’s Curmudgucation blog and “About Me” page; Curmudgucation on Substack; Peter Greene’s contributor pages at Forbes, The Progressive, and Bucks County Beacon; Bucks County Beacon’s writer spotlight on Greene; and Greene’s public social media and professional profiles.
Or, in a cleaner bibliography style:
- Greene, Peter. Curmudgucation. https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/
- Greene, Peter. “About Me.” Curmudgucation. https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/p/about-me.html
- Greene, Peter. Curmudgucation — Substack. https://curmudgucation.substack.com/
- Greene, Peter. Forbes Contributor Page. https://www.forbes.com/sites/petergreene/
- Greene, Peter. The Progressive Author Page. https://progressive.org/topics/peter-greene/
- Greene, Peter. Bucks County Beacon Author Page. https://buckscountybeacon.com/author/petergreene/
- Bucks County Beacon. “Writer Spotlight: Peter Greene.” https://buckscountybeacon.com/2023/10/bucks-county-beacon-writer-spotlight-peter-greene/
- Greene, Peter. X / Twitter Profile: @palan57. https://x.com/palan57
- Muck Rack. Peter Greene Profile. https://muckrack.com/peter-greene
