Arne Duncan Has Learned Nothing
Obama’s Secretary of Education, Arne Duncan, writes, “Our efforts to improve schools have worked well where people have led with courage. To say otherwise is wrong.” As one who has spent 25 of the last 40 years in the classroom, as a secondary-school teacher, an adjunct college instructor and as a full-time college professor, I am certain it is he who is wrong. And that the real courage, in education, lies elsewhere.
Like so many making decisions about education in America, Duncan is besotted by numbers—or massages them, at least, to make predetermined points. He starts his recent article for The Washington Post with two paragraphs celebrating that fourth- and eighth-grade test scores are up—before admitting that twelfth-grade scores are flat. His explanation for this, circular and self-serving, is that high schools have resisted reform.
He then celebrates the increase in high-school graduation—but he looks at this only as a number to be proud of, writing that getting “more kids over the finish line of high school means many more have a chance to continue their education.” In light of twelfth-grade flat scores, that can be no more than just pushing recognition of failure, in point of fact, on to the next level: many of these graduates (as a recent look into graduation rates in the District of Columbia shows) should not have graduated at all and will face extensive remediation if they go on to college.
Duncan goes on to take credit for the increase in percentages of Americans with two- and four-year degrees and for the increased number of Latinos in college. I suspect that he knows these numbers cannot be connected to his “reforms” for Arne Duncan Has Learned Nothing | ACADEME BLOG: