Latest News and Comment from Education

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 3, 2026

 

MORNING NEWS UPDATE: JUNE 3, 2026

Here are the top news stories for June 3, 2026, across the requested categories. These are based on major headlines from U.S. and international outlets like ABC, NBC, NYT, Reuters, and others.

U.S. NEWS

POLITICS

  • Trump administration faces backlash: Bipartisan criticism over recent actions, including Middle East policy and domestic issues like immigration enforcement.
  • California governor primary and other races: Tech-favored candidates underperformed in some contests; results in key states will shape November matchups.
  • Broader Trump-related developments: Proposals for political tests on federal grants; ongoing scrutiny of past communications and appointments.
  • Primary Election Takeaways: Live results are settling from yesterday's major primary elections across California, Iowa, and other states. Notably, Karen Bass advanced in the highly watched Los Angeles mayoral race, while Mark Leno and Xavier Becerra led early gubernatorial tallies in California.

  • Trump Presidential Records Probe: An exclusive investigation reveals that the Trump presidential library archives have been unable to locate historical Twitter direct messages (DMs) from his first term, raising fresh legal questions regarding compliance with the Presidential Records Act.

  • GOP Pushback on Payout Fund: A proposed presidential payout fund has hit a wall of unexpected resistance from congressional Republicans, signaling a shifting political environment on Capitol Hill.

WORLD AFFAIRS

  • U.S.-Iran conflict escalates: Iran launched strikes hitting Kuwait's airport (killing at least one, injuring dozens); U.S. and allies responded with intercepts and counter-strikes. Peace talks are in jeopardy.
  • Ukraine-Russia war intensifies: Ukraine conducted drone strikes on Putin's hometown (St. Petersburg) targeting naval/oil sites during a major economic forum; Russia launched massive attacks on Ukrainian cities, killing dozens.
  • Other global: UK protests over a murder case turn violent; fire at New Delhi hotel kills at least 21.
  • U.S.-Iran Retaliatory Strikes: Geopolitical tensions have spiked dramatically in the Persian Gulf. Following U.S. military actions that disabled an Iranian-bound oil tanker, Iran launched localized missile and drone strikes targeting Kuwait International Airport and the headquarters of the U.S. Fifth Fleet in Bahrain. U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) reports that the majority of the attacks were thwarted, though one casualty was reported in Kuwait. Iran has publicly warned both nations that they bear "direct responsibility" for allowing their territories to host U.S. assets.

  • Political Upheaval in India: Major regional shakeups are dominating Indian politics today. In the south, D.K. Shivakumar has officially taken the oath as the 34th Chief Minister of Karnataka following a tense leadership transition. Meanwhile, in West Bengal, the Trinamool Congress (TMC) has abruptly dissolved all of its organizational committees following internal rebellion from local legislators.

  • U.S.-Iran Maritime Escalation: U.S. Central Command forces engaged in fresh strikes against targets near the Strait of Hormuz after intercepting several Iranian missiles and drones, disrupting key global shipping channels as peace talks remain stalled.

  • Ebola Border Restrictions: A Kenyan court has extended an order blocking the construction of a designated U.S. medical facility intended to treat American Ebola patients evacuated from ongoing outbreaks in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

  • Laos Cave Rescue Crisis: In Southeast Asia, heavy floodwaters continue to hamper frantic rescue operations in the Xaysomboun province, where two miners have remained trapped underground for nearly two weeks.

EDUCATION

  • Nigeria teachers' strike: Indefinite strike over school abductions in Oyo State (dozens of children and teachers taken); protests demanding better security.
  • U.S. developments: Focus on academic achievement and workforce alignment in governors' agendas; ongoing debates around charter schools and AI literacy in classrooms.
  • Federal notes: U.S. Dept. of Education announcements on investments and awards.
  • College Aid Rules Overhaul: New, highly restrictive federal loan rules are moving forward, threatening to significantly gut financial aid for thousands of college majors deemed "low-paying" based on graduate career placement data.

  • Superintendent Retirement Wave: Public school leadership shifts continue nationwide as major urban and suburban districts—including Northside ISD in Texas—announce high-profile superintendent retirements at the close of the academic year.

  • Charter School Bus Crash Safety: A high-impact school bus crash carrying students from the Higher Ground Academy charter school onto the Hamline University campus has triggered renewed local debates surrounding urban student transit safety protocols.

ECONOMY

  • U.S. jobs and growth: Companies added 122,000 jobs (strongest since early 2025); Q1 GDP revised to +1.6%. Mixed signals with some sectors showing resilience.
  • Markets and tariffs: S&P/Dow futures dip amid Middle East tensions and oil price rises; Trump administration proposes new tariffs focused on forced labor and other issues.
  • Broader: Blockbuster IPOs (e.g., SpaceX) could boost narratives; Europe unveils tech sovereignty plan for chips/AI.
  • Pain at the Pump: Energy executives warn that consumers face immediate price hikes as global oil supplies and reserves hit historic lows, exacerbated by the widening military tensions in the Middle East.

  • Media Industry Downsizing: The Minnesota Star Tribune, the state's largest news outlet, announced a heavy 15% workforce reduction through voluntary buyouts and layoffs to stabilize operations against digital shifts.

  • Tax Cut Realities: A fresh Treasury Department analysis reports that the vast majority of tax filers claiming recent federal tax breaks on tips and overtime wages earned less than $100,000 annually.

TECHNOLOGY

  • Elon Musk trillionaire buzz: Speculation intensifies around Musk becoming the world's first trillionaire, tied to SpaceX IPO valuations and his holdings in Tesla, xAI, etc.
  • AI advancements and concerns: UN warns AI could double data center power/water use by 2030; Trump administration seeks AI model cybersecurity tests; Meta and Microsoft push AI agents.
  • Other: New Nvidia RTX Spark laptops; various funding rounds and tools for AI monitoring/agents.
  • AI Environmental Strain: A United Nations-backed study released today warns that the exponential growth of artificial intelligence is placing a critical strain on physical resources—specifically noting massive spikes in data center water consumption and land use rather than just electricity.

  • Executive Order on AI Safety: The White House issued a new Executive Order aimed at giving federal oversight bodies an "early look" at the training phases of the most powerful nascent AI models before public deployment.

  • Anti-Style Theft Legislation: Bipartisan lawmakers have introduced a new congressional bill explicitly designed to protect independent digital creators and artists from generative AI "style theft" and unauthorized voice/likeness replication.

HEALTH

  • Medical breakthroughs/studies: Urine test for autism detection; GLP-1 drugs (e.g., Ozempic) linked to ~30% lower breast cancer risk; chemo-free options showing gains in multiple myeloma.
  • Other: Vapes become more toxic with high puffs; ongoing policy hearings on gender care, Medicaid, etc.
  • GLP-1 Cancer Breakthroughs: Optimism is surging across medical research communities following a series of clinical trials indicating that blockbusting GLP-1 weight-loss medications may play a vital role in cancer prevention and tumor suppression.

  • Robotic Surgery Milestones: Medtronic announced it has officially submitted expanded 510(k) filings to the FDA for its Hugo robotic-assisted surgery system, aiming to open full commercial use for high-volume general and gynecologic surgeries in the U.S.

  • Chronic Pain & Opioid Shift: New public health data indicates that while nearly 1 in 4 adults still suffer from documented chronic pain, state-level initiatives focusing on alternative physical therapies have successfully dropped opioid overdose deaths by roughly one-third.

SPORTS

  • NBA Finals buildup: Knicks vs. Spurs hype; fans traveling, historical grudges (e.g., 1999).
  • MLB action: Daily highlights like Matt Olson homers, strong pitching performances (e.g., Kyle Harrison).
  • Global prep: England training for 2026 World Cup; other international warm-ups and events.
  • NBA Finals Tip-Off: The San Antonio Spurs are set to face off against the New York Knicks tonight in Game 1 of the highly anticipated NBA Finals, causing massive city-wide celebrations in both major markets.

  • MLB Sweeps: On the diamond, the Minnesota Twins used a commanding four-run fourth inning to defeat the Chicago White Sox 6-4, positioning themselves for a clean series sweep.

  • Kilimanjaro Record Attempt: Outside the traditional arenas, 89-year-old medical media pioneer Art Ulene has entered the final phase of his training to climb Mount Kilimanjaro this summer, aiming to become the oldest person to ever summit the peak.

News evolves quickly, especially with ongoing conflicts in the Middle East and Ukraine. Check reliable sources for updates.


EDUCATION SPECIAL

TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY
TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

Here is your comprehensive digest of the top education headlines making waves today across the United States and globally.

## TOP US EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

1. Federal Funding Frozen: White House Stalls $2 Billion in Education Spending

The White House budget office has actively blocked roughly $2 billion in federal education funding. Districts and policy analysts are closely tracking the affected programs, with growing concerns over how these sudden budgetary holds will impact low-income school infrastructure, specialized grant allocations, and local district planning for the upcoming school year.

2. Backlash Against Classroom Tech Gains Momentum

A significant pushback against classroom-assigned devices and student-facing artificial intelligence is sweeping across public education.

  • The Union Stance: American Federation of Teachers (AFT) President Randi Weingarten has publicly urged strict bans on screens and student-facing AI for the youngest learners, warning that students are currently "drowning in tech."

  • Systemic Failure: Adding fuel to the anti-tech fire, a massive data breach involving the Canvas learning management system has further frayed parent and district trust regarding student data privacy and ed-tech vendor security.

3. Federal Civics Push Amid "Discriminatory Equity" Legislation

The U.S. Department of Education and the Department of Labor have officially launched a Fiscal Year 2026 grant competition for the American History and Civics – National Activities program, keeping with a nationwide push for traditional civics ahead of the nation's 250th birthday. Concurrently, congressional Republicans are advancing legislation designed to codify restrictions on classroom materials and discussions regarding race and LGBTQ+ identities, characterizing certain diversity initiatives as "discriminatory equity."

4. Overhaul of Higher Education Accreditation System

The Department of Education announced a newly reached consensus on a proposed regulatory framework intended to fundamentally reform and decentralize the nation's higher education accreditation system. The move is designed to shift oversight metrics and curtail the historical power of traditional accrediting bodies, drawing intense debate from university leaders warning about potential threats to academic freedom.

## TOP WORLD EDUCATION NEWS TODAY

1. International Student Mobility Shaken by Policy Shifts

At the NAFSA: Association of International Educators annual conference, global higher education leaders expressed deep uncertainty regarding the future of international student enrollment. Tightening U.S. immigration enforcement and potential shifts in student visa policy are prompting global recruitment networks to warn of a major chill in international enrollment, potentially diverting student pipelines to alternative nations.

2. Arson Tragedy at Kenyan Boarding School Sparks National Outrage

Nine students have appeared in a Kenyan court following a catastrophic, suspected arson fire at a girls' school dormitory that tragically killed at least 16 students. The disaster has ignited an urgent international conversation on school safety infrastructure, oversight, and student mental health crises within residential schooling environments.

3. The Climate Toll: Extreme Heat Costing Years of Schooling

A newly highlighted global analysis reveals that climate-related disruptions and extreme heat waves are carving deep inequities into global education systems. In low-income countries, nearly 10% of the school year was lost to climate disruptions recently, with exposure to intense heat waves linked to an average loss of up to 1.5 years of total schooling for impacted children.

4. UK Graduates Decry Systemic "Cash Cow" Student Debt

In the United Kingdom, student advocacy groups testified before a parliamentary inquiry, accusing universities and lenders of treating debt-ridden graduates as "cash cows" to sustain institutional budgets. The testimony follows fresh polling indicating that one-third of British citizens no longer believe a university degree is worth the escalating time or financial burden.



PAY PER LEARN: HOW SILICON VALLEY DECIDED YOUR KID'S EDUCATION SHOULD COME WITH A MONTHLY SUBSCRIPTION FEE



PAY PER LEARN: HOW SILICON VALLEY DECIDED YOUR KID'S EDUCATION SHOULD COME WITH A MONTHLY SUBSCRIPTION FEE

A Mildly Furious, Entirely Accurate Guide to the EdTech Oligarchy's Master Plan

Somewhere in a gleaming Palo Alto boardroom, a billionaire just had a revelation. Not about curing disease, feeding the hungry, or fixing crumbling school roofs — no, no. The revelation was this: What if we could make children pay a monthly fee to learn their multiplication tables? Cue the champagne. Cue the TED Talk. Cue the press release calling it "a revolution in personalized, equity-centered, AI-powered learning journeys." Welcome to Education-as-a-Service — or as the rest of us call it, Netflix for your second-grader, except you can't cancel without your kid failing fourth grade.

The Pitch: "We're Not Killing Public Education. We're Disrupting It."

Let's be clear about who's driving this particular clown car. We have Bill Gates, who has spent two decades and several billion dollars "improving" American education with roughly the same success rate as his Windows Vista operating system. Gates now declares AI will be the "biggest accelerator" of his career and will "change school forever." He's not wrong about the "change" part — in the same way that a wrecking ball changes a building.

Gates assures us AI won't replace teachers. It will merely "supercharge" them by handling all the actual teaching — grading, lesson planning, instruction — while the teacher's new job is to provide "social-emotional support." In other words: the robot teaches, the human hands out tissues. Congratulations, educators. After years of fighting for professional respect, your new title is Certified Emotional Support Human, Version 1.0.

Then there's Mark Zuckerberg, whose Chan Zuckerberg Initiative has been quietly funding "whole-child personalized learning" — which is tech-billionaire for "we want to map your child's cognitive development like a server farm." CZI's vision involves injecting "learning science" into every digital tool a student touches, which sounds wonderful until you remember this is the same man who turned a college social network into a global surveillance apparatus and then said, with a straight face, that he was sorry.

And rounding out our trio is Laurene Powell Jobs, who, through the XQ Institute, has declared the American high school an "obsolete, industrial-era system." She's not entirely wrong — but her solution is to replace it with AI-driven "durable skills" platforms. Because nothing says preparing kids for an uncertain future like handing their education to a proprietary algorithm owned by a private foundation with no democratic accountability whatsoever.

The Product: "Subscribe to Learning. Cancel Anytime. (Please Don't Cancel.)"

Here's how the subscription model actually works in practice, stripped of the inspirational stock-photo branding:

In Higher Education, companies like Coursera and 2U/edX are busy convincing you that a four-year degree is a dinosaur and what you really need is an indefinite monthly subscription to a rotating carousel of micro-credentials. For just $59/month — forever — you too can collect digital badges from IBM and Yale that may or may not impress your future employer, who is also paying a subscription to LinkedIn Learning to figure out which badges to trust.

In K-12 schools, the hustle is subtler but no less effective. Canvas (Instructure) has become the digital operating system of American public education. Your child's grades, assignments, and teacher communications all live inside this proprietary platform. Try switching? Good luck — you'll lose your entire instructional infrastructure. It's less a learning management system and more a very polite hostage situation.

Pearson and Wiley — the textbook giants who once charged $200 for a physics book — have graciously modernized. Now, instead of buying a book you can resell, students pay a monthly subscription for digital access that expires the moment the semester ends. The used textbook market? Eliminated. Student savings? Eliminated. The publishers' profit margins? Thriving.

And then there's Age of Learning — makers of ABCmouse — which markets directly to parents with the subtle message that public schools are failing your precious child and for just a few dollars a month, you can give them the education they deserve. It's less an educational app and more a monetized guilt trip delivered via cartoon animals.

 The AI Angle: "Your Child's Teacher Is Now an Algorithm. Don't Worry, It's Personalized."

Peter Greene, the sharp-eyed education blogger at Curmudgucation, recently dissected a piece from The 74 — a publication that, as Greene notes, was launched by Campbell Brown as an anti-public-education political vehicle and now operates as a "very mixed bag," publishing legitimate journalism alongside what can only be described as reformster propaganda in a blazer.

The article in question, by Daniel Weisberg — a Broad Foundation fellow, former TNTP CEO, and man who has apparently never met an actual classroom teacher — declares that "America's schools are terrible at catching kids up" and proposes AI as the miracle cure. Greene's response is surgical: If teachers could teach three months of material in one month, wouldn't they already be doing that? Do catch-up advocates imagine teachers are sitting there thinking, "I could go faster, but I'm feeling leisurely today"?

Weisberg's AI vision involves a magical system that analyzes a struggling fifth-grader's fraction errors, cross-references data from "thousands of similar children," and generates a "15-minute tutoring block" to fix the problem. Greene, with the weary patience of someone who has read too many of these reports, asks the obvious question: Where is this data from thousands of children? Did they consent to having every keystroke monitored? And on what planet does a struggling fifth-grader get re-taught in fifteen minutes?

The answer, of course, is the planet where shareholders need a good quarterly report.

The Real Business Model: "It's Not About Your Child. It's About the Recurring Revenue."

Let's call the subscription model what it actually is: a permanent extraction mechanism disguised as educational innovation.

The genius — and the horror — of EaaS is that it requires a narrative of permanent deficiency. To keep you subscribing, the platform must convince you that you are never fully educated. There is always another certificate, another update, another AI-generated milestone standing between you and employability. You are not a student who graduates. You are a customer who churns.

The companies doing this most aggressively aren't shy about it:

  • LinkedIn Learning (owned by Microsoft) has turned professional development into a pay-to-play visibility game. You pay to learn, and your credential is stamped on your public profile — because in the gig economy, your worth is a subscription status.
  • ClassWallet and Odyssey — the fintech platforms hired by states to manage voucher programs — are perhaps the most brazen. They take public education dollars, run them through a private digital marketplace, skim transaction fees, and call it "parent empowerment." It is, in fact, privatization with a UX designer.
  • PowerSchool has quietly become the backend data engine of American K-12 education — managing attendance, compliance, demographics — and has grown by acquiring smaller tools until districts are locked into sprawling enterprise bundles they can't escape without administrative chaos.

The pattern is consistent: hook, lock, extract. Hook teachers with free tools. Lock districts into proprietary ecosystems. Extract annual subscription fees indefinitely, because the alternative is losing your entire instructional infrastructure.

The Propaganda Pipeline: "Fair and Balanced EdTech Coverage, Sponsored by the People Who Sell EdTech"

None of this would work without a media ecosystem to normalize it. And that ecosystem exists — well-funded, professionally produced, and strategically positioned between legitimate education journalism and billionaire-funded reform advocacy.

The 74 is the most prominent example: a publication that occasionally publishes genuinely valuable education reporting, and occasionally publishes pieces like Weisberg's AI catch-up manifesto, which Greene charitably describes as managing "to get so much wrong in such a little space." The pattern — real journalism mixed with reform propaganda — is precisely what makes it effective. Pure propaganda is easy to dismiss. Propaganda with a credible masthead is considerably harder.

Several other "education news" outlets follow the same model: foundation-funded, reform-aligned, and staffed by writers who have never had to explain to a room of 28 eight-year-olds why fractions are not, in fact, trying to personally ruin their lives.

The Resistance: Unpaid, Unsponsored, and Unimpressed

Here's the good news: there are educators, writers, and researchers who have been watching this play unfold for twenty years and have been documenting it with meticulous, furious clarity — without a Gates Foundation grant in sight.

Peter Greene's Curmudgucation (Substack) remains one of the sharpest, most consistently accurate voices on education reform, capable of dismantling a 1,200-word propaganda piece in 800 words of plain English.

For a comprehensive list of these unsponsored, unfiltered voices — bloggers, writers, podcasters, and organizations who cover public education without a billionaire's thumb on the scale — Big Education Ape maintains The Patron Saints and Warriors of Public Education: a running directory of the people doing honest education commentary in the age of the EdTech oligarchy.

They don't have a subscription model. They don't have a venture capital runway. They have classrooms, keyboards, and the deeply unfashionable conviction that public education is a democratic institution, not a revenue stream.

The Takeaway: What's Actually at Stake

Strip away the Silicon Valley branding, the inspirational AI demos, and the foundation press releases, and what remains is a straightforward power transfer:

Old ModelNew Model
Democratic oversight by school boardsCorporate governance by platform algorithms
Teachers as instructional leadersTeachers as "emotional support humans"
Public curriculum with accountabilityProprietary content, alterable overnight
One-time textbook purchaseMandatory, expiring subscription access
Public education as a rightEducation as a recurring monthly fee

The tech oligarchy didn't set out to destroy public education because they hate children. They set out to monetize it — because a $800 billion annual public education system that currently generates zero subscription revenue is, from a certain boardroom perspective, a massive market inefficiency.

The question isn't whether AI can help students learn. It probably can, in the right hands, with the right oversight, and with teachers — actual human teachers — in the lead. The question is: who owns the platform, who controls the data, who sets the curriculum, and who collects the monthly fee?

Right now, the answer to all four questions is the same small group of extraordinarily wealthy men who have never taught a class, never managed a classroom of 30 kids on a Tuesday afternoon in February, and never once had to explain to a parent why their child's grade portal is down because the district's subscription lapsed.

But they do have a great pitch deck.

For honest, unsponsored education commentary, visit Big Education Ape and Curmudgucation. No subscription required.


Sources & Links for "Pay Per Learn"


🖊️ Education Commentary & Watchdog Journalism

  1. Peter Greene — Curmudgucation (Substack) "Can Schools Play Catch-Up?" — The article dissecting The 74's AI catch-up propaganda piece by Daniel Weisberg. 🔗 https://curmudgucation.substack.com/p/can-schools-play-catch-up

  2. Peter Greene — Curmudgucation (Original Blog) The full Curmudgucation archive — 10+ years of education reform criticism, free and unsponsored. 🔗 https://curmudgucation.blogspot.com/

  3. Big Education Ape "The Patron Saints and Warriors of Public Education: Bloggers, Writers, Podcasts, and Organizations" — The definitive directory of honest, independent public education voices. 🔗 https://bigeducationape.blogspot.com/2025/11/the-patron-saints-and-warriors-of.html


📰 The Propaganda Outlets (Know Your Sources)

  1. The 74 Million "America's Schools Are Terrible at Catching Kids Up. How AI Can Help" — The Daniel Weisberg piece critiqued by Peter Greene. 🔗 https://www.the74million.org/article/americas-schools-are-terrible-at-catching-kids-up-how-ai-can-help/

🤖 AI & Billionaire Ed Reform

  1. Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation — Education Strategy Official foundation page on U.S. education priorities, AI integration, and math knowledge graphs. 🔗 https://www.gatesfoundation.org/our-work/programs/us-program/k-12-education

  2. Chan Zuckerberg Initiative (CZI) — Education CZI's stated mission on personalized learning, learning science, and generative AI in classrooms. 🔗 https://chanzuckerberg.com/education/

  3. XQ Institute (Emerson Collective) Laurene Powell Jobs' high school redesign vehicle — "durable skills," AI, and dismantling time-based learning. 🔗 https://xqsuperschool.org/


💻 EdTech Subscription Platforms (The Usual Suspects)

  1. Coursera Plus The flagship "all-you-can-learn" subscription model — $59/month for unlimited credentials. 🔗 https://www.coursera.org/courseraplus

  2. Pearson+ Pearson's digital textbook subscription platform — replacing the resellable textbook with expiring access. 🔗 https://www.pearson.com/en-us/pearsonplus.html

  3. Instructure (Canvas LMS) The proprietary digital classroom operating system locking districts into annual subscription dependency. 🔗 https://www.instructure.com/

  4. LinkedIn Learning (Microsoft) Pay-to-learn professional development tied directly to public profile visibility. 🔗 https://www.linkedin.com/learning/

  5. PowerSchool The dominant K-12 Student Information System — backend data engine for American public schools. 🔗 https://www.powerschool.com/

  6. Age of Learning (ABCmouse) Consumer-facing subscription app marketed directly to parents of K-12 students. 🔗 https://www.ageoflearning.com/

  7. ClassWallet Fintech platform managing state ESA/voucher funds — the private transaction layer of school privatization. 🔗 https://www.classwallet.com/


📖 Background & Policy Research

  1. National Education Policy Center (NEPC) Independent research on education policy, EdTech, and privatization — university-based, foundation-free. 🔗 https://nepc.colorado.edu/

  2. Network for Public Education (NPE) Advocacy and research organization tracking charter school expansion, voucher programs, and ed reform money. 🔗 https://networkforpubliceducation.org/

  3. Diane Ravitch's Blog "The largest blog in the United States devoted to public education" — decades of documented reform criticism. 🔗 https://dianeravitch.net/

  4. Pluralsight Enterprise technical upskilling subscription platform — selling the "skills obsolescence" narrative to corporate HR. 🔗 https://www.pluralsight.com/


🎥 Video Reference

  1. Bill Gates on AI Changing Schools Forever Gates Foundation video outlining the AI-powered customized learning vision. 🔗 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GFGvGvGGqCE

💡 A note on sourcing: The independent voices — Greene, Big Education Ape, Ravitch, NEPC, and NPE — receive no billionaire foundation funding. The contrast between their resources and their accuracy versus the well-funded reform propaganda machine is, itself, the story.