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Wednesday, June 24, 2020

Michigan Republicans Attempt to Get Out Ahead in Back-to-School Policy | Teacher in a strange land

Michigan Republicans Attempt to Get Out Ahead in Back-to-School Policy | Teacher in a strange land

Michigan Republicans Attempt to Get Out Ahead in Back-to-School Policy


The first thing I did when I retired from teaching was embark on a PhD program in education policy. When I enrolled, my advisor wondered immediately why a newly retired teacher would want to study education policy. She thought I should be in the teacher education program—or maybe the ed leadership division, with all the wannabe superintendents.
But I wanted to study education policy—to see just how the sausage was made, by whom and for what reasons. As a long-suffering object of education policy, I wanted to untangle the process that had so often made me ask: What were they thinking, when they came up with this?
I learned a number of things, most of which weren’t part of any syllabus, none more important than the fact that education policy creation is seldom measured and thoughtful, informed by research, goodwill and common goals.
John Kingdon, one of the most influential thinkers on policy creation, believes that there are ‘windows’ where changes in policy become possible as three streams—a problem, a policy proposal, and politics converge to yield something new.
That’s where we are right now. Big problem: returning to school (or not) during a pandemic. Tons of policy options to address this problem. Politics swirling around the issue, from state control over health mandates, a bitter election season and the CONTINUE READING: Michigan Republicans Attempt to Get Out Ahead in Back-to-School Policy | Teacher in a strange land