Education policy may be the one place real bipartisanship exists in Washington, but that may not be a good thing for children.
The opening speaker was well loved and revered, Dr. Jill Biden and the summit wrapped up with the President himself.
This was President Joe Biden’s chance to convince the
teachers and parents of America not only that the disastrous four years of
Trump and DeVos’ corruption and lies were done, but that we have collectively
turned the corner on C19 and are now ready to re-open our school buildings and
our communities for the children and families of the country. What great news
to deliver!
Dr. Cardona’s second major speaker of the day was Dr. Rochelle
Walensky, the new head of the CDC who has been on most major networks every day
for weeks already assuring the nation that though we are not ready to reopen
adult venues completely, we are ready to reopen children’s areas at the reduced
3ft distance (as long as they all wear masks). Both Dr. Cardona and Dr.
Walensky both referenced lovingly their own children. Each of whom would be
able to graduate this coming year. The new Covid variants were given a short
phrase, “Yes, we’re concerned,” but there was little about the high plateau of
cases, or the potential for post spring break outbreaks. The message was: 3
feet is safe.
This first Summit was also the moment when the Biden
administration and Secretary Cardona had the chance to establish the direction,
vision, and positions they would chart for the future of US Schools. In today’s
view of the education landscape, divided between billionaire investors and
working class teachers and parents, everyone was waiting to see.
Who would they listen to?
Whose perspective would they deem valid?
And whose expertise would they respect with action, not just well worn
phrases?
Cleveland is one of a minority of places that still is under
“takeover.” It has a mayoral controlled and appointed school board, and 15
charter schools that represent over half the students in the 32K district.
Gordon in his presentation even gave a shout-out to JEB Bush’s Chiefs for
Change.
No mention was made of the study from Stanford’s Hoover
Institute that showed Ohio charter students learn 36 days less math and 14 days
less reading than traditional public school students.
The second district featured was Tulsa Oklahoma’s
Superintendent Deborah Gist, who was the DC State Superintendent during
Michelle Rhee’s tenure as superintendent and is a proud alum of both the
Kennedy School of Government and the Broad Academy class of 2008. Tulsa is
about the same size district as Cleveland, but has fewer charters, with 7 in a
32K district. At least three of which have experienced newsworthy scandals in
the last several years: Epic, Dove Science Academy, and Langston Hughes
Academy.
For labor coverage, the two representatives were Cleveland
teachers’ new union president Shari Obrenski (AFT), and NYC’s UFT President
Michael Mulgrew both of whom messaged the importance of collaboration with
administration. Notable is that none of the major leaders of the unions,
grassroots movements, nor large districts that have fought for their staffs’
safety during the pandemic were there.
The pedagogy reports were about exciting summer programs
that should be offered this year and was coordinated by long time presidential
ed advisor, Stanford’s Linda Darling-Hammond.
She brought with her a collection of teachers expressing
deep gratitude for being allowed to be there and cheerfully reporting “best
practice” plans to teach first graders how to learn outside and choose a job
path this summer as part of their social-emotional learning. After a year of
traumas like their family losing jobs, homes, and lives, it is bound to be
great fun for first graders to learn how they can one day fill a slot in the
corporate-worker-world of the future economy.
The Portrait of a National School System painted by
the new Democratic administration is a picture of positively resilient school
managers, lots of messaging about collaboration and data, with Spring 2021
universal testing, all buildings open, large scale summer school, a business
model management plan, a high value for school choice and charters, and lots of
well-trained workers for US companies.
By the time President Biden came on to announce the $130B
for schools included in the Covid relief package, the four note chord that
sounded in my head, was
“That’s great!
What strings are attached?
Whose pocket is that earmarked for?
And the American Enterprise Institute is going to love this!”
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