By Amy Stuart Wells
It must be apparent by now that I'm cleaning out my inbox today. This article requires a subscription to read the entire thing, so I'll leave the introduction to you and post some of the relevant bits only available to subscribers:
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Today, it is often difficult to distinguish Republicans from Democrats on key education issues. President Obama's signature Race to the Top program, which promotes charter schools, state tests, and tough-love accountability for educators, might just as well have been proposed by a Republican president. While Democrats and Republicans may disagree on the level of federal education funding, they continue to move toward each other on what to do with those funds. In fact, as an article in /Education Week/ recently suggested, there is more fighting /within/ than /between/ the two major parties on education reform these days. ("White House Expected to Mount Fresh ESEA Effort," <http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2011/01/19/17esea.h30.html> Jan. 19, 2011.)
While it is a difficult moment to not support greater agreement across our political parties, the reality is that this increasing bipartisanism in education reform is not working for our students. In fact, the most agreed-upon solutions---testing, privatization, deregulation, stringent accountability systems, and placement of blame on unions for all that is wrong---are doing more harm than good. Achievement overall has not improved, and the gap between the privileged and the disadvantaged has widened. Parents across the country are fed up with the stress and boredom their children feel in schools that are driven by tests and competition. Internationally, countries with better safety nets to support children's well-being are leaving us in the dust. As President Obama noted, while the United States once led the world in education, we are now falling rapidly behind.
Despite this bad news, there appears to be no dramatic change of course on the political horizon, no healthy debate on the bipartisan agenda. Indeed, consensus on bad ideas in education has become much like a naked emperor---no one wants to break from the ranks and state a bold vision.
"The same Democrats who fight Republican efforts to privatize Social Security and Medicare have been cajoled into supporting free-market education reforms that would have made their predecessors cringe." http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2011/01/27/20wells.h30.html?r=1693578479