Dana Goldstein on Ed Reform and Party Politics
Dana Goldstein NAILS one of the key lessons from the recent election: the importance of having DEMOCRATS pushing reform, as it completely undermines the usual defenses of the forces of the status quo:
So what we're seeing is that data-driven,
standardized testing-centered school reform is most politically
palatable when it is pursued by Democrats. As Alexander Russo
notes, reformers need to support school funding if they want to be trusted by teachers and the public. In other words, as the PAC Democrats
for Education Reform has long argued, the
standards-and-accountability agenda seems to make the biggest strides
when it is pursued by Democratic politicians, because of the
Nixon-goes-to-China power of the traditional allies of teachers' unions
and public schools asking them to change their ways.
None of this is intended to be a normative
statement either for or against this particular agenda. I'm generally
more skeptical of testing and more bullish on (modernized) vocational
education and school desegregation than the standards-and-accountability
movement writ large. But after covering education for six years, it has
become more and more clear to me that in places where mainstream
Democratic politicians embrace standards/accountability/ choice-driven
reform, the education left--teachers' unions, class
size activists, charter school foes--have few recourses on Election
Day. Where the choice/accountability agenda is most closely affiliated
with Republicans, on the other hand, the unions can push back, hard, at
the ballot.
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