The Shame of Michelle Rhee

The latest scandal of the D.C. schools, so memorably exposed by USA Today, points out Rhee is not blameless, but she is sure is shameless.

Apart from Rhee, the idea that one can run public schools on business models or privatize them is absurd and unworkable.

Ravitch:

Her celebrity results from the fact that she has emerged as the national spokesman for the effort to subject public education to free-market forces, including competition, decision by data, and consumer choice. All of this sounds very appealing when your goal is to buy a pound of butter or a pair of shoes, but it is not a sensible or wise approach to creating good education. What it produces, predictably, is cheating, teaching to bad tests, institutionalized fraud, dumbing down of tests, and a narrowed curriculum.

This formula, which will be a tragedy for our nation and for an entire generation of children, is now immensely popular in the states and the Congress. Most governors embrace it. The big foundations endorse it. The think tanks of D.C., right-wing and left-wing, support it. Rhee helped to make it fashionable. If she doesn't pause to consider the damage she is doing, shame on her. If our policymakers don't stop to reflect on the damage they are doing to public education and to any concept of a good education, then our ntion is in deep trouble.

Rhee has no business being anywhere near a classroom or school district. Her license should have been revoked the minute it was discovered she had duct taped students.

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