蜜桃影视

Explore

Top DeVos Deputy Tells Nation鈥檚 Education Reporters That Pandemic Adds Urgency to Federal Push for Private School Choice

Jim Blew (Student Success California)

If anything, the global pandemic has deepened U.S. Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos鈥檚 commitment to all forms of school choice, top deputy Jim Blew told reporters in a keynote question-and-answer session at the 鈥檚 73rd National Seminar, held remotely last week.

The U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 assistant secretary for planning, evaluation and policy development, defended DeVos鈥檚 desire to create a national tax-credit private school scholarship program, requiring schools that want federal relief funds to offer in-person classes in the coming academic year and to share that aid with private schools and parents opting out of traditional schools.

鈥淲e’re not backing off from the need to empower families and classroom teachers with choices,鈥 Blew said. 鈥淚f anything, COVID-19 underscores the importance of having choice.鈥

The department agrees that there are substantial costs associated with reopening schools and would support a new congressional appropriation, he said, but called on reporters to cover DeVos鈥檚 threats to withhold funding from schools that will operate online only with more 鈥渂alance.鈥

鈥淲e believe that the local authorities, with health authorities, need to make the decisions about what happens in their schools,鈥 Blew said. 鈥淲e just wanted to even out the debate a little bit to let everyone know children are better off in school. They鈥檙e far better off in school, and there won’t be money coming from the federal taxpayer to support it unless they open.鈥

Parents and teachers can decide not to return to schools in person, he said. Families that don鈥檛 want to send their children back should be sent relief funds directly so 鈥渢hey could work out a different alternative for their own student.鈥

The red-hot national debate about school reopening is politicized, Blew acknowledged, saying, 鈥淭here’s not much nuance allowed in presidential rhetoric,鈥 and he called on reporters to provide context.

鈥淭here’s two levels of analysis that we have to make here, and one is really about the presidential debate, the campaign rhetoric, the stuff that you all are aware of,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here’s another set of questions around how it actually gets done. 鈥 The president, and I should say Joe Biden, won’t talk about the nuances underneath this larger issue, but as reporters, you should cover it, and those of us who have to implement it really need to understand it.鈥

It is traditional for federal education secretaries to address EWA鈥檚 annual convening. DeVos declined the group鈥檚 invitation during her first two years in office, last year with the New York Times鈥 Erica Green.

As first moderator Steve Drummond, the executive producer who oversees NPR鈥檚 education coverage, and then EWA members questioned Blew, the Q&A grew tense. After that charter schools in Detroit, a city where DeVos pushed for unimpeded choice in the two decades before her appointment to the Trump administration, underperformed compared with their district counterparts, Blew chastised reporters.

鈥淚 understand there is a lot of underperformance throughout Michigan in their schools, and I’m fascinated that reporters want to lay that at the feet of the secretary of education,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here is a whole line of governors, there are mayors, there are school boards, there are school districts who’ve had real power over how that education system is managed, and somehow or other, a philanthropist, who was encouraging schools to get better, gets blamed for what’s happened in that state.鈥

Blew went on to describe reporters attending the session as 鈥渁mong the elites in our country鈥 who do not understand that parents in low-income communities can鈥檛 work when schools don鈥檛 provide an in-person option.

Idaho Statesman investigative reporter Nicole Foy was among attendees who were quick to push back: 鈥淚’m not sure if the assistant secretary is aware of the average salary of a local reporter, but in no way are we among the elite.鈥

Blew apologized, but in the next breath he suggested that teachers are highly compensated. 鈥淚 have lots of friends who are reporters, and I understand the salary pressures on all of you right now,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 would, by the way, contrast that with the average salary of a teacher in this country.鈥

Appearing this year in DeVos鈥檚 stead, Blew opened the session by contrasting his and Devos鈥檚 鈥渆ducation reform vision鈥 with what he called 鈥渢he dominant vision 鈥 embodied by the labor union that represents teachers in collective bargaining.

鈥淚 call it the broken status quo vision,鈥 he continued, 鈥渢he factory model system that has been in place for about a century.鈥

School choice is the antidote, Blew reiterated throughout his appearance, emphasizing that he and DeVos believe that the public support their determination to include taxpayer support for private schools and other non-public options.

鈥淲e do want them all to reopen, so we have to treat them all evenly,鈥 he said. 鈥淲e cannot say we’re only going to support the traditional public schools that are unionized.鈥

In response to questions about school accountability and some states鈥 desire to suspend annual standardized student assessments, Blew said that without the new school year underway, it鈥檚 premature to decide whether to suspend the Every Student Succeeds Act鈥檚 testing mandate.

鈥淟et’s see how things evolve,鈥 he said. 鈥淏ut everyone on this call should understand our instinct would not be to give those waivers.鈥

Did you use this article in your work?

We鈥檇 love to hear how 蜜桃影视鈥檚 reporting is helping educators, researchers, and policymakers.

Republish This Article

We want our stories to be shared as widely as possible 鈥 for free.

Please view 蜜桃影视's republishing terms.





On 蜜桃影视 Today