Jimmy Carter – Ӱ America's Education News Source Thu, 13 Feb 2025 21:02:24 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png Jimmy Carter – Ӱ 32 32 Opinion: Without the DOE’s Institute of Education Sciences, Helping Teachers Learn What Works in the Classroom Will Get a Lot Harder  /article/without-the-does-institute-of-education-sciences-helping-teachers-learn-what-works-in-the-classroom-will-get-a-lot-harder/ Fri, 14 Feb 2025 17:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=740004 This article was originally published in

The future of the , the nonpartisan research arm of the , . The Department of Government Efficiency, a Trump administration task force led by Elon Musk, has announced and training grants.

The – or less than 1% of – but it advances education by supporting rigorous research and . It also sets and formalizes the criteria for evaluating educational research.

In short, the Institute of Education Sciences identifies what works and what doesn’t.


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As who , we believe this often overlooked institute is key to advancing national education standards and preventing pseudoscience from entering classrooms.

Dissatisfaction with US education

Getting education right can help address some of the nation’s biggest challenges, such as .

But throughout U.S. history, dissatisfaction with student achievement levels has spurred major education reform efforts.

Russia’s launch of the Sputnik space satellite, for example, triggered the 1958 . That measure attempted to strengthen science and math instruction to bolster Cold War defense efforts.

Concerns about educational inequality led to the 1965 , which funded schools serving students from low-income families.

After in 1979, small-government conservatives, including Ronald Reagan, .

As president, however, Reagan appointed as secretary of education. Bell convened the . And in 1983 it produced , a report that warned of “a rising tide of mediocrity” in schools.

It motivated national leaders to push for higher academic standards.

In 1997, growing alarm over many students’ poor reading levels led to the , which emphasized evidence-based reading instruction.

In response to continuing concern about U.S. education, President George W. Bush partnered with to pass the in 2002. The law attempted to raise standards by mandating testing and interventions for low-performing schools. It provided incentives for successful schools and punishment for failing ones.

This law significantly .

President George W. Bush appears at the bill-signing ceremony of the No Child Left Behind Act at Hamilton High School in Hamilton, Ohio, on Jan. 8, 2002.

Institute of Education Sciences

Just months after Congress approved the No Child Left Behind Act, it established the Institute of Education Sciences to provide independent education research, becoming the first federal agency dedicated to using scientific research to guide education policy.

Before the institute, educational research was . Findings were buried in books or locked behind paywalls.

. Structured with statutory independence, it is led by composed of researchers, not political appointees.

It produces replicable results and makes them to the public.

For example, the , launched in 2003, provides educators with guidance on effective practices. A school board seeking to adopt a new curriculum can find answers on the site about effective approaches.

The clearinghouse distills research into clear recommendations. It spares local decision-makers from having to wade through complex studies. The site also references original studies and offers descriptions for local decision-makers who want to examine the evidence for themselves.

Since 2007, it has published 30 . They cover topics such as , and .

These guides synthesize the best available evidence, rather than relying on one study, leader or political ideology.

Yet, the clearinghouse may be one of the parts of the Institute of Education Sciences on the chopping block.

Evidence increases freedom

From the 20th-century belief that instruction should be tailored to to the 1970s movement promoting , pseudoscience and fads have obstructed improvements in education.

The Institute of Education Sciences protects educational freedom by countering these claims.

Some argue that educational choices. They believe parents and school boards will naturally gravitate toward effective programs while ineffective ones fade away.

But education markets often , not the best results. have documented how pseudoscientific programs gain traction through compelling narratives rather than evidence.

Meanwhile, , and pseudoscientific products flood the market. Programs such as and thrive in the .

Marketed directly to parents of children with learning difficulties, these products use slick advertising and claim to “rewire” children’s brains to boost learning. Families pay thousands for programs that of lasting benefits.

Programs designed by university scholars also aren’t immune to the allure of anecdote over hard data.

Columbia professor Lucy Calkins , thus harming a generation of students’ reading development. Stanford professor Jo Boaler’s delayed Algebra I in some until ninth grade and discouraged timed arithmetic practice.

And thrived for decades despite overwhelming evidence that it .

These examples reveal how well-intentioned but ineffective educational products gain traction through public appeal rather than rigorous research.

The future of IES

In 2007 awarded the Institute of Education Sciences the highest score on its program assessment rating tool, a distinction earned by only 18% of federal programs.

But most Americans probably never heard of this.

And that highlights the institute’s major weakness: insufficient emphasis on sharing its findings and practice guides with the public and policymakers.

The institute would do well to publicize its findings more extensively so that parents and education leaders can better access rigorous research to improve education.

Whatever changes are made to the Department of Education, preserving the institute’s role in providing research on what works best – and ensuring continuous exchanges between research and practice – will benefit the American public.

This article has been corrected regarding Lucy Calkins’ affiliation with Columbia University. The school’s Teachers College has disbanded Calkins’ Reading and Writing Project, but she remains a faculty member on sabbatical.The Conversation

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Jimmy Carter Celebrates 10-Year-Old, Fellow Cancer Survivor /article/jimmy-carter-celebrates-10-year-old-fellow-cancer-survivor/ Thu, 09 Jan 2025 15:19:02 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=738019
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Opinion: Ed Sec Helps Set National Priorities in a System Primarily Guided by Local Govs /article/ed-sec-helps-set-national-priorities-in-a-system-primarily-guided-by-local-govs/ Sun, 05 Jan 2025 17:30:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=737696 This article was originally published in

The Department of Education has been a source of political controversy since its creation in 1980 . President Ronald Reagan, who was first elected that year, .

As a and the balance of federal and state roles in American education, I believe that understanding the department and its leader’s responsibilities is especially important today. Every child in the United States is required to attend school in some capacity, and what happens at the federal level can have real-world impacts on students ranging from preschool to grad school.

In addition, President-elect Donald Trump has pledged .


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The secretary of education

The secretary of education belongs to the president’s cabinet, leads the Department of Education and advises the president about educational policy issues.

They oversee a department with a that enforces many civil rights laws and ensures compliance with federal laws such as the .

Some of the Education Department’s key responsibilities include administering funding to help schools serving low-income students obtain an equitable education regardless of their socioeconomic status; managing the – known as IDEA – to ensure services for students with disabilities; and overseeing the – or FAFSA – which helps millions of students afford college.

Through the FAFSA, millions of students obtain , which don’t have to be repaid, , which do, as well as part-time .

In the U.S., education is . As a result, the function of schooling largely falls to individual states.

Each state has its own education system, with most designating a significant amount of control to local jurisdictions. bear the responsibility for setting many policies and approving budgets for their district.

Federal funding makes up . of the bill, mostly through a combination of taxes on income and property. In some cases, there are other taxes, such as those on tobacco and alcohol sales, or revenue is raised through state lottery systems.

These funding formulas can be .

Secretaries who stood out

Ultimately, the role of the secretary of education is less about wielding substantial power and more about using the position as a platform to influence the national conversation on education.

Education secretaries often act as thought leaders, shaping public dialogue and policies rather than directly implementing sweeping change. Some have garnered more attention than others.

, who served as secretary of education during the Reagan administration, became a prominent conservative voice. He advocated for “” rooted in traditional values. Bennett also sharply , blaming them for the perceived decline in the quality of American education.

commanded more national attention as secretary of education than most people who have held the position during her tenure in the George W. Bush administration. Spellings championed standards-based education with an emphasis on accountability. She played an important role in implementing , a federal education initiative that aimed to increase accountability by requiring all public schools to meet consistent standards.

, who served as education secretary during the Obama administration, also made a lot of headlines. His program encouraged school districts and states to compete for federal funding as a way to drive improvement through competition. Duncan’s support for school choice and policy reforms, as well as his occasional criticisms of teachers unions, made him – including within his own Democratic Party.

Betsy DeVos, who served during Trump’s first administration, was one of the most polarizing education secretaries in the department’s brief history. Her tenure was defined more by efforts to in education than attempts to build new initiatives or improve public education.

DeVos also charter schools, which are funded with tax dollars but operated independently of local school systems.

Student loan debt

The amount of student debt Americans owe in recent years. Reducing that burden was among the top priorities of , President Joe Biden’s education secretary.

In 2023, the Biden’s plan to forgive up to $20,000 per borrower. In response, the Biden administration announced that included lower loan payments and additional forgiveness; most of them are on hold due to .

Ultimately, the courts will determine the legality of these relief efforts – underscoring the limits of the secretary of education’s power. With the scale of this debt, I am certain that student loan debt is likely to remain a big focus for anyone serving as the secretary of education.

Culture wars battleground

Debates regarding education policies sometimes double as battles over cultural issues, such as LGBTQ rights in schools and whether parents should have more control over what students are taught in classrooms.

Conservative groups such as have pushed for laws that restrict discussions of sexual orientation and gender identity and have supported bans on transgender athletes in school sports.

LGBTQ rights organizations, including the , support policies that protect trans children from bullying at school.

On the chopping block?

The education secretary’s job would go away if Trump were to succeed with his campaign promise to “” the department. Doing that would require an act of Congress, but experts question whether such a measure would prevail .

Even , many federal education programs could be distributed to other agencies.

The predates the establishment of the Department of Education. I have no doubt that it would continue should there not be a secretary of education anymore.

This story is part of a of Cabinet and high-level administration positions.The Conversation

This article is republished from under a Creative Commons license. Read the .

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Back to the Future: GOP Pledge to Abolish Education Department Returns /article/back-to-the-future-gop-pledge-to-abolish-education-department-returns/ Mon, 26 Sep 2022 11:15:00 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=697032 When former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos that her former Cabinet department “should not exist,” it made some waves. 

The school choice advocate and Republican mega-donor has kept a relatively low profile since leaving Washington last January, mostly attending to policy developments in her home state of Michigan. Her call to eliminate the U.S. Department of Education, unveiled at , represented a return to the national spotlight — not just for DeVos, but for an idea that has hung around Republican politics for decades. 

Even more remarkably, DeVos’s sentiments were echoed a few weeks later by her former boss. Denouncing what he described as the politicized teaching of subjects like race and sexuality before a joyful crowd at the Conservative Political Action Conference, that if the federal government promoted “radicalism” in academic instruction, “we should abolish the Department of Education.”


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President Donald Trump and former Education Secretary Betsy DeVos both called for the elimination of the Department of Education this summer. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

Conservatives have sought to scrap the department, and dramatically reduce Washington’s K-12 footprint, since it was created in 1979. Those efforts, including that would take effect by the end of this year, have generally been seen as quixotic; even when they held unified control over Congress and the White House, Trump and DeVos floated, but never came close to pursuing, the Departments of Education and Labor.

The political fallout of that kind of reshuffle would be hard to predict, but potentially severe. According to , over half of Americans view the Department of Education favorably. The department collects and disseminates scientific evidence on schooling through the Institute of Education Sciences, plays a public watchdog role through its Office of Civil Rights, and helps equalize school funding with the tens of billions of dollars provided by Title I. All of these purposes are served with of any cabinet department. 

But while policy experts consider outright abolition a farfetched notion, they say it reflects a long-running contest between dueling urges in American education: a strong distrust of federal influence on one hand, and on the other, profound dissatisfaction with the status quo. During the presidencies of George W. Bush and Barack Obama, the second impulse was dominant, with massive new federal initiatives launched around school performance and accountability. But resistance to federal authority has been growing for a decade, and the renewed energy around abolition is breaking through just as the disgust of Republican voters — with perceived indoctrination in classrooms, federal recommendations on COVID safety, and much else — has crested. 

Kevin Kosar, a senior fellow at the right-leaning American Enterprise Institute who studies public administration, said that the government’s response to COVID had engendered “a clear backlash” among Republicans. Even as pandemic health measures were largely decided at the state level, he added, Washington’s guidelines on masking and vaccines in schools have fueled the party’s enmity toward federal interventions in education.

“The Right certainly doesn’t trust the federal government to lead some sort of learning recovery response,” Kosar said. “They would much rather pull the power back to local communities and have the feds stay as far away as possible.”

Jack Jennings, a retired policy maven who served as the Democrats’ top education aide in the House of Representatives, argued that shrinking the public sector is never as easy as it sounds. But he added that abolition is electorally potent with the Republican base before the 2022 midterm elections, likening it to a “red flag in front of a bull.” 

“It’s not an issue that’s going to come to fruition soon, but it’s one of those things that rattles the cages of conservatives,” Jennings said.

Unions divided

The department has always had its share of detractors. At its inception, that group even included many Democrats.

Longtime American Federation of Teachers President Albert Shanker, pictured with U.S. Vice President Walter Mondale, argued against a federal Department of Education. (Jack O’Connell/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)

By the late 1970s, the federal government’s responsibilities over education — codified in landmark laws like the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965 — were housed in the then-Department of Healthcare, Education, and Welfare. President Jimmy Carter’s insistence on carving out an entity devoted specifically to K-12 was borne of , the nation’s largest teachers’ union, which had helped Carter secure the Democratic nomination in 1976. Until that election, the NEA had never issued a presidential endorsement.

But according to Jennings, many in the president’s own party were leery of the idea. Even fervent liberals worried that a dedicated agency would induce untold “meddling” in the affairs of schools and districts. Albert Shanker, the influential president of the American Federation of Teachers, lobbied against the change out of concern that his own union would be put at a disadvantage.

“[Carter] was fulfilling a campaign promise by sending it to the Congress,” Jennings recalled. “But when the Congress received it, Democrats were not all in favor of it.”

President Jimmy Carter at the inaugural ceremony for the new U.S. Department of Education, 1980. (UPI amk/Valerie Hodgson)

In the end, necessary authorizing legislation passed in the perennially Democratic House . But Democratic resistance faded over time, as the government’s sizable outlays to educate poor and disabled students gelled easily with the party’s own priorities. Hostility among Republicans would be a feature of the policy landscape for years to come.

Ronald Reagan the newly created department while still a presidential candidate. That pledge years later, following the national alarm stoked by the release of the administration’s bombshell report, A Nation at Risk; after declaring a national education emergency in its first term, it would have appeared perverse for the administration to gut the nation’s foremost education authority in its second.

Still, Reagan later appointed as education secretary the public intellectual William Bennett, whose views were . And the Republican position remained clear for years afterward. Lamar Alexander, a former Tennessee governor who led the department under President George H.W. Bush and later served three terms in the U.S. Senate, his abortive 1996 presidential campaign. for eventual nominee Bob Dole included a promise to eliminate the Department of Education (along with the Departments of Energy, Commerce, and Housing and Urban Development).

David Cleary, a former senior aide to Alexander who now serves as the Republican staff director for the Senate’s Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions, said his party’s enduring skepticism toward federal overreach explained its drive to abolish. Moreover, few of the department’s functions need to be administered nationally.

“The U.S. Department of Education doesn’t establish a curriculum — thank God — doesn’t establish education standards, doesn’t establish tests, and doesn’t establish criteria for institutions of higher education,” Cleary said. “So it really is just a grant-making entity with a huge bureaucracy.”

William Bennett, who was appointed education secretary in 1985, became one of the leading lights of the Reagan cabinet. (Diana Walker/Getty Images)

A short-lived honeymoon

Notwithstanding the Right’s philosophical objections, however, the last quarter-century has been a time of bipartisan acceptance for the department. The key figure in that detente was George W. Bush.

It was the Texas governor’s wholesale embrace of education reform — part of a “compassionate conservative” push that helped Republicans recover from Dole’s landslide 1996 defeat — that set the stage for the No Child Left Behind Act. That law, the biggest expansion of the federal government’s educational powers since the Civil Rights era, was enacted through a generational compromise with Democrats: The Left would get more resources to improve chronically failing schools (which they later complained was short-changed), while the Right would get tighter accountability for academic results (which later trampled on local autonomy, they grumbled).

Both parties returned early from their political honeymoon, with Democrats and teachers’ unions against a law they helped shepherd into being. But it was Republicans, disenchanted with the department’s broader scope over local schools, that migrated further from the vision of a more muscular federal role.

Their distaste only grew as responsibility for implementing NCLB fell to the Obama administration. As Secretary of Education Arne Duncan backed ambitious policy initiatives like Race to the Top and Common Core, Tea Party conservatives — increasingly in concert with the leadership of both NEA and AFT — demanded a reversal of the department’s growing remit. 

Chester Finn, a senior fellow at the conservative Hoover Institution and president emeritus of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, compared the public’s attitude toward education reform to a pendulum that periodically swings toward greater federal involvement.

“But then we suddenly discover that that’s too pushy…and it’s embarrassing people, so there’s a backlash,” Finn remarked. “That’s what was beginning to happen in the late Bush and Obama years, and that’s when they started giving waivers and making exceptions so that the pushing wasn’t as hard or as uniform.”

President Barack Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan, who unveiled the national Race to the Top initiative in 2010, were later blamed for the expansion of the department’s remit. (Kristoffer Tripplaar-Pool/Getty Images)

The retreat from NCLB’s strictures in the mid-2010s was not total. The law that supplanted it, 2015’s Every Student Succeeds Act, left in place some Bush- and Obama-era accountability measures while granting states more freedom to chart their own course. But even the relaxation of regulations couldn’t shield the department from the dissatisfaction that would follow in the pandemic era.

“It still felt like there was a truce, fundamentally — that the federal role in education was legit,” said AEI’s Kosar. “Then we get some of the executive orders in the Obama administration that struck the right as ‘woke.’ And now we get schools being an epicenter for debates about how to respond to the coronavirus. That’s what sparked the most recent revolt against the feds.”

‘Anyone pushing this is going to be savaged’

If the intellectual history of abolition is well-documented, its potential as a governing proposal is hazy.

To put it simply, the Department of Education is a well-known entity with countless supportive constituencies. Eliminating its offices and employees would require relocating the trillion-dollar federal student loan program, which plays an integral role in sending millions of students to college. Title I, which dispenses billions to districts and schools that serve children facing academic and socioeconomic challenges, has its own army of defenders in both Congress and the states. Billions more go to special-education students.

“It’s going to be a heavy lift,” Kosar said. “Every interest group is going to come out and want to keep its programs alive. And of course, anyone pushing to do this is going to be savaged viciously as anti-education.”

Even if a future Republican administration were to keep the most popular initiatives intact, they would face two significant logistical hurdles. First, relocating those programs in other agencies — student loans at the Treasury, for instance, or the Office of Civil Rights at the Justice Department — would almost certainly require a statutory change that Democrats wouldn’t go along with. So full GOP control of government, plus filibuster-proof majorities, would be a necessity.

Jack Jennings

If this could be achieved, the federal role, however shrunken, would be scattered in pieces across the executive branch. Without the unified leadership provided by a secretary, their effectiveness could be severely hampered.

Jennings, the former longtime House staffer, said the end result would be a succession of functions “spun off into different areas of the federal government. And there would be no coordination among them because they would be answerable to different people.”

Cleary, the Senate HELP Committee aide, conceded that the political obstacles would be significant. But a more limited administrative campaign against the department, entailing the systematic elimination of Democratic regulations and mass block-granting of its various programs, could be achieved under a future Republican administration, he said.

“If I were the secretary of education, or advising one, I would do a hiring freeze and just not hire new people, and start to burn out the Deep State, if you will,” he said. “You don’t really need as many people as they have.”

Chester Finn

Finn, a former department hand who openly desires a “serious rethinking” of the federal role in education, said that neither wholesale elimination nor reform was likely on any near-term timeframe. Entering an era of greater partisan divides on the Department of Education, he added, Republicans would be forced to offer greater specificity around their signature education promise.   

“The question’s always the same: Do [conservatives] just want to abolish the building with the name over it that says ‘Department of Education?’ Or do they want to abolish the federal functions that it contains? Because those are such different things.”

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