FEBRUARY 10, 2011
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Is Michelle Rhee undermining school reform?

The mantra goes, “You either love or hate Michelle Rhee.” In the education world, there is no figure as polarizing as the former chancellor of Washington, D.C.’s public schools, who famously warred with the city’s teachers’ union and left abruptly when her boss, Mayor Adrian Fenty, lost reelection last year. Since then, she has started an organization called StudentsFirst to push for education reform nationwide. She announced the group in a Newsweek cover story, and it raised more than $700,000 in its first week. Andrew Rotherham, an education policy expert, told me, “Do people say, ‘I [am] kind of uncertain about Michelle Rhee’? No way.”
Count me, then, as one of the uncertain few. To be sure, I am generally a fan of Rhee. The world of liberal education policy consists, more or less, of two factions: reformers, who support performance pay, charter schools, and weakening seniority-based job protections for teachers; and opponents of these ideas, who are often allied with teachers’ unions. Like most reformers, I greatly admired Rhee’s tenure in D.C., in which she closed failing schools, fired underperforming teachers, and helped raise student achievement.
But, in reading about Rhee’s recent moves, I’ve felt a nagging sense of disappointment. She is now advising several conservative governors who line up with reformers on certain issues but whose commitment to public education is questionable. Meanwhile, she hasn’t offered robust answers to some of the thorniest matters facing education policymakers. Last week, I put these challenges to Rhee directly. And I came out of our conversation much as I went in: with decidedly mixed feelings about her vision for the education-reform movement.
Consider Rhee’s alliance with New Jersey’s Republican governor, Chris Christie, who has waged an assault on his state’s education status quo. Some of his rhetoric—backing performance pay and criticizing the power of teachers’ unions—has been music to reformers’ ears. But other statements—saying that teachers are “among the most privileged in our society” and telling one teacher that, if she doesn’t like what she’s being paid, she should get a new job—have been disrespectful and obnoxious. Rhee has admitted that she could have been a better communicator with teachers, so I asked her if Christie’s bullying could be bad for reform. “Absolutely not,” she said. “That’s more of what we need in this country. ... He never crosses the line.”
But style isn’t the main concern with Christie. Since taking office, he has slashed nearly $1.3 billion from his education budget, possibly violating state constitution requirements for education funding. (His solution if parents don’t like the consequences? “Move.”) Granted, the recession is forcing every state to make tough choices. But New Jersey’s Assembly speaker, Democrat Sheila Oliver, noted that Christie could have minimized education cuts if he hadn’t let a tax expire for people making $1 million or more. So it seems fair to wonder: Are these the actions of a governor who genuinely wants to improve schools? Shouldn’t true education reformers be fighting to win more money for public schools, even if they want to spend those dollars differently?
I asked Rhee (a Democrat) whether devoting less money to education is problematic. “If there was any evidence or data in New Jersey or across the country that, by putting more money into the system, you were going to be getting better results, I’m sure he would be scouring every corner to find it,” she said. “We have radically increased the amount of money we spend on education in this country. ... In most cases, the results have gotten only worse.” But there’s no evidence that Christie, who ran on a platform of cutting taxes, is interested in dedicating more money to public education under any circumstances. (K-12 education isn’t listed on his website as a priority.) And, while it’s true that education dollars should be spent more wisely, there’s no reason policymakers can’t do so while also figuring out how to invest more in schools. Yet Rhee, it seems, wants to address only the question of allocation. “The focus can’t be on how do we get more money or raise taxes,” she said.
On another hot-button issue, Rhee has a more nuanced take. One of her new Republican partners, Florida Governor Rick Scott, has proposed introducing school vouchers statewide. His plan would allow public money to be used by any student at any type of school—public, charter, private, even virtual.* Rhee, too, has advocated for more choice, penning an op-ed in The New York Times before President Obama’s State of the Union address, asking him to call for a law that would empower parents to move their children from unsuccessful schools. But does she support Scott’s plan, which hardly seems in line with the goal of improving public schools? StudentsFirst’s 25-page policy agenda seems to indicate so—but Rhee suggested otherwise. “You talk to some people in the choice movement who say vouchers are the answer, but I don’t think that’s the case,” she said. “The right system will have a very strong, well-run traditional public school system, [and] a good, accountable charter system. And some publicly funded vouchers and scholarships can be players.” She also said vouchers should apply to low-income children only. In other words, choice should be about ensuring that no child is trapped in a failing school—a laudable goal.
I then asked Rhee about a related issue that isn’t in StudentsFirst’s agenda: school integration. It’s no secret that one of the main reasons public schools have such disparate success rates is because of racial and socioeconomic segregation. While redrawing district boundaries wouldn’t be possible or effective everywhere, there have been successful, small-scale initiatives to make sure students of different backgrounds are educated together in good public schools—an important liberal ideal. But Rhee called integration a “very tricky situation” and said, “StudentsFirst is not at this point going to take a policy stance on the issue.”
Of course, Rhee shouldn’t be expected to have answers for every pressing educational question. StudentsFirst is just getting its bearings, and, as Rhee pointed out to me, there are countless issues the group could be tackling—curriculum and school nutrition, for instance—but isn’t, because it has chosen “areas where there is a need for a national organization with a national agenda.” Yet it is precisely in these areas—how to engage with teachers, how to spend public money—that Rhee’s agenda and choice of political partners raises hard questions. “I’m a realist,” Rhee told me. “We have to focus on what is doable, what is in front of us.” But setting realistic goals doesn’t have to mean sacrificing principles or collaborating on measures that could be harmful to public schools. And so, I have to admit: In a world where everyone supposedly loves or hates her, I’m still kind of uncertain about Michelle Rhee.
Seyward Darby is the deputy online editor for The New Republic. This article ran in the March 3, 2011, issue of the magazine.
*Since this article went to press, Governor Scott has released his annual budget proposal and said he will not push for universal vouchers this year. According to The Gainesville Sun, he still supports the idea, but he will focus right now on expanding charter schools instead. (Meanwhile, he has proposed cutting $3 billion from state education aid.)
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7 comments
What a disappointing, superficial story.
- senechal
February 15, 2011 at 7:18pm
What a disappointing, superficial story.
- senechal
February 15, 2011 at 7:18pm
In D.C., they had the MOST EXPENSIVE schools in the nation, the most spending per student. But those dollars didn't make it into the classroom, or to the teachers. This was because they had incompetents and nepotism running the school system. Books were kept in warehouses and never distributed. Maintenance on buildings was deferred. Administration staffs were huge. All kinds of issues like this. In this environment, Michelle Rhee was a breath of fresh air. She cut the sizes of administrative staff. She closed several schools that were basically empty. She instituted evaluations of everybody and everything. However -- D.C.'s schools were NOT reflective of the nation as a whole. Most school systems have already had LOTS more oversight. Solutions that worked in D.C. would be overkill for most other school districts, where teachers are underpaid, administrative staffs minimal, and they don't HAVE money for books or computers.
- AllanL5
February 16, 2011 at 9:24am
I've never quite understood the animus of self-styled reformers such as Rhee, Christie, etc., toward teacher unions. Some of the academically top scoring states have high (90+) unionization rates and some of the lowest scoring states have low (below 10%) unionization rates. The best explanation, perhaps, is the need for a clearly defined villain. That the villain is irrelevant is beside the point. Dan
- dbuck1
February 16, 2011 at 1:17pm
Forbid children to go to school. Make them work in the fields. Make school a forbidden delight (like sex, drugs, texting). Prohibit them from reading. Burn books in front of them. To get to school they will have to sneak out at night, with books hidden under their clothes. Shoot live ammunition over their heads as they scurry through the fields to get to school. When they do get to school, clones of Michelle Rhee will drag bad teachers out of the classrooms or abuse the mediocre ones in front of the horrified children.
- skahn
February 16, 2011 at 11:40pm
skahn has a point. When the country was being founded there was no public education to speak of, but enough people read to make "Common Sense" a runaway best seller, and the founding documents speak to and of a highly educated population. The Founders, much of the rest of the country, and notable others like Lincoln were self-educated. Since public education became mandatory, and copied itself after the Prussian model for turning out good little widgets, achievement has been in steady decline. We may not need to shoot over their heads, but it wouldn't hurt to have only students who recognize the value of education and are in school because they want to be as was the case a couple of centuries ago.
- Robert Powell
February 18, 2011 at 9:33am
RP "... Since public education became mandatory, and copied itself after the Prussian model for turning out good little widgets, achievement has been in steady decline ..." That's just stupid. Decline? As in the development of laser, landing on the moon, internet, DNA ... yeah we have been in steady decline.
- dirque
February 18, 2011 at 2:32pm