Arne Duncan Can't Quite Explain Why He's Dissing Texas

Why is Arne Duncan messing with Texas? I asked the Secretary of Education
about this a few hours after he injected himself into the
presidential-election scrum. Policy wonks like me had woken up to baffling
reports that Duncan told Bloomberg Television's Al Huntthat the Texas school
system "has really struggled" under Rick Perry, the GOP governor who just
announced he is running for President. "Far too few of their high school
graduates are actually prepared to go on to college," Duncan said in the TV
interview, which is scheduled to air this weekend, telling Hunt that he
feels "very, very badly for the children there."

When I asked Duncan about this dire assessment in an interview I had
scheduled today for my next School of Thought column, the former head of the
Chicago school system was light on specifics:

"Texas has challenges. The record speaks for itself. Lots of other states
have challenges too. But there is a lot of hard work that needs to be done
in Texas and a lot of children who need a chance to get a great
education."(See the education crisis no one is talking about.)

But what about the fact, I responded, that on the National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP), Texas' fourth- and eighth-graders substantially
outperformed their peers in Chicago in reading and math?

"I would have to look at all the details, but there are real challenges in
Texas. And like every other state, they should be addressed openly and
honestly as in Illinois, as in Chicago, and everywhere else."

Confused? Me too, and I do this for a living. Overall, Texas students scored
right around the national averages in reading and math on the NAEP. And
according to an Aug. 17 report by the group that administers the ACT
college-admissions exam, Texas high school graduates only narrowly trail
national averages for college readiness. True, the national averages aren't
great, but Texas is right there with the pack. So why is Duncan dissing the
Lone Star State? Its minority students outperform minority students in
Chicago, albeit by smaller margins. And with a high school graduation rate
of about 73%, Texas may be slightly below the national average, but it's
doing a lot better than Chicago, which only graduates about 56% of its
students.



Read more here:
http://www.time.com/time/nation/article/0,8599,2089503,00.html



In my opinion the former head of the Chicago School system only has the
right to talk smack about Atlanta and DC (Is this the best we can do as
secretary of education?).  Anyway, I know why he's suddenly started dissing
Texas.  Do you?


J

-

We want one class of persons to have a liberal education, and we want
another class of persons, a very much larger class, of necessity, in every
society, to forego the privileges of a liberal education and fit themselves
to perform specific difficult manual tasks. - Woodrow Wilson


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