Opinion - To improve K-12 education, Linda McMahon should target radicalized education schools
Secretary of Education Linda McMahon started as the co-founder of World Wrestling Entertainment. Her first target for a knockout as secretary should be radicalized education schools.
With the recent publication of the National Assessment of Educational Progress report, Americans are increasingly aware of the absolute failure of our K-12 public education system to produce kids with the requisite knowledge and skills to compete in the global economy.
McMahon might be tempted to focus like a laser on raising test scores in the here and now. Undoubtedly, she should take immediate steps to reverse the downward spiral.
However, she should also set her aim for teacher colleges that produce unprepared and politicized educators. Student achievement will languish as long as education schools are churning out teachers who see their primary roles as developing the next generation of social justice activists.
When I entered my own doctoral program in education in January 2018, I was taken aback at how little foundational scholarship was required. Most coursework relied on far-fetched ideological theories rather than providing rigorous data-informed resources to improve student learning.
Paulo Friere's 'Pedagogy of the Oppressed' served as an education bible, and was required reading in most classes. Friere declares, 'No pedagogy which is truly liberating can remain distant from the oppressed by treating them as unfortunates and by presenting for their emulation models from among the oppressors.'
In other words, the role of teachers in their minds is not to teach kids to be successful, but to empower students to overthrow the system that created their success.
Today's education schools are training teachers to 'decolonize the curriculum,' a pedagogy based on stripping the curriculum of all scholarly influences and promoting perpetual revolution.
And the results speak for themselves — our kids are failing.
More and more teachers are speaking out about how their teacher education programs failed to prepare them to teach students how to read and write.
According to the U.S. Department of Education, a second grade teacher in Utah stated, 'My college education and teacher prep program left me prepared to address how members of the LGBT+ community and students of color may feel inside of a school, but blindsided about what to do if a student cannot read in third grade. My preparation was filled with diversity, equity, and inclusion training and very little practical support.'
In 2022, the Center for Organizational Research and Education published a report that found that California spent upwards of $36 million on diversity, equity, and inclusion programs in K-12 schools. What does California have to show for its expenditure? According to EdSource, only 7 percent of Black students there are proficient or advanced in reading. Latino students scored slightly higher, with 19 percent scoring proficient or advanced. Looking at all of California's fourth graders, only 31 percent scored proficient or advanced in reading.
In a letter posted in 2024, the dean of UCLA's School of Education and Information Studies wrote, 'Since the mid-1990s, UCLA's Departments of Education and Information Studies have been housed together within the same school, continuing each department's long commitment to using teaching, scholarship, and service to dismantle systemic inequity and increase social justice.' Dean Christina A. Christie's letter continues to tout the department's commitment to equity and justice, but fails to comment on the importance of teaching students how to read.
UCLA is not alone in its negligence. Founded in 1870, Hunter College hosts New York state's oldest teacher preparation program. Hunter's School of Education holds 'that the transformative power of education, an essential tenet of democracy, can only be realized by interrupting societal inequities and injustices.' Only 31 percent of New York's fourth graders are reading at proficient or advanced levels.
McMahon has the opportunity to turn our teacher training pipeline around. First, she can strongly encourage that K-12 school preparation programs possess requisite skills on the basics required to teach their subject matter. The Department of Education possesses the power of the purse and can withhold funding from universities that fail in their basic mission.
McMahon can expose the extreme agendas in today's education schools, putting university presidents on notice that this radicalized approach to educating teachers must stop. And alongside the Department of Education, congressional leaders must focus on recalcitrant education schools' deans and failing to adequately prepare teachers.
Only when teacher's colleges go back to the basics of training teachers to teach kids to read and write will we see improvements in our kids' learning. McMahon has a unique opportunity to deliver a knockout in order to save American education.
Brandy Shufutinsky, EdD, is the director of Education and Community Engagement with the North American Values Institute.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
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Hamilton Spectator
2 hours ago
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He was arrested while trying to join an oversight tour of a 1,000-bed immigrant detention center. A trespass charge was later dropped, but he sued interim U.S. Attorney Alina Habba over the dropped prosecution last week. 'I think all this stuff is designed to be a distraction,' he said recently. 'But I also think that us not responding is consent. Our silence is consent. If we continue to allow these people to do these things and get away with it, right, they will continue to do them over and over and over again.' In one of his final campaign ads in Spanish, he used footage from the arrest and the demonstrations to cast himself as a reluctant warrior, with text over the images saying he is 'El Único,' Spanish for 'the only one,' who confronts Trump. Confident Republicans Former state assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli is making his third bid for governor, and Trump's backing may help. But Chris Russell, a Ciattarelli campaign consult, said Democrats' habit of misreading of Latino voters might matter more. 'Democrats believe the key to winning these folks over is identity politics.' He added: 'They're missing the boat.' Ciattarelli faces four challengers for the GOP nomination in Tuesday's primary. During a telephone rally for Ciattarelli las week, Trump called New Jersey a 'high-tax, high-crime sanctuary state,' accusing local officials of not cooperating with federal immigration authorities. But Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop, another contender for the Democratic nomination, said he is not entirely convinced the Democratic party will keep losing support in New Jersey. He thinks the gubernatorial race will be a referendum on current Gov. Phil Murphy. Immigration and the economy may enter some Hispanic voters' thinking, but how that plays out is anybody's guess. 'The Latino community is two things in New Jersey. It is growing significantly, and it is a jump ball. There's nobody that has an absolute inside track.' —- Gomez Licon reported from Fort Lauderdale, Fla. Error! Sorry, there was an error processing your request. There was a problem with the recaptcha. Please try again. You may unsubscribe at any time. By signing up, you agree to our terms of use and privacy policy . This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google privacy policy and terms of service apply. Want more of the latest from us? Sign up for more at our newsletter page .


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
It's the economy, estúpido: New Jersey governor's race tests Democrats' efforts to win back Latinos
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Josh Gottheimer and Mikie Sherrill, Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop, Newark Mayor Ras Baraka, New Jersey Education Association president and former Montclair Mayor Sean Spiller and former state Senate President Steve Sweeney. Although Trump made closing U.S. borders a central promise of his campaign, his economic message hit home with Latinos. More Hispanics saw inflation as the most important concern last fall than white voters, AP VoteCast showed. That lesson has been taken to heart in this year's campaign, with strategists, unions, organizers and politicians pivoting away from immigration and putting pocketbook concerns at the forefront of their appeals. 'At the end of the day, if you're worried about paying your bills and being safe at night, everything else is secondary,' Rep. Gottheimer said in an interview. 'I think that is front and center in the Latino community.' 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Ana Maria Hill, of Colombian and Mexican descent, is the New Jersey state director of the Service Employees International Union Local 32BJ, where half of the members are Hispanic. Hill says raising the minimum wage and imposing new regulations to cap rent increases are popular among those she has been calling to support Newark Mayor Baraka. She says Democrats lost ground by not acknowledging real-world struggles that hit Latinos hard after inflation spiked following the pandemic. 'I think where we lost voters last year was when workers asked 'What's going on with the economy?' We said 'the economy is great.' And it could be true, but it's also true that eggs cost $10, right? It's also true that a gallon of milk costs $6.' Taking that lesson to heart, Gottheimer held a press conference at a Latino supermarket in Elizabeth, a vibrant Latino hub south of Newark, against a backdrop of bottles of a corn oil used in many Hispanic kitchens. Sherrill headed to a Colombian restaurant, also in Elizabeth, on Saturday for a 'Get Out the Vote' rally. One of her advisers, Patricia Campos-Medina, a labor activist who ran for the U.S. Senate last year, said candidates who visit Latino businesses and talk about the economic challenges the way Sherrill has done show they get it. 'She has a message that covers a lot of big issues. But when it comes to Latinos, we've been focusing on the economy, affordable housing, transportation, and small business growth,' Campos-Medina said. When state Senate Majority Leader M. Teresa Ruiz, the state's highest-ranking Hispanic official, endorsed Sherrill last week, she cited her advocacy for affordable child care directly, for instance. A candidate's arrest Trump's four months in office have been defined by his aggressive crackdown on illegal immigration. That gave Baraka a chance to seize the spotlight on a non-economic issue as an advocate for immigrant residents in Newark. He was arrested while trying to join an oversight tour of a 1,000-bed immigrant detention center. A trespass charge was later dropped, but he sued interim U.S. Attorney Alina Habba over the dropped prosecution last week. 'I think all this stuff is designed to be a distraction,' he said recently. 'But I also think that us not responding is consent. Our silence is consent. If we continue to allow these people to do these things and get away with it, right, they will continue to do them over and over and over again.' In one of his final campaign ads in Spanish, he used footage from the arrest and the demonstrations to cast himself as a reluctant warrior, with text over the images saying he is 'El Único,' Spanish for 'the only one,' who confronts Trump. Confident Republicans Former state assemblyman Jack Ciattarelli is making his third bid for governor, and Trump's backing may help. But Chris Russell, a Ciattarelli campaign consult, said Democrats' habit of misreading of Latino voters might matter more. 'Democrats believe the key to winning these folks over is identity politics.' He added: 'They're missing the boat.' Ciattarelli faces four challengers for the GOP nomination in Tuesday's primary. During a telephone rally for Ciattarelli las week, Trump called New Jersey a 'high-tax, high-crime sanctuary state," accusing local officials of not cooperating with federal immigration authorities. But Jersey City Mayor Steven Fulop, another contender for the Democratic nomination, said he is not entirely convinced the Democratic party will keep losing support in New Jersey. He thinks the gubernatorial race will be a referendum on current Gov. Phil Murphy. Immigration and the economy may enter some Hispanic voters' thinking, but how that plays out is anybody's guess. 'The Latino community is two things in New Jersey. It is growing significantly, and it is a jump ball. 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The Hill
2 hours ago
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