logo
Has America Given Up on Children's Learning?

Has America Given Up on Children's Learning?

New York Times10-05-2025

What happened to learning as a national priority?
For decades, both Republicans and Democrats strove to be seen as champions of student achievement. Politicians believed pushing for stronger reading and math skills wasn't just a responsibility, it was potentially a winning electoral strategy.
At the moment, though, it seems as though neither party, nor even a single major political figure, is vying to claim that mantle.
President Trump has been fixated in his second term on imposing ideological obedience on schools.
On the campaign trail, he vowed to 'liberate our children from the Marxist lunatics and perverts who have infested our educational system.'Since taking office, he has pursued this goal with startling energy — assaulting higher education while adopting a strategy of neglect toward the federal government's traditional role in primary and secondary schools. He has canceled federal exams that measure student progress, and ended efforts to share knowledge with schools about which teaching strategies lead to the best results. A spokeswoman for the administration said that low test scores justify cuts in federal spending. 'What we are doing right now with education is clearly not working,' she said.
Mr. Trump has begun a bevy of investigations into how schools handle race and transgender issues, and has demanded that the curriculum be 'patriotic' — a priority he does not have the power to enact, since curriculum is set by states and school districts.
None of it adds up to an agenda on learning.
Democrats, for their part, often find themselves standing up for a status quo that seems to satisfy no one. Governors and congressional leaders are defending the Department of Education as Mr. Trump has threatened to abolish it. Liberal groups are suing to block funding cuts. When Kamala Harris was running for president last year, she spoke about student loan forgiveness and resisting right-wing book bans. But none of that amounts to an agenda on learning, either.
All of this is true despite the fact that reading scores are the lowest they have been in decades, after a pandemic that devastated children by shuttering their schools and sending them deeper and deeper into the realm of screens and social media. And it is no wonder Americans are increasingly cynical about higher education. Forty percent of students who start college do not graduate, often leaving with debt and few concrete skills.
'Right now, there are no education goals for the country,' said Arne Duncan, who served as President Barack Obama's first secretary of education after running Chicago's public school system. 'There are no metrics to measure goals, there are no strategies to achieve those goals and there is no public transparency.'
Michael Petrilli, the president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, a center-right think tank, and a former education official under President George W. Bush, agreed. 'There is no talk of achievement gaps, and little talk even of upward mobility or opportunity,' he said.
Vicious debates over critical race theory and D.E.I. have put education at the center of our politics. And yet, these conversations are so often indifferent to the data showing that when it comes to academic learning and social development, too many children and teenagers are suffering.
But despite the lack of national direction, an energetic group of educators, parents and researchers is advancing an ambitious agenda for learning. It is centered around one big idea: The breadth, depth and quality of the curriculum matter.
How Education Reform Died
Many Americans will recall that on the morning of Sept. 11, 2001, President Bush was in a second-grade classroom, smiling wanly as children read a book called 'My Pet Goat.'
What they may not remember is why Mr. Bush was there, at Emma E. Booker Elementary School in Sarasota, Fla., on that morning. Booker was — and is — an ordinary public school, which served mostly Black children from low-income families. The president was promoting No Child Left Behind, which he was struggling to get through Congress. It would eventually pass with bipartisan support, instituting a national program of annual standardized testing in reading and math.
While Mr. Obama critiqued how N.C.L.B. was carried out, he agreed with its core vision and advanced it. States were prodded to adopt the Common Core, a set of shared curriculum standards, which brought changes like more thesis-driven writing assignments and a greater emphasis on conceptual understanding in math.
In those years, Washington sought to hold educators accountable for raising students' scores on tests linked to the new standards. Schools could be labeled 'failing.' Teachers with low evaluation scores could even lose their tenure protections.
It worked, at least for a time. Achievement in reading and math increased, especially among the lowest-performing students. But tying punishments to test scores led to a predictable outcome: a curriculum that, in too many schools, centered on test prep. Students practiced reading short passages and answering multiple choice questions about those passages, over and over again. And with principals focused intently on raising scores in reading and math, they whittled away time for social studies and science.
All of this contributed to a potent anti-education-reform movement, led by teachers and parents. On the right, there was angry resistance to any kind of federal mandate over local schools. On the left, a vocal group of parents began to refuse standardized tests; in 2015, 20 percent of students in New York opted out of state exams.
The politics of top-down school accountability had become untenable. Later that year, Mr. Obama signed the Every Student Succeeds Act, largely unraveling his own education agenda. Bipartisan school reform was dead.
Since then, Republicans have embraced a free-market vision of parental rights, in which as many tax dollars as possible are freed to help parents pay for private-school tuition, home-schooling and for-profit virtual schooling. That movement accelerated during the Covid-19 pandemic, when conservative parents organized to resist school closures, mask mandates and progressive ideas about race and gender in the curriculum, picking up support from some centrists and liberals along the way.
Over the past five years, the number of students using some form of private school voucher doubled, to more than 1 million. That number is expected to continue to grow quickly.
Voucher advocates once argued that school choice would move children into academically superior schools, as measured by test scores. Not any more. Now, their highest goods are parental control and satisfaction.
Over the same time period, Democrats drew closer to their traditional allies, the teachers' unions. During the 1990s and early 2000s, the party had engaged in a constructive internal debate on whether to expand the number of public charter schools, an idea that Mr. Obama supported. Many charters were built around the conviction that poor children deserve an academically rigorous education — but they largely were not unionized. President Joe Biden, a staunch labor ally, marginalized the charter-school sector, despite the fact that it has created thousands of quality public schools.
Instead, Democrats focused on investing in teacher pay and improving school buildings. Progressives spoke frequently about schools as community centers filled with counselors and health clinics, and less frequently about reading comprehension or algebra.
Health and social supports — even nicer buildings — do help children learn. But as Democrats tried to address poverty and inequality, they sometimes minimized schools' core functions of learning, socialization and child-care while parents work. This tendency contributed greatly to the party's inaction in the face of the unions' push for extended remote learning.
The public schools superintendent in Seattle, Brent Jones, whose system was closed for 18 months, has framed that period as, essentially, a triumph.
'I saw it as a forced opportunity to step back,' he said. 'We were called upon, frankly, to expand our mission to include many other things: nutritional, social, emotional, mental health. There was a cry for support. Schools stepped into that gap.'
Maximizing Learning
In one classroom, in northeast Louisiana, you can see several ideas that have emerged far from the spotlight of national politics.
One recent afternoon at Highland Elementary School, where 70 percent of students qualify for free or reduced-price lunch, a diverse group of fifth-graders sat, rapt, as their teacher, Lauren Cascio, introduced a key insight: that the Renaissance, the Scientific Revolution and the Reformation all occurred during the same period of human history.
Ms. Cascio reviewed vocabulary words that students would need: heretic, rational, skepticism, heliocentric. Then, over the course of an hour, 10- and 11-year-olds broke into groups to discuss why Leonardo da Vinci was interested in human anatomy. They wrote about how the ideas of Copernicus and Galileo differed from those of the ancient Greeks.
Unlike in many elementary-school classrooms, the students did not have computers or tablets on their desks. They had open books, which they were avidly marking up with highlighters and pencils.
The work in Louisiana has been celebrated by the Knowledge Matters Campaign, an effort led by Barbara Davidson, a policy advocate and veteran of the Department of Education under Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. Ms. Davidson supported the goals of No Child Left Behind. That is why she feels a responsibility now to correct for that era's excesses. Knowledge Matters tries to draw attention to schools that demonstrate strong reading results, often through teaching a notably rigorous, history-heavy curriculum to elementary school students.
Ms. Davidson has worked to amplify the ideas of a loosely organized network of educators, curriculum-writers, parents and local policymakers who are rejecting ideological approaches to education, and instead, are focused on how to maximize learning.
It starts with reading. One positive development of the past decade has been a shift toward a research-backed focus on structured phonics in the early grades — to successful effect. But now, some of the attention has shifted to additional aspects of literacy instruction that are backed by cognitive science, and crucial for turning beginning readers into proficient ones; namely, the finding that to become a good reader, and thus a well-educated worker and citizen, children need a strong vocabulary and knowledge about the world. The subjects that best build vocabulary and knowledge are social studies and science — the exact subjects that the Bush-Obama reforms often stripped from the school day.
But students face an additional challenge that didn't exist during the education battles of the 2000s: ubiquitous screens. Children cannot learn to focus their attention on books or anything else if they are constantly distracted by addictive technology. The push to ban phones in schools transcends partisanship, and parent activism has helped a dozen states ban or limit cellphones in schools. Still, many educators say that screens remain a problem.
About 90 percent of schools now provide a computer or tablet for every student, up from 45 percent before the pandemic. It is common for children as young as 8 to spend an hour or more of the school day staring at screens.
Some teachers are moving in-class reading and writing back to paper. Among them is Jon Gold, a middle school history teacher in Providence, R.I., who frequently writes on how to enrich the curriculum and use technology in smarter ways. He now requires his students to close their laptops and read on paper. 'Their reading comprehension is stronger,' he said.
The push to emphasize learning is not just about the liberal arts, though. Developing a mature attention span is also crucial for work. The previous generation of education reformers sought to enroll as many students as possible in four-year colleges. In many ways, the standard-bearer was the KIPP network of charter schools, whose mantra was 'college starts in kindergarten.'
The bachelor's degree still accelerates lifetime earnings, and KIPP leaders still encourage students to strive for it. But given the persistence of high college dropout rates and the burden of student debt, KIPP teachers and counselors are increasingly open to students pursuing remunerative career paths that do not require a four-year degree — think electrical installation, HVAC specialists and radiography technicians.
High schools need much more help on this from employers and government, many educators say — establishing apprenticeships that allow teenagers to learn in real work places, and collecting data on what types of vocational programs are most rigorous, as measured by a track record of landing graduates in decently paid jobs.
The Politics of Learning
Satisfaction with public education is at a quarter-century low, and enrollment in public schools has declined since the pandemic. According to polls, concerns about the curriculum are one reason. But large majorities of voters are enthusiastic about schools doing a better job at teaching the core academic subjects and civics, as well as introducing more work force training. So why aren't politicians responding to voters' concerns when it comes to learning?
Some elected officials — especially younger ones — are.
Jake Auchincloss, a House Democrat from the Boston suburbs, has urged his party to apologize for pandemic school closures. He has advanced a number of proposals to more heavily regulate and tax social media companies, and has said the money should be used to provide every public school student in America one-on-one tutoring.
On the Republican side, Senator Tom Cotton, like Mr. Trump, wants to tax elite university endowments, which he argues are not serving most American students. He envisions using the money to finance a $9,000 voucher for high school graduates pursuing workplace apprenticeships, and to offer incentives to companies to hire those trainees into permanent jobs.
The country is deeply polarized. But a survey of some of the most exciting work happening in schools shows that educators and parents have the ability to embrace new ideas and come together around the goal of giving the next generation a quality education. It could even be the beginning of a political platform.

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Trump won't call ‘whacked out' Walz after Minnesota shooter charged
Trump won't call ‘whacked out' Walz after Minnesota shooter charged

Politico

time15 minutes ago

  • Politico

Trump won't call ‘whacked out' Walz after Minnesota shooter charged

President Donald Trump said he would not 'waste time' calling Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz after a shooter attacked two Democratic state lawmakers — killing one — over the weekend. 'I think the governor of Minnesota is so whacked out, I'm not calling him. Why would I call him?' Trump told reporters aboard Air Force One on his way back from the G7 summit on Tuesday. 'He's a mess. So I could be nice and call, but why waste time?' the president added. A spokesperson for Walz, a Democrat who was former Vice President Kamala Harris' running mate in the 2024 election, did not immediately respond to a request for comment. On Saturday, former state House Speaker Melissa Hortman and her husband Mark were shot and killed in what Walz called a 'politically-motivated assassination,' while state Sen. John Hoffman and his wife were seriously injured by the same shooter. Authorities arrested Vance Boelter on Sunday after a two-day manhunt. The 57-year-old has been charged with six counts in total for murder, stalking and firearms offenses, according to court documents. Walz has been a sharp critic of Trump since starting his second term. But historically, presidents have offered support to state and local leaders in the wake of violent tragedies, regardless of party affiliation. Following the 2011 shooting of Rep. Gabby Giffords (D-Ariz.), then-President Barack Obama offered Republican Gov. Jan Brewer 'the full resources of the federal government.' When a shooter attempted to assassinate then-candidate Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania, last year, former President Joe Biden called Trump to check on his condition. And Trump himself called Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, a Democrat, about a week after an arson attack on the governor's mansion earlier this year. In the wake of Saturday's violence, the entirety of Minnesota's congressional delegation, including Democratic Sens. Tina Smith and Amy Klobuchar and House GOP Whip Rep. Tom Emmer, issued a joint statement condemning the attack. 'Today we speak with one voice to express our outrage, grief and condemnation of this horrible attack on public servants. There is no place in our democracy for politically-motivated violence,' they said.

Trump's Deportation Policy Collides With Realities of American Labor Market
Trump's Deportation Policy Collides With Realities of American Labor Market

Newsweek

time16 minutes ago

  • Newsweek

Trump's Deportation Policy Collides With Realities of American Labor Market

Based on facts, either observed and verified firsthand by the reporter, or reported and verified from knowledgeable sources. President Donald Trump's mixed messaging on immigration enforcement appears to have has caused concern among his base, fear in Democrat-run cities and confusion at the White House. At the end of last week, Trump reportedly told Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to pause most raids at agricultural facilities and hospitality venues. On Sunday, he said he would increase targeted actions in so-called sanctuary cities. Then on Monday night, the Washington Post reported that the pause on farms, restaurants and hotels was being walked back. The mixed signals on the president's signature domestic policy caused some dismay among those on the right who made it clear they wanted illegal immigrants out of the U.S., regardless of the jobs they were doing, just as the president promised during his campaign. "If ICE is being told to go easy or exempt all of agriculture, meatpacking, hotels, and restaurants from enforcement, first of all how many illegal aliens are left to enforce the law against?" Mark Krikorian, director of the Center for Immigration Studies, a right-leaning thinktank in Washington, D.C., told Newsweek Monday. "If ICE at the same time is supposed to step up enforcement in sanctuary jurisdictions, can they raid restaurants in New York? Can they raid farms in California? Which of those two directives, to exempt certain industries but focus on sanctuary jurisdictions, which of those take priority?" A farmworker wears protective layers while gathering produce in the summer heat, before receiving heat awareness education outreach from the TODEC Legal Center, on August 2, 2023 near Hemet, California. Inset: US President Donald Trump... A farmworker wears protective layers while gathering produce in the summer heat, before receiving heat awareness education outreach from the TODEC Legal Center, on August 2, 2023 near Hemet, California. Inset: US President Donald Trump attends an arrival ceremony during the Group of Seven (G7) Summit at the Pomeroy Kananaskis Mountain Lodge in Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada on June 16, 2025. More Mario Tama/LUDOVIC MARIN/POOL/AFP via Getty Images Are ICE Raids On Or Off? Krikorian's questions get at the heart of the complexities of carrying out mass deportations in a country dependent on migrant labor. Trump campaigned on a promise to deport upwards of 11 million people in the country without legal status. While originally focused on those with criminal records, experts repeatedly warned that a deportation effort on this scale would sweep up undocumented immigrants without criminal records — including those who make America's farming and hospitalities industries run. On Thursday, Trump appeared to concede that his sweeping immigration enforcement efforts were hurting some of those very industries, including agriculture, hospitality and dining. "Our great Farmers and people in the Hotel and Leisure business have been stating that our very aggressive policy on immigration is taking very good, long time workers away from them, with those jobs being almost impossible to replace," Trump wrote in a Truth Social post. "In many cases the Criminals allowed into our Country by the VERY Stupid Biden Open Borders Policy are applying for those jobs. This is not good. We must protect our Farmers, but get the CRIMINALS OUT OF THE USA. Changes are coming!" If Trump were to ease up on workplace raids, he will be going against his base in Republican-majority states who voted for the removal of illegal immigrants writ large. But many red states also have vast rural areas that see immigrants employed on farms, as well as urban and suburban regions that depend on migrants to staff jobs in healthcare and hospitality. "The president himself is not a restrictionist. He's not a low immigration guy. He's a regular Republican, 'legal good, illegal bad' guy on immigration," Krikorian said. "But his voters are immigration restrictionists. In other words, regular voters who voted for Trump want less immigration overall. Not just illegal but legal, too." On Monday night, DHS reportedly walked back the directive it had sent to agents days earlier, with the department's leads telling ICE and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) that the White House did not support the pause, per the Post. Meanwhile, Trump's deputy chief of staff and immigration policy architect, Stephen Miller, has been clear that he wants to see around 3,000 arrests per day from ICE. Exempting workplaces would likely hinder that already difficult goal. Mixed Messaging From Trump The president also posted on Sunday night that he was ordering ICE, with its already strained resources, to increase its efforts in sanctuary cities such as Chicago, New York City and Los Angeles – areas which voted strongly in favor of Democratic candidate and former Vice President Kamala Harris in November's presidential election. "This muddies the president's message about deporting the largest number of illegal aliens ever," Krikorian said. "That's a problem both internally, as far as giving direction to what ICE agents are supposed to do, an externally as to who is going to bother self-deporting now, if Trump has said a huge share of the illegal population doesn't have to flee?" DHS has urged those without legal status to self-deport, with reports over the weekend that upwards of a million people had chosen to do so before ICE could detain them. That data has not yet been made public. Law enforcement stand guard outside the Federal Building during a protest on Friday, June 13, 2025, in Los Angeles. A federal appeals court ruled on June 12 that the Trump administration can maintain control of... Law enforcement stand guard outside the Federal Building during a protest on Friday, June 13, 2025, in Los Angeles. A federal appeals court ruled on June 12 that the Trump administration can maintain control of the California National Guard, overturning a lower court ruling that U.S. President Donald Trump's deployment of troops to Los Angeles without Governor Gavin Newsom's consent as unlawful. More Ringo Chiu via AP Krikorian said he believed there was a fight going on within the White House over what the priorities were on deportations, with Trump potentially throwing ideas out on social media and his staff struggling to keep up with the latest conflicting marching orders. This has the effect of sending illegal immigrants and their employers the same message that previous administrations had, in Krikorian's view: that it was OK to skirt the law. "If you're going to restore integrity in the immigration system, then you're going to have to inconvenience people who have profited from the earlier arrangements," he said. When Newsweek asked DHS how it would continue to deliver on what the president promised while protecting American businesses, and whether policies would differ state-to-state, Assistant Secretary Tricia McLaughlin said the department will "follow the President's direction and continue to work to get the worst of the worst criminal illegal aliens off of America's streets." Where's Congress? Getting a grasp on deportation numbers remains difficult under this administration, but pressure is being placed on ICE to triply daily arrest numbers. Congress is being asked to dramatically increase funding for the agency, but longer-term solutions to keep border crossings low and tighten vetting requirements remain unknown. "I really think that Trump's comments are a reflection of the decades of Congressional inaction on immigration," Kathleen Bush-Joseph, policy analyst at the nonpartisan Migration Policy Institute, told Newsweek. "Because these industries are relying on immigrant workers, but they have not been provided a pathway to lawful status, and they have remained in the country, for many cases, for many years." Trump's back-and-forth over farming and hospitality worksite arrests will not change the status of those illegal immigrants. If or when the president decides to act on tightening legal immigration laws, or to give undocumented immigrants some kind of amnesty, remains to be seen, and bigger changes like this would likely need Congressional approval. Lawmakers have reintroduced the bipartisan Farm Workforce Modernization Act, which would establish an easier pathway for immigrants to gain legal status to work on American farms, but widespread changes to improve the country's legal immigration system rarely make it all the way to the Oval Office. Bush-Joseph said Congress is currently being responsive to the president's wishes when it comes to ICE funding, so it could be the right time to act. "So would Congress also be willing to move on more standalone immigration legislation, like they did with the Laken Riley Act, is a question, but of course the topic of legalization remains extremely politicized," she said.

Federal judge strikes down Trump cuts to NIH medical research grants linked to diversity, gender
Federal judge strikes down Trump cuts to NIH medical research grants linked to diversity, gender

CBS News

time17 minutes ago

  • CBS News

Federal judge strikes down Trump cuts to NIH medical research grants linked to diversity, gender

The firings and billion-dollar research grant cuts at NIH in Trump's first 100 days back in office Washington — A federal judge struck down sweeping Trump administration orders that resulted in the cancellation of hundreds of National Institutes of Health research grants because they were linked to topics like diversity, gender identity and vaccine hesitancy. "The ideologically motivated directives to terminate grants alleged to constitute DEI, 'gender ideology,' or other forbidden topics were, in fact, arbitrary and capricious, and have now been ruled unlawful," Dr. Peter Lurie, head of the Center for Science in the Public Interest said in a statement Tuesday. Lurie's group was among those that filed the lawsuit. Judge William Young of the U.S. District Court in Massachusetts capped a trial Monday for multiple lawsuits that were filed against the Trump administration: one by a coalition of public health groups and another by several Democratic state attorneys general. It is possible that the Trump administration could seek to block the ruling by Young, who was nominated to the court by President Reagan in 1985. "HHS is exploring all legal options, including filing an appeal and moving to stay the order," Andrew Nixon, communications director for the Department of Health and Human Services, said in a statement. Nixon said the department "stands by its decision to end funding for research that prioritized ideological agendas over scientific rigor and meaningful outcomes for the American people," saying the department wanted taxpayer dollars to support "gold standard science" and not "divisive DEI mandates or gender ideology." The court has not yet published Young's order in the case, but notes from the clerk announced that the challenged directives have been vacated and that the Trump administration was ordered to "promptly comply." Separate court cases are underway for other cuts to medical research funding sought by the Trump administration, like the terminations of funding to universities like Harvard and Columbia that have disrupted studies for cancer and diseases. Another federal judge in Massachusetts earlier this year blocked the NIH from implementing a policy change that would have cut funding for research overhead costs, which is now being appealed by the Trump administration. "Today's court ruling halted the cancellation of millions of dollars that have already been awarded to address important public health needs and will allow funding for life-saving medical research to continue," the Massachusetts attorney general's office said Monday in a statement. They said that the judge had "denounced these actions" at the trial, saying he had "never seen a record where racial discrimination was so palpable" and would "be blind not to call it out." Young's ruling came after opponents challenged the process used by the Trump administration to come up with and implement its steep cuts to grants, saying the law requires federal agencies changing their policies to "supply a reasoned analysis for the change." Flaws cited by a trial brief brought by the groups included the lack of a definition for what qualified as banned "DEI studies" and NIH Acting Director Dr. Matthew Memoli having spent only minutes deciding which grants and funding opportunities to cut. "Defendants do not explain how lightning speed implementation of the Directives could possibly reflect reasoned decisionmaking," they wrote.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store