U.S. Secretary of Education John B. King Jr. urged advocates of public education to put aside their differences and work together to continue to build on improved student outcomes.
鈥淔or all who believe that strong, equitable public education is central to a healthy democracy and a thriving economy, now is the moment for us to set aside the policy differences that we have let divide us, and move forward together courageously to defend and extend this fundamental American institution,鈥 King said.
King鈥檚 year-long tenure has been marked by big fights between different groups, all of whom consider themselves advocates of public education. Civil rights organizations and teachers鈥 unions, for instance, have tussled over everything from testing to a wonky set of spending rules for the Every Student Succeeds Act.
But those groups are to help from the Trump administration. Betsy DeVos, the President-elect鈥檚 pick for education secretary, has been a long-time advocate for school choice, including for vouchers to private and religious schools.
King also went through some of what he sees as the Obama administration鈥檚 accomplishments on education, including greater college enrollment by minority students, and record high graduation rates. (However, experts say it鈥檚 unclear if higher graduation rates are really a sign that students are learning more, and tough to say whether Obama鈥檚 policies can be credited with improving them.)
During a question-and-answer period, King was asked whether he鈥檚 worried that President-elect Donald Trump鈥檚 administration would weaken the Education Department鈥檚 office for civil rights, which helps ensure that schools are providing an adequate and appropriate education to English-language learners and students.
King noted that past administrations haven鈥檛 always used the office to its fullest potential. But he said, advocates were able to put pressure on the feds to go
And he was asked about charter schools, which a Government Accountability Office study found often decline to enroll populations of students that are difficult to teach, including English-language learners and students in special education.
鈥淐harter authorizing matters a lot,鈥 King said. Some states he said, have 鈥渄elinquent鈥 charter authorizers. 鈥淲e all need to be active in the state legislative discussion. We鈥檝e got to lift up the examples of schools that are doing thing鈥 and taking in different groups of students, King said.
The charter landscape in Michigan, DeVos鈥 home state, has been described as everything from 鈥渁 thousand flowers blooming鈥 to the 鈥渨ild, wild west鈥 in part because it has a patchwork of authorizers. .
File photo of John B. King Jr.