Arne Duncan: Obama's Education Secretary

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The Associated Press | 12/16/08 05:32 PM | AP

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Education Secretary-designate Arne Duncan smiles as President-elect Barack Obama make the announcement, Tuesday, Dec. 16, 2008, at the Dodge Renaissance Academy in Chicago. (AP Photo)

CHICAGO — President-elect Barack Obama announced Arne Duncan, the head of the Chicago school system, as education secretary Tuesday and declared that failing to improve classroom instruction is "morally unacceptable for our children."

"When it comes to school reform, Arne is the most hands-on of hands-on practitioners," Obama said, making the announcement at a school that he said has made remarkable progress under Duncan's leadership.

"He's not beholden to any one ideology, and he's worked tirelessly to improve teacher quality," Obama said.

Duncan stood nearby, the latest member to be named to the Cabinet of the president-elect. His appointment is subject to Senate confirmation.

"No issue is more pressing than education. ... It is the civil rights issue of our generation," Duncan said in brief remarks.

Obama combined his announcement with a brief news conference in which he refused to say whether he supports the idea of a special election to fill the Senate seat he recently vacated.

Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich has the power to make the appointment, but he was arrested last week and charged with, in effect, trying to enrich himself by appointing a new senator who could help him financially or politically.

Some Democrats have called for a special election, while others prefer to wait for Blagojevich to resign, a step that would allow Lt. Gov. Pat Quinn to appoint a new senator. The second alternative would ensure the seat remains in Democratic hands, and on a faster timetable than a special election would allow.

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Obama cut off a reporter who sought to ask a question about Rep. Rahm Emanuel, the incoming White House chief of staff, who was reportedly heard on a federal wiretap talking with an aide to Blagojevich about potential Senate replacements. The president-elect said he has not been able to confirm that is the case.

Neither Obama nor Emanuel has been accused of any wrongdoing, and the president-elect has said he will make the results of an internal investigation into the matter public soon.

The appointment of Duncan left a handful of Cabinet appointments yet to be made public, and in response to a question, Obama hinted broadly a Republican would be among them.

The posts yet to be filled include secretaries for the departments of Labor, Transportation, Agriculture and Interior, where officials have said Democratic Sen. Ken Salazar of Colorado has been tapped. Nor has Obama named leaders for the intelligence agencies, or a trade representative.

So far, Defense Secretary Robert Gates, a holdover from the Bush administration, is the only Republican member of the incoming Cabinet.

On the economy, the president-elect said the Federal Reserve was "running out of ammunition" in terms of lowering interest rates to combat the recession. He said it was "absolutely critical" that his economic recovery program be put into place to deal with what he called the toughest time economically since the Great Depression.

The Fed was expected to announce the latest in a series of rate cuts later in the day.

Obama spoke of Duncan in glowing terms _ and joked that his longtime friend, a former professional basketball player in Australia, had the superior jump shot.

"In just seven years, he's boosted elementary test scores here in Chicago from 38 percent of students meeting the standards to 67 percent. The dropout rate has gone down every year he's been in charge."

On a key standardized test, Obama said, "the gains of Chicago students have been twice as big as those for students in the rest of the state."

Duncan would take over a sprawling department that has focused during the Bush administration in winning passage and then implementing the president's signature No Child Left Behind education program.

That effort has proven controversial, with supporters saying it is making progress in improving student skills, while local officials complain it focuses too much attention on standardized tests.

Obama said it was time for Washington to move beyond "tired debates" such as whether to approve the use of vouchers for students to attend private schools.

"We cannot continue on like this. It is morally unacceptable for our children and economically untenable for America," said the president-elect.

Duncan has run the country's third-biggest school district since 2001, pushing to boost teacher quality and to improve struggling schools and closing those that fail.

The news conference took place at the Dodge Renaissance Academy on Chicago's West Side, a facility that Duncan shut down and then reopened. Obama and Duncan visited the school together in 2005.

A 44-year-old Harvard graduate, Duncan has played pickup basketball with Obama since the 1990s. Duncan co-captained the Harvard basketball team and played professionally in Australia before beginning his education career.

He ran a nonprofit education organization on Chicago's South Side before going to work in Chicago schools under former superintendent Paul Vallas, now the New Orleans schools chief.

Duncan's nomination will please reform advocates who wanted a big-city schools chief who has sought to hold schools and teachers accountable for student performance; they had backed Duncan or New York's Joel Klein.

These advocates have squared off against teachers' unions in a contentious debate among Democrats over whom Obama should choose. Unions, an influential segment of the party base, wanted a strong advocate for their members such as Obama adviser Linda Darling-Hammond, a Stanford University education professor.

Yet Duncan's nomination may please the unions, who have said Duncan seems willing to work with them.

"Arne Duncan actually reaches out and tries to do things in a collaborative way," Randi Weingarten, head of the 1.4 million-member American Federation of Teachers, said in an interview earlier this month.

Obama managed during his campaign to avoid taking sides in the debate, which centers on accountability and the fate of President George W. Bush's No Child Left Behind law. Duncan also has tried to appeal to both factions; he signed competing manifestos from each side earlier this year.

CHICAGO — President-elect Barack Obama announced Arne Duncan, the head of the Chicago school system, as education secretary Tuesday and declared that failing to improve classroom instruction is ...
CHICAGO — President-elect Barack Obama announced Arne Duncan, the head of the Chicago school system, as education secretary Tuesday and declared that failing to improve classroom instruction is ...
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- Biracial1 I'm a Fan of Biracial1 10 fans permalink

I'm glad that I don't expect the school system to provide 100% of my child's education. If Johnny can't read, when did the parent(s) find out? Will anyone have the courage to put some of the blame on the parents?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:39 PM on 12/16/2008

Amen to that. Parent cooperation and help makes a vast difference. With good parents in some cases the kids already know how to read to some degree before their first day of school. Just read the kid a damn book before bedtime every night.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:01 PM on 12/16/2008
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Billions and billions have been spent on public education..With the teachers'
union wielding such power it will be impossible to "fix" it....just keep pouring
our tax dollars down a rathole, dug by tenured teachers/professors..

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 12/16/2008
- chelliza I'm a Fan of chelliza 6 fans permalink
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You can't honestly believe it is all about the schools and teachers. If kids that don't have parental support, can't speak english and whose parents can't read or write go to a different school, they will suddenly become great students? Suddenly do well? How about drug and alcahol use at home? How about if the parents don't get them to school every day? How about kids who have been moved around to 6 or 7 schools by the time they are in 3rd grade? It is all public education and the teachers fault? Where do you base your expertice in the area? Oh, let me guess, you went to school once so you know all about it.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:33 PM on 12/16/2008

There are many problems with the schools.

A major one is blaming everything on the teachers but putting no accountability on the parents. It doesn't matter how good a teacher is if the parents don't make the kid do homework, play a part in discipline (since teachers no longer have the power to do pretty much anything anymore), or even getting the kid to actually show up every day.

The reforms need to be a compromise between the teachers and the reformers - just trying to take things away from teachers will just drive more and more qualified people away from an already undesirable profession.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:52 PM on 12/16/2008

Amen!!!!!!!!

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:25 PM on 12/16/2008
- dadumdee I'm a Fan of dadumdee 8 fans permalink

Why would students want to learn anything when the liars, cheats, theives, hustlers, and violent people rule the world? We must really underestimate our kids. Kids learn predominately through modeled behavior, so lets look at what they see before we start acting like their behavior is an anomaly. We have an incurious President who made it to where he is through election fraud and his family connections. We have an economy that rewards wealth and deceit. We have a popular culture that is filled with rich inheritants, talentless exhibitionist, and violent braggarts. Our education system is predicated on the idea of social mobility within a meritocracy. It is dependent on the mantra that hard work is rewarded by money, power, prestige, etc. It is falling apart because it is evident to so many kids that hard work has nothing to do with success and being rewarded. This cynacism towards actual achievement is reinforced by everyone from the disruptive student who gets school staff's attention, to the wack rapper who makes multiple millions bragging about being a social misfit, to industries (prison, military/defense, telecommunications, drug prohibition) who's profitability is related to their perpertration of harm to America. If a kid sees a teacher pouring her heart and soul in to a job only to be broke and run down, then sees a CEO run their company in to the ground and rob their shareholders but escape with millions of dollars, who do you think they will emulate?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 12/16/2008
- KarateKid I'm a Fan of KarateKid 436 fans permalink
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I think PE Obama could have made a better pick, who knows. The bottom line is we have a bunch of politicians who claim they support education when they're running for office, but they don't fund it like they need to once they get elected. Most of THEIR kids go to private schools, so what do they care?

We used to have a well rounded educational system. Now, it's all about test scores. It is sad when subjects like social studies, science and language arts are taught for 1/2 hour a week. You can see the results just by reading the comments; most cannot spell or punctuate properly, and the grammar is an abomination. We have a Press Secretary that is clueless about the Cuban Missle Crisis.

No Child Left Behind is but the latest magic bullet in a long line of programs intended to be the panacea, but it falls well short.

The bottom line is whoever is in the position will largely be a figurehead and won't be a difference maker and it may be unreasonable to expect that from ANY Secretary, given the enormous problems public schools face: lack of funding, a dramatic drop off in staff development and teacher re-training, parents who don't care and treat schools like babysitting, disparity of the "have" and "have not" schools, lack of real teacher accountability, etc. etc.

Fixing public schools will be as massive an undertaking as fixing our economy without a manufacturing base.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 PM on 12/16/2008

Good comment, I just have two minor points to make:

1. It's Cuban "Missile" Crisis.

2. I'm a stickler for spelling, grammar and punctuation, although I do not by any means have perfect knowledge of either of the latter. However, I have noticed that with the advent of computers and quick, easy communication by way of a keyboard, some really common errors have crept into my typing. For example, I often find it easier while speedtyping some thought I don't want to lose before I can get it out, to simply put a comma between clauses and continue a run-on sentence. I know better, but it's faster and easier. I also find myself typing an apostrophe into "it's" when it's not called for, or typing there for their or they're and vice versa. Sometimes I go back and clean it up, sometimes not. And sometimes when I proofread, I miss some common errors until it's already posted. A linguist once told me, spoken language is correct because the speaker is the determiner of what they want to say and how they want to say it, but written language is a code and must be put on paper correctly if it is to be interpreted correctly. (I have seen legal cases turn on a misplaced comma in a contract, for instance.) But it does seem that our language is deteriorating. If we can't get educators to care about it, I guess there's nothing to be done.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 03:50 PM on 12/16/2008
- FirstShirt I'm a Fan of FirstShirt 66 fans permalink

"Obama cut off a reporter who sought to ask a question about Rep. Rahm Emanuel, the incoming White House chief of staff, who was reportedly heard on a federal wiretap talking with an aide to Blagojevich about potential Senate replacements."

Change you can believe in. No more of the same old faces and same old behavior.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:23 PM on 12/16/2008

It is change, it's the press who is desperately hoping there is a scandal where there is none.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:03 PM on 12/16/2008
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So you don't think the Blago thing is a scandal??

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:11 PM on 12/16/2008

Great. Obama has now put in charge of the Department of Education someone who could not get Chicago's proficiency testing above that of third-world countries. Check out the UPI story on 10/23/08 "The professor said with only 13 percent of eight-graders in Chicago public schools earning math proficiency scores, the city's school system ranked near third world countries like Bulgaria, Cyprus, Jordan and Macedonia."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:21 PM on 12/16/2008

And how does that compare to other major cities in the USA?

And how does that compare to CPS before Duncan came along? It wouldn't surprise me if it was an improvement.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:04 PM on 12/16/2008

I think it's kinda sad that there seems to be no place at Obama's table for Howard Dean. And I'm not alone in this view.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 PM on 12/16/2008

I've tried to find any news on this and nothing at all. It appears Howard Dean has dropped out of sight for a while. Don't give up. Obama has 3,500 appointments to make. He still has about 3,460 left to go.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 PM on 12/16/2008

But the fact that there is no place for Dean in the Cabinet speaks volumes.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 PM on 12/16/2008
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Maybe he will do for the nations schools what he did for the Chicago school system.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:19 PM on 12/16/2008

Did Obama keep his children out of Chicago public schools? I know he has to send the girls to private school in D.C. because of security and other issues, but what did he do in Chicago when he was a state senator and U.S. senator?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 12/16/2008
- MNmommy I'm a Fan of MNmommy 406 fans permalink
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They were at the University of Chicago Lab School (incredibly expensive private school).

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 12/16/2008

you mean shut down schools and reduce "education" to what you can vomit up onto a test? for the sake of our democracy, let's hope not.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:34 PM on 12/16/2008

Just a moment ago, Arne Duncan, the newly appointed Secretary of Education, took the microphone for a few comments. In thanking his mentor and friend, John Rodgers, he said," He gave my sister and I the opportunity to start a great school on the south side of Chicago."

I jumped up from my seat. How could a Harvard graduate and soon-to-be Secretary of Education make such an elementary GRAMMAR MISTAKE!?

What is so hard about using "I" and "me" correctly? "Me" is used after a verb or preposition. That's all there is to it. Would you ever say, "He gave it to John and she, we, or they?" Of course you wouldn't. You would use the object form of the pronoun: "to John and her, us, and them." the same rule applies to I/me.

Obama, please pass this on to Arne, and refrain, yourself, from making the same mistake. Usually you get it right but I once heard you say, "to Michelle and I." Let's set a good example for our school children

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:17 PM on 12/16/2008
- FirstShirt I'm a Fan of FirstShirt 66 fans permalink

Hey look, how can you possibly understand what it feels like to not be educated unless you have experienced it yourself.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:25 PM on 12/16/2008

I noticed the error also. I think he probably knows the difference and made a careless error.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:27 PM on 12/16/2008
- caliguy I'm a Fan of caliguy 2 fans permalink

It's really easy to figure out the correct form of the pronoun--simply remove the other pronouns...You would never say "He gave I the opportunity...."

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:40 PM on 12/16/2008
- Gladys1963 I'm a Fan of Gladys1963 62 fans permalink
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Very good point. But then, most folks have problems with:

its vs it's
was vs. were
lose vs. loose
less vs. fewer
which vs. that

there, their, they're
two, to, too
where, wear, ware

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:44 PM on 12/16/2008

I agree, but I think there is a qualitative difference. The mistakes you cite would seem to suggest a more unsure grasp of the basic rules, whereas witnessing someone whose educational credentials are beyond doubt say, "He gave my sister and I..." suggests hypercorrection, not ignorance of basic grammar.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:09 PM on 12/16/2008

They always taught us that saying "my sister and I" was the correct usage. What is it then? Is it, "me and my sister"?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 05:16 PM on 12/16/2008

It is "my sister and I" if they are the subject of the sentence. It is correct to say "my sister and me" if they are the object.

My sister and I went....

He gave it to my sister and me. In this case "he" is the subject.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:27 PM on 12/16/2008

Quite a bit of criticism of Duncan based on the quality of CPS.

Anyone have a link to stats on how much (or how little) CPS has improved during Duncan's tenure?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 12/16/2008

Let's talk about the quality of Duncan's English.

Just a moment ago, Arne Duncan, the newly appointed Secretary of Education, took the microphone for a few comments. In thanking his mentor and friend, John Rodgers, he said," He gave my sister and I the opportunity to start a great school on the south side of Chicago."

I jumped up from my seat. How could a Harvard graduate and soon-to-be Secretary of Education make such an elementary GRAMMAR MISTAKE!?

What is so hard about using "I" and "me" correctly? "Me" is used after a verb or preposition. That's all there is to it. Would you ever say, "He gave it to John and she, we, or they?" Of course you wouldn't. You would use the object form of the pronoun: "to John and her, us, and them." the same rule applies to I/me.

Obama, please pass this on to Arne, and refrain, yourself, from making the same mistake. Usually you get it right but I once heard you say, "to Michelle and I." Let's set a good example for our school children

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:20 PM on 12/16/2008
- BSERIUS I'm a Fan of BSERIUS 8 fans permalink

Duncan's kids go to private schools, so do most city employees who can afford it....less than 50% of highschool kids graduate... only 6% of those get degrees of any type.....Patronage is not Change

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:22 PM on 12/16/2008

You didn't answer my question.

Anyone care to post a link to stats comparing CPS pre and post Duncan? Or CPS versus other big city districts?

Duncan is the one who had the balls to track college graduation rates, most districts don't even want to find that out since in many places that number would be woefully low.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:07 PM on 12/16/2008
- MilesTone I'm a Fan of MilesTone 3 fans permalink

Cronyism at its best.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 12/16/2008

"Cronyism" is, by definition, the appointment of people who aren't experienced or qualified. There's no question that Duncan has experience comparable to others who have held the position.

Or is anyone from the president's home city or state supposed to be automatically disqualified?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:13 PM on 12/16/2008

has he been a teacher? would you follow a general that has never been a soldier?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:35 PM on 12/16/2008
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LOL everyone is a a complainer. If it was someone from the Clinton administration then everyone would be complaining he is a Clintonite.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:21 PM on 12/16/2008

Here in New Orleans, we are counting the days until Vallas goes back up North. He boasts about having financially bankrupted our public school system, while our schools crumble.He recruits twenty-somethings with no experience or academic background in education-it's a cost savings. Our school has neither reliable heat or air-conditioning, or enough books or any computers. Yet my children are expected to pass NCLB tests that are anti-minority/poverty. Our little ones get under the tables when it starts to rain, terrified.Our city has never been rebuilt, let alone our schools, yet all that money has magically disappeared.I will not abandon my children, yet am terrified to advocate for them.If Duncan is anything like Vallas, the public school system will be destroyed on a national basis.The union is necessary for us teachers because we deal with drug and sexually abused children daily,and we need protection from these parents.Children rely on us teachers to protect them, love them, and teach them.We teachers haven't quit, no matter what. But what the hell,how many of you show up every day for your own children the way we teachers do?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 12/16/2008

"If Duncan is anything like Vallas"

Why would you assume he is? People were REALLY glad to see Vallas go, I doubt you'd find many that wouldn't say Duncan has been an improvement.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:18 PM on 12/16/2008
- steamboat I'm a Fan of steamboat 45 fans permalink

",or enough books or any computers."

YOU got a computer so have your child learn it and practice on it instead of watching TV.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 06:09 PM on 12/16/2008
- neocon666 I'm a Fan of neocon666 72 fans permalink

Wow! An Education Secratary who doesn't want to destroy the Department of Education. I guess Obama is even more dangerous to the right wingnuts than even they imagined.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:09 PM on 12/16/2008

actually, he favors outsourcing educational services to private companies...death by 1,000 cuts....

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:36 PM on 12/16/2008
- zell I'm a Fan of zell 6 fans permalink

I agree with you. Where is Howard Dean? It was Dr. Dean's 50-State Strategy that got Obama to where he is today and if he does not select Dr. Dean to a cabinet position, I will be speechless. Dr. Dean is one of the smartest men in politics today and also one with much integrity. I hope he will be selected for the FDA or any position. The reason i mention the FDA is because we need someone in that position with a reputation for being a straight-shooter and a person of high integrity, which would fit Dr. Howard Dean.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:59 PM on 12/16/2008
- iwantpie I'm a Fan of iwantpie 7 fans permalink

I disagree. Locally Howard Dean 50-State Strategy work, but it was PE Obama himself who did the work by going into Red areas and reach out to people with an open mind and heart.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:45 PM on 12/16/2008
- hawkai I'm a Fan of hawkai 2 fans permalink

What about critical thinking? This wasn't even mentioned in Obama's press conference today. Since when do test results reflect ability in the real world?

Also, the mere mention of "pay for play" made my stomach churn. Can we now look forward to a new Chicago-style system of corruption taking over the public schools?

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 12/16/2008

"Since when do test results reflect ability in the real world?"

Rarely ever.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:57 PM on 12/16/2008
- tbone99 I'm a Fan of tbone99 107 fans permalink
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Critical thinking might impede the government's ability to do what they want
We will soon be graduating a generation of test takers , not thinkers...perfect breaucrats

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:45 PM on 12/16/2008

That was the Republican plan all along...and they've been putting it in place for the last 30 years. The last thing they want from a class of indentured servants is too many questions, let alone incisive ones! Test scores are a way of "disqualifying" students from entering the upper (even middle) rungs of society. The ivy blue boys are merely protecting their "franchise." Withholding education is one of the many "weapons of mass destruction" against the American citizenry.

Get away from the "not enough funding" argument, which is exactly another way that the republicans control this issue by feeding into that "frame."

Having said that, we have to turn away from "organized" education by turning children (and adults) into lifelong autodidacts. The internet is the largest and most accessible university in the world! It is the only antidote to mediocre public education-- in fact, there is no reason not to include a 2-year college curriculum into middle/high school years---as is done in most advanced western countries and which is called a "baccalaureat"!
It's high time to create a nation of CRITICAL, ANALYTICAL THINKERS as opposed to the Wizard of Oz model of simplistic regurgitators being anointed with diplomas.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 02:14 PM on 12/16/2008
- mb32 I'm a Fan of mb32 3 fans permalink

If you're talking about Obama's reference to Duncan's support of cash incentives, he actually said, "pay for performance." I don't believe I heard anyone mention "pay to play." It really is unfortunate that people are painting everyone from Chicago as corrupt. There are good, honest people here. Just because Bush is from Texas is every Texan a liar who approves the use of torture? Whether you agree or disagree with Duncan's approach to educational issues or his record at CPS, there has never been any hint that he is corrupt.

I agree that there needs to be more emphasis on critical thinking skills. Some of the arguments I’ve heard from oppositionists and the MSM are rather breathtaking in their groupthink and lack of logic.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 01:54 PM on 12/16/2008

As a Chicagoan the Sun-times Says it best

"Chicago's loss is the nation's gain. President-elect Barack Obama is expected to name Chicago Schools CEO Arne Duncan as his choice for U.S. Secretary of Education today.

Word is that Duncan will be tapped at one of his showcase schools, the Dodge Renaissance Academy, one of the first failing schools that he shut down and reopened with great success. As Duncan departs for D.C. -- one of a proud and growing group from Chicago -- he will be remembered most for that effort: a radical program to shut down dozens of failing schools and replace them with 100 new ones."

Having relatives that went to those failing schools and coming back to a new school, new teachers, new system and are testing better. For those who bash Arne they have to remember what he inherit, seven years in a very short time to have done so much.

    Favorite    Flag as abusive Posted 12:51 PM on 12/16/2008
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