3 Takeaways - Former Secretary of Education Arne Duncan: Education Runs on Lies (repost) (#102)
Episode Date: July 19, 2022“Education runs on lies. That’s probably not what you’d expect from a former Secretary of Education, but it’s the truth.” Arne Duncan exposes the lies and the broken system that have caused ...American kids to fall behind. He also shares what really works.
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Welcome to the Three Takeaways podcast, which features short, memorable conversations with the world's best thinkers, business leaders, writers, politicians, scientists, and other newsmakers.
Each episode ends with the three key takeaways that person has learned over their lives and their careers.
And now your host and board member of schools at Harvard, Princeton, and Columbia, Lynn Thoman.
Hi, everyone. It's Lynn Thoman.
Welcome to another episode.
Today, I'm excited to be here with former Secretary of Education Arne Duncan.
Before becoming Secretary of Education, he was CEO of Chicago Public Schools.
President Obama has said, quote,
Arne has done more to bring our educational system,
sometimes kicking and screaming into the
21st century than anybody else, unquote. I'm looking forward to seeing how Arne sees education
now and what we can do to further improve education and opportunity, especially for our
most disadvantaged young people. Welcome, Arne, and thanks so much for being here today.
Thanks so much for having me.
My pleasure. Arne, I loved your book, How Schools Work. And as I've told you,
it's one of the most memorable books I've ever read. The first sentence of the book
is that the education system runs on lies. Can you tell us about that and about Calvin Williams?
It's a bit of a provocative statement, but I wouldn't say it if I didn't believe it. I'll
just give you a couple quick examples of where I think our words and actions don't match up,
and I can tell you about Calvin. Three specific examples. One, we all say we value education,
but you wouldn't talk to anyone who says they don't care about education. But the truth is almost no one votes around education. And I always say education
should be the ultimate bipartisan or nonpartisan issue. There's nothing Republican or Democrat
about helping more babies get off to a good start, about raising graduation rates, about
trying to lead the world in college completion rates. No one has a monopoly on good ideas.
But very few of us go to the voting booth and hold
politicians, mayors, congressmen, governors, the president, local, state, national. We don't go to
the voting booth and vote with that in mind. And as a result, I think many politicians give nice
educational soundbites, but don't really invest and don't hold themselves accountable and don't
put the resources in that we need.
So we say one thing, our actions say another.
The second one would be we all say we love teachers and value teachers,
but I would argue teachers are wildly underpaid, underrespected,
undertrained, underrecognized, and our words and our actions don't match up.
And the final one, maybe the hardest one, is Dr. Hunter Dattles.
Hunter would say,
we value our children,
but we tolerate a level of gun violence in this country that is wildly higher
than basically any other industrialized nation.
And so we say we value education,
but we don't vote on it.
We say we love teachers,
but we don't support them.
We say we care about our kids.
We don't keep them safe.
And so I think we are dishonest.
I think those are lies and things that we don't act upon.
The story of Calvin Williams is a deep one.
It grew up as a part of my mother's
inner city tutoring program.
It had just a formative impact on me, my sister,
my brother, we all ended up trying to follow
in her footsteps in various ways.
But I took a year off between my junior and senior year of college, which was a little
bit nontraditional to really figure out was her work like a part of who I was or was it
actually who I was.
And most of my friends would go to law school, become investment bankers, or go to Wall Street
or whatever it may be.
And I didn't quite think that that was what I wanted to do.
And during that year, I decided I wanted to sort of follow, you know, do her work in some form or fashion. I didn't quite know what that
meant, but that was going to be my life's work. And that summer before coming back for my delayed
senior year, a young man who lived literally right across the street, right across the corner from
my mother's program was, we knew the family well, came over and asked, could I help get him ready
for the ACT? He was a basketball player. I was a basketball player. He was a lot better than I was. I was thrilled.
Yeah, let's get to work.
Let's do something.
I'll never forget.
It was warm.
We sat out on the church steps and just started to do a little work.
In that first session, in the first few minutes,
just saw that he was basically reading at maybe a third or fourth grade level.
And it was just beyond heartbreaking for me.
He happened to be on the B honor roll at his high school in a really violent neighborhood. He wasn't
caught in the gangs. The neighborhood had lots of drugs and alcohol available. He didn't touch
anything. Then he played by all the rules. And he had no idea how far behind he was.
And it was just devastating. And we did some work, but I knew at that point,
I just didn't have enough time. I started the previous summer, maybe if I would have had a year,
but that summer working was not going to be enough time to catch him up and have him do well.
And he did not do anything like what he could have done in college. Just seeing how the system
had absolutely failed him and lied to him throughout his life. That was one of many
motivators to make him want to go into
education and really try and tell young people the truth and have high expectations for them
and challenge them. So to take all the lessons I learned from my mother's program every single day
and try and take those to scale. How common is it for the grade level standards to be too low
for kids and parents to believe that the kids are meeting grade
level standards or are even honor roll students when in reality they are far behind where
they should be.
That happens unfortunately in many states and that was really the driver between us
trying to raise standards.
And we can talk about the Common Core or whatever.
We all talk about the cost of college being too high and the cost of college is too high.
What we don't talk about is we spend eight to nine billion, with a B, eight to nine billion dollars each year on remedial class
in college. And what that means is young people with a high school diploma go to college and then
have to take non-credit bearing classes, burning through Pell Grants, burning through loans,
terrible for them, terrible for their parents, terrible for taxpayers. Nobody wins. But that's the conversation we don't have. And it was true, I talked about in the book,
as you may remember, that when I was running the Chicago Public Schools, our test scores were going
up every year. We were celebrating. We were feeling great. And then the Consortium on Chicago
School Research did a really important study. Illinois was one of many states that had reduced standards.
And so we were living that, we didn't know it.
And what the consortium did is they did a correlation
between quote unquote,
meeting the Illinois state standards and taking the ACT.
If you were meeting standards,
that correlated to a 16 on the ACT.
If you get a 16 on the ACT,
basically you have a 10% chance of graduating from college.
You're not ready.
And so we had been lying to kids and families.
We didn't know we had, but it was an unbelievable punch in the gut.
And so we stopped paying attention to the kids who were, quote unquote, proficient.
That was no longer the goal.
The goal was to get kids into an advanced status on the state test.
That correlated to a 20.
And those numbers for us in Chicago public schools were small. And so it really was a hugely important impetus for us to push harder.
But when you have a measuring stick that shortchanges kids, deceives them and families,
I think that's one of the most insidious things you can do in education is give people a false
complacency or a false sense of optimism or false sense of hope when we're actually
setting them up for failure down the road.
I think it's horrific.
You quote President Bush, who has eloquently said,
quote, the soft bigotry of low expectations, unquote.
Can you tell us about that?
It's an interesting phenomenon.
It's pretty deep that too often you'll hear,
maybe more sensitive here,
because people often don't quite say it out loud. The sense you'll get is that these kids are poor, or these kids are
minority students, or these kids are immigrants, or these kids are English language learners.
The implication is there's only so much they can do, or that if you really want to do academically,
you have to end poverty first. That's the first thing you have to do. And trust me, I would love to end poverty tomorrow. President Biden's taken some pretty
interesting steps to reduce poverty. But while we fight those macro battles, we can't not educate
kids. And I would argue quite the opposite. The best way I know how to break cycles of poverty
is by providing a high quality education. That's what my mother devoted her life to.
Yes, she was an educator, but she was trying to really lift kids out of poverty.
And in one generation, we were able to see many families where no one had any college education.
Many did not have high school diplomas.
The generation that she worked with go on to be successful and break it.
And so I'm passionate about education for all the educational
reasons. A bigger passion is I see education as the best path to help end cycles of poverty,
provide some economic mobility, give a ladder up into the middle class. And that's really what my
life's work has been about, is trying to create opportunity for young people, for communities
that have historically denied those.
What are you proudest of accomplishing
as Secretary of Education under President Obama?
I have a list of successes and a list of failures.
I'm happy to talk about all of those,
but take the successes.
And none of this stuff is ever a mission accomplished moment.
It's always so much further to go
and you're just trying to accelerate the pace of change
and do more.
But on things that we're proud of, we're really proud to put more than a billion dollars behind high-quality early childhood education.
And I will always argue that the best investment we can make is in high-quality pre-K.
If I had one additional tax dollar, maybe one more dollar, where I put it, that's where I would put it.
The Historic Library Department has done very little in the early childhood space and they're getting our babies off to a good start.
Again, it's James Heckman here at the University of Chicago,
Nobel prize winning economist has studied this longitudinally for decades and
talks about a seven to one ROI.
There are very few places where we're investing in a public sector activity
gives you $7 back, less teenage pregnancy, less dropouts, less incarceration,
more young people graduating
from high school, going on to reproductive citizens. So big play there. Secondly, we were
able to get high school graduation rates up to all-time highs, and they're still not high enough.
Again, the dropout rate is still too high, but having historic highs and seeing every subgroup
at historic highs, white, Black, Latino kids, Asian, English language learners, poor children, special needs,
whatever it might be, every subgroup improvement, felt
great about that. Invested very heavily in community colleges.
I think those are sort of the unrecognized gem along the
education continuum. We did a lot of partnership with the
Department of Labor. And then we were able to put an additional
$30 billion into Pell Grants. It was a fascinating Washington lesson.
We basically cut out the middleman, literally, without going back to taxpayers for a nickel.
We just cut out the middleman, did the lending internally ourselves.
That was wildly controversial there, but we thought it was sort of common sense.
And we went from 6 million to 9 million Pell recipients, a 50% increase.
We had another million students of color go on to college and felt great about
creating opportunity for young people who had worked hard, but weren't born with a silver spoon
in their mouth and needed those health resources to make that college dream a reality.
One of your most ambitious efforts as Secretary of Education was the Common Core Education Standards
as an attempt both to make U.S. schools more challenging and to make the
curriculum more similar from state to state. Can you tell us about that, how effective it's been,
and what more we can do? The concept, again, is for me pretty basic, but this one was wildly
controversial. It's just simply trying to make sure that if young people graduate from high school,
they can take credit bearing classes
in college. They don't have to take remedial classes. That was literally all we were trying to
do. And we weren't setting a national standard and we know about local control and education.
What we were saying is if you're in Texas, you just need the University of Texas to certify that
your state standards are good enough so you can go to the University of Texas and take a college level class. And same for Wyoming and California, whatever it might be.
And so significant progress didn't mandate anything, put some incentives out there for
states to do this and to do this together. I've always said the fact that we have 50 different
yardsticks, 50 different states measuring how we're doing educationally. That's never made sense to me.
If you follow a sports team in a newspaper, there's one score for that game.
There aren't 50.
If you invest in the stock market and a publicly traded company, you can look at a newspaper
every day or look online and find out the stock price of your company.
There aren't 50 ways to measure value.
It's not an accident in education.
It's very intentional.
I think it's a way to keep things
opaque. It's a way to not be clear, not be transparent. And so we were able to get many
states to work together and to raise standards. Initially, it went extraordinarily well. What we
didn't foresee, Lynn, and I'm no good at ranting and marketing, and this is a joke, but it's really
true, that we did not foresee the rise of the Tea Party and the pushback against President Obama. You had Obamacare, and that was
supposed to somehow stigmatize it. And Obamacare got translated to Obama Corps in education.
So we got political pushback on that. And in hindsight, we're calling it the Common Corps,
which I thought was pretty innocuous. We probably should have called it the very uncommon, unique to all 50 states core,
and the Buckeye core, and the Hoosier core, and the Illini core, whatever.
What happened is a lot of controversy.
You had many states rebrand, which is fine, but keep 90, 95% of standards.
So we were able to make some real progress, but with the benefit of hindsight and sort
of understanding the pushback, I'm always honest. My interpretation of much of the pushback was less on the substance and more really a racist
reaction, quite frankly, to our first African-American president and that anything he was
trying to do, whether it was to provide health care or provide a better education, was going to
be resisted, not so much on rational terms, but on more emotional terms. Don't have
zero regrets for doing it. Definitely with the benefit of the wisdom of hindsight, would have
branded it and marketed it a different way. There is not a single other country in the world that
has 50 different systems of education as we do in the U.S. One of your other focuses was the increased use of data in education,
including standardized tests to determine how schools, students, and teachers are performing.
How is the United States doing with standardized testing now, and how can we best use it?
Well, I'll say relative again, as you said, we live in a globally competitive economy,
and so we're not competing for jobs, you know, Wisconsin versus Illinois versus Indiana,
where I live here in the Midwest.
We're competing with jobs with India and China and South Korea and Singapore.
And so in order to compete, we have to try and win that.
The good jobs, the middle class jobs, the highways jobs are going to go to where the
skilled workers are.
We're in a flat world now.
And I worry desperately about those jobs leaving our country and going to other countries where
there's more of a skilled and educated workforce.
So for me, this is not really about education.
It's really about trying to keep us globally competitive with an economy that can thrive
and with an upwardly mobile population because of educational opportunity, creating economic
opportunity.
So if you look at whether it's reading or math scores or whatever it might be,
we're usually somewhere between 15th and 30th on access to pre-K. I think we're 28th or 29th now.
College completion rates, we led the world a generation ago. It's interesting, we're flatline,
other countries have passed the slide, we're about 12th now. The hard truth, Lynn, is that
we're top 10 in nothing. Early childhood, K-12, higher ed. And I don't
think that's acceptable. I don't think we can be complacent. And we should be challenging that
every day and not just sort of resting on laurels or resting on our glory days from a couple of
decades ago. So I do think, again, test scores don't tell you everything by any stretch, but I
also think it's an important benchmark to know where you are. And it's actually a very interesting
debate now with a pandemic and so many kids so far behind and a couple of young kids not even
in school, which is devastating to me. And there's a debate of whether we should assess kids or not
now. And I just don't know, Lynn, honestly, how do you help kids catch up if you don't know where
they're strong and where they're weak? I had my annual checkup for the doctor recently. What does the doctor do? She doesn't just start prescribing me a bunch of medicine. She's asking
me how am I doing and how am I feeling? What's going on? She assesses my health before she does
anything. And I think we need to be assessing kids where they are educationally and those that are
high flying, let's help them move. And those that need more help, let's get them more help.
But I don't know how you help kids in an effective, efficient way
if we don't know where we are.
And I worry that because maybe we're a little embarrassed
or we're a little ashamed or because it's a hard truth,
we shy from those things.
And I just think it's really important not to guess,
but to know what
kids' strengths and weaknesses are, how best to help them, and then to hold us as adults accountable,
particularly now for helping tens of millions of kids who are pretty far behind after this past
horrific year in education. We got to help them catch up as fast as we can.
You've seen now generations of students from pre-K all the way through lower school, middle school,
and upper school as CEO of Chicago Public Schools and as someone who's worked with students now
for decades. What are the most important predictors for students' success in lower
school, middle school, and high school? I'll just go back to my mother's philosophy.
It's like yesterday, five decades ago,
she said, see where kids are, find out where they are, and just take them from there. And you'll
have kids come to you that are a couple grade levels ahead or a couple grade levels behind.
You'll have kids that are really fast learners in some things and slow learning in other things.
You'll have kids with one passion or another. For me, the predictor is much less what kids bring to the table
and much more what we as adults do to meet them where they are
and take them where they need to go.
The benefit I've had over the lifetime of experience
of seeing kids who happen to live in all black, all poor,
very violent neighborhoods, many do extraordinarily well
and do things that theoretically should be
impossible. And none of this is easy, but I saw what they could do because I saw the difference
in the impact my mother and her volunteers had in their lives. And so the predictor isn't race.
The predictor isn't socioeconomic class. The predictor isn't neighborhood. The predictor is
educational opportunity and support and guidance
and staying with it for the long haul. And I always say the best teachers, it's obviously
partly significantly intellectual and helping kids expand their thinking. But so much of this
is the heart and really helping young kids to believe in themselves and to believe that even
if no one in their family has ever gone to college, that they have the capacity to do that
and to believe that they belong in that environment and exposing them to a world of opportunities that
they don't know exists. It's hard to aspire to a career or a profession that you've never heard
of and you don't know anyone who has. And so where you have love and opportunities and support and
guidance, that's the best predictor of student success. It's not whatever strengths or challenges they bring
to the table when you first meet them. Are there other predictors, such as, for example,
reading behind grade level in third or fourth grade or absences from school? Can we tell the
kids that are in danger of falling behind? In a heartbeat, you look at attendance,
okay, first grade, whatever. Every child wants to go to school. When you In a heartbeat, you look at attendance. Okay, first grade, whatever.
Every child wants to go to school. When you have a test, if you get a 90, 90%, that's an A,
that's pretty good. If you have 90% attendance, let's take the average school year is about 180 days. If you have a 90% attendance, that means you're missing 18 days. You're basically missing
a month of school. That's not good. And if you're missing
two months of school or three months of school, that's never the child's choice. That's something
really wrong or challenging or dysfunctional going on at home. So yes, that is absolutely,
for me, the earliest predictor. Way before there's a grade or a test, if students are coming to
school and they're on time, that
just tells you something about the kind of support they have at home. And if they're struggling to do
that, those are kids that you have to pay an extraordinary amount of attention to and do that
as early as possible. Another critical issue that you focused on is crime and the disproportionate
impact on young Black men. And this is especially true in major cities
like your home city of Chicago.
As a country, we have addressed crime
primarily with one tool, enforcement.
How should we think about crime
and what else can we do, especially for young people?
Yes, it is crime, but it's actually violence
and very specifically gun violence
that I'm focused on. You're right. We basically had an incarceration strategy, young people? Yes, it is crime, but it's actually violence and very specifically gun violence that
I'm focused on. You're right. We basically had an incarceration strategy, a lock them up strategy.
We in the United States have, I think, 4% of the world's population, but 25% of the world's
inmates that are, as you say, disproportionately black and brown men of color. And let me clear,
I think if people commit a crime, they should absolutely be held accountable. But what we don't do is we don't invest in these communities and we don't invest
in these people. And where there is high unemployment, where there is inferior education,
where there is inferior health care, where there's lack of access to quality food,
when there's disinvestment in communities, I guarantee you,
Lynn, you will see higher crime and higher violence. And that's honestly a choice that we
have made. And with the pandemic, there's this new term, socially distanced. The communities I work
in, 15 neighborhoods in the southwest side of Chicago, they have been socially distanced for
decades. We didn't use that term, but they've been redlined.
They've been disenfranchised.
They've been marginalized.
And we've seen capital leave.
And the violence, the crime, that's the manifestation.
That's the blood pouring out of the wound.
But this wound has been caused by all these other things.
And so what we're trying to do is give our young men and young women who are caught in
these horrific cycles of violence
a chance to change their lives. And we do a number of things. We have an amazing street outreach team
that recruits young men and women into our program. We have life coaches for every single young person.
We have a clinical team. And the amount of trauma that folks are living with and live with all their
lives, frankly, is pretty extraordinary. We have an education team. We've had lots and lots of folks
get high school diplomas, which has been amazing. We've got a small set in college now. Then we have
a jobs team. And our goal is to move people from the illegal economy, which in places like Chicago
almost inevitably leads to violence, leads to gun violence, to the legal economy. It's been
the hardest thing I've ever done, the most heartbreaking, but by far the most inspiring
as well. Tell us about Chicago Cred.
Yeah, we're just laser focused on reducing gun violence in Chicago.
Violence is not unique to Chicago, but it's uniquely bad.
We're about six times more violent than New York, about three to four times more violent
than L.A.
It does not have to be that way.
It should not be that way.
What breaks my heart and motivates me is our children who
grew up on the South and West sides, literally, literally every single one knows at least one
person who's been shot. And it's often multiple people. When I go to classrooms, I'll say, how
many of you know, five people have been killed, 10 people have been killed, 15 people have been
killed. And you get up to that and a half to a third of the room's hands are still in the air.
It's obviously never a kid's fault. And my whole life I've talked about deferring gratification
and going to college and all that. And obviously I still believe that. But when you're literally
trying to survive day to day, particularly for young men who honestly don't believe they're
going to live past 18 or live past 21. And that's a rational, that's not an irrational thought.
That's a rational reaction to the war zones,
to the environment we're living in.
Then when I'm talking about college and stuff,
I'm speaking a foreign language.
So I'm really just trying to give our kids
and our communities a chance
to just to grow up healthy and safe.
And we made some significant progress
the previous three years,
this past year, 2020, with the pandemic,
with George Floyd's murder,
we took a big step in the wrong direction and got more violent. So we have a lot of hard work ahead
of us this year and going forward to try and continue to make Chicago as safe as other major
cities on the East and West Coast. What can we as Americans, as parents, and as caring people
do to improve the circumstances and the opportunities for
disadvantaged young people? I think the pandemic has taught us so many lessons,
but good and bad. But one of the biggest ones is just how interconnected we are,
that none of us are okay if we're not all okay. And that if my family's healthy,
but our neighbor's family's sick, well, we're all at risk. We can separate geographically.
We can separate by community.
We can separate by gated community.
But it's really understanding our common humanity.
This is the most humbling work I've done.
I'm learning so many tough lessons every day, but probably the biggest lesson is not to judge.
I got a million crazy stories, but one of our guys told me, he said, Arnie, I grew up in a household full of guns.
And I wish we would have had toys, but we had guns. And guess what? He grew up to be a pretty big shooter and created a lot of mayhem and havoc and destruction. He's doing much, much better now.
But I thought about both my parents are educators and my sister, brother, and I grew up in a
household full of books. And guess what? All three of us became educators. We followed in their footsteps. And it does not make me or my family any better than him.
It's just, we're all at some levels, preachers of our environment, shaped by our environment.
And so what can we all do? We can do whatever we can to create opportunity and to not judge
and to give other people's children the same kinds of opportunities
and supports and guidance and love that we try so hard to give our children. And on one hand,
you could say it's altruistic, and yes, that's true. But I would say more than ever that our
fates are intertwined, are interconnected. So you could almost do it in a selfish way.
If you want what's best for your children, one of the best things you could do for your children is to make sure other people's children are doing well as well.
Arnie, before I ask for your three takeaways, is there anything else you'd like to discuss
that you haven't already touched upon? No, I appreciate the conversation,
a couple of questions. I've enjoyed it. What are the three key takeaways that you'd like to leave the audience with today?
A couple.
I think one, that education should be the ultimate bipartisan issue and that no one
has a monopoly on good ideas.
And I would plead with folks listening and watching to vote in part at every level, local,
state, and national for the candidates that are going to create
educational opportunity in your community. And that I don't hold politicians responsible for
not being committed here. I hold us as voters responsible for not holding them accountable
to do the right thing. So please vote. I don't care, liberal, conservative, Democrat, Republican,
I truly don't care. Please vote based upon education. Secondly, that we are top 10 in the
world in nothing. And so the status quo is not good enough. And how we reimagine education,
how we reinvent, how we move from a K-12 system to a pre-K through 14 system at a minimum,
we have to do a much better job, both for education, but also for economic reasons.
And then the third one would be to never judge or never discount.
You can't tell a book by the cover.
And I can give you countless examples of young people I grew up with and young people I worked with who, by any normal prediction, should not be contributors to society, but are doing extraordinary things
as contributors to society because they had educational opportunity and people who love
them.
Maybe judge less and invest more.
Arne, thank you so much for all you have done to improve education and opportunity for all
of our young people.
And thank you for our conversation today. This has been terrific. Thanks so much for the opportunity. all of our young people. And thank you for our conversation
today. This has been terrific. Thanks so much for the opportunity. Have a great day now.
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