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Can This Nominee Save America’s Failing Schools?

Posted on Saturday, February 15, 2025
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by Ben Solis
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27 Comments
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While the contentious battles to confirm Robert F. Kennedy Jr. as Secretary of Health and Human Services and Tulsi Gabbard as Director of National Intelligence stole most of the headlines this week, the Senate also held the first confirmation hearing for Linda McMahon to become Secretary of Education. Though the hearing hardly produced the same fireworks that characterized Kennedy’s or Gabbard’s questioning, it nonetheless underscored the urgent need for reform of an American education system that is failing students.

McMahon decried public education as a “system in decline” during the hearing, vowing to “reorient” the priorities of the Department of Education and “invest in teachers, not Washington bureaucrats.” That alone represents a marked shift for an agency whose budget has exploded from $79 billion in 2000 to $268 billion in 2024 – even as student outcomes have steadily declined nationwide.

Trump has already begun following through on his campaign promise to enact sweeping changes at the Department of Education, shuttering programs that were not established by federal law and placing dozens of staffers on leave. The administration has also called on Congress to draw up plans to close the department entirely.

Democrats zeroed in on these actions during the hearing on Thursday, claiming that any budget cuts to the department would harm outcomes for students, particularly those in low-income districts. Protesters, some of whom claimed to be K-12 teachers (though it is unclear why they would be at a congressional hearing instead of teaching) also interrupted McMahon several times.

But the objections to Trump’s changes and McMahon’s nomination ignore the severity of the crisis facing American students. The National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), also known as “The Nation’s Report Card,” the most recent edition of which was released late last month, paints a dire picture.

According to its findings, more than five years after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, students are still falling further behind.

In reading, “the average reading score for the nation at grade 4 was 2 points lower compared to 2022, and 5 points lower compared to 2019.” Eighth graders saw equally disappointing results. Fewer than one-third of students nationwide are reading at or above the NAEP “Proficient” level, which means they lack the ability to understand and interpret written text consistently.

Fourth graders are considered to have “Basic” reading skills if they are able to sequence or categorize events from a story. Forty percent of students failed to meet this standard, a three-point increase from 2022. About a third of eighth graders also now fail to meet the “Basic” benchmark.

In mathematics, the 2024 NAEP showed that fourth-grade scores were two points higher than 2022, but still three points lower than 2019. Eighth graders showed no improvement from 2022, remaining a shocking eight points below 2019 levels. Nearly 25 percent of test takers did not reach the NAEP “Basic” level, meaning “they likely cannot identify odd numbers or solve a problem using unit conversions.”

“Where there are signs of recovery, they are mostly in math and largely driven by higher-performing students,” said National Center on Education Statistics Commissioner Peggy G. Carr. In other words, while some students are scoring higher, others are falling even further behind, creating a widening performance gap.

In response to the release of the 2024 NAEP late last month, the Department of Education called the results “heartbreaking,” noting that “not only did most students not recover from pandemic-related learning loss, but those students who were the most behind and needed the most support have fallen even further behind.”

“Despite the billions of dollars that the federal government invests in K-12 education annually, and the approximately $190 billion in federal pandemic funds, our education system continues to fail students across the nation,” the statement said.

White House Press Secretary Karoline Leavitt further stated that the results were “completely unacceptable” to President Trump, promising that he would take “aggressive action to address this education problem.” To this end, Trump signed an executive order targeting Critical Race Theory and gender ideology in public schools. These practices, Trump said, “not only erode critical thinking but also sow division, confusion, and distrust, which undermine the very foundations of personal identity and family unity.”

Ultimately, however, real progress toward improving student outcomes must start at the state, local, and even individual family level – something Trump has long recognized. That is why Trump has championed school choice policies and empowering parents through policies like the direct election of school principals.

Professor Karl Schachtschneider, a lawyer and educator, told me in an interview that parental involvement is critical and irreplaceable. “Children learn information in school and then, with parental support, apply moral values to it, practicing the knowledge under their guidance. It is more about authority than skills,” he said.

Democrats, teachers’ unions, and liberal activists will undoubtedly continue to insist that Linda McMahon, Donald Trump, and the entire Republican Party are failing students by advocating for major overhauls to the American education system and the Department of Education. But the numbers clearly show that it is that system that has been failing students for far too long, and it is time for serious change.

Ben Solis is the pen name of an international affairs journalist, historian, and researcher.

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Donna
Donna
3 days ago

The democrats continue to pound their fists on the table insisting that their only concern is for the children, yet they are the very ones, advocating the murder of children in the womb, advocating open borders that bring unaccompanied children across dangerous terrain and into the evil arms of sex traffickers, advocating the mutilation of children in the name of gender confusion, advocating boys in girls restrooms and locker rooms, etc. The democrats and the teachers unions have no love for children. Their only interest is for themselves. Some for power and others are just too dumb to realize how dumb they are, yet they are called teachers. What a pile of rubbish.

Pat R
Pat R
3 days ago

That is also why there are lots more home-schooled children today than ever before. The parents are doing a better job than the public schools.

Dan W.
Dan W.
3 days ago

She can help Trump shut down the Department of Education.

William Boylan
William Boylan
2 days ago

“… our education system continues to fail students across the nation,” Parents hold the primary responsibility for their children’s failure. They are not involved. They have no idea who is on the school board, they don’t supervise homework and have no idea what is in the curriculum.

Rob citizenship
Rob citizenship
2 days ago

Good article Ben, so many approaches to doing what is needed in order to fix the school systems. Something that could be considered a priority matter would be to get to the root of the reading abilities of students not being what they should be . . It could be a variety of distractions, in and outside of the school. Parents should be involved with helping in that area. Getting to the root cause of distractions that prevent students to be reading at the appropriate level and understanding what they are reading should be a fundamental in education.

Misty
Misty
1 day ago

Learning starts at home beginning with discipline. Parents hand off the kids and expect teachers (some who care) to work miracles. No kid needs a cell phone in school. Put every child in a classroom on a level playing field and learning can begin. AFT is an abomination and needs to be abolished. There are a lot of truly dedicated teachers but their enthusiasm is quickly diminished by violence and having to teach subjects that have no business in schools or that students will ever use in their lifetimes. Classes should be standardized by grade and age of the student like it was back in the 50-s and 60’s.

Phil
Phil
1 day ago

Our public school systems, particularly those in big cities, are beyond hope. They have been destroyed by entrenched bureaucracies, teachers’ unions, and corrupt politicians. The only hope for the students is a 100% voucher system. If schools had to compete for students, educating our students would become the number one goal.

Mark Paxton
Mark Paxton
1 day ago

I don’t understand how colleges use standardized testing like SAT, ACT or especially GRE for determining admissions yet the Teacher’s Unions often decry issues like racism and culture
There has to be something to combine with standardized testing to recognize those talented students who they might otherwise be overlooked.
Parental involvement “must” also be included if we are to find any success.
The bottom line needs to start being the students.

anna hubert
anna hubert
1 day ago

We the country are trying to dig ourselves from the avalanche This is the accumulation of manure that piled up for good 50 years , no matter what department we look at. Same disaster . All the money spent caused more harm than good. Those responsible are still fighting for status quo. We can’t control ourselves but want to control mother nature.

Richard hollingshead
Richard hollingshead
1 day ago

the reason the kids are failing is what the teachers unions are teaching them.

Bil Smith
Bil Smith
1 day ago

Stand twenty students randomly selected from across the nation, hand each a handwritten letter (cursive) and direct each person to read aloud that which is written. Would be interesting to determine if all have been equally instructed in the basics of writing skills.

Stephen Russell
Stephen Russell
1 day ago

Only for short term do scrap Dept Education

Rose
Rose
1 day ago

Amen to the comments! Sports are very big in school activities. They do help kids expand social awareness and enjoying competition. It needs to be balanced with regular education to prepare them for the future.

DDC
DDC
13 hours ago

No more social promotions. If student doesn’t meet requirements, they repeat that grade. NO EXCEPTIONS!

Fred
Fred
13 hours ago

Education is an issue of each state, not the Fed! Making it a Federal Dept. just added more bureaucracy, money and incompetents in political jobs far from any schools it serves. Teachers unions also led to the downfall of education. Teachers unions are only interested in more money, more days off and less work, by eliminating subjects such as cursive writing and other needed subjects.

CLIFFORD F GERACI
CLIFFORD F GERACI
1 day ago

#1 in education when Carter established the dept of ed , now ranked #40 in the world. As an A&P mechanic working on airplanes, it we had as dismal a record as the Department of Education, no one would fly.

Arnie
Arnie
1 day ago

Here only job will be to shut down the department. Nothing else matters. The department will disband, and then when schools don’t get better Trump will blame the states. *shoulder shrug

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