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Sunday, 07 December 2008

Inez Tenenbaum for Obama’s Cabinet?

By BRAD WARTHEN
EDITORIAL PAGE EDITOR
NOW THAT HE’S got his economic and national security teams lined up, President-Elect Obama can turn to the “second-tier” Cabinet positions, such as Secretary of Education.
    Normally, I wouldn’t take all that much interest in the Education job. I don’t see education as a proper function of the federal government; it’s a state responsibility. And when the feds have gotten involved in K-12, they’ve generally mucked it up. I’m not a fan of Ronald Reagan, but he did get some things right, and one of them was proposing to do away with the U.S. Department of Education. You’ll notice, however, that after all that talk, he didn’t actually get rid of it. So the department is there, and somebody is going to run it.
    That being the case, I hope the somebody Barack Obama chooses is our own Inez Tenenbaum. At this point you’re thinking two things: First, “Does she really have a shot at that?” I don’t know. There are a lot of lists, short and long, floating around, and she’s on some and not on others. The Associated Press had her on a short list of five names (which also included Colin Powell) at the end of November, but when they moved the same list on Thursday, she wasn’t on it (nor was Gen. Powell). On the same day, MSNBC posted a long list on its Web site that included her (and Gen. Powell). Other names regularly mentioned include Arne Duncan, who runs Chicago public schools, and Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of Kansas.
    Inez (disclosure here — I call her Inez because her husband, Samuel, is a friend) doesn’t make it on David Brooks’ short list in his column on the facing page. But we’ll see.
    Now for the second thing you’re thinking, especially if you’re one of those who buy into the notion that public schools in South Carolina are irredeemable, and anyone who has ever had anything to do with them is tainted. When I mentioned Inez as a contender for the job the other day, someone who should know better said it would be ironic for two Democratic secretaries in a row to be from South Carolina, since our schools struggle so.
    No, it wouldn’t. It would be perfectly fitting, especially given Inez Tenenbaum’s record as state superintendent from 1999-2007.
    There are achievements that can be quantified, such as South Carolina’s students scoring at or above the national average on nationally recognized standardized tests for the first time. Our fourth- and eighth-graders even scored at the very top in math and science on the National Assessment of Education Progress.
    But what of the SAT, the favored test of naysayers? During her tenure, our average rose 32 points, the greatest gain of any state where most graduating seniors take the test. No, we didn’t catch up — we just improved faster than anyone.
    But what impressed me most about her performance was that she took the situation she had and did the most she could with it. The most dramatic example: her implementation of the Education Accountability Act. The EAA was enacted the year she was elected, pushed by business leaders and a conservative Republican governor, and largely opposed by Democrats and professional educators. She might have dragged her feet, but instead she fully embraced the task of implementing accountability, in spite of institutional resistance.
    How did she do on that? The year she left office, Education Week ranked South Carolina No. 1 in the nation for accountability. The research organization Education Trust ranked our state as tied (with Maine) at No. 1 in the rigor of our proficiency standards; The Princeton Review rated our testing system 11th best.
    Our state’s leadership on this front ironically became a liability when No Child Left Behind came along. That’s because each state was judged by how well it met its own standards and expectations, and ours were higher than other states’.
    So as long as there is a U.S. Department of Education, and especially while NCLB remains law, I want the person in charge of administering it to know the reality here in South Carolina.
    But what makes Inez Tenenbaum, and Dick Riley before her, better suited than folks from other parts of the country at addressing the nation’s real K-12 problems? Consider the sheer magnitude of our challenges, based in generations of slavery, Jim Crow and abject poverty. Before the Civil War, our state had more slaves than free people. We integrated our schools 16 years AFTER Brown vs. Board of Education, even though the case started here. The achievement gap for poor and minority students is a national problem, but no one has more experience combating it than Gov. Riley and Inez Tenenbaum.
Inez isn’t talking about her candidacy, or non-candidacy. But she did say some things about Barack Obama and education that I liked hearing.
    She’s had time to think about this because she’s one of the experts who helped him draft his education platform (which you can read online, linked from my blog). Rather than talk about the federal government trying to run our schools, she speaks of the historic opportunity Mr. Obama has to lead by example.
    She remembers how John Kennedy got kids engaged in physical fitness when she was in school, mainly by talking it up. A president Obama can do the same with parental involvement, parlaying the excitement his election has generated into an ongoing movement. She has been deeply impressed by his own commitment to education, from seizing every opportunity offered in his own life to his involvement in his daughters’ schooling — she heard him, on the campaign bus here in South Carolina, talking to his girls on the phone about every detail of their day at school. He was engaged in the way all parents should be.
    Barack Obama, as she describes it, has the potential to lead on education without pushing coercive new laws or creating new bureaucracies.
    Now that’s a federal role in education I can get behind.

For more, please go to thestate.com/bradsblog/.

Posted by Brad Warthen at 12:01 AM in Barack Obama, Columns, Education, South Carolina, The Nation
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Comments

Inez would be an AWESOME choice for any position in the Ed. Dept., although I'd like to see her at the top!

Posted by: Rich | Dec 7, 2008 1:23:17 AM

Inez Tenenbaum for Secretary of Education would be a disaster. Look what she was able to accomplish with the same position on the state level... she held South Carolina's position in being ranked last in education her whole tenure. What redeeming value does she have other than she's married to your ol' breakfast buddy, Sammy "the free Visa card" Tenenbaum? Brad your sucking up to the Tenenbaum's only pales is comparison to your hatred of Governor Sanford.

Posted by: Bill C. | Dec 7, 2008 10:17:54 AM

Inez nor anyone else needs to be in the Fed'l Dept. of Education! It does need to go away immediately! It, nor welfare, medicaid, medicare, food stamps, adc and others are not the contituional authority given to the fed'l government! THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT NEEDS TO BE FORCED BACK TO IT'S VERY LIMITED CONSTITUTIONAL AUTHORITY! DEFENSE AND THE ARBITRATION OF DISPUTES BETWEEN THE STATE ARE BASICALLY IT!

Posted by: zeke | Dec 7, 2008 11:18:27 AM


We would seem to be better off without a secretary of education if the end result is the dumbing down of America.

The future of this country is about educating our youth. Nations such as India are leading by example. How important in the scheme of world job markets is it when educated students take telecommunications jobs away from the US? Make a call about a problem you have with your television reception and you will be talking with someone in India.

The article about appointing Inez Tenenbaum to lead the country through the education catch up with the rest of the world seems a suck-up appointment; otherwise, he would appoint someone from a state or agency that has a proven track record much better than an example set by South Carolina. What about the dropout record in SC?

When you are playing catch up to the other nations, we need a miracle not a political appointment.

Posted by: slugger | Dec 7, 2008 12:20:02 PM

that's just it; the vast majority of states are having severe education, including drop-out (read the latimes about the dropout scandal there), problems.
if you only read SC papers, you think we're the only ones where johnny can't read, the budget is in a mess and the legislature is a corrupt mess. It just ain't so.

Posted by: martin | Dec 7, 2008 12:53:18 PM

Since there is already a lopsided dearth of lawyers in his future cabinet, Obama should select Inez "Ticking Bomb" for Education.

Look what a fabulous job the lawyer from Georgia did (compared to Georgia's SATs) for SC. Why not bring the rest of the country down to our level?

Liberals believe equalization to lowest common denominators helps self esteem. Unfortunately, it negatively impacts job prospects and economic growth both for individuals and regions.

Posted by: Dino | Dec 7, 2008 2:34:36 PM

Considering that so much of our national economic and physical security vitally depends on quality of information, I'd say "education" is indeed a vital responsiblity of the federal government, in partnership with state and local governments, parents, and students. It's an "everybody" responsibility.

The US Dept. of Education should have more prominence, not less. It should be shoulder to shoulder with DoD and the Treasury. We all know Dick Riley served under Clinton. But how many people know, right off hand, who the current Sec. of Education is? Out of sight, out of mind. It's just sad. The department needs serious, aggressive, spotlight leadership.

There are certain states that would likely excel without federal educational oversight. Vermont, for instance. But not SC. We need all the help we can get. There are cultural implications, sure. It would be a nightmare to wake up one day and realize our kids were taking classes in Intelligent Design, Abstinence Education, and Secessionist Heritage. Meanwhile, there is a world of career-changers, professionals, and entrepreneurs who have federal student loans and grants at least partly to thank for their better lives. And don't forget the GI Bill. It's more important than ever.

Posted by: jfx | Dec 7, 2008 3:08:37 PM

Inez Tenenbaum for National Secretary of Education?

Why don't we let Allendale County vote on it?

Posted by: p.m. | Dec 7, 2008 8:00:22 PM

Not too surprising is it? Obamas' cabinet picks this far have all been clapped out, hopelessly liberal and entirely failed liberal hacks. Inez ought to fit right in with this bar scene from Star Wars.

And no surprise either that Warthen loves Obamas' selection of Tenenbaum for Sec of Ed. As a moon-eyed sycophant, Warthen likes ALL of Obamas' choices. Terrorism, Black Liberation Theology...all of it is fine with Brad.

I actually like the selection of Tenenbaum as a cabinet member. Her imminent national failure as Sec of Ed may hasten the necessary disillusionment with Obama that will precede real American progress.

David

Posted by: faust | Dec 7, 2008 9:44:21 PM

"hopelessly liberal"

Yep, Bob Gates and Jim Jones are just a coupla liberal hacks.

David, the angry Left doesn't seem to agree with your analysis:

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2008/12/05/AR2008120502602_pf.html

Posted by: jfx | Dec 7, 2008 10:46:11 PM

Robert Gates and General Jones have to be chosen, because their jobs cannot be faked, and the Democrats have no one who can do those real jobs.

The rest are just cronies who are glib talkers and posers, who have no record of accomplishment in the real world, just like Obama.

Posted by: Lee Muller | Dec 8, 2008 9:33:32 AM

It's always blamed on economics and the solutions are to throw more money in to help the "poor children". I have to wonder how so many economically deprived children with concerned involved parents have managed to succeed in school. Parents are the key to fixing our education problems..not a government system. Can the education system ever fix a problem that begins at home? Not unless it has the ability to force parents to assume that role.

Perhaps if public assistance were doled out according to the child's school performance, disciplinary behavior, and attendance we could see a difference in many parents' attitudes towards education. We've dumbed down our education system so some could look smarter and "feel good" about themselves. Unfortunately, the achievers just shoot at a lower mark and the low-achievers have just gone lower. But wait..for a politician to say this would be the ultimate in politically incorrect. It's never the parents' or children's fault...right?

Posted by: ruintuit | Dec 8, 2008 10:02:40 AM

Hey, Brad, it's been almost 13 hours since Gov. Sanford made an appearance on Geraldo Rivera's Fox News show.

Why haven't you jumped all over the governor yet? There were still a few splotches on him that weren't covered with your hoofprints and sputum.

I think you're missing a good chance to promote your all-government, all-the-time agenda. It's time to come clean about using your Unparty malarkey to make your being a closet Democrat.

Heck, Fox News might be willing to do a special on you as a media Democrat who voted for McCain. Think of the chance you'd have to spread manure all over Sanford and promote your good buddy's wife for Secretary of Education.

Might even help you into an even higher income percentile so you could actually afford your health insurance and have time to learn something about farming in the state you call home.

Posted by: p.m. | Dec 8, 2008 11:28:29 AM

Pardon me: That should be, "It's time to come clean about using your Unparty malarkey to MASK your being a closet Democrat."

Posted by: p.m. | Dec 8, 2008 11:31:23 AM

Thanks for clearing that up, penultimo. Now would you please go lock yourself in a room with those who are convinced the UnParty is a cover for my Republican sensibilities, and y'all come out when you've decided who's right?

By the way, if y'all liked my column about Inez, you'll love Howard Fineman's in Newsweek. It begins:

    Inez Moore Tenenbaum is a little slip of a lady, with porcelain skin and a smile as sweet as ice tea on a sunny Southern porch.
    But looks are deceiving. She has a blowtorch will to win and more organizational drive than almost anyone else in her home state of South Carolina, where she served as a very successful—and very popular—elected superintendent of education from 1999 to 2007.
    It was a lucky day for Barack Obama when, two years ago, Tenenbaum became the first major Democrat in South Carolina to endorse him for president. She was taking a big risk at the time.
    She, as much as anyone else, insured that he won the South Carolina primary against the formidable Sen. Hillary Clinton—a victory that, as much as anything else, got him the party nomination.
    When he climbed down off the stage on primary night in Columbia, the first person he embraced (after his wife, Michelle) was Tenenbaum.
    If Obama owes anybody, he owes Inez. And she is worth owing, since her record as state superintendent of education is exemplary....

You'll notice I didn't get into why Obama owes Inez, because to me that shouldn't enter into it. But Fineman, as senior Washington correspondent for the newsmagazine, is apparently accustomed to thinking in those terms.

Posted by: Brad Warthen | Dec 8, 2008 11:42:30 AM

Why would I lock myself in a room when I don't even lock my house?

If the Democrats here think a closet Republican would back a $2/gallon tax on gasoline and Inez Tenenbaum for Secretary of Education, that goes a long way toward explaining why they're Democrats.

Limited logic skills do rank pretty high in the Democrat arsenal, right after feeding at the public trough.

Posted by: p.m. | Dec 8, 2008 12:19:06 PM

Why would I want to read an article in Newsweek? Newsweek is a liberal rag that contaminates the minds of those stupid enough to buy the magazine. Example: Obama.

What can Inez Tenenbaum teach the children except to say that "It takes a villege to raise a child" and then not even support Hillary? The reason that it probably would take a villege is because the people in the villege cannot find the parents.

With the out of wedlock birth rate, the dropouts and those put into jails for crimes committed to buy drugs, somebody has to educate the children born to these non-performers. Otherwise, the apple will not fall far from the tree.

Posted by: slugger | Dec 8, 2008 1:32:13 PM

Slugger and pm,

It will probably cause you to burst a blood vessel in your brain, but please read the semi-love letter to educrats in today's The State paper.

The State on Education Reform

It's chock full of educrat spin (selective choice of statistics, positive spin on the worst news, considering minor achievement in a decade to be fantastic).

And then there's the stuff in there that just makes me shake my head. Under Inez's supposed accountability initiative, one single school district (Allendale) was taken over in an entire decade and that takeover showed no success. And where do I get a list of principals and/or teachers who were held accountable by the EAA? Brad makes it the centerpiece of his support to give his friend's wife a job in a department he doesn't think is worth having anyway... and yet I can find no evidence anywhere of the application of the term "accountability" anywhere in the public school system.

ac·count·a·ble

ADJECTIVE:

1. Liable to being called to account; answerable.

That means SOMEONE is supposed to be responsible when things go wrong. So, Brad, what accountable actions did Inez take responsibility for?

And the whole issue of PACT being abandoned is glossed over completely. It's right there in black-and-white:

"But student improvement on PACT has slowed in recent years. Lawmakers decided this year to develop a new standardized test, PASS, which students will take next year. School report cards"

So when the test results couldn't be blasted out in a P.R. release any more, what happens? Why they just blame the test and throw it away. And come up with a NEW test that will give them a few more years to produce essentially the same results for all the extra money wasted.

Then we get to the crux of the way educrats deal with issues. This is from the article (you can't make this stuff up):

"Accountability has successfully used data to identify the students, schools and districts that are challenged in the state.
The next chapter will be redefining schools and using innovation to help these students who have not achieved in traditional classrooms. In Spartanburg 6, for example, district leaders are redefining the school year, the school day and the role of a school. About 800 elementary students attend school from 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. Their school year is also longer, 220 days compared with the traditional 180 days. Part of the time is academics; the rest is tutoring and activities like field trips to parks and zoos, swimming and golf lessons and trips to art shows. Transportation, meals and snacks are all provided at no charge to parents. It’s increasing test scores.

“Long term, if we stick with this, these kids are going to make it through our system and earn a diploma,” said Darryl Owings, Spartanburg 6 superintendent. “Our state needs to take this kind of approach. We’re a microcosm of this state and we’re seeing results.”

So after a decade of PACT testing, the educrats determined that the best way to improve test scores is to make kids go to school for 40 more longer days. Brilliant!! How did we miss that option?

But when that doesn't move enough kids from Below Basic to Basic skills, what's next? Making them wards of the state? Hey, maybe instead of going home after school, maybe these educrats could bring all these kids to a big farm and let them pick vegetables or something in their spare time? I'm sure that would be better than expecting their parents to take responsibility for their kids education.

I'll be waiting patiently for the South Carolina Government Diapering Service to be implemented any day now. Motto: "We own your butt from cradle to grave"

Posted by: Doug Ross | Dec 8, 2008 2:20:03 PM

Academic failure is always the TAXPAYERS' fault.

Never mind all those astronauts and scientists who were educated in one-room schoolhouses, right up into the 1960s, and brought us jet aircraft, telecommunications, and medical breakthroughs.

Success couldn't possibly be the result of superior teachers, orderly classrooms, self-discipline, and hard work.

Posted by: Lee Muller | Dec 8, 2008 2:43:16 PM

What Inez Tenenbaum did as SC Superintendent of Education to bring accountability (via EAA) to the South Carolina education system was nothing to sneeze at. Opposed by some in her own party and others that many tiredly refer to as “educrats”, she managed to raise South Carolina to a national leadership position in education accountability and to hold our schools to proficiency standards that, along with Maine and Massachusetts, were ranked by the Hoover Institution’s “Education Next” journal as tops in the nation. For these accomplishments, our state has been nationally, and repeatedly, recognized.

To quote a Sept., 2006 article from The State, “Critics say improvement doesn’t matter as long as our absolute scores don’t lead the nation — which is sort of like telling your boss you don’t want that 50 percent raise if you’ll still make less than he does.” Too many of our citizens look at public education in South Carolina and see only inadequacy, failing to realize that fixing a complex system that has never been sound requires a holistic, visionary approach. And that it takes a very long time to see the final results. South Carolina has for decades faced huge challenges in overcoming a persistent epidemic of poverty and its crippling effects on public education. Inez Tenenbaum, and Dick Riley before her, led South Carolina’s department of education with an understanding not only of our state’s social ills, but with a determination to pursue the long cure and an eye to our state’s future.

There are many people who see only failure in our public education system and will, for reasons of their own, refuse to acknowledge its successes. But, those opinions aside, Inez Tenenbaum did much to move our state forward; she would make a fine US Secretary of Education.

Posted by: Claudia | Dec 8, 2008 2:56:21 PM

Lee,

Don't you get it?

Every successful adult owes it all to the government.

Every unsuccessful adult just didn't get enough help from the government. But we'll get there one day.

To paraphrase MLK, "I have a dream that my three little children will one day live in a nation where they will not be judged by their intelligence, work ethic, and perseverance but by the content of their government assistance check."

Posted by: Doug Ross | Dec 8, 2008 2:56:50 PM

Claudia,

The reverse of your statement is also true:

"There are many people who see only failure in our public education system and will, for reasons of their own, refuse to acknowledge its successes."

Our educational system in South Carolina would improve at a much faster rate if there was true accountability and honesty. If you can, please point me to one case where the Inez said, "We were wrong." or "That program failed" or "We spent money that we could have better spent elsewhere". Just one...

Posted by: Doug Ross | Dec 8, 2008 3:00:12 PM

Will Folks has a great post over on FITSnews today about the Superintendent of the D.C. school system... I agree with him - this is what many of would like to here a person in authority in the school system say:

Not An Educrat

"“The thing that kills me about education is that it’s so touchy-feely,” she tells me one afternoon in her office. Then she raises her chin and does what I come to recognize as her standard imitation of people she doesn’t respect. Sometimes she uses this voice to imitate teachers; other times, politicians or parents. Never students. “People say, ‘Well, you know, test scores don’t take into account creativity and the love of learning,’” she says with a drippy, grating voice, lowering her eyelids halfway. Then she snaps back to herself. “I’m like, ‘You know what? I don’t give a crap.’ Don’t get me wrong. Creativity is good and whatever. But if the children don’t know how to read, I don’t care how creative you are. You’re not doing your job.”


And it's interesting to compare the response of her detractors to the way our own educrats and bureaucrats feel abou Mark Sanford... people hate it when you don't play the game:

" Some parents, teachers and school activists said the combative, sometimes disdainful tone she has struck in the press has alienated constituencies she needs to mobilize if she hopes to turn the system around: teachers, parents and school principals. Cathy Reilly, head of the Senior High Alliance of Parents, Principals and Educators, called the use of a broom on the Time cover “disrespectful and denigrating.”

“I don’t know what she was thinking,” Reilly said. “I don’t think sweeping things out is the way to go, and that way of relating to people metaphorically sends a message right down to the children.”

Posted by: Doug Ross | Dec 8, 2008 3:11:54 PM

A can of kerosene and a book of matches is more like it than a broom.

Liberals think that if they have good intentions, and chant a few magic words, like "bring accountability", then that's it - all done, success.

If Inez Tennenbaum had actually "brought accountability" to public schools, she would not have been hiring failed principals as consultants, or as high-level state bureaucrats.

Posted by: Lee Muller | Dec 8, 2008 4:31:00 PM

We should not let the teachers union go without giving them their full responsibility for our school problems.

Do we think that the teachers union is all about educating our children? Is there a union in this country that is not all about what is best for the union?

The school system should be turned back over to the states and taken out from under the federal government. Each state has it’s own problems just as each city and county in each state has a different problem. You cannot put all the children in this country into one pot and except the same results.

Do away with teachers unions and restore the education of our children to the states instead of the federal government. We, the people, need to be in control of the minds of our children. Only when the parents get back in control will be able to return this country to some sort of sane future for our country. You cannot let the liberal teachers that were brainwashed while in college by liberal agendas stay in charge of our children and how they think.

My children listened to me when they were growing up and I gave them an history lesson. The children this day and time seem to think that the teacher knows more about how this country should be run than the parents and grand-parents. The teachers are not hired to get into the minds of the students and change their thinking along Marxist lines. The teachers should be doing their jobs of teaching reading, writing and asthmatic as well as history.

I have two grandchildren that are teachers. I admire and respect what they are doing in their profession. We can only hope that somehow and with some person that we could lead our country back to local schools and turns around and save our country.

Do not give away the minds of our children to those that would destroy our way of life.

Posted by: slugger | Dec 8, 2008 5:17:45 PM

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