United States Secretary of Education Betsy DeVos visited Leon County Tuesday, making stops at Holy Comforter Episcopal School and the Florida State University Research School. DeVos used the trip to champion school choice and individual liberties.
Trump Administration Education Secretary Betsy DeVos presents herself as a champion of religious education and school choice. It鈥檚 fitting that her first stop in Tallahassee was at Holy Comforter Episcopal School.
Crosses are prominently hung in classrooms and the school honor code directs students to let God鈥檚 love guide them. DeVos first visited the 5th grade classroom of Mrs. Russell to catch a lesson on idioms.
鈥淲ater under the bridge鈥 wonder what that means?" Russell prompted the class. "I wonder if Madam Secretary knows what that means?鈥
DeVos logged her answer through an online program with the rest of the class. She then moved across the hall to meet Mrs. Cureton鈥檚 kindergarteners and pulled out Dr. Seuss鈥檚 Oh The Places You鈥檒l Go.
鈥淐ongratulations! Today is your day! You鈥檙e off to great places. You鈥檙e off and away!" she read. "You have brains in your head. You have feet in your shoes. You can steer yourself any direction you choose!鈥
Holy Comforter charges more than $11,000 per year in tuition. That enables school-issued MacBook Pros, programmable robots made of Legos, and 3-D printers in the science labs. Based on resources alone, the places these students will go could be very different than those at Oak Ridge or Riley Elementary. Those public schools both earned D grades this year. But DeVos says choice and individual liberty should trump other issues.
鈥淪o again I would just say, instead of focusing on buildings and systems, we should just focus on individual students,鈥 she said.
When questioned about solutions for chronically underperforming schools, she says鈥
鈥淧arents should be more and more empowered to make the right choice for their child, for their children to send them to a school or schools that are right for them," DeVos said. "Florida has made great steps in that direction. I think that needs to and will continue.鈥
For those who can鈥檛 leave a failing system, it鈥檚 not clear what DeVos鈥檚 solution is.
Denise Howard is a mother of three, with children at FSU鈥檚 lab school and Conley Elementary. She came to DeVos鈥 second visit pushing her youngest in a stroller, and carrying a sign that reads 鈥楰eep Public Schools Funded鈥.
鈥淪he wants to funnel funds away from public schools and put them in charter schools and private schools and I disagree with that,鈥 Howard said.
Howard criticizes DeVos鈥檚 support of for-profit charters. She doesn鈥檛 want her child鈥檚 school to be lumped into that category.
鈥淚 think that鈥檚 what upsets me some. If she is trying to use Florida High, Florida State University Schools as this shining example of charter schools. That is not her brand of charter school,鈥 she said.
FSUS is actually considered public, and treated as its own school district.
DeVos鈥檚 visit got pushback from other parents, and from the Florida Education Association, the state鈥檚 teachers鈥 union. The FEA argues that DeVos鈥檚 policies favor alternative schools, which don鈥檛 have to meet the same accountability requirements. At the writing of this story, DeVos has no plans to visit a Leon County public school.
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