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Betsy DeVos Backtracks on Remote Learning Options She Had Championed

By Mark Lieberman 鈥 July 27, 2020 | Corrected: July 28, 2020 5 min read
Education Secretary Betsy Devos speaks at meeting in Indianapolis on July 24.
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Corrected: An earlier version of this story misspelled Kristina Ishmael鈥檚 name.

Has Education Secretary Betsy DeVos cooled on remote learning?

DeVos has recently called for school buildings across the country to fully reopen, threatened to find ways to withhold funding from schools that stick with full-time remote learning, and derided the Fairfax County district in Virginia for its plan to combine in-person and virtual instruction.

For many in the education world, these comments from DeVos come as a big surprise. The secretary was an enthusiastic supporter of virtual education earlier in the pandemic鈥攂efore President Donald Trump started this month to reopen buildings and return to in-person instruction for the 2020-21 academic year.

Just this spring, for example, as school buildings closed and millions of students transitioned rapidly to remote learning, DeVos praised schools鈥 flexibility and willingness to transition to online learning.

鈥淚 think it鈥檚 very clear that we have an opportunity to embrace distance learning and remote education in a way that two months ago would not have been thought possible,鈥 DeVos in April. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 happening very well in many places and鈥攐ut of necessity鈥攎any others are getting up to speed.鈥

In the internet age, the tendency to equate 鈥榚ducation鈥 with 鈥榮pecific school buildings鈥 is going to be greatly diminished.鈥

Later that month, DeVos鈥 Education Department announced it would provide to boost statewide virtual learning programs and help families access technology that鈥檚 essential for learning at home. Applications for those grants were . The department did not respond to questions from 91直播 about the status of that program.

DeVos still believes 鈥渨ell-executed鈥 online programs can be valuable for some students, according to department spokesperson Angela Morabito. 鈥淢any public charter and private schools and some districts did an excellent job of making the pivot, on very short notice, and were able to keep education going,鈥 Morabito wrote in an email. 鈥淭hose were notable exceptions, and based on the science and data, Secretary DeVos is urging every school to plan for a return鈥 to full-time, in-person learning this fall.

The department has also said children will experience psychological setbacks and miss out on access to in-school meals and health care if buildings remain closed. Many parents have jobs that can鈥檛 be done remotely, which will make child care an issue, the department has said.

DeVos鈥 recent public comments pushing for schools to reopen and return to in-person instruction have been ignored in many places. As of July 23, nine of the nation鈥檚 15 largest school districts had announced they will be using full-time remote learning as their back-to-school instructional model, affecting more than 2 million students, according to 91直播鈥檚 school reopening tracker. Many other districts plan to open buildings only on certain days of the week.

The Fairfax district, meanwhile, on July 21 reversed its reopening plan and resolved to keep buildings closed when the year begins.

Contradictory Rhetoric Confuses Educators

Confusing and contradictory rhetoric from federal officials such as DeVos represents a failure of productive leadership during a period when schools and the families they serve urgently need support and consistent messaging, many education leaders argue.

For educators nationwide, federal recommendations are 鈥渇ull of mixed messages right now,鈥 said Kristina Ishmael, director of primary and secondary education for Open Education Global and a senior research fellow at the policy research firm New America. 鈥淎 lot of district leaders don鈥檛 necessarily know where to go from here.鈥

DeVos has long advocated for online learning and other alternatives to the traditional public school model. During a , a conference on technology, business, and education, she outlined how she would transform American education: 鈥淲e would build a system centered on knowledge, skills, and achievement, not on delivery methods.鈥 In 2018, she observing and spotlighting a program that brought online education to rural K-12 students.

She has despite evidence that some of those programs yield poor student outcomes. In addition, prior to her federal tenure DeVos and her husband were investors in K12, Inc., a publicly traded online learning company that supports or operates many virtual charter schools. In higher education as well, she has that would allow more online schools to access federal aid.

In a 2013 , DeVos said the rapid evolution of technology was an encouraging sign of the possibilities for improving education. 鈥淚n the internet age, the tendency to equate 鈥榚ducation鈥 with 鈥榮pecific school buildings鈥 is going to be greatly diminished,鈥 she said.

DeVos鈥 鈥楴on-Nuanced View鈥 on Reopenings

John Watson, founder of the Evergreen Education Group, a K-12 digital learning research and consulting firm, believes there鈥檚 some validity to the idea that online learning is less desirable when it鈥檚 mandatory, as it will be in many schools this year, than when it鈥檚 one option among many. He and other online learning proponents have advocated for thinking of schools鈥 efforts this spring as 鈥渆mergency remote learning鈥 or 鈥渃risis learning鈥 rather than 鈥渙nline learning,鈥 which is typically more strategic and planned over a longer period of time.

But he hasn鈥檛 seen DeVos draw that distinction. Trump hasn鈥檛 made it either鈥攐n July 10, he that 鈥淰irtual Learning has proven to be TERRIBLE compared to In School, or On Campus, Learning鈥 now that schools across the country have tried it.

鈥淭he politicizing of this encourages other people to take a similarly non-nuanced view and say that all schools should be open or all schools should be closed,鈥 Watson said. 鈥淎nything that takes away from really thinking about these issues and shifts it to the overly simplified view that our political situation unfortunately devolves to these days is negative for everybody involved.鈥

Meanwhile, Ishmael thinks DeVos鈥 apparent 180-degree shift on virtual education might make state and district leaders who applied for federal online education grants earlier this year wonder whether the department supports their proposals.

Longer-term, Ishmael believes a sudden reversal for the federal government鈥檚 attitude towards online learning could put up another roadblock to rethinking antiquated policies around instructional time and delivery methods. In her home state of Nebraska, where she worked as a teacher, state laws slowed down efforts to create a new online public school.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a ripple effect that will potentially happen because of this as well,鈥 she said.

A version of this article appeared in the August 26, 2020 edition of 91直播 as Betsy DeVos Backtracks on Remote Learning Options She Had Championed

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