AEI – 社区黑料 America's Education News Source Thu, 14 May 2026 16:32:46 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 /wp-content/uploads/2022/05/cropped-74_favicon-32x32.png AEI – 社区黑料 32 32 Opinion: Report Finds Books Aren’t Vanishing From Schools. But That’s Not the Whole Story /article/report-finds-books-arent-vanishing-from-schools-but-thats-not-the-whole-story/ Thu, 14 May 2026 16:32:41 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=1032386 A version of this essay originally appeared on 鈥淭he Next 30 Years鈥 .

A new report on whole-book reading in secondary English classrooms arrives at a useful moment. The debate over whether students in school has become increasingly , and at times nearly . A growing chorus insists that American schools have abandoned literature and are trapped in a joyless regime of excerpt-driven 鈥渟kills instruction鈥 imposed by standards-aligned curriculum and testing. Rand brings something refreshing to the conversation: evidence. And, as it tends to do, the evidence complicates nearly everyone鈥檚 preferred narrative.


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The report鈥檚 headline finding is less alarming than much of the recent rhetoric would suggest: Nearly 90% of secondary English Language Arts teachers report assigning at least one full fiction or nonfiction book during the school year. About two-thirds assign between one and four books annually, while roughly one-quarter assign five or more. Clearly, that鈥檚 not a picture of novels disappearing entirely from classrooms. But neither is it particularly reassuring. For one thing, the report doesn’t tell if the average number of books assigned has declined, or which books students are reading: graphic novels or classic literature? The authors also acknowledged, 鈥淲e do not know the form their assignment took; teachers could have used the book for whole-class instruction or as a choice for independent reading.鈥

The researchers鈥 most troubling finding is that teachers serving disadvantaged students consistently assign fewer books. Students in high-poverty schools or majority nonwhite schools, multilingual learners and students with disabilities all appear less likely to experience sustained encounters with complete works of literature. 

That matters, because reading a book is not just an extended version of reading a passage. It requires different cognitive habits: sustained attention, memory, fluency and the ability to remain immersed in language and ideas over long stretches of time. As Doug Lemov noted in a I hosted recently, teaching whole books effectively means cultivating 鈥渃ognitive persistence鈥 in ways that are becoming increasingly rare in our fragmented digital culture. 

So, if there is a singularly troubling implication in the Rand report, it is not that books have vanished. It鈥檚 that the students most in need of the benefits that whole books provide appear least likely to receive them.

The report also contains a finding that will delight critics of standards-aligned curriculum: Teachers using publisher-developed instructional materials assigned fewer books on average than educators using self- or district-created materials. Rand cautiously suggests that excerpt-heavy curriculum design may partly explain the trend. That said, I suspect the authors of the report may be assigning too much causal weight to curriculum publishers and not enough to the accountability systems that have shaped their products. For at least a quarter-century, high-stakes reading tests have functionally imposed a theory of literacy upon American educators that views reading comprehension primarily a suite of transferable skills that can be amply demonstrated on short, decontextualized passages: finding the main idea, making inferences, citing evidence, identifying author鈥檚 purpose and so on.

If that is what policymakers demand and tests reward, curriculum publishers would be irrational not to align their products to it. Said differently, the tests drive practice. Curricula are adapted to the tests. This is one reason I have that reading exams damage literacy instruction: they subtly teach educators to think about reading in ways that are at odds with cognitive science, leading schools to de-emphasize the importance of background knowledge, vocabulary and fluency in favor of a skills-and-strategies approach that assumes reading comprehension can be taught, practiced and mastered via repeated practice on brief passages. This approach largely conflicts with the science of reading that policymakers, literacy advocates and curriculum reformers are to persuade states, districts and schools to embrace.

To be sure, testing mandates in grades 3 to 8 cannot fully explain the decline of whole-book instruction in high school. But accountability systems helped shape the field鈥檚 broader conception of reading itself 鈥 not merely elementary and middle school test prep. High school assessments like the SAT largely reinforce these signals, emphasizing analytical skills applied to . The point is not that standardized tests directly cause teachers to assign fewer novels in high school. It鈥檚 that the accountability era has normalized a fragmented theory of reading across the entire K-12 system. 

It would be a mistake to respond to the Rand report with a simplistic demand to raise the novel count. Assigning lots of books is not automatically good instruction. A poorly taught novel can easily become an exercise in disengagement or superficial discussion. What matters is whether schools and teachers understand why whole books matter in the first place and can confidently guide their students through literary analysis and conversation.

The AEI webinar I hosted last month touched on both of these crucial topics. During the event, Lemov argued that whole books are cognitively powerful precisely because they demand sustained thought. They immerse students in language rich enough to shape how they themselves think and speak. Reading a book requires students to hold ideas in memory over time, revise their understanding as characters evolve and tolerate ambiguity long enough for meaning to emerge.

Mike Austin of Great Hearts Academies made a related and more humanistic point: Books welcome students into an ongoing cultural and moral conversation larger than themselves. Whole books matter not merely because they are long, but because they allow students to inhabit another consciousness deeply enough to encounter enduring questions about human life and moral values. 

On the question of how to teach books effectively, Kyair Butts, a Baltimore middle school teacher, emphasized the importance of building classrooms where students feel safe taking academic risks, reading aloud, building fluency and participating in shared intellectual work.  Lemov reinforced this point by sharing a video of eighth graders reading To Kill a Mockingbird together in class. Their teacher walked around the room, paper book in hand, as she modeled expressive reading, cold-called on students to read and encouraged self-correction. All these practices help students develop their reading fluency, a key aspect of upper-grade literacy.

In sum, good ELA instruction doesn鈥檛 happen simply because a publisher inserts a novel into a curriculum map. Nor will schools fully recover sustained literary reading until or unless policymakers and administrators create structures that signal its value and reward it. For years, schools received the opposite signal. 

The question now is whether schools are prepared to reclaim a richer understanding of reading itself 鈥 not as a toolbox of comprehension 鈥渟kills鈥 or test prep, but as immersion in language, knowledge, memory, narrative and thought.

Annika Hernandez, a research associate in education policy studies at the American Enterprise Institute and a former middle and high school English teacher, contributed to this essay.

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Along Party Lines, McMahon Bid to Lead Education Department Advances to Senate /article/along-party-lines-mcmahon-bid-to-lead-education-department-advances-to-senate/ Thu, 20 Feb 2025 19:40:27 +0000 /?post_type=article&p=740266 With little fanfare and just 10 minutes of debate, the Senate education committee on Thursday narrowly voted to advance the nomination of former World Wrestling Entertainment CEO Linda McMahon as education secretary.

The 12-11 vote fell along party lines, with the Republican chairman of the committee, Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, calling McMahon 鈥渢he partner this committee needs to improve the nation’s education system.鈥

Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, an Independent who is the committee鈥檚 ranking member, said he liked McMahon personally. 鈥淚 respect the work she has done in building a large and successful business.鈥 But he said no matter who the education secretary is, 鈥渉e or she will not have the power鈥 to make consequential decisions. A small group of people in The White House, he said, will be 鈥渃alling the shots.鈥


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Sanders was referring to massive cuts at the department by auditors deputized by billionaire Elon Musk鈥檚 Department of Government Efficiency.

Along with other Democrats, Sanders criticized White House plans to dismantle the U.S. Education Department, which he said 鈥減rovides vital resources for 26 million kids who live in high-poverty school districts. These are the kids who most need our help.鈥

During her confirmation hearing last week, McMahon said she supported dismantling the department, but admitted that the administration needs congressional support to do it. 

鈥淲e鈥檇 like to do this right,鈥 she told the committee. 鈥淲e鈥檇 like to make sure that we are presenting a plan that I think our senators could get on board with.鈥

Sanders on Thursday said that was misguided. 鈥淚s it a perfect entity?鈥 he said. 鈥淣o. Is it bureaucratic? Yes. Can we reform it? Yes. Should we abolish it? No.鈥

Likewise, Sen. Tim Kaine, a Virginia Democrat, said he鈥檇 vote no on McMahon鈥檚 nomination for that reason. 鈥淚 can’t vote for somebody who will willfully engage in the destruction of the very agency she wants to lead. That is disqualifying.鈥

McMahon鈥檚 nomination proceeds as the administration sends decidedly mixed signals on its education agenda. President Trump has nominated two experienced, well-regarded educators 鈥 North Dakota state Superintendent Kirsten Baesler and former Tennessee education chief Penny Schwinn 鈥 as top lieutenants to McMahon, even as Elon Musk鈥檚 Department of Government Efficiency decimates the department鈥檚 research arm, slashing millions of dollars in contracts in search of waste, fraud and abuse. At a press conference last week, Trump called the department 鈥渁 con job.鈥 

McMahon, for her part, has said she supports DOGE鈥檚 work, saying, 鈥淚t is worthwhile to take a look at the programs before money goes out the door.鈥 

While she鈥檚 expected to easily earn confirmation in the Republican-controlled Senate, with support among conservative groups, McMahon faces opposition from education and civil rights groups that more broadly oppose the White House education cuts. 

The conservative group last week said Trump was smart to nominate McMahon to lead the department 鈥渋n what we hope is a short tenure鈥 as she works to shutter it.

Conservative commentator Rick Hess McMahon鈥檚 WWE experience gives her the right background for the top job: 鈥淐onsidering that it鈥檚 an agency that鈥檚 long been plagued by low morale and accused of being too chummy with the unions and the college cartel,鈥 he wrote, 鈥渢here鈥檚 a strong case that what鈥檚 needed is an outsider with a strong managerial track record.鈥

By contrast, the Leadership Conference on Civil and Human Rights on Wednesday urged lawmakers to reject her nomination, saying in a co-signed by more than 240 groups that she鈥檚 鈥渦nprepared and unqualified鈥 to lead the agency. Her confirmation would be 鈥渄isastrous for students, their families, and educators,鈥 the group said. 

Worth more than $3 billion

One of 13 billionaires tapped to lead Trump鈥檚 administration, McMahon has held tightly to Trump鈥檚 key education priorities: advancing private school choice, preventing trans students from competing in sports consistent with their gender identity and fighting antisemitism. 

McMahon鈥檚 confirmation has taken longer to schedule than those of most other cabinet nominees as the education committee waited for her to complete ethics paperwork detailing vast financial assets and ties to far-right organizations. Her net worth totals more than $3 billion.

As a board member of Trump Media & Technology Group, which runs the president鈥檚 Truth Social platform, she earns $18,400 quarterly. Politico reported that she also received stock in the company worth more than $800,000 in late January. McMahon is also on the advisory council for the Daily Caller, a conservative media outlet that has given her favorable coverage. 

If confirmed, McMahon has promised to step down from her board positions, forfeit any shares in Truth Social that she doesn鈥檛 yet fully own and divest from those that she does within three months. She also earns interest income from education-related municipal bonds that fund school construction across the country and has pledged to divest from those as well.

A vote before the full Senate has yet to be scheduled.

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