Expertise: 

Michael J. Petrilli

Visiting Fellow
Biography: 

Mike Petrilli is an award-winning writer and president of the Thomas B. Fordham Institute, one of the country’s most influential education policy think tanks. He is the author of The Diverse Schools’ Dilemma: A Parent's Guide to Socioeconomically Mixed Public Schools and coeditor of Knowledge at the Core: Don Hirsch, Core Knowledge, and the Future of the Common Core. Petrilli is also a visiting fellow at Stanford University's Hoover Institution and executive editor of Education Next. Petrilli has published opinion pieces in the New York Times, Washington Post Bloomberg View, Slate, and Wall Street Journal and has been a guest on NBC Nightly News,, ABC World News Tonight, CNN, and Fox, as well as several National Public Radio programs, including All Things Considered, On Point, and the Diane Rehm Show. Petrilli helped create the US Department of Education’s Office of Innovation and Improvement, the Policy Innovators in Education Network, and Young Education Professionals. He lives with his family in Bethesda, Maryland.

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Analysis and Commentary

Has the Left Lost Faith in Upward Mobility?

by Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Monday, October 7, 2013

Rather than accept a future of low-skill, low-wage work for our impoverished young people, education reformers aspire to build their "human capital"--their knowledge, skills, capabilities, talents, habits, character--so that the labor market will one day repay their contributions to society with a wage that far exceeds any minimums.

Analysis and Commentary

Self-Sufficient Citizens: Public Education’s Job No. 1

by Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Monday, September 30, 2013

Is there anything schools can to do to encourage their students to follow the "success sequence"?

Analysis and Commentary

If You Send Your Kid to a Failing School, You are a Bad Person

by Michael J. Petrillivia Corner (National Review Online)
Tuesday, September 3, 2013

A manifesto in response to Allison Benedikt: You are a bad person if you send your children to a failing school (unless you have no choice). Not bad like murderer bad — but bad like sacrificing-your-child’s-future-while-not-actually-doing-anyone-else-any-good bad. So, pretty bad. I am an education-policy wonk; I’m also judgmental. It seems to me that if every single parent sent every single child to the best possible school available, public schools would improve. This would not happen immediately. It could take generations. Some children might get mediocre educations in the meantime, but it will be worth it, for the eventual common good. So, how would this work exactly? It’s simple! Everyone needs to put pressure on our public schools in order for them to get better. Not just lip-service pressure, or I-might-pull-my-kid-out pressure, but real flesh-and-blood-offspring pressure. Your local school stinks but you send your child there anyway? Then its badness is just something you object to in the abstract. Your local school stinks and you send your child elsewhere? If enough parents act like you then you are doing everything within your power to make it better. And parents have a lot of power. In many under-resourced school districts, it’s the mass exodus of parents that has finally forced officials to make necessary changes. Everyone out. (By the way: Banning neighborhood schools isn’t the answer. We need a moral adjustment, not a legislative one.) There are a lot of reasons why bad people send their kids to failing schools. Yes, some do it out of laziness or out of loyalty to a longstanding family tradition. Others literally have no choice, as they cannot afford private schools and because teachers’ unions have blocked all other routes of escape. I believe in public education! you might say. I understand. You want the best for your community, but if you can tell your public school is crappy then you’re not doing anybody any good by propping it up with your child’s attendance (and tax dollars). You might believe that yours is the exact kind of family that can help your crappy public school become less crappy. This is naïve. Your child will not learn as much or be as challenged as she could be. Don’t let anyone tell you to “live with that.” Especially if she is gifted. The world needs her to fulfill her whole potential. I went K–12 to excellent public schools. My high school offered numerous AP classes, and over four years, I read many excellent books. I even played soccer. This is not bragging! I left home well prepared for college, and thanks to that preparation, I left college after learning a lot there too. I’m not saying that my precise educational route is the right one for everyone. But I am grateful that I attended good schools, and want that for everyone. By the way: My parents didn’t send me to these great schools because they believed in public ed. They couldn’t have afforded private schools very easily, so they chose to live where we lived based on the schools. Take two things from this on your quest to become a better person: 1) Your child will probably do just fine without “the best,” but 2) “the best” you can afford is surely what you should aim for. Also remember that there’s more to education than what’s taught. As wonderful as my school’s English, history, science, social studies, math, art, music, and language programs were, going to school with poor kids and rich kids, black kids and brown kids, smart kids and not-so-smart ones, kids with superconservative Christian parents and other upper-middle-class Catholics like me was its own education and life preparation. (I went to school in suburban St. Louis in the 1980s, home to the nation’s largest desegregation program, so my school enjoyed a certain amount of racial and socio-economic diversity that other affluent suburban schools did not.) But remember that there’s more to education than what’s taught. If your local public school doesn’t uphold the values you teach at home, that’s a big problem. Many of my (morally bankrupt) friends send their children to failing public schools. I asked them to tell me why. Here is the response that most stuck with me: “We wanted to live in the city, and these are the schools that are available to us, and that we can afford. And attending school with poor children will be a special experience for our kids.” I get it: You want to keep enjoying nightlife and a short commute and you think your kids will do fine. You like your school’s diversity, hate the suburbs, and figure you can provide whatever enrichment your son or daughter needs at home. Maybe your involvement will make the school a little better. Maybe your child’s large vocabulary will rub off on his or her peers. You know who else wants to believe those things? Scores of social scientists, a deluge of do-gooders, but here’s the thing: Whatever you think your children need—deserve—from their school experience, don’t assume that the parents at the nearby public-housing complex want the same. You want something warm-and-fuzzy and uber-progressive? They want something back-to-basics and akin to a Catholic education. You want more art and music and time for exploration and free play? They want a focus on reading and math and extended time for the fundamentals. If you send your kids to school with their kids, you are likely to use your energy, power, and money fighting to change your school in ways that you prefer but that might actually do less-advantaged children material harm. You might find yourself taking resources away from what they need most — a content-rich curriculum, a strong focus on reading and math, a firm approach to discipline — and hurting their life chances in the process. Don’t just acknowledge your inner consumer — listen to it. Pick the best fit for your child. Let other parents do the same. Everyone will be the better for it. — Michael J. Petrilli is author of The Diverse Schools Dilemma: A Parent’s Guide to Socioeconomically Mixed Public Schools, and research fellow at the Hoover Institution.

Analysis and Commentary

Cities Are For Strivers

by Michael J. Petrillivia Public Sector Inc.
Tuesday, September 3, 2013

The rapid gentrification of many large American cities represents a triumph and an opportunity for Republicans—a triumph because it was mainly Republican ideas (welfare reform, aggressive crime-figh

Analysis and Commentary

Introducing Netflix Academy: The Best Educational Videos Available for Streaming

by Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Saturday, August 31, 2013

Skeptics of educational technology like to quote mid-century enthusiasts who claimed that the filmstrip was set to transform our schools.

Analysis and Commentary

What Parents Want—and How Policymakers Can Provide It

by Chester E. Finn Jr., Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Tuesday, August 27, 2013
Analysis and Commentary

The Problem with Proficiency

by Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Friday, August 16, 2013

Proficiency rates are terrible measures of school effectiveness.

Analysis and Commentary

Why the ‘Opt-Out’ is Not a Cop-Out

by Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Friday, August 9, 2013
Analysis and Commentary

Common Core’s Best-Kept Secret

by Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Tuesday, August 6, 2013

The Common Core era signals a return of history, civics, literature, science, and the fine arts to the elementary school curriculum.

Analysis and Commentary

The Tony Bennett Flap: School Grades, Stakes, and Signals

by Michael J. Petrillivia Education Next
Friday, August 2, 2013

What matters most is how reformers react to the bright spotlight now on school-grading systems.

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