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Bruce Deitrick Price

Bruce Deitrick Price has been writing about education for 30 years. He is the founder of Improve-Education.org. His eighth book is "Saving K-12 --What happened to our public schools? How do we fix them?" More aggressively than most, Price argues that America's elite educators have deliberately aimed for mediocrity--low standards in public schools prove this. Support this writer on Patreon.

Most Recent Articles by Bruce Deitrick Price:

Is Close Reading a complete fraud?

Perhaps not entirely. Any method, no matter how silly, can be used as a change of pace. Let’s stipulate that variety is often a stimulus. Here’s the chief, if ironic, benefit of this bad method. Make kids wallow for half-an-hour in something unpleasant (for example, how to prepare taxes) and many will beg for anything half-way interesting. Please, teacher, let us read a novel. Please!
- Friday, July 15, 2016

Why Socialism Is A Bad Deal

Thanks to Bernie and Hillary, Socialism is on everyone’s mind. These politicians, like so many in our media and universities, claim it’s a glorious idea.
- Tuesday, June 7, 2016


Reading IS phonics

The last 80 years have seen one of the weirdest intellectual debates you can imagine. The Education Establishment constantly argues that phonics is wrong or unnecessary, that phonics is something you can throw away and nobody will be hurt.
- Friday, February 19, 2016


Bill Ayers and Social Injustice

From John Dewey circa 1915 to Bill Ayers a century later, we hear the same progressive spiel. There must be drastic change, and perhaps much destruction and death, in order to create a more just society. A dubious trade if you stop and think about it. Lenin gave the same deal to the hapless Russians.
- Tuesday, October 27, 2015

The Purpose of Public Schools

The traditional view is simply stated: the purpose of public education is to take each child as far as each child can be taken. Who can disagree with that?
- Wednesday, October 14, 2015

Education, politics, and lies—what’s the difference?

During the past decade, I wrote mainly about education. I decided it would be good strategy to stay away from peripheral issues, especially politics. I didn’t want to confuse my readers. I wanted them to think, oh yeah, this is that guy that writes about education.
- Thursday, August 6, 2015

Education: Suppose Al Capone lives in your city

So, Al Capone lives in your city. Do you talk about it? Do you mention that this Mafia guy got his mansion by breaking the law, blackmailing people, buying and selling politicians, not to mention killing people? Seriously, do you ever talk about Al Capone? Or do you look the other way and pretend that nothing is going on where you live, nothing journalistically interesting, nothing criminally interesting.
- Friday, June 12, 2015


K-12 Education is a Crooked House

Some sites I write for want a lot of links and the appearance of journalism. Why is that a plus? Journalists lie every day.
- Saturday, April 25, 2015



Ignore Common Core, the NEA, and Bill Gates. Here are some good ideas

Our Education Establishment, for 100 years, has denigrated facts, knowledge, maps, details, and the memorization of anything. It’s absurd. You can’t find your way around your own house unless you remember various rooms and hallways. All of life is like that.
- Sunday, January 18, 2015




Education: What a Wonderful World It Would Be

What a wonderful world it would be if, for example, the people in charge of our public schools really believed in knowledge. If, for example, the National Council of Teachers of English, really loved English. If the National Council of Teachers of Math, really loved math. Alas, that does not seem to be the case.
- Friday, September 12, 2014

Public school education—there’s bad news and good news

The bad news is that John Dewey’s “progressives” are winning big. They mobilized every educational front group and every pedagogical gimmick to achieve the goal of controlling what goes on in the schools, as a way of achieving a fundamental transformation of America, to coin a phrase.
- Saturday, August 9, 2014

Education: None Dare Call Them Commies

Historically, Socialism and Communism were sometimes synonyms. But generally there was a sense that Socialism was softer. If you had enough power, you moved on to Communism, which was more coercive.
- Thursday, July 17, 2014

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