Now perhaps more of you can understand why the Department of Education, as it was, needed to be dismantled. The liberal approach to education essentially gave up on the children in the poor neighborhoods of cities like Chicago and Baltimore and Washington D.C. The lack of discipline along with DEI and CRT-like curriculum instead of a focus on English and basic math meant the kids had scant chance to succeed. There was little incentive to change among radical leaders, keeping the children uneducated meant more future votes for them.
Actually, the Department of Education has little to do with that. Cities and states manage to do that to themselves quite nicely. They are the ones who set curriculum. Local school boards, too, though to a lesser degree.
Example: States could chose to implement Common Core or not. But here's a curious thing that turned up in Georgia years ago, when that state was considering it. A candidate for state school superintendent pointed out that Common Core standards were
less than the state's current standards, and had the documentation to prove it. Then she pointed out that Georgia already didn't do so hot when it came to students and math. She didn't get elected, by the way.
I don't know about reading. Ours were taught phonetics in school rather than whole word. But math...
Well, first you have to know that when it came to our children and math, I was like Robert Parr trying to help Dash with his math homework. More than once I'd show them a way it worked, and when they protested the teacher didn't do it that way, would tell them to do it like I showed them, then put it in a form the teacher wanted. The big thing I saw is that our system of mathematics is naturally like an abacus, and once upon a time, that was how it was taught. And I'm of the strong opinion that number lines, like diagraming sentences, is a bunch of hooey. You want the kids to "get" it? Turn the thing vertically so it's like a thermometer. They've seen thermometers and what the column of fluid does. It also makes it easier to understand negative numbers.
It doesn't help that each half generation, how math is taught changes, maybe in hopes that this time students will "get" it. Here's a suggestion: Go back to the "abacus" model and start from there. That's what used to work.
Will also note that factions are now introduced one full grade later than we learned them, which implies something about how much they're taught of multiplication and division (in other words, not a lot).
Ahem. Anyway, what the Department of Education does is show up with a check. It's even designed so that it doesn't have that much influence of school systems. It has the lofty idea of equal access to education (note: the Department of Education was established at the end of 1979, long after desegregation so that was always an iffy statement). And it supposedly promotes research, and improving education, without being too long on specifics. The whole thing is summed up in the question "What exactly is it that you do?" We've seen education fail to improve after throwing money at it, so if we're not getting a good return on the investment, maybe we don't need to be spending it on the Federal level.