Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Public Education, Cheating Education
Public Education, Cheating Education
Mar 13, 2026 11:09 AM

America’s children are in serious trouble when es to public education in munities. All over America, more and more schools would rather cheat on standardized testing than suffer the consequences of the truth that many of their students are seriously struggling. The widespread corruption in many public school systems that predominantly serve children of color is no less than a national crisis. It seems that many public educators, like politicians, are making decisions that serve their career advancement rather than make tough decisions that serve the education needs of children.

For example, in Atlanta on April 2, 2013, Beverly Hall, former superintendent for the city’s public schools turned herself in after being indicted by a grand jury in a cheating scandal. In addition, 26 other educators had surrendered to authorities with a bond set for some Atlanta educators at $1 million. In total, 35 educators were indicted, accused of cheating on standardized testing dating back to 2001.

According to CNN,

About 180 teachers were implicated initially. Cheating is believed to date back to early 2001, when standardized testing scores began to turn around in the 50,000-student school district, according to the indictment. For at least four years, between 2005 and 2009, test answers were altered, fabricated and falsely certified, the indictment said. “We’ve had cheating all up and down the line. It was absolutely amazing,” said Michael Bowers, a former Georgia attorney general who investigated the cheating scandal.

A few years ago, Walter H. Annenberg, Professor of Education Policy, Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy, and Steven D. Levitt, the William B. Ogden Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago, conducted a study demonstrating that Chicago Public Schools are likely cheating when administering standardized testing. The researchers noted unusual gains in performance during the season of high-stakes testing followed by steep declines in performance when students were retested. Jacob and Levitt conclude that the Federal Government introduced perverse incentives that encouraged cheating. “With the implementation of the No Child Left Behind Act, the incentives for teachers and administrators to manipulate the results from high-stakes tests will only grow, especially as schools begin to feel the consequences of low scores,” Jacob and Levitt observe. What the scholars found in Chicago then was not surprising:

Cheating by school personnel increased following the introduction of high-stakes testing, particularly in the lowest-performing classrooms. For example, the likelihood of cheating in a classroom that was one standard deviation below the mean increased by roughly 29 percent in response to the school probation policy and 43 percent due to the ending of social promotion.

In fact, there is much discussion now that the Federal guidelines are not just corrupting Chicago, but school districts throughout the nation.

In Woodbridge, NJ, two elementary school principals and three teachers were suspended last summer after state investigators concluded they cheated or encouraged third-graders to cheat on state standardized tests.

The educators’ conduct was uncovered in the state’s “erasure analysis” of 2010 and 2011 NJ-ASK tests, in which investigators look for unusually high numbers of wrong-to-right erasures. Investigators also received anonymous letters and phone calls about possible testing breaches at Middlesex County schools, officials said. Dozens of staff members and students were interviewed by the state Office of Fiscal Accountability and Compliance, officials said.

In Philadelphia, investigations into a massive cheating scandal have resulted in two administrators surrendering their credentials in lieu of disciplinary action by the state of Pennsylvania. They are Barbara McCreery, the former principal of Communications Tech High School and this years principal of Bok Technical High School, and Lola Marie O’Rourke, former principal of Locke Elementary. Both have confessed to cheating. According to news sources, citywide in Philadelphia 53 district schools and three charters remain under scrutiny for possible cheating beginning with state tests administered in 2009, according to reports.

The list of cheating, corrupt, and scandalous public school districts goes on and on. What is most unfortunate is that those that have the most to lose, in a system where teachers and administrators cheat to save their own careers, have the least power to institute change. This may explain why more and more African Americans are protesting with their feet and are now homeschooling their children. Because we know that failing pounded by despair, broken families, government dependence, poverty, and deficient moral formation—is the pathway to prison, we may need to take radical steps to rethink how we educate our children, and find ways that structurally and financially empower parents to have absolute freedom to make the best decision for their children without education bureaucrats or the education unions undermining their choices.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Gratitude for Grace
Gina over at The Point links to a piece by Jennifer at Conversation Diary, which reads in part, …I got out a pen to add some things to the store list. I do this about five times every day. But this time, as I wrote “bread” and “black beans” on my little pad of paper, it hit me: I am doing something really, really amazing here. Out of the blue, I suddenly saw writing items on my grocery list in...
School Choice in D.C.
Washington, D.C., has long been a focal point of debates about vouchers and other forms of school choice–partly because the public schools there are so notoriously bad that a working majority of politicians and parents are open to experiments that might improve them. Two recent articles highlight interesting developments. First, Bill McGurn of the Wall Street Journal challenges President Obama to fight congressional action that might terminate the D.C. scholarship program (which currently permits some students to attend private schools...
Economic Crisis Resource Page
Today on the Acton website we launched a resource page devoted to the global economic crisis. This page is a collection of recent Acton articles, interviews, and video that directly relates to the economic crisis. It includes material that addresses the causes of the crisis, the government’s responses, and market-based solutions to the crisis. It also has a link to a superb video in which Sam Gregg discusses the government’s response to the crisis and how its policies, such as...
Economic Literacy on Campus: Abysmal
Maurice Black and Erin O’Connor, research fellows at the American Council of Trustees and Alumni, write in “Illiterates,” a column in Newsday, that “younger Americans are deplorably uninformed about economic and financial matters.” They observe that “students who do not understand money e adults who are financially irresponsible.” And, of course, they e adults who are not equipped to understand broader economic issues involving government, such as taxation, debt and spending. From the column: Some colleges and universities offer programs...
Evangelicals and Catholics Together?
The Making Men Moral conference at Union University is over, but there are some takeaways. This was a unique engagement of many natural law thinkers such as the Catholics Robert George and Francis Beckwith with Southern Baptists like Russell Moore and Greg Thornbury. In that connection, Russell Moore delivered a message that I think would be considered a highlight of the conference by anyone who attended. He addressed the differences between Catholics and Evangelicals irenically without being ecumenical in any...
Conservative Protestants and Corporate Behavior
I have a piece up today at the First Things website on conservative Protestants (like me) and their attitude toward corporate behavior. Here’s a clip: Experience and prudence have demonstrated that free markets are demonstrably better than other alternatives. But the problem is that we have tuned our antennae in such a way such that they pick up market problems like the promotion of hedonistic vice but do not take adequate notice of other wrongs. Thus, conservative evangelicals are quick...
World Freedom Atlas
The World Freedom Atlas, “a geovisualization tool for world statistics,” looks like a very powerful plement to something like the Gapminder Trendalyzer tool. ...
‘Don’t Buy Stuff You Cannot Afford’
As Dave Ramsey admits, all of the advice he gives is something that you would be able to get from your grandma. It’s a mentary on our society that this basic wisdom, that prudential use of money (i.e. thrift) is a virtue, is so alien to us. ...
PBR: Retreat, not Surrender
Free trade seems to get all the blame when things go wrong and none of the credit when things go right. It’s the Rodney Dangerfield of global economics: it gets no respect. Certainly in this worldwide economic downturn globalism is going to take its bumps and bruises. And as trouble es to roost at home (and vice versa) more then ever the lesson is going to be how truly interdependent we all are. In the short term there will certainly...
Has Damon Linker Dethroned Natural Law?
I’ll save you the suspense. No. Linker, known primarily for betraying Richard John Neuhaus by serving as editor of First Things and then publishing a book accusing Neuhaus of scurrilous theocratic aims, now writes at the New Republic. In a recent post there, he brilliantly claims to have demonstrated the idea of natural law is obvious poppycock. Why? Because he disagrees with two officials of the Catholic Church holding that a nine year old who was raped and with her...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved