Because of her
advocacy for
school choice, her
presence alongside Trump (as well as Bannon and Sessions) makes it even harder for Black, Latino, and Asian reformers who champion choice to continue doing so without risk of damaging their work with the men, women, and children who look like them.
«Eisner's unrelenting
advocacy of the arts continued during periods in which arts programs were cut in
schools, and a chorus of administrators and policymakers, faced with budget constraints, focused on test scores, worried that spending time painting or drawing was not academic enough... One of the casualties of our preoccupation with test scores is the
presence — or should I say the absence — of arts in our
schools,» he wrote in the Los Angeles Times in 2005.