Ķvlog

Opinion
Equity & Diversity Opinion

Let DEI Practices Die. Replace Them With Something Better

The secretary of education’s first school visit highlighted the potential of student agency
By Robert Maranto — June 05, 2025 5 min read
Secretary of Education Linda McMahon meets with students during a visit to Vertex Partnership Academies in New York on March 7, 2025.
  • Save to favorites
  • Print
Email Copy URL

In combating DEI, Donald Trump is doing the right thing. In that sentence I just wrote, I almost choked writing the six final words. But it is what I believe. A stopped clock is right twice a day.
— , a Columbia University associate professor and New York Times opinion writer

If many diversity, equity, and inclusion practices are in fact dying, there is considerable that we should not mourn their passing. But serious inequities do exist, and in politics, you can’t beat something with nothing. In her first school visit as U.S. secretary of education—to Ian Rowe’s Vertex charter school in the Bronx borough of New York City—Linda McMahon she wants to replace DEI with individual student agency, enabled by strong families and schools. I see that as good news for anyone who cares about inequality and wants to counter racism.

Vertex founder Rowe literally wrote the book on the power of student agency. As he lays out in Agency—The Four Point Plan for All Children to Overcome the Victimhood Narrative, students need, more than anything, the personal conviction of their own potential supported by the consistent guidance and moral direction of social institutions.

My experience and my work as a researcher make me agree with McMahon that Rowe is on to something. For a university professor, I have oddball views on race and class, initially shaped in blue-collar Baltimore. When I was 13, my dad dropped me off to work at our family business, an industrial bakery in a low-income Black neighborhood that had been a low-income Sicilian neighborhood a generation before, when my family lived there. Years on the factory floor taught me that if I had been born Black in Baltimore like my supervisor and most co-workers, I would have had a far higher probability of living poor and dying young.

As economist Melissa S. Kearney shows empirically in The Two-Parent Privilege, the rise of single-parent homes—which for complex reasons expanded among Blacks more quickly and Asians more slowly than among whites and Hispanics—does much to explain racial gaps in student achievement and downstream, wealth creation. Family structure is associated with later life outcomes for all major racial and ethnic groups in the United States and even in countries with strong welfare states and high levels of income equality like Denmark.

I could see this firsthand in Baltimore among people I worked alongside and respected. My supervisor, an expert dough mixer and good leader who never had us do any job he wouldn’t do, had biological children living in five different households. He tried, but in the real world, it’s hard to parent in multiple homes. By the time I left the family business, I could see two of his sons starting to go astray, with some substance abuse and no long-term plans, in a community where early mistakes can be unforgiving.

Again, as Kearney details, family structure has the same kinds of impacts no matter one’s race or ethnicity. Yet, in part reflecting the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow, African American communities were affected by the shift toward one-parent families before whites and to a greater degree than whites.

Unsafe schools and communities and stressed families are terrible burdens on children growing up, but so far as I can tell, few DEI practices address those grievous situations.

Schools can help make up some of resources typically missing in single-parent households, yet there again, the opportunities were not equal for me and my supervisor’s sons. I attended mediocre public schools in the suburban county adjacent to Baltimore. But my school, though in no way outstanding, was still safer and faced fewer challenges than schools in my part of the city, which was being drained of middle-class families.

Unsafe schools and communities and stressed families are terrible burdens on children growing up, but so far as I can tell, few DEI practices address those grievous situations. Instead, DEI influencers feed upper-class virtue signaling, as my progressive friend has detailed. DEI-related policies like freezing police budgets and “de-policing” certain neighborhoods (while still protecting downtown business districts) were associated with a near doubling of homicide rates among Black males in the 2014 to 2020 period, as political scientist Wilfred Reilly and I . Even DEI practices like diversity training fail to improve intergroup relations or diversify leadership, as al-Gharbi shows in his of two decades of research, concluding that such trainings are often empty gestures.

We should replace DEI with better things. When McMahon visited Vertex, she shone a spotlight on Rowe, the son of Jamaican immigrants, who argues that many common DEI approaches such as those teach minority students they are victims of white supremacy. That in turn robs them of the personal agency to succeed, and instead, ironically, places their fates in the hands of others. Further, one unfortunate line of thought in the DEI canon has derided certain pathways to success, sometimes casting hard work, objectivity, or the nuclear family as “whiteness” to be “dismantled.”

see also

Image shows a multi-tailed arrow hitting the bullseye of a target.
DigitalVision Vectors/Getty

In his book, the conservative Rowe, who holds two Ivy League degrees, also criticizes unrealistic approaches of other conservatives. Calls for students to simply make better choices fail to “acknowledge the necessity of local, character-forming institutions to help young people build agency,” institutions like families, schools, and houses of worship.

Were Rowe writing now, I suspect he would add to his criticisms that not teaching vital parts of U.S. history from Harriet Tubman to the Tuskegee Airmen, which has already happened in some classrooms, may send the message that important African American historical figures who showed agency under oppression do not count in our common national story.

Rowe aims for the Vertex Partnership Academies charter school to be a character-forming institution, teaching the knowledge to succeed academically and the U.S. history connecting young people to our national story. Vertex also teaches the “success sequence”: If kids graduate from high school, get a full-time job, get married, and have kids in that order, statistically, they have a 97% chance of avoiding poverty. That was true in the 1990s when some in the Clinton administration began to talk about it and remains true in the 21st century, as sociologists Wendy Wang and Brad Wilcox .

This is knowledge young people need and want, which schools rarely teach, and most .

Like John McWhorter, I have serious disagreements with the president who appointed Linda McMahon. But if the secretary can gradually, sensibly replace DEI paradigms with those stressing agency, it could revolutionize American education—and America.

Related Tags:

A version of this article appeared in the July 16, 2025 edition of Education Week as Let DEI Practices Die. Replace Them With Something Better

Events

This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
Teaching Webinar
Maximize Your MTSS to Drive Literacy Success
Learn how districts are strengthening MTSS to accelerate literacy growth and help every student reach grade-level reading success.
Content provided by 
College & Workforce Readiness Webinar How High Schools Can Prepare Students for College and Career
Explore how schools are reimagining high school with hands-on learning that prepares students for both college and career success.
This content is provided by our sponsor. It is not written by and does not necessarily reflect the views of Education Week's editorial staff.
Sponsor
School Climate & Safety Webinar
GoGuardian and Google: Proactive AI Safety in Schools
Learn how to safely adopt innovative AI tools while maintaining support for student well-being. 
Content provided by 

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.

Read Next

Equity & Diversity Remains, Stories of Native American Students Are Being Reclaimed From a Cemetery
Records offer a glimpse into their experiences at the Carlisle Indian Industrial School in Pennsylvania.
7 min read
This photo provided by the Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center shows the 1892 student body of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School assembled on the school grounds in Carlisle, Pa.
This photo provided by the Carlisle Indian School Digital Resource Center shows the 1892 student body of the Carlisle Indian Industrial School assembled on the school grounds in Carlisle, Pa.
John N. Choate/AP
Equity & Diversity Opinion Schools Cannot Afford to Ignore Race and Identity
People often don't notice discrimination if it doesn't affect them directly.
13 min read
Conceptual illustration of classroom conversations and fragmented education elements coming together to form a cohesive picture of a book of classroom knowledge.
Sonia Pulido for Education Week
Equity & Diversity Opinion In Today's Political Climate, Teachers Must Center Empathy
Kwame Sarfo-Mensah offers guidance on how teachers can model courage and leadership for students.
9 min read
Conceptual illustration of classroom conversations and fragmented education elements coming together to form a cohesive picture of a book of classroom knowledge.
Sonia Pulido for Education Week
Equity & Diversity Letter to the Editor Let DEI Thrive: How Agency and Belonging Flourish in Identity Safe Spaces
We can’t afford to let go of diversity, equity, and inclusion, writes an author and educator.
1 min read
Education Week opinion letters submissions
Gwen Keraval for Education Week