
New Books in Education Mark Hlavacik, "Willing Warriors: A New History of the Education Culture Wars" (U Chicago Press, 2025)
Mar 28, 2026
Mark Hlavacik, assistant professor at Texas A&M who studies public arguments about schools, discusses how culture-war conflicts have reshaped U.S. education since the 1970s. He outlines five vivid case studies, examines high-profile controversies like the National History Standards and the 1619 Project, and considers when public fights help or harm schooling. He also offers tips for interpreting viral education debates.
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How Op-Eds Stopped National History Standards
- National History Standards controversy shows exposé rhetoric can halt policy quickly.
- Lynn Cheney used op-eds and preplanned research tactics to stop standards she disliked before they were released.
Education Is Argument's Best Laboratory
- Education debates are an especially rich place to study argument because they combine high stakes and abundant rhetorical spectacle.
- Hlavacik's background in teaching and debate draws him to education as a fertile field for analysis.
Bloom Raised Valid Curriculum Questions
- Alan Bloom's Closing of the American Mind mixes flawed cultural critiques with serious questions about curriculum purpose.
- Bloom criticized corporatization of universities and the 'college is for jobs' mindset, concerns still relevant today.






