The Department of Education and the Collapse of Formation
The Department of Education does not operate like a schoolhouse. It does not teach children, shape minds, or form citizens. It behaves like something else entirely — a giant fan to blow money. A financial steam shovel throwing good money after bad, scooping federal dollars from one side of the republic and dumping them into an ever‑expanding administrative landscape on the other. The machinery is loud, expensive, and relentless, and its motion gives the illusion of progress even as the ground beneath our schools erodes.
This is the part the public never sees. Before a child ever sits at a desk, before a teacher ever opens a book, before a parent ever meets a principal, the Department of Education has already completed its real work. Programs are created. Regulations are drafted. Standards are issued. Compliance offices are staffed. Auditors are hired. Reporting systems are built. Entire bureaucracies rise up to manage the flow of federal dollars long before a student walks through the schoolhouse door.
The structure is not educational. It is financial. It is political. It is self‑perpetuating.
And it forms no one.
The tragedy is not simply that the DOE wastes money. The tragedy is that the DOE consumes the very oxygen that once sustained formation. Every dollar shoveled into bureaucracy is a dollar not spent on literacy, reasoning, history, or civic judgment. Every new regulation creates another layer between teacher and student. Every new program creates another constituency whose survival depends on the continuation of the program itself. The system grows, but the citizen shrinks.
This is how a republic fails to produce formed adults. This is how it expects to teach its children. Show them how to waste money. No one does it better than the Department of Education and Congress.
The Department of Education was not designed to form citizens. It was designed to distribute funds. And once Congress discovered that money could be moved more easily than minds, the purpose of education shifted. Formation gave way to compliance. Judgment gave way to paperwork. Responsibility gave way to performance. The covenant between citizen and republic — the expectation that a free people must be formed and educated to remain free — was quietly abandoned.
The collapse of formation did not begin in the classroom. It began in the appropriations process. It began when Congress stopped debating education in the open and started burying DOE funding inside omnibus bills no one reads. It began when visibility disappeared and accountability dissolved into procedure. It began when the financial machinery of Washington became more important than the intellectual machinery of the American mind.
A nation cannot form citizens using a big fan, blowing money. It cannot cultivate judgment through a steam shovel. It cannot build a republic on a foundation of compliance reports, grant cycles, and regulatory audits.
And yet this is the system they built — a system that moves money with great efficiency and moves human beings not at all.
The collapse of formation is not an accident. It is the predictable outcome of a structure that rewards spending over stewardship, expansion over excellence, and bureaucracy over humanity. Until we confront the machinery itself — until we name it, map it, and refuse to be governed by it — the republic will continue to produce unformed citizens in an age that requires the most formed citizens of all.