In 1973, 61 percent of Republicans and 60 percent of Democrats said they had “a great deal” or “quite a lot” of confidence in America’s public schools. By 2022, that was down to 43 percent among Democrats and 14 percent among Republicans. While public schools enjoyed overall support from 58 percent in 1973, that had fallen to 28 percent by 2022.
In higher ed, with a condensed timeline, the collapse has been faster and more dramatic. In 2010, 75 percent of Americans said college was “very important.” In 2025, just 35 percent did. In 2015, Gallup first asked about confidence in higher education (tellingly, it hadn’t previously bothered to ask). That year, 57 percent of respondents said they were confident in higher education. By 2024, that figure was down to 36 percent.
What’s driven the shift? It’s a product of declining trust in institutions across the board. This was accelerated by the twinned rise of populism and divisive DEI-imbued ideologies. And the final straw may have been school systems throwing in the towel during Covid while elite colleges became synonymous in the public mind (fairly or no) with antisemitism and onerous debt.
Through the late 20th century and the first years of this one, policymakers and the public mostly treated colleges with deference and the internal workings of schools with benign neglect. As much as educators decried the “intrusiveness” of No Child Left Behind or Obama-era teacher evaluation, neither initiative made much effort to influence school-level decisions around books, instructional materials, grading, curricula, staffing, or how to teach civics or history. Even “reformers” hesitated to insert themselves too deeply into the day-to-day work of schools or colleges. But the pandemic, populism, and the platforming of “anti-racist education” combined to upend this hands-off approach.
The consequences of broken trust have hit education especially hard in for at least three reasons.
First, educational institutions have a formative mission. To my mind, that’s inevitable and appropriate. They’ve historically been tasked with helping to inform their students’ views and values. But as trust in them declines, schools and colleges will face more scrutiny from those concerned about which values are being promoted, who’s making those decisions, and how that’s working in practice. Whatever role one thinks schools ought to play, declining trust complicates their efforts.
Second, schools and colleges depend heavily on public dollars. A loss in trust means new questions arise about what taxpayers are getting in exchange for the vast sums they’re providing. When K–12 schools spend close to $20,000 a year per pupil and the public underwrites hundreds of billions in nonperforming college loans, trust becomes a pocketbook issue.
Third, educational institutions have tended to take their autonomy for granted. The independence of higher ed is viewed as a birthright that helps safeguard academic freedom. In K–12, the long leash is a product of early 20th-century reforms that insulated schools from politics. The result was a culture where institutional leaders at both levels were ill-prepared for populist backlash.
Given all this, plunging trust has had big implications for policy and practice.
Take school choice. From 1990 to 2020, choice advocates spent decades grinding out stop-and-start wins. Then, in the wake of Covid school closures and clashes over gender identity and DEI, there was a metamorphosis. In these moments of crisis, many public school parents just weren’t that worried about whether private alternatives would yield better test scores. What mattered more to many was, “Why aren’t our kids back in school?” and, “What are their schools teaching them?” When parents and policymakers lose their default confidence in public schools to navigate fraught decisions (around books, sexuality, history, et al.), the sheer number of potential pain points means the case for choice will snowball.
Why have advocates for K–12 accountability had such a tough slog? After all, you might think distrust would be a boon for testing—a good way to keep a wary eye on schools. The wrinkle? No Child Left Behind, the Common Core, and the schism between populists and institutionalists marked accountability hawks as part of the education establishment. Rather than being labeled as suspicious outsiders seeking to get schools back in line, they got coded as elite regulators committed to the status quo. The future of testing may well depend on their ability to rewrite that narrative.
Why have concerns about grade inflation become more prominent of late, when it’s been going on for decades with little obvious consternation? When faith in good intentions erodes, stubborn problems like grade inflation morph into evidence of an intent to deceive parents and defraud students. That means schools and colleges can no longer be trusted to police themselves. On the left, this distrust manifests in the push for “equitable grading,” which ostensibly combats the systemic biases baked into teaching. On the right, it shows up in the Trump Higher Ed Compact’s grading directive, which requires schools to adopt measures like grade distribution dashboards. Either way, it results in a demand for new strictures on how schools or colleges go about their day-to-day work.


