Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article

To: Carry_Okie
You PICK on one bone and never look at the total of the skeleton. Have you ever read anything else on this? Gotten a feel for the topic? Or are you just stuck gnawing on that bone?

Will Rick Perry Unravel the Strange Consensus on Public Education?

In Texas Schools, Perry Shuns Federal Influence

52 posted on 09/10/2011 1:36:36 PM PDT by Cincinatus' Wife
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 48 | View Replies ]


To: Cincinatus' Wife
You PICK on one bone and never look at the total of the skeleton.

Lol, I've been making serious, systemic, and innovative proposals on educational reform since long before Rick Perry came on the national political scene.

Education Policy Components

  1. Enforce the U.S. Supreme Court decision re Communications Workers v. Beck (487 US 735, 1988).
  2. Assist formation of corporate service associations. Offer State funding for local school districts to divest into smaller, more personalized institutions.
  3. Use the private and home education market to develop and test learning tools and services. Private validation services could assess product performance against product claims. School boards would be free to select guaranteed products for use in public schools.
  4. Insurance on the guarantee would cover the cost of remedial education if the product fails to meet warranted performance.
  5. Veto any bill requiring home and private educators to conform to State teacher certification standards.
  6. Veto any bill requiring State supervision of home schools.
  7. Analyze any Federal program for insufficient funds and unintended consequences suspecting unfunded mandates. Cite New York v. United States (505 US 144, 1992).
Here is a speech on the topic I wrote for Bill Simon:

Education

Education is the most critical issue in California, more serious than even the budget crisis. When Gray Davis first ran for Governor, he promised that Education was to be his highest three priorities, but instead Mr. Davis has shown us what they really were all along: Re-Election, Re-Election, and Re-Election. What were the results? Education spending per student has increased nearly 30%, while classroom performance remains relatively unimproved and at the bottom of a nation producing a third rate primary and secondary education product. The system is broken and the State is nearly bankrupt. So what can we do?

One answer is to free California’s teachers from the overwhelming power of national unions. Teachers should have a choice whether or not to support an often radical political agenda. Unlike Gray Davis, if you elect me Governor of California, I will enforce the law that prohibits unions from requiring campaign contributions in dues payments without teacher’s permission (Beck (487 US 735), 1988).

Second, we must reverse the trend toward large unified school districts that has effectively excluded parents from affecting public school decisions. The purpose of consolidation was supposedly to reduce the cost of overhead through economies of scale and to strengthen the districts’ collective bargaining power, but that isn’t how it has turned out. Instead, district bureaucracies have become enormous and the resulting issues are so complex that parents are pushed aside by an organizational machine controlled by union lawyers.

I plan to assist formation of corporate service associations for school districts so that they can divest operations into smaller, more personalized institutions while retaining the organizational muscle to deal with the unions. Smaller school districts will give parents a stronger voice on district boards over the issues that matter to them. The principle need to make this possible is to develop programs for children with special needs. Here is where can turn to parents for solutions.

Some would argue that parents on local School Boards aren’t qualified to make administrative decisions about public education, especially over programs for children with developmental challenges. So, I’d like to talk about an education success-story that not only proves that argument wrong, it points toward a total transformation in public education.

Home education is enjoying a renaissance in America, and religious freedom isn’t the principle reason. Parents are choosing to home school to assure educational excellence for their children, whose learning habits they know best. A family bond of patience and discipline is a critical factor in student success, especially in a challenging situation. What many people don't know about home-schools is that they have a high percentage of students with genetic, behavioral, and developmental disabilities that had often been poorly served by public institutions. Even with that statistical disadvantage, SAT, ACT, and STAR test scores strongly indicate that home education is producing superior results across the entire spectrum of individual ability.

So parents ARE competent to make choices about their children’s education, and home schools successfully manage nearly every type of specialized educational problem. So what are they doing right that we can apply to public institutions?

As home-educators have grown in number, they have been organizing into loosely knit education cooperatives that point to a new form of public education: a decentralized, customer-oriented network for lifelong learning, using products customized to meet individual interests and abilities. That promises what 21st Century public education could really become: a multi-disciplinary market of customized learning products and services.

We are already starting to see the effects of this change. Software and curriculum companies are finding a growing market of customers committed to gaining competitive advantage. Colleges and universities are offering online degrees because they need superior students to assure productive alumnae. Superior teachers could get rich transmitting their ideas and methods to a mass-market. Where better to develop those products and sell them to the world than California?

We can use private and home education as if they were R&D laboratories developing and testing proven learning tools and services. Public school parents on school boards could then select those products that the State would fund for use in public schools. It is a gradual transformation, from experimenting on our children with untested academic theories, to contracting for innovative tools and methods that have been proven in the marketplace.

All we have to do is let it happen and keep government from regulating new educational methods out of existence. If you elect me Governor, that is what I will do. Federal education dollars aren’t worth the price of Federal control and bureaucratic requirements. Private and home education both leave the State with more money to spend per-child and provide a competitive incentive for public schools to keep their customers.

Together, let’s help California rise from the ashes of a broken system and lead the way once again, into a world of exciting possibilities for our children.

Now, that program would bring real change.

15 posted on Saturday, April 19, 2003 9:34:27 PM by Carry_Okie (California - See how low WE can go!)

This whole harangue of yours reminds me of SOME of the reaction I got when I shot down Dick Pombo's "reform" of the ESA, yet for the most part it was positive because FR was a different place in those days, sigh. Just because the guy is "on our side" does not mean that what he is proposing is a good thing. Like I said on that thread, "If it's broke, don't fix it." They should devolve the powers that got us into the hole in the first place.

53 posted on 09/10/2011 1:55:54 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (GunWalker: Arming "a civilian national security force that's just as powerful, just as well funded")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 52 | View Replies ]

To: Cincinatus' Wife
You can't know how much this reminds me of the educational hoo-haw when George W. Bush ran for President. He instituted TESTING. He IMPROVED Texas education... so much so that ol' Rick Perry had to fix it too and what do you know, but he's doing the same things!

Look what happened: George W. got into office and who'da thunk it but he did a deal with TEDDY KENNEDY for No Child Left Alone, er "Behind." Yes indeed, now the DOE has the power to test children to see if their "tolerance education" is up to snuff, nationwide!! Great idea.

So don't get all huffy when I see Perry doing the same things and don't exactly get enamored with the underlying principle: centralized command and control. Somehow, it's been a bad thing for securing the blessings of liberty every time it's been tried, regardless of how pleasing the pitch may have sounded.

So now that you've tried to push the same thing and had it handed back to you, well, thanks for the opportunity to make things clearer. Over time, the far cheaper and far more effective alternatives to increasing state control will become more obvious.

54 posted on 09/10/2011 2:09:15 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (GunWalker: Arming "a civilian national security force that's just as powerful, just as well funded")
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 52 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
News/Activism
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson