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A Bold Way to Save Education in America
Godfather Politics ^ | November 12, 2011 | Art Robinson

Posted on 12/02/2011 5:15:24 AM PST by 1010RD

The American tradition of public education began in one-room school houses when frontier farm families hired dedicated teachers to teach their children.

When I attended public schools in the 1950s, I received an excellent education. American schools were rated the best in the world. Those schools prepared me for Caltech, and Caltech prepared me for a wonderful life in science. I owe my career and accomplishments to the great start I received in the public schools.

Those public schools were locally controlled and locally funded. Teachers and parents worked together on the content of curriculum, student discipline, and all aspects of school life. In addition to being academic institutions, public schools became centers of sports competition, social events, and other aspects of community life.

Unfortunately, our public schools are no longer locally controlled. They are largely controlled by federal and state agencies and special interests empowered by government. Local school boards still meet, but the most important decisions are out of their hands.

As local control diminished, so did the academic quality of our schools. U.S. schools are now rated as among the worst in the developed world. This is more than a tragedy – it is child abuse.

When 50 million American children – in whose hands the fate of our nation rests – receive poor quality elementary academic educations, the future of our country is in serious jeopardy. The federally and state controlled public schools that are ruining our children’s educations should be abolished – and replaced by the locally-controlled public schools that served our children so well in the past. No school should be permitted to ruin the life of a single student.

A vast federal bureaucracy and numerous special interest organizations it empowers now stand between our students and our teachers. It should be eliminated. All aspects of a student’s upbringing are the responsibility of the student’s parents and any professional whom the parents wish to engage. Together, they should provide the student with the best possible academic opportunities. This effort must not be imperiled by those who use education for their own purposes, rather than for the student’s best interest.

Americans have responded to the deterioration of their schools by providing more and more tax money, but more money has not worked. Much of the money never reaches the students or the teachers. It funds a literal army of non-teachers, administrators, and federal, state, and local bureaucrats – who generally spend their time making life miserable for the teachers and interfering with their efforts to teach.

Tax funding for Oregon schools is now, on average, about $10,000 per student year. Suppose that one of our thousands of great teachers were to be given 30 students, a check for $300,000, and asked to teach those students for nine months. Do you think the teacher would have sufficient resources? (Some schools receive less than the average of $10,000, but even $200,000 would suffice for this example.)

The teacher could rent the best room in town, hire an assistant, raise her own salary, buy everything the students need, fully fund all extracurricular activities, and have money left over. The teacher could, of course, do this more efficiently in a school with other teachers. This single teacher example illustrates, however, that education resources are sufficient – if the resources go directly to the classroom.

The local school board would assure that resources do go to the classroom and provide sufficient supervision, which need not cost much. Following World War II, my uncle taught school in Iowa. In addition to teaching a full load of classes, he was given a few dollars extra to be the superintendant of schools.

I have been an educator all my life. Starting with earning a little money for college by tutoring students in high school, I eventually became a faculty member at the University of California at San Diego, teaching chemistry to 300 undergraduates each year and supervising graduate students. Currently, our family business provides curricula, books, and teaching aids to approximately 60,000 home schooled students in the U.S.

In the 1950s when our schools were under local control, there was almost no home schooling in America because there was no need for it. Now, millions of American children are being home schooled because their parents want better educations for them than are provided in the academically inferior schools that are under federal, state, and special interest political control.

Not even nuclear war could “abolish” American public education. It is an integral part of our way of life. However, American schools must be returned to local control. The federal Department of Education should be closed, and education returned entirely to the states and the people as the Constitution specifies. The states and localities can collect the needed taxes. No increase in overall taxes would be needed.

Local control is close to the parents, where real concern for the student lies. Also, local control places our school districts in competition with each other for academic excellence, so students benefit.

Improvement of our public schools cannot wait. It cannot be neglected in hopes that they will gradually improve over the coming decades. The 50 million children in these schools now will not have a second chance at some future date.

Beyond high school, the U.S. system of private and public universities is also functioning below its potential because of political control. Oregon State University, located in Oregon District 4, serves as an example. This university receives more than $250 million in federal research dollars each year, including approximately $30 million as direct earmark funding from incumbent Congressmen during the last congressional session. By comparison, OSU private funding for research is now less than $6 million.

Is it any surprise, therefore, that in the 2010 election, OSU facilities and personnel were mobilized in favor of the incumbent Congressional candidate in District 4 and against the challenger? OSU courses often contain partisan political content, even science courses with no logical political purpose. OSU has become a very partisan political institution, which can lead to reprehensible injustices to students, as evidenced by my own family.

By contrast, the California Institute of Technology receives only about half of its funds from political sources. The other half is supported by income from Caltech’s endowment, which mitigates the effect of outside political influence.

Oregon State University and the University of Oregon (also in Oregon District 4) are very important institutions. Both universities would, however, be much better off if they were not completely dependent upon politicians for their immediate existence. Very large independent endowments should be built for both universities. These could be built with both public and private funds, but then be administered by the universities without political control.

Public education, from first grade to the university levels should be as independent of federal and state political influence as possible.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; US: Oregon
KEYWORDS: academia; arth; artrobinson; constitution; education; elections; elections2012; frhf; homeschooling; learning; robinson; schools; teaching
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To: 1010RD

Certification equals Indoctrination. It makes sense if you know the objective, right?


41 posted on 12/02/2011 10:18:19 PM PST by itsahoot (Throw them all out!)
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To: 1010RD
Tax funding for Oregon schools is now, on average, about $10,000 per student year.
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Local control is still local socialism.

1) The children who attend risk becoming accustomed to accepting a tuition-free socialist service. Well?...If the government ( local or not) can use the threat of police action to take money from a neighbor to give them socialist schooling, why not use that government power to get lots of socialist goodies

2) It is **IMPOSSIBLE** to have a culturally, politically, and religiously neutral education. Even if school districts were the size of a city block or a suburban housing division, there is no way to reconcile the various worldviews of even those few families. In the end, the largest political bully group gets to dictate the worldview of the area's children and they have the government police force to make other citizens pay for it.

3) Ok....Let's say all socialist K-12 schooling were returned to the town level. How many generations would it take to reproduce the federal and state monstrosity that we have now? One? Two? Three generations? Socialism's natural course is to move toward greater and greater centralization.

4) Finally...Secularism is NOT NOT NOT religiously neutral! In a secular school a child must think and reason godlessly merely to cooperate within the classroom! How can that be religiously neutral? It can't! The point is that it is impossible to have a religiously neutral education, and no citizen should be forced to pay for the establishment of the religious worldview of the biggest political bullies in the town.

Socialist schooling is a First Amendment and freedom of conscience abomination!

Solution: We must begin the process of privatizing universal K-12 education. What's needed is complete separation of school and state.

By the way....It only took one to three generations of modern locally controlled socialist education to produce **four** terms of Franklin D. Roosevelt.

( Not proof read)

42 posted on 12/03/2011 5:58:10 AM PST by wintertime (I am a Constitutional Restorationist!!! Yes!)
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To: SumProVita
Of course, we must all share in the blame ... because, as a nation, we began to ignore God and His Wisdom.
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Well....Sending generations of kids to socialist schools that were at first a lukewarm Protestant, then secular with a nod to God, and now utterly godless hasn't helped any.

At there very best our modern socialist schools offered the children a lukewarm and generic Protestantism. What does Christ do with the lukewarm? He spits them out of His mouth! Children who attend schools like this risk learning to be generic and lukewarm about their faith.

My grandmother ( born 1894) attended secular socialist schools that merely nodded to God in the morning. Children who attend these schools risk learning to think godlessly and occasionally nod to God.

Today's socialist schools are utterly godless, and merely to cooperate in the classroom children must think and reason godlessly. How can they not, at least while there?

If you are wondering how America lost its way, maybe the local godless socialist school is a good place to start looking.

Socialist schooling is an abomination. One more generation of this and I doubt we will survive as a free people. It's like looking a train wreck happening in slow motion.

43 posted on 12/03/2011 6:08:20 AM PST by wintertime (I am a Constitutional Restorationist!!! Yes!)
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To: Spartan79
Return the control of education to local school boards.
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Even if school districts were the size of a city block or a suburban housing division, the schools would still be socialist and they would still be either godlessly secular or lukewarm and generic in their religious worldview.

Children who attend schools like this risk learning to be comfortable accepting a tuition-free socialist service provided to them by threat of police force. Well?...Why not use that force to get lots of socialist goodies?

Children who would attend these schools risk learn to think godlessly or to be lukewarm and generic in their religious belief.

Fundamentally, socialist schooling is a First Amendment and freedom of conscience abomination, not only to the children and their families but the taxpayer who is under police threat to pay for it.

44 posted on 12/03/2011 6:13:31 AM PST by wintertime (I am a Constitutional Restorationist!!! Yes!)
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To: JenB
But the seed was planted in poisonous ground and even then the motives of the people behind “public” schooling - not the teachers, but the administrators and visionaries - has been incompatible with a traditional conservative American viewpoint.
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You “get it”.

I find it discouraging how few Freepers, who are conservative in every other way, fail to understand.

I have been hammered in the past for being too strident...but..honestly, I fear for this nation. One more generation of children ( future voters) indoctrinated in godless and socialist compulsory schools and we will be a nation of slaves.

45 posted on 12/03/2011 6:22:48 AM PST by wintertime (I am a Constitutional Restorationist!!! Yes!)
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To: netmilsmom
Nope, I don’t share the blame nor will I take the blame and the sooner that conservatives learn this the better.
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Exactly!

And..Yep! I think conservatives should get on the collectivist people's education committee ( oops! “school board”). Conservatives should have **one** goal while participating in the collectivist education people's committee: Closing down **all** socialist schooling!

46 posted on 12/03/2011 6:27:17 AM PST by wintertime (I am a Constitutional Restorationist!!! Yes!)
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To: SumProVita
If children attend schools that are lukewarm and generic in their Protestantism do you think they will learn to be lukewarm and generic Protestants? ( By the way, Christ spits the lukewarm out of His mouth!)

If children attend godlessly secular schools do you think they will learn to think secularly and nod to God on occasion?

If children attend utter godless schools what do you think they will learn?

If children attend socialist schools, do you think they might learn to be comfortable with taking money from a neighbor for other socialist “free” goods and services?

47 posted on 12/03/2011 6:32:26 AM PST by wintertime (I am a Constitutional Restorationist!!! Yes!)
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To: 1010RD

So socialism on the town level is better?

It’s better to have the socialist school committee dictate the political, cultural, and religious worldview of other people’s children and use police threat to make citizens pay for it?


48 posted on 12/03/2011 6:35:47 AM PST by wintertime (I am a Constitutional Restorationist!!! Yes!)
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