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The Fight to Reform Education
Townhall.com ^ | February 5, 2012 | Derek Hunter

Posted on 02/05/2012 5:20:55 AM PST by Kaslin

Would any concerned parent willingly send their children to an average public school in this country if there was an option available?

The word “concerned” in the question should be a tipoff that the answer is no. Still, states, localities and the federal government continue to dump billions of our hard-earned tax dollars into a system that is rotten to its core.

Don’t think things are that bad? A student in Washington state named Austin took a video camera into his school’s cafeteria and asked students basic questions about U.S. history. The answers, although funny, are pathetic.

Progressives say it’s because teachers are forced to “teach to the test” – meaning standardized tests designed to measure knowledge of important topics such as English, science and math. Lee White, executive director of the National History Coalition, told the Huffington Post, "They've narrowed the curriculum to teach to the test. History has been de-emphasized. You can't expect kids to have great scores in history when they're not being taught history." That would hold some water, of course, if those students who failed at history were excelling at other topics. But they’re not.

President Obama has attempted to address the problem of our failing education system in each of his three State of the Union addresses, but his solution, as always, is only to spend more money. But if money was the problem, we’d be leading the world in education. We are not.

Progressives will tell you we’re spending a lower percentage of our GDP on education than other countries, which is true. But when it comes to per-pupil spending – the measure that matters most – we’re near the top.

Our education spending has skyrocketed. Our test scores have not.

A new study by Harvard researchers (yes, Harvard) found class size, the oft-cited straw man used by progressives to urge the hiring of more union teachers, essentially doesn’t matter. But real facts, real evidence rarely plays a role when it comes to progressives pushing their agenda, so this won’t matter either.

If meaningful reform is to come, and that’s a big “if,” it’s going to come from the state level.

One person actually trying to bring change to public education is Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal.

The Wall Street Journal says Gov. Jindal “wants to create America’s largest school voucher program, broadest parental choice system and toughest teacher accountability regime – all in one legislative session.”

School choice and a voucher program that allows students and parents to choose any school that best suits their needs have been proven winners in the fight to improve education quality. They’ve also been the top target of teachers’ unions because families often choose private schools where the teaching staff is not unionized.

Gov. Jindal believes that every child deserves an equal opportunity in education, but that the current system doesn't allow for it. Emboldened by what has happened in New Orleans since Hurricane Katrina, Gov. Jindal is now pushing for statewide education reform.

Educational choice is one of the few good things to come out of the storm, which laid waste to dozens of the nation’s worst public schools. Instead of rebuilding the old, failing system, the state transformed most of the schools in Orleans Parish into autonomous charter schools.

Student achievement has improved dramatically, and in a poll last summer by the New Orleans Times-Picayune, two-thirds of parents in the city said they prefer the new system over the old one, and 98 percent said choice should be part of any future reforms in the state. The biggest challenge has been how to squeeze more students into the most successful of the charters.

Gov. Jindal’s plan would allow students in failing schools statewide to take the roughly $8,500 the state spends on their education to any accredited school they wish. The threatened loss of money would apply market forces to bad schools that routinely fail without consequence. Needless to say, unions representing teachers don’t like the idea.

Teachers’ unions also aren’t crazy about the governor’s idea to reform tenure, the mechanism that makes it nearly impossible to fire bad teachers. His plan would grant it to teachers rated “highly effective,” but deny it to those who don’t make the grade – no matter how long they’ve taught.

Also along those lines, Jindal’s plan also would end the practice of “last in, first out” – the laying off of young teachers simply because they haven’t been on the job as long as others. This would allow schools to keep effective teachers and rid itself of bad ones – which research indicates does make a significant difference in students’ educational achievement. These reforms make sense to anyone without a vested interest in the status quo, meaning union bosses and progressives.

Michael Walker Jones, executive director of the Louisiana Association of Educators, said of the school choice plan, “If I'm a parent in poverty I have no clue because I'm trying to struggle and live day to day.” Jindal and choice advocates could not have written a more tone-deaf line for their opponents if they’d tried.

Progressives think everyone but them is simply too dumb and/or distracted to negotiate school choice. You “have no clue,” but they, helpfully, know what is best for you and your children – as evidenced by the state of public education in America today. It’s the philosophy behind every progressive policy idea – from education to “financial reform” to ObamaCare. It is rare and refreshing to hear one of them actually say it.

Jones, in working to stop needed reforms, gave reformers their greatest arrow in a quiver full of arrows tipped with facts, studies and statistics. As Jindal continues his push to improve education in his state, there will be more “gaffes” of this sort. Progressives aren’t used to being openly challenged on such a large scale. Gov. Jindal is. For the sake of Louisiana’s students, let’s hope he wins.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: arth; frhf
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To: wintertime

Inasmuch as I was making the point that most anyone can, if they really desire, homeschool or opt for private school; and that the argument of unaffordability is usually weak; I’m going to assume you have entirely misunderstood my post.

Hidden taxes are beside the point as well. I was simply demonstrating how the typical budget reflects choices which could be otherwise, if the parents rearranged priorities.

As to my personal experience I’d prefer to keep that to myself.


21 posted on 02/05/2012 10:13:27 AM PST by Lady Lucky (Public education -- government cheese for the brain.)
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To: Tzar
Homeownership is an investment (even now) while rent is lost money. Anyone who rents has to make additional retirement investments to make up for it. Really, you aren’t saving money, you are just committing yourself to retiring later or relying on your children for support.

Quality education is also an investment. As I mentioned, it all depends on your priorities. You want to risk having your children indoctrinated into socialism, and then rely on them to support you in your old age...go right ahead.

22 posted on 02/05/2012 10:19:46 AM PST by Lady Lucky (Public education -- government cheese for the brain.)
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To: Clintonfatigued
They can’t imagine that education can be done in any other way.

Yes, poverty of imagination certainly has a lot to do with it. Likewise, I suppose people whose families were homeowning are probably not going to think seriously about sacrificing that lifestyle by becoming apartment dwellers, for their children's educational improvement. But they could.

23 posted on 02/05/2012 10:28:02 AM PST by Lady Lucky (Public education -- government cheese for the brain.)
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To: Kaslin; 2Jedismom; 6amgelsmama; AAABEST; aberaussie; AccountantMom; Aggie Mama; agrace; ...

ANOTHER REASON TO HOMESCHOOL

This ping list is for the “other” articles of interest to homeschoolers about education and public school. This can occasionally be a fairly high volume list. Articles pinged to the Another Reason to Homeschool List will be given the keyword of ARTH. (If I remember. If I forget, please feel free to add it yourself)

The main Homeschool Ping List handles the homeschool-specific articles. I hold both the Homeschool Ping List and the Another Reason to Homeschool Ping list. Please freepmail me to let me know if you would like to be added to or removed from either list, or both.

24 posted on 02/05/2012 10:33:33 AM PST by metmom (For freedom Christ has set us free; stand firm therefore & do not submit again to a yoke of slavery)
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To: Jim Noble

It is a refutation of the Progressive (aka Communist)argument “smallest percentage of the GDP.” IT is not implying that dollars per child is a valid measure of performance.


25 posted on 02/05/2012 10:49:59 AM PST by Little Ray (FOR the best Conservative in the Primary; AGAINST Obama in the General.)
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To: wintertime

Back in ‘87, I was a teacher. In ‘88 we had an influx of older people - not blaming them, the state was hiring, the economy at the time wasn’t (It was when Soros broke our country for his own gain)

Standards improved dramatically for a couple of years. Attendance up. Grades up without being fiddled. Student enthusiasm WAY up.
Teaching was actually a complete joy for this time. I’d wake up and be eager to get to work, there is no better feeling than seeing a concept suddenly “click” in someone’s mind. It is better than sex. (coarse, but you get the point)

Of course, our government worked hard to remove these new teachers. Piled paper requirements on us until most left from exhaustion.

But, it is a thought. True conservatives tend to be, to put it delicately, older. A couple years teaching in a school between retiring from work and actually retiring and who knows what change you can make.
Wasn’t it the communist idea to change the system from within? Any reason why conservatives shouldn’t borrow that tactic?

I know our system is slightly different from yours. I also know what I saw with my own eyes. It works. For a while.

Homeschooling is and should be always the preference. Every kid is different, and it is a lot harder to snow Mom or Dad than a teacher looking after 30 kids at once. Yet a lot of parents, especially now, cannot afford one earner to stay home. It is bad, but it is what it is.

My kids, bless them, went to school (homeschooling is not a viable option here), came home, did their homework in about 15 minutes, THEN started the real lessons of the day. The wife and I traded off days, depending on our own workloads.
We do it now, with the grandkids. The 4 year old has a tested reading age of 12, and a complete immunity to pain (I babysit him in the workshop). The eldest two could get into any university in the country right now, academically speaking. They are a bit young yet though.


26 posted on 02/05/2012 11:52:48 AM PST by EnglishCon
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To: EnglishCon
Wasn’t it the communist idea to change the system from within? Any reason why conservatives shouldn’t borrow that tactic?

Government schooling must be abolished.

There are three fundamental problems with government schooling that can not be fixed because they are **intrinsic to the very foundation of the system. In fact, we should completely stop using the expressions "public" schools or government schools. They are really **socialist** schools because they are the very definition of a single payer socialist-entitlement program. /p>

1) It is impossible to have a religiously, culturally, and politically neutral education, and the worldview of socialist schooling reflects the religion, culture, and politics of the biggest political bully. If it is a First Amendment and freedom of conscience abomination for atheistic Marxists to impose their religious, cultural, and political worldview on unwilling students and taxpayers, it is just as much of an abomination for conservatives to impose their worldview on the children of the liberal/Marxists.

2) The religious worldview ( by default) in government socialist schooling is godless secular humanism. Simply by attending children must think and reason godlessly just to cooperate in the classroom. How could it be otherwise? Even at their very best, modern government socialist schooling ( beginning in the mid-1800s) merely offered up a lukewarm and generic Protestantism. We know what Christ does with the lukewarm. He spits them out of His mouth! This can not be fixed. No matter what action the government socialist school takes regarding religion it will establish the religious worldview of some and utterly trash the beliefs of others.

3) Government socialist schooling is the very definition of a socialist-entitlement program. Simply by attending children risk learning that the government and the voting mob has great power to take money from a neighbor to pay for their tuition-free schooling. Well?...Why not use the government and the voting mob to take money from a neighbor for **lots** of socialist goodies?

27 posted on 02/05/2012 2:46:16 PM PST by wintertime
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To: Lady Lucky

Please accept my apology. I did miss your point.

Far too many parents make excuses for not homeschooling or private schooling rather than making the sacrifices needed to get their kids out of these moral cesspools.

I do want to point out, though, that renters do pay property taxes. In fact, school property taxes are hidden in every service and good that we purchase. It just sets my teeth on edge that just to survive I must pay tribute to the godless temples of atheism ( misnamed “public” schools). This is what set me off, and I responded to your post without reading to the end.


28 posted on 02/05/2012 2:59:56 PM PST by wintertime
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To: wintertime

“...and our nation’s system of schooling is the very definition of socialism.”

And so is our military, in many ways. Granted that private, parochial, and home schooling are superior to public education, the latter still has a function, when it is operating properly, which is to produce a large number of average employees.

And that was its function from the very start.

Importantly, the alternative to public education is *not* a better education for the majority, but even *less* education. And that is unacceptable, because the result would be incapable public charges. America just doesn’t need that many ditch diggers.

Believe me, the arguments you are making were being made in the early 1980s, and there were great hopes that somehow the personal computer could overcome this harsh truth. Somehow, some way, breaking the mediocrity-at-best of the public education system.

Charter schools have helped a lot in breaking the near monopoly, as have vouchers.

Right now, the state of AZ has proposed a radical change, so that schools can opt out of the federal school lunch program. When the bureaucrats in Washington figure it out they are going to freak out, because the vast majority of federal control over schools has been implemented under threat of taking away the FSLP. If a school opts out, it can kiss off huge amounts of federal intrusion and expense.

It will have a lot more money and time to teach, and it will leave schools that still have the FSLP millstone around their necks in the dust, academically.


29 posted on 02/05/2012 3:25:25 PM PST by yefragetuwrabrumuy
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To: Clintonfatigued

However bad public schools may have been in the past they are MUCH, MUCH worse now! The typical recent public high school graduate in this area may have what was a sixth grade public school education fifty or sixty years ago. As far as history knowledge goes I can tell you from personal experience that we have recent UNIVERSITY GRADUATES WHO MAJORED IN HISTORY in this area who could not pass a seventh grade history final from my era. We have teachers teaching in public high schools who would not have stood a chance of graduating from the public high schools of sixty years ago. Some of them couldn’t pass the test to be ADMITTED to a public high school of that era.


30 posted on 02/05/2012 3:36:27 PM PST by RipSawyer
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy
It will have a lot more money and time to teach,
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

It will have a lot more money to **FORCE** a godless worldview on captive children and **FORCE** citizens to pay for this non-neutral government establishment of a godless religious worldview!

It will still have plenty of money to **FORCE** children into socialist schools. Merely by attending the children risk learning to be comfortable with socialism and their socialist tuition-free entitlement. Gee! If government and the voting mob can give them tuition free school, why not use that power to get **lots** of “free” socialist goodies?

Finally, these socialist schools will still be a First Amendment and freedom of conscience abomination!

31 posted on 02/05/2012 3:59:28 PM PST by wintertime
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To: wintertime

Seeing as you are my favorite freeper and I agree with you 100% on the evil of public ed, your apology is cheerfully accepted. :o)


32 posted on 02/05/2012 4:21:14 PM PST by Lady Lucky (Public education -- government cheese for the brain.)
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To: Jim Noble

“Until mandatory education ends at eighth grade, the problem is hopeless.”

You make an interesting point. High school is a waste of time. I have needed nothing that I studied there and it’s been over 20 years since I graduated.


33 posted on 02/05/2012 4:30:30 PM PST by Clintonfatigued (A chameleon belongs in a pet store, not the White House)
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To: Lady Lucky

Thank you.


34 posted on 02/05/2012 4:31:15 PM PST by wintertime
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To: Clintonfatigued
I went to a great (public) high school, and I learned a lot.

But

Even in my school, and in almost all others, the warehousing of "students" who don't belong there and who don't want to be there consumes a huge and disproportionate share of resources.

If people can't agree that the ones who shouldn't be there should be free after age 13, then let them set up concentration camps for them.

High school should be for those who can benefit, and who want to be there.

35 posted on 02/05/2012 5:33:53 PM PST by Jim Noble ("The Germans: At your feet, or at your throat" - Winston Churchill)
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy
The three big problems of public education are federal intrusion, state incompetence and corruption, and teachers union and “ivory tower leftist” disruption.

No.

The biggest problem is forced pretending.

36 posted on 02/05/2012 5:35:27 PM PST by Jim Noble ("The Germans: At your feet, or at your throat" - Winston Churchill)
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To: Jim Noble
"High school should be for those who can benefit, and who want to be there."

Well, if high school was about education you would be right. It's not. It's about indoctrination. That's why it doesn't work the way you think it should. It isn't hard to figure out a solution to the problem if you have correctly identified the problem.

The fact that kids are forced to be there demonstrates that public school is about indoctrination, not education.

37 posted on 02/05/2012 5:40:29 PM PST by GourmetDan (Eccl 10:2 - The heart of the wise inclines to the right, but the heart of the fool to the left.)
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To: Jim Noble

For those who don’t want to be in high school, apprenticeships can be an option. It’s done in some European nations (Switzerland, for example) and they seem to work very well.


38 posted on 02/05/2012 5:42:31 PM PST by Clintonfatigued (A chameleon belongs in a pet store, not the White House)
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To: yefragetuwrabrumuy
The worst “ivory tower leftist” interference was with the creation of Noam Chomsky’s ‘whole language English’ instruction

I had no idea that came from Chomsky the communist. I remember when that was first introduced, my oldest was in 2nd grade and I had an argument with his teacher about it. I lost, they were going to shove it down his throat anyway. So I bought a phonics reading package from a customer of mine, got educated about how important reading by phonics was and taught my two younger children how to read before they reached 1st grade.

Yes my children were educated in the public schools but I did what I could to prevent indoctrination. Finally had to move them out of the area to a small rural town in Oregon where the teachers were farmers and ranchers and taught hunter safety courses on the school grounds. My oldest graduated from Elkton High School in the year 2000 with 23 other kids!! 85 was the total student body count grades 9-12.

39 posted on 02/06/2012 7:26:15 AM PST by thirst4truth (www.Believer.com)
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To: Kaslin

bump for later


40 posted on 05/22/2012 5:20:01 AM PDT by TurboZamboni (Looting the future to bribe the present)
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