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There's An Educational Crisis in the US. Does Anybody Care?
Townhall.com ^ | November 1, 2019 | Sheriff David Clarke Ret

Posted on 11/01/2019 5:03:33 AM PDT by Kaslin

The downward spiral of learning in American K-12 public schools continues. Does anybody care? Where’s the outrage, headlines, or breaking news? Congress and Big Media are too preoccupied with the impeachment scam in Washington D.C., to notice a real crisis in America. Our fourth and eighth-grade kids can’t read, and they are struggling to subtract a two-digit number from a three-digit number to come up with the correct answer

According to the National Assessment of Educational Progress, also referred to as the Nation’s Report Card, fourth-graders are the only ones to make a statistical gain and by only 1 point in math. Lest you see the light at the end of the tunnel by this increase in math, let me advise you that it is an oncoming train. That gain produces a score of 241. That’s out of a possible score of 500 — big deal.

But don’t take my word for it. Peggy Carr, the associate commissioner for the National Center for Education Statistics, said, “over the past decade there has been no progress in math or reading scores.” She further noted that “we see lower-achieving students made score declines in all of the assessments.” Read lower-achieving students to mean black and Hispanic kids. The president of the Thomas B. Fordham education think tank called the outcomes, “disappointing.” I call them abysmal and predictable. They blamed the declines on the recession and cuts in education spending. Folks, that’s what I call a swing and a miss. 

In my home state of Wisconsin, state-mandated test scores were just as dreadful showing that “fewer than half of Wisconsin students are scoring high enough on state tests to be considered proficient in math and reading.” The achievement gap between white and black students continues to widen as well; all of this is occurring while education spending in the state continues to go up.

The educational system is so horrendous in Detroit that a former public high school graduate has sued his previously attended district for failing to educate him to a point he couldn’t pass any of the courses at his community college. He called attending high school a “big waste of time.” He recalled in his 11th and 12th grade English classes that students were given material to learn that was marked for third or fourth graders. Long-term substitute teachers also failed to teach, showing movies instead. The lawsuit included an eighth grader who, after his teacher quit, had taught math to his classmates for a month. Stories like this describe most large urban school districts attended by black and brown students across America. Sadly, there is very little uproar. 

These horrible scores are reflected internationally, too, as the U.S. continues to slide in comparison to 15-year-old students of other nations. Accordingly, the U.S. ranks 35th in math, 25th in science, and 24th in reading. Singapore leads all countries in each category. Hong Kong follows. I doubt that these nations spend on education per pupil what the U.S. does. Asian culture might play a role here too. I know that will rub some liberal apologists the wrong way, but too bad. I care about our kids' prospects to reach their God-given potential. 

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, we spend $648 billion a year on education. We are getting nearly no return on our investment. Yet, all we ever hear from school officials and education advocates is that we need to increase school spending. Why? So we can produce more kids who cannot read? Kids who can’t read and are uneducated end up living life at the bottom. They live in poverty and in need of government welfare services to survive. They are more likely to engage in criminal behavior and make other poor lifestyle choices like dropping out of school, fathering kids they can’t support, becoming involved in gangs, or abusing drugs. I thought that the millions spent on Head Start, K4, and now K3 kindergarten was supposed to bridge the divide between black kids and their white counterparts. The test scores aren’t showing it. Why are we still funding these programs?

Recently, former Speaker of the House Paul Ryan announced a new non-profit initiative to fight poverty. Here we go again. After over 50 years of the War on Poverty that saw taxpayers spend $22 trillion on anti-poverty programs, poverty increased. Yes, increased. Note to Paul Ryan: Unless a kid has a great cross-over dribble or can run a 4.4 40-yard dash and become a professional athlete, the best anti-poverty program is an education. It will equip people to thrive in a knowledge-based economy. That will lead to gainful employment. Instead, he’ll raise millions from foundations to finance white papers that will suggest more of the same like increases in education spending they now call “investments” and think tank-suggested experiments on new approaches to teaching. Federal grant money will also be sought for this junk. 

My suggestion is the K.I.S.S (Keep It Simple Stupid) approach. Teach these kids to read, write, add, subtract, multiply, and divide at the appropriate grade level and make parents step up to fulfill their responsibility and role in the education of their kids. Stop letting school boards dumb down the curriculum that fills kids' heads with useless social justice nonsense and expect more from our kids. These school board social justice activists are no different than Nancy Pelosi or that creep Adam Schiff, or the rest of the like-minded members of Congress and Big Media, who are so obsessed over impeaching the president that they're clueless to the world around them. Or do they not care?  


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial
KEYWORDS: arth; blackmales; davidclarke; education; educationreform; schools; trends
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To: Jim Noble
The only way for outcomes of K-12 to be equal is for everyone to be equally stupid. Get used to it.

Bingo.

The only thing that matters to these people is Equality. They don't care about education at all. They just want everyone to be as equal as possible and, as you say, the only way to get there is to make everyone equally stupid.

This stuff isn't an accident.

21 posted on 11/01/2019 5:33:11 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (If White Privilege is real, why did Elizabeth Warren lie about being an Indian?)
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To: JeanLM

I agree, but I live in an area (NYC metro area, northeastern NJ) where private schools struggle - they are unaffordable for too many considering the high public school costs to which all most contribute (through property taxes or rents to pay another’s property taxes). Rather than sacrificing their children in public school systems, many whites simply have none.

I’d say most of the other social problems are caused by that (the negative birthrate, and trafficking of Third Worlders to fill the gap); the WASP culture of this country is almost gone completely from mainstream “popular culture”. Recent news described how only a handful of counties across the country increased the proportion of their “white” residents; no surprise then that stories also follow about lower life expectancies, literacy, etc. - the replacements are dragging the numbers down.


22 posted on 11/01/2019 5:34:32 AM PDT by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: Jim Noble

You are correct in that; whites have increasingly been demonstrating the same social ills as others. They still had higher rates of intact families and lower substance abuse (as just a couple of examples), and that reflects in school performance.

Where pockets of “all-white” schools exist, the government is working furiously to seed the area with non-whites - and the destruction of the schools are simply collateral damage. The main purpose (at least in the NYC metro area) is to attach non-contributing populations to taxpaying hosts. Our bankrupt ghettoes are farming their welfare populations out to areas where dwindling white populations can provide basic services for them, and it is accelerating the “white flight” - not in response to non-white neighbors, but in response to their huge price tags.


23 posted on 11/01/2019 5:38:48 AM PDT by kearnyirish2 (Affirmative action is economic warfare against white males (and therefore white families).)
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To: Kaslin
There's An Educational Crisis in the US. Does Anybody Care?

SURE!!!

(but do they 'care' enough to actually 'do'?)

24 posted on 11/01/2019 5:39:20 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Kaslin
...make parents step up to fulfill their responsibility...

HOW DARE YOU even HINT that 'parent(s)' have ANY responsibility??!!??

It's up to the VILLAGE!!!


25 posted on 11/01/2019 5:40:47 AM PDT by Elsie (Heck is where people, who don't believe in Gosh, think they are not going...)
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To: Kaslin

You can lead a horse to water
But you can’t make him drink

You can send a plantation kid to school
But you can’t make him think


26 posted on 11/01/2019 5:44:56 AM PDT by bert ( (KE. NP. N.C. +12) Progressives are existential American enemies)
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To: Kaslin

Of course I care, but the system is so broken it needs a Cntl-Alt-Del. The misadventures of our local school board are shocking. Mismanagement of an epic scale with weapons grade stupid thrown in.


27 posted on 11/01/2019 5:48:18 AM PDT by mad_as_he$$ (Beware the homeless industrial complex.)
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To: Kaslin

We’re giving Mozambique a run for its educational buck.


28 posted on 11/01/2019 5:49:00 AM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: JeanLM
Our poor educational system is the biggest problem we have as it feeds all the other social problems.

I think culture trumps education. The culture really started to change in the 60s with entertainment being our national pastime. Andrew Fletcher was right, "Give me the power to write the songs a nation sings and I don't care who rights the laws".

29 posted on 11/01/2019 5:51:09 AM PDT by fatez (Ya, well, you know, that's just your opinion man...)
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To: Elsie

Politicians don’t DO. They only talk about DOING, but never actual DO.

That’s why they can’t handle Trump. He only knows DO.

I take that back, he also knows DONE and then moves on to the next project.


30 posted on 11/01/2019 5:56:00 AM PDT by cyclotic (Democrats must be politically eviscerated, disemboweled and demolished.)
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To: Kaslin

We don’t have an “education crisis” in this country. Our schools are working exactly as they were designed: to raise a nation of peasants who are incapable of thinking rationally, and have millions of taxpayer-funded jobs for people who would otherwise be unemployable.


31 posted on 11/01/2019 5:57:16 AM PDT by Alberta's Child ("In the time of chimpanzees I was a monkey.")
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To: Kaslin

When schools lost their ability to discipline children, give bad grades to those who won’t do homework or listen in class we lost our children. It is the same in the homes, there is no discipline. It is that way in our churches, people do what they feel is right in their heart. It is that way in our country, people speed in their cars, don’t stop at stop signs, all the little laws we choose to ignore.
If we were faithful in little we would be seeing great results in all the areas of our lives.


32 posted on 11/01/2019 6:07:33 AM PDT by Cottonpatch
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To: Kaslin

Math and Reading are like History (the misnamed Social Studies), vastly over-rated. Leave that useless stuff for the nerdy Asians - transsexual studies is where its at.


33 posted on 11/01/2019 6:08:00 AM PDT by PIF (They came for me and mine ... now it is your turn ...)
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To: Kaslin

Yes, the schools are bad, but the parents are worse.
I’m getting some interesting anecdotal evidence from my wife who is subbing in a local school.
Some of the kids are so feral it isn’t funny. At best, they seem to have spent all their time in front of a TV or tablet. At worst...
Possibly the saddest one was a child who told my wife he going to bite her. Not because he didn’t like her (quite the opposite) but because he wanted the attention it would bring him from his mother.
But, I guess there is some hope of fixing the schools...


34 posted on 11/01/2019 6:09:34 AM PDT by Little Ray (Freedom Before Security!)
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To: Cottonpatch

Saw Paul Harvey give a great speech at a conference I attended in 1978.

The topic was... No Self Discipline, No Self Government.


35 posted on 11/01/2019 6:10:53 AM PDT by N. Theknow (Kennedys-Can't drive, can't ski, can't fly, can't skipper a boat-But they know what's best for you.)
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To: Kaslin
Stories like this describe most large urban school districts attended by black and brown students across America. Sadly, there is very little uproar.

Why would there be an uproar? An uneducated population is easily manipulable, which causes subservience. This is just what the deep state wants.

The problem is not just the schools. It is also the predominant culture of the ghettos and barrios. This culture deems that becoming educated is acting white, and severely ostracizes those who step outside of its dictates. Until that culture is changed, kids will continue to be groomed for criminality and dependence.

36 posted on 11/01/2019 6:10:58 AM PDT by exDemMom (Current visual of the hole the US continues to dig itself into: http://www.usdebtclock.org)
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To: Kaslin

Re: Does anyone care?

I care.


37 posted on 11/01/2019 6:12:17 AM PDT by wintertime (I shun government K-12 teachers.)
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To: Kaslin

There’s always an educational crisis!
At least as log as I have been alive.
The first one I remember was caused by Sputnik.


38 posted on 11/01/2019 6:12:44 AM PDT by Reily
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To: Cottonpatch

When parents started treating school as a daycare facility, is when we lost our children.


39 posted on 11/01/2019 6:13:01 AM PDT by dfwgator (Endut! Hoch Hech!)
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To: Kaslin

I work at a grade school that is over 50% immigrant.

Good kids, lousy scores.


40 posted on 11/01/2019 6:13:29 AM PDT by Uncle Miltie (Epstein proves it's all a charade.)
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