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Can more money make schools better?
TownHall.com ^ | Tuesday, January 21, 2003 | by Phyllis Schlafly

Posted on 01/20/2003 9:42:30 PM PST by JohnHuang2

President Bush is celebrating the first anniversary of his No Child Left Behind Education law and hopes it will give a significant boost to his re-election in 2004. Speeches about improving public schools are always crowd-pleasers because it is common knowledge that they desperately need major improvement.

The public school establishment, however, is developing acute paranoia as accountability deadlines in the plan start creeping up on them. By the end of January, states must give the U.S. Department of Education their plans for holding schools accountable and for reporting progress in student proficiency. Under the plan, states are required to test students three times in reading and math during their K-12 schooling.

Beginning in the fall of 2005, states must give reading and mathematics tests to every child each year in grades three through eight. Schools with scores that don't measure up will get more money, but their students must be offered the option of transferring to other schools. If the school is judged to be failing for three years, the school district must pay for tutors (called supplemental service providers) chosen by the parents. The bill was far and away the most expensive federal education bill ever passed, but Sen. Ted Kennedy. D-Mass., refers to it as a "tin cup" appropriation and claims public schools cannot overcome their problems "on the cheap." He would make the same complaint if No Child Left Behind doled out double the money.

Billions of dollars of federal money poured into public schools over the last 20 years show no correlation to improved performance or better scores. The government's own evaluations report that Title I, the mammoth program for disadvantaged children, is a failure. Congress created a program called E-Rate in 1996. It offers subsidies of 20 percent to 90 percent for schools to buy telecommunications services such as Internet connections and wiring for classrooms.

The E-Rate program is paid for by a tax on everyone's telephone bill, dubbed the Gore tax. According to a new report by the Center for Public Integrity based on Federal Communications Commission investigations, the $2.25 billion program is "honeycombed with fraud and financial shenanigans."

The current passion for accountability doesn't seem to cover how money is spent. But quite apart from who may or may not have been lining his pockets with easy E-Rate money is the question, did it advance education?

Did computers improve students' performance or grades? We can't find any report about that.

England's Department for Education, however, has just completed a comprehensive study on this very subject and found that equipping schools with a million computers connected to the Internet has had little if any impact on education standards. Despite the government spending more than a billion pounds over the past five years, "no consistent relationship" was found between computer use and pupil achievement in any subject at any age in primary or secondary schools. Technology is wonderful, but it's not the key to remedying the problems within U.S. public schools or raising students' scores. The crucial, overriding problem with schools is that they fail to teach children to read in the first grade.

Teaching children to read in the first grade doesn't even appear on the agenda of education reform! It was not one of the famous education goals of Goals 2000, and all Republican and Democratic politicians pontificating about school reform consistently say that they want children to be able to read by the third grade.

So what are they doing in kindergarten, first and second grades? Spending their time on sex education or playing with computers? Teaching children to read is not rocket science and it doesn't require expensive equipment, materials or professionals. Any parent can teach his child to read with a good $50 phonics system.

Teaching a first-grader to read requires teaching the child the sounds and syllables of the English language so he can put them together like building blocks and read multi-syllable words like hamburger or toothbrush. For decades, schoolchildren have been taught to guess at the words by looking at the pictures, a fraud called "whole language."

That's why third-graders can't pass reading tests and why students fall farther behind each year as their schoolbooks contain more and bigger words. Of all the injustices that have been perpetrated on minorities, none is as devastating to their chance to live the American Dream as keeping them in failing schools for 12 years without teaching them to be good readers. No Child Left Behind requires schools to administer reading tests to students in the third grade. Yet no real progress will be made in improving scores until schools teach children to read in the first grade by a systematic, logical, straightforward phonics system.

©2003 Copley News Service


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS:
Tuesday, January 21, 2003

Quote of the Day by MozartLover

1 posted on 01/20/2003 9:42:30 PM PST by JohnHuang2
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To: JohnHuang2
Can more money make schools better?

No.

The only way for the schools to get better is to eliminate the INDOCTRINATION and go back to EDUCATION.

2 posted on 01/20/2003 9:48:44 PM PST by jimkress
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To: jimkress
I voted for Bush for Tax cuts and for Vouchers. I like the voucher idea, alot. Tax cut's, well, to be honest, I was hoping for more, but I don't feel lied to.

What I really want is power over the schools. Power to move my son's around at will on the tax dollars I am already paying, not via the extra mile I will most likely wind up paying for private school. When competition reign's, the schools will respond.

3 posted on 01/20/2003 9:54:57 PM PST by Michael Barnes (.)
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To: unix
If we closed all public schools tomorrow, parents who want their kids educated would find a way to educate them.

If we increased public school funding tenfold starting tomorrow, parents who don't care about their children's education would still have uneducated children.

4 posted on 01/20/2003 10:07:58 PM PST by umgud
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To: umgud
I agree with you..Can't fault what you say. But since I am "restricted" to area codes, or zip codes as to where my child goes, my options as of current fall on my own means, even though I pay taxes for the public school fiasco. Give me the option, the choice of where my child can go, things will change.

Can I write off my private shcooling costs?(serious question) If not, would you agree that I should be able to? With that, are we not simply talking about a different form of voucher?

5 posted on 01/20/2003 10:26:28 PM PST by Michael Barnes (.)
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To: JohnHuang2
The available data show a modestly strong inverse correlation between per-pupil spending in the government schools and the academic achievement of the inmates, er, students there. This correlation is hard for the layman to plot out for himself, because it requires time-series data that state governments are loath to publicize -- including the actual fractions of their annual budgets that go to state school systems.

To me, it seems intuitive: the huge amounts of tax money being funneled into the schools have made them inviting targets for persons whose agenda is personal comfort or enrichment, rather than the education of the young. Take away the temptation and their percentage participation in the government schools will decrease. Not all the way to zero, of course, but there will be a visible improvement.

Freedom, Wealth, and Peace,
Francis W. Porretto
Visit The Palace Of Reason:
http://palaceofreason.com

6 posted on 01/21/2003 5:54:50 AM PST by fporretto (Curmudgeon Emeritus, Palace of Reason)
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To: JohnHuang2
De publik skool zstem stinx. Klozit dowen.
7 posted on 01/21/2003 6:09:55 AM PST by ImpBill
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To: JohnHuang2
De publik skool zstem stinx. Klozit dowen.
8 posted on 01/21/2003 6:10:35 AM PST by ImpBill
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To: JohnHuang2
More money for the past 40 years has only made them worse. They will be "better" when they are empty - as in children being private or home-schooled .
9 posted on 01/21/2003 7:00:08 AM PST by Let's Roll (Whether we bring our enemies to justice, or bring justice to our enemies, justice will be done.)
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To: JohnHuang2
bttt
10 posted on 01/21/2003 8:12:43 AM PST by Deadeye Division
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To: unix
Here's a story from today's paper regarding the possibility of vouchers in a failing school district.

http://www.bergen.com/page.php?qstr=eXJpcnk3ZjcxN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXkyJmZnYmVsN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk2MzMxMzMw

It's going to come to that if the schools don't start to hustle because the parents will DEMAND it.
11 posted on 01/21/2003 8:25:30 AM PST by ladylib
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To: JohnHuang2
bttt
12 posted on 01/24/2003 11:19:24 AM PST by Tailgunner Joe (God Armeth The Patriot)
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To: jimkress
The only way for the schools to get better is to eliminate the INDOCTRINATION and go back to EDUCATION.

Agreed. I would also argue that more money would improve the situation if the above advice was actually followed.

13 posted on 01/24/2003 11:20:34 AM PST by amused (socialism is totalitarianism in sheep's clothing)
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