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Matt
Damon’s Silly Teacher Rant
By Michelle Malkin
Published August 05, 2011
Actor
Matt Damon is a walking
public-service reminder to immunize your children early and often
against La-La
Land disease.
In
Damon’s world, all public-school
teachers are selfless angels. Government workers and Hollywood
entertainers are
impervious to economic incentives. Anyone who disagrees is a
know-nothing,
“corporate reformer” ingrate who hates education.
Last
week, the liberal box-office star
addressed a “Save Our Schools” march in Washington at the behest of his
mother,
a professor of early-childhood education. He attacked standardized
tests. He
praised all the public-school teachers who “empowered” him and unlocked
his
creative potential by rejecting “silly drill- and-kill nonsense.” Damon
decried
the demoralization of teachers by ruthless, results-oriented free
marketeers
whom he mocked as “simple-minded.”
What
Damon’s superficial tirade
lacked, however, was any real-world understanding of the deterioration
of
core-curricular learning in America. Students can’t master simple
division or
fractions because today’s teachers -- churned out through
lowest-common-denominator grad schools and shielded from competition --
have
barely mastered those skills themselves. Un-educators have abandoned
“drill-and-kill” computation for multicultural claptrap and fuzzy math,
traded
in grammar fundamentals for “creative spelling” and dropped standard
civics for
save-the-earth propaganda.
Consequence:
bottom-basement U.S.
student scores on global assessments over the last two decades. Blaming
the
tests is blaming the messenger. The liberal education establishment’s
response
to its abject academic failures? Run away. This is why the Save Our
Schools agenda
championed by Damon calls for less curricular emphasis on math and
reading --
and more focus on social justice, funding and “equity” issues.
Out:
Reading is fundamental.
In:
Feeling is fundamental.
After
his drippy pep talk absolving
teachers of any responsibility for America’s educational morass, Damon
lashed
out at a young reporter who had the audacity to ask him about the
negative
impact of lifetime teacher tenure. “In acting, there isn’t job
security,
right,” Reason.tv’s Michelle Fields asked Damon. “There is an incentive
to work
hard and be a better actor because you want to have a job. So why isn’t
it like
that for teachers?”
It’s
elementary that people will work
longer and harder if they know they will be rewarded. There’s nothing
anti-teacher
about the question. (And before teacher-unions goons go on the attack,
I am the
child of a public-school teacher and the mother of two children in an
excellent
public charter school by choice.) But Damon’s hinges came undone when
confronted with the mild question.
“You
think job insecurity makes me
work hard?” he retorted. “That’s like saying a teacher is going to get
lazy
when she has tenure.” Damon unleashed crude profanities on Fields. “A
teacher
wants to teach,” Damon fumed with his mother next to him. “Why else
would you
take a sh- -ty” salary and really long hours and do that job unless you
really
loved to do it?”
Never
mind that most out-of-work
Americans would find nothing “sh- -ty” about earning an average $53,000
annual
salary plus health and retirement benefits for a 180-day work year.
Damon
went on to deride standard,
mainstream behavioral economic principles as “intrinsically
paternalistic” and
“MBA-style thinking.” And when the young reporter’s cameraman pointed
out that
there are bad apples in the teaching profession as in any profession,
Damon
called him “sh--ty,” too.
Tinseltown
stars can afford to put
emotion over logic, progressive fantasy over practical reality. The
rest of us
are stuck with the bill. And those whom bleeding-heart celebrities
purport to
care most about -- the children -- suffer the consequences of bad ideas.
Interminable
teacher tenure in
America’s largest school districts, from New York to Chicago to Los
Angeles,
has produced a rotten corps of incompetent (at best) and dangerous (at
worst)
educators coddled by Big Labor. As the DC-based Center for Union
reports, “In
many major cities, only one out of 1,000 teachers is fired for
performance-related reasons. . . . In 10 years, only about 47 out of
100,000
teachers were actually terminated from New Jersey’s schools.”
By
contrast, as the educational
documentary “Waiting for Superman” pointed out, one out of every 57
doctors
loses his or her license to practice medicine, and one out of every 97
lawyers
loses their license to practice law.
In
Los Angeles, it’s not just meanie
Tea Partiers making the case for abolishing teacher tenure. When the
Los
Angeles Times exposed how the city’s tenure evaluation system
rubber-stamped
approvals and ignored actual performance, the district superintendent
admitted:
“Too many ineffective teachers are falling into tenured positions --
the
equivalent of jobs for life.” USC education professor Julie Slayton
acknowledged: “It’s ridiculous and should be changed.”
Pop
quiz: Would multimillionaire Matt
Damon apply the same warped employment practices and dumbed-down
curricular
standards to his own accountants that he champions for America’s
public-school
teachers? Film at 11.
Michelle
Malkin is a New York Post
columnist and Fox News contributor.
Read
it at Foxnews
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