Townhall...
The Fight
to Reform Education
by Derek
Hunter
Feb 05,
2012
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.
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