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Our Politicians Need an Education

Straddling the fence between federal regulation and local control hurts


BY TED RALL

Public education is mirroring American society overall: a tiny island of haves surrounded by a vast ocean of have-nots.

For worried parents and students, the good news is that spending on public education has become a campaign issue. Mitt Romney is pushing a warmed-over version of the old GOP school voucher scheme, "school choice." The trouble with vouchers, experts say (and common sense supports), is that allowing parents to vote with their feet by withdrawing their kids from "failing schools" deprives cash-starved schools of more funds, leading to a death cycle -- a "winner takes all" sweepstakes that widens the gap between the best and worst schools. Critics -- liberals and libertarians -- also dislike vouchers because they allow the transfer of public tax dollars into the coffers of private schools, many of which have religious, non-secular curricula unaccountable to regulators.

Romney recently attacked President Obama: "He says we need more firemen, more policemen, more teachers. Did he not get the message of [the failed recall of the union-busting governor of] Wisconsin?"

"I would suggest [Romney is] living on a different planet if he thinks that's a prescription for a better planet," shot back Obama strategist David Axelrod.

Both parties are missing the mark, the Republicans more than the Democrats. Republicans want to gut public schools by slashing budgets that will lead to bigger class sizes, which will reduce the individual attention dedicated to teaching each student. Democrats rightly oppose educational austerity, but are running a lame defense rather than aggressively promoting positive ideas to improve the system. Both parties are too interested in weakening unions and grading teacher performance with endless tests, and not enough in raising salaries so teaching attracts the brightest college graduates. Not even the Democrats are calling for big spending increases on education.

Is the system really in crisis? Yes, said respondents to a 2011 Gallup-Phi Delta Kappa poll, which found that only 22 percent approved of the state of public education in the U.S. The number one problem? Not enough funding, say voters.

Millions of parents whose opinion of their local public system is so dim that they spend tens of thousands of dollars a year on private school tuition and -- in competitive cities like New York City, force their kids to endure a grueling application process.



According to one of the world's leading experts on comparing public school systems, Andreas Schleicher of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the U.S. is falling rapidly behind other countries. In Canada, he told a 2010 Congressional inquiry, an average 15-year-old is a full year ahead of his or her American counterpart. The U.S. high-school completion rate is ranked 25th out of the 30 OECD countries.

The elephant in the room, the idea neither party is willing to consider, is to replace localized control of education -- funding, administration and curricula -- with centralized federal control, as is common in Europe and around the world.

"America's system of standards, curriculums and testing controlled by states and local districts with a heavy overlay of federal rules is a 'quite unique' mix of decentralization and central control," The New York Times paraphrased Schleicher's testimony. "More successful nations, he said, maintain central control over standards and curriculum, but give local schools more freedom from regulation, he said."

Why run public schools out of Washington? The advantages are obvious. When schools in rich districts get the same resource allocation per student as those in poor ones, influential voters among the upper and middle classes tend to push for increased spending of education. Centralized control also eliminates embarrassing situations like when the Kansas School Board eliminated teaching evolution in its schools, effectively reducing standards.

A streamlined curriculum creates smarter students. It's easier for Americans, who live in a highly mobile society, to transfer their children midyear from school to school, when a school in Peoria teaches the same math lesson the same week as one in Honolulu. Many students, especially among the working poor, suffer lower grades due to transiency.

Of course, true education reform would need to abolish the ability of wealthier parents to opt out of the public school system. That means banning private education and the "separate but equal" class segregation we see today, particularly in big cities, and integrating the 5.3 million kids (just under 10 percent of the total) in private primary and secondary schools into their local public systems. Decades after forced bussing, many students attend schools as racially separated as those of the Jim Crow era. The New York Times found that 650 out of New York's 1700 public schools have student bodies composed at least 70 percent of one race -- this in a city with extremely diverse demographics.

If we're to live in a true democracy, all of our kids have to attend the same schools.

.



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COMMENTS
2 comments posted for this article
toddkreigh
 6/28/2012 - 3:55pm
   Yes, it's really sad we have such diverse standards and that the states are still allowed so much control over education. Prior to 1980 - which was when the illustrious Jimmy Carter signed the Department of Education into existence - our system of education was in total chaos. No one was learning anything. We were 35 out of 30 of the top nations in educating our young.
   
   Except that everything I just said is utter crap. We began seriously losing ground in the late 50's, after we went into panic mode that the Soviets won the race to space and we started pushing math and science over history and literature. State after state signed on to changes in curriculum that supported this directive. The result was predictable: history and literature courses became moribund afterthoughts; your average modern high school history course is a waste of a teacher's salary and of a student's time.
   
   The fact of the matter is prior to 1959, the American system of education was one of the best in the world. Nowadays, not so much. Does anyone think the solution to that problem is to grant even more control to a useless, national education bureaucracy?
   
   Yet still we hear the cries: "more money, more money! We can fix it with more and more money." It is a waste of time to point out that Utah spends the lowest amount per pupil on education of all the 50 states - yet still ranks somewhere in the middle for student achievement. Conversely - and equally as futile to point out - Washington D.C. spends the most per pupil on education. Yet ranks last .. yes, dead last in student achievement. There is no greater bureaucratic boondoggle than the D.C. public schools. The Washington Post acknowledges this.
   
   You can quite accurately predict "student achievement" based on racial/income demographics. Money doesn't have a damn thing to do with it. Yeah, I know, it's not politically correct to say stuff like that. I just don't give a rip about being politically correct. What I do care about is 2/3 of my property taxes go to pay for the education of children I don't have in the local, substandard public education system. But more money and government involvement will fix everything. Sure it will. Whoooot!
   
   The approach Rall advocates - abolishing private schools and all other forms of free choice forcing everyone into an awful school - would be akin to acknowledging you can't save everyone, so might as well just sink all the lifeboats and let everyone drown.
   
   Come to think of it, that's exactly what a government-engineered solution would look like.
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George, Midtown
 6/20/2012 - 10:04am
   There used to be a valuable resource called The Advisory Commission on Intergovernmental Relations (ACIR) that tried to bridge the gap in regards to Federal/State regulatory issurs.
   Sadly, it is defunct.
   The archived web site of the ACIR can be found at the University of North Texas's 'Cyber Cemetery'
   
   http://www.library.unt.edu/gpo/acir/Default.html
   
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