The question has loomed for decades: what to do about the sorry state of public schools.
It's a beast of a question.
And when the feds get involved, the "solution" can be monstrous.
An 1,100-page law called the No Child Left Behind Act was signed by President George W. Bush in January. In a nutshell, it calls for standards that must be met by every student. Success is measured by standardized testing, which must reflect improvement over time.
Failure is also measured. In fact, schools can fail in 135 ways -- and not without consequences.
Penalties include having to transfer students, hire tutors, replace staff or write new learning plans. Schools also could lose federal funding or face a takeover by the state.
The new law has spurred an outcry across the country from education leaders. They object to the tyranny of a federal law that takes away local control. They are angry that the law may supersede state-level standards such as Maine Learning Results. And they fear the poor track record of Congress paying for federal mandates. Already, Maine's share to implement the new law has shrunk from an authorized $190 million to a budgeted $100 million.
The state's deputy education commissioner, Judy Lucarelli, called the No Child Left Behind Act "appalling" and "burdensome."
We agree.
There's nothing wrong with high standards, but this law strips states of authority and hamstrings schools with demands that are not likely to be fully funded, ever.
States - and local taxpayers -- already are burdened by the chronic under funding of the special education act of 1975.
And we wonder: Is more standardized testing the answer?
We doubt that forcing educators to appease demands for better test scores will fix the country's outdated schooling system.
We ought to take a good portion of the $26 billion authorized for the upgrade and study the system itself. Are the physical and intellectual structures of institutions really conducive to learning? What are the alternatives?
Let's find out.
And let's look at the scientific evidence revealing that people learn in many different ways, using many types of intelligences.
Most schools offer alternative programs for "at-risk" kids. But they might not reach that verge-of-failure stage if teaching methods were tailored to learning styles.
That would be true school reform. Veterans Day,
by the numbers Number of military veterans in the United States: 25 million
Members of the American Legion: 2.8 million
Members of the Veterans of Foreign Wars: 1.5 million
Current size of active-duty force: 1.35 million
Number of reserves that could be mobilized for an invasion of Iraq: 300,000
Years since the VFW was created: 100
Years since Veterans Day was established (as Armistice Day): 84
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....the credit unions of America saw the scheme the Big Banks were creating and they did not join in! The credit unions and small local banks were the only financial institutions that remain sound to this day. Wall Street and the Big Banks created this mess along with the US Congress to show the world "how strong America is" even after an event such as 9/11 happening to us!
I was in the housing market from 2005 to 2007. I walked into a Wells Fargo office with some homes that I was interested in buying. One was an apartment building. The two women behind the desk I met with had eyes the big as saucers (their greed was seeping out!) looking at that one and said to me, "We can also give you a $120,000 construction loan in addition to buying the building!". What should have been a $125,000 mortgage had suddenly doubled before my eyes. I walked out of the office disgusted. Why? Because I couldn't afford it and because it was very apparent to me that they didn't care.
Anyway, stop blaming poor people for the Housing Bubble, when it was the banks who took all the risk!
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