vision2020
Education / Taxes
Rep. Young: Thanks so much for your legislative up-date and the play
"by-play" metaphor. As Will Shakespeare said it, "All the world's a
stage, and the people are its players" (not literal per se).
I have a comment or two on education reform, having spent the
better part of my professional career in that sector. We've talked
about raising standards at least since the first :"Sputnik" in l957,
when I happened to be serving in federal government in the Eisenhower
administration. We passed the "National Defense Education Act" to
improve performances especially in math and sciences. It did some
good but was not sustainable, given many other priorities and with
the major pushes during the sixties for civil rights and then
military spending for Vietnam.
What we seem to lose sight of is that all valid research on
pupil performance links it to the quality of instruction and
specifically to the role of the teacher. Say what they will, that
linkage and the qualifications of teachers are paramount to improving
kids' performance. We may alter many other variables, such as time on
task, electronic software, textbook quality, and so forth. But these
do not yield their potentials without the added human nurturing
factor of teaching and role models. Closely related to this is class
size: If a teacher cannot reach all students adequately, then some
are "left behind". A class of 20-25 youngsters is fully adequate; but
even then, class assistants, community resource inputs, and home
conditions all relate to what can be accomplished by the teacher
role. Show me some research that rejects this.
Another area where we seem to encounter almost insurmountable
interferences with school-based education, is competition from
influences external to the school: Mass media and its often
distracting content, peer group forces ("street culture") alien to
traditional learning, and material gratifications which run counter
to intellectual, artistic and moral pursuits, not to mention
religious-spiritual nurturing. The latter in our political system is
the exclusive domain of the family and religious institutions. But
public schools can reinforce moral education through many appropriate
avenues.
Buttressing these two, to me, cardinal points is the need for
society to recognize teachers more fully for the professional people
they are and to compensate them more fairly, in line with those who
have equal college preparation but earn much more (up to twice the
amount) than do teachers (engineering, business, legal, health
professions, etc). Low salaries also depress the academic market and
do not always attract the best. There are exceptions for those who
love the field (my granddaughter earned a 4 point all through high
school AND college, and chose teaching because she loves to work with
young people). That is not the rule, however.
We live in a capitalistic, competitive economy, and if you
want to attract better talent into a field such as human resources
production (i.e., education), you must provide the incentives, or
else place people where you want them as do police-dominated
societies. As both the Idaho and US economies are turning large
surpluses, it is time to reconsider our public investment strategies
and move more resources into public education. For the well-to-do,
they will always do that themselves, through private schooling. But
that is less than 10% of the education market. What do we do for the
90% which produces by far most of the nation's future leaders and
professionals and workers? Market elasticity in employment seems to
bypass the education profession, which is locked into a mind-set that
prevents the free play of economic competition.The health, legal and
technical professions REFUSE to be trapped in this system.
I hope you and others will give earnest attention to our
teaching profession. We are watching to see what qualities of
thinking and social objectives are motivating our representatives,
the legislator and governor in a wholly republican dominated
government.What will you do? For whom?
Regards, W. Ken Medlin
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