ON PUBLIC EDUCATION
(www.BurtonRidgeway.com)
Reform will never happen in a public school system where a chief administrator with the quality of children’s education on his/her mind, will always be at odds with teachers and principles, who have themselves as primary benefactors.
A board of education formed by a money-driven election system, therefore completely financed by special interests, including teachers unions, cannot represent the children’s interest.
Children “of color” as a group, anywhere, in any sized cut-out, will always be at a disadvantage in a white, and politically-dominated, education system; a system which dictates the same treatment for all students. Slow-learning children, and those being nurtured in cultures different than the majority, cannot grow, they need insightful “specialists“, in control of their own schools.
The poor *can* have at their disposal equal opportunity for top-notch education to the rich; *equal*, in this case means, each acquires what they realistically seek.
We need to defeat the idea that all kids, of all races, and cultures, can, and must, be treated the same; people are not the same: every culture thinks in their own language. Children of minority cultures and races, should … must, be raised by those of their own culture; parents should . . . Must, be provided the freedom to send their kids to where they themselves want them, which may very well be to a school run by members of the majority.
Much more of education budgets than 40-60% would be spent inside class rooms, and much less for maintenance, within the following system:
Schools should be sold to the teachers - each school to it's own staff on a fifty?- year non-interest-bearing note. The state's education department would set parameters of a minimum agenda for a school to receive tax-support for teaching the three R's, financial and economic literacy, and development of the ability to read for long periods - in a word, to concentrate - and, what the pedestrian button on the traffic-light pole does *not* do. In other words, to think; how, not what! Annual payments would be made directly to the schools rather than any local boards.
Teacher-strikes, without the interest of their students in mind, would be history. No more school districts; no more local boards of education. No longer would we waste money on politics, and redundant levels of authority.
The money from these sales would go very far to advance the welfare of the state politicians, or the people, depending on how many hostile taxpayers are watching.
National requirements should be mandated by the federal government to the states, and the state Superintendent of Education, to licensed schools, and instructors.
All applicants for positions in schools- to own or teach - should already be licensed. There should also be state mandated responsibility for the safety of their charges, immunization, and required forwarding of all relevant files to student’s new schools, and to a national clearing house, for a pedophile-search. When an employee at any level, leaves to work in another school, the record of that employee must be forwarded to the new school, even if in another state. Laws must be made to protect schools from lawsuits for having done so.
The national department of education should maintain a file with each and every person working or having worked in a school, public, private or religious; anyone *convicted* of pedophilia should be in that file. A private-line web site should be available for school administrations to check each applicant for previous positions, and any criminal record. Let’s not continue to be stupid, so in fear of a central computer taking over our lives that we expose our kids to physical and mental destruction in the name of freedom.
I do not here promote federal police action; the use of this file, though it be mandatory to file each and every hire, it should be voluntary for schools to use it, and states to mandate its use.
To not do so, should definitely expose administrators to civil lawsuits. ( Not the taxpayers!; the administrators! )
Private schools should be primarily owned by the teaching and
management staff, to prevent inappropriately rapid
growth, and damaging down-sizing; open (publicly held ) corporations should not be permitted.
If this turns out to be unworkable, controls should be designed to prevent schools from collapsing from investment manipulation.
After which each school, with permission from all their student’s parents, could put the Ten Commandments on the property, and pray to God without fearing enforcement of the constitutional interpretation that is not exactly accurate.
The state should require insurance coverage, to be obtained and
paid for by the owner- corporation of each school to reimburse the
state and parents for failure to complete a school year, for any
reason - insurers being required to immediately report late
payment, and lapsed coverage.
The national government should mandate general policy, in the national interest, to the
states, set by a federal education division of a larger department,
and not involve themselves in the nitty-gritty of educating our
children, or the financing thereof.
The staff of the federal Division of Education should be no more
than one
hundred people - total. They would deal with the states in the
sharing of
ideas, and facilitate, through state leadership, any mandates from
Congress. The federal office of Secretary of Education should be
abolished, and the department returned to Health and Welfare. There’s no need for an extensive
national education policy, other than what to promote as essential
knowledge, professions, or trades American kids should be
preparing for, considering that we are now in a world-wide
competition for talent. Then let the states facilitate it by leaving it
to the professionals with a lot to win or lose by their
decisions; Teacher’s unions will be a problem for school owners, not the state government. With so few teachers not being an owner, the unions would have very small budgets, and very little power.
Both federal and state rating of each school would keep parents ( who pay attention ) from placing, or keeping, their children in
schools that do not pass their - the parent’s - muster. Class size,
and school population could be watched for safety and effectiveness. This would not be politics, but administration of our common interest.
For the present, until a state sells its schools, parents should
be given a federal tax credit - not deduction - for the full current
portion of
their taxes going to public education, for each child they enter into
a state -approved private school. This would establish
exactly
what percentage of the population does, in fact, prefer private
education. Self-serving guessing by politicians and political warriors is not necessary. If this results in an extreme minority going to public schools, the decision would be obvious: eliminate public schools. I doubt that result.
Until a revision in the tax system returns primary taxation to the states, (
see my brief on taxation ) the federal government should merely
remit education money to the states, and step back.
The states - under any tax system - should replace testing of
students
by their own school staffs with outside private testing firms to
eliminate possible cheating by principles and teachers, for whatever reason. Testing firms could also be required to design appropriate tests for different cultures.
Such firms for various state-licensed professions currently exist.
There should no longer be a need for teacher's associations
because staff-members would be owners. With the probable need for about two million new teachers by 2020, we had better turn the problem over to the only system that can attract competent
people: private enterprise. Taxes - and income from the purchases of schools, and property - would support the mandated portions of agendas; the balance of each school's agenda would be theirs to decide, as would their overhead, profit margin, fringe benefits, and fee structure.
However, some teachers will choose to not be a stockholder. I
don’t doubt that teachers who opt out of owning, will organize
and the owners of that school will learn what it’s like to be an
employer having to deal with a labor union - from the other
side.
Parents would be free to choose a school, based on staff,
programs, track record, and fees. Parents who want their children
to learn
religion, or morality, and respect for authority, would have their
wishes satisfied, just as atheists would. Smaller classes would
result, and be of the highest benefit. There would no longer be
concern about schools forbidding students from using religious
texts as a basis for their homework assignment; principles would
follow the wishes of the parents.
”. . . public schools have a duty to teach moral rectitude. . .
.” Colorado State Board of Education.
Hogwash! They have only the duty to teach children what they
need to know to succeed in civil life. Moral rectitude
should be taught within the privacy of the family, or their
personally chosen representatives, not by public, politically
motivated, and protected, administrators.
New schools would be established by teachers and principals with
ideas and ambition to make them real, and to profit from it; large
classes, in large buildings on massive property, would no longer be
a given; small neighborhood classes would probably spring
up in the homes of teachers who would be able to maintain
quality education at a very low cost. Such teachers
would have to agree to visits, without warning, by
state-authorized inspectors, who would be limited to the student
area, and the teacher’s behavior, and popular reputation.
The teacher's residence must be off limits. The property would, of
course,
require *state* regulation, and local enforcement, to protect the children.
I also suspect that small schools would be much less exposed to
the problem of student-suspensions for bad behavior. Rented retail stores could also serve as school locations .
Along with the federal credit, each state could choose to add credits or deductibility.
The purchase payments by teacher's corporations for school
property would relieve us of the education portion of property taxes, (see
my brief on taxes ) making room for tuition. The voucher system
would not be
necessary, except for children on welfare. All schools, as private
businesses, would then be taxpayers.
Schools should not be governed by school *districts*. Too many people move among
cities relative to their jobs. County-wide controls make more sense than city politics, but the state is, to
me, the most logical over- all controller, therefore, they should be
"Boss." A large reduction of management-level payroll across
every state system that goes private would result.
Additionally, wealthy higher institutions of learning could buy into,
or establish, local schools at all levels, to promote quality
education according to their philosophies, and provide future
opportunities to students, plus smooth transition into the “mother
University.” But not before the fifth(?) year of this system, I should think!
( By-the- bye, I wonder why so many people fail to consider that
college is not for everyone. How does a student who cannot read be qualified to pursue any subject in a college?
We need originality to produce an effective education system;
building on
the ruins of the present one will not do. Let's remember a truism:
when
government requires minimum competency figures, competent civil servants
will seek
to reach only those figures; competent operators of their own
firms go for the max. Vouchers would not solve this problem,
because they offer a limited amount of money, far short of the
amount needed for middle and low income parents to afford. And
teacher’s associations will block any effective corrections, as they
currently demonstrate by their opposition to any ideas not entirely
in their favor.
As for language, private schools specifically formed, to teach from
given languages to English, would sprout up, to prepare them for
schools which do not accept the non-English speaking student, not to
mention small schools started in neighborhoods for their own
children, with qualified teachers, in their own language, while
converting them to English-speakers.
One of my fans wrote that I must have in mind local social service clubs, and large corporations, adopting a school, funding programs in addition to the basics, and working to make their neighborhood schools the best possible. I certainly had that in mind, as well as wealthy graduates from poor neighborhoods returning some of the fruits of
their success. It’s being done now! There’s a lot that could be
added, and very passionately promoted. This is an excellent basic
idea to develop. I had this in mind relative to financing bussing for
poor kids; some wealthy people would find it appealing to sponsor
one or two busses within a particular zone.
As concerns vouchers for religious education, I think any system
that merely issues vouchers, to be given to any qualified school,
from there to be
nothing more or less than a check moving through the banking
system would in no way, “advance the cause of religion,” or
“entangle the state with the church.”
I prefer my idea to any version of a voucher system, and the idea
of the people recovering the money now tied up in school property
for distribution to other of our community needs thrills me to the
core.
Another fan sent me email from a well known fighter in the wars against
statism who had read this page, at his behest, and replied to him
that my idea,
though nifty, would put the teachers on so aggressive an attack
as to destroy all that exists on earth; the best way to go, he
wrote, is to offer a more pleasing compromise so they, the
teachers, could hold on to their self respect.
This fighter believes, and I don’t doubt his insight, that should
teachers own their schools, they would use legislation to fight for
limits on the competition.
If they were private enterprise, there would be a solid basis for
government, and the courts, to prohibit such attempts on their
part, which of course would not stop them from trying - just as
business now does at every opportunity - in legislation and
attempts at monopoly pricing, and product controls.
(FECMA would stop that! )
One of the absolutes in solution politics - public, business, and
social - is that everyone with a program will argue against any
other, if for no other reason than that they are on a roll with their
own, and are committed to it, as are the people who support
them, who must be supported in return. They are victims of
“mind-lock,” or the necessity to wash each other‘s back. Or both. In other words, this is, as in all of politics, “Gang-war”!
I can be convinced to modify or drop any of my positions, but not
in the face of the degree and character of resistance; if I believe
my solution to be the best, then I want it; gang-members don’t have the “inner glue” to do that.
If you think my idea to make the teaching and administration staff
owners, not employees, with their own money at stake, is a good
idea, promote it. Copy this page and send it to the media and your
state legislators. Make your thoughts known, otherwise, your
thoughts aint woit nuttin’.
You could also demand that your state call the teacher’s bluff and take a look at the state constitution for its wording, and how it can be used to give teachers the means to teach as they wish, with minimum government “coercion,” as owners of their own businesses. Professional and competent teachers, both those who prefer programmed instruction, and those who dream of some day being freely creative with their own experience and knowledge, alert to each child’s learning style, will jump at the opportunity. I guarantee it ! (well . . . .)
As long as schools are a division of government, curriculum must
not include religion, or anti-religion. Public education should
involve itself only with preparation for adult life. It deals with
families of all beliefs; it must be limited by the idea that
government employees, out of respect, must not address
religion, at all. The mere discussion of it, in general, pro or con,
should not be permitted. History, yes, but the class must also
include what co-existed during the same period. It is
therefore best to not address religion at all.
There is one mitigation: respect for every religion, nationality, and
culture, as well as non-religion should be mandated, except for church-owned schools.
Public school buildings could, and should, be made available to
not-for-profit, social “associations,” during off hours, not
competitive with other student’s attention, in return for expenses;
and not be made available to for-profit “associations,” which
would unfairly compete with local commerce. It would be
beneficial for us to have all public school buildings serve as
after-hours community centers. There’s no legitimate reason for
them not to be.
People who want to meet for religious purposes, should not be
prohibited from using available school facilities after hours, as long
as no school authority-figure is present. There’s no need to
complicate the issue with nonsense.
Every school, in a private system, or the present one, should have
a highly trained - non-public employee - psychologist on the job
throughout the school day to constantly observe the students as
they move around, and congregate. I don’t suggest a “KGB
agent,” but the job is too big for a teacher or the Principle. Sticks
of dynamite looking for a match need to be spotted, ASAP.
I am receptive to the idea of eliminating compulsory random testing of students. Zero-tolerance laws do nothing, in my opinion, than convince ourselves and others that we are trying to do something about drug abuse.
Rather than go into it in depth here, pull up, “www. Beyond zero tolerance. Org.”
Of course, you should also pull up my brief on the drug war.
I would like visitors to this site who have made any of the above ideas known to your CongressMember, local and state legislators, and people you know who would be interested, to let me know which ideas, and who you had informed. Please!
It's tough to be free; to live in a society that provides for the
freedom to express ourselves without fear of retribution by
neighbor or government. It is so tough that very few of us find it
easy to extend that freedom to others. When we do, it's
only after fighting for our chauvinistic convictions until our nerves
are shot, and then reluctantly surrender.
I too have a problem with people who live their lives according to
their own preferences. I have convictions on how people should
behave in just about
every circumstance, and have to do battle with my dictatorial
tendencies every time I read the paper, listen to the news, watch it on the tube, or see behavior in public. I wish very much
to afford personal liberties
to my fellow humans, but it's difficult: Everyone is so wrong!
There was a news article about a 16 year old student who refused
to pay
homage to our flag. He is probably trying to be a
grown-up with political
convictions he hasn't thought through, or she had only thought of
it just the hour before. Now that it was made a big deal by the
establishment, he sticks to his guns. Maybe not!
Regardless, she has the right to not speak what he doesn't wish
to, outside regular educational requirements. The pledge of
allegiance in schools is intended to condition children to think as
members of a nation. When a youngster, regardless of age,
refuses to do so, leave her be. Friends (Maybe his parents)
will take her to task without our help, government employees and
dictatorial, self-righteous, conservatives must stay out of it.
Refusenicks are few. No matter what we do, they will appear
from time to time; this is America. We must forever stand ready
to
do battle with those who can't stand independent thought. It
was
right to insist on the child standing, to refrain from disrupting the
others
- they are kids, after all. He must not be compelled to speak what
he doesn't believe. However, requiring him to leave the room is
equal to insisting on group prayer to Allah, and those who object
can leave, or not enter until homage to the only right religion has
been given, and death to the Infidels.
Public employees, and conservatives tend to make a fuss over nothing, "We allow free thought, but not if it takes us by
surprise, or hurts our feelings, or we can’t handle it
emotionally...."
We'd have it a lot easier if we kept Flag/God saluting out of
public education, and meetings, but I won't hold my breath.
Instead, for the moment, I'll limit my suggestions to cancellation
of
his citizenship and a boat-ticket to his parent’s old country. See
how fast they instruct him to refrain from grown-up
decision-making until he is one. Unless, of course, they are knee-jerk
Liberals, in which case it's hopeless.
Refusal to salute the flag because the country is racist, or
other complaints is dense thinking. All the benefits we enjoy
in the US are connected to this nation being what it is,
whatever it may be, including the right to object to it. For
this reason, you should pledge your allegiance to the
system that affords such freedom.
The very fact that the constitution gives you the right to
refuse to pledge your allegiance by saluting its symbol, is the
reason you should, in gratitude for having that very right.
Whatever it is you object to, it is not the system, but people
living within it. Of course, some abuse it, as sure as
there are those who don’t. Whatever you object to is the
product of individuals, not the system, and it is of them you
should complain, knowing that, just as you think you have a
right to what you want, others do too, and we all have
different wants that clash, which is why we all should
appreciate our nation.
Our flag is the symbol of all the freedom we enjoy, including the
absolutely necessary obligation to permit others the right to object
to your values, as others must permit you. That’s what the
American flag means, so salute America, or be of the
moral character you claim to have, by leaving it.
I object to it. It aint necessary. Under the present system, all schools should be mandated to refrain from qualification testing where the race of the child is shown in any way; though the parent, applying in person for a place would, of course, give that away. It is, however, easily possible for schools to consider all applications without names, or addresses, or any other indication that would reveal the
probable race, or religion of the applicant, and use only an
application number. I assume enrollment could be easily applied for, and
facilitated by post, or e-mail.
The problem is that certain people, like Colin Powell ( I really hate
to disagree with him ), believe in controlling the results: the democratic spread by race. With the use of application numbers, whatever spread results would be unplanned, therefore democratic. Ce-Sera-Sera! What will be, will be! We should seek nothing more.
Discomfort in the company of people from different cultures, lack of self-esteem, intolerance, hate, inability to deal with others, all result from the lack of direction and a self-determined meaning of life. A youngster without direction naturally seeks the only face-saving approach to the future available to him. He will choose a false basis on which to respect himself, which is usually racial and religious hatred.
Students should leave grade school having had an introduction to self-development of self-esteem, followed by development of one’s ideas concerning himself in connection with others, in Junior High, and a polished idea of who one is before leaving high school, probably in the form of a dissertation on the subject, “Who am I, what made me so, and where am I going?“.
To my knowledge, no such approach is being used in any school. If that’s not the case, let me know. If it is, make it so.
Every level of education from age ten, should include a class on
our nation; its system of government, the Declaration of Independence, and the
Constitution - with students at each class-level writing a paper on
a particular portion of a document. High School should include the
study of
various interpretations of the Constitution, and the creation of
the
Bill of Rights. Including the No-No, “The Constitution AND the Bill
of Rights;” There’s just the Constitution; the “Bill of Rights” is an historic document, not a current, separate set of laws.
You didn’t? !!!!!
On the subject of, Evolution/”Intelligent Design, Because we are what we were raised to be: of a particular religion, religious or not, God‘s sudden impulse, or a distant relative to the Chimps in the Zoo, whatever; Student’s acceptance of evolution hinges on “conditioned response.”
Kids coming from, and returning to, their homes where evolution is rejected as invalid, will not accept it. They will tolerate the instruction, but will dismiss it as undeserving of further thought. They *will not* take it with them into life. Kids raised in the opposite environment will not instinctively reject it.
Besides, I don’t think they should be taught something their culture rejects. Not if it isn’t essential. I don’t believe it is.
Evolution, being a science, and intelligent design being a product of religion, evolution must continue to be taught as the only valid theory until new *scientific* evidence invalidates it.
Therefore, converting to an education system that serves the interests of us all is the only way to fly; my version of privatization would eliminate the war between Ape-people, and Adam’s people; we‘d all get our way, and the argument will end.
And Adam’s people will get a real shock when Caesar, the Chimp, lands in a space ship from the future, with his pregnant wife, and talks.
© 1997 burtonridgeway
@yahoo. com
Please visit these other briefs:
A better way to secure our benefits:
Social Security
*
Another idea on:
Taxes
*
We could rid ourselves of the political election circus act:
”The FECMA Conspiracy.”
*
Who’s body is it, anyway?:
Abortion
*
We need a better approach than:
"The War on Drugs"
*
Are we destined to go on and on about the right to own an
arsenal?
Guns and the 2nd
amendment
*
Is it really a threat?
A National ID Card
*
A commentary on the not-so-little things about our legal
system.
Law and Order
*
The solution to:
Our health insurance problems
*
Our cities are terrible!
*
Proposed changes to the
Constitution
*
A commentary on miscellaneous issues and questions we face:
Miscellaneous.
*
Rev./Rab./Fr. Burton
at the pulpit
*
On Near-east problems
*
For your funny bone:
Thoughts too minor for serious people
*
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