Monday, September 19, 2011

Stupid In America…..

When school children start paying union dues, that’s when I’ll start representing the interests of school children.” Albert Shanker, (President Teachers Union)

(John Stossel) School spending has gone through the roof and test scores are flat. While most every other service in life has gotten  faster, better, and cheaper, one of the most important things we buy –  education — has remained completely stagnant, unchanged since we started  measuring it in 1970.

Why no improvement?  Because K-12 education is a government monopoly and  monopolies don’t improve.

The government-school monopoly claims: Education is too important to leave to the free market. At a teachers’ union rally, even actor Matt Damon showed up to deride market competition as “MBA style thinking.”

“Competition may be okay for selling movies and cell phones, but education is different,” says the establishment. Learning is complex. Parents aren’t real “customers” because they don’t have the expertise to know which school is best. They don’t know enough about curricula, teachers’ credentials, etc. That’s why public education must be centrally planned by government “experts”.

Those experts have been in charge for years. They are what school reformers call the “Blob.” Jeanne Allen from the Center for Education Reform says for years attempts at reform have run, “smack into federations, alliances, departments, councils, boards, commissions, panels, herds, flocks and convoys, that make up the education industrial complex, or the Blob.

Taken individually they were frustrating enough, each with its own bureaucracy, but taken as a whole they were (and are) maddening in their resistance to change. Not really a wall — they always talk about change — but more like quicksand, or a tar pit where ideas slowly sink.

And the most powerful part of the Blob is the teachers’ union.  (read more)

Video: U.S. Reading Scores Lowest in 40-Years

The Dumbing Down of America Series

Posted by Ask Marion - h/t to Last Refuge

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