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Gov. AMF in Houston today for another education charade

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PDittie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Fri Dec-16-05 11:07 AM
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Gov. AMF in Houston today for another education charade
Rick Perry is an absolute magician to be able to hoodwink the media into reporting his numerous failures in Texas public education as something to be proud of. This afternoon -- 1:30 p.m. -- he appears at Carver High School to announce his latest handjob.

Chris Bell has previously called for answering Bill Gate's call to redesign high school curricula to adequately prepare Texas children for the 21st century economy, so I suppose it's good that Rick Perry is heeding what Bell is saying...

Education trumps the economic development benefit of a toll road or a tax break for yet another big-box superstore.

But Mr. Perry continues to back an Enron-style accountability system that holds kids back to keep them out of the test pool. This "ninth-grade bulge," which education researchers say is a result of high-stakes testing, has pushed the state's effective dropout rate to nearly 40 percent, tops in the country.

The sad fact is that most residents of our prison system lack high school degrees. The perverse incentive to encourage kids to drop out of school has created a school-to-prison pipeline that is a silent moral crisis in Texas. Incredibly, Mr. Perry was one of only three governors not to sign a national agreement by the National Governors Association to accurately track dropouts. We can't keep using the prison system to hide our failures like Enron used offshore dummy corporations to hide its debt.

Another unfortunate, if avoidable, byproduct of Enron-style accountability is the silent crisis of teacher dropouts. We have a shortage of qualified, certified teachers because 60 percent of all teachers quit within their first five years.

Texas pays its teachers $6,100 less than the national average, but it costs more than $13,000 to replace each teacher. This is perhaps the best example of Enron-style accounting. Consequently, we have more certified teachers not teaching in Texas than are working in the classrooms. We need to bring their salaries up to the national average and then empower them to teach our kids something more important than how to take yet another standardized test.
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PDittie Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-18-05 10:50 AM
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1. johncoby reports from the scene:
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Poet Lariat Donating Member (275 posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Sun Dec-18-05 11:49 AM
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2. My sister is an elementary school teacher
...and has been for the last 20 years. She dropped out for a couple of years over "not being allowed to teach anymore". She found herself spending the majority of her day grilling and preparing the kiddos for their mandated tests instead of utilizing her ample skills to really help them learn about the world. She's back now because she needs the money, even though the pay ain't so hot. She felt like she didn't have a choice...you see she went to college, worked hard for her degree, spent several of her best years molding little minds for success and can't just go out and start a new career.

She, like a lot of our Texas teachers are making due in a bad situation. They need help from our elected officials and they're not getting it.
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