Posted on 08/13/2005 1:33:11 PM PDT by wcgo2
Forty years after the voters rights act, it is arguable that the black American is in a worse place than he was back then. Why is that? Because he/she is constantly being told about the numerous black people who have advanced to higher stations in life, like Condoleeza Rice, Colin Powell, and various black executives. I must, however remind the reader of a time-tested adage: The exception proves the rule. The fact that certain people have escaped the poverty inherent to the ghettoes such as Harlem and Compton in the united states means absolutely nothing, under funded schools and cultural differences still work to ensure that the black American will not reach his/her potential in a white mans world.
A statistic that I was not aware of is that the number of black children born to unwed mothers has actually increased since the voting rights act, which was supposed to liberate blacks from the terrors of the Jim Crow laws all but completely. At the time of the act, the figure was one quarter. Now? The figure is two-thirds.
Children born into this kind of oppression can hardly hope to stop the cycle of poverty and crime that seems all so inherent to the ghetto. For example, at New York Citys Stuyvesant high school, where students gain entrance based on standardized tests, the student body is less than two percent black, in New York City a city that has far more than a two percent black population.
Whats the solution? Were far from being able to provide it. It will arise not from affirmative action or handouts; it must be in the public school system. The solution is not throwing money at the public school system, which is the solution favored far and away by the powerful teachers union. The solution is accountability.
Bad teachers should be paid less. Good teachers should be paid more. Simple? It should be. Its the basic principle of capitalism, the good succeed and the bad fail. It seems simple to me that by basing the salaries of teachers directly on the performance of their students, they will have initiative to help them succeed. Thats a good principle in theory though, but past efforts to put such a program into place have been stopped short because of a powerful teachers union that is more concerned for their own well being than that of the children they teach. As well, ways to calculate how their kids are doing are tough. Heres my idea: bring in independent consultants twice annualy, and have them rate the students based on a rubric. The average of the two independent consultants reports will indicate the teachers pay. Simple enough? Yes. Quite frankly, its something weve gotta do.
bttt
Unions prevent the application of capitalism to the labor force in every industry where the unions exist.
In airlines, poor performers that meet the bar minimum are rewarded as frequently or almost as frequently as those that work hard. I have an uncle who worked for ages for an airline and he worked hard. The union took their dues, and ensured that the slackers got to keep their jobs at the expense of promotions for the truly motivated.
In schools - teachers just aren't provided with an incentive to achieve results. It is considered crass to apply reality to the acquisition of knowledge. Such a noble profession should be governed by the spiritual reward of teaching young minds, not by the ability of the teacher to actually teach. Crass or not, our education system is in dire need of a reality check. At some point, lowering standards every year just isn't going to work.
Pretty good ... check your capitalization!
Discipline. Even the best teacher in the world can't teach if his or her hands are tied when it comes to discipline. Even good kids underachieve when there are no consequences. You may as well take all the unions-bad-teacher talk and put it on the shelf until we stop handling kids as if they're going to break.
When I was in school, if I didn't get the grades, it was my fault. If I got in trouble at school, I was in even more trouble at home. My brother teaches (7th grade) and his only recourse when a student does bad is to send him or her to the office. He recently had a kid stand up in the middle of the class and start screaming obscenities and throwing stuff at another kid. Do you know what the (obviously liberal) counselor does? Lets him play a video game until he's calmed down and then sends him back to class (the all-powerful "timeout"). When my brother complained about this, he was told that the school didn't want the parents coming in and causing a bunch of trouble, and it was up to him to work something out (Doesn't it say something that this kid was allowed back into class after a violent act, but if he had drawn a picture of a gun, he probably would have been suspended for the rest of the year).
He's constantly attacked by parents who think their precious little child can do no wrong. Somehow it's always his fault.
He's a damn good teacher, but he's about to give up. So much for income incentives.
It's not surprising, though. This is the evil the liberals have released on us. It's never your fault; someone is trying to keep you down or simply hates you for no reason. How easy that excuse is. It's no wonder kids have picked up on it so quickly.
Until black society stops encouraging the "black" way of thinking ie don't excel, don't speak proper English, don't act "white", pick on the ones that do try to excel, black children are never going to get anywhere. It would also be helpful if the parents actually demanded the kids learn while they're in school.
We have been discussing ways to fast track kids through high school to avoid the liberal agenda and other idiocies:
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1315730/posts?page=84#84
Unfortunately my thread title was not well thought out, because some parents might instinctively skip over it due to attached stigma, whether real or imagined.
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