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Stupid in America -- Why your kids are probably dumber than Belgians
Reason ^ | January 13, 2006 | John Stossel

Posted on 01/13/2006 3:34:41 AM PST by JTN

For "Stupid in America," a special report ABC will air Friday, we gave identical tests to high school students in New Jersey and in Belgium. The Belgian kids cleaned the American kids' clocks. The Belgian kids called the American students "stupid."

We didn't pick smart kids to test in Europe and dumb kids in the United States. The American students attend an above-average school in New Jersey, and New Jersey's kids have test scores that are above average for America.

The American boy who got the highest score told me: "I'm shocked, 'cause it just shows how advanced they are compared to us."

The Belgians did better because their schools are better. At age ten, American students take an international test and score well above the international average. But by age fifteen, when students from forty countries are tested, the Americans place twenty-fifth. The longer kids stay in American schools, the worse they do in international competition. They do worse than kids from countries that spend much less money on education.

This should come as no surprise once you remember that public education in the USA is a government monopoly. Don't like your public school? Tough. The school is terrible? Tough. Your taxes fund that school regardless of whether it's good or bad. That's why government monopolies routinely fail their customers. Union-dominated monopolies are even worse.

In New York City, it's "just about impossible" to fire a bad teacher, says schools chancellor Joel Klein. The new union contract offers slight relief, but it's still about 200 pages of bureaucracy. "We tolerate mediocrity," said Klein, because "people get paid the same, whether they're outstanding, average, or way below average." One teacher sent sexually oriented emails to "Cutie 101," his sixteen year old student. Klein couldn't fire him for years, "He hasn't taught, but we have had to pay him, because that's what's required under the contract."

They've paid him more than $300,000, and only after 6 years of litigation were they able to fire him. Klein employs dozens of teachers who he's afraid to let near the kids, so he has them sit in what they call "rubber rooms." This year he will spend twenty million dollars to warehouse teachers in five rubber rooms. It's an alternative to firing them. In the last four years, only two teachers out of 80,000 were fired for incompetence.

When I confronted Union president Randi Weingarten about that, she said, "they [the NYC school board] just don't want to do the work that's entailed." But the "work that's entailed" is so onerous that most principals just give up, or get bad teachers to transfer to another school. They even have a name for it: "the dance of the lemons."

The inability to fire the bad and reward the good is the biggest reason schools fail the kids. Lack of money is often cited the reason schools fail, but America doubled per pupil spending, adjusting for inflation, over the last 30 years. Test scores and graduation rates stayed flat. New York City now spends an extraordinary $11,000 per student. That's $220,000 for a classroom of twenty kids. Couldn't you hire two or three excellent teachers and do a better job with $220,000?

Only a monopoly can spend that much money and still fail the kids.

The U.S. Postal Service couldn't get it there overnight. But once others were allowed to compete, Federal Express, United Parcel, and others suddenly could get it there overnight. Now even the post office does it (sometimes). Competition inspires people to do what we didn't think we could do.

If people got to choose their kids' school, education options would be endless. There could soon be technology schools, cheap Wal-Mart-like schools, virtual schools where you learn at home on your computer, sports schools, music schools, schools that go all year, schools with uniforms, schools that open early and keep kids later, and, who knows? If there were competition, all kinds of new ideas would bloom.

This already happens overseas. In Belgium, for example, the government funds education—at any school—but if the school can't attract students, it goes out of business. Belgian school principal Kaat Vandensavel told us she works hard to impress parents. "If we don't offer them what they want for their child, they won't come to our school." She constantly improves the teaching, "You can't afford ten teachers out of 160 that don't do their work, because the clients will know, and won't come to you again."

"That's normal in Western Europe," Harvard economist Caroline Hoxby told me. "If schools don't perform well, a parent would never be trapped in that school in the same way you could be trapped in the U.S."

Last week, Florida's Supreme Court shut down "opportunity scholarships," Florida's small attempt at competition. Public money can't be spent on private schools, said the court, because the state constitution commands the funding only of "uniform, . . . high-quality" schools. But government schools are neither uniform nor high-quality, and without competition, no new teaching plan or No Child Left Behind law will get the monopoly to serve its customers well.

A Gallup Poll survey shows 76 percent of Americans are either completely or somewhat satisfied with their kids' public school, but that's only because they don't know what their kids are missing. Without competition, unlike Belgian parents, they don't know what their kids might have had.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government
KEYWORDS: education; educationnews; johnstossel; schools; stossel
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To: syriacus

Mandatory education should end at 16, as it did in the past. Kids who don't want to be in school should be given the freedom to get a job.

You know, I have to agree. By high school, it should be coming clear which students have the aptitude for/want to pursue higher education and professional fields and those that don't. Why force everyone into the same boat and bring everyone down? At least by 15 or 16, those that know they would rather be trained in a trade or just go out into the work force on their own should be allowed to do so and let those that WANT to continue on towards higher education do so. The kids that don't want to be there just end up getting into and making trouble while wasting valuable years of their lives that could be spent learning a trade or working. School really does just become a holding pen after that time.


101 posted on 01/14/2006 8:01:23 AM PST by usmom
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To: usmom
I think you did a good job of laying out the reasoning behind what I said.

I think that enforcing laws that make kids remain in (academic) school beyond 16 is a waste of time, energy and money.

102 posted on 01/14/2006 8:12:07 AM PST by syriacus (Independent counsel system has "been corrupted and no longer serves its intended purpose" Leahy,1998)
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To: Jim Noble

It didn't used to be that way - young people could drop out of school at 16 and go to work in a factory - work their way up and be making a decent living and raise a family. Those factories are no longer an option for most young people because they have been moved to Mexico, China, and other places out of our country. So, now we tell these kids that they have to stay in school and prepare for college even though they are clearly not capable or interested in doing that. Most high schools now have terrible vocational programs or none at all. It is inexcusable that everyone is put on the "college track"in high school or just plain ignored.


103 posted on 01/14/2006 8:13:33 AM PST by Sioux-san (God save the Sheeple)
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To: usmom
Why force everyone into the same boat and bring everyone down?

Because if you don't, the graduation photo won't "look like America".

104 posted on 01/14/2006 8:53:21 AM PST by Jim Noble (Fiat justitia, ruat coelum)
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To: JTN; All
And yet another addition to John Stossel's ongoing series of articles based upon his research for "Stupid in America" is here: School Competition Remains "Unproven" (sarcasm)
105 posted on 02/08/2006 9:15:59 AM PST by FreeKeys ("THE most widespread form of child abuse is parents' sending kids to govt schools." - Neal Boortz)
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To: garbanzo
It'll be watched by no one and nothing will change. I'm no tinfoil-hatter, but you almost have to assume that our education system is the way it is for a reason

Almost?

106 posted on 02/08/2006 9:22:06 AM PST by subterfuge ("The Kennedys are not real Democrats. They have their own party." --Tip O'Neill)
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