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Is Jeb actually ahead of the curve on education? The jury's in - and they side with: Jeb.
USA Today ^
| Sept. 17, 2002
| summer; Del Jones
Posted on 09/19/2002 6:00:49 PM PDT by summer
Edited on 04/13/2004 1:39:57 AM PDT by Jim Robinson.
[history]
Is Jeb actually ahead of the curve on education? The jury's in - and they side with: Jeb.
You decide.
In my opinion, these leaders are now echoing what Gov. Bush has been saying and doing for years.
In short, this national jury is in - and their experience has led them to side with: Gov Bush .
(Excerpt) Read more at usatoday.com ...
TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Florida
KEYWORDS: education; flgovrace; florida; jebbush; nationaltrends
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Darren Walker, who heads the education arm of the Rockefeller Foundation, says there are no simple solutions and "a number of strategies are required to get traction."...
"We learned the hard way that if you seek to change the public schools, you must be prepared to deal with repeated setbacks," he said.
Some people talk about FL education as if it was #1 in every category during the 8-year rein of FL's former Dem governor, Chiles, and then suddenly, everything fell apart with Gov Bush. Nothing could be further from the truth.
Gov. Bush has tried and succeeded in improving education for this state. This state has now been ranked #2 nationwide in the number of Nationally Certified Teachers, #4 in the nation in Educational Choice (up from #34), and FL community colleges are ranked #12 in the nation in terms of the number of students staying in school to graduation. Under Gov. Bush, 100% of FL students take the PSAT for free in public schools, something the People For the American Way have demanded in every state but not received.
And while other states are still struggling with antiquated formulas denying equitable educational funding to the poorest districts, FL has had an equitable forumula in place. Gov. Bush's push for literacy, setting grade level standards and testing, expanding testing to include science and expanding AP courses, all speak well of the education improvements made during his administration.
Will we be #1 overnight after at least 8 years of being at the bottom? Probably not.
But
Gov Bush has not given up on public schools. He has improved them, created competition, and offered parents and low income students, disabled students and students in failed schools a variety of educational options they never had before. His record on education can stand up to whatever criticism is thrown at it.
Furthermore, those who have spent billions on education in this country know there is no "quick" fix. Yet, Gov. Bush's current opponent promises to fix education "the fastest." This is an empty promise. There is no one single solution. Gov. Bush's multi-pronged approach, and his dedication to this issue, is one of the best and most defendable elements of his overall record as governor.
1
posted on
09/19/2002 6:00:49 PM PDT
by
summer
To: **Florida; *Jeb Bush
For index.
2
posted on
09/19/2002 6:01:08 PM PDT
by
summer
To: SpookBrat; Elkiejg; floriduh voter; Frances_Marion; gatorman; livius; Amore; seekthetruth; ...
FYI.
3
posted on
09/19/2002 6:02:31 PM PDT
by
summer
To: clasquith
Good article from USA Today on education. FYI.
4
posted on
09/19/2002 6:02:52 PM PDT
by
summer
To: summer
Summer, you need to write this in short form for some paper and send it in for publication!
Excellent!
To: LibertyGirl77; katherineisgreat
Thanks, katherineisgreat. LibertyGirl77, FYI. :)
6
posted on
09/19/2002 6:16:47 PM PDT
by
summer
To: summer
But, summer, isn't McBride running on an Education platform? (^:
The Florida papers are choosing to tell the truth about Jeb's education record, wow! Did you do this?
This McBride guy, the lawyer who beat Janet Reno, should know better. He's an ex-Marine, for heaven's sakes. He's running on a platform promising to improve the state's schools an interesting claim given that he is the hand-picked, lavishly financed candidate of the Florida teachers unions and the National Education Association (NEA), the very people who have wrecked Florida's schools.
Expecting a man as thoroughly beholden to the educrats as Bill McBride to undo the mess the NEA has created in America's schools would be like expecting a Mafia don to solve the problem of organized crime.
Back to the Slime Pit
summer, do you have
Wait4Truth and
redlipstick on your ping list? You, floriduh voter, PhiKapMom and JulieRNR21 all have great Fla. ping lists. Perhaps we should designate a chief Fla. pinger, and the rest of us can ping the pinger and avoid multiple ping lists? What do you say? (^:
To: summer
I never knew there was so much corporate money in schools. Oh those evil corporations...
Summer you are doing such a great job in bringing these issues to light! Thanks!
8
posted on
09/19/2002 6:18:49 PM PDT
by
Dianna
To: summer
Another great article and comments, summer!
Two major factors that this article points out as essential for educational reform are competition and accountability.
Competition: Jeb's voucher program has forced failing schools to recognize that they will lose students (and their accompanying money) to private schools unless they make substantial improvements.
Accountability: The FCAT has established a baseline for measuring progress. This allows school systems to determine which programs are working and which are not. When problems are discovered, measures can be taken to correct methods that do not work.
There is obviously much work that remains to be done before Florida's schools achieve uniform excellence, but Jeb's reforms are working. The last thing that Florida needs is to elect a dem governor who will reverse all the progress that has been made and instead implement all the liberal, progressive policies that have been proven to fail everywhere they are implemented.
To: summer
an experiment to break up 2,000-student low-income public high schools into 500-student schools that are more personal. That can't be thrilling the teachers' union folks. Our educrats lust to merge our small school district (K-8 only, with school-board funding of "public school choice" for high school) into an adjoining district. But "bad things start to happen when you get more than 500 to 1000 people in one place." Namely, not everyone knows everyone else--so accountability suffers.
To: summer
Great read, BTTT, bookmarked, tagged and bagged for anti-lib ammo.
Thanks, Summer!
To: summer
Great info bump!
To: summer
To: Ragtime Cowgirl; Dianna; Truth Addict; conservatism_IS_compassion; Luke FReeman; windchime; ...
Thanks so much for your comments on this thread. :)
14
posted on
09/20/2002 9:30:32 PM PDT
by
summer
To: summer
You're welcome!
To: summer
a variety of educational options I was tuned to C-Span last night, and the candidates for Governor of PA were debating education. I fear that the Democrat sounded as good as the Republican on this issue-- faint praise indeed, in this case. The Libertarian candidate was head and shoulders above on education; everyone else was determinedly fixated inside the box of
government school uber alles.
To listen was to cringe. And even the Libertarian put some emphasis on "public school choice." Trouble with that is, of course, that it threatens some white suburbanites and thus is unnecessarily divisive. I am for the practical option--private school choice. That takes race/class out of the equation, freeing us to unite as adults against the domineering of educrats.
To: summer
To: summer
Bush bump!
To: summer
GO JEB!!
19
posted on
09/21/2002 7:41:48 PM PDT
by
mafree
To: summer
Ping for you. (^:
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