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Our Most Valuable Natural Resource
Generally, most people agree that, "You get what you pay for."
And, usually it is true. So, assuming most of us subscribe to this bit
of common sense, why do we think our children can get a good education
at bargain-basement prices?
First of all, I cannot understand why we do not consider the young people
of this country our most valuable natural resource.
It seems that we will spend more time and money trying to save a spotted
owl than we will to save the next generation of human beings (from intellectual
extinction). Yes of course, the environment is important, the deficit
looms like a cancer; homelessness, jobs, crime in the streets, the very
infrastructure of the country cry for attention and repair, but without
good schools, without careful nurturing of our children -- unequivocally
our most valuable resource -- where will all our best efforts end up a
generation from now? Ignorant (badly educated) people do not know how
or why to preserve the spotted owl, eliminate acid rain, conserve energy,
fight crime and make peace.
How can people go to sleep at night knowing that we, the United States
of America, the one remaining super-power, rank in the basement, among
industrialized nations, on standardized tests for basic skills in math
and science? The fact that we rank first in Nobel Laureates simply illustrates
the problem I am talking about…that is to say, our school system
is exactly like our health care system... the very best in the world if
you are rich. But for the majority, ours is a system that has developed
mediocrity to a high art.
The gap (chasm) between the affluent and the penurious has grown ever
wider. George Bush's "thousand points of light" turned out to
be candles. He was the "Education President" like Herbert Hoover
was the "Equal Opportunity Employer." American schools need
a Marshall Plan if only to get us back in competition with Europe and
Japan. Just the other day a Dow Jones "News Brief" stated that
several American businesses are giving bonuses to employees who go back
to school. Well, Hallelujah, its about time business is waking up to the
"resource" of an intelligent work-force.
Where is the failure of American Education? I think the answer, like so
many things, is in the money. As candidate Bill Clinton pointed out in
his remarks to the convention of the National Education Association in
1992, the federal government is spending less today than it did in 1980
on education. Less money for more students and more problems. There simply
is not sufficient financial support for good schools anymore. What is
left is a shell of a system with everyone, from students to faculty, cynically
"putting in time".
California is a perfect "laboratory" example of what has happened
across the country. Twenty-five years ago California schools were ranked
close to the top in national studies. Along came "Proposition 13"
which slashed taxes and today California schools are ranked close to the
bottom nationwide. To pretend that money is not the answer is to pretend
that cigarettes don’t cause cancer. It would be nice if there were
better answers to both these problems but there ain't.
Good Education must be free and equal for all
people. This must be clearly spelled out as a mandate of the Federal
Government. This must be the Peace Dividend. We must abandon the farce
of school (property) taxes and incorporate a school-tax program from increased
state and federal income tax. Then, all monies for schools must be distributed
equally. The wealthy have to be convinced
that they must share their tax dollars now
for the education of the poor across town or they will be spending twice
as much later on for police, welfare and reconstruction. Bad education
is like cancer, it must be eliminated early before it gets out of control
-- and it is close to terminal metastasis right now.
Many people actually do not know what good education is. I mean, if you
have not had it how can you know? How often have we heard the lamentable
remark, "My high school was good enough for me, it should be good
enough for my kids." Like good cooking, fine wine, a Mozart opera,
a baseball game, real wilderness…if you have not experienced these
things how can you be expected to understand the significance of their
absence? Thirty years ago we Americans did not know what good volleyball
was until we saw the Russians and the Japanese at the 1968 Olympics. We
had to see (and get beaten) to believe. To reiterate; it was the Japanese
and Germans who taught us about well-made automobiles.
The fact is, the average American public school is a farce compared with
the many excellent (private) college preparatory schools across the country.
The high-quality, safe, encouraging, respectful, joyful learning that
goes on in these private schools must be the right of all our children,
not just the rich.
This free and equal education is the crux of the problem. The
wealthy and privileged must be made aware that there are high schools
in the United States without Bunsen burners, without Encyclopedia
Britannicas, without nets on the basketball rims, without showers,
without computers, without enough teachers. It is one of the great mysteries
of social politics that those who will spend considerably more for designer
ice cream, Mexican beer, German cars and Harris Tweed consistently refuse
to acknowledge that there is a direct fiscal relationship between lousy
schools and crime, welfare, racism or teenage suicide. John Kozol, a longtime
researcher in American education testified before Congress about the needs
of our schools. One comment he made was particularly significant. He said
not one member of the United States Congress sends his/her children to
the Washington D.C. public schools! If this is true, what an unequivocal
indictment. Whatever is wrong with the schools in Washington is probably
the same thing that is wrong with schools across the country. If our public
schools are not good enough for a single member of Congress then they
are not good enough for anybody! Period!
The United States must have a school system with national standards in
which one can get a good education in virtually any public high school
anywhere in the country -- a high school system the equal of the state
university system. Sure, some state universities have a bit more cache
than others, but nevertheless, one can certainly get a decent education
at the state university in Arkansas, Mississippi or Maine as well as in
California or Michigan. By the same token, one should be able to go to
the public high schools in Oakland, Detroit or East St. Louis or a small
town in Mississippi, Texas or Vermont and not be in danger and get a good
education. And I am talking about a good
education; not a scrap of paper which pretends to be a diploma of standards
which are flaunted by a functional illiteracy.
Basically, we are dealing with a massive prejudice; rich against poor,
white against colors -- particularly black. To pretend otherwise is reprehensible.
One glance at the test scores of Blacks will attest to this… at
least a hundred points lower across the board nationwide. We must promise
the American people that we will eliminate the gap between the test scores
of whites and blacks; that our objective is that eventually all young
people, of all colors and economic backgrounds will score equally
on standardized tests. Our motto must be that good education is as much
a right as good health care.
The violence in our schools must be stopped immediately. Again, Jonathan
Kozol states that some schools he visited were so violent that taxi drivers
refused to take him to the school; he had to walk the last few blocks
by himself. This is outrageous. War must be declared against violence
and it must be done with a conviction that inspires us all to support
it. What is happening to the young people of this country is a tragedy.
The young people of America want to know that we will do for them what
George Bush did for Kuwait.
In a nutshell this is what has happened in American education: our schools
are like the cars we used to make -- big, ugly and inefficient. Along
came the Germans and the Japanese and we all know the rest of the story.
As we should have been taking a closer look at the German and Japanese
cars -- the overhead cams, independent suspensions and disc brakes; and
perhaps most of all, the quality -- we need to take a closer look at where
there is good education going on. Happily, in this case we do not need
to go over seas because we have some of the best schools in the world
right here in this country -- mainly, the private college preparatory
schools.
Why do we ignore these schools? When is somebody going to wake up and
recognize the good that has been going on at the many, many excellent
prep schools across the country (not to suggest that there are not also
excellent public schools as well). Coaches aren't afraid to copy success.
Hospitals adopt better techniques. Copying is the name of the game in
business and advertising. So why don't we copy our best schools? Who or
what are we afraid of? Why not simply demand that our public schools emulate
our best private schools just as our public hospitals emulate our best
private hospitals and just as Detroit is finally trying to emulate the
best German and Japanese automobiles.
Clearly, there is a conspiracy of ignorance among university education
departments, public school administrators and teachers along with the
general naivete of the public, which keeps the private school experience
in the dark. People just don't know. I have experienced it time and time
again…the refusal to believe that there are actually schools where
students want to learn, where they respect the teachers and the teachers
respect them and the teachers respect the administration and the parents
and teachers work together to make the schools as good and happy a place
as possible for young people. Most people think I am fantasizing when
I talk about such things but it is true and has been true for a long time.
I went to such a school and I have taught in several private schools as
well as public schools. I know.
But it all comes back to money; the realization that a huge investment
in young people today will pay enormous dividends down the road a few
years. I am happy that we will spend any amount of money and effort to
save an American pilot shot down in enemy territory. It would make me
even happier to know that we care as much about several million young
people every day in equally hazardous terrain, subject to equally hazardous
assaults. And don't for a second mistake this as a plea for the voucher
system. Not at all. The answer for America is simply to make all our (public)
schools equal and good. And, I might point out that the best does not
necessarily mean the most expensive and ostentatious -- for many years
the Volkswagon beetle was considered among the ten best-made cars in the
world by Car and Driver magazine.
What are the basic ingredients for good schools? First of all, they are
smaller and happier which translates to better and safer. Smaller student-teacher
ratios (say, 15 or 20 to 1 compared to 30 or 40 to 1 in the public sector)
mean better teaching. This is one of the keys to good education -- small
class size. Twenty students per class should be designated a national
maximum. There should be laws governing class size no less than
there are laws governing the foot-candles of light required in schools
and public work places. Ten people on a basketball court seems perfect.
Imagine the chaos if there were forty? Well, apply the same logic to any
classroom and you can see what has happened to our schools.
Secondly, along with smaller classes, there must be fewer preparations
for individual teachers. One cannot teach six classes of forty students
per class and remain effective, much less sane, every day. Private school
teachers teach four classes per day allowing for more preparation time
and more time for extracurricular participation and student teacher involvement.
Thirdly, teachers must be respected more and paid more. The fact of the
matter is that garbage collectors and grocery checkers are paid more than
many teachers. More respect and higher pay will, in turn, result in better
teachers.
Fourth, schools must be designed, built and/or refurbished to look inviting,
warm, safe and conducive to learning. To a visitor from Mongolia the average
American public school might well be mistaken for a penitentiary. We need
to invest in spacious campuses, bright classrooms and the best technologies.
A lot of elementary schools are engaging and most of our colleges and
universities are very inviting…why do we think teenagers are bereft
of taste and want to spend six hours a day in boisterous, over-crowded,
monstrously hideous block-houses?
Finally, what these things should boil down to is a happier environment
where students are comfortable and enjoy school, where teachers enjoy
teaching, where faculty and administration are less at loggerheads and
where parents are satisfied with the education their children are getting
and, perhaps most of all, where young people will again feel the respect
they deserve as the next generation.
These are the plain and simple facts of good education. Such education
should not be the privilege of a few but the right of everyone. The gap
must be closed in our schools because America will not survive the continuing
disparity between rich and poor, the educated and the ignorant.
None of this can be achieved without massive federal support. Our little
friend in Central America, Costa Rica, has no army and spends
twenty-five percent of its national budget on education. It is
the jewel of Latin America. Is there not a lesson to be learned from the
comparison of investment in education and investment in armaments if we
look at Costa Rica and her neighbors? Costa Rica has a literacy rate of
about ninety eight percent; higher than ours. Costa Ricans are happy,
hard-working people. Costa Rica is surrounded by countries with big armies
and airforces and multitudes of illiterate people living in revolutionary
squalor. Is it possible to pretend that education has nothing to do with
the quality of life and the pursuit of happiness? We, meanwhile, spend
something less than five percent of our national budget on education.
America's tired young people are a reflection of the hypocrisy they have
been fed for too many years. The answer to teenage ennui and suicide is
to convince them that there is a future worth studying for, worth living
for here in America. Imagine what it must be like for virtually every
young person with eyes to see and ears to hear. They have grown up with
a government which has raped the wilderness, traded arms for hostages
(and gone Scott-free, one might add) continues to test nuclear weapons,
build and sell anti-personnel mines, financed a plethora of suspect tyrannies,
invaded hapless Central American countries, ignored grotesque deficit
spending, contributed to drug-trafficking, refused to pass gun-control
legislation while posturing for safe streets, cut school funding, and
lied to us on practically every issue of substance from AIDS to Desert
Storm. Come on now, is it any wonder some young people are simply overwhelmed
and say, "to hell with it" as they take another toke?
Our families have frayed, schools are bankrupt and the streets are a battleground;
the least we can give to the youth of America is the respect they deserve
as our most valuable natural resource. We can begin showing that respect
by rebuilding the place where they spend most of their time, the schools.
As FDR ended the depression the federal government must step in to end
the inequality, violence and indifference in our schools. As Truman promised
a car in every garage, we must now be promised a (good) school in every
neighborhood. It is as simple as that. "As we sow, so shall we reap."
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