I agreeto Idea Don't prop up failing schools
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Don't prop up failing schools

Why Is This Idea Important?: Throwing money at the US education problem simply won't fix it. Drastic policy change and reform will.

Historically the federal government has been a small investor in the nation's education system. With the recent economic stimulus bill, however, this changed virtually overnight.

There is great danger in the sudden and massive amount of funding -- nearly $100 billion -- that the federal government is throwing at the nation's schools. District by district, the budgetary crises into which all schools were plunging created the impetus for long-needed changes.

The most likely result of this stimulus will be to give our schools the luxury of affording not to change. This is borrowed money that we're pumping into our schools, and it comes at a price. Charging education isn't changing it.

That our schools need to change should not be surprising. Just walk into your local school and enter a classroom. Odds are high that it won't look too different from a classroom from a generation or two ago.

Sure, there might be some computers in the back of the room and perhaps an interactive white board instead of a chalkboard, but chances are high that students will still be sitting at desks lined up in neat rows with a teacher at the front delivering the same lesson on the same day to all the students. This might be acceptable if society and the skills many people need to succeed in today's economy hadn't changed either, but they have.

While U.S. schools stand still, the rest of the world is moving forward, and this has a price tag -- not just for individual children, but also for the nation.

We urge the federal government to consider four criteria when creating new programs or grants for states and districts to help transform an outdated educational system into one fit for the 21st Century.

First, don't fund technology that simply shoves computers and other technologies into existing classrooms. We've spent well over $60 billion in the last two decades doing just that, and there is now overwhelming evidence that when we do it, the current unsatisfactory system co-opts the technology to sustain itself.

We should instead use technology funding to bolster new learning models and innovations, such as online-learning environments, to level the playing field and allow students from all walks of life -- from small, rural communities to budget-strapped urban schools -- to access the rich variety that is now available only to children in wealthy suburban districts.

Second, don't fund new school buildings that look like the existing ones. If the architecture of new buildings is the same as that of existing schools -- designed around teachers delivering monolithic, one-size-fits-all lessons to large batches of students -- it will lock students into another century in which the physical infrastructure works against the flexibility needed for student-centric learning.

Instead, invest in bandwidth as an infrastructure of change. The government has a productive history in investing in infrastructure that creates change and innovation -- from allocating land to those building the transcontinental railroad and the land-grant colleges in 1862 to the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency funding the creation of the Internet.

To allow all districts to realize the power of online learning to advance us toward a student-centric system, the federal government should help deliver broadband capabilities necessary not just for today's needs, where schools already lag, but also in anticipation of tomorrow's.

Third, don't fund the institutions that are least likely to change. Our research shows that institutions are good at improving what they are structured to do, but that transformative innovations that fundamentally change the trade-off between cost and quality -- disruptive innovations -- come from start-up institutions.

This means that there is a high probability that spending money on existing schools of education will only result in their doing more of the same, for example. Meanwhile, there are a host of disruptive training organizations that are providing comparable educators at lower cost, such as Teach for America, the American Board for Certification of Teacher Excellence, and New Leaders for New Schools.

Alternative certification, including alternative programs from existing schools of education, has grown at a 29 percent compound annual growth rate since 1997. The government must embrace this and back the winners, not defend the old institutions.

Fourth, direct more funds for research and development to create student-centric learning software. Just a fraction of 1 percent of the $600 billion in K-12 spending from all levels currently goes toward R&D.

The federal government should reallocate funds so we can begin to understand not just what learning opportunities work best on average but also what works for whom and under what circumstance. It is vital to fund learning software that captures data about the student and the efficacy of different approaches so we can connect these dots.

Transformation of any existing system isn't an easy process, but ignoring the laws of innovation, although it may be perhaps politically expedient in the short run, will only make it more difficult.

When the federal government directs future funds toward education, having these principles in place will go a long way toward making sure we're not simply charging education, but that we have a fighting chance of changing it.

From: http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/06/02/christensen.schools/index.html

Submitted by paulastewart 4 years ago

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  1. The best way to encourage and help schools pull themselves up and improve teaching techniques and therefore bring up test scores, student behavior, and student self-confidence is to enable a system of competition for students within the local school system. This is a proven method. If a public school system that has mediocre scores and other problems knows that it has to compete with private schools on a voucher program for federal funding or state funding, watch and see how hard that public school system works to bring up its school system. A great example of this is the Washington, D.C. school system where it is most likely, if not the worst, one of the worst school systems in the U.S. Parents lobbied for the voucher system and got it, thousands of children who would have been mired down in the public school system and exposed to drugs, victims of crime and and myriad of other unsavory things instead got a great education at one-half the cost of what it would have cost for the terrible public school system which never bothered to change. That experiment was a failure. Sadly, President Obama took the vouchers away and took hope away for thousands of families who are forced to send their children to those cesspools called public schools. They are dangerous, drug-infested, schools that teach children the trade of being a criminal instead of good citizenship. We must, as good stewards of our education system, as parents, give our children an education to give them a firm foundation upon which they can build their lives. This type of action can't be allowed to happen. There is a better way. The federal government must allow the states to make decisions regarding education. That is where decisions should be made. The states have the power and should exercise that power. The federal government has no business in the education of our children. Once again, here is a prime example of the federal government poking it's nose into the private lives of U.S. citizens. The federal government needs to be reigned in and reminded that it has limited rights under the U.S. Constitution and State's Rights trump the Federal rights for the Federal government was created by the states. We do not serve the federal government. Our children are the responsibility of the parents. Not the responsibility of the federal government.

    4 years ago
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  2. Well sylvester.cathy it really sounds like the parents need to get more involved with their kids if they are that bad at schools. Ninety percent parents fault if their kids are into trouble all the time. On another note on schools, I think we waste to much of our money on schools all over the county or in Louisiana the parish. Ive seen the counties or parishes have a population of 10000 people and they have 8 different school buildings that are run down and poorly funded. The schools should be pre-k thru 8 in one building and 9-12 in another and do away with all others as it cost to much money to run 10 different schools in 1 county or parish.

    4 years ago
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