When
education worked, students were responsible for their own education. Many, like Abe Lincoln accepted this
responsibility; they hired tutors, borrowed books, took apprenticeships and
managed to learn enough to enter an occupation and earn a living.
Parents
and teachers can’t help students who aren’t interested in learning, so these
students need to as least be willing to learn the minimum required to function
as an adult. Students who demonstrate a lack of interest need to be in special
classes unless and until they decide to take responsibility for their own
education. Then they might be able to
apply for and be accepted in other forms of schooling aimed at their interests.
GA
Education Bills
You will
find lots of education bills that nibble at the edges of different problems,
but they won’t do much because the Legislature has failed to establish who is
responsible. They are looking for
someone to blame for public school failures. None of this thrashing around will
help.
Lessons
from Homeschooling
Homeschoolers
are proving the value of tutoring at an early age, which is what they actually
do. They are able to adopt learning to the differences in each student. This gives the students the freedom to take
responsibility for their own education.
The time saved in homeschooling is used to develop other skills and
interests.
Lessons
from the One-Room Schoolhouse
When
communities were large enough to build a one-room school house and hire a
teacher, older students were taught to tutor the younger ones. Teachers kept
this going until the curriculum was very advanced. Tests from this era (1800s and 1900s) were
much more advanced and comprehensive.
The curriculum was “classical”.
20%
Failure rate
The 20%
failure rate has always been with us.
The farm family in the 1800s with 5 kids invariably had 1 kid who didn’t
learn math or reading easily. Not being
good at it, this 1 kid worked farm chores and remained on the farm. Many of these early failures eventually
learned more than enough to function as adults.
Government’s
Unconstitutional Grabbing
Education
is not one of the enumerated powers granted to the federal government in the US
Constitution (as written). The federal government needs to end its meddling and
leave it to the States and the People. The People should decide how to go
forward from there. Public schools could survive if they can be funded and
controlled by parents, teachers and Principals. This could take a while to get
the cost of education down to reasonable levels and maintain forward motion for
students in the system.
Corporate
Interests
Businesses
who hire students and graduates need to stay engaged, but their responsibility
is to hire the best employees they can find.
Corporations
who are in the “education business” have offered little, are not necessary and
should be suspect.
Corporations
who fuss over graduation rates should be encouraged to consider hiring the
other 80%.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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