Education policy has gotten short shrift so far in this year's presidential campaign season, yet both Democratic nominee Sen. Barack Obama and GOP hopeful Sen. John McCain have offered visions of education reform, and the differences between them could not be more striking.Who's ahead...according to the NY Times poll?
Mr. Obama wants to strengthen public schools by boosting funding for early childhood education, rewarding good teachers with higher pay and offering tax credits for college tuition. Mr. McCain's plan centers on giving parents vouchers for private schools, eliminating most federal regulation of education and expanding online programs that let students take advanced math and science courses in schools where they aren't offered.
Both candidates agree that American education is in crisis. Currently, 6 million middle and high school students read below grade level, and only 70 percent of high school students graduate with a diploma. Nearly a third of new teachers quit within their first five years on the job. And soaring college costs have left millions of students unable to afford higher education, the principal key to success in today's information-based economy. Even those who can pay often leave school with crippling debt.
Senators Obama and McCain also both acknowledge that the federal No Child Left Behind Act passed under the Bush administration is inadequate. The law requires schools to make steady improvements in instructional quality each year as measured by student performance on standardized achievement tests. But it doesn't provide
money for schools to hire better teachers, upgrade curriculum and equipment or
create after-school enrichment programs. The law is a classic example of an
unfunded mandate that leaves struggling states and local governments to pick up
the tab for costly federal initiatives...
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Monday, September 15, 2008
The Candidates on Education
This from the Baltimore Sun:
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