Sunday, February 26, 2012

Education Failing Students : America Falls Behind

The bottom line here is students have a low level of expectation of what their future will be when they get out into real life. TV sitcoms, reality shows and the environment in witch they have grown up will dictate their personal outcomes. All the student has to do is enjoy the ride.

The America student, for the most part, grows up in an environment that tells them life has no down side. No situation that comes their way, no matter how serious, can be handled by someone else. That is, a Super Hero will save the day. So many kids see this every day on the tube or playing games where magic happens all the time. Don't worry about the bad situation that's coming, that can be fixed by hitting the red button. Wow - awesome.

Parents of many of these kids now have grown up with this same mentality of 'it takes the entire village to raise the child'. Independent thought has been put aside and replaced by promises of others, big government, taking the responsibility for everything, good or bad.

Whether it's education or earning a living wage to meet ones needs and wants, it's believed there will always be a safety net to catch the falling star. But when the star crashes into the ground and realizes the net is gone, a net that was never really there to begin with, but now they are confused. They did everything right. They did what everything they were told to do. All they had to do was lay on the couch and play the game. They pushed all the right buttons.


The frustration and pain when cold reality finally pushes the fuzzy warm feelings fantasy aside can be debilitating. Now it's time to take control of one's life and go forward. The problem is the student of 'game boy' has no idea of what to do. hmmm Time for big government to step in and gain another recruit to dependency.


Restructuring Public Education for the 21st Century
Source: Linus Wright, "Restructuring Education for the 21st Century," National Center for Policy Analysis, February 23, 2012.

American public education needs a complete restructuring in order to support the development of critical thinkers ready to assume their positions as productive citizens of a free society. Neglecting to change the system will only contribute to America losing its position as the leader of the free world, says Linus Wright, an undersecretary of education during the Reagan administration and senior fellow with the National Center for Policy Analysis.

Students in dozens of other countries, including China, South Korea, Germany and Finland, outperformed American students in reading, math and science, according to the Program for International Student Assessment results released in December 2010.

The United States ranked 23rd in science, 17th in reading and -- worst of all -- 31st in math.
These results suggest that the United States is in need of a public education makeover. Indeed, students are inadequately prepared in elementary and middle school for academic success in high school.

Consider, 75 percent to 80 percent of urban children begin kindergarten with inadequate to non-existent vocabulary for learning.

Over time, many become discouraged and drop out, leaving the United States in the unenviable position of having one of the highest dropout rates in the world -- the United States' secondary education graduation rate was 76 percent in 2009, according to the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD); six percentage points behind the OECD average of 82 percent.

America must move away from its antiquated agrarian system of education -- a six-hour school day and a 180 day school year will not and cannot compete with other industrialized nations whose students meet higher academic standards, have better prepared teachers, spend 30 percent to 50 percent more time in class, and are supported by a parental culture that expects and requires more from their children, says Wright. In addition, the United States needs to seriously consider how to improve academic achievement for low-income and non-English speaking students.

Important reforms include:
Early childhood education.
Eliminating the 12th grade.
Moving vocational education to community colleges.

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