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July 8, 2023
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As a rock music fan, I enjoy Pink Floyd. But “We don’t need no education” is bad advice for life.

When our kids graduate school, they no longer just have to compete with each other. They now compete in a global marketplace. Not only have low-skilled jobs moved abroad where labor is cheap, but to attract new high-paying, tech-based jobs to America (or even to work online), our kids need an education as good or better than students get in China, India, Israel and other nations. Sadly, our schools are not giving them the tools they need to compete in the 21st century.

I have a friend who owns a printing business. He gives job applicants a pencil and ruler, and asks them to mark an eighth of an inch, a sixteenth of an inch and other simple measurements on a piece of paper. He tells me that no more than one out of ten even has a clue what he’s talking about. If America’s students can get a high school diploma without knowing basic fractions, then all we’re equipping them to achieve is a fraction of the American Dream.

Of course, the cry always goes up, “We need to spend more on education!” But we already spend over $550 billion a year, more than 4 percent of the gross domestic product. If money equaled results, then Washington, DC, should be crawling with junior Einsteins. DC public schools spend over $30,000 per student per year, or $10,000 more than the tuition for an in-state graduate degree from the University of Virginia. Yet DC’s reading, writing and math scores are well below the national average. Money alone doesn’t fix the problem.

Those who are obsessed with “income inequality” want to tear down those who earn more, but have no ideas for helping those who earn less. Well, here’s one: finish high school! Nearly a third of US students drop out. Over their lives, they’ll earn, on average, a quarter million dollars less than high school graduates. They’re also more likely to suffer ill health, get involved in drugs and crime, and die nine years younger. Staying in school benefits both them and society.

But if we want students to learn, then schools have to make them want to learn. To ignite their curiosity and turn them into lifelong seekers of knowledge. That takes both involved parents and competent teachers who are rewarded for good results. Kids need to be taught how to think, not just memorize standardized tests. They also need to be taught real facts and real history, not trendy racist, socialist and anti-American propaganda.

Dropping arts and music classes is the most short-sighted budget cut a school can make. Studies show that music class helps kids do better in other subjects, develop social skills, and stay in school longer. It might also improve the current dismal state of pop music. We must remember that schools exist for the students, not for the teachers’ unions or the education bureaucracy (so open the schools and stop letting the unions keep them closed.) And we need to keep most decisions about education at the state and local levels, with close parental involvement, so they’re made by people who know the students best.

If you think that doesn’t matter, look at all the home-schooled students winning academic contests. Home is as local as you can get, yet those students are more than ready to compete on the world stage. Don’t you want your kids to be?

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Comments 21-30 of 50

  • Allan Artimisi

    07/07/2022 06:45 PM

    I agree with what you are saying Governor. I've got a BS in Aerodynamics and and MS in Electrical Engineering. I'm retired now but had to manage large numbers of engineers while I was working. I was amazed that some of these people had gotten through a college education with the poor skills they had in math and their ability to write coherently. I came to the conclusion that our Dept. Of Education was one of the drawbacks to getting a good education. But, when I look at most of the Government Departments, most of them have very poor results in what they are supposed to be managing so all I can say is that we need to get government out of the business of dictating how things are supposed to be managed.

  • JOSEPH A GREEN

    07/07/2022 05:51 PM

    I see a lot of fools writing about their ideas on the cause of the mass shootings but they all totally ignore the main root problem. Most police go their entire careers without shooting anyone. Most military veterans go their entire careers without shooting anyone. Getting into a gunfight gives you an adrenalin high much like a shot of heroin. Children should not ever be exposed to this fact. The common traits of mass shooters are: usually under the age of 25, male, loners with few or zero friends, addicted to first-person shooter electronic games. Playing these violent games gives them a high similar to the real thing as they kill hundreds of victims per hour. Getting rid of these games would really help a lot. The reality is that too many males under the age of 25 are not emotionally mature enough to properly handle the lure of make-believe violence. An excellent compromise for both political parties would be to make the age of 25 the legal minimum to own any firearms and to vote. The messed-up creeps sitting in their parent's basement murdering thousands of electronic people per day should not have access to real firearms

  • Bo Ehrig

    07/07/2022 05:24 PM

    Good article and you are so right.
    I was a TV movie UPM and logistics transportation guy. My wife is a working actress.
    We would not let our kids in the eighties until mid 1990’s to watch tv Monday through Friday. They could watch a little bit on Saturday. But tv was so boating to them they turned it off.
    We homeschooled are kids for 3 years. It was the best decision of our life. The we put the into private Christian schools.
    Both kids are in their mid to late 30’s. My son was an international banking lawyer.
    Owned his own business in Hong Kong with 90 employees making VR adds for Facebook and many companies. He had to back off and he moved to Los Angeles and now is an executive producer for movies, tv, video games, and him and his partners own a NY Broadway play. Making it into a movie.
    My daughter has a masters degree in international business. And now is a lawyer in Hawaii. Her and husband have a great farm with lots of animals for their son.
    Her son goes to a private Christian school. And my sons kids go to a private school.
    We attribute this to what you said in your article.
    Oh yea, my son played viola and has played professionally. My daughter played cello through college.
    So yes music was a big part of their lives.
    My wife and I thought when they were born that a loveing family and a good education was what God wanted us to give them to be ready to compete on the world stage.
    We did that through our 42 years of marriage and the fruits of this work is paying big time. God is faithful.
    If your ever interior can give you their names to look them up.

  • Ron Ciccone

    07/07/2022 04:21 PM

    I agree that music education is important. Music has had a profound effect on my success as a scientist and engineer. My parents sat me at the piano at seven years of age. Knowing time signatures, quarter notes, eithth notes, etc, had me miles ahead of the introduction to fractions in fifth grade. By engineering school I was playing keyboards, guitar, bass, and banjo (sort of). Getting together to jam some blues, or maybe rock, was incredibly valuable to clear the complexities of thermodynamics and quantum mechanics. Now, at 71 and still working, I can come home from a crazy day in the tech world, play blues acoustic guitar, or ragtime piano, and clear the cobwebs. No, I am no virtuoso, I just love. Students need the exposure to a creative outlet that just might change their lives. There were times in the early days when the lessons were challenging, but it was well worth it.

  • DARRELL MOECK

    07/07/2022 04:03 PM

    The "Value" of an "Education" is seldom dependent on school funding, but in the passion & integrity of each teacher. If the "Teacher" is in the job for money only, the curriculum will suffer and the children will be moved to a higher grade without learning anything. When I was a Senior at a major University and about to graduate, I met a young married couple who were completing their MS degree in Education. Their goal was to target any US community and maximize their income as a husband/wife team. Their "passion" was for money, not teaching. And one thing I really noticed while talking with this couple was their lack of understanding on many subjects...and these were the future Educators of children. Hence, "Home Schooling" is now preferable to any Public School because parents care about the quality of education.

  • Penny Wood

    07/07/2022 04:01 PM

    My Great Grandmother and Grandmother we're school teachers. My Grandmother was adamantly against the Teachers Union, she said they would be the demise of the educational system. At 61 years old I have seen a terrible decline since I was in school and my son now 39 was in school. My great niece & nephew are being home schooled so they are least have a chance to make it in the world. Very sad situation we have in America with parents that don't participate in their children's education and insane governments adding to the problem.
    Penny Wood

  • David Puckett

    07/07/2022 04:01 PM

    First of all, it was a pleasure to visit with you at the 'Old Friends' reunion at Bruce and Diana's house on the 2nd. Great folks all. I have kind of been grafted in of you will, by being Shelba's boyfriend.
    Being licensed as a music educator, not to mention musician from grade 5 on, I couldn't agree more about the importance of the art.
    I work with band kids quite a bit, and non band kids as well. I would to think I am not biased, but as hard as I try, maybe a little sneaks in any way.
    All that said, you rarely see a band kid getting in trouble in school. I rarely see a band kid in serious academic difficulty. On occasion I get to be the warden of ISS. I can only recall one instance of a band kid being in there, and they were very embarrased about it, especially when they saw that I was the warden that day, and of course when I asked them 'what are YOU doing in here?'
    It is amazing every year how much in scholarship money graduating band students receive. Some of these students most likely would not have been able to attend college if not for the scholarship. Of course, not all the scholarship money was for music, but I firmly believe that band helped them develope traits that led to success in other classes.
    I guess you have figured out that I am a strong advocate for music in the schools, so moving on...
    One of the things that I have noticed and made a point to work with kids on is determining the better of two or more choices when there is no bad or 'wrong' choice. Let's make the 'better' choice.
    I could go on further with this extended 'comment', but will close it out by saying that I do enjoy reading your daily newsletters. Keep up the good work!

    David Puckett

  • Bruce Higham

    07/07/2022 03:43 PM

    We are touched by advertisements concerning Rileys Children's hospital. Is this a safe place to make regular monthly donations.

  • Martha Montague

    07/07/2022 02:54 PM

    Very well said sir !! I have long known that our country has been dumbing down our children. The results are obvious ! Thank you for stating that fact so clearly and succinctly. I read and enjoy your newsletters.

  • Florence Kostrzewa

    07/07/2022 02:22 PM

    Dear Mr. Huckabee,
    Your insightful emails are inspiring. We were fortunate to be able to send our children to parochial schools. Not only did they get an excellent education but were taught a sense of responsibility, good manners, self-worth and a God-oriented life style. The public school systems in many cities (mine included) seem to be more interested in test scores rather than teaching the students to actually THINK. Although religious schools foster morality, they do inculcate a sense of responsibility and a God-fearing moral obligation to treat all people as created equal and deserving of basic rights. Maybe public schools should consider less worry about what the teachers unions want and more about what is best for the children-the future of our country. God bless your work.