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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 31-40 of 50

  • Janet Russenberger

    07/07/2022 01:42 PM

    I have been ranting about the lack of education in our local schools for 20 years. Prior to retiring, I ran a small dairy farm. I would hire kids from a nearby college. I can only remember 4 that knew that 1/2 of 1/2 was 1/4! They told me they had never heard of civics classes. The worse I think was the one who, after I worked side by side with him for two weeks of training then was ready to be independent. He was hired for 20 hours a week but his third week he called in sick on two days. He became very upset when his paycheck was only for 12 hours. He insisted that I owed him for 20 because that was what I hired him at! He never returned.

  • Lanny Cook

    07/07/2022 01:37 PM

    I couldn't agree more! But not only are high school students graduating with dismal academic skills, but a majority of schools have also eliminated most technical education courses. These courses were essential for applying academic knowledge in technical settings, while providing students problem solving skills. I retired after nearly 28 years of service in a public high school, teaching and managing technical education programs. I was a first-hand witness to academicians eliminating viable career programs that enhanced a student's academic education. In fact, I wrote a book about the dismal state-of-affairs in the public school system that most folks don't want to acknowledge. I'd love to send you a copy of it. Fingernails on the Chalkboard - an Insider's Look into the Public Education System. Even though I wrote it over a decade ago, the lessons more than apply to the current system! Here's a link to Amazon if you want to purchase your own copy. https://www.amazon.com/Fingernails-Chalkboard-Insiders-Public-Education/dp/1937756084 Thank you sir!

  • Bud Amey

    07/07/2022 01:33 PM

    A friend of mine has a sign above his desk that simply reads, "You can't fix stupid". I have argued for years that the Teacher's Unions have been promoting stupid. So may window cashiers can't even calculate change for the drive-thru meals without the register. Yet, they want and expect to be paid $18-$25/hr. That is absolutely nuts. I have retired after 45 years in transportation.
    I tell people who think I didn't live up to my potential I enjoyed my life, and still do. My two life sayings are, "I would agree with you, but then we'd both be wron" (I get a lot of deer in the headlight looks with that) and "I may not always be right, but I am seldom in doubt." Love your columns. Thank you for all your research and comments.

  • roy mattox

    07/07/2022 01:30 PM

    well said, as always, and i thank you. nothing has made me any madder in music than that one line. we dont need no education. so many took that to heart in attitude and it shows. thank you for all you do.

  • Suzanne Tarley

    07/07/2022 01:26 PM

    I am a 96 year old woman graduate of the BEW YORK CITY SCHOOL SYSTEM OF MY TIME. GRADUATED CUM LAUDE UNIVERSIY OF SOUT CAROLINA DURING WWII. GRADUATED KATHARAIE GIBBS SECRETARIAL SCHOOL SO COULD EARN A LIVIND. DID NOT WANT TO BE A TEACHER. USEDMY SKILLS LEARED EARLY I SCHOOL MY WHOLE LIFE. FRO 57 YEARS OLD SOLD REAL ESTATE FIR LARGEST INDEPENDENT COMPANY IN CINCINNATI OHIO. I AM COMPUTER LITERATE THANKS TO THAT OWNER. I AM STILL SEEKING KNOWLEDGE. ENJOY YOUR SITE. FOUGHT THE SCHOOL BOARD IN SUBURBAN CINCINNATI. WE FIUGHT THEM AD WON. IF YOU WIULD LIKE TO SPEAK TI ME PERSONALLY. WOULD WE HAPPY TO TALK. PARENTS HAVE YMTO WAKE UP ALL OVER AND GET RID OF THE CESSPOOL THAT IS CURRENTLY CALMED EDUCATION IN THIS COUNTRY. I SEE TRANSCRIPTS COING TI ME NOR USING THE COORRECT THEIR/THERE!!

  • Julia McCormack

    07/07/2022 01:22 PM

    Absolutely on point. As a 31 year public school educator, 15 year classroom, 16 as M.L.S. degreed librarian, I see the decline in curriculum, in teacher training, and in the sick direction of the ALA in the library profession. My husband (retired 45 year teacher/principal) and I are disgusted with the federal/blue state education distortion, worked hard in our district to educate our students in Civics, the classics, and traditional subjects, and most importantly, the role of God in the founding of America. Yet, the year I retired right before Covid hit, new kindergarten teachers requested our library order gay fiction to diversify. My principal and I were on the same page and quietly did not. I would have refused either way. This depravity is taking the place of rigorous math, reading, true science and accurate history education. We recommend homeschooling and the Abeka curriculum, there are other good ones, to anyone who is able. We pray the federal dept. of education is abolished. Our free country’s survival is at stake.

  • Paul Kern

    07/07/2022 01:22 PM

    I really appreciate the high quality education I had as a child. Depression era parents. Dad left after eighth grade to support his mom and siblings. Mom had to quit in 11th grade. Married and pregnant. We had enclopedias and dictionaries and all kinds of reading material and the oldies music and even classical! A real treasure. With an IQ of 145 learning and play in a stable family kept this overactive kid grounded. I now have to keep my talk simple as even most adults have poor comprehension skills. Glad I have good skills developed as a counselor. I still wince at times

  • John N Wood

    07/07/2022 01:19 PM

    I Totally Agree! One of the first things a student in school should receive is a copy of the Constitution and other Foumding Documents that they are required to have and read, because they will be tested on them.

  • David Womer

    07/07/2022 01:08 PM

    I think the Board of Education should be abolished. Rather than have the kids follow the money, the money should follow the kids and charter schools should be the focus rather than pumping more money into failed schools.

  • Robert Monk

    07/07/2022 01:07 PM

    I saw this article in the July 7 Washington Stand on the NEA saying they will fight for abortion until the bitter end. I started reading it and this sentence struck me as a perfect explanation of the divide between public education and the rest of the Country.

    The “NEA is a social justice union that is a majority female and trans and gender non-confirming folx,” said the ”rationale” for adopting this resolution, New Business Item 34. It did not mention any commitment the union may have to educating children".

    This definition of the NEA by the NEA says it all. The worst part for me is that the leaders of the NEA deeply believe everything they are saying.