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Welcome to Call to Decision
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American Education Fails
Because It Isn't Education
by Tom DeWeese
from American
Policy Center, Dec.
6, 2007
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The
debate over public education grows more heated. Regularly,
reports are released showing that the academic abilities of
American students continue to fall when compared to those in
other countries.
Twenty years ago the U.S. ranked first in the world in the
number of young adults who had high school diplomas and
college degrees. Today we rank ninth and seventh,
respectively, among industrialized nations. Compared to
Europe and Asia, 15-year-olds in the United States are below
average in applying math skills to real-life tasks. The
United States ranks 18 out of 24 industrialized nations in
terms of relative effectiveness of its education system.
Knowledge in history, geography, grammar, civics and
literature are all in decline in terms of academic
understanding and achievement.
To solve the crisis, politicians, community leaders, and the
education community all preach the same mantra. Students
fail, they tell us, because "expectations haven't been
set high enough." We need more
"accountability," they say. And every education
leader and nearly every politician presents the same
"solution" to the education crisis: more money,
better pay for teachers, and smaller classroom numbers so
the children get enough attention from the teachers.
Consequently, there are two specific categories in which the
U.S. excels, compared to the rest of the world. First, the
U.S. ranks second in the world in the amount we spend per
student per year on education = $11,152. The U.S. is also a
leader in having some of the smallest classroom numbers in
the world. Yet the slide continues. American students grow
more illiterate by the year. How can that be? We're doing
everything the "experts" tell us to do. We're
spending the money. We're building more and more schools.
We're raising teachers' pay.
Every American should understand that these three items:
higher pay, smaller classrooms and more money for schools
are the specific agenda of the National Education
Association (NEA). The NEA is not a professional
organization for teachers. It is a labor union and its sole
job is to get more money into the education system, and more
pay for its members. It also seeks to make work easier for
its members - smaller classrooms. Clearly the NEA is not
about education - it's about money and a political agenda.
Clearly the nation's education system is not teaching the
children. They can't read or work math problems without a
calculator. They can't spell, find their own country on a
map, name the president of the United States or quote a
single founding father. America's children are becoming just
plain dumb.
Yet we have been focusing on a massive national campaign to
"fix" the schools for the past decade or more. Now
we have ultra high-tech, carpeted, air-conditioned school
buildings with computers and television sets. We have
education programs full of new ideas, new methods, and new
directions. In the 1990's we set "national
standards," accountability through "national
testing" through Goals 2000. Through that program we
declared that every child would come to school "ready
to learn," "no child would be left behind,"
and pledged that our kids would be "second to
none" in the world. Above all, we've spent money, money
and more money. The result, American students have fallen
further behind, placing 19th out of 21 nations in math, 16th
in science, and dead last in physics.
With all the programs and attention on education, how can
that be? To coin a well-worn cliché – "it's the
programs, stupid." More precisely, it's the federal
programs and the education bureaucracy that run them. It is
simply a fact that over the past twenty years America's
education system has been completely restructured to
deliberately move away from teaching basic academics to a
system that focuses on little more than training students
for menial jobs. The fact is, the restructured education
system has been designed to deliberately dumb-down the
children. (Note: the NEA hates that phrase!)
Most Americans find that statement to be astonishing and, in
fact, to be beyond belief. Parents don't want to let go of
their child-like faith that the American education system is
the best in the world, designed to give their children the
academic strength to make them the smartest in the world.
Politicians continue to offer old solutions of more money
and more federal attention, almost stamping their feet,
demanding that kids learn something. Programs are being
proposed that call for teacher testing to hold them
accountable for producing educated children. More programs
call for annual tests to find out if children have learned
anything. The nation is in panic. But none of these
hysterical responses will improve education - because none
of them address the very root of the problem.
The truth is, none of the problems will go away, nor will
children learn until both parents and politicians stop
trusting the education establishment and start ridding the
system of its failed ideas and programs. Parents and
politicians must stop believing the propaganda handed down
by the education establishment that says teaching a child in
the twenty-first century is different and must be more high
tech than in days past. It simply isn’t so.
THE ROOT OF THE PROBLEM
Today's education system is driven by money from the federal
government and private foundations, both working
hand-in-hand with the education establishment headquartered
in the federal Department of Education and manned by the
National Education Association (NEA). These forces have
combined with psychologists, huge textbook publishers,
teacher colleges, the healthcare profession, government
bureaucrats, big corporations, pharmaceutical companies and
social workers to invade local school boards, classrooms and
private homes in the name of "fixing" education.
The record shows that each of these entities has benefited
from this alliance through enriched coffers and increased
political power. In fact, the new education restructuring is
working wonders for everyone involved - except for the
children and their parents. As a result of this combined
invasion force, today's classroom is a very different place
from only a few years ago.
There is simply not enough room on these pages to tell the
entire history of education restructuring and
transformation. It dates back to the early efforts by
psychologists like John Dewey, whose work began to change
how teachers were taught to teach in the nation's teacher
colleges. The changes were drastic as education moved away
from an age-old system that taught teachers how to motivate
students to accept the whole scope of academic information
available. Instead the new system explored methods to
maneuver students through psychological behavior
modification processes. Rather than to instill knowledge,
once such a power was established the education process
became more of a method to instill specific agendas into the
minds of children.
As fantastic as it seems, the entire history of the
education restructuring effort is carefully and thoroughly
documented in a book called The Deliberate Dumbing Down
of America. The book was written by Charlotte Thomson
Iserbyt, a former official at the Department of Education in
the Reagan Administration. While there in 1981 - 1982,
Charlotte found the "mother lode" hidden away at
the Department. In short, she found all of the education
establishment's plans for restructuring America's
classrooms. Not only did she find the plans for what they
intended to do, she discovered how they were going to do it
and most importantly why. Since uncovering this monstrous
plan, Charlotte Iserbyt has dedicated her life to getting
that information into the hands of parents, politicians and
the news media
Iserbyt's work details how the process to restructure
America's education system began at the beginning of the
Twentieth Century and slowly picked up speed over the
decades. The new system used psychology-based curriculum to
slowly change the attitudes, values and beliefs of the
students.
The new school agenda was very different from most peoples'
understanding of the purpose of American education. NEA
leader William Carr, secretary of the Educational Policies
Commission, clearly stated that new agenda when in 1947 he
wrote in the "NEA Journal:" "The teaching
profession prepares the leaders of the future... The
statesmen, the industrialists, the lawyers, the
newspapermen...all the leaders of tomorrow are in schools
today." Carr went on to write: "The
psychological foundations for wider loyalties must be
laid...Teach those attitudes which will result ultimately in
the creation of a world citizenship and world government...
we can and should teach those skills and attitudes which
will help to create a society in which world citizenship is
possible."
Professor Benjamin Bloom, called the Father of Outcome-based
Education (OBE) said: "The purpose of education and
the schools is to change the thoughts, feelings and actions
of students." B.F. Skinner determined that applied
psychology in the class curriculum was the means to bring
about such changes in the students values and beliefs simply
by relentlessly inputting specific programmed messages.
Skinner once bragged: "I could make a pigeon a high
achiever by reinforcing it on a proper schedule."
Whole psychological studies were produced to prove that
individuals could be made to believe anything, even to
accept that black was white, given the proper programming.
The education system is now a captive of the Skinner model
of behavior modification programming. In 1990, Dr. M. Donald
Thomas perfectly outlined the new education system in an
article in "The Effective School Report" entitled
"Education 90: A Framework for the Future." Thomas
said: "From Washington to modern times, literacy has
meant the ability to read and write, the ability to
understand numbers, and the capacity to appreciate factual
material. The world, however, has changed dramatically in
the last 30 years. The introduction of technology in
information processing, the compression of the world into a
single economic system, and the revolution in political
organizations are influences never imagined to be possible
in our lifetime... Literacy, therefore, will be different in
the year 2000. It will mean that students will need to
follow
- Appreciation of different cultures, differences in
belief systems and differences in political structures.
- An understanding of communications and the ability of
people to live in one world as one community of
nations...
- In a compressed world with one economic system...it is
especially important that all our people be more highly
educated and that the differences between low and high
socio-economic students be significantly narrowed...
- Education begins at birth and ends at death...
- Education is a responsibility to be assumed by the
whole community...
- Learning how to learn is more important than
memorizing facts
- Schools form partnerships with community agencies for
public service projects to be a part of schooling...
- Rewards are provided for encouraging young people to
perform community service."
In this one outline, Dr. Thomas provides the blueprint for
today's education system that is designed to de-emphasis
academic knowledge; establish the one-world agenda with the
United Nations as its center and away from belief in
national sovereignty; replace individual achievement with
collectivist group-think ideology and invade the family with
an "It takes a village" mind-set. Dr. Thomas'
outline for education is the root of why today's children
aren't learning. These ideas permeate every federal
program, every national standard, every textbook and every
moment of your child’s school day.
THE BUSH SOLUTION
Upon election, President Bush declared education to be his
number one priority. His first legislation to reach the hill
was a major education policy proposal called: "No Child
Left Behind." The president said education was the
hallmark of his time as Governor of Texas where he imposed
strict guidelines for annual testing. He says he wanted to
confront the growing problem of American illiteracy and the
low standing of test scores. And the president said,
"We must focus the spending of federal tax dollars on
things that work."
To those ends, the President's education policy proposal
addresses four specific principles including: 1) Annual
testing to assure the schools are actually teaching the
children and achieving specific educational goals. 2)
Restore local control by giving local and state school
boards the "flexibility to innovate." Said the
President, "educational entrepreneurs should not be
hindered by excessive red tape and regulation." 3) Stop
funding failure. The President proposed several options for
helping failing schools to improve. 4) Give parents a choice
to find a school that does teach. President Bush gave
schools a specific period of time to improve. If they
failed, parents would be given the option of going to
another, more successful school by way of a voucher plan.
On the surface these proposals sounded to many like fresh
new ideas to take back local control of the schools and run
the federal programs out the door. But time and a closer
examination proved otherwise. In fact, President Bush
himself unknowingly summed up the problem with his education
program with one statement: "Change will not come by
disdaining or dismantling the federal role of
education."
To the great disappointment of many, President Bush decided
to completely ignore the very root of the education problem
- the federal government and its programs. Instead,
President Bush's proposal accepted the incorrect conclusion
that the problem with education is simply an over blown
bureaucracy that wastes federal funds and fails to enforce
clear standards by rewarding bad schools. His numerous
statements that "no child will be left behind,"
came straight from the decade-old motto of the Children's
Defense Fund, the group that claims Hillary Clinton as one
of its leaders. By being so off-the-mark, there just is no
way the Bush proposal could appropriately address a single
school reform issue.
First, his plan to restore local control was directly tied
to the use of Title I federal funding. Title I is one of the
main federal programs to directly fund the
"at-risk" catch-all devise now driving the
invasion of in-home social workers; the establishment of
in-school health clinics; the enforcement of pop diagnosis
by teachers and administrators that has put millions of
children on Ritalin. Title I is the root of the education
establishment's attack on families.
Second, by leaving the federal Department of Education
intact, President Bush left in full force the machinery now
driving the education system. State school boards are simply
outposts of the federal bureaucrats. They are of the same
mindset, driving the same programs in the states that are
dictated by the federal office. Local ideas from local
teachers and parents have no chance of a hearing in these
vast bureaucracies. Failing to address this behemoth simply
dooms any attempt to improve education.
President Bush made much of the testing program in the state
of Texas, which shows scores up by dramatic numbers. His
first Secretary of Education, Rod Paige, owed his
appointment, in a great way, to his leadership in the Texas
testing program. But a close look at what actually took
place in Texas caused concern.
Under Governor Bush, Texas established a statewide
achievement test called TAAS, which is administered annually
to every public school student from third grade through
twelfth. Texas officials tout the fact that, today, Texas
reports an 80% passing rate. The test is given the credit
for the dramatic increase because, as Bush then proposed on
the federal level. TAAS was touted as providing
"accountability" and an annual measuring stick to
determine how students are progressing.
However, Texas colleges are reporting that Texas-educated
students still cannot read, even after getting good grades
on the TAAS test. Why? Because so much emphasis is placed on
passing the test that teachers have begun to "teach to
the test." Even months before test day, teachers
pressure students to be ready. They become little more than
cheerleaders. Schools fly banners, hold pep rallies and the
pressure builds to pass the test. Classroom time is spent
practicing for the test rather than just focusing on
well-rounded academic curriculum. Rarely do classes branch
off into anything that’s not on the test.
Why such pressure? Because teacher salaries and job security
are tied to the results. Schools have even been found to
cheat on the results. Is this what parents have in mind when
they call for accountability? This is the heart of the Bush
plan. Under it, parents may see test scores go up, but they
will find that their children still can't read.
The Bush plan ignored the existence of the social scientists
who have made psychological guinea pigs out of the children.
It ignored the role of the Department of Education as a
teacher training lab which brags that, in just two weeks, it
can completely change the attitudes, values and beliefs of
good, academically-focused teachers, and turn them into
pliable facilitators to help dumb-down the very students
they sought to teach. Nothing was changed in the classroom
under the Bush plan.
TIME TO INVESTIGATE THE DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
From the start of his administration, President Bush made it
clear that he had no intention of getting rid of the
Department of Education. Consequently, the Republican
dominated Congress dropped its intentions to de-fund and
remove the Department of Education. However, it is not
possible to make the changes that Americans are hoping for
without taking that step. Bush's plan simply used warm and
fuzzy rhetoric to further institutionalize more of the same.
His voucher plan has proven to be little more than a Judas
Goat to lead private schools into the nightmare of federal
programs, which attack and feed on any school that accepts
federal money. And so the cancer grows.
While promising to fix American education, the President
doomed any hope of it by insisting on keeping the
establishment intact. The "No-Child-Left-Behind"
Act simply succeeded in institutionalizing the failed
policies of Goals 2000 and School to Work. And that's why
American education continues to fall.
It's time to ignore the agenda of a self-interested labor
union and begin to look at the real reasons why American
public schools are in crisis. What is robbing our children
of the ability to get a good education?
Americans who want to rid the nation of this plague have
little choice but to insist that their representatives in
Congress begin a complete investigation into the Department
of Education and its policies, its waste, and its fraud on
the taxpayers, parents and children of this nation.
Perhaps then, as the facts are exposed under the hot lights
of a Congressional hearing, the American people will begin
to understand that the problem with education isn't low paid
teachers and crowded classrooms - but rather, is the result
of a cynical, deliberate attempt to dumb-down America to
promote a radical political agenda. For that is the truth.
Visit
the American Policy Center
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Tom
DeWeese is the President of the American Policy Center and the
Editor of The DeWeese Report
American Policy Center
70 Main Street
Suite 23
Warrenton, Virginia 20186 |
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