Education Failure: No Child Left Behind - Part 1
The fourth of my "mandates" is education.
It is so easy to blame the schools for children failing to become students. Oh, we automatically classify every child who attends a school as a "student", but that's stretching reality a bit.
A rather horrible statistic was published in the last few days: 44% of Detroit, Michigan children graduate from high school (some official argue that the number should be in the low 50% range). That versus 85% statewide (check out the graphs).
That must be related to money. Well... no. Livonia, Michigan received $8,142 per pupil; Wayne County (average) receives $9,140; Detroit receives $9,861 (2002 Michigan Department of Education). Yet Livonia graduates over 87% of their children. The argument is that Detroit doesn't get to spend its money on education... it administers it to other costs... so the children don't receive as much as they should. Okay... and Detroit has a school board voted in by Detroit residents... so the problem must be with Livonia... the Livonia parents are involved and willing to spend time and money supporting their children and the schools... totally uncool.
But let's get beyond money, because the graduation rate is not directly correlated to money spent on the school system... as much as those who keep asking for more want us to believe.
Detroit is an example of what ails education in large cities:
- Large sums of money... local, state, and federal... are poured into an enormous bureaucracy that is top-heavy with political appointees and very well paid administrators.
- Unions have a stranglehold on both the school maintenance and education processes.
- The districts are so large that logistics become the central issue rather than education.
- There is little or no communication between the top administrators of the school district and the parents... not assigning fault here because communication requires effort from both parties and too may people with offspring are not inclined to be parents.
"You can't assign all the blame to the schools. It's that these kids don't see education paying off. They don't see it worthwhile to stick around, obviously," said David Plank (click on EPC Staff Members), codirector of the Education Policy Center at Michigan State University.That's worth repeating... They don't see it worthwhile to stick around.... I suggest you read my October 19 posting if you have not already done so.
Tomorrow... what can we do?