Education takes centerstage at the national political
conventions
This story was written by the 8-18 Media team that traveled
to the Democratic National Convention, including Emily Stulz,
16, Erin Bozek-Jarvis, 14, Eric Wagner, 14 and Ben Harris,
13, with contributions by the 8-18 Media team that traveled
to the Republican National Convention made up of Andrew LaCombe,
18, Chelsea Parrish, 17, Hayley Maskus, 15, Connor Stulz, 14
and Maggie Guter, 11.
As
a country known in the past for it’s exceptional education
system, America is now falling behind. Due to many factors,
many regard the education system in United States as broken.
This
was voiced many times at the Democratic and Republican National
Conventions.
On the last night of the Democratic Convention Presidential
Nominee Barack Obama addressed the need to reform America’s
education plan.
“
Now is the time to finally meet our moral obligation to provide
every child a world-class education, because it will take nothing
less to compete in the global economy,” he said.
In his acceptance speech on the final night of the Republican
Convention Presidential Nominee John McCain called education
a civil rights issue.
“
Education is the civil rights issue of this century. Equal access
to public education has been gained. But what is the value of
access to a failing school,” he asked? “We need
to shake up failed school bureaucracies with competition, empower
parents with choice, remove barriers to qualified instructors,
attract and reward good teachers, and help bad teachers find
another line of work.”
Representatives from
the Education Equality Project was at both conventions. This
is a group of major city mayors, state and national education
officials, educational reformers and many others concerned
about the lack of equality in today’s educational system.
Their goal is to help assure that everyone, regardless of race
and
income level, has the opportunity to succeed in life by providing
them with a sound education. To help ensure their mission is
a success, the group is trying to get leading Democrats and
Republicans to sit down and formulate ways we can all work
together at improving
education.
While in Denver, we heard from James Mtume, who hosts the syndicated
radio program “Open Line.” He is especially critical
of many American’s disinterest in education.
“
Any society that does not deal with problems with education is
like a person sitting in the middle of the road. You get hit
both ways by traffic,” he said.
Civil rights and social justice activist Rev. Al Sharpton was
in Denver and St. Paul on behalf of the Education Equality Project.
His message was that this is the time for education reform.
“
We have the right to make new adjustments, readjustments, and
be serious about this…Our conscience dictates it. This
point in history mandates it,” he said. “Our children
are not to be compromised. It’s time to close the gap.
We’re the ones that can do it. Now is the time!”
One of the main concerns of the Education Equality Project is
the increasing number of high school students who chose to drop
out. For example, according to a recent study by the Schott Foundation
for Public Education, Michigan graduates 33 percent of black
males and 74 percent of white males. In the Detroit Schools that
number drops down to only 20 percent of black males and 17 percent
of white males. Statewide 20,000 students drop out each year,
including about around 80 in the nine districts served by the
Marquette-Alger Educational Service Agency.
Singularly, experts say preventing high school students from
dropping out is the most effective way to reduce the number of
impoverished people and to decrease the amount of unemployment
in the future.
Stephanie Cosgrove, eighteen, of Cherokee, Iowa, was a delegate
at the DNC. She is an advocate of early intervention as a way
of improving the education of American students.
“
For instance, when it comes to preschool, we could solve so many
social issues if people had proper education early on and were
developmentally up to par with where they should be,” she
said. “The studies have shown that a child that has gone
to preschool and had a good education from the start is less
likely to be dependent (on society) or going through the system.”
Former Republican presidential candidate and Arkansas Governor
Mike Huckabee had this take on the issue at the RNC.
“
The biggest issue I think is making sure their education system
works for the students, and that it’s built around them
and not around the schools,” he said. “The education
system ought to be about the students, not about the institutions.”
One target for reform on the educational front, especially
at the Democratic National Convention, was the Bush Administration’s
No Child Left Behind Act. Faylene Owen is a Michigan State
University Trustee who was in Denver.
“
I think education is best left to the states and localities.
Federal government intervention in education has caused more
problems than it has solved, like the No Child Left Behind Act,
which continues to cause problems for our neighborhood schools,” she
said. “The best role for the federal government is to
provide financial assistance for students and research funding
for our
institutions.”
Democratic Congressman Dale Kildee of Flint was also at the
DNC and he too feels the Act needs “redoing.”
“
First of all, if a district misses (competence assessments) by
an inch or a mile you get the same consequences. They restructure
your school, sometimes close your school right down. I think
we need to have some differentiating consequences,” he
said.” “One of the big shortages or defects of No
Child Left Behind are unfunded mandates. They put all these mandates
upon the schools, but didn’t give them the money to carry
them out. We have to fund it much better.”
Another issue discussed at length at both conventions that all
agree is affecting our quest for a well-educated nation is the
rising cost of college tuition. If students have not been hindered
by the cost of school before, they will be in the near future
if current trends continue. Owen, as a university trustee, is
in the front line of setting tuition rates.
“
As a country we are making a huge mistake by failing to invest
more in higher education,” she said. “Our higher
education system is one of our major competitive advantages over
other countries…and we need to continue to invest in
it to keep our advantage. It will pay off for the country if
we
invest now.”
Kildee said he believes that one good way to assist students
with the cost of going to college is to better fund Pell Grants.
Pell Grants are financial aid grants that do not have to be paid
back by the student.
“
The cost of textbooks and the cost of tuition has really gone
up, yet the help we give to students has been frozen,” he
said. “We really have to get down to ways of making education
very, very quality but efficient in cost. I know individual
young people who were forced to drop out of college because
of their
debt.”
Former NFL star Chris Carter, who was at the RNC as a representative
of the NFL and VISA, was promoting financial literacy among young
people. He said the cost of higher education is putting young
people far behind right from the start.
“
Education is so expensive. They already start their adult life
so far behind and trying to catch up is very difficult,” he
said. “They all work through college, get a job, and they’re
hustling for years and years to try to pay it off and stay
ahead.”
Republican delegate Mike Knopf, seventeen, of Dubuque, Iowa agrees
that college costs are, perhaps, the biggest issue facing young
people today.
“
The biggest issue for my age group is probably college funding
because you and I both know that the four year college degree
is now turning into the five year college degree and student
loans are getting harder to pay off,” he said. “So,
(in this election) whatever the candidates can offer up for
post-secondary schools is probably going to be a big sway issue.”
John Moen, sixteen, Eden Prairie, Minnesota was at the RNC and
he too is concerned about college funding.
“
I’m not in college yet but when I do go I know it’s
going to cost a lot of money,” he said. “I know that
my parents can afford college for me but I know a lot of people
cannot. I think the government should spend more time putting
some of the money into funding education and not things that
won’t be as helpful to America’s youth.”
Avery Platter, fifteen, of Apple Valley, Minnesota had a different
take on the issue while visiting the RNC.
“
I think that it’s not the government’s place to regulate
how much colleges charge because that’s ‘big Government’ and
I do not agree with ‘big government,’” he said. “I
think since the cost of everything is rising we shouldn’t
be too surprised that tuition costs are rising.”
Adam Kiihr, nineteen, of Charlotte, North Carolina, who was at
the RNC with the Junior Statesman Program, agreed with that viewpoint.
“
If you put forth the effort and do well enough in school you
can get a scholarship and that can get you in to college for
little or no cost,” he said. “So, I don’t feel
it’s the government’s responsibility to cover that.”
So in the end, education has become a major issue in this upcoming
election. Both parties agree our country cannot thrive without
a solid education for everyone, no matter how young or old, or
of what race.
U.S. Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings was at the RNC
and was asked what young people can do for education reform.
“
Don’t take the easy way out. I know that’s often
easy to do, and often supported by grownups,” she said. “Put
academics before sports. Put academics before part-time work.
Those sorts of things…hold yourself to high standards.”