Saturday, October 6, 2012

Romney floats radical education idea ? Joanne Jacobs

Education policy had a few moments in the Obama-Romney debate last night.

President Obama said education would be gutted, if Republican challenger Mitt Romney is elected, Ed Week reports.

?I?m not going to cut education funding . . . and grants that go to people going to college,??Romney said.

Obama touted his plan to hire an additional 100,000 math and science teachers.

Romney countered that Obama?s $90 billion invested in green energy (?You pick losers.?) would have paid for two million teachers.

Obama linked his education reform agenda to Common Core Standards, which are supposed to be a state effort,?Ed Week notes.

Obama, who doesn?t refer to Race to the Top much on the campaign stump, invoked his signature education-reform brand three times in the debate as having ?prompted reforms in 46 states.? (Clearly a reference to the common core, without naming the common-standards movement, which is a?politically dicey?thing for the federal government to support these days.)

Both candidates said improving education is a key to economic prosperity.

?Historically, affluent and white parents and school districts have gone to great lengths to keep poor, nonwhite kids out of their own kids? classrooms,? Goldstein writes.

? The Obama administration?s signature school reform program, Race to the Top, did nothing to encourage school integration or allow children to attend schools outside of their home districts?an important right, since many failing schools are located in districts where almost every school is underperforming, and those that aren?t have overflowing wait lists.

Romney hasn?t explained how his proposal would work and the chances it would happen are slim, she predicts.

What would President Romney do on education??Rick Hess looks at Romney?s record as governor of high-scoring Massachusetts.

Romney?s education record as Massachusetts governor from 2003 to 2007 looks a lot like President Obama?s has. Romney inherited a strong reform tradition ? built around standards, testing, and accountability. He maintained and strengthened this commitment by adding a science test to the state?s accountability system and supporting high school exit exams. He also pushed a controversial plan to mandate parenting classes for parents in low-performing districts seeking to enroll their kids in kindergarten.

In terms of school choice, Romney vetoed a bill to place a moratorium on opening new charter schools, and the number of charter schools increased modestly, from 46 to 59. He unsuccessfully championed merit pay for the top third of performers and for math and science teachers, offering bonuses of up to $5,000. He pushed for addressing low-performing schools with strategies that are quite similar to those favored by the Obama administration, including making it easier to replace principals and teachers in such schools or turning them into charters.

President Romney probably would push an Obama-like reform agenda, ?but would do so with a lighter touch, less spending, and more emphasis on choice,? Hess predicts.

Source: http://www.joannejacobs.com/2012/10/romney-floats-radical-education-idea/

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