Opinion: Education reform could have big impact
Publisher’s note: This editorial is from the Dec. 13, 2010, Sacramento Bee.
The more strong voices there are prodding education bureaucracies to improve results for kids, the better.
That’s what makes former D.C. schools chancellor Michelle Rhee’s new StudentsFirst venture intriguing. Within one year, she aims to create a 1 million-strong membership organization. Within five years she aims to raise $1 billion, some of which would be used to influence local school board and state legislative elections, starting in 2012. Ultimately, she’s aiming for 10 million members, with people joining for as little as $5 a month.
Modeled on membership organizations such as AARP, the Sierra Club and the National Rifle Association, Rhee says the StudentsFirst organization launched in Sacramento last week comes out of a couple of things – her experience as D.C. chancellor, with courageous teachers and others telling her that they felt alone in battling the bureaucracy; and from the film, “Waiting for ‘Superman,’ ” which has inspired people to ask her what they can do.
Rhee realized there was no call to action. StudentsFirst seeks to remedy that.
Her four goals are the right ones to draw a broad audience: great teachers, giving parents choices, sending money to programs that work and getting parents more involved.
Whenever I see the word “reform” I run for the hills. The more our society reforms the further downhill it goes.
When will the electorate wake up that it is the basics that count, not more pablum. In football it is still blocking and tackling that provides the foundation for all teams.
In education it is the parents who teach their children the importance learning. Everything else flows from this simple concept. No amount of money can overcome a lack of good parenting.
The state has been reforming the education process for many decades, throwing money at a problem money can not solve. Yet all we hear from the educrats and their follow travelers is give us more money.
No thanks.