Teachers Unions Strike Back At Education Criticism

John Stossel:

Teachers unions are mad at me. The New York State United Teachers demands I apologize for my “gutter level” journalism, “an irresponsible assault on public school students and teachers.” This is because I hosted an ABC News TV special titled “Stupid in America,” which pointed out:
– American fourth graders do well on international tests, but by high school, Americans have fallen behind kids in most other countries.
– The constant refrain that “public schools need more money” is nonsense. Many countries that spend significantly less on education do better than we do. School spending in America (adjusted for inflation) has more than tripled over the past 30 years, but national test scores are flat. The average per-pupil cost today is an astonishing $10,000 per student — $200,000 per classroom! Think about how many teachers you could hire, and how much better you could do with that amount of money.
– Most American parents give their kids’ schools an A or B grade, but that’s only because, without market competition, they don’t know what they might have had. The educators who conduct the international tests say that most of the countries that do best are those that give school managers autonomy, and give parents and students the right to choose their schools. Competition forces private and public schools to improve.
– There is little K-12 education competition in America because public schools are a government monopoly. Monopolies rarely innovate, and union-dominated monopolies, burdened with contracts filled with a hundred pages of suffocating rules, are worse. The head of New York City’s schools told me that the union’s rules “reward mediocrity.”
All that angered the unions. But when they criticize my “bias and ignorance,” I don’t hear them refute the points listed above. They don’t refute them because they can’t. It’s just a fact that rules that insist an energetic, hard-working teacher who makes learning fun must be paid exactly the same as a lazy, incompetent teacher are rules that promote mediocrity.

Read the whole thing.

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  • http://Array richard

    Keep in mind that these are the same union supported nut cases that will not let an imcompetent teacher be fired, that do not want to be scored on their performance and last but not least fight voucher programs.

  • http://magyartruth.blogspot.com/ Chief RZ

    2Hotel9,   I didn’t know that about the NEA-Stossel connection.  I wonder what opened his eyes?

    The Truth:  A liberal friend of mine was all "public education is good" until he volunteered to proctor our state’s exit exam one year.  What he heard and saw first hand (hint, hint liberals-he discovered The Truth) turned him 180 degrees and he put his children in private schools the next week.

  • 2Hotel9

    The NEA feels betrayed by Stossel, they have sang his praises for other pieces he has done. Now he has taken that million candlepower spot light of his and shined it directly on them, and they are pissed. Watch how this shakes out in the coming days. Stossel is going to find himself very lonely, very quickly.

  • http://politicsandpigskins.blogspot.com/ EdMcGon

    If Stossel needs a friend, I volunteer.

  • robert108

    It seems to me that the entire notion of public education is founded on mediocrity, and they have achieved it. The purpose is to provide every student with a "good general education", which, in the absence of specific standards, is the definition of mediocrity.  God forbid they should aim for excellence.  Good old socialism.

  • Jack Conway

    If Stossel needs a friend, I volunteer.

    EdMcGon on March 9, 2006 at 12:12 PMVolunteers  are the first casualties and never get any medals.

  • 2Hotel9

    JC, you have still not stepped out and taken a position, could that possibly be tied to the fact you are a cowardly fuck? My my, what a pathetic piece of shit.

  • kbiel

    But, but, their fo’ da chillin’.  They taught me reel good.  :)

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