| Obama on Education | |
• McCain supports school vouchers. • Supports sending federal dollars directly to local schools, cutting back on red tape and saving administrative costs. • McCain wants to place parents and children at the center of the education process and empower parents by greatly expanding the ability of parents to choose among schools for their children. Editor’s note: We found it difficult to pinpoint the position of John McCain on education from his campaign website and decided to publish an unedited copy of his position directly from his website. Excellence, Choice, and Competition in American Education John McCain believes American education must be worthy of the promise we make to our children and ourselves. He understands that we are a nation committed to equal opportunity, and there is no equal opportunity without equal access to excellent education. Public education should be defined as one in which our public support for a child's education follows that child into the school the parent chooses. The school is charged with the responsibility of educating the child, and must have the resources and management authority to deliver on that responsibility. They must also report to the parents and the public on their progress. The deplorable status of preparation for our children, particularly in comparison with the rest of the industrialized world, does not allow us the luxury of eliminating options in our educational repertoire. John McCain will fight for the ability of all students to have access to all schools of demonstrated excellence, including their own homes. No Child Left Behind has focused our attention on the realities of how students perform against a common standard. John McCain believes that we can no longer accept low standards for some students and high standards for others. In this age of honest reporting, we finally see what is happening to students who were previously invisible. While that is progress all its own, it compels us to seek and find solutions to the dismal facts before us. John McCain believes our schools can and should compete to be the most innovative, flexible and student-centered - not safe havens for the uninspired and unaccountable. He believes we should let them compete for the most effective, character-building teachers, hire them, and reward them. If a school will not change, the students should be able to change schools. John McCain believes parents should be empowered with school choice to send their children to the school that can best educate them just as many members of Congress do with their own children. He finds it beyond hypocritical that many of those who would refuse to allow public school parents to choose their child's school would never agree to force their own children into a school that did not work or was unsafe. They can make another choice. John McCain believes that is a fundamental and essential right we should honor for all parents. As president, John McCain will pursue reforms that address the underlying cultural problems in our education system - a system that still seeks to avoid genuine accountability and responsibility for producing well-educated children. John McCain will place parents and children at the center of the education process, empowering parents by greatly expanding the ability of parents to choose among schools for their children. He believes all federal financial support must be predicated on providing parents the ability to move their children, and the dollars associated with them, from failing schools. |
• Obama Addressing a mostly African American crowd outside Atlanta in July 2008, “You can’t find a job unless you are a really, really good basketball player. Which most of you brothers are not. I know you think you are. But you’re not. You are overrated in your own mind. You will not play in the NBA. You are probably not that good a rapper. Maybe you are the next Little Wayne, but probably not. In which case you need to stay in school.” • Obama opposes school vouchers. • Obama believes that the problems with education in the US are that the ‘No Child Left Behind Law’ has failed, students have been neglected, high dropout rate, teacher retention, and soaring college costs. He believes that the goal of the ‘No Child Left Behind Law’ was the right one, but unfulfilled funding promises, inadequate implementation by the Education Department and shortcomings in the design of the law itself have limited its effectiveness and undercut its support. He states that America has one of the highest dropout rates in the industrialized world with only 70 percent of U.S. high school students graduating with a diploma and that African American and Latino students are significantly less likely to graduate than white students. He believes that teacher retention is a problem with thirty percent of new teachers leaving the job within their first five years in the profession. He says that 2 million academically qualified students will not go to college because they cannot afford it because our complicated maze of tax credits and applications leaves too many students unaware of financial aid available to them. • Obama proposes the comprehensive "Zero to Five" plan to provide support to young children and their parents. His plan places key emphasis at early care and education for infants, believing that it is essential for children to be ready to enter kindergarten. Obama would create ‘Early Learning Challenge Grants’ to promote state "zero to five" efforts and help states move toward voluntary, universal pre-school programs. • Obama would improve quality and quadruple the ‘Early Head Start’ program and increase funding for ‘Head Start’ program. • Obama wants to provide affordable and high-quality child care to ease the burden on working families. • Obama would reform the ‘No Child Left Behind Law’ starting with funding of the law. Obama believes teachers should not be forced to spend the academic year preparing students to fill in bubbles on standardized tests. He would improve the assessments used to track student progress to measure readiness for college and the workplace and improve student learning in a timely, individualized manner. Obama also wants to improve the NCLB's accountability system so that we are supporting schools that need improvement, rather than punishing them. • Obama wants to make math and science education a national priority by recruiting math and science degree graduates to the teaching profession and would support efforts to help these teachers learn from professionals in the field. He would also work to ensure that all children have access to a strong science curriculum at all grade levels. • Obama would address the dropout crisis by passing his legislation to provide funding to school districts to invest in intervention strategies in middle school - strategies such as personal academic plans, teaching teams, parent involvement, mentoring, intensive reading and math instruction, and extended learning time. • Obama would expand high-quality after school opportunities by doubling the funding to the main federal support for after school programs and serving one million more children. • He would expand summer learning opportunities with the "STEP UP" plan which addresses the achievement gap by supporting summer learning opportunities for disadvantaged children through partnerships between local schools and community organizations. • Obama supports college outreach programs like GEAR UP, TRIO and Upward Bound to encourage more young people from low-income families to consider and prepare for college. • He supports transitional bilingual education and would help ‘Limited English Proficient’ students get ahead by holding schools accountable for making sure these students complete school. • Obama would recruit teachers by creating new ‘Teacher Service Scholarships’ that would cover four years of undergraduate or two years of graduate teacher education, including high-quality alternative programs for mid-career recruits in exchange for teaching for at least four years in a high-need field or location. • Obama would prepare teachers by requiring all schools of education to be accredited. He would also create a voluntary national performance assessment so we can be sure that every new educator is trained and ready to walk into the classroom and start teaching effectively. Obama would also create Teacher Residency Programs that would supply 30,000 exceptionally well-prepared recruits to high-need schools. • He wants to retain teachers with a plan that would expand mentoring programs that pair experienced teachers with new recruits. He would also provide incentives to give teachers paid common planning time so they can collaborate to share best practices. • Obama wants to promote new and innovative ways to increase teacher pay that are developed with teachers, not imposed on them. Districts will be able to design programs that reward accomplished educators who serve as a mentor to new teachers with a salary increase. Districts could reward teachers who work in underserved places like rural areas and inner cities. And if teachers consistently excel in the classroom, that work can be valued and rewarded as well. • Obama wants to make college affordable for all Americans by creating a new American Opportunity Tax Credit. This universal and fully refundable credit will ensure that the first $4,000 of a college education is completely free for most Americans, and will cover two-thirds the cost of tuition at the average public college or university and make community college tuition completely free for most students. Obama would also ensure that the tax credit is available to families at the time of enrollment by using prior year's tax data to deliver the credit when tuition is due. • Obama wants to streamline the financial aid process by eliminating the current federal financial aid application and enabling families to apply simply by checking a box on their tax form, authorizing their tax information to be used, and eliminating the need for a separate application. |
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