Article #2
Current Initiatives and Discussion in
Minnesota Indicate
Rampant Confusion Concerning PreK12
Education
Confusion as to the nature of the preK-12
dilemma and the needed overhaul is evident in current initiatives and
discussion among those endeavoring to induce change and those responding to the
proposed changes.
So as to comprehend the debased verbiage now
being spouted by most of the participants in the initiatives and the
conversation, first be aware that excellent education is a matter of excellent
teachers imparting specified knowledge
and skill sets in the liberal, technological, and vocational arts in grade by
grade sequence across the preK-12 years.
An excellent teacher is a professional of deep and broad knowledge with
the pedagogical ability to impart that knowledge to students of all demographic
descriptors. The purpose of public
education is to send forth citizens to lives of cultural enrichment, civic
participation, and professional satisfaction.
Know also that the actual problems in preK12
education abide at the level of the locally centralized school district. Using the Minneapolis Public Schools as
salient example, understand that the failure to provide an acceptable education
to students is explained by weak curriculum, inept teaching, lack of skill
remediation for students lagging academically, absence of staff capable of
connecting with struggling families, and the existence of many superfluous
offices and departments. Understand also
that there is no one at the Davis Center central offices making decisions as to
the academic program or involved in implementation who knows what she or he is
doing. This includes Superintendent Ed
Graff; Interim Senior Academic Officer
Aimee Fearing, Associate Superintendents Shawn Harris-Berry, LaShawn Ray, Ron
Wagner, and Brian Zambreno; Office of
Black Student Achievement Director Michael Walker; and Department of Indian Education Director
Jennifer Rose Simon. Also bearing blame
for the condition of the Minneapolis Public Schools are Eric Moore, an expert
data analyst who appears to be ranging beyond his expertise by involving
himself in academic programming; Maggie
Sullivan, Senior Human Resources Officer, who has not devised a critically
needed program for teacher training; and
Senior Executive Officer Suzanne Kelly, who has not been effective in her
efforts to make the changes that she knows need to be made.
This is a level of detail that readers never
get unless they read them in my own articles.
Instead, the inane discussion focuses on constitutional amendments to
guaranteed an undefined “quality education”;
inept gubernatorial initiatives that cannot work because the governor is
indebted to the very education establishment that is culpable for the PreK-12
dilemma; would-be education reformers
who do nothing more than call for the same essential knowledge-averse
approaches espoused by the education professors who are most responsible for
the vacuity of preK-12 education.
We are now paying dearly for the lack of
knowledge-intensive public education.
The paramount responsibility of any school district is to impart to
students the information that they need in history, government, economics,
biology, chemistry, and physics to make informed judgments as citizens; to enrich their lives with quality
experiences in literature and the fine arts;
and to provide them with the skills necessary to be successful in their
postsecondary education.
The United States now lacks a generally
informed citizenry. Too many people make
judgments on the basis of emotion and belief, rather than fact. Quality education should produce citizens
with an abundant, shared body of knowledge of the kind that will both ensure
more satisfying individual lives and better decisions for the common good.
Examine the debased verbiage currently making
the rounds in the public ether, and you’ll get a sense of why wretched preK-12
education continues.
Consider carefully my detailed analysis and
explanations of the needed overhaul and you’ll have powerful indication of how
we will address the preK-12 dilemma.
If once considering my analysis you somehow
arrive at the level of comprehension that very few possess, you will grasp the
revolutionary measures that must be taken in preK-12 education so as to replace
the abominably ignorant American populace with culturally enriched, civically
engaged, and vocationally satisfied citizens.
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