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FROM THE EDITORS: Good News for Presidential Candidates
By Paul E. Peterson
The public supports a wide range of education reforms
Put foreign policy
first, theorist Niccolò Machiavelli once advised his
16th-century Florentine prince. It’s not bad advice for
21st-century presidential candidates, either. National security,
not education, will be the overriding issue in the 2008 campaign,
even if the Gates and Broad Foundations succeed with Strong
American Schools, their $60 million quest to place education front
and center.
Still, schools will not be missing from the
political agenda altogether. So long as the economy perks along and
no one wants to cut Social Security or raise taxes on more than a
few, then health care and education will be the top domestic
issues. Clearly, no presidential issues kit can afford to be
without an education page.
Too often candidates let vested interests and
insistent advocates provide the content for that document. Many
Democrats, for example, are currying favor with union interests by
insisting on less student testing and more federal funding.
“While the children are getting good at filling in all those
little bubbles, what exactly are they really learning?”
Senator Hillary Clinton asked delegates at a meeting of the New
Hampshire chapter of the National Education Association late last
May. “How much creativity are we losing? How much of our
children’s passion is being killed?” Meanwhile, one is
hearing in Republican circles a great deal about getting Washington
off the states’ backs.
That may make political sense in the early
days of a campaign when the opinions of the few count more than
those of the many. Eventually, though, the next president must win
support from a broad cross-section of voters across the country.
On education matters, a heap of valuable
information can be found in the poll results presented in this
issue. Shrewd candidates will scrutinize the hundreds of numbers
set forth on pages 13 to 26 to extract the political truths buried
within. To guide their search, I offer five basic themes that
percolate through many of the answers potential voters have given:
1. Although the
public supports its public schools, it finds them mediocre at best,
deserving no more than a grade of C.
2. People want to
remedy that situation but are not nearly so doctrinaire as powerful
interests and political elites. Ordinary voters are pragmatists,
willing to try many different things, whether it be accountability,
school choice, smaller classes, more spending, or rewarding good
teachers.
3. More people
support accountability than any other single education reform. If
they do not trust all of the utopian promises offered by NCLB,
neither do they want the federal government to abandon its efforts
to hold state and local school officials to account. On the
contrary, the public would expand accountability systems in several
directions:
a. Create national standards to replace
state-specific ones.
b. Demand that students pass high school
exams before graduating.
c. Evaluate and reward teachers according to
how much their students are learning.
4. The public
wants schools, students, and teachers to be treated fairly. Money
should be spent equally on different types of schools, different
types of students, and across the board on all teachers, unless
there are convincing reasons to do otherwise. Even extra rewards to
effective teachers win only a moderately positive endorsement.
5. The public does
not oppose school choice, but doesn’t know much about charter
schools. A charter platform will need a lot of explaining.
All this is good news for responsible aspiring
leaders. From among the options available, the correct policies can
be selected, and if persuasively described, perhaps even
implemented post-election. May the best leader win.
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