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Latest results show America's High School seniors score below grade average: 40% below in math. 25% below in reading.

2007-02-23 03:48:08 · 15 answers · asked by Jacob W 7 in Politics & Government Other - Politics & Government

15 answers

because more money is not the answer. New buildings or a bigger pool is not going to make students any smarter. A lot of money given to schools are being wasted!

2007-02-23 03:56:04 · answer #1 · answered by slipperypickle 3 · 0 1

First, we DO NOT spend a lot of money on education. There is a disproportionate amount being spent on children which is determined by where they live. Class sizes are often too large and teachers are overburdened (I'm NOT a teacher). People who think kids have everything, should go to schools in poor areas and get a reality check. My kids ahve several computers in each classroom and others in the library,etc. Some schools don't have any.

Second, children are being taught only the basics. They are also taught to memorize (not think, be creative or use reasoning, etc). They are taught to take standardized tests.

Third, parents aren't involved enough. Even with smart kids, parents should be reviewing their children's homework to make sure they are understanding it. If your child needs help, make sure they get it and don't expect the teacher to be able to tutor all students that may have difficulties. Thats' too much to ask.

Fourth, you have to understand that there are many immigrants in this country. It's hard to learn a second language and be expected to be proficient. In California this is a huge problem and really affects test scores. We also have a lot of poor and uneducated people in our country and their children are poor and uneducated as well. Their schools don't have much money and their parents can't help them. It's very sad.

We are too concerned about making our children memorize multiplication facts, than we are about teaching them how to solve mathematical problems. We provide multiple choice tests to determine comprehension, instead of making our children write out and support their answers. Our schools are in crisis and the government, teachers and parents need to work together to solve this problem. Parents- if your child is having trouble, then teach them. Stop blaming everyone else and realize that it's your responsibilty to help your child. If you are too busy, that is your choice. Make it your responsibility.

2007-02-23 04:20:52 · answer #2 · answered by Swim Mom 4 · 0 0

Because our schools don't need more money. Money can only go so far toward teaching. What happens when you've already bought the best of every possible teaching accessory? How will giving more money improve the education kids are getting? It WON'T.

Kid's aren't learning because the WAY we teach is crappy, especially in the area of History. Parents no longer discipline their children at large. We also teach things like evolution which just aggravates the problem by giving them an excuse to act like animals. Why is everyone surprised that we have so much trouble?

We need school vouchers. Competition between schools would drive them all to excellence and greater efficiency, since their efficiency would also determine their survival. It would also ELIMINATE "should we teach Intelligent Design vs. Evolution" debate, since each school would be free to teach what they wanted, and parents would be free to pick which school to send their children to on that basis. If evolution is everything it's been hailed as, it will show in the kid's grades, and vice versa with Intelligent Design and Creation.

Why haven't we already adopted a voucher system? At the very least, it can't yield any worse results than our current system!

2007-02-23 04:06:05 · answer #3 · answered by Daniel A: Zionist Pig 3 · 0 2

In 2004, Total spending on K-12 education in America was
536 billion dollars.

Per Capita, the United States ranks 2nd, behind Norway in Education spending.

Federal Education spending has increased 111% since 2001, from 42 billion dollars in 2001 to 88.8 billion dollars in 2007.

Its not how much we spend, but how its spent and social factors the schools have no control over.

The break down of the family unit has obviously hurt the educational attainment of children.

2007-02-23 05:30:28 · answer #4 · answered by jeeper_peeper321 7 · 0 0

The Pentagon is spending about $6 billion a month on the war in Iraq. And the goverment is spending about 4 billion a month on education. I think they can do alot better. And no child left behind needs to be renamed every child left behind. Teachers are so busy teaching to the test that the children are really not learning very much of anything.

2007-02-23 04:04:57 · answer #5 · answered by jellybean29 2 · 0 0

You know I think this is a very good question. Why can't we have vouchers and send our children to better private schools. I have a child that has learning disabilities. He went to public school. He doesn't have any behavioral problems so the teachers didn't know what to do with him. Some of you say we need to spend more money. That might be the case but on average we spend enough on public schools if it was giving to the parents we could hire a private tutor and educate our children through collage cheaper.

2007-02-23 04:17:17 · answer #6 · answered by bigh5586 2 · 0 1

Because we DON'T spend a lot of money on education.Another reason is the style American students are taught.All creativity has been sucked out of American school systems. The human brain needs creativity to spark an interest in academic studies.

2007-02-23 03:53:21 · answer #7 · answered by Michael S 2 · 1 0

I'll tell you why... parents don't support their kid's education enough.. We live in a TV - Internet culture, entertainment rules.

You can't blame the schools, you can't blame teachers, you can't blame books, you can't blame jesus, you can't blame bush, you can't blame Clinton, you can't blame anyone but the PARENTS and the STUDENTS themselves.

The information is all out there, waiting to be learned... kids who study hard and do homework do WELL in school, the rest FLUNK OUT and fail. That's the way it is, and NO AMOUNT of money will change that.

Give an F student a new textbook and he's still a FAILURE.

2007-02-23 03:52:31 · answer #8 · answered by slipknotraver 4 · 1 0

Why should they be motivated? Our fathers and grandfathers at least had a chance of working their way to the top. Only 1% of kids today will ever make it to the top - and those only by lying, cheating and stealing their way. The rest know they will spend their lives being exploited by the top 1% that owns everything.

Our society is going nowhere - our country has only one goal - to keep the wealthy few in power.

2007-02-23 03:58:02 · answer #9 · answered by Mike J 2 · 0 0

We spend 32k a year on a prisoner and on elementary 9k a year on a college pupil. And this is costly to show a pupil, incredibly through fact the sector of boost would be in intense tech jobs. Classrom gadgets of books for 32 pupils are over 3k. desktops are costly. do no longer youngster your self that much less funds spent on toddlers is the answer, incredibly through fact the optimal expenditure is on administrator salaries--no longer on instructors or pupils.

2016-10-16 08:00:31 · answer #10 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

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