‘Great Public Schools: A Basic Right and Our Responsibility’

American Education Week will be celebrated Nov. 15-21

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

Education has served as America’s most potent springboard toward a better tomorrow and remains society’s single best hope for ensuring the American dream.

Communities everywhere want young people to feel connected, believe in themselves, and find joy and meaning in life. One precious gift we can give them is education opportunities and experiences that will help access a productive future.

The theme for American Education Week, Nov. 15-21, is “Great Public Schools: A Basic Right and Our Responsibility.” Investing in the education of America’s youth is the key to empowering and equipping them with the skills needed to compete in the global world and to ensure them a bright and prosperous future. The best guarantee of educational opportunity is a school system that receives strong support from the community.

Schools

America’s schools have made steady progress in many areas as a result of education improvements begun a decade ago. Some areas where schools have focused attention are now showing results of greater achievement. They are:

• Teaching strategies that reflect research-based instructional practices.

• Appropriate instruction, remediation, and acceleration alternatives.

• Testing to ensure appropriate curriculum alignment and student assessment.

• Enhanced use of technology and data.

There are thousands of teachers throughout the nation who in their daily work shape the lives of children — and the future. They are the center of education. Teachers understand the complexity of the teaching and learning environment. Their stories capture the powerful elements in the art of successful teaching where the criterion is student knowledge gain.

However, a familiar question and what continues to be a major challenge to the education community is how to ensure that students have the skills necessary to succeed and how to raise the academic ambition of a school to create a culture of achievement.

Many schools across America are linking standards-based reform with student achievement. Some believe the solution to higher academic success is high-stakes testing. It has become the accountability tool of choice to many states as policy makers struggle to find ways to increase achievement levels. This approach remains an open question.

The drive for so-called higher standards in schools has caused policy makers to pursue a heavy-handed, top down version of education reform. The results: schools have been turned into giant test-prep centers, the intellectual life has been squeezed out of many classrooms, and many educators are tirelessly waiting for a much needed review and change of the assessment process.

Previous Page|1|||

Comments


National Video