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Author Archives: Jordan Abel

#160 What Is Education and How Should We Measure? (Part 8)

19 Saturday Sep 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Education Issues, Gov't Policy, Societal Issues

≈ 2 Comments

First-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  Each entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more about the author, Entry #1.  Note: most characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Conversation about education starts Entry #153. Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.  End of previous entry, Jordan states, “What society can do is for kids who caught a bad break with parents, or made a stupid decision and quit school, we will help you get your education.”

010414_1635_16TeachingS1.jpgJC: How are you going to help these kids?”

Jordan: “You mean how are we going to help them.  Go back to an earlier part of this conversation — we talked about setting clear, easy-to-understand goals.”

JC: “I agree with the goal setting.  Who’s really going to set the goals, the local school board?”

Jordan:  “No.  That has been the problem.  Too much variation in quality among districts.”

JC:  “Then there has to be a national standard.  With a national standard, do local school boards decide how to achieve to the goal…at least within reason?”

TurtleneckJordan: “Exactly. As much as I am for national standards, I also realize that executing to achieve a national standard might be different in California than in Charlotte or New York. Each area has certain challenges that are unique to the area.”

JC: “OK, I’ll buy the argument for a national standard.  But why let the local districts decide how to achieve?  There will be so much variation, which seems to defeat the purpose.”

Jordan: “We need buy in to make this work.  People become more committed to a achieving a goal when they have some input. Allowing the local communities some degree of freedom is not only necessary but a smart move to get local participation and commitment.”

JC: “Will having higher-level goals help get rid of what seems to be the ‘solution de jour’ for education?”

Jordan: “I hope so.  No doubt it will take a few years.  By the way, some specific proposal come to mind as a solution de jour?”

JC: “The most recent is from your current location, Charlotte.”

newspaperJordan: “I didn’t have time to read the Charlotte Observer this morning. What’s the latest proposal?”

JC: “The school board wants each school to have a limited percentage of kids below the poverty line. I guess the school board thinks the ‘education fairy’ is going to sprinkle pixy dust and make everything better if only so many kids are below the poverty line.”

Jordan: “That’s the kind of proposal we need to get rid of.  I understand these kids have it tough. But limiting disadvantaged kids to a certain percentage is addressing the symptom, not the cause. Besides a percentage-based plan will drive more affluent kids to private school and make it nearly impossible to recruit a top-notch superintendent.”

JC: “No.  But Charlotte is supposedly a progressive city.  What’s the issue recruiting a superintendent?”

Jordan: “Charlotte has gone through school superintendents like crap through a goosegoose.”

JC: “A bit graphic don’t you think?”

Jordan: “Maybe, but true. They’ve run off two good ones in the last 3-4 years and now refuse to promote an assistant who has 30-some years’ experience.  She knows the system inside out and add the people. Seems to me the school board ought to seek stability rather than churning the system yet again.”

JC: “What about support for teachers?”

Jordan: “North Carolina legislature gives teachers a token bonus and cannot understand why teachers are unhappy and leaving the state. NC is on a race to the bottom and is now 48th or 49th in teacher pay. A few years ago it was above the down_arrow_clip_art_22552national average.”

JC: “North Carolina seems like an example of what not to do.”

Jordan: “You got that right.  Many residents, especially those who moved from the north are dumbfounded…and frustrated.”

JC: “Hate to ask this, but are some Charlotte school board members still fighting the Civil War…or Brown v. Board?”

Jordan: “Many view the Civil War and Brown v. Board as the same issue. The school board is mostly locals. Maybe it’s time to start another civil war, but this time the war will be about education and not slavery.”

JC: “A sidebar. When you read the Charlotte Observer today (September 14, 2015), make sure you read the letters to the editor.”

070715_2218_141SenseChe3.jpgJordan: “OK, what was the letter about? No, let me guess. The Civil War.”

JC: “Bingo. And the reason the South seceded was not about slavery but because of taxes. Those damn Yankees were overtaxing the southern states and they had to secede.”

Jordan: “Taxes? I’ve never heard that before. What taxes?”

JC: “Who knows? Sorry for the interruption. What about a civil war focused on education?”

Jordan: “The strategy would be to have those damn Yankees start running for school board and state house and senate. Might take 15-20 years to secure a majority vote on school boards but the effort would be worthwhile.”

meeting-clipart-board-clip-artJC: “You need to speak more southern.  The proper term is ‘might could’ take 15-20 years.”

Jordan: “OK, might could.  In addition to Yankee candidates, we need to appeal to Yankee parents with school-age kids and older people with grandchildren.”

JC: “Want my guess about how long it will take to get control?”

Jordan: “More than 15-20 years?”

JC: “No, a lot less. Once the movement gets started, the change will occur quickly. Look what happened with the LGBT movement.”

Jordan: “I am still amazed how quickly societal attitudes changes and how quickly lives changed.”

JC: “I think most people were ready for a change but needed someone to take the lead. Then they jumped on board.”

Jordan: “Well, my friend, what are we…notice the we part…going to do about starting albert-einsteinthe ‘Teach Kids to Think’ movement?”

JC: “First, let’s call it the ‘TKT Movement – teach kids to think movement, or TKT2.”

Jordan: “I like TKT2 because the ‘squared’ part forces people to think about the acronym.”

JC: “Well, while we’re thinking, I think I need a break.”

#159 What Is Education and How Should We Measure? (Part 7)

13 Sunday Sep 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Education Issues, Gov't Policy, Societal Issues

≈ Leave a comment

First-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more about the author, Entry #1.  Note: most characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Conversation about education starts Entry #153. Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.  Jordan and JC continue conversation after talking informally to some people at nearby tables.

JC: “So what do you find out? People think the idea of earning a merit 010414_1635_16TeachingS1.jpgbadge for completing certain ‘courses for dummies’ might reduce the stigma of not knowing certain topics?”

Jordan: “The people who I talked to thought the idea was interesting and intriguing. But they also suggested we run a pilot program.”

JC: “The groups I talked to had a similar reaction. The idea of eliminating the stigma of learning basic skills…topics that you should know…was well received.”

Jordan: “What about a pilot program to test the idea?”

JC: “We didn’t talk specifically about a pilot but the groups were concerned that implementing the program too quickly might backfire. They wanted to build support at the grass-roots level rather than mandate from the superintendent’s office…and certainly not from the individual states or Washington.”

TurtleneckJordan: “Why are so many people in this country against a national education program? When you go off to college or get a job there is an expectation of a certain level of learning. You can’t have 50 different standards.”

JC: “More like 500 or 5,000 different standards if you consider all the school districts.”

Jordan: “Can you imagine every auto plant having different standards for crash worthiness, turn signals, tire quality, etc. At the end of the day, like it or not, education is much like having kids go down an assembly line. In first grade, they start out at the beginning of the assembly line and assembly lineby the time they complete high school, they are a functioning chassis that can drive away.”

JC: “What about college or trade school?”

Jordan: “College and trade schools add more options and make engine performance better. But when kids graduate from high school, they should be prepared to function in the real world.”

JC: “I agree but I also know that at the end of the assembly line some cars need some repairs. What happens with these cars…kids?”

Jordan: “Let’s fix the kids. Many kids drop out of school because they have not thought through the consequences or there is some tragedy in their life. We…the proverbial societal we…have to grab these kids and make sure they get enough training to get out of high school.”

JC: “Even if they are older?”

Jordan: “Getting people who are older back through high school is even more old_woman_walkingimportant. I don’t care if someone is in their 90’s. If they want to finish high school, my vote is to have the taxpayers fund the program.”

JC: “Doesn’t that seem like a waste of money? I mean training someone who is that old?”

Jordan: “I think there is value created from two perspectives. Chances are the person who is without a high school education still pays taxes – sales tax, property tax, whatever. And they will likely pay taxes for at least 40-50 years…and maybe longer. So society owes them something in return.”

JC: “What’s the second benefit?”

Jordan: “The 90 year-old going back to school would be a great example and inspiration for a lot of younger people to complete their education. If great grandma grandmacan do it, why can’t you sonny boy or you sonny girl?”

JC: “Great grandma could become the poster child for the merit-badge program. Never too old to complete your education.”

Jordan: “Now, before we get all excited and start slobbering all over each other, we need to make sure this idea can really work. One think to talk about it in the abstract. Another to lay out a practical plan.”

JC: “Maybe we step back for a week or two. The High Holy Days are coming up. This could be on our list for the New Year.”

Jordan: “I agree that something should be done with the idea of taking away the stigma of going back to finish one’s education, no matter how old.”

JC: “You know what I like about this idea? It doesn’t point fingers at whether you are mirror-clipart_jpgpoor or rich, whether you did or did not have a supportive home life and all the other ‘symptoms’ of why someone did not do well in school. The idea holds up a mirror and says, ‘If you want to finish your education, you have to make the effort but we will help you.”

Jordan: “I agree. The school board and the public need to make sure every reasonable opportunity exists for kids to complete high school. But teachers cannot fix the kids life at home. What society can do is for kids who caught a bad break with parents, or made a stupid decision and quit school, we will help you get your education.”

JC: “I like it.”

(Continued)

#158 What Is Education and How Should We Measure? Learning Disabilities (Part 6)

05 Saturday Sep 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Education Issues, Societal Issues

≈ Leave a comment

First-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more about the author, Entry #1.  Note: most characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Conversation about education starts Entry #153. Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.

Jordan: “To me the board of education mission statements seem awfully complicated. How would you measure results?”

010414_1635_16TeachingS1.jpgJC: “What I don’t understand is why there is little, if any, emphasis on teaching kids to think. Lots of touchy-feely kinds of words that are politically correct but are hard to measure.”

Jordan: “If we are to make work the idea of ‘teaching kids to think,’ then schools will need to teach core courses and measure progress against the baseline in the core courses.”

JC: “I agree. Kids need to learn the fundamentals of math, English, social studies, history and some basic science. At the same time, society, especially parents, needs to understand not every kid is going to become highly proficient in every course. Like it or not, people have different skills.”

TurtleneckJordan: “I agree. My skills lean toward math. But I am lousy at the skilled trades. My carpentry is a joke.”

JC: “Little Jordan can’t saw straight?”

Jordan: “Ever watch ‘This Old House‘? I love the show. I also marvel at how much math and physics are used in carpentry. Tom Silva and Norm Abram use math and physics all the time to solve problems.”

JC: “Yes, I do watch it. And here’s what I fund humorous. Norm Abram may be the most famous Jewish carpenter since Jesus.”

ThisOldHouseJordan: “Funny.  So maybe we use Norm and Tom as examples why we need to teach all kids certain fundamentals, whether or not they are college bound.”

JC: “What about kids with learning disabilities? How do we teach them?”

Jordan: “We need to teach them to think. Thinking might be at a different level but we want the kids to leverage whatever skills they have.”

JC: “How are we…collective we as you say…going to teach these kids to think? You talking about mainstreaming these kids in regular classes?”

Jordan: “My view is mainstreaming is disruptive to the class. I know that sounds discriminatory but you can’t slow down 90-95% of the students for the sake of 10%, or 5%. We need 122813_2140_15Education4.jpgto think hard about how to educate kids with disabilities.”

JC: “That’s a touchy subject.”

Jordan: “May be. But parents, educators and citizens need to have an honest conversation. I am not an education expert. My expertise, at least according to the people who know me, is providing practical solutions to complex problems. Teaching kids with disabilities is a complex problem. And the current system does not appear to be working.”

JC: “You know someone knows how to teach kids with disabilities to think?”

Jordan: “Not personally.  But, there are people with lots of very practical, valuable educational experience.  My guess is the skills required for teaching kids with disabilities differ from skills required to teach other students.  Why try to mix them?”

JC: “I find it ironic we are focusing on teaching kids with learning disabilities. We all have some kind of learning disability in some subjects.”

Jordan: “Point well taken. So how do we teach me carpentry or teach me how to sing better?”

cookingJC: “I’m learning disabled when it comes to cooking. I just don’t get it.”

Jordan: “What Princess knows how to cook? Ordering in is your idea of cooking. That was too easy.”

JC: “See if I ever invite you to dinner.”

Jordan: “Where would we go, Steak & Shake? Back to topic at hand. Maybe we should take a lesson from the ‘Dummies’ books. Apply the same principle to education.”

JC: “First step might be to change the name from ‘Dummies.'”

Jordan: “Think about this. What if supposedly smart people enrolled in classes for Carpentry for Dummies‘dummies’? Would that remove some of the stigma of not being proficient?”

JC: “You mean if a MIT-guy like you enrolled in a ‘Carpentry for Dummies’ class, other people might be willing to enroll in say ‘Math for Dummies’?”

Jordan: “It just might work.”

JC: “Here’s another idea. What if participants in the ‘dummies classes’ were awarded merit badges, like the Boy Scouts. Your merit badge then becomes something of a bBoy Scout sash-smalladge of honor. You know, like guys show off their trophy for winning some golf tournament.”

Jordan: “Interesting idea. Merit badges for completing a ‘dummies’ class. Eliminates the stigma…reduces it anyway…of not being proficient in a certain skill. And encourages more people to continue with their education.”

JC: “Let’s run that by some people and get their reaction.”

(Continued)

#157 What Is Education and How Should We Measure? (Part 5)

02 Wednesday Sep 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Education Issues, Societal Issues

≈ Leave a comment

First-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more about the author, Entry #1.  Note: most characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Conversation about education starts Entry #153. Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.

JC: “Using a standard of ‘teaching kids to think’ seems so simple. Do you think it can 010414_1635_16TeachingS1.jpgreally work?”

Jordan: “The seeming simplicity is what will make it work. I know that sounds odd but simplicity is the key.”

JC: “The measure is easy to understand. Plus it fits into the 10-second sound bite…with time to spare. I know it is easy to understand but is it really practical?”

Jordan: “What’s not practical about it? Think about your education. What did your English and math teachers instill in you?”

JC: “Some basic facts and methods first, then how to solve problems, which is really how to think.”

Jordan: “I agree, we can’t lose sight of learning the basics. I think everyone agrees on that. Now, in English class, what’s the value of diagramming? To have Diagramming Sentencesyou speak more clearly…and not split those infinitives?

JC: “To some degree. But diagramming really taught me how to think about sentence construction. To think about how words and phrases worked together to form a unit.”

Jordan: “What about math class? What did you learn?”

JC: “Now that I think about it, both in math and English classes…and other classes as well…I was taught how to approach a problem.”

TurtleneckJordan: “And how to solve a problem in a logical way. Gee, did learning to think help you in school and help you in addressing life’s problems?”

JC: “Helped me except for dealing with guys – like you, for example.”

Jordan: “I don’t understand women either so I guess we’re even. Seriously, the question for society today — ‘Are we teaching kids how to think?'”

JC: “Probably not teaching them very well, even with all those standardized tests.”

Jordan: “Give me an example.”

JC: “Here’s an easy one that you run into almost every day. How many young people at the cash register know how to make change?”

cash registerJordan: “Not many. Yesterday I had a bill for $4.88. I gave the clerk a $5.00 bill, one dime and three pennies because I wanted a quarter rather than more coins.”

JC: “Do you get a quarter or the deer-in-headlight look?”

Jordan: “Worse. I got back a dime and two pennies. Then I gave her back the change and asked for a quarter and still the ‘Duh’, reaction. I gave up.”

JC: “Do you think the public, you know the general public, can support the idea of ‘teaching kids to think’ as a direction for education?

122813_2140_15Education4.jpgJordan: “I hope so. Just for fun, let’s look at mission statements from 3-4 school boards. Curious to see what the boards think the mission of their school system is.”

JC: “Good idea. Look at Charlotte, NC, which you know well. Also, try Westport, CT…another one of your spots…NYC and San Francisco.”

Jordan: “Here’s Charlotte/Mecklenburg’s mission statement. ‘Foster a culture of excellence where proud students and educators become the craftsmen of a beautiful, quality work.'” (http://mcpsweb.org/?page_id=3307)

JC: “Huh? Wonder what that means? Try Westport.”

Jordan: “Their statement is a lot longer. ‘Our Mission is to prepare all students to reach their full potential as life-long learners and socially responsible contributors to our global community. We westport-logoachieve this by fostering critical and creative thinking and collaborative problem solving through a robust curriculum delivered by engaging and dedicated educators. We are committed to maintaining an environment that supports inquiry and academic excellence, emotional and physical well-being, appreciation of the arts and diverse cultures, integrity and ethical behavior.'” (http://www.westport.k12.ct.us/mission-statement/)

JC: “A mouthful but seems to make more sense. At least Westport talks about ‘critical and creative thinking.’ That seems like a step ahead.”

Jordan: “Let’s look for mission for New York City public schools, which I think is the largest district in the US.”

JC: “It is the largest. What’s the mission statement?”

Jordan: “I don’t know. I found mission statements for specific schools.  For the district, the only mission statement I found was under a tab for ‘early childhood,’ but no general statement.”

JC: “Surely you jest. Really?”

Jordan: “The childhood one seems OK as a start, ‘Every student in New York City deserves an opportunity to have the foundation of skills, knowledge, and approaches to learning needed to be ready for school and, ultimately, college and careers.'”  ( http://schools.nyc.gov/Academics/EarlyChildhood/mission)

JC: “So NY has a hidden general mission statement if they have one at all. What about San Francisco? They’re home to a lot of high-tech companies. What’s their mission statement?”

Jordan: “According to the website, the San Francisco school district initiated a community-wide program to develop a curriculum that would address the needs of the future.”  (http://www.sfusd.edu/en/assets/sfusd-staff/about-SFUSD/files/vision-2025-spreads.pdf)

JC: “Did they come up with a simple guiding principle?”

Jordan: “No. They have a booklet with a list of steps. Seems like a good start but still lots of verbiage. However, there is one statement that is very insightful.”

SFO LogoJC: “That is?”

Jordan: “Here’s the essence of quote. ‘If there was one surprise…it was the extent to which a shared vision already exists in our community and how easy it would be for diverse groups…to agree on the types of teaching and learning environments we want to build in San Francisco.'”

JC: “OK, Westport and San Francisco seem to have versions of what we’re talking about. NYC has a version of early students tat seems OK.  Charlotte’s mission is confusing. Here’s what I’m not confused about, I need a break.”

(Continued)

.

#156 What Is Education and How Should We Measure? (Part 4)

29 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Education Issues, Societal Issues

≈ Leave a comment

For first-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more information about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more background about the author, Entry #1.  One another note: almost all characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Conversation about education starts Entry #153. Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.

Jordan: “You got that argument right. The problem with charter schools is two-fold. #1, far less accountability than public schools. And in some cases virtually no accountability.

010414_1635_16TeachingS1.jpgJC: “I’ll buy that.  What’s the second problem?”

Jordan: “#2, taxpayer dollars that are collected for use in public schools are diverted to the private sector. The money transfer further erodes the funding for public schools – teachers, buildings, and equipment. The diversion is a vicious cycle with public education suffering more and more.

JC: “Aren’t some charter schools focused on specific subjects or areas of study? That seems like a good idea. Why not let kids who are really good at say math and science go to schools where they can excel?”

Jordan: “You can accomplish the same programs…call them high-intensity study Turtleneckprograms…in the public school system. Big cities have done so for years. NY, and probably some others, have an array of special-interest high schools.”

JC: “You’re right. We went to public school and were enrolled in ‘accelerated classes.’ They probably call those classes ‘advanced placement’ now…more politically correct. I guess you and I didn’t need private schools or charter schools to get a good education.”

Jordan: “I understand the taxpayer’s frustration with cost of schools. Rather than increasing taxes, a better approach would be to reduce or eliminate money not being spent very efficiently – like busing, charter schools. Add to that waste the extra money many parents are spending for private schools.”

JC: “If I’ve heard you right tonight, you think the way to start rebuilding public schools is cutting way back on busing teacherand taking the money to create a corps of higher-caliber teachers, like Miss ‘What?’ and Mrs. D.?”

Jordan: “There are people out there who can teach like Miss What? and Mrs. D.  But they’re probably not teaching because of low pay.  We need to recruit those people to become teachers and need to pay them enough so they remain as teachers.”

JC: “Given the political support for charters, how can the rebuilding program get started? There’ll be a lot of resistance.”

Jordan: “Maybe. But the key is generating public support, at which point the politicians will fold. Remember in 2015 how quickly and effectively the Donald changed the tone of the Republicans running for president?”

JC: “Yep. His comments were straightforward, unvarnished, not diplomatic and often over the top…but he got everyone’s attention.”

Jordan: “Trump also made it OK to talk about sensitive issues without the PC-sugar Trumpcoating.”

JC: “Alright, I guess we need to find someone like the Donald…but a bit less bombastic…to talk about education.”

Jordan: “Let’s get someone to promote a very simple concept for education. You brought it up early in the conversation.”

JC: “You mean Einstein’s comments about education?”

Einstein EducationJordan: “Exactly. ‘Education is not the learning of facts. It’s rather the training of the mind to think.'”

JC: “Did he really say that, or is that some made-up quote on the web?”

Jordan: “Not sure it really matters. It’s a great quote and we should use it. We need to repeat it ’till we memorize it.”

JC: “You can engage your brain and memorize the quote. I’m getting a refill.”

engage-the-brain-clipartJordan: “Education is not the learning of facts. It’s rather the training of the mind to think. Education is not the learning of facts. It’s rather the training of the mind to think. Education is not the learning of facts. It’s rather the training of the mind to think.”

JC: “By the way, I checked on the quote while you were trying to memorize it. Some controversy about the exact quote and whether it was taken out of context…but, I think its close enough. The quote is easy to remember and understand. I’m voting we use it.”

(To be continued)

#155 Education What Is It and How Should We Measure? (Part 3)

26 Wednesday Aug 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Education Issues, Societal Issues

≈ 1 Comment

For first-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more information about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more background about the author, Entry #1.  One another note: almost all characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Conversation starts Entry #153. Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.

010414_1635_16TeachingS1.jpgJC: “OK, let’s just pretend we stop discretionary busing. I know most schools will still need some buses but what really happens if we cut busing?”

Jordan: “Three things happen. #1 kids get more time for schoolwork or just to play. #2, kids get to go school in their neighborhood with their friends. They can start to build a bond with the local school and not some far off school. #3, money becomes available to pay teachers more and/or hire better teachers.”

JC: “How much more money? How much do we spend on busing?”

Jordan: “Here’s the math. For each school bus, the taxpayers buy or lease a bus, hire a driver, buy fuel and hire a mechanic for maintenance and repairs. And, just in case the one bus breaks down or needs maintenance, there is a back-up bus – not one for one Turtleneckbut some spares.”

JC: “I understand the costs but it’s not just for one kid. There’s a bunch of kids on a bus.”

Jordan: “For argument sake, let’s assume each bus averages 30 kids. Might be a bit high but reasonable.”

JC: “30 kids is about the same size as an average class.”

Jordan: “Right. So for every $1.00 spend on busing a kid, there is $1.00 less for paying teachers…unless, of course the taxpayers want to increase taxes.”

School-Bus-ClipartJC: “Never thought of the cost of busing quite like that. I wonder if taxpayers do?”

Jordan: “Now we need to figure out what each school bus costs per year.”

JC: “Before you Google that, let’s each take a guess.”

Jordan: “Alright. Write your number down and then we’ll compare estimates.”

JC: “I put down $15,000 per bus per year. So if my math is right, for 30 kids that equates to $500 per year per student.”

Jordan: “I’m going a little higher, $20,000, which works out to be $667 per student per year.”

JC: “Let’s see how we did.”

Jordan: “Here’s the DoE (Department of Education) website. Based on the trend line, it looks as if $1,000 per student per year is more accurate.”

Trash CanJC: “So we were both low. For every student, taxpayers are spending $1,000 per year to bus kids? And in some places, the number’s a lot higher. Spending that much money on busing seems like a waste.  Like throwing money in the trash can.”

Jordan: “We agree that some busing is necessary. But let’s assume that 50.0% of busing is discretionary. Might be higher but 50.0% is a reasonable estimate.”

JC: “If half the busing is discretionary, then for each bus with 30 kids, about $15,000 per year is wasted. Taxpayers, really the school board, could redirect the money to Money-clip-artpay every existing teacher $15,000 more per year. And not have to raise taxes!! Busing is even dumber than I thought.”

Jordan: “You got that right. I wonder how many parents would gladly make the following trade: stop busing your kids for more qualified teachers at the neighborhood school.”

agreement-clipart-business_handshakeJC: “Seems like a no-brainer to me. Plus the kids can spend more time at school studying, participating in extracurricular activities or just goofing off with friends.”

Jordan: “What baffles me is why kids in grammar school have to commute 30-60 or even 90 minutes a day? When I worked in Manhattan and we lived in Connecticut, my commute was not much longer.”

JC: “Plus the kids are sitting on a bus and not walking to school or riding a bike to school. So tell me again, why are we busing these kids?”

Jordan: “People who proposed busing as a solution were likely well intentioned…at Not Understandleast I think they were. But these same people neither thought through the consequences nor really understood the cause of the problem.”

JC: “You’ve said several times that the cause of low performing schools is not poverty per se.”

Jordan: “It’s not poverty per se. And yes, I agree many kids do not have good role models at home.”

JC: “Which begs the question, ‘Why bus kids to another school rather than attract better teachers to the neighborhood school?'”

Jordan: “I understand busing was done initially because schools were segregated…and schools in lower-income neighborhoods, especially black neighborhoods, were inferior.”

JC: “After busing became more widespread, did educational scores improve for kids business-free-clip-artbeing bussed?”

Jordan: “Probably, but I think only temporarily. One of the unintended consequences was busing ended up eroding confidence in and support of public schools.”

JC: “You mean because more parents sent their kids to private schools rather than being bussed?”

Jordan: “Charlotte (NC) is a good example. After busing between neighborhoods started more parents sent kids to private schools and religious schools…along with a big jump in home schooling.”

JC: “What about charter schools? Are they a good alternative?”

Charter SchoolJordan: “Another non-solution that addresses the symptoms, not the cause. Charters are a darling of many Republican politicians. Charters were promoted as better than public schools because…”

JC: “…because students attending want to learn, because charters offer better-qualified teachers…and of course, charters have no unions – the cause of most problems with public schools.”

Jordan: “You take a sour pill today? By the way, I agree with your comments. In my view, the problem with charter schools is twofold.”

JC: “Hold that thought. I need to take a break.”

—————

Links to downloads of other topics,

  • 15 05 23 Do They Really Understand Entries #121-#130 (Discuses policies in government and private industry)
  • Insight into General Motors (Multiple Entries) — (Spans many years pre and post bankruptcy)

#154 What is Education and How Should We Measure? (Part 2)

22 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Education Issues, Societal Issues

≈ Leave a comment

For first-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more information about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more background about the author, Entry #1.  One another note: almost all characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Continuation of Entry #153. Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.

JC: “So you think the way to improve education is double teachers’ salaries and show 010414_1635_16TeachingS1.jpgrespect for the teaching profession?”

Jordan: “If forced to a 10-second sound bite, ‘yes,’ double salaries and show respect. But you and I know the solution is more complicated.”

JC: “You mean like students wanting to learn?”

Jordan: “When talking about students wanting to learn, a bunch of clichés come to mind. ‘You can lead a horse to water…’ ‘You can’t move anything by pushing on a string.’ And some others.”

JC: “Understand what you mean. But how do you intend to change these kids minds…have them want to learn?”

TurtleneckJordan: “That’s where good teachers come in. The decision to learn starts at home but…”

JC: “…but in many cases, there is no encouragement at home. Plus, some kids don’t seem to understand the importance of learning, especially how it affects them long-term.”

Jordan: “No matter what we do, there will be some kids who resist education. Teachers can be inspirational for some and reinforce the inspiration for others. But there is some percentage that will resist learning…at least publicly.”

JC: “I know we talked about this earlier but I still remember how excited I used to get Black School Teacherbefore English and math classes. I loved those classes.”

Jordan: “I hear ya. Did I ever tell you what happened in 8th grade math?”

JC: “Mrs. D your teacher?”

Jordan: “Yes. Remember the Cootie Bug game?”

JC: “Had some sort of bug-like thing, didn’t it?”

Jordan: “Right. Mrs. D had an extra-credit program called the Cootie Club. The program was designed to last the entire year. When you finished a section of extra-cootie bugcredit work, you were given part of the Cootie Bug.”

JC: “Let me guess. You finished early.”

Jordan: “Finished all the coursework and all the extra credit material by mid-October.”

JC: “The whole year’s work and extra-credit stuff by mid-October? What’d she do with you then?”

Jordan: “Made me a teaching assistant, helping other kids and grading papers.”

JC: “That’s great. But you were inspired before class even started. You loved math.”

Jordan: “True and she let me run at my own pace…as fast as I wanted. She was a true teacherinspiration for me.”

JC: “OK, but what about kids whose parents are so encouraging or who live in lower-income areas?”

Jordan: “It’s not as if my parents were wealthy. You know we had a good mix of students in that school.”

JC: “The kids were not poor by anyone’s standards.”

Jordan: “Agreed.”

JC: “Then how do we establish respect for teachers?”

Jordan: “Two steps. #1 is the president, whoever it is, needs to reinforce…and I mean reinforce constantly…the importance of teachers in educating our children. He or she should use the bully pulpit and pound in the country’s collective head why we need to support teachers.”

JC: “JFK made volunteering OK for recent college grads by promoting the Peace Corps. We still have the Peace Corps all these years later. What’s the second point?”

Jordan: “All income groups need to focus on the importance of a quality public 122813_2140_15Education4.jpgeducation. I should add all ethnic groups.”

JC: “What do we do about poor performing schools, especially in lower-income neighborhoods? Shouldn’t those kids be transferred to other schools?”

Jordan: “I know that’s a popular idea…but it’s wrong. Moving the kids to another location does not address the real problem.”

JC: “Why not?”

Jordan: “Reminds me of how some companies deal with lower-performing employees. They move the employees to another department. What’s been accomplished? Nothing.”

School-Bus-ClipartJC: “Are you saying busing the kids to a better performing school isn’t a solution?”

Jordan: “You got it. Busing the kids treats the symptom, not the cause.”

JC: “You want to teach kids in their neighborhood, even if the school is under-performing.”

UnfairJordan: “We…another societal we…need to fix the problem at the location. To shuffle kids all around town is unfair to kids being bussed. Unfair to kids who should be going to a school in their neighborhood but are being bussed. It’s also unfair to taxpayers to spend money on a solution that does not address the problem. Take the money spent on busses and diesel fuel and hire better teachers!!”

JC: “I need to think about that idea — cut way back on busing and use the money for teachers.”  (To be continued)

—————————————

Links to downloads of other topics,

  • 15 05 23 Do They Really Understand Entries #121-#130 (Discuses policies in government and private industry)
  • Insight into General Motors (Multiple Entries) — (Spans many years pre and post bankruptcy)

 

#153 What Is Education and How Should We Measure?

19 Wednesday Aug 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Causes of the Revolution, Education Issues

≈ 9 Comments

For first-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more information about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more background about the author, Entry #1.  One another note: almost all characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Jordan and JC, a long-time friend (and frequent character) are having dinner. Time of year – just about when school starts.

JC: “Here’s a toast to an enjoyable evening.”

122913_1337_14BringingU2.pngJordan: “Hear, hear. Nice to see you, JC.”

JC: “Nice to see you, Jordan. I’d ask what you’ve been up to but Greenie filled me in the other day.” (See Entry #151)

Jordan: “She and I had a fun time talking taxes.”

JC: “She enjoyed it. Now here’s my topic for the evening – what is education?”

122913_1337_14BringingU1.jpgJordan: “You should know. You were a better student than I was…plus you taught middle school for a while.”

JC: “Well, you taught also…and at some big-name university.”

Jordan: “OK, so what’s the issue with education?”

JC: “The issue is the education system seems to be focused on the wrong measure.”

Jordan: “Whadda mean, wrong measure?”

Einstein EducationJC: “Einstein said it best. ‘Education is not learning of facts. It’s rather the training of the mind to think.'”

Jordan: “Great way to frame education.”

JC: “Think about your own education. Did you memorize a bunch of facts for some test? Or did you get trained how to think?”

Jordan: “You need to know certain facts and rules, especially in math, science and any language.”

JC: “Agreed, but the key is how do you use those facts to solve problems?”

Jordan: “You know what teacher I think of who made us learn some facts and then taught us how to think?”

math_clipartJC: “Our mutual math teacher, Miss ‘What?'”

Jordan: “She’d grind you down with her ‘what?’ questions. Then one day you understood and started to think.”

JC: “You were much better at math than I was but she was one of the best teachers I ever had, from grammar school to grad school.”

Jordan: “I wonder how she would be rated today.”

JC: “Probably get points off because she was so demanding…at least in our group.”

TurtleneckJordan: “What other teachers come to mind?”

JC: “Remember Frances…”

Jordan: “…English?”

JC: “Yes. She was right up there with Miss ‘What?’.”

Jordan: “What do you remember most about her English class?”

Sentence diagramJC: “Diagramming sentences. Some of those sentences were incredibly difficult to diagram properly.”

Jordan: “I hope you didn’t split any infinitives or leave your participle dangling.”

JC: “You need to worry about your participle dangling, I don’t.”

Jordan: “Funny, JC. Seriously, though, you learned the basic rules then applied them to the problem at hand, just like Einstein said.”

JC: “OK, we agree we got a good education…”

Jordan: “…in public schools.”

JC: “Yes, public schools. But how do we translate that experience to today?”

Jordan: “The first step is to attract more qualified teachers.”

JC: “Easier said than done. More pay?”

Money-clip-artJordan: “Yes, a lot more pay. Probably at least 50% more pay, maybe even double salaries.”

JC: “Wow that will cost a lot.”

Jordan: “Equally important to pay is showing respect. We…societal we…need to make teaching a highly respected profession, again. I said again because at one time it was.”

122813_2140_15Education4.jpgJC: “Good idea, but who is going to pay for all this?”

Jordan: “The current system is very expensive. It’s just that the cost is located in different buckets.”

JC: “I don’t follow you.”

Jordan: “An inferior education system…”

JC: “Excuse me Jordan, you think our system is inferior?”

Jordan: “Yes and getting worse every year. An inferior education system adds direct costs for lower worker productivity, which makes US business less competitive worldwide. The lower wages then reduce taxes paid by individuals. But a major money_bucketindirect cost is additional crime. The cost to incarcerate a person for one year is the same as tuition at a major university. I know people get all exorcised about the idea but I would rather pay someone to go to college than have them sit in prison and not be productive.”

JC: “No one wants to talk about the indirect costs. Politicians claim it is confusing for voters.”

Jordan: “Well, many of those politicians got voted out of office after the Revenge Revolution. Maybe it’s time to take a new approach to discussing problems — frankness and honesty”

JC: “You know what politician comes to mind – at least for the frankness part.”

TrumpJordan: “The Donald?”

Jordan: “He’s not my ideal role model but I have to give him credit. He changed the dynamic of running for president.”

Jordan: “Let’s not forget Bernie Sanders. He wasn’t as bombastic as the Donald but he got issues out on the table.”

JC: “Alright, we need an honest discussion about the value of teachers…and about the cost of not getting better teachers. Where do we start?”

Jordan: “Remember how we began to measure the appropriateness of policies for government and business?”

JC: “You mean, ‘treat thy neighbor as thyself?’ You want to apply that standard to teachers?”

Jordan: “Why not? Seems simple and straightforward. Ask parents, grandparents, Parent Meetingfamilies, business leaders, other educators what they want from a teacher?”

JC: “And I’ll bet its more than teaching kids to memorize facts for a test. They’ll want the teacher to teach the kid to think.”

Jordan: “Seems like a simple way to start measuring what we should do.”

JC: “Speaking of measuring. A critical storage tank of mine is full. Let’s take a break for a couple of minutes.”

#152 Real Tax Burden (Part 2 of 2)

15 Saturday Aug 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Causes of the Revolution, Economics, Gov't Policy, Societal Issues

≈ Leave a comment

For first-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more information about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more background about the author, Entry #1.  One another note: almost all characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Jordan and Greenie, a friend who went to the same grammar school, having coffee. Greenie asked Jordan to explain the tax burden on individuals…in simple terms. Jordan just asked Greenie to guess at the total tax burden as percent of income by quintile. Conversation starts #151.

Greenie: “OK, so how’d I do? Was I close?”

Jordan: “Very good. Here’s a chart I pulled up while you were guessing.”

(http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/wonkblog/wp/2012/09/19/heres-why-the-47-percent-argument-is-an-abuse-of-tax-data)

010414_1635_16TeachingS2.jpgGreenie: “Could you please explain this chart to me?

Jordan: “Why don’t you explain it to me?”

Greenie: “OK, the left bar is labeled 0-20, which I take means the 20% of people with the lowest income – the first quintile.”

Jordan: “Correct.”

Greenie: “That group – the 0-20% group – pays about 17.5% of their total income in some form of tax. We don’t know if its income tax, or sales tax…or whatever the tax…just that about 17.5% goes for taxes.”

Jordan: “What’s next?”

Greenie: “The tax burden for the next three groups, or quintiles – 20-40%, 40-60%, 60-80%, increases gradually to what about 27-28% for the 60-80% group.”

TurtleneckJordan: “What about the highest income group?”

Greenie: “Seems to hover around 30%. And look, for the top 1%, it starts to fall off. Did I read the chart correctly?”

Jordan: “Like a pro.”

Greenie: “My guesses were pretty close. OK, so maybe I got lucky. But all I did was think about it logically. I know income taxes are progressive but almost all other taxes are flat or regressive, so the tax burden is more even than a lot of people think.”

Jordan: “Because most people only talk about income taxes and not total taxes. Besides, you used a phrase that seems to be overlooked in DC – ‘think about it logically.'”

Greenie: “There’s still no logical thinking…even after the Revenge Revolution?”

Jordan: “You tell me. Republicans are still promoting a flat tax. A flat tax would make the share of taxes go down by income quintile. Do Republicans think voters don’t understand what a flat tax does?

Screwed-GuyGreenie: “I’d be a little more diplomatic. I’d ask how long before lower and middle-income voters realize how Republicans are trying to screw them…again.”

Jordan: “You call that statement more diplomatic? Anyway, some Republicans have forgotten…or hope voters have forgotten…what proposals pushed ordinary people over the edge and started the Revenge Revolution.”

Greenie: “You spend a lot of time inside the beltway. Do you have any insight into how Republicans think? That’s assuming they really think.”

Jordan: “Be nice.”

Greenie: “Alright…but just for a little while.”

Jordan: “A few days ago I was invited to play golf with the former Speaker of the House and the former Senate Majority Leader.”

Greenie: “Fun day, huh? Who did you offend? Sorry.”

Jordan: “It was an interesting day. We had some frank discussions about the Republican Party and why they lost their base during the Revenge Revolution.”

Greenie: “Did they listen?  I suppose they want to get their old jobs back.”

Jordan: “Yes, I think so.”

Greenie: “Can you tell me anything else?”

Jordan: “Not really. Promised I would keep the conversation very quiet.  I can tell you to give these guys some time to get their act together and then start to turn around the Republican Party.”

Greenie: “You mean Republicans might become rational again…and not so far off in the math_rational_numbersweeds?”

Jordan: “No guarantee, but they just might.”

Greenie: “There is hope after all.”

#151 The Real Tax Burden – Not What You Think (Part 1)

12 Wednesday Aug 2015

Posted by Jordan Abel in Economics, Federal Budget, Gov't Policy

≈ 2 Comments

For first-time readers, this blog is set in the future (sometime after 2020).  This entry assumes the Revenge Revolution has occurred.  For more information about the anticipated 5th revolution in the US — the Revenge Revolution — and more background about the author, Entry #1.  One another note: almost all characters appear in a number of entries, with many entries building on previous conversations.  You’ll catch on quickly.  Thanks for your time and interest…and comments. 

Scene: Jordan having coffee with Greenie, a friend who attended the same grammar school.

Greenie: “Jordan, it’s been a while. I think the last time we had coffee was with JC.”

Jordan: “That was months ago. How ya’ doing?”

010414_1635_16TeachingS2.jpgGreenie: “Getting back into circulation. Had some tough times. You know, family issues. By the way, thanks for the note.”

Jordan: “You’re welcome. Glad life is getting better.”

Greenie: “Moving on, I need some advice.”

Jordan: “From me?”

Greenie: “I need to understand some economic issues. Nothing personal.”

Jordan: “I’m not good at personal advice. And some people in Washington don’t like my professional advice.”

Greenie: “Well, I do. So there. What I really need to understand is taxes. What is the real tax burden?”

TurtleneckJordan: “In total or by income group?”

Greenie: “By income group. There’s a lot of babble inside the beltway about a flat income tax. Mostly among Republicans, but even some Democrats seem to support the idea.”

Jordan: “And what’s your concern? Flat tax seems fair, doesn’t it? Everyone pays the same percentage of income. What could be more fair?”

Greenie: “You sound like one of the talking heads on Fox News. The argument assumes that income tax is the only tax.”

Jordan: “You and I know it’s not the only tax…but focusing on income tax makes a great sound bite.”

checklistGreenie: “Coming in on the train I made a list of different kinds of taxes…and I probably missed some.”

Jordan: “What’s on your list?”

Greenie: “Income tax – federal, state and for some people, local income tax. Then there are taxes for Social Security and Medicare.”

Jordan: “Just to clarify, Social Security and Medicare are technically insurance programs but for this discussion, leave them as taxes.”

Greenie: “Don’t start confusing me. To me Social Security and Medicare are taxes. I also had on the list sales taxes, excise taxes – you know, your phone bill, property Tax_Time_Clip_Arttaxes, plus all those fees you have to pay for different things. Those seem like taxes to me.”

Jordan: “You mean like the fees you pay when you rent a car?”

Greenie: “Yes. I rented a car in Houston and taxes and fees were 30-35% of the total bill. That seems outrageous. Have I missed any taxes?”

Jordan: “Business taxes. Every year my consulting business has to pay a licensing fee to the state and then pay another fee to file an annual report. That’s on top of the income taxes.”

Greenie: “Speaking of licenses, what about the fee for license-plate renewal and what about the fee for renewing your driver’s license?”

Jordan: “Your list is a great start. We probably have the taxes that affect most people.”

Greenie: “Has anyone ever calculated how much of someone’s income all these taxes and fees account for? If you think about it, many of these taxes and fees might be more of a burden to lower-income groups. I wonder if taxes in the US are more regressive than progressive.”

Jordan: “Hold on. If I sound like a talking head on Fox News, then you sound like a screaming liberal.”

Greenie: “I’ll take that as a compliment.”

Jordan: “Yes, there are some estimates of tax burden by income quintile. Wanna take a guess at the percentages?

Greenie: “If I’m close will you buy me another coffee?”

Jordan: “Have as many refills as you want.”

Greenie: “You want my guesses or what the Republicans would say?”

Jordan: “First, pretend you are a Republican. I know it’s hard, but just pretend.”

flat tax cartoonGreenie: “Republicans would claim the top two quintiles pay most of the taxes. That’s why the system is unfair to higher-income earners and there should be a flat tax.”

Jordan: “The top two quintiles pay most of the taxes because…duh…they earn the most money. What about payment as a percent of income?”

Greenie: “I’ll bet for lower-income people, taxes as a percent of income are a lot higher than most people realize.”

Jordan: “Why? Give me an example.”

Greenie: “Property tax. The flat-tax crowd focuses on income tax. But if you rent, you still pay property taxes. Your rent is a bit higher every month…plus there is no deduction on your income tax.”

Confused Clip ArtJordan: “Alright, give me your guess – all taxes as a percent of income. Guess by income quartile…I mean quintile.”

Greenie: “Here goes. Lowest quintile, probably 15-20% of total income in taxes. The top dogs, maybe 25-30%. The rest of them someplace between. How’d I do?”

(To be continued)

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