Albuquerque Journal

Politician­s’ lower standards hurt our students

- CAL THOMAS Syndicated Columnist Readers may email Cal Thomas at tcaeditors@tribpub.com.

What is the greatest threat to educating children today? Is it COVID-19, or ignorance? I’m going for number two. There is growing evidence to back me up.

In August, Oregon Gov. Kate Brown privately signed a bill ending a requiremen­t that high school students prove they are proficient in writing, reading and math before graduating. The law lasts for three years. The pandemic was blamed for students falling behind, but the real motive was revealed by the governor’s spokesman, Charles Boyle, who said existing standards failed students who don’t test well and that new standards would aid the state’s “Black, Latino, Latinx, Indigenous, Asian, Pacific Islander, Tribal and students of color.” I’m surprised he didn’t include, as President Biden often does, the LGBTQI-plus demographi­c.

In New York, outgoing Mayor Bill de Blasio ordered the eliminatio­n of the city’s gifted and talented program. You can probably guess the reason. Critics of the program claim it is racist because white and Asian students are overwhelmi­ngly represente­d. De Blasio will let children currently enrolled complete the program, but no new students will be accepted. Instead, reports The New York Times, “The system will be replaced by a program that offers the possibilit­y of accelerate­d learning to students in the later years of elementary school.” Who will qualify for that? And who gets to say? What if it is the same racial and ethnic imbalance as now?

De Blasio ludicrousl­y claimed, “I bet you a lot of parents are going to look at this plan and say this is a reason to stay in public schools.” Quite the opposite. Enrollment in city public schools has fallen below 890,000 students — down from more than a million kids a decade ago, according to internal Department of Education records viewed by The New York Post. COVID-19 is only part of the reason. Home-schooling and people moving out of New York are likely bigger contributo­rs to the exodus. Over the past five years — starting before COVID — New York City public schools shed at least 10% of their students, according to Department of Education figures.

The decline in American education is not a new trend, but it has been accelerate­d in recent years by certain politician­s who allow their ideology and politics to replace outcomes.

I’ve written about the Children’s Scholarshi­p Fund (CSF) in the past because it has a record of success, which ought to be the primary goal, not pleasing politician­s and teachers unions. According to CSF’s website, “In New York City, 99.4 percent of CSF alumni responding to our alumni survey graduated high school on time in 2018, compared to the most recent average NYC public school graduation rate of 77.3 percent. Of the CSF alumni who graduated, 87 percent indicated they planned to enroll in college.” The same gap between CSF students and public schools exists in other cities where they are active.

What is — or ought to be — especially pleasing is the testimonie­s given by the mostly minority students who have been rescued from their failing public schools and given a chance at a real education, not to mention a moral framework for how to live a good life. Read some of these stories on the site.

Since its founding, the CSF has provided $885 million in scholarshi­ps for 185,000 children. In the past school year, the CSF and local partners distribute­d $46.9 million scholarshi­p awards. More children could be rescued if more politician­s adopted school choice, which is a growing trend, along with home schooling.

Cutting a gifted and talented program, and not requiring kids to read, write or do basic math flunks the test of what education is supposed to mean and limits a child’s job and career opportunit­ies. That is a form of child abuse.

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