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Super Tuesday States Haven't Heard Candidates On Education, Say Teachers, School Leaders

Posted: 03/ 6/2012 4:10 pm Updated: 03/ 6/2012 9:07 pm

Education

It's Super Tuesday, and Ohio kindergarten teacher Nicole Kessler is frustrated. Budget cuts turned her life upside down this year: To save money on bus routes, her district turned half-day kindergarten into two full days a week and every other Monday. Her school can't afford field trips or professional development, and her classroom supplies were cut in half.

But, as Kessler puts it, you wouldn't know it from watching the Republican presidential campaign. As teachers, parents and education officials in the 10 states that head to the polls today struggle to make it through a distinctly rough patch in education, they, like Kessler, have heard virtually nothing on the topic from the presidential candidates.

So far, the candidates have only discussed education to bolster their conservative credentials, rarely addressing the academic well-being of the country's students or education's impact on the future of the economy. According to an analysis by The Guardian, education has so far only comprised one percent of presidential debate questions.

"I've not heard anyone say anything in Ohio about education," Kessler said. "Mitt Romney and Rick Santorum have been here a lot this week -- and it's been a lot about social issues. And factories."

While her district was able to pass a tax levy to prevent widespread teacher layoffs, if similar levies don't pass in other districts, many Ohio teachers stand to be fired.
To add to that, Ohio Gov. John Kasich (R) has "significantly" cut school funding, Kessler says, and plans to implement a content test for every teacher in the bottom 10 percent of schools, but "he's not sure how he's going to fund it."

The lack of serious conversations about schools on the campaign trail has caught the eye of some well-known education figures. On Monday, Joel Klein, the former New York City schools chancellor who now heads News Corps' education arm, took to the pages of the Washington Post to bemoan the issue. Klein wrote that it's "crazy" that the first time education became visible on the campaign trail was when Santorum mocked Obama's college goals, calling him "a snob."

Klein wrote: "Unless voters insist that candidates give education the attention it deserves, this will be another political season in which both sides offer pablum without seeking a mandate for the ambitious reforms our schools require."

As he explained to The Huffington Post, the "pablum" comes from "this notion that education is a state issue, which is a traditional Republican notion. ... To simply say, 'Let the states take care of it' -- that's not going to get us anywhere."

And while the Republican candidates spar over the economy, joblessness feels more urgent than education, despite the policy area's profound, long-term impact on employment. "People care about gas prices, what's in the news du jour," Klein said. "Thoughtful questions about long-term policy are always much less grabby and much less sound bite-y." In the fall, Klein participated in a candidates' forum on education, organized by the College Board, but the candidates didn't talk to each other -- and only two (Gingrich and Santorum) showed up in the flesh, with Michele Bachmann and Herman Cain participating remotely.

Michelle Rhee, the former chancellor of Washington, D.C. Public Schools who now heads the advocacy group StudentsFirst, has also taken notice. The lack of focus on education is "ridiculous," she said.

"What people are failing to recognize is that we are not going to be able to ensure that our economy recovers in the long term and that this country regains its position in the global marketplace until we fix our education system," Rhee continued.

The 16 states where SF is now working -- including Super Tuesday states Ohio, Tennessee and Georgia -- are now dealing with issues around teacher quality, school choice and fiscal accountability, Rhee said, what she calls "the meat of the issue."

In Georgia, John Barge, the state's education chief, says his schools are grappling with budget cuts and revamped teacher evaluations. "Like the other states, we've done a lot of shoring up with federal dollars," he said in an interview. "For us, that's the greatest challenge: still trying to provide the greatest possible education to our students with significantly reduced resources." And though Gov. Nathan Deal (R) has proposed a slight increase in education funding, Barge said it won't compensate for the dried-up federal funds. Some Georgia districts have seen shorter school calendars and teacher furlough days.

But like Kessler, Barge hasn't heard a peep about it on the campaign trail. "There aren’t candidates that appeal to me on education right now, since I just haven't heard them discuss it," he said. "That's it. But in my opinion, education is the number one economic development tool a state or a city can have."

Idaho's schools superintendent Tom Luna paints a rosier picture of the campaign trail so far, though that might be because he's advising Romney. Last year, Idaho passed education laws that require students to learn online, limit teachers' collective-bargaining rights and use merit pay to compensate teachers -- reforms that teachers and parents have tried to repeal.

Luna expects education to become a general election issue. "When people recognize -- and I know that Governor Romney recognizes this -- there is an inseparable link between a growing education system and a robust economy, it'll come up."

In Massachusetts, another Super Tuesday state, charter-school teacher Darren Burris says he's most worried about sharing best practices. While Massachusetts is known for high academic standards and high test performance, Burris said, "there are still places where kids are struggling." But even with his former governor on the campaign trail, he's heard nothing of interest. "Education is a secondary issue at best," he said. "It hasn't been dealt with."

Rhee's SF is considering ways to increase the profile of education in the election. The group counts over one million members in its ranks -- although its unclear how many are active -- and Rhee says quite a few have reached out to ask why the candidates haven't addressed education in any serious way. Rhee said, "There's a groundswell of people who are speaking out saying, 'We want to understand where the candidates stand.'"

Earlier on HuffPost:

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04:48 PM on 11/06/2012
Anyone remember Bush's No Child Left Behind? We need Education to be a #1 Priority in the USA but Secretary of Education Arne Duncan is awesome at what he does I'll admit...
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Cathy M Rubin
10:13 AM on 10/01/2012
Please join us with your comments in THE EDUCATION DEBATE 2012 - you may find of interest: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/c-m-rubin/the-global-search-for-edu_49_b_1902173.html
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06:48 PM on 04/05/2012
Michelle Rhee is a very good front for the charter school movement. i question whether her group was formed to soften peoples position on the ALEC legislation. http://alecexposed.org/w/images/5/57/2D4-Next_Generation_Charter_Schools_Act_Exposed.pdf
Like everything else the working people have had access to, our educational system was slated for destruction. Glad my children were educated in public schools before lobbyists started.
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08:03 AM on 03/12/2012
Education is not an issue with the republican base because it is detrimental to thier message and lacking in their constituency.
06:36 PM on 03/15/2012
No one truly wants to speak about education because it is in shambles when you disect it and look at it deep down.No one wants to speak about the number of student loans being distributed, just to attend college. Plus the necessity of obtaining a degree of some sort, if one desires a decent job to even pay the loans back.
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Aldous Jose A Castro
01:43 AM on 03/09/2012
"News Corps' education arm"...

Isn't that an oxymoron?
10:17 PM on 03/08/2012
No candidate is addressing education and what they plan to do with this broken system. What does adult education look like. School is getting more expensive and us that have obtained student loans as undergradutes need some serious loan forgiveness!
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Marx Twain
America's homespun Marxist
03:28 PM on 03/08/2012
Allow me to fill in the gaps. Obama believes in charter schools, high stakes testing, and scapegoating teachers. So does the GOP. The reason they haven't talked about it is because they all agree.
10:29 AM on 03/08/2012
Republicans are ignorant.
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bowloforanges
Je pense que, donc, je suis
09:01 AM on 03/08/2012
goTP doesn't need to talk about education on a National level.

They are dismantling education State by State.

Scott Kevin Walker cut 1.6 BILLION dollars from the public education budget over the next two years, even as he passes out tax breaks like candy and increases public funding to private and charter schools. Most districts in the state were forced to deal with these cuts this year by forcing our top commodity, experienced teachers, into early retirement to get some short-term balance in hiring new, "less expensive" teachers. Programming cuts are rampant all over the state.
10:30 PM on 03/08/2012
I agree about the states doing their own thing. It has been absolutely crazy here in Texas. Perry has been campaigning and has not paid attention to education here in Texas as long as the govenors mansion is remodeled and he can do as he pleases.
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rwaller
My bio never meets guidelines!
05:55 PM on 03/07/2012
Republicans not talking about education? Finally something that makes perfect sense. If ever there was an organization that depended on the uniformed, it is the republican party. It is why their messages of fear, divisiveness and hate are so affective with their base. It is why their political arguments always pander to the lowest common denominator. Saying republican leadership is for education is like saying the Pope is in favor of Caligula.
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sbrez
raining blue
05:35 PM on 03/07/2012
what are you kidding me? its GOP doctrine to slash public education funds and break up teacher unions - that way they can keep everybody uneducated and keep feeding their base numbers. Santorum called obama a "snob" for wanting everyone to go to college....
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Viktor Todorovic
04:00 PM on 03/07/2012
There should be no surprise here. Destruction of public education system has been a long term goal of the Republican party. Look what Ronald Reagan did to the University of California system while he was governor of that state. All of the policies of this political entity lead to one goal -- creating a two tier society of masters and serfs. Master class will get their education privately from pre-school to university level preparing them for political or financial careers. The serfs will get home-schooled or get parochial schools at best, then go to some kind of vocational school or for-profit university that will prepare them for their low paying service job. Upper middle class will consist of entertainers and what's left of scientists and engineers, to pacify the population and create an illusion of upward mobility. Lower middle class will consist of ever-growing security forces needed to conquer resources abroad and suppress the growing revolt within borders. Now print this, bind it and you have Republican Manifesto in short.
bullthull
Enemy of all that is stupid
04:42 PM on 03/07/2012
1) Please provide any proof national education programs have worked
2) If the goal of Repubs was to create a two tier system that is exactlty what the lefts beloved social democracies have - the top tier off to college lower tier to trade schools/ services. My wife fought the local implementation of "outcome based education" 15 years ago during the Clinton adminstration.
3) 90% of running a school is employee costs teachers ARE not underpaid when you look at prevailing pay in each area and comparing 4 year degrees. It is far easier to be a teacher than an electrician yet we are constantly told how important teachers are. We have Charter and religious schools that blow the doors off the public schools with far lower costs.
4) Parents need to get off thier a**** and get invloved , schools are run locally . I really want to see the federal government run a local school - the disaster would shut everyone up.
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boonjava
Nigerian filmmaker
07:52 AM on 03/08/2012
1. FAFSA and Pell grants have been pretty successful for those students who couldn't quite afford higher education without them. Just sayin'.
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Viktor Todorovic
10:56 PM on 03/09/2012
1) Apart from grants (mentioned by boonjava), ED monitors and addresses discrimination in schools among many other things. Title IX for example. Many others as well. Unfortunately, there's another program that worked, it's "No child left behind" a plan by Republicans to destroy public education through standardized testing nonsense. They pretty much succeeded.
2) Society needs a plan, we can't just educate willy-nilly. I think this could be a fertile ground for serious discussion.
3)This just tells you that everyone else is over-worked and underpaid. Salaries are very different from place to place. Chicago pays almost $70,000; that's $20,000 more than I make and I have a PhD in molecular genetics. Phoenix pays miserable salary, my brother in law is trying to get out of it as he can barely pay his bills. As for electrician being a harder job, I couldn't disagree more. Messing with kids brains is the most difficult job if done properly. Anyone can put two wires together. Charter and religious schools do better than which public schools? It depends what you compare.
4) I couldn't agree more. I'm on my daughter's PTO.
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rjk111
01:54 PM on 03/07/2012
Well, there's a good reason for the topic being absent. The Gas and Oil Party plan to give education to their corporate cronies, just like the GOP dominated administration in Michigan is doing. Corporate profits will continue soaring for decades while they own the former public schools ... and they're going to call them "charter" schools.
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Alan626
Beliefs are not facts
01:38 PM on 03/07/2012
Why are the Republican candidates not interested in providing for, or even discussing in public, the education of the next generation? Three reasons...
1. Because an ignorant populace is more easily manipulated.
2. Because education is "just an elitist, Liberal plot to indoctrinate the youth of America against God."
3. Because uneducated people can be paid less.
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Opygollopy
The more I talk to people, the more I love my dogs
11:37 AM on 03/07/2012
Republicans do not want people educated, they would lose their base and never hold public office and suck off the taxpayer any more.