Author Topic: How Trump’s Executive Order Can Fix Ronald Reagan’s Education Failure  (Read 287 times)

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How Trump’s Executive Order Can Fix Ronald Reagan’s Education Failure


The Trump administration can better its odds of ending the monopolies at the root of widespread public dissatisfaction with schools and their indoctrination of American kids.

 
By Joy Pullmann
May 3, 2017

 

Donald Trump managed to find America’s pulse during his campaign on a low-key issue that nevertheless is definitive to America’s longevity as a freedom-generating nation: education. Of high-profile Republicans, he was one of the few to blast Common Core and vow to “restore local control” to American schools, and through the only mechanism that makes that truly possible: parent choice. As president, he reiterated that promise, and last week signed an executive order that aims to begin fulfilling it.

I’ve got some bad news: That’s nowhere near good enough. Truly restoring parent control over education requires Congress to cut the U.S. Department of Education and relinquish the power they have seized from parents and local communities and given to bureaucrats, a promise Ronald Reagan also made as a presidential candidate but left unfulfilled due partly to staff treachery at a key moment in history. His failure allowed America’s education to metastasize, eroding Americans’ capacity to govern themselves through robust character and careful analysis.

Americans have long trusted Democrats far more on education than they do Republicans. Perhaps that’s because Republicans typically offer the same old soft Bolshevism without all the fluffy clothing. They drone on and on about forming our kids like widgets in a corporate machine and fine-tuning percentage points on teacher pay scales. They tell us their five-inch-thick education “reform” bills, laden with dozens of refunded garbage programs and dictatorial control still preserved for federal bureaucrats, diminish “the national school board.” Puh-leese. At least Democrats burn our public education dollars without hiding their glee.

The situation is dire. But there are some constructive things the Trump administration can do to better their odds of ending the education monopolies at the root of widespread public dissatisfaction and ideological indoctrination of American kids.

Let’s Start With that Executive Order

The federal government’s method of securing power over local schools by taxing citizens, then offering their money back if states follow the ignorant orders of politicized and distant bureaucrats, is illegitimate, unconstitutional, and makes Americans dumber. Like the rest of the administrative state, it’s destructive of self-government and government by consent, which is every American’s birthright.

That said, I believe in respecting and working within existing culture and systems. The prudential question is how to accomplish as much good as possible given the obstacles at play. The BHAG is to shift the window of what conventional wisdom says is possible, which Trump has already shown he’s more than capable of doing.

So I don’t think Trump should ignore the laws that direct his administration to keep running programs that waste children’s minds and taxpayers’ money. Instead, his administration should demonstrate to lawmakers and the American public why they should consent to ending all the idiotic things the federal government does in education. His administration should also take care that any resulting policy changes are prudently carried out to prevent backlash from poor execution.

Intelligent use of Trump’s executive order can further that end. The order, even just as a rhetorical document, is good and strong, although it also reveals Congress has bound the administration’s hands in many respects from restoring self-government in education to the people:

Quote
It shall be the policy of the executive branch to protect and preserve State and local control over the curriculum, program of instruction, administration, and personnel of educational institutions, schools, and school systems, consistent with applicable law, including ESEA, as amended by ESSA, and ESEA’s restrictions related to the Common Core State Standards developed under the Common Core State Standards Initiative.



The Secretary shall examine whether these regulations and guidance documents comply with Federal laws that prohibit the Department from exercising any direction, supervision, or control over areas subject to State and local control, including:

(i)    the curriculum or program of instruction of any elementary and secondary school and school system;

(ii)   school administration and personnel; and

(iii)  selection and content of library resources, textbooks, and instructional materials.
DeVos will find that yes, the U.S. Department of Education is forced by law to break older laws that aim to restrict the federal government from telling schools what and how they must teach. Her own department was originally approved on the promise to the American people that it would not interfere with freedom of thought and instruction, and it has repeatedly and systematically broken this faith. It has done so, for example, by telling states what tests and curriculum mandates they are allowed to have, and how they must train and certify teachers, and by funding particular curricula and tests (including the national Common Core tests).

Americans don’t want the feds doing this, and central planning education only deforms the American character and intellect because centralization always increases costs and reduces quality, as well as eviscerates self-government.

The Results of This Order Can Inform Needed Legislation


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http://thefederalist.com/2017/05/03/how-betsy-devos-can-make-trumps-executive-order-fix-ronald-reagans-education-failure/
No government in the 12,000 years of modern mankind history has led its people into anything but the history books with a simple lesson, don't let this happen to you.