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originally posted in:Secular Sevens
Edited by Le Dustin xLil D: 12/29/2013 1:36:57 AM
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Centralizing education: good or bad?

Positive change to failing education systems

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Negative change to failing education systems

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NOTE: failing education systems = American education system [u]What is centralized education?[/u] Centralized education is a reformation that would take the funding and organization of schools out of the power of cities and towns and into the power of states. [u]What does it accomplish?[/u] It attempts to accomplish many things. One being the movement to stop the notion that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Most decentralized education fails because rich children live in rich towns and poor children live in poor towns and cities. This means that when parents pay taxes, poor children get stuck in poor schools and rich children get stuck in rich schools. This is inequality at its most dangerous level, because education is the most important mean of alleviating poverty. These kinds of schools also champion stronger education funding in general. So rich students also benefit by going to schools like this. [u]What is the opposition?[/u] Funding, of course. But education investments goes directly back into the economy. So yeah, you have to pay upfront, but you make your money back and more. No business man would pass up easy money making opportunities like this (money making opportunities in terms of economic growth, not scamming college students with loans). The difficulty in all of this is the fact that this generally stays as reformation movement only within states (logistically, students cannot travel hundreds of miles to school each day). Since it isn't a national movement, it makes it hard to get public support. But in the states that have implemented these kinds of reformations, there been huge payoffs and successes. Basically, do you think this reformation would good if it were implemented all over the America?
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  • The educational system isn't failing due to lack of funding. [url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/25/oecd-education-report_n_3496875.html]The United States spends more than other developed nations on its students' education each year, with parents and private foundations picking up more of the costs than in the past, an international survey released Tuesday found. Despite the spending, U.S. students still trail their rivals on international tests.[/url] The system is failing because of multiple causes. Not the least of which is the fact that the motivation of many educators and their students is sub-par. Focus on the self-image and confidence of the student has taken priority over performance. An "everyone passes" or "no one fails" mentality encourages and rewards mediocrity and discourages effort and excellence. High-schools have become a farm-league for college athletics which are then a farm-league for professional athletics. Parents also deserve some blame and responsibility. If they are not involved in the education or assignments of their children, then they are neglecting their role by assuming that "someone else is supposed to do that". While a standardized curriculum is fine, a federally funded and run program would be a terrible idea. Washington has a TERRIBLE track record of not tracking its money, overspending, and not caring about any outcomes or results. Healthcare.gov anyone?

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