Darrell Allison: Education to change

Posted: January 27, 2014 at 2:43 pm


without comments

As I travel around the state, I am sometimes asked by well-meaning skeptics: Instead of providing additional options to students, why not build it within our existing traditional public school system? I understand. For the defenders of traditional public schools, terms like public charter schools and private schools make them cringe. And, while there is a small minority of people that believe that public schools are inadequate and not worth investing in, I am not one of them.

My position on public education reform was best described in the award-winning 2011 documentary, Waiting for Superman. When studying the quality of public education compared to yesteryear, researchers found that high-performing schools had become low-performing and that the low academic scores may have little to do with the state of the actual school in question. In fact, the real issue may have more to do with the major decline and devastation in the communities that surrounds the school.

I am a product of public schools from a small North Carolina textile town. Today, where the textile mill smoke stacks once stood, they have been replaced by bright, biotech research buildings.

Consider this: When I attended public schools 23 years ago, 70 percent of the African-American households were two-parent households. Today, more than 70 percent of the African-American households are one-parent. And while I would in no way imply that our single mothers are somehow inadequate, Im appalled by the fact that they had no choice in the matter.

It is tough statistics like these that lead me to ask: Given the plight of our families, communities and the changing global economy, why should we expect our traditional public schools to face these challenges alone? Now more than ever, we must be open to change.

Change is constant. All of us must adapt. And our public educational system is no different.

When just more than 24 percent of children from low-income communities meet grade standards in Pitt County, it is clear that these parents deserve greater options for their children. When you add these countywide numbers to statewide figures, the number of children that are unable to perform is jaw dropping. According to the State Department of Public Instruction, 70 percent of low-income North Carolina students failed to demonstrate proficiency of their subject thats seven out of 10 students.

Our K-12 public education system should look to our forward-thinking leaders at our North Carolina college and university level. In a state recognized for its strong educational prowess, our schools of higher-learning house choice schools on their campuses. In recognition of the global economy, our universities have discussed the idea of starting campuses in China. If change is good enough for our world-class institutions, why such furor opposing parent options at the K-12 public education system the same system that produces 30 percent proficiency for poor students?

The divisions among adults within our traditional public schools, public charter schools and private schools must end. Its about the kids.

New York Times best-selling author, Eckhart Tolle, once said, Some changes look negative on the surface, but you will soon realize that that makes space for something new to emerge. The something new to emerge will not happen solely within our traditional public schools, public charter schools nor in the Opportunity Scholarship program, where poor children can attend private schools.

Read more:
Darrell Allison: Education to change

Related Posts

Written by simmons |

January 27th, 2014 at 2:43 pm

Posted in Eckhart Tolle




matomo tracker