Question & Thought for April 30th, 2016!
These student loans are probably one of the only things that the government shouldn’t make money from, and yet it does. And do you think this has anything to do with why schools continue to raise their tuition every year? Those loans should be viewed as an investment in America’s future.”
For two decades I’ve been urging politicians to open the schoolhouse doors and let parents decide which schools are best for their children. Professional educators look to claim that doing so would be the end of good public schools. Better charter or magnet schools would drain the top kids out of that system, or hurt the morale of those left behind. Suddenly, the excellence that comes from competition is being criticized. ” (Donald Trump)
Non-cognitive skills: “I believe it is time we get back to teaching discipline, self-control, patience, punctuality. The biggest complaint that I hear from employers is that young people who show up for jobs don’t have those habits. They don’t get there on time. They don’t know how to conduct themselves appropriately.”
Teacher pay: “Not only don’t we pay teachers what they deserve to be paid, in other countries that have better test scores than ours–you hear about that all the time–actually teachers get paid much more on an even standard with professionals who are engineers and in other walks of life. We have to face the fact that we have a lot of people who come out of school burdened with student loans and decide they can’t go into teaching, so we lose a lot of good young people.”
Public education: “The public school system has been, I believe, second to the Constitution, the most important institution in making America the great country that we have been over the last 200 plus years.”
Issue soup: “Let’s put money into what we know does work, like smaller class sizes, higher teacher pay, and better curriculum. Let’s use interventions that work. That means extended learning time, it means summer school, it means stronger parental involvement from the very beginning of a child’s schooling.”” (Hillary R. Clinton)