Category Archives: Education

North Carolina Allows Illegal Aliens into Community Colleges

Recently the North Carolina Board of Community Colleges voted to allow illegal aliens to enroll in our community colleges.  I strongly agree with this stance.  Independent of your legal status in this country, the more educated our communities are, the better off our communities will be.  Research has shown that as the education level of a group goes up, the impact to the community in which they lives is more and more positive.

Further, I don’t understand why we would choose this one product to draw the line in the sand.  For example, we don’t prevent illegal aliens from buying groceries.  Or gasoline.  Or clothes.  Why would we exclude those folks from the one thing that may actually result in them trying to become legal?  I mean, if a person who is here illegally takes the time, the effort and the cost to go to school, almost certainly that person is going to want to reap the rewards of that education.  That is going to mean obtaining a job with pay commensurate to the education level.  And that, in turn, is going to result in them wanting to obtain legal status.  And THAT is what we want.  We want people who come here, want to study and sacrifice and then go to work in our communities.  And anything that we can do to make that easier, we should be doing.

Good for the North Carolina Board of Community Colleges.

Union Mentality

This from WRAL.com:

Although it is still unclear how many teaching positions could be cut because of the state’s long-awaited budget, educators are just now learning that their salary for the upcoming school year will be the same as last year.

How is that possible?

Priorities and Scare Tactics

Look, it’s simple.  We all do it.  There are times in every good household when something unexpected comes up.  Or, in times of over spending, perhaps it shouldn’t be unexpected, but, you get the point.  You look in the checkbook and look at the bills and confirm that it isn’t going to add up.  You are going to have to reduce spending or get another job.  It happens to all of us.  Happens to me.  Will happen to me again.  And this is healthy; it forces us to keep what is important to us and shed what isn’t.

For example, as I monitor my “play money” fund and see that it’s going to be bankrupt in 3 months I am forced to review what I am paying for in terms of “play”.  I see that I have 3 magazine subscriptions and 5 on line subscriptions.  Further, I am spending 90 bucks a month on aikido and so on and so on.  Given that I have to shave off $50 a month, I go through what everybody goes through.  I itemize my “play money” expenditures, rank them in order of value and cut the ones that are of LEAST VALUE!  Notice I say value, not dollar expenditure.  See, I really appreciate my aikido and am willing to keep that program intact even though it has a higher dollar value than say, Forbes.  Sadly, Forbes is a redundant source and it gets wacked.

What I don’t do is this:

Democrats generally agree that tax increases are needed to avoid what they say would be devastating cuts to education and social services for children and the state’s poor.

See, to me, that’s disingenuous.  Who DOESN’T want to avoid cutting these programs?  There’s not a person in the world that wants to cut education and social services.  First.  It has to be at the top, or close to it, of every single politicians value list.  Or should be.  And that’s what makes me mad about Liberals.  They want and take the easy way out every time.

  • When forced to cut, they won’t.
  • When asked to prioritize, they won’t.
  • When required to do what all adults do-they balk.

Now, this doesn’t mean that Education won’t have to cut back some.  It doesn’t mean that schools have a green light to spend spend spend.  But what it does say is that there HAVE to be places where we can cut before we have to implement “devastating cuts to education and social services”.

Sheesh.

How to Get More of a Thing

I have posted a in the last week about getting less of a thing here and here.  I posit that when something becomes more expensive you get less of it.  As that same thing becomes less expensive, you get more of it.  For example, when you tax jobs, you get less jobs.  When you reduce the price of beer, you sell more beer.

Real life example is here.

MAIDE — Dirt could start moving as soon as August on a new $1 billion facility Apple is planning to build in Maiden, officials said Monday.

Catawba County commissioners and the Maiden Town Council approved incentives at a Monday evening meeting for the project, which is expected to create roughly 50 jobs 60 miles northwest of Charlotte.

The local incentives approved Monday are on top of changes to North Carolina law intended to attract the technology company. In June, Gov. Bev Perdue announced the expansion just hours after signing legislation that will cut the California-based computer company’s tax bill in this state by about $46 million over a decade. Apple must agree to invest $1 billion over nine years in land, property and equipment to qualify for the benefit.

See how easy this is?  When you reduce thhe cost of doing business, you do more business.  Funny that.  Truth and Facts!

Teacher’s Unions

I know that we don’t have teacher’s unions in Carolina, but still, the negative effects are everywhere.

Today, the N&O reported on the idea of merit pay for teachers.  In this case, the merit pay seemed to be limited to the type of school a teacher taught at; not how well that teacher did.  But still,  it’s a start.

I started my working career as a teacher, it was the first job I had after college.  Further, that first year was also a “negotiation” year for the “EA” and the school.  I remember the feeling when I saw the results of my elected representation:

No raises for teachers going from 0-1, 1-2 or 2-3 years of experience.  However, raises for everyone else.

I knew then that the whole “working for a union thang” wasn’t for me.  I left as soon as the year was up.

What I don’t understand is how so many people, with a straight face, claim that paying more money to a better performer is bad. Ffor anything.  Really.  Never ever understood that.  Ya know, while I think that the salaries we pay athletes is gross, at least we have the right incentives in place.

  1. We agree on a specific number of years in the contract.
  2. I will pay you according to the market.
  3. When you are no longer able to perform, you are no longer able to be employed.

Why would it be any different for teachers?  Why, WHY, do we want to protect low performing teachers?

I just don’t get it.

Wake GOP Has This One Wrong

For a long time now, the left has cornered the market on Education issues in our politics.  They have dominated this perception and have won that marketing strategy.  For example, when asked which party supports education, most North Carolinian’s will reply that it’s the Democrats.  The irony of this is, of course, bitter.  It is the conservative family that stresses discipline, delayed gratification and higher education.  Many of the traditional democratic base does not take full advantage of the education system in our country.  So, how is it that the democrats have won the day on this issue?  It’s because the Teacher’s Unions support the liberal cause.  And when you have the teachers supporting the democrats, you end up having the perception that the Democrats support Education.  Simple.

And deadly.

We have to do a better job on this issue; there are very few things more fundamental to the success of a society than the education of it’s citizenry.  The higher the educational base is, the more wealthy that nation is, the better the economy and the better the innovation.  Quite simply, education is the engine that drives a nations out of the grinding poverty of third world status into the ranks of modern nations.  And for the elite programs, it is what drives modern nations into Super Powers.

Education is key; we have to take that issue back.  And that is why this saddens me.

Today, the Wake County GOP issued a statement saying, in short, “We disagree with the Year Round calendar.  Parents, take your child out of school for a day to protest.”

Even if I agreed with the concept that Year Round calendars are bad, which I don’t, THIS is NOT the way to handle that conflict.  Grown adults sit down, reason and come to valid conclusions.  They do not, repeat do NOT use children in a game of chicken.

This is just one more reason why the GOP is finding itself struggling.

Wake County Schools

So, North Carolina has two very large school districts.  The way it works in Carolina, see, is that our schools districts are made up along the county lines; not by the cities.  This forces allows districts to be very very large.  For example, Raleigh is about the 48th largest city in the nation, and yet Wake County Public School  [WCPSS] is one of the top 10 in terms of student population.

The other thing that makes WCPSS unique is that it is one of the nation’s leading districts in how it is handling it’s student assignment.  Unlike many, if not most, districts across the country, WCPSS assigns students by financial status.  In this case, the district is using F&R [free and reduced lunches] as a proxy for income.  As a result, the policy that has been in place for a number of years is that the district planners are trying to keep all schools at no more than 40% F&R population.

The idea, according to district officials, is that as the ratio of low income students at a specific school increases, achievement decreases;for all students.   Therefore,  assignment by income, taccdording to the theory, increases achievement for all students as well as minimizing the chance that a school degenerates into an inner city horror show so prevalent among many of the nation’s districts.

Anyway, I was reading this weekend.  One story chronicled the difference in the assignment approach in Raleigh and Charlotte.  The other describes one local Charlotte school that has changed dramatically since that district abandoned busing in favor of local or neighborhood schools.

I am a big believer in education.  I firmly believe that the higher the education of the individual, the higher the income, the lower rate of incarceration and in general, the higher return to society.  Further, I am a strong supporter of public education.  While I typically am not in favor of entitlement programs, I find that educating our youth is not only helping them, but, from a national perspective, investing in ourselves.  Unlike perpetual welfare or the minimum wage, I find that our society is actually improved by providing public education to all children.

However, in time, I do come back to my data driven roots.  And in this case, I am finding that the studies showing the increase achievement not only to be sound, but compelling.  I do not claim that a poor child sitting next to a rich child will help both of them learn.  But what I am saying is this.  Schools in affluent neighborhoods are going to have parents that are involved in the school.  They are going to volunteer.  They are going to donate to the PTA.  They are going to make sure that the computer lab has, you know, computers.  Further, these parents are not going to accept that when there is violence in the halls, nothing be done.  They will demand action, and, because they have a demonstrable successful trajectory in life, they will get that action.  In short, the schools will be safer, cleaner and better equipped.  The exact thing, by the way, that will bring in the best teachers, or at least not have them running for the doors.

Folks on the other side, well, they see it another way.  They claim that busing takes away from the neighborhood feel.  They claim that busing takes away time for a child to study.  They claim that they moved into a certain neighborhood to go to a certain school.  In some ways, I empathize.  In most, I don’t.  My take, is that when data and studies show that a particular method works, and integration of economic societies helps, you go with the data.  Every time.

Just look again at that Charlotte school.  Its only been 7-8 years and the schools has fell back to old times and ways.  Sure the Charlotte district will say that they are keeping up with Wake, but, I don’t think they are.  The schools themselves certainly are not.  And, as older sentimental teachers retire or just give up, the scores will show it too….

Promises

So, the good Gov’na has made many many promises over the course of her campaign.  And, according to reports, those promises have been removed from her website.  This seems to be a popular politician’s trick as we have seen the same shenanigans over at Obama’s website.  I’ll comment on each in the coming days and then we’ll follow up on the Govna’s progress from time to time.
Thanks to the Raleigh News and Observer who was able to capture those promises and then publish them in today’s edition.  They are:
EDUCATION

  • Expand and better coordinate the Smart Start and More-at-Four pre-kindergarten programs.
  • Build a volunteer corps to tutor students in math and reading.
  • Require all troubled high schools to comply with research-backed restructuring.
  • Ensure that high schools across the state are equipped to offer online college-level coursework.
  • Establish the “College Promise” program to guarantee free or affordable college for students who graduate from high school, stay out of trouble and perform community service. The program would expand a state scholarship program known as EARN and increase the scholarships from two years to four.
  • Waive tuition to all students who graduate from high school and then enter a community college full time.

ARTS

  • Support sustainable resources for community arts councils and organizations. Help them get support from the private sector.
  • Protect and develop cultural heritage sites.
  • Support arts education and expand arts programs in public schools.

WATER

  • Assist local governments with moving toward a tiered water billing system that would charge a higher rate to customers who use the most water.
  • Help small cities and towns install better meters, build connections between regional water systems and repair leaking pipes.
  • Establish water conservation standards for all new homes, businesses and state government buildings.
  • Adopt tax incentives for business to improve water conservation standards in existing buildings.

CRIME

  • Give law enforcement agencies equipment they need and fix funding gaps for high-crime communities.
  • Boost the number of district attorneys, judges, magistrates and clerks. Increase pay for those positions.
  • Toughen anti-gang laws, and attack gangs as organized-crime organizations.
  • Enact harsher penalties for crimes involving guns and drugs.
  • Give more money to law enforcement agencies participating in a federal program that allows local agencies to pursue immigration charges against illegal aliens.
  • Make sure sentences for violent criminals are strong and long.

ECONOMY

  • Dramatically expand and transform a state program that helps small towns and cities preserve and revitalize downtowns. Allow cities and towns to choose which economic development ideas best fit their needs.
  • Support an $18 million tax reform plan to exempt small businesses from the first $15,000 of their income.
  • Expand to $10 million a year a state fund that provides matching grants to start-up companies that win certain research or technology grants.
  • Make the state a leader in biofuels, solar energy and other green technology industries.
  • Increase the state’s investment in an N.C. State University partnership that fosters manufacturing businesses.

HEALTH

  • Provide health insurance coverage for all North Carolina children by giving more money to N.C. Kids Care to expand who is covered. Create a system for families to buy insurance for uninsured or uninsurable children. Expand public outreach to ensure that all children who are eligible are enrolled in Medicaid and Health Choice.
  • Encourage businesses to offer employees affordable health insurance through tax incentives. Establish an affordable small business-coverage policy that would be funded equally by the employer, the employee and the state.
  • Support stem cell research using adult, cord blood or embryonic sources. The N.C. Biotechnology Center will oversee and manage the awarding of stem cell research grants.
  • Every person served by the mental health system should have strong, effective case management.
  • Establish “mental health courts” to link at-risk and minor offenders with mental illnesses to get them treatment before they spiral into a life of crime.
  • Punish swiftly and fully those who abuse or neglect mental health patients.

GOVERNMENT REFORM

  • Make government transparent: “I’m going to open the windows wide on the state capitol, and we’re going to let the sunshine in.”
  • Create a Google-type search engine for scrutinizing all state contracts.
  • Establish an independent budget-reform panel whose recommendations must be voted up or down by the legislature without amendment.
  • Tighten controls to stop officials leaving state service from immediately going to work for businesses they were working with in their state jobs.
  • Prohibit legislators from asking lobbyists to contribute to charities.
  • Make unannounced, on-site inspections of state agencies. Meet with employees without managers present.
  • Work in Charlotte three or four days each month.
  • Change state policy to require that all e-mail messages be kept until the state develops a plan for long-term retention.

ACCESSIBILITY

  • Field questions from the news media every week.
  • Share her public schedules and prohibit staff from deleting e-mail messages.
  • Hold at least four live town hall meetings during her 4-year term. Hold an online town hall meeting once a month.

TRANSPORTATION

  • Strip most specific road-building decisions from the Board of Transportation. Convert the panel into an advisory board of directors.
  • Road building and other transportation decisions will be based on data and need.

ENERGY

  • Rely on scientific and environmental information to determine whether to allow oil drilling off the state’s coastline. North Carolina should share in the profits of any oil discovered.

Governor Purdue: How Shall Ye Deliver

In Saturday’s edition of the News and Observer, we saw this article. The article lists the top nine challenges our first female governor is going to face.  After blinking and taking another sip of Saturday morning coffee I confirmed that it was a top nine list.  Top nine?  Nine?  Shaking my head I plowed into those challenges.

The introduction was fair enough.  The facts were laid out with enough detachment that I couldn’t say that anyone was rooting for or rooting against anyone else.  However, we couldn’t get out of that intro without the obligatory “this is as bad an economy we have seen since the Great Depression”.  I hate that.  I mean really REALLY hate that type of scare mongering.  I hold that this type of hype, this irresponsible posturing that has caused much of America’s fear.  And to make it worse,  we are seeing it on both sides of the aisle.  Truly a bi-partisan effort to freak us all out.

Okay, so,’nough said about the preamble, lets get to the main course.

1).  The Budget – Not surprisingly, this is first on list; and it should be.  And I wanna see how she is going to handle this.  ith a shortfall estimate of 3 billion, she is going to have a challenge.  To her credit, she seems to want to resist raising taxes.  In fact she acknowledged that a tax increase might be a bad idea:

I don’t believe that you can raise taxes in an economy with folks struggling the way they are.

Now, I would have liked to hear a little bit more about why she feels that way; right now it has the tone of a campaign promise.  But she follows this up with a nod to education and a pretty honest assessment of where we are:

My goal would be to hold the classroom and teachers and kids as harmless as possible. After that, you have to be a realist and do what you have to do to make the budget balanced.

2).  Dropout Rate – This is where Democrats always stumble.  They correctly and consistently have education near the top of their priority lists, and that is exactly where we should have it.  However, liberals are always always always wrong [and predictable] when it comes to how to actually do something here.  Their only answer is to spend more.  And then, spend more to study why spending more isn’t working.  To me the answer is pretty straight forward.  The problem for Purdue and her party; they are indebted to the very folks that they can not afford to alienate; teachers and the whole “Educational Establishment”.  Until teachers and Principals can be subjected to otherwise normal competition based advancement, we will be stuck with subpar education.

3)  Green Economy – So, really, this is whatcha got?  I mean, the economy is so freakin obvious, and then education is so freakin Democrat that really, this is the first of the rest, and this is pathetic.  Now, I will only give Green Jobs credit here in our State because The Chairman is promising to spend like a billion 150 billion dollars on Green Jobs.  So, when it comes to “free” money, the prudent thing to do is take.  Otherwise, the concept of Green makes me wanna lose my belly.  Don’t get me wrong, one day oil is gonna run out.  And, if we can stretch the oil we do have even further by investing in alternative energy or by increasing efficiency of that oil–I am ALL for it.  Just don’t pull this bullshit about Global Warming.  </rant>

4)  Mental Health System – This one befuddles me.  I have zero insight into the mental health system, much less how or why it’s broken.  My only take – the more we rely on government health care to provide health care, the less health care we will actually get.  Serious, think about it.  When was the last time “Government” provided any sort of innovation?  Never!  The only thing that can happen when we try and have government run anything is attempted cost containment, corruption, buracracy and failure.

5)  Obesity – Another health issue.  And again, the alarms are sounding.  I am not sure what the answer is to this one, but I am pretty sure that it has nothing to do with government.  For a peek into what that might loook like, check this scenario out.  [H/T Carpie Diem].   The only thing that prevents me from totally bashing this is the fact the article refers to children.  I maintain that kids are not subject to the normal rules I have for society as a whole.  In other words, if an adult wants to eat themselves into oblivion, that HAS to be their choice-and their issue.  But kids, yeah, we may be better served to develop a solution to this one.  I suspect that libs wouldn’t be too keen on my thoughts though:  Put ’em to work!

6)  Open Government – This is a throw away.  She deserves one, but come on–number 6?  Serious?

7)  Probation – I honestly think this has to go to the real number #1 slot.  In other words, it should be ahead of Global Warming Green Jobs.  Really.  This one is so UP THERE that almost nothing else is as important.  We have criminals who are out on probation not once meeting their probation officer.  We have folks committing crimes and not being followed up on.  Guys are falling through the cracks all over the place.  Really, this HAS to be higher than 7.

8)  Campaign Reform – Only thing I can say.  Endowment fund.

I can raise enough money for both the Republican and Democratic candidates in 2012.

This should be fun to watch.

9)  Transportation – Again, I think this one rates a bit higher than it’s being listed.  We’re so far behind in road works and the money to fund them.  It may be time to at least consider privatising our roads.

Let’s see how the Gov’na does in the next 4 years.