education


Alan Jenkins's picture

Coming Clean on the Stimulus

A report issued by the White House and the Education Department on Monday showed that the federal economic stimulus package (the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act) has so far created or saved 250,000 education jobs. more »

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Brian Dockstader's picture

Post-Speech: Conservatives, How Stupid Do You Feel Now?

I wrote last week about the absolutely shameful, shocking and appalling attacks from conservatives against President Obama in response to his plans to give students a back to school pep talk about the importance of education. more »

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Brian Dockstader's picture

Taking Pride In Being Ignorant

Well the reviews are already in on Obama's big speech on "the importance of education", and they aren't pretty. The descriptions range from "brainwashing" and "indoctrination of your children" to accusations that Obama's speech shows that he is actually Mao, Hitler, Mussolini, and of course, a terrorist. more »

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Armand Biroonak's picture

Dept. of Ed's 'Race to the Bottom?'

The Obama administration realizes that our education system is lagging, but the recently announced ‘Race to the Top’ initiative may not be the solution. The Department of Education’s ‘Race to the Top’ puts up for grabs almost $5 billion of federal dollars to states that devise innovations and demonstrate improvements in K-12 education. This program is a good start in theory, but the fine print promotes broad, sweeping changes that are cause for concern.

First, to be eligible, states are required to link performance with testing. This is similar to the failed No Child Left Behind policy that focused too much on student assessment, and too little on broader factors and gains, when gauging school quality. For those who forgot, NCLB showed little gains in student progress, with schools forced to teach to the test and tests emphasizing low level skills.

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William Daniels's picture

Can Anyone Read “The Economy” Correctly?

On July 5, 2009 U.S. Vice President Joe Biden said: “We misread how bad the economy was…”. Well that’s exactly what the previous administration did also.

Isn’t it about time we stepped back and took a fresh and comprehensive look at just what it is that is being “read”? more »

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Kari  Fulton

Partner with Kari

Public Relations, Coalition building

Partner with Thomas

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Interests: education, helping, History, Politics, Reading, Science, sociology, thinking, writing
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Eric Lotke's picture

The Obama Budget: A Stick In The Eye For Banks

With all the fuss over Wall Street bailouts and AIG bonuses, one banking breakthrough is going unnoticed. Obama's proposed budget completely eliminates an unnecessary, obsolete bank subsidy: College student loans – where the subsidy goes to the bank, not the student. It’s a stick in the eye of the banking industry, and the banks aren’t taking it lightly. more »

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The Investment Deficit in America: Yesterday’s Achievements, Today’s Problems, Tomorrow’s Solutions

Publication Type:

Report

Source:

Campaign for America's Future (2009)

URL:

http://assets.ourfuture.org/documents/inv-20081117-investment-deficit.pdf

Keywords:

Infrastructure; Investment

Abstract:

America grew up investing in its land and its people. Today, our post-World War II infrastructure is starting to decay, and so is the educational system that helped build our modern middle class. This report comprehensively examines our investment deficit. It documents yesterday’s achievements, today’s problems and tomorrow’s solutions.

Full Text:

RELATED RESOURCES

 

Research Director Eric Lotke discusses the "Investment Deficit" report and the "Real Investment in America" conference.

Read full report >>

America is falling apart. Falling apart, and falling behind.

Previous generations of Americans built interstate highways and transcontinental railroads. Now we sit in traffic.

Americans from an earlier era pioneered universal primary education and chartered great universities on public land. They enacted the G.I. bill to give the greatest generation the access to college that helped build our modern middle class. Nowadays American students toil in overcrowded classrooms with leaky roofs, while the cost of college soars out of reach.

America grew up investing in its land and its people. Historically, we directed roughly 8 percent of our gross domestic product to long-range investments, and the investment paid off. Now we are down below 4 percent. Our post World War II infrastructure is starting to decay, and we aren’t replacing it. We are lamenting the loss of jobs rather than hiring people to renew and rebuild.

Other countries are racing past. China spends 9 percent of its GDP on infrastructure investment and opens a new subway system every year.

From physical infrastructure like roads and bridges to human capital from kindergarten to college, this report comprehensively examines our investment deficit. It documents yesterday’s achievements, today’s problems and tomorrow’s solutions.

As this report is released, America’s economy is in a deep downturn, which is now spreading across the
globe. A major recovery program is essential to lift this economy from what is likely to be the worst
recession since the Great Depression. Direct public investment—in new energy and conservation, in modernizing our infrastructure, in education and training, and research and development—should be the centerpiece of any recovery plan. That is not only necessary to lift the economy in the short run; it is a vital down payment on the sustained public investment that we need to sustain a competitive and decent society in a global
economy.

The needs listed in this report provide a guidepost for both recovery and for long-term, sustainable growth.