Education needs action, not debate

Published 11:05 pm Saturday, March 7, 2009

It is amazing the disparity between argument and problem solving when the subject of public education arises.

It almost seems two sides are playing a tug of war with students and teachers in the middle.

Students are often left stranded as the grappling over how to improve the situation and how to save face continues.

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Opponents of tracking and proponents of programs like First Choice are somehow pitted against one another while our two most important assets are left to figure things out for themselves — educators and pupils.

The government can’t fully solve problems in education because they can’t get into homes.

First Choice is a valuable program because it essentially forces students to rise to a certain level, which is what good education is about. But such a program is akin to a bailout of education system, sans the billions of dollars.

Parents should not wait for educators to challenge their children. They can take small steps — weekly trips to the library, encouraging reading at a young age and involvement with schoolwork.

These things do more for a child’s future than any program.