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Originally Processed With FOIA(s): FOIA Number: S FOIA MARKER This is not a textual record. This is used as an administrative marker by the George Bush Presidential Library Staff. Record Group/Collection: George H.W. Bush Presidential Records Collection/Office of Origin: Speechwriting, White House Office of Series: Davis, Mark, Files Subseries: Subject File, 1989-1991 OA/ID Number: 13869 Folder ID Number: 13869-015 Folder Title: Education Summit-Charlottesville, Virginia-Part II, 9/28/89 [2] Stack: Row: Section: Shelf: Position: G 19 2 6 2 States BULK RATE nent Postage and Fees Paid Office U.S. Government Printing Office PERMIT G-26 Weekly Compilation of IDENT NTS Presidential D.C. 20402 Documents ISINESS rivate use, $300 Monday, March 30, 1987 Volume 23-Number 12 Pages 289-316 WRITE HOUSEND RESEARCH LIBRARY CENTER Mar. 26 / Administration of Ronald Reagan, 1987 Administration of Ronald Reagan, 1987 / Mar. 26 [Laughter] But I was walking on down the street all by myself-the band had turned deeper and found out it was the language problem. nor Sununu, Secretary Bennett, distin- their own dreams and determination. The the corner. [Laughter] But I have to say-and I think that the guished guests, before I begin my remarks, key here is lower tax rates and fewer need- Well, again, I know that I'm supposed to Federal Government has a part that is let me say a word of thanks to our hosts, move on. We've got this great conference Principal Kenneth Clark and the staff, the less regulations, and we've made great that's waiting, and I think we've been played in this, and not a good part-that we faculty, and students of Hickman High progress in both those areas. But the job behind schedule for quite some time. have come to the point where we're talking School. won't be done until we get control of Fed- Students. Awwww! about teaching both languages and teaching This school, Hickman High, is a special eral spending, so that tax rates won't go up students in their native language, instead of school with a long and proud tradition. The again. That's why it's time for Congress to The President. I feel that way, too. [Laughter] what the move should be if they're going to one thing I'm told-and I'm sure it's true- cut the Federal budget and leave the family be in America: They have to learn our lan- budget alone. Q. I have a present for you. Mr. Presi- it's the only school in America that has as its dent, on behalf of Hickman High School, guage in order to get along. And I will do team name the "Kewpies." With a name The challenge of preparing for the 21st we'd like to make you an honorary Kewpie, anything that I can to help to get rid of any like "Kewpies," you've got to be good, and century also includes working to build a which is our school mascot, and present you Federal interference that is trying to force Hickman is. [Laughter] fair, open, and expanding world economy. with this sweatshirt. local school districts to continue teaching As you can see just by looking at the This is where the jobs and prosperity of our students in their native tongue. Their job is future will come from. The President. Well, thank you. I'll tell trophy cases in the halls, over the years to teach them English. you another bad thing about my youth, too. Hickman High has been an all-round cham- And finally, it includes making sure our When I was playing football, the cheerlead- And could I just say one last thing? I'm pion in basketball, swimming, tennis, and young people are ready for the jobs of the ers were boys. [Laughter] taking too much time here. In East Los football, as well as in areas like debate, dra- 21st century, making sure they're ready to Angeles I met with a group of parents, His- matic speaking, music, and mathematics. lead a strong America in a strong and grow- Note: The President spoke at 1:41 p.m. in panic parents. And I asked them-a group And Hickman has excelled in one area that ing world economy. In short, making sure the school auditorium. of mothers—I said, well, why couldn't you I, in particular, know something about. that American education is the best in the take turns volunteering to sit in the class Every year 141 students from throughout world. Yes, it's a challenge for every Ameri- where there's a high percentage of these the Nation are named Presidential Scholars. can, the challenge of preparing America for students, and if the teacher is confused, not This program began in 1964, and since then the next century. aware that it's the language problem, you Hickman High has been home to six win- And that reminds me of a story. When Columbia, Missouri who speak both languages now, you could ners, putting it at the top 5 percent of all interject and find out if that is the problem the schools in the Nation. And you can see you get to be my age, everything reminds you of a story. [Laughter] This is the story Remarks During the Opening of the with this student's lack of understanding. why Hickman received the Department of And they told me that there were regula- Education's Secondary School Recognition of the old fella who picked up some creek National Governors' Association- Department of Education Conference. Award. Hickman High is one of the best. land, some bottom land and along the tions that prevented them from being able Now, I'd better stop, or they'll make me an creek. And it was rocky, and it was covered March 26, 1987 to sit in a classroom and do that, because honorary "Kewpie." [Laughter] with brush. And he started in hauling the they didn't have certificates to do such a rocks away and cleaning out the brush and Bill, could I interject a comment here, thing. When we talk about what works in edu- then harrowing and fertilizing and planting. because you've talked about something Well, I think it's time we started looking cation, we're really talking about preparing And he had a truly great garden spot there. that's very dear to my heart. I think, back at the regulations and getting back to the for America's future. Last month I said that And one day, one Sunday morning after in California when I was Governor, that we it was time to begin a great American dis- main subject, which is, yes, let's get every- church, he said to the minister, when the were sort of in the forefront with regard to body to talk in our language. cussion about our future and how to pre- service was over, he'd kind of like to have bilingual education. But my belief in the pare America for the world of the year him come out. He'd like to have him see definition of that was it meant that-faced Note: The President spoke at 2:20 p.m. in 2000 and beyond. What kind of country will what he'd been doing. Well, the minister as we are there, particularly with the His- the auditorium of Hickman High School. we pass on to our children? came out on a Sunday afternoon, and he panic group and language talked at home In his opening remarks, the President re- That challenge, preparing America for took him down there and showed him this. and not at school-that we were to provide, ferred to Secretary of Education William J. the 21st century, is as great an adventure as Well, the minister was impressed. He said, if we could, teachers adept in both lan- Bennett. the one that faced settlers who, more than "I've never seen such melons. God has truly guages, so that if a student was not getting a century-and-a-half ago, started a town blessed this land." And he said, "Look at what he should get, they could find out along the Flat Branch that they called Co- this corn; how high it is." He said, "The whether it was a language difficulty or not. Columbia, Missouri lumbia. It includes being sure that we make Lord-well, the Lord has been good." And And I met one young man who had grad- the best use of our science and technology, he went on in that vein, and the old boy uated there in East Los Angeles from high Remarks at the National Governors' so that when we're first to invent some- was getting more and more nettled about school top in his class. He had spent several Association-Department of Education thing, we're also first to bring it to market. this. And finally he interrupted, and he said, years in a class for the mentally retarded Conference. March 26, 1987 It includes improving the climate for entre- "Preacher, I wish you could have seen this because teachers had just decided that was preneurship and growth, so that the young place when the Lord was doing it by him- what was wrong. And then along came- Governor Ashcroft and Governor Ban- people here in Columbia and around our self." [Laughter] God bless her-a teacher who went a little gerter and Governor Campbell and Gover- nation can live in a world where the only limits on what they achieve are the limits of This conference today is just one sign that in the area of education America is no 304 305 Mar. 26. Administration of Ronald Reagan, 1987 Administration of Ronald Reagan, 1987 / Mar. 26 longer just waiting for things to happen. sacred national heritage. You need orderly We've come a long way from where we people today we've ever had. I have a gether with many other States, has given schools that assign homework. You need were 4 years ago, when our National Com- hunch they want more attention given by teachers raises. Utah also has begun a schools with strong principals who have a mission on Excellence: in Education issued schools to ethical standards, not less. After career ladder program, as we were told, sense of mission. You need committed its report card on American schools called all, in an area related to values, drugs, teachers who lead students to do their best and has pioneered the use of computer and "A Nation at Risk." The Commission found they've been miles ahead of most adults. and keep regular tabs on progress. You satellite technology in teaching. that high school students were scoring With many adults saying that taking drugs need schools that teach a sense of right and And States and school districts are experi- lower on achievement tests than at any was a matter of doing your own thing, wrong. And you need parents and commu- menting, which is why we came here today: point in the past 25 years-that's 13 per- young people were telling us that drug nities that care. to hear about experiments in the 16 dis- cent of all 17-year-olds were functionally il- abuse was the most serious problem facing literate-and the American students ranked Basic skills, standards, discipline, work, their schools. A while back, a student in tricts in the 8 States that are part of the last among industrial nations on 7 of 19 aca- family support, ethical principles-this is California asked Nancy what to do when National Governors' Association program demic tests. "A Nation at Risk" galvanized a the new American consensus on the secret drugs were offered, and she answered, "Just for improving the quality of education. citizens' movement for educational reform. to quality education. And forgive me for say no." Today there are more than 12,000 Here in Columbia, one test involves getting Just Say No clubs across the country, and parents involved in early education of their This movement has gone ahead at every saying so, but the only surprise here is that level, from local communities to statehouses it's new. Plato would have recognized such there's one here at Hickman High. So, I preschool children. Oak Ridge, Tennessee, to the Federal Government. And the Gov- "secrets," so would Confucious, Matthew believe young people do want to hear about is working to broaden the professional expe- ernors have been out in front in every State Arnold, and Benjamin Franklin. values and standards of right and wrong, rience of both teachers and administrators. in trying to make the improvements that And yet these so-called secrets were new and they want to hear about them from And in the White Mountains Regional Dis- in most places, but not in Columbia. Last adults. trict of New Hampshire, they're using com- must be made. Our Governors have been among the most important leaders in this, week members of my staff came out here Some adults ask: Well, what values would puters to analyze student progress as well as including those Governors who are here for a day. Columbia has a remarkable you teach? Well, how about the Judeo- the strengths and weaknesses of curricula today. number of outstanding schools. Again and Christian ethic? It's as simple as the Ten and textbooks. This conference and the Governors' again, I found out my staff was asking prin- Commandments and as enduring as the Well, let me say a little bit about what report, "Time for Results," grew out of that cipals and administrators: "Why? What's Scriptures. And here are some samples: we're doing in Washington. We've proposed movement, a movement that has produced made the schools here different over the "Love thy neighbor as thyself." "Honor thy restructing some of our programs to give a broad consensus on what needs to be years?" And one frequent answer was that father and thy mother." And, yes, "Thou States and schools more flexibility and to done. And part of that consensus has been Columbia never accepted the so-called re- shalt not steal." make the programs more effective. But we that more money is not the key to higher forms of the sixties and seventies. This I've dwelt on values for a reason. Part of know that 93 percent of the money for edu- quality. The sixties and seventies were dec- system stuck to basics and kept high aca- it is that standards of right and wrong are cation comes from States and cities. The ades of rising spending but falling SAT demic standards when others were turning essential to any life that is lived well and Federal Government provides less than 7 scores. And then it turned out that a to fads like minicourses, grade inflation, and should be a part of education. It's just this percent. So, the most important thing it can number of States-for example, New Hamp- abolishing basic requirements. And one of simple: Students with strong values do well do is help the teachers, administrators, and shire-spent only modestly on education, the worst of those so-called reforms was in school. But also, a school is a community, parents. Reports like "What Works" and but had among the Nation's most effective value-neutral instruction. and the Judeo-Christian ethic is a prescrip- "Schools Without Drugs" are crucial. Sound schools. Another part of the consensus is Yes, too often in the decades of declining tion for a happy and productive communi- information is crucial. that wealth and status in a community do achievement, we heard school officials say ty, city, State, or Nation. Getting back to Education suffered when the Federal not guarantee good schools or their absence that teaching right and wrong was none of values is part of getting back to basics. It's means schools will be bad. Inner city their business. A story about this appeared part of preparing our country for the 21st Government tried to give to much direc- schools in poor neighborhoods, like those in century. And it's basic to what every school tion to local schools. Yes, the Federal Gov- in the newspapers some time ago. A guid- should do for every child in every classroom ernment tried to buy much to much for its East Harlem District 4 in New York City ance counselor asked a class what they in America. less than 7 percent of funding. Some seem and Charles Rice Elementary in Dallas, should do if they found a purse with $1000 Since "A Nation at Risk" came out 4 to think that education is best directed by stand among America's best. in it. Well, the class decided that returning The secret to educational quality is not in years ago, Governors, as I said, have been administrators in Washington. Well, I say it with the money would be neither right the pocketbook; it's in the heart. It's in the leaders in the return to the fundamentals of the American people know better than nor wrong; it would be just dumb. And what works in education. Many States have anyone in Washington how to fix their own simple dedication of teachers, administra- when they asked the counselor what he tors, parents, and students to the same raised education standards. Almost every schools. thought, he said he wouldn't force his basic, fundamental values that have always State has increased either promotion, high A few themes run through all the many values on them. "If I come from the posi- been the wellspring of success, both in edu- school graduation, or college entrance changes and experiments of the last 4 years, tion of what is right and what is wrong," he standards, or college exit requirements. Sev- and those are the common sense themes of cation and life in our country. You don't told the reporter, "then I'm not their coun- need schools filled with high technology to eral States have increased them all. getting good teachers and good principals, selor." Well, I'm not sure what he thought give children a good education. You need he was. Many States have also worked to improve working with parents, focusing on the schools that set high standards and pay at- the quality of their teachers. Missouri has basics, and measuring the results. And these Now, let me say I don't believe the stu- tention to the basics of reading, math, sci- started a career ladder program and gives themes all add up to the simple goal of dents in that class were typical of America's ence, language, and the meaning of our special scholarships and loans to encourage knowing where America wants education to young people. We have the best young bright students to become teachers and, to- be by the year 2000. 306 307 Mar. 26 / Administration of Ronald Reagan, 1987 Administration of Ronald Reagan, 1987 / Mar. 26 Getting what America wants and needs. even had a few words to say to a sixth (2) the Secretary of Health and Human ties and other matters affecting two or It's like the story of the three fellows who grade civics class. I'm a little better than Services, who shall serve as Vice Chairman; more agencies. went into a restaurant. I wanted to tell you civics than I am on computers. [Laughter] I (3) the Secretary of State; (c) In order to help coordinate the activi- one last story before I finished. [Laughter] haven't learned to use a pocket calculator (4) the Secretary of the Treasury; ties of Executive departments and agencies They were ordering their dinner, and one yet. [Laughter] Wouldn't do any good with (5) the Secretary of Defense; with responsibility for drug law enforce- of them ordered a glass of milk. But he told what Congress is doing. [Laughter] (6) the Secretary of the Interior; ment and drug abuse reduction, and to su- the waitress that he'd been in there the Well, today I've talked about preparing (7) the Secretary of Agriculture; pervise implementation of the determina- week before, ordered a glass of milk, and he America for the 21st century. Well, the kin- (8) the Secretary of Labor; tions of the Board, the Chairman shall: wanted a clean glass this time. Well, the dergarten children I saw today at Fairview (9) the Secretary of Housing and Urban (1) advise the Board in matters concern- other two also decided to order milk. When will graduate from high school in the year Development; ing its responsibilities; the waitress came back with the three glass- 1999. This year's high school graduates will (10) the Secretary of Transportation; (2) make recommendations to the Board es of milk, she said, "Now, which of you spend most of their working lives in the (11) the Secretary of Energy; for the coordination of drug enforcement wanted the clean glass?" [Laughter] 21st century. In the life of a man or a (12) the Secretary of Education; and drug abuse reduction activities; By being clear about what we want and woman, or the life of a nation, the 21st (13) the Director of the Office of Manage- what works, we've stopped the slide in SAT (3) correlate and evaluate intelligence and century's but a short, short time away. If we ment and Budget; scores. They're on the rise again. By 1990 other information to support the activities begin to prepare for it now, it can be the (14) the Assistant to the President for Na- let's reduce by one-quarter the 40 percent of the Board; beginning of America's greatest century, a tional Security Affairs; of 13-year-olds reading below skill level. By (4) act as primary advisor to the President time when Americans scale peaks of oppor- the year 2000 let's have everyone reading (15) the Director of Central Intelligence; and the Congress on national and interna- tunity and achievement that we didn't dare at their skill level. By 1990 let's resolve that (16) the Chief of Staff to the Vice Presi- tional programs and policies and the imple- dream of reaching before. Yes, we can set dent; SAT scores will have made up half the mentation of those policies; and sail on new oceans of challenge and reach ground they've lost, and by the year 2000 (17) the Director of the White House (5) perform such other duties as the Presi- new continents of hope. You are the path- let's have them exceed their 1963 record Drug Abuse Policy Office; and dent may direct. finders. You are the navigators. high, which still stands. And finally, by the (18) such other members as the President So, today let's set our compasses by the (d) The Board shall carry out all duties year 2000 let's raise literacy levels so that may, from time to time, designate. fixed star of basic skills and enduring values, and responsibilities of the National Drug every American can speak, read, and write Sec. 2. Functions. (a) The Board shall fa- and start out the new century together. Enforcement Policy Board, as set forth in English and fully participate in the opportu- cilitate the development and coordination Chapter XIII (The National Narcotics Act) nities of our great country. Thank you, and God bless you. of national drug policy and shall coordinate of Title II of Public Law 98-473. I brought Secretary Bennett along with activities of Executive departments and Note: The President spoke at 2:28 p.m. in (e) Nothing in this Order shall be deemed me today. And, Bill, I'm going to give you a agencies to reduce the supply and use of little homework assignment. In April 1988 the auditorium of Hickman High School. illegal drugs, including international activi- to affect the authorities or responsibilities of it will be 5 years since we issued "A Nation ties, enforcement, prevention and educa- the Office of Management and Budget, or any Office or official thereof. at Risk," and that's when I'd like you to tion, treatment and rehabilitation, and re- issue a new report telling us how far we've search relating to illegal drugs. Sec. 3. Coordinating Groups. The Board (b) In furtherance of its responsibilities, shall establish a Drug Enforcement Coordi- come and what still needs to be done, what reforms have worked, and what principles National Drug Policy Board the Board shall: nating Group and a Drug Abuse Prevention should guide us as we move ahead. We (1) review, evaluate and develop United and Health Coordinating Group. The mem- need milestones on our road to the 21st Executive Order 12590. March 26, 1987 States Government policy, strategy and re- bership and chairman of each Coordinating century, and in education this report will be sources with respect to illegal drug law en- Group shall be designated by the Chairman of the Board. the first. By the authority vested in me as Presi- forcement, prevention and education, treat- You know, earlier today I visited Fairview dent by the Constitution and the laws of ment and rehabilitation, and research ef- Sec. 4. Conforming Amendments. (a) Sec- Elementary School. It's another of the forts, including budgetary priorities and na- tion I of Executive Order No. 12368 is the United States of America, including sec- tional plans and strategies; amended to provide as follows: model schools in this district. I saw what a tions 872, 873, 1111, 1112, 1113, 1114, fine principal, like Fairview's principal Dr. 1202, and 1203 of title 21 of the United (2) facilitate coordination of efforts of all "The Office of Policy Development has James Wells, and a dedicated and talented States Code, and in order to coordinate the Executive departments and agencies to halt been assigned to assist the President and staff can mean to children in the early years performance of all drug abuse policy func- national and international trafficking of ille- the National Drug Policy Board in the per- of learning. I wasn't too surprised that Fair- tions of the Federal government, it is gal drugs and to reduce drug abuse; formance of the drug policy functions con- view is a model school. You see, one of the hereby ordered as follows: (3) coordinate the collection and evalua- tained in Section 201 of Title II of the Drug teachers there and I go way back, and I Section 1. Establishment. (a) There is tion of information necessary to implement Abuse Prevention, Treatment, and Rehabili- know she's great. Miss Joy Underdown hereby established the National Drug Policy United States policy with respect to illegal tation Act, as amended (21 U.S.C. 1111). taught my son Ron when he was in nursery Board ("the Board"). drug law enforcement and to the reduction Within the Office of Policy Development, school and kindergarten a few years ago. (b) The Board shall be composed of the of drug abuse; and the Director of the Drug Abuse Policy You know, it's a few years ago. [Laughter] following members: (4) provide policy guidance to the agen- Office shall be primarily responsible for as- But I saw how the children at Fairview are (1) the Attorney General, who shall serve cies and facilitate resolution of differences sisting the President and the Board in the learning through the use of computers. I as Chairman; in this area concerning interagency activi- performance of those functions." 308 309 09-08-89 Education reform 'running out of steam' a recipe for education," said Phil Dun- Carroll Campbell of South Carolina, co- Chester R. Finn Jr., professor of educa- By Carol Innerst 70P shee, administrative assistant for educa- chairmen of the NGA Task Force on Edu- tion and public policy at Vanderbilt Uni- THE WASHINGTON TIMES tion to Iowa Gov. Terry Branstad, who cation, will hold hearings in Washington versity and a former assistant secretary President Bush's "education summit" became chairman of the National Gover- on Sept. 13 with educators, businessmen of education, thinks that "radical" steps, with 50 governors later this month nors' Association in August. "This will and other advocacy groups, said Rae such as a national curriculum and keep- couldn't come at a better time because provide a start for that discussion, and Bond, NGA spokeswoman. The hearings ing students in school until they have the education reform movement is fiz- additional momentum. It should not be will take place at the Hyatt Regency on mastered set goals, are what summit par- zling, a prominent educator said yester- described as the final solution to the na- Capitol Hill. ticipants need to talk about. day. tion's education problems." "The White House is establishing the A recent Gallup Poll, he said, "signals The governors, many of whom have agenda; we've been offering input," she that the public is ready for much more "The reform movement is running out played leadership roles in the nation's said. radical changes in the basic rules of the of steam we're running out of time," said Ernest L. Boyer, president of the education reform efforts, have spent the Although the agenda has not yet taken system than anybody has yet proposed Carnegie Foundation for the Advance- past couple of weeks scrambling to put shape, the issue of choice in public and is ready for more sweeping changes ment of Teaching and U.S. commissioner together their piece of the agenda for the schools, which Mr. Bush has pushed, is than educators are comfortable with." of education under President Carter. meeting with the president. certain to receive attention. "This summit ought to talk about large Many have called upon the Denver- Mr. Branstad and others also want to issues, what we'd like kids to know and Test results to be released over the based Education Commission of the talk about the roles of the federal and be able to do upon emerging from formal next few months, including the National States to prepare background papers for state governments and how federal reg- schooling," he said. Assessment of Educational Progress, them on the issues they think are likely ulations can be eased so that states and won't give the public anything to be to come up at the summit, said Chris local districts have more flexibility in Reform has "gone about as far as it can happy about, according to another educa- Pipho, director of the ESC Clearing- their use of federal funds for education, go in an ad hoc arrangement," said Mr. tor, who is familiar with the congression- house. Mr. Dunshee said. Boyer, who also urges national goals and ally mandated sampling of what school- Many plan to continue to do their The Heritage Foundation and the Free standards. children have learned. "homework"on education issues right up Congress Foundation, in a joint policy "Governors need a clear sense of how The governors don't expect a final so- to the time they leave their state capitals paper outlining the conservative posi- to work together to start moving to- lution to the nation's educational prob- for the Charlottesville campus. tion, have urged Mr. Bush to "issue an ward clearheaded goals where 16,000 lems to come out of the summit, set for Mr. Branstad will be listening to labor, executive order to free states from cum- school districts can get one act together Sept. 27-28 on the campus of the Univer- businesses and educators, including bersome federal rules that frustrate without destroying local vitality," he said. sity of Virginia at Charlottesville. teachers, the week before the summit, state education innovation, and challenge "The president's genius is that by calling "This should not be viewed as a one- Mr. Dunshee said. states to do the same for their local gov- the 50 governors together he is saying it's shot discussion from which will emerge Govs. Bill Clinton of Arkansas and ernments." a state responsibility." TIMES 09-08-89 House panel approves tuition payment bill By J. Jennings Moss 13/70P an employee who quit or was fired THE WASHINGTON TIMES within three years of being hired to repay the government for the stu- A House subcommittee yesterday dent loan. passed a bill to allow federal agen- A similar bill is in the Senate Gov- cies to pay student loans of selected ernmental Affairs Committee but no employees as a way to recruit and action has been taken. retain qualified government work- ers. The other bill the House subcom- The measure is the first legisla- mittee passed would close a loophole tion born out of the National Com- that allows federal agencies to stack mission on the Public Service's rec- performance review boards with ommendations earlier this year. non-career employees. That group, known as the Volcker The boards make financial per- Commission, suggested a complete formance awards to Senior Execu- blueprint that included granting an tive Service members, high-level ca- immediate 25 percent pay raise. reer government employees. The Post Office and Civil Service Mr. Sikorski, who introduced the subcommittee on civil service unan- bill with Mrs. Morella, said the imously passed the student loan bill scandal-plagued Department of and a second measure to require that Housing and Urban Development al- performance review boards have a lowed a majority of politcal appoint- majority of career federal employ- ees to sit on the board. ées. Office of Personnel Management Rep. Constance A. Morella, Mary- Director Constance B. Newman has land Republican, said the bill would opposed the bill, saying it was "encourage new graduates to apply unecessary because of recent OPM for federal service and make federal regulations to correct the problem. service as attractive as private en- terprise." "I believe and the subcommittee believes that the issuance of reg- An amendment introduced by ulations will not provide a perma- subcommittee Chairman Gerry nent solution, which would prohibit Sikorski, Minnesota Democrat, future and perhaps less informed would let agencies pay up to $6,000 OPM directors from revoking those a year or a total of $40,000 for any regulations to once again permit one employee's student loan. agenices to engage in the type of The original bill was introduced activity we have seen at HUD," Mr. by Rep. William Ford, the Michigan Sikorski said. Democrat who heads the full com- mittee, and Rep. Benjamin Gilman, The chairman said he expected New York Republican. both bills to be heard either by the full committee or by the House be- The legislation also would force fore the end of the session. Education Is Key to National Prosperity parents, children are starting school these Some observers have given great importance to "in- Louisiana, with a low education level. was saved Tays to get educated. dustrial policy" in Japan - the government's attempts financially for decades by its oil wealth. But now that To economists, the youngsters are building to steer resources to those modern industries that it ex- the value of its oil production has diminished, the "human capital" - the education, training, and other pects to grow rapidly. underlying poverty of knowledge is being reflected in skills necessary for their later entry in the work force. Sam Nakagama, a Wall Street economist of Japanese widespread personal poverty. The prosperity of a nation depends greatly on its hu- origin, comments: "In assessing Japan's postwar eco- By contrast, Massachusetts, la king in natural 16 man capital, economists say. nomic success, it's hard to ignore the critical role played sources, has had to live by its wits. The Bav State is/spe- Indeed, Richard Freeman, a Harvard University by the educational system. The continuing competitive cial because of its large concentration of private colleges professor of economics, reckons education to be the success of Japanese industry clearly owes a and universities, as contrasted to public -li- great deal to its large pool of well educated D A V R. most critical factor leading to high living standards nanced institutions. About 60 percent of generally more important than physical factors such as workers, engineers, and managers. Japan's FRANCIS those students in higher education attend mines, timber, farmland, roads, ports, and so on. amazing ability to cope with such economic these private institutions, a higher propor Author George Gilder points out in his new book, earthquakes as the energy crisis and the tion than in any other state. "Microcosm: The Quantum Revolution in Economics doubling in the value of the yen owes a These private schools are big business. and Technology," that the Industrial Revolution de- great deal to a highly trained labor force." They will probably spend more than $5 bil- pended on regimented physical labor, natural re- Education and training, he continues, lion directly this year, their students and sources, crude energy sources, and massive transport "are clearly more important for economic visitors another approximately $1.5 billion facilities. success than such ephemeral factors as in- on lodging, food, etc. The indirect hick to "Wealth and power," he writes, "came mainly to the dustrial policy." the economy runs about $2.5 billion. possessor of material things or to the ruler of military Switzerland has high living standards, At least as important, these prestigious forces capable of conquering the physical means of pro- but not because of its scenic beauty. Nepal, schools attract talent to the state, Massa duction: land, labor, and capital. one of the poorest nations, also has great mountains. chusetts has more people with doctorates in iene and "Today, the ascendant nations and corporations are Switzerland is prosperous because its people are highly engineering, per capita, than any other state. I he same masters not of land and material resources but of ideas educated and use that knowledge in their industrial is true for scientists and engineers without a PhD. and technologies. Today, wealth comes not to the and financial companies and in their tourist industry. A Bank of Boston study shows that the rulers of slave labor but to the liberators of human cre- The United States has many natural resources. So entrepreneurial alumni of the Massachusetts Institute ativity, not to the conquerors of land but the emanci- has Brazil, another country with a large territory. About of Technology alone have founded 636 companies that pators of the mind." 35 percent of US youths go to college and perhaps 20 have directly and indirectly created 300,000 jobs in the History has already proved his basic point. The percent end up with degrees. Brazil, with barely 50 per- state. Education is the backbone of the state's famous physical means of production in Japan and Germany cent of its youths enrolled in primary and secondary high-tech industry. Massachusetts has the third highest were heavily destroyed by World War II. But the peo- school, needs to educate a broader segment of its popu- personal-income level among the 50 states. ple of the two nations were educated, skilled, and will- lation if it is to lift itself fully out of its third-world status. Education's chief product remains mentally compe ing to work. Japan and West Germany rank today only Within the US, the value of education is proven by tent and more complete individuals. Its major byprod- after the United States in their economic might. interstate comparisons. uct is wealth. CHRIS.SCI.MON.:09-08-89 Best-Selling Writer as Back-of-the-Class Scribbler 70 so much time sitting in a classroom." about, that she means it when she says to By Jim Benoivenga How did the students react to the pres- them, " 'I'm going to do something for ence of this non-teacher adult, scribbling you,' he says. "There has to be hope Decades of research and reform writer of The Christian Science Monitor furiously in the back of the room for a when you talk about the education of chil- have not altered the fundamental year? "I became a real piece of furniture," dren, and I found this in Mrs. Zajac and in facts of teaching. The task of univer- he says. The children "were told what I knowing that there are thousands like sal, public, elementary education is I T didn't take an entire school year for was doing and realized I would not exert her." still usually being conducted by a Tracy Kidder to realize that the great any control over them." It is his third book about a not-famous woman alone in a little room, presid- American education epic was one teacher Were there any surprises over the person at work. "There is something bio- ing over a youthful distillate of a in one classroom. In fact, it took less than course of a school year sitting in a fifth- logical about education," says Kidder. In town or city. If she is willing, she two weeks for grandiose plans to embrace grade class in an urban school district? "I any given generation we may not have tries to cultivate the minds of chil- modest realities. "The search for a grand didn't use as much of what I call the 'exte- many great poets or physicists, but we can dren both in good and desperate solution to education is part of the prob- rior stuff,' says Kidder, though he re- have many great teachers, certainly good shape. Some of them have problems lean, be says. searched the subject thoroughly. Also, as a ones, he says. There is a "web of influences that she hasn't been trained even to In a telephone interview, Mr. Kidder nation, "we still go on imagining the that a teacher can have, and I wanted to identify. She feels her way. She has emphasized that when discussing educa- schools will transform society," he says. show how enormous it can be." He makes no choice. tion, Americans fail to "deal with the par- This may be a quaint idea learned in his- a point of relating Mrs. Zajac's thoughts From Among Si hoole Intdren' ticular." His book does. tory books, but it still has a very strong pull about her favorite teacher, to those of some He made an effort never to get up on a on the nation's psyche. It comes home of Mrs. Zajac's earlier students (now col- soapbox. "I, wanted the story to stand on when you see a roomful of fifth graders re- lege graduates) for whom she was their fa- its own." he says. "And that's why I spent alize what this no-nonsense teacher is all vorite teacher. CHRIS.SCI.MON.:09-08-89 70 An Anthem to Teachers HE 2.5 million American T in less children-intensive jobs fessionals, such as doctors or law- public-school teachers are don't always understand. yers? Or does the nature of their gathering their books, Tracy Kidder in his new book, work with young people make thoughts, and courage for an- "Among Schoolchildren," writes: them unique public servants? We other year in front of the class. "The task of universal, public, el- think they are a little of both. Let's stop for a moment and give ementary education is still usually As professionals, teachers de- thanks for the women and men being conducted by a woman serve more autonomy and power. who will instruct, cajole, worry alone in a little room If she is They also should be held over, joke with, and help our most willing, she tries to cultivate the accountable. Teaching is noble. precious resource - our children. minds of children both in good But the recent trend to romanti- In the past five years, there's and desperate shape. Some of cize it shouldn't be allowed to been more recognition of the im- them have problems that she sway the public's right to demand portance and value of teachers hasn't been trained to identify. better efforts. Many types of work than in the previous five decades. She feels her way." are tough and lonely - not just It's about time. Teaching has Since 1983, teachers salaries teaching. And few jobs have a been undervalued and ignored. have increased generously. The three-month vacation built in. A teacher with any integrity average salary increased from Plus, a husband and wife who quickly finds that standing alone $17,500 in 1983 to $29,000 in teach today make over $60,000. every day in front of 25 students 1988. That's a lot, and it has eased As public servants, teachers of every race, creed, and back- the predicted teacher shortage deserve and need moral support ground - and who arrive already (though not in math and science). from parents and the public. hooked on TV - creates demands There's still a struggle over Some of our finest people - our and requires patience that people teachers' identity: Are they pro- unsung heroes - are teachers. CHRIS.SCI.MON.:09-08-89 A Year in the Life of a Fifth Grade Tracy Kidder records one teacher's joys, frustrations, and the day-to-day rhythms of her class TO Pedro, who lives with a trans- Mrs. Zajac's lessons. Ricans replaced Irish-American vestite uncle and a tiny, 69-year- If you didn't raise your hand, families of the sort in which Mrs. By Gene I. Maeroff old grandmother he calls his she would probably call on you. Zajac (nee Christine Padden) was mother. "I got four stepmothers," You could count on that. But she raised. Pedro said. "My father never gets gave you a lot of time to answer Focusing on a classroom in HRIS ZAJAC is the sort of married with women." and she wouldn't get angry if you Holyoke, as Kidder has done, is C caring, involved school- This is not to say that the cause couldn't, unless you hadn't been not like looking at a classroom in teacher that almost any is hopeless and schools should not paying attention, and she affluent Pacific Palisades, Calif., or child would be fortunate to have. do better despite the socio- wouldn't let your classmates make in the heart of Brooklyn's Bed- She is dedicated to her calling, economic backgrounds of their fun of you." ford-Stuyvesant ghetto. But then willing to give inordinate amounts students. Kidder offers no apolo- Perhaps Mrs. Zajac could im- no two public-school classrooms - of personal time to her work, and prove her pedagogy, but Kidder even on opposite sides of a wall - sensitive to the needs of the indi- never fully delves into the teach- are the same. The author's choice vidual children in her fifth-grade ing possibilities that might moti- of locale is as good as any if the class. Among Schoolehildeen vate the students and help them goal is to help the reader under- Yet many students in her be more effective learners. stand the frustrations and joys of Holyoke, Mass., classroom end the The reader is the silent class- teaching in an elementary school year without making much RACYKIDDER room observer who comes to and the extent to which home, progress. Many bear the markings know Mrs. Zajac, a softhearted family, and neighborhood influ- of youngsters who, within a few disciplinarian, who is an intense ence the behavior and achieve- years, may drop out of school. woman whose life is defined as ment of students. More than 30 percent of the much by her vocation of teaching One must wonder, though, school's sixth graders failed a basic as it is by her role as mother and whether readers will slog through skills test, and almost all in the fail- wife. She can no more neglect her 250 pages to gain a better appre- ing group were from im- household chores at the end of the ciation of the educational obstacles poverished families, many of them school day than she can leave be- in the paths of a classroom of stu- Puerto Rican. hind the themes, reports, and test dents and their teacher. To be This is the world Tracy Kidder papers that she lugs home each sure, Kidder brings alive and per- has chosen to describe in "Among afternoon. sonalizes what otherwise are the Schoolchildren," a title that shares The children in Mrs. Zajac's dreary statistics of social scientists. a certain irony with an identically class are the dramatis personae in Yet, how many really want to entitled poem by W. B. Yeats, who this performance, and like the spend page after page, for in- at the age of 60 explored his roots characters in the old World War 11 stance, watching Mrs. Zajac try to in the timeless milieu of a school- movies, they assume the expected cope with Clarence and agonize AMONG SCHOOLCHILDREN room. Mrs. Zajac - "Ajax" to some stereotypes - Judith, the bright about whether she should let him by Tracy Kidder of the wise-guy boys is the teach- Boston: Houghton Mifflin student Mrs. Zajac cannot help be transferred to a school for trou- er among these 20 schoolchildren, 340 pp., $19.95. but favor; Clarence, the some- bled children? and despite her determination times lovable troublemaker; While this is a difficulty, and energy, many will not make it. Robert, the emotionally disturbed "Among Schoolchildren" is an ac- This is a book for anvone who child whose eyes are wild with curate reflection of life in an ele- wants a better feel for the day-to- gia. But so much that happens to fiendishness; and Claude, the mentary school. where events day rhythm of the classroom. the children in Room 205 at Kelly lonely misfit. unable to gain social tend toward the routine. By. the Readers will arrive at the end School seems beyond the control acceptance from his peers. end. which happens to be the con- of a chronological journey of Mrs. Zajac or the school. She Kidder devotes considerable clusion of the school year. the through an entire school year with tries her best, keeping expecta- space to the social history of teacher is ready for a break and so a greater understanding of the ad- tions high and acting humanelv: Holvoke, a working-class town in is the reader. vantages and disadvantages that "You were supposed to raise the western part of the state. students bring with them to school your hand before you asked or an- where in only 30 years a sizable Gene I. Maeroff is the author of from home. There is. for instance. swered a question during one of number of impoverished Puerto "The School Smart Parent." TIMES 09-08-89 High Time for Stringent Standards At a time when national leaders call upon the applicable to the specialty. And many students poor and struggling to work hard and resist the have no chance of success because they have lure of the easy way out, it is only right that language and reading problems. everyone encourage those who are: seeking to And when students fail, they fail not only for improve their lot by going to school to study and themselves but for the taxpayer who winds up learn. But some unscrupulous trade schools still paying for government-backed loans that usually peddle dreams and deliver disillusionment and pay for courses that can cost as much as $6,000 for debt to the students who enroll in vocational six months. While vocational students receive less courses with the hope of a good job and a better than one-quarter of all federal student loans, they life. account for 35% of the loan defaults. A bill by Assemblywoman Maxine Waters Waters' bill would impose several requirements (D-Los Angeles) would impose stringent stand- that would expand state authority over vocational ards on the approximately 3,000 vocational schools schools, guarantee more rights for students and in California. The schools teach a wide range of improve the quality of the education they receive. specialties, from lab technology to cosmetology to The state could revoke a substandard school's underwater welding. There is no doubt that many authorization to operate, ensure that a school vocational schools provide a needed service to the disclose its success rate for past students, give people who most need job training: the poor, the students more legal rights and expand the mini- undereducated and immigrants. But there are mum education standards, among other things. several dozen schools that aggressively recruit Increased licensing fees would cover the $6-mil- students and use them just to attract government lion enforcement costs. The bill complements funds-without giving the students the training another meritorious bill by Sen. Becky Morgan they bargained for. (R-Los Altos Hills) that would overhaul and make A Times investigation last year by staff writer consistent the regulation of vocational schools and Henry Weinstein found that although vocational private postsecondary institutions. schools derive more than 75% of their income from The good schools have nothing to fear. But if the government money, they are not obligated to Waters and Morgan bills become law, as they demonstrate any record of success. Too often should, time will run out for schools that operate students drop out because of shoddy equipment, for the sole purpose of fleecing unsuspecting lackadaisical instructors or course work that is not students and taxpayers. In Education, Small Is Sensible 109 We all agree that a good school be tackled efficiently and naturally. pound foolish. But just as the Empire By Deborah Meier can't work without greater trust and Staff can meet to discuss issues and State Building houses many compa- support from families. But trust differences without complex gover- nies, large school buildings can house love New York. I love Chicago. comes from parents, teachers and Big, nance structures; understanding the many small schools. I love Beethoven's "Ninth students knowing each other over a budget does not require an advanced That's happening right now. In New I Symphony." It's not an antipa- period of time. Parental apathy de- anonymous degree in accounting. Looking in on York City's District 4 in East Harlem, thy to bigness that makes velops as a rational response to large, colleagues and, sharing ideas, be- there are now 51 small schools in the me. a fervent champion of anonymous schools. schools comes possible. same 19 buildings that contained 19 small schools. Rather it's We agree that students fail to use In small schools, parents hear schools in 1974. Each cluster of small "higher-order thinking skills" - in- are self- about the same teachers, students the conviction that unless we start schools can choose how to share thinking small, none of the recent tellectual reasoning, engagement and and families year after year in a vari- equipment and space, based on the consensus that has developed around curiosity. But we still place these neo- defeating. ety of formal and informal ways. trade-offs they want to make. District phyte intellects in schools where they Trust builds and issues that arise get needed school reforms is remotely 4 schools have become nationally feastble. rarely witness strong-minded, articu- settled handily. Accountability to par- known as schools that are good to Small schools are not the answer, late adults defending ideas, exchang- ents, as well as to the community, is a teach at and good to attend. but without them none of the pro- ing views or making reasoned deci- less knotty problem. Yes, small schools, like small sions. Hugeness works against lively large schools operate, of necessity, on In a small school, strangers and posed answers stand a chance. towns, can be small-minded. But they What teachers need is a direct Intellectual intercourse. the basis of bureaucratic values. In a strange behaviors stick out and can voice in the decisions they imple- No one denies that school reform be addressed with dispatch. Trouble- offer the flexibility and structural bureaucracy, the worst "crimes" are ment. "Teacher empowerment" is on won't get far until we do something those that create disorder. making strangers can be identified simplicity needed to tackle the com- everyone's list of needed reforms. about drugs, violence and vandalism. Young people cannot learn demo- and peer pressure has an inhibiting plexity of learning. But what does this mean in a school But the solutions appropriate to a cratic values in a setting that does not effect on violence or other antisocial Just as language immersion is the with 100 faculty members who rarely large anonymous school - metal de- value individual achievement, that behavior. It's hardly surprising that best way to learn a foreign language, immersion in a small, caring school see each other work, don't share the tectors, quasimilitary pass systems cannot notice triumphs and defeats, private high schools in New York same students and differ widely in - Increase the depersonalization has no time to celebrate or mourn, or City have always had student bodies community is the best way to learn their pedagogical assumptions? that contributes to antisocial behav- respond with indignation or recogni- of under 500. That's the right what is a foreign language to too lor. tion as the situation requires. size. many of our young: the language of Deborah Meier is principal of Central We claim that young people need Small schools offer opportunities to Are small schools economically participation, that difficult public lan- Park East, a public high school in settings that help them develop solve every one of these critical feasible? Huge school buildings may guage necessary to becoming a mem- Manhattan. strong values and moral vision. But issues. School-site empowerment can have been pennywise, but they are ber of a democratic society. CHRIS.SCI.MON.:09-07-89 Chicago's Education Revolution A BOLD experiment in people power is Legislature's accountability for the experi- in the schools were recorded by People for getting under way this fall in Chicago. ment? the American Way. The city is inverting its school system's The mayor, Richard Daley fils, will have a Since Socrates, citizens have tried to con- administrative structure. Local school coun- new political issue. As will the entire city's po- trol instruction under the guise of protecting cils, dominated by parents, will decide what litical colony. Many Hispanics, hitherto not the young. Compromising state re- is spent and taught. The councils will be able legal voters, will be brought into the political sponsibility for curriculum could put enor- to hire principals for four-year terms, and system during the next month's voting for mous pressures on teachers and department fire them. the 6,000 council slots. This is good. But will heads from vigilante outsiders. Let's say at the outset this experiment the schools be made the bush leagues of Chi- I once faced such a challenge as a young should be supported. Chicago's 410,000 pub- cago empire-building? Politics lic school students fare about the same as oth- RICHARD J. high school teacher just out of can exploit the vulnerable even college. A voluntary reading as- er receivers of that city's services - which is as it claims to rescue them. CATTANI signment included James to say, they have one of the worst school en- A school council will be made Agee's "A Death in the Family: vironments anywhere. Especially on the city's up of six parents, two residents The book made one derogatory South Side, where streets often have no pave- without children in school, and reference to a member of the ments, the schools reflect an ethos of aban- two teachers, all serving two-year clergy. School officials asked donment. terms. The principal will sit on that the book be withdrawn. I Not every school, and not every class- the committee but not vote on said I'd think about it room, is a disaster. Exceptional principals his tenure, which will be deter- overnight. The next day I told and teachers do make stands in Chicago, as mined by at least a seven-vote the department head and prin- in other educational Beiruts, and establish majority. The workings of such cipal that if the book had to go, enclaves of order, progress, and success. But councils could be fascinating. I had to go with it: It represent- Chicago has so many young people who start The principal and teachers will have to edu- ed the voice and values that underlay sound off at a disadvantage - blacks and Hispanics cate the parents as to the legal and profes- writing. The administration stuck with me. are the city's majority - that a heroic attempt sional requirements of education. Parent and Years later I learned it was a local church of- to reverse the hopelessness about education resident councilors will have to keep the pro- ficial, put onto the issue by a parent, who had there should be tried. fessionals' focus on the needs of children and tried to ban the book. The pitfalls are no less commanding. the community. Where individual schools are successful, In one sense, turning over Chicago's What about politicking to replace a prin- parents, administrators, and teachers are schools to the community is like turning cipal by a board member's in-law? This goes usually found working hard together. But on poverty over to the poor. Education is the re- on already where school boards are respon- its scale, Chicago is attempting no less than a sponsibility of the states. State boards of ed- sible for an entire community's schools. cultural revolution. ucation set the standards - and indeed, in the What about censorship efforts by local May wisdom, courage, and the utmost of new Chicago system, superintendents will be parents, or attempts by religious and special good will be with the city. able to close down schools whose councils interest groups to control the curriculum? run them amok. But what will be the Illinois Last year, some 172 attempts to censor books Richard J. Cattani is editor of the Monitor. N.Y.TIMES:09-07-89 Mississippi Schools Facing Move to Stem Resegregation Tide 10ptiz2 By RONALD SMOTHERS Special to The New York Times Mr. Anderson, the N.A.A.C.P. official, LAUREL, Miss. Like tidal ebb and said: "It's something that occurs In doing so, the association presented flow, desegregation followed by reseg- among white parents, white lawyers, evidence that more than 50 white stu- regation has been a seemingly inexora- white judges, white school administra- dents living in Laurel gave false ad- ble pattern in some Mississippi school tors and in a white system. We don't dresses or obtained guardianships so districts. know the extent, but we know it goes on that they could attend schools in Jones But as school opens here, local offi- a lot." County. cials are under new pressure from state and Federal officials to stem the Legislative Action Taken "I knew five or six myself who were doing it," said Joe Frank Sanderson, a resegregation tide by challenging some Mississippi had already acted in the white who is vice president of the Lau- of the extraordinary efforts made by last legislative session, tightening the rel-Jones County group and who testi- whites to avoid enrolling in largely law on guardianships by allowing dis- fied in the court case. black districts. tricts to disregard them if they deter- "The guardianships were racially "We have exposed something here, mined that they were obtained only for motivated and it was common knowl- and now the whole state will have to school attendance purposes. edge," he said in an interview. "We change," said the Rev. Johnny Ander- And in August the State Attorney General, Mike Moore, took the addi- brought it up because it was always son, a member of the Laurel school tional step of asking the state's 82 chan- suspected but just unproven." board who is vice president of the local chapter of the National Association for cery court judges, who grant the The Laurel case took another odd the Advancment of Colored People. guardianships, to warn those seeking turn when the city's N.A.A.C.P. chapter What was exposed, in part by events them that they might be disregarded. opposed the consolidation proposed by this summer in this city of 19,000 peo- In a letter to state education officials the white parents and the Justice De- ple in southeastern Mississippi, was es- in July, Justice Department officials in partment. sentially an open secret around the Washington said the "problem has be- Mr. Anderson and the local chapter's state: Whites who could not afford tui- come so widespread that virtually president, Manuel Jones, called the tion in private schools established to every area in Mississippi is affected by consolidation plan a political move by avoid integration would send their chil- the transfers that often impede deseg- wealthy whites to undermine growing dren to public schools in other districts regation." The Federal officials urged black influence in the increasingly the state to adopt stricter policies for black district. that were largely white, a practice re- ferred to as "zone jumping." guardianships and transfers. 'Subjective Opinion' Cited Focus on Bogus Guardianships "We want them to put in place a more structured program for verifica- Mr. Anderson said blacks, who make The state had already begun to crack tion," said Nathaniel Douglas, chief of up about 58 percent of Laurel's popula- down on one favorite tool used to estab- tion, had won two of the five school lish the residency needed for such the educational opportunities litigation board seats in recent years. He said the switches: a bogus guardianship involv- section of the Justice Department's school system was "hospitable" to ing a relative or family friend living in civil rights division. "We think it is a black students and did not make them a predominantly white district. state responsibility, and doing this is feel alienated. In past years, the guardianships going to be cheaper than litigating in "We didn't control the system, but have been drawn up by lawyers and all the school districts affected." we had some input and it was educat- routinely approved by state courts by Strict Guidelines Planned ing black students," be said. the hundreds or even thousands in the Arthur Peyton, the chairman of the A Federal magistrate at first ap- weeks before school opens. More often Mississippi Board of Education, said proved the consolidation, but a Federal than not, such guardianships were the board would introduce strict guide- District judge reversed that ruling readily accepted by school officials. lines for the state's 152 school districts earlier this summer. The judge, The situation in Laurel was brought when it meets Sept. 15. The guidelines Thomas S. Lee, said the Justice De- to light when whites blew the whistle on could include hiring people to monitor partment and the Laurel-Jones County other whites in a court fight over con- and report regularly on transfers and group had, "perhaps unfortunately," solidating the mostly black Laurel guardianships among Mississippi's failed to show that the transfer ruses School District with the mostly white 503,000 public school students. had "a significant cumulative impact" Jones County School District, which Mr. Peyton and other state education in resegregating schools in Laurel and surrounds the city district. Laurel's officials said they had not taken more Jones County. schools went from 46 percent black in action because most desegregation Judge Lee said he held "the subjec- the 1970's to 75 percent black this year, issues were already addressed by tive opinion that there does exist a while those in Jones County are 81 per- nearly 70 Federal court orders and an greater incidence of improper interdis- cent white. Evidence submitted in the case false equal number of voluntary desegrega- trict transfers, racially motivated tion agreements. transfers, than were actually proven" addresses or obtained guardianships but added that there was no objective solely to avoid enrolling their children **It is a problem and we are anxious' proof that would support a merger. in schools with large numbers of black to do something about it," Mr. Peyton' children. And a Federal judge has al- said. "But we don't understand the Jus- But the strength of the judge's sub- ready mandated specific steps that the tice Department's suggestion that we jective opinion could be seen on Aug. Laurel and the Jones County systems have been derelict in our duty." 24, when he added to his original ruling must take to investigate and verify Advocates of school desegregation a set of specific steps that each district guardianships and transfers. applauded the Federal and state ac- must take to investigate and verify Practice Seen as Widespread tions. Phyllis McClure, an N.A.A.C.P. guardianships and transfers. Included lawyer, said the moves would deal with in these steps were semiannual reports No one, including state and Federal officials and civil rights groups, has put a "big, big problem which has been to the court on the number of guardian- together data on the extent of zone with us for a long time." ships and transfers sought. jumping through the use of phony School Consolidation Sought "That's going to make everybody ac- countable,' Mr. Anderson said. "And I guardianships. But the evidence can be The people who blew the whistle on think that will be the model for what found in the files of hundreds of princi- the situation in Laurel, members of a the State Department of Education re- pals and superintendents who have largely white group called the Laure!- quires around the state." routinely winked at the influx of white Jones County Association for Excel- students with such documents. lence in Education, were pressing to Jesse High, regional director of the consolidate the Laurel School District, Department of Education's office of which has a stronger commercial and civil rights, in Atlanta, said the prac- industrial tax base, sound buildings tice took place largely in Mississippi and broad course offerings, with the and to a lesser extent in Georgia and Jones County School District. Alabama. The practice of using false addresses or other deceptions to put children in what their parents consider more di- sireable schools is not confined to the South. Parents in Northern states have also been known to try to enroll their children outside their neighborhood or district schools to avoid attending pre- dominantly black schools. But in Mis- sissippi the practice seems to be more widespread. 09-07-89 A Nationwide Move to Teach the Integrity of Clear Writing 70° By KATHERINE BISHOP Creative portions of the speech in the essay's by those logs. The result is writing on Special to The New York Times text, thereby learning about the event themes like the pitfalls of ambition and SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 6 - After 15 as well as the actual words of the about things they were ashamed of years, the instructors in the Bay Area immersion in a speech. having done. Writing Project, which recently com- Other Model Programs Ms. Smith said a recent evaluation pleted its summer session, have reason topic helps to demonstrated that the program Is While the Bay Area Writing Project to believe that the rest of the country is working. At Bret Harte Junior High catching up to their concern for the im- clarify themes. Is widely replicated throughout the na- School In Oakland, participating teach- tion, it is not the only model for Improv- portance of teaching writing. ers had students write on one topic ing writing skills. In New York City, the Their optimism lies in that last early in the fall and then write again on Teachers & Writers Collaborative has spring the Association of American a similar topic in the spring. They ties. The National Writing Project now been bringing professional writers into Medical Colleges announced plans to found that the second group of papers has a network of 165 sites training the classroom since 1967 to work di- include in its medical school admission showed substantial improvement in or- exam a test of writing skills. more than 80,000 teachers yearly. rectly with students assisted by teach- ganization, fluency, specificity and ers. "There's an increasing call for whole Explaining to Novices grammar. "Some kids are more inspired meet- faculties - not just English teachers, Ms. Smith, who was one of the origi- Ing a writer," said Nancy Shapiro, di- but also science and math teachers - nal 25 teachers in the project's first rector of the program. "That may be a to use writing as a way for kids to not summer session, recalls a typical day catalyst for some students more than a just retain material, but to understand of work: A physics teacher picked a teacher who's interested in writing." sit and make it their own," said Mary topic most of the nonscience teachers Financed by state, Federal and cor- Ann Smith, a junior high school English did not really understand, like how peo- porate grants and school fees, the col- teacher who for five years has worked ple see color, and had them discuss it in laborative employs about 50 writers full time as the director of the writing small groups and then write a paper and serves approximately 8,000 chil- project. about it as though they were explaining dren, from kindergarten through The Bay Area Writing Project, which it to someone else who did not under- eighth grade, each year. is run from the University of Califor- stand. Ms. Smith said the teachers of the nia's Berkeley campus, was begun in In another session, a social science Bay Area Writing Project rejected the the 1973-74 school year with a $13,000 teacher demonstrated how students notion that they should not require grant from the university in response could gain a deeper understanding of a their students to read difficult works. to the weak composition skills of enter- broad topic by writing about one mo- Susan Reed, a teacher at De Anza High ing freshmen. Founded to teach teach- ment in its history as though they had School in nearby Richmond, whose stu- ers to teach writing, it has became the been there. Instead of trying to encap- dents are predominantly from low-in- model for the National Writing Project, sulate the entire civil rights movement, come and minority families, has her also based at the Berkeley campus, one participating teacher wrote about pupils keep logs of questions and obser- which was begun with a grant from the the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I vations as they read "Macbeth" and National Endowment for the Humani- Have a Dream" speech, interspersing then write essays on topics suggested WASH. TIMES 09-07-89 Jesse Jackson's latest revolution 201\70p Jesse Jackson, the unrivaled master of the apt symbol, wants parents to get involved in sistently improves student achievement, he elementary and secondary schools. He's urg- ought to advocate reforms that give parents ing them to go to school with their kids and greater control over what goes on in schools. Polls indicate that 85 percent of the nation's meet the teachers, attend parent-teacher low-income parents favor education meetings and pick up the report cards at the end of each grading period. He's asking them vouchers, which would permit them to to leave daytime phone numbers, so school choose which schools their children attend. Jesse Jackson, who has chosen schools for authorities can determine whether absent students are sick or playing hooky. And he some of his own kids, certainly understands this. Too, parents of all races have had it with wants families to switch off their television busing, which has severed ties between sets for at least two hours each night while students pound the books. neighborhoods and schools. And voters are Unfortunately, most area parents stayed making it clear that they have lost patience with bad teachers and the local unions that away from school this week, thus demon- defend them. strating that it will take much more than a pep talk to get them involved in education Education reforms instituted over the past again. Some have become sick of institutions 20 years have stripped parents of authority that promote bad teachers and give diplomas over schools. We can restore parental faith in to unqualified students. Some have lost touch schools only by dismantling many of those because their children are bused to schools reforms and challenging an educational es- far away from home. Others have lost hope tablishment that has prospered at the ex- pense of parental discretion. Jesse Jackson because they believe that outside forces, such as racism, make it impossible for kids may not have realized it, but in urging par- to get the breaks they deserve. ents back to school, he could set off a long- overdue revolution in American education. If If Mr. Jackson is serious about parental involvement, which is the only thing that con- so, every parent and student in the country will owe him thanks. WASH TIMES 09-07-89 Classroom acts and anxieties SUZANNE FIELDS TOP the back-to-school time, but a I lot of us wouldn't know where we were if we landed in one. Educationists can't de- cide whether they ought to provide day care for teen-age moth- ers, install metal detectors to pre- vent students from carrying weap- ons into school, or hire armed guards - or a reinforced Marine ri- Cable TV's educational fle company - to keep out the drug dealers. Teachers haven't figured out why American students can't compete in- offering ternationally in math and science. Is it their fault that many teen-agers think the Gettysburg Address refers to someone's street and zip code, that Afghanistan is a fru-fru breed of dog, or that Voyager 2 is a Star Trek sequel? Two-thirds of our teen-agers watch more than three hours of tele- vision daily and most of them still couldn't come up with the name of the secretary of state (or of their own congressman), describe Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev's problem in the Baltic states, or ex- S.KELLEY plain what the noise over Gen. Man- uel Noriega of Panama is all about. So it's all but incomprehensible that many teachers and administra- tors are outraged at the notion that their classrooms should be exposed to television news because (gasp!) the news will be interrupted by two minutes of commercials. They're not even sure the schools should al- low any television news, with or without commercials, because it of- fers only "passive" learning. Well, the teachers (not all of whom could answer a current-events quiz, either) are missing a rare opportu- nity. They can have their cable and learn from it, too, if only they allow their classes to watch one of the daily current affairs television shows now offered to public schools. One is "Channel One," produced by Christopher Whittle, which car- ries 10 minutes of news and two min- utes of advertising. It made its con- troversial debut last year in six schools. "CNN Newsroom," intro- duced last month, offers a similar sion show. Yet few students associate format with 15 minutes of news and their restlessness in class to televi- no commercials. Ted Turner obvi- sion. They don't know why they want ously believes he can whet appetites paper coverage of the same events? the teacher to take a commercial to be satisfied on other CNN chan- Is there slant or bias in the stories? break, but they do. nels. Does the medium affect the mes- Classroom news shows could These shows are not perfect. Thev sage? teach them more about the world come with glitz and glamour. short Like it or not. we live in a televi- than simply news and information. segments on serious subjects. but sion age. and educators can either Chris Whittle is offering $50,000 of they can wake kids up to the world harness the medium to offer infor- electronic technology - television around them and spark discussions. monitors. videocasette recorders. a What kids won't get there. many mation. or ignore it and watch others satellite dish - to the schools that won't get at all. use It for something less important take "Channel One." With a little Think of the questions a class than feeding a young mind. Critics of education frequently note that high imagination, teachers could put that could discuss. How do the news school students lack "problem- technology to other uses, too. shows encourage a limited attention The American Association of span? What is the impact of advertis- solving" and "decision-making" ing on the news? How does television skills. What better way to develop School Administrators, the National influence perceptions of events? these faculties than by criticizing Association of Secondary School Or consider what an imaginative television and content? Principals, the National Parent- By the time a student is a senior Teachers Association want to reject teacher could develop for homework assignments. How do these shows in high school. he has spent about "Channel One," news, technology, 11,000 hours in the classroom and imagination and all. They say adver- differ from network news? How do studied more than 13,000 lessons. tising makes students a "captive au- the news items compare with news- He has spent 22,000 hours before the dience." Captive to whom, besides television set and probably watched the advertisers the kids will watch Suzanne Fields. a columnist for as many as 750,000 advertisements. as soon as they get home fom school? Television encourages a short at- Americans may watch more TV The Washington Times. is nationally tention span. which teachers will and TV news than any other nation, syndicated. deal with, like it or not. One critic of but few of us understand how televi- television measured 39 attention sion manipulates the way we think shifts. including the commercial about what we see. If Chris Whittle's breaks, in a single 30-minute televi- advertisers pay for that kind of edu- cation, that's the kind of bargain we won't often get. TIMES 09-06-89 Help for Workers in a Complex World 70N130 By KATHLEEN TELTSCH But in a time of big Federal deficits, Because millions of American work- action on literacy is most likely to ers cannot read, write or reason well come from state and local govern- enough to do their jobs, demand is ments, private companies and founda- growing for programs to teach adults tions. Among government programs, literacy and technical skills. experts say a number hold promise, in- The programs, often taken to people cluding these: where they work, can be as basic as 9In Illinois, a statewide effort has English for recent immigrants or as been organized to pull together civic sophisticated as helping employees in groups, educators, volunteers, employ- high-technology industries master ers and labor representatives to sup- complex documents. port 250 tutoring programs at colleges, In a Long Island City warehouse, a libraries and even firehouses. The teacher gives English lessons to His- state has spent $19 million in the past panic, Italian and Slavic employees at four years to educate 36,000 adults in a Ronzoni pasta factory so they can reading and mathematics, and has learn to operate new automated equip- helped businesses and unions operate ment. In northeastern Mississippi, the basic-skills programs for workers in state is using a tractor-trailer outfitted factories and union halls. as a mobile learning laboratory, com- 9In Massachusetts, a team of lit- plete with computers, to give lessons in eracy experts, government officials job-related reading and mathematics Outside government, some of the and labor and business leaders devel- to 14 potential recruits for a new plant most aggressive drives for worker lit- oped a work-force literacy program that makes rocket motors for the Na- eracy come from the trade unions, that is expected to grow from 45,000 to tional Aeronautics and Space Adminis- which are pressing for education bene- 100,000 participants a year by 1991. It is fits for members. tration. one of the first state efforts shaped In New York City, the Consortium A Widely Scattered Effort around specific needs in the job mar- for Worker Education links 10 unions "Most jobs today need basic skills ket, reflecting the shift from manufac- around the issue of literacy. It has approaching 12th-grade levels," said turing toward service industries. helped 17,000 members, preparing Harold W. McGraw Jr., president of the qVirginia has begun a 10-year pro- most for entry-level jobs and providing Business Council for Effective Litera- gram centered on the Virginia Lit- others with college training. Financed cy, a national clearinghouse for data on eracy Foundation, which has raised $3 by Federal, state and city grants, it is adult literacy. But he added, "Seventy- million from 230 businesses and pro- now negotiating to extend literacy five percent of the adults in today's vides support for private literacy training to the 200 unions affiliated labor force will be there for the next groups. A state Adult Literacy Com- with the Central Labor Council, which two or three decades, and one in five represents 1.2 million workers. reads below the eighth-grade level." "By 1994, the consortium should be It is hard to assess the results of lit- training 30,000 workers," said Joe Mc- eracy programs, partly because there 'Most jobs today Dermott, the executive director, "and has been little effort to coordinate employers who want qualified workers them. Federal efforts are scattered need basic skills will have to come to us." among 79 agencies; at least half the states have some sort of literacy initia- approaching 'Good Work and We Can Prove It' tive, but the goals and budgets vary Until recently, literacy attracted lim- widely. 12th-grade ited support from private sources. Sub- Even the definition of literacy is dis- stantial grants came mainly from a puted. Last year Congress asked the Department of Education to define the levels.' few companies, including the Gannett Company and B. Dalton Bookseller, term and then to estimate how many and the MacArthur, Ford and Hewlett Americans are illiterate. But that sur- Foundations. vey, involving thousands of interviews, Another philanthropy, the UPS Foun- will take four years, said Andrew Kol- mittee promotes collaboration between stad, project officer at the Govern- public and private literacy groups. dation, based in Greenwich, Conn., is qMississippi has become the first providing $2.2 million over three years ment's National Center for Educa- tional Statistics. state to offer a tax credit to corpora- for a literacy program. Part of the tions training or retraining workers. money will help teen-age mothers While the study will assess the di- 9New York City provided more than learn basic skills through the New mensions of the problem, no one dis- $40 million over last four years for Chance Program of the Manpower putes that a problem exists and that it becomes more urgent as businesses adult literacy, far more than any Demonstration Research Corporation, try to keep up with foreign competition. major city, according to the Business a national research organization that "Twenty to thirty million adult Council for Effective Literacy. It budg- develops programs for the needy. It eted $15.2 million this year for pro- will also equip 20 centers, operated by Americans lack basic literacy skills, U.S. Basics, a nonprofit educational in- and that makes adult literacy a life- grams at 300 places, including schools, and-death economic and social issue colleges, libraries and factories like the stitute, for teaching English to immi- for this country," said Forrest P. Chis- Ronzoni warehouse, where 75 workers grants. And it will help United Way pro- man, director of the Southport Insti- were tutored. mote six programs with a goal of devel- oping a model for a nationwide effort. tute, a research group in Washington City officials estimate that New York has at least 1.5 million adults who can- Some smaller businesses are setting that completed an analysis of adult lit- not fill out a job application, under- up their own programs with govern- eracy this year. stand instructions on a medicine bottle ment help. A 'Jump Start' for Nonreaders or write a simple letter. Yet literacy Champ Industries, a metal works in The study, "Jump Start," was pub- programs reach just 47,000 New York- Lake Ronkonkoma, L.I., began losing lished by the institute and financed by ers, and 13.000 are waiting for place- contracts because workers could not companies and foundations. It urged ment. keep pace with new marketplace tech- the Government to create a national nology. 'Our products must meet 'Diverse as the City Itself' center for research and technical help precision standards. said Stephen in training a corps of thousands of "Our classes are as diverse as the Shuster. the president. "and some adult literacy instructors. Senator Paul city itself." said John Casey, acting di- workers could not use a ruler." Champ Simon of Illinois and Representative rector of the Mayor's office of adult lit- secured help from the Long Island Re- Thomas C. Sawyer of Ohio recently in- eracy. New York's programs provide gional Education Center, which troduced bills that would advance basic education in reading and writing, brought in experts from local schools those objectives. but also in skills like interviewing for a to instruct workers in reading blue- Although President Bush has vowed job. prints, basic mathematics and reading to be the "education President," Mr. At the Mid-Manhattan Adult Learn- and writing English. Chisman said, "the Administration ing Center on West 120th Street, 700 Now new orders are coming in, and clearly does not yet have a literacy adults take remedial instruction or the workers attest to the change, show- agenda. The First Lady is honorary train for new careers. Though classes ing off the statistical process control chairwoman of the Barbara Bush have ended for the summer, one in- charts they are trained to keep. Foundation for Family Literacy, which structor, Anne Goodwin, gave up her "Before, we argued who made the focuses on encouraging parents and vacation and devoted another two mistakes,' said Michelle Cuesta, a 24- children to learn reading together The weeks without pay to tutoring 15 stu- year-old machinist, as she sliced metal foundation. financed by private dona- dents facing high school equivalency tubes with a pipe saw. "Now we turn tions. is operated by volunteers. tests. out good work and we can prove it. WALL ST.J. :09-06-89 Where Liberal Arts Starve Amid Federal Plenty 701 By CHARLES J. SYKES versity in the late 19th and early 20th cen- grossly magnified those tendencies. As it opens Its doors for the new aca- turies than did any other institution. Keep- Of the $476.3 million the university re- demic year, Johns Hopkins University has ing up with Hopkins has been a national celved in federal research and develop- no faculty member in its classics depart- academic obsession since the day it opened ment grants in 1987, the amount allocated ment who teaches Greek literature or phi- in 1876. to the School of Arts and Sciences was a losophy; none who can lecture on Plato's In recent years, that hasn't been easy to mere 3.7%. Nor did the liberal arts fare "Republic," Sophocles' "Oedipus Rex" or do. Johns Hopkins has been one of higher much better in the university's extraordi- Homer's "Odyssey." But this is not just education's most successful growth indus- narily successful capital campaign, where another Stanford-like setback for the Great tries. Its operating budget increased from only 8% of the more than $512 million Books. $88.5 million in 1972 to $557 million last raised over five years will go for Arts and In its small way, the fate of the classics year- healthy 529% increase. The largest Sciences. In the absence of an institutional at one of the nation's most lavishly funded single factor has been the increasing be- commitment to compensate for the imbal- universities casts a revealing light on both nevolence of Uncle Sam. In 1967, Hopkins ance, the liberal arts inevitably became the fragility of the liberal arts and the ranked 15th among leading universities in the raggedy stepchildren of the univer- mysteries of academic finance. Above all, Its share of federal research money-a re- sity. however, it is a commentary on the para- doxical role of the federal government in the modern mega-university. By shifting the focus of higher education from under- Johns Hopkins receives more federal research support than any other university graduate to graduate education and from teaching to in the country. In 1987, federal research and development grants totaled $476.3 mil- research, federal money reshaped academic priorities. lion. In addition, the school has raised more than $512 million from private donors spectable, if somewhat modest, showing. The situation was exacerbated by Johns in the past five years. Even so, the admin- By the early 1980s, it had leaped into the Hopkins's policy of financial decentraliza- istration revealed last year that the School top position. tion, under which each school was ex- of Arts and Sciences-the liberal-arts core This growth paralleled the increasing pected to go it alone. The result was that of the university-had run up a deficit of $4 role of the federal government in Ameri- even as Johns Hopkins prospered and million and projected a shortfall of $7 mil- can higher education in the years after swelled, while the medical school built an lion this year. World War II. While the federal govern- $85 million research facility and the ad- Draconian Financial Plan ment created vast new research centers, ministration dreamed of a new space tele- laboratories and federally endowed insti- scope, the School of Arts and Sciences The financial crunch led to the resigna- tutes, it also provided a case study in the withered like an etiolated limb. But the tion of Johns Hop- law of unintended consequences, especially news is not all bad. kins's president for the liberal arts. By shifting the focus of When the inevitable crunch came, (who earlier had higher education from undergraduate to Johns Hopkins adopted a plan to bail out been stripped of his graduate education and from teaching to Arts and Sciences and share revenue budgetary author- research, especially scientific research, among the various schools. Hopkins's new ity) and the imposi- the new federal money radically reshaped administration is far more realistic about tion of a draconian the priorities and prestige hierarchies of the limits of academic growth; It now rec- five-year financial academia. plan that includes ognizes that the university can no longer Then-Education Secretary William Ben- steep increases in pursue every frontier of knowledge. nett described the curious interplay of cash But the omens for the liberal arts are tuition, a 10% cut- and scholarship: "X dollars buys the stu- still troubling. On the heels of the cut- back in liberal-arts dent one professor; 2X dollars buys him backs, two of the four professors in the faculty costs and the elimination of several two. But 3X and 4X and 5X dollars gradu- academic programs. tiny and beleaguered classics department ally remove the professor from the stu- quit; today the department has only a sin- As Prof. Jerrold Cooper, chairman of dent, and 6X dollars may replace all the gle tenured faculty member (Georg Luck, the Near Eastern studies department, re- classroom professors with graduate stu- marked with a trace of academic under- a Latin specialist) and must import guest dents.' lecturers for Greek literature. Other de- statement: "When a university cuts its fac- At Johns Hopkins the operation of Ben- partments await the effects of attrition. ulty after raising half a billion dollars, it's nett's Law is writ large. The money was Ironically, Johns Hopkins continues to a very, very bad situation." not going primarily for classroom have a relatively well-funded Humanities This might be written off as an aberra- teachers; nor was it going for the liberal Center. But it too reflects the new aca- tion except for the distinctive role that arts. This is not altogether surprising demic culture. Prof. Luck calls it "a for- Johns Hopkins has played as the prototypi- given Johns Hopkins's historic focus on tress of trendiness," with a special em- cal American research university. With its graduate research and the sciences. Unlike phasis on deconstructionism, post-structur- emphasis on research and graduate educa- most large universities. Hopkins has a tiny alism and other forms of fashionable jar- tion. Johns Hopkins did more to shape the undergraduate population-only about goned academic nihilism. The "Iliad" and new academic culture of the American uni- 2,000 students. But the federal money Aeschylus may be out: but Hopkins has WALL ST.J. :09-06-89 262 Derrida and de Man well covered. Prof. Luck has watched the changing culture of the university. "This was a fan- tastic place 20 years ago," he says. "But it's become more commercialized. Hopkins has become more like a business.' Not quite. Entrepreneurs don't have tenure. Bureaucrats do. An eloquent tribute to the transfusion of the federal government's mindset into the universities is the fact that university administrative costs nation- ally have grown at twice the rate of in- structional costs over the past decade. A notable legacy of the federalization of the universities has been the bureaucratization of the soul of higher education. It's unclear whether the turmoil at Johns Hopkins, so often a trendsetter, is also a harbinger of more crises to come. Federal support for academic science and engineering nationwide topped $8.5 billion in 1987, up from less than $5 billion in 1980. Private money also continues to flow into the universities, usually in the form of re- stricted grants. As many as 60 universities and colleges are conducting fund drives with goals of more than $100 million each. Three schools are seeking $1 billion. And yet, the signs of poverty amid plenty are becoming more widespread. Princeton and Cornell, no financial pikers themselves, are also wrestling with red ink. Mighty Stanford projects an $11 mil- lion budget deficit this school year, despite a $1.1 billion fund-raising campaign. Not Money, but Values As Robert Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago remarked in the late 1940s in a different context, lavishing more money on the modern university "is a little like telling a drowning man that he can im- prove his position by drinking a good deal of water." The problem is not money, but values. There is more than enough blame to go around: academic bureaucrats who imag- ine they are entrepreneurs; absentee trust- ees; professors in full-cry after consulting contracts; a society that has lost sight of the value of the humanities. But a special place in this rogues' gallery must be re- served for the jolly gnomes of official Washington, oblivious, as ever, to the con- sequences of their actions. Mr. Sykes is the author of "ProfScam: Professors and the Demise of Higher Edu- cation" (Regnery Gateway, 1988). WASH. TIMES 09-06-89 Race relations first lesson for many college freshmen By Carol Innerst monplace at American colleges and universi- THE WASHINGTON TIMES 122/701 ties. The rapidly changing nature of the student The first lesson many college freshmen are bodies has exacerbated tensions and made it getting this school year is in race relations. imperative for institutions to see that their Hood College in Frederick for the first time "experiment" in multicultural living works, this year is offering a five-hour workshop on said Ray Colvig, spokesman for the Univer- multiculturalism this Saturday to the entire sity of California at Berkeley. freshman class of 200, 10 percent of whom are minorities. "It's no longer an experiment for us," he In a session titled "Vive la Difference," said. "We're doing something few institutions freshmen learned last week how to interrupt have done. incidents of verbal behavior likely to spark "Only the military is comparable for hav- resentment, such as an ethnic joke. ing such a diverse population living in such And at Smith College in Northhampton, close proximity. It's impossible to prevent Mass., "attitudes assessment" is "part of an some things from happening in a community orientation discussion of racial attitudes," of 30,000 living in close proximity. But you said spokeswoman M. Janet McNeill. could turn the issue over and see that for a "Orientation is required," she said. "There group as diverse as ours, there's probably a is no way that a freshman could escape dis- relatively low number of incidents." cussion of the subject." The Berkeley campus this year has no eth- A plan called the "Smith Design" spells out nic majority. The 3,500 new freshmen are 11.4 the college's commitment to affirmative ac- percent black, 1.8 percent American Indian, tion and to the "importance of embracing di- 21.8 percent Hispanic - for a total of 34.9 versity as an educational as well as a life goal," percent affirmative action students - and she said. 27.8 percent Asian-American and 32 percent Twenty percent of this year's freshman white. Another 5.3 percent refused to state class of 615 are ethnic minorities, she said. ethnic background, he said. As summer reading, all members of Bow- Berkeley freshmen got their first dose of doin College's freshman class were assigned sensitivity training over the summer, but Richard Rodriguez's autobiography, "Hunger more is coming in the residence halls, Mr. of Memory," recounting his struggles in the Colvig said. classroom and in white society. "The groundwork for good [race] relations must be laid in the residence halls," he said. A workshop Tuesday at University of Berkeley also plans to address the issue of Maryland, College Park, which has seen multiculturalism through the curriculum. All clashes between black and Jewish students, is titled "Broadening Your Horizons: How to students starting in 1991 will have to complete Benefit from Campus Cultural Diversity." a course in American cultures, selecting three from five offerings that will call atten- On the academic front, visiting professor tion to the interplay and contributions of the Jerome Taylor, director of the Institute for the five principal ethnic groups in contemporary Black Family at the University of Pittsburgh, society - Americans of European descent, will teach a class on "Race, Culture and Con- blacks. Hispanics, Orientals and American sciousness" in the Afro-American Studies Indians. Program at Maryland this semester. Stanford University takes a similar step Such programs are rapidly becoming com- this fall. PHIL. INQ. :09-06-89 One in three can't read this column By CLAUDE LEWIS 70P "I don't think lumping everybody at particular grade levels is the right way S everal years ago 1 served as co- to go. I think collaborative learning chairman, with David Horowitz, groups are more effective. People moti- vate one another when they have com- of the Mayor's Commission on mon goals. If five adults want to be Literacy in Philadelphia. However, I able to read the Bible, I'd like to get had to resign from the post because them together. They'd support each my position at The Inquirer posed a other. Put them with a good facilitator, 0 possible conflict of interest. But my they'll do much better. interest in the problem of illiteracy "It's a wonderful thing to see some- has remained strong and I am encour- one get his GED Igeneral equivalency aged that Thelma Reese, who heads diploma] right where they work," the program, is doing as much as possi- Reese said. "But we need more compa- ble, considering her budget and the nies willing to establish learning cen- extent of the problem, to increase the ters right on the job." reading ability of thousands, Philadelphia is a leader in the battle The problem is more widespread against illiteracy with some 240 agen- than most people understand. Many cies involved and 560 learning sites in take reading for granted, not realizing the city. But even illiteracy can be that many read at only a fourth grade political. Some companies don't want it level, if at all known they have There are many workers with reading reasons for illiter- The battle against difficulties. They're acy in a nation not sure what the pub- crowded with free illiteracy is a lic reaction might be. public schools. Not Reese's daughter, the least of them is continuing who lives in San embarrassment. struggle. Francisco, volun- Many have con- teered as a reading vinced themselves teacher in that city. they can get Her name was placed through life, living in the dark coun- on a waiting list for síx months be- try of ignorance. cause "training takes place twice a But we live in complex times today, year there, and in one place, the times that demand increased literacy library," Reese said, her voice tinged and comprehension. Even the military with distress. is plagued by the problem. "Approximately 35 percent of Phil- Philadelphia is doing as much or adelphians are unable to read at the more than any other city in the na- junior high level. How can the tion to increase reading skills, but so schools make up for all of that?" far has been able to reach no more Reese is angered that some Wash- than 25,000 people in the last five ington officials are trying to recruit years, according to Reese. foreigners to do jobs that should be "It's scary that we can't do more," done by Americans, because many she said in a recent interview. "What Americans lack reading skills. we've accomplished is terrific, but "That boggles my mind," she says. we have another 300,000 to 400,000 to "If we can't marshal our resources to reach. It's frightening to think about train our own people to do the jobs the total number of nonreaders who needed here, where are we headed? may be out there. Some of them will Our country has a pool of untapped never be reached because they have labor unable to meet the demands of discovered ways of hiding the fact the workplace. As a nation, we've got that they can't read. to solve this problem." "People who have never worn The demand for increased skills is glasses often claim to have left them going to become even more acute in at home." Reese said. "To mask their the 21st century, which is just over a inability to read, some fake other decade away. injuries, others listen to friends or- Illiteracy is responsible for far dering in restaurants and ask for the more than ignorance. In some. it IS same meal. They don't use menus. the root cause of hostility. violence. a The problem is going to get far lack of self esteem. a lowering of self- worse. Reese insists, though she says confidence. a diminution of goals in Philadelphia there may soon be a and a lifestyle built on poverty and breakthrough that will significantly despair. Illiteracy often keeps fam- advance the city's reading programs. ilies at or below the poverty line and She's reluctant to reveal all of the hurts the entire nation. details, but some of the efforts have What Thomas Jefferson wrote in to do with massive support and fund- 1816 is still true today: "If a nation ing by an outside company, others expects to be ignorant and free, in a have to do with new teaching tech- state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be. niques. Reese encourages those need- ing help or those who want to volun- Claude Lewis column appears Mon- teer to call 686-8652. days and Wednesdays. WALL 09-05-89 132 Educated Moves Elite Private Colleges Several of these schools have contended room and board for the coming school year that they are doing nothing unlawful. But range from a low of $19,207 at Princeton to Routinely Share Plans the case is more than a legal battle. To a high of $19,510 at Brown. That's a differ- ence of 1.5%, less than might be expected Ivy League Costs in shopping for a car or even a television For Raising Tuition set. 1989-90 tuition. fees, room and board Of course, many colleges do charge Brown $19,510 less. In-state students will pay $4,733 at the SayingIt'sDoneOpenly,They average four-year public school this year. Harvard 19,395 Private schools will average $12,635. Decry Price-Fixing Probe; U. of Pennsylvania 19,350 Critics complain that the pricier schools exploit their cachet, and the lifetime ca- Critics Charge 'Arrogance' Dartmouth 19,335 reer advantages, imagined or real, that a Columbia 19,320 diploma from a "better school" confers. In fact, colleges often raise charges to Yale 19,310 Wesleyan's Accurate Forecast avoid being the least expensive among Princeton 19,207 their peers, says Jan Krukowski, an educa- tion consultant. They're afraid of raising By GARY PUTKA Cornell 18,670 "suspicion about why they're so low," says Staff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL Source: College Board Mr. Krukowski, who doesn't view this as Wesleyan University was agitated early evidence of collusion. Whereas businesses in 1988 over a recurring issue: money. many educators, it's a climactic attack af- hold down prices to compete, Northwest- Angered by a proposed 7.5% increase in ern's Mr. Weber adds, many schools ter years of smoldering public resentment student charges, activists at the Middle- of rising tuitions and selective admissions "raise prices to meet the competition." town, Conn., school were pushing a letter- practices in which parents and students writing campaign to mobilize parental have felt impotent. Some colleges acknowledge that the pressure against further big increases. Ad- similar charges among similar schools is ministrators countered with some data The Bush administration's interest in no accident but see nothing illegal about it. that in virtually any other industry would the issue was foreshadowed last Decem- Many college costs, including faculty and have set off alarm bells. ber, at a meeting between Mr. Bush and 10 other salaries, campus upkeep and the A March 4, 1988, document, labeled college presidents. To the educators' sur- like, are broadly the same. And, much like "confidential" and drafted by the Wes- prise, the session included a lecture from retailers, schools scrutinize competitors' leyan treasurer's office, stated that in Sep- White House Chief of Staff John Sununu- pricetags closely. They often defend tember 1988, Harvard University charges two of whose eight children are in col- greater-than-average tuition increases by would go up 6%, Yale's 6.2%, and Dart- lege-about tuition increases that he citing higher charges or a bigger increase mouth's 6.3%. At the other end of the spec- deemed excessive. Attorney General Dick the year before at a similar school. trum, Wellesley College planned a 7.9% in- Thornburgh has also commented privately People familiar with the Justice Depart- crease, Amherst College 8.5%, and Wil- about "waste" he has seen on campus; his ment's investigation say the agency sus- liams 10.6%. Thus, the Wesleyan adminis- last job, before joining the administration, pects that the colleges' exchange of infor- tration argued that its increase was only was at Harvard's Kennedy School of Gov- mation prior to setting tuition and sala- matching the competition. ernment. ries-exchanges like that indicated by the Uncanny Accuracy Generating Discontent Wesleyan document-are routine, system- Exactly right or within a half-percent- Critics say the Ivy League and other top atic and designed to eliminate any real age point of each school's actual increases, colleges have laid the political groundwork price choices for higher-education shop- Wesleyan's figures were good-too good, for federal investigators by projecting an pers. perhaps. Most of the group of elite colleges image of wealth and indifference to paren- "What many college presidents and still hadn't announced their 1988-89 tal fears about affordability as they raised their staffs do to share information charges. How did Wesleyan know? It won't tuitions in the 1980s at a pace well above would pass as price rigging," says Robert historical rates. Iosue, the president of York College, in say. York, Pa. "How on earth can room and Questions over tuition-setting practices "This is the arrogance of an elite which board costs at Harvard, located in the Bos- have become more than academic. They is absolutely certain it knows what is best are one aspect of a broad Justice Depart- for everybody," says Chester E. Finn Jr., ton area, with one of the highest costs of ment investigation of possible collusion to a former Education Department aide who living in the country, be essentially the same as those at Brown [in Providence, rig prices and salaries in higher education. often complains about college charges. R.I.] or at Dartmouth in Hanover, New The department says it has made sweeping Colleges feel folks shouldn't be making civil-investigative demands of about 20 price decisions when it comes to deciding Hampshire, where the cost of living is much more moderate?" schools for records relating to how they de- termine student charges, faculty pay and where to go to college. And even if they The information sharing. both formal financial aid. The colleges have begun want to, [the colleges won't let them.' and informal, is extensive by private-in- complying with the demand. Suspicions of a rigged market "are con- dustry standards. The schools say they re- The earlier-reported practice of 23 Ivy sistent with what I would characterize as a peatedly call one another during the year League and other Northeastern schools of paternalistic approach to tuition setting. about tuitions and salaries. often talking in fixing student financial aid see page A6 says Arnold Weber, the president of North- terms of ranges of prospective increases. western University. Many colleges. he Indeed. the very notion of price competi- is also under government scrutiny. At an annual spring meeting, these colleges com- adds, think that "we know what's best for pare proposed financial-aid packages for you because we aspire to something called more than 10.000 common admittees and in excellence in higher education. We don most cases eliminate variances SO that a want to cloud the student mind by putting family S expenses will be identical no mat- him in a position where he have to make ter where a student goes. According to peo- trade-offs between different prices and pie familiar with the investigation. how- quality. Mr. Weber says he has put "our ever. the Justice Department main con- tuition where my mouth is by keeping cern IS tuition and faculty salaries. Northwestern's increases over the past four years below the average at compara- Mainly Private Schools ble institutions. The investigation has stunned many Anyone now shopping among the eight educators, especially at the prestigious pri- Ivy League schools would find little choice vate schools on which it seems to be fo- on price. Except for Cornell, which may cused. Public-college tuitions and salaries. enjoy economies of scale as the largest of largely fixed by state legislative and policy the eight, charges for tuition. fees. and decisions. apparently aren't under study. So far. 13 private schools acknowledge get- ting the civil-investigative demands: they include the University of Chicago: Wes- leyan. Connecticut and Trinity colleges in Connecticut: Amherst. Harvard. Williams and Tufts in Massachusetts: Bates. Bow- doin and Colby colleges in Maine: Hamil- ton College. New York state: and Middle- bury College. Vermont. WALL :09-05-89 tion is foreign to many schools. Officials of at open budget and faculty meetings and in board meeting, be says, his standard re- different colleges view one another less as campus publications as much as a year be- sponse to an outside inquiry would be competitors than colleagues. fore the final figure is set. something like "I could imagine 8% to 11% Oberlin's Practices The March 4. 1988, Wesleyan document, next year-we're still thinking about It." however, indicates that preliminary but Representatives of all the other schools Typical is the routine at Oberlin Col- accurate Information is exchanged just say they either didn't know how Wesleyan lege, a small liberal-arts school in north- when it would most help competitors- got the numbers or decline to comment. eastern Ohio with selective admissions and right before they set their own numbers. There's no doubt that anti-price-fixing an $18,840 pricetag close to Ivy League The document lists the 1987-88 and the laws apply to the nation's colleges and uni- levels. Beginning every autumn, over the then-prospective 1988-89 student charges at versities. But legal experts say the Justice phone and at multi-college gatherings, Wesleyan and 16 other schools. The pros- Department faces several problems in Oberlin Provost Sam Carrier swaps data pective charges are footnoted as "final" or making an antitrust case against the about preliminary plans for increases in "preliminary." People involved in the schools. When price-fixing can be shown to student charges the next fall, he says. By Wesleyan budget process say the adminis- offer some demonstrated public good, the time final figures are announced in the trators told the budget committee that they there are precedents for excusing it. At spring, Oberlin and other schools can set had obtained, on a confidential basis, pre- least in the case of financial aid, says Phil- charges at an optimal level-not too high liminary figures from the other schools. lip Areeda, a Harvard law professor, the to be uncompetitive but high enough to Figures for 11 schools besides Wesleyan colleges could argue that by saving money meet the bills. Mr. Carrier says a similar were listed as preliminary, but they on some students, they can aid others and routine is followed for faculty salaries. matched final charges exactly at Swarth- thereby expand access to college-to the "As I meet with people, I get their more College ($17,930), Wellesley ($17,240) public's benefit. thinking," he says. "I certainly feel free to and Williams ($17,329). The figure for As for tuition price-setting, Prof. tell colleagues at other institutions what I Stanford University missed by only $1 and Areeda says the government's main legal have recommended to our board." for Amherst by $5. For the others-Dart- problem may be the consumer choices Although such comments might be sen- mouth, Harvard, Penn, Oberlin, Trinity apart from the elite private schools. Be- sitive in light of the federal inquiry, Mr. and Yale-the numbers came within 1% cause "literally thousands" of other col- Carrier and others argue that they clearly of the final charges, either as listed in the leges charge less, he explains, a price-fix- show no conspiracy is afoot. The openness College Cost Book, the standard reference ing conspiracy among several dozen of many schools' budget and tuition-setting work for applicants, or as provided by the schools, even if proved, might be shown to processes enables anyone to get prospec- colleges when asked. barely affect the overall market. On the tive data on tuitions well before the date, Oberlin's Mr. Carrier says he doesn't other hand, if the Justice Department can usually in March or April, when a college specifically recall but he "could have convince a court that the appropriate mar- announces the final figures approved by its been" the person who gave Wesleyan the ket is selective schools, it would be much trustees. Oberlin number. Penn and Swarthmore easier to prove that any price-fixing con- "The tuition inquiry amazes me," says say their trustees had already acted before Robert Zemsky, the director of planning spiracy was harmful to consumers. the March 4 date of the document; hence, and head of a higher-education research the figures were no longer proprietary. group at the University of Pennsylvania. Swarthmore's president, David Fraser, "It's a fundamental misunderstanding of says its board approved final tuition fig- how this process works. This is an abso- ures on Feb. 27, 1988, about a week before lutely public process everywhere." the date on the Wesleyan list. He says that, Wesleyan's Document generally, anytime after the board's an- The final tuitions look alike because one nual tuition-setting meeting "I would be school can easily see figures that another's happy to give the information to anyone administration is proposing, Mr. Zemsky who asked," even if parents wouldn't be of- argues. Specific figures are often discussed ficially notified until later. Before the Officials of Harvard, Bowdoin Work For a Firm Selling Data on Students By GARY PUTKA colleges say would be unethical. One Steff Reporter of THE WALL STREET JOURNAL school says it pays $700 for the service. Whatever benefits elite colleges may For $350, the company also sells col- gain from their information exchanges, some of their employees appear to be do- leges the names of students who applied to their school but enrolled elsewhere and of ing well in the process. They work for Student Aid Services those who made deposits to attend more Inc., a closely held company that sells ad- than one school. A company marketing let- missions-related data to some 80 to 100 col- ter last February included the names of customers, including Harvard, Bowdoin leges. Three Harvard University em- and other private schools and public insti- ployees-Admissions Dean William Fitz- simmons. Assistant Admissions Dean War- tutions such as the University of Rhode Is- land and University of California at Berke- ren Reed and Financial-Aid Director James Miller-are listed in its marketing ley. More than 154,000 names were entered materials: so is Walter Moulton. the direc- in the company's data bank in 1987-88. tor of student aid at Bowdoin College. The admissions-overlap data is valua- Their roles in the company raise ethical ble. Knowing where common applicants questions. according to some critics. who decide to go helps colleges tailor their say administrators shouldn't be involved in marketing. Identifying multiple depositors profit-making activity that relies on their helps them enforce application rules and college jobs. Mr. Miller has said the com- ensure that all their slots are filled. AS a pany makes a small profit. but how much result of the service. which identified 1.225 hasn't been disclosed. He. Mr. Fitzsim- multiple depositors in the 1987-88 school mons and Mr. Reed declined to be inter- year, acceptances are sometimes pulled. viewed for this article. Mr. Moulton didn't Chester E. Finn. a former research di- return phone calls. rector at the Education Department and Harvard declined to comment about its now at Vanderbilt University, calls it officials' activities. A Bowdoin spokesman "gross" that a company selling such serv- said that Mr. Moulton long ago disclosed ices employs admissions officers who can his connection with Student Aid Services. influence their school's decision to buy. "It in line with Bowdoin's policy of requiring sounds to me like a form of self-dealing employees to disclose potential conflicts. that in Washington would be worthy of ref- and that Bowdoin 'is satisfied that it erence to an ethics committee." he adds. doesn't constitute a conflict of interest." Edward Custard, the acting director of Student Aid Services gathers and col- admissions at New College, in Sarasota. lates information for financial-aid "over- Fla., says the people connected with Stu- lap. a system in which the eight Ivy dent Aid Services "are clearly capitaliz- League schools and 15 other private East- ing" on their college positions. He says the ern colleges compare notes and fix finan- Harvard officials are well known in colle- cial-aid awards to students admitted at giate circles. Few colleges, Mr. Custard more than one of the schools. The process. says, would buy the services "if the offi- which affects more than 10,000 students. is cials were employed by Southwest Texas aimed at avoiding a bidding war that the State." N.Y.TIMES 09-03-89 New School Term in Chicago Puts Parents in Seat of Power cils will turn into unmanageable fief- 10P 11970 doms led by people with little knowl- edge of education. One principal said By ISABEL WILKERSON flatly, "I don't feel a group of parents Special to The New York Times should be allowed to run the school." CHICAGO, Sept. 2- With the start of "To take an entire system, convert It Bruce Berndt, president of the Chi- the new school year, Chicago will begin to civilian control and insist that this cago Principals' Association, said what education experts say is the most happen everywhere at once makes Chi- change was happening too fast. "We radical attempt in this country to re- cago unique in the country," said Pro- are literally learning how to swim by fessor Finn. "Nobody anywhere in this being thrown into the pool," be said. vamp a big-city school system by shift- country has conferred this kind of au- One fear, he said, is that principals ing power almost overnight from downtown bureaucrats to parents and thority on a lay board." will have to spend more time politick- ing than administering. "You've got to community people at each of the city's The effort to overturn Chicago's top- heavy bureaucracy came after Mr. win seven votes to get hired," Mr. 600 schools. Bennett denounced the 410,000-student Berndt said. "You could get 120 per- Each school will be run by a parent- school system, where the dropout rate cent on your evaluation and not get re- led council with the far-reaching au- is 45 percent and the average test score hired because they want somebody's thority now held by the Board of of students in nearly half the schools brother-in-law." Education. The councils, to be chosen was in the bottom 1 percent in the na- Nowhere but Up? in elections next month, will have the tion in 1987. Indeed, Professor Finn said, "some power to approve budgets, make "You've got close to educational parents will make uneven, inconsistent recommendations on books and curric- meltdown here," Mr. Bennett said. and even foolish decisions." But he ulums and assign and dismiss princi- The Legislature Acts added, "There's nowhere to go but up." pals. Now community groups are using The change, intended to streamline After months of lobbying by an un- training sessions to educate parents. At likely coalition of business leaders, the nation's third-largest school dis- a workshop from a housing project on education advocates and parents in all trict after New York and Los Angeles, the South Side, Florence Cox, a parent income brackets, the Illinois Legisla- leader and trainer, passed out charts of grew out of deep frustration over a ture settled on legislation last year that the Board of Education hierarchy and school system described in 1987 by Wil- streamlined the central office and gave maps of the school districts. Many par- liam J. Bennett, then Secretary of more authority to principals in hiring ents had barely finished the eighth Education, as the nation's worst. staff. Most important, it made parental grade, she said, and more than once All over the city, people are now control the centerpiece. she had to suspend the session so par- bracing for the transfer of power. Offi- The councils will be made up of six ents could find one of the five sheets parents, two community residents with cials are polishing plans for elections she passed out. no children in the school and two teach- for the 6,000 council slots, and trying to Mrs. Cox started with the basics, tell- ers, all elected to two-year terms. The ing parents that they should not get rid prevent vote fraud on Election Day and principal will sit on the board but will of a principal just because they did not infighting afterward. have no say on his appointment or dis- like him, that they should not go into Into the Political System missal, a decision that will require the schools looking only for things to seven votes. Not only will lay people criticize. Dozens of community groups are outnumber professional educators, but trying to educate parents, many of each council will be headed by a parent "Now that you'll be elected public of- them school dropouts bewildered by as well. ficials, you'll be responsible to the peo- their new responsibilities, and to get The law abolishes the lifetime tenure ple who elected you," Mrs. Cox said. "If them to run for council seats. Leaders of Chicago principals. Earlier this somebody wants a copy of the minutes, of black and Hispanic neighborhoods week, Judge Robert Sklodowski of you have to give them one. And you are waging a get-out-the-vote cam- Cook County Circuit Court, calling Chi- can't have secret meetings. If you walk home together and stand under a street paign to bring disaffected minority cago "an educational wasteland," ruled against a group of principals who light talking, that's a meeting, people. residents into the political system. sought to keep their tenure. So when You can't do that." Seventy percent of Chicago public the principals come up for reappoint- Serious Campaigns Ahead school students are from families ment, half in June 1990 and the other half in June 1991, depending on the re- Mae Frances Lyons, who lives at the below the poverty level, and in the low- income communities there is a sense sults of a lottery, each council will de- Prairie Courts housing project on the that more is at stake than just schools. cide whether to keep the principal or to South Side, came in wanting to run for a parent seat at Drake Elementary Parents who live in a housing project hire another under a four-year con- School. But she was not certain after on Chicago's South Side took notes like tract. hearing what the job entailed. "This is schoolchildren at a seminar on school The changes in the school system are mind boggling," said Mrs. Lyons, who change this week. expected to create a weaker role for dropped out of high school in the 10th the superintendent and the Board of grade. "I think I'd better back off from "These local school council elections, Education and thus leave Mayor Rich- this." as disarrayed as they may be, are ard M. Daley as the leading voice on In some communities, parents and going to be more important to us than school policy. The changes will un- residents are gearing up to campaign the election of Harold Washington," doubtedly figure prominently in the as if they were running for mayor. Salim Al-Nurridin, a community or- 1991 mayoral campaign. "This is going to be a serious, no-kid- ganizer, told the group, referring to the While taking away millions from its ding, no-jive campaign," said Mr. Al- late Mayor whose 1983 election galva- budget, the law did leave the Board of Nurridin, the community organizer ral- Education a key lever over the coun- lying South Side residents. nized the city's black voters. "This is about restructuring our community cils: The board can close a school if a Campaigning is likely to be espe- council fails in its duties. The law cially intense in Hispanic areas, where from the ground up. leaves the superintendent with admin- community leaders are hoping to gal- Several other districts, including New York and Dade County, Fla., have istrative duties as set by the board. vanize people now out of the political system because of language barriers tried decentralization. New York IS Board Keeps a Key Function or lack of citizenship. To vote for the divided into 32 community school dis- tricts, and Dade County has conferred Advocates of change say an all- parent and resident seats in the school powerful. distant bureaucracy was council elections requires only that the greater authority to individual schools crippling the schools. There was no voter be 18 or older and live in the com- on a limited basis. But no other decen- accountability,' said Dr. Donald munity or have a child at the school. tralization effort has been as far-reach- Moore, executive director of Designs This is going to be the largest ex- ing and as quickly done as Chicago's. for Change, an education research and periment in grass-roots democracy the advocacy group in Chicago. The country has ever seen," said Dan Solis, 'Absolutely Precedent-Breaking' change, he said, "gives people with the executive director of United Neighbor- "This is the biggest change in Amer- greatest stake in the schools a bigger hood Organization, a Hispanic com- ìcan school control since the 1900's," say in how they're run." munity group here. "We have a com- said Michael Kirst, a professor of Critics fear that the parent-led coun- munity with a large number of people education at Stanford University who who are not citizens, who have been in- has written several books on school timidated for years because their Eng- governance. "It is the most drastic lish wasn't that good, who are now sud- change in any school system I can denly able to leapfrog into the system think of. It is absolutely precedent- into positions with real power." breaking." What happens in Chicago could The trend in other districts has been transform not only disenchanted mi- to transfer power to principals rather nority neighborhoods but also public than directly to parents, said Chester education in general, experts say. E. Finn Jr., a professor of education "It's a bold experiment," Professor and public policy at Vanderbilt Univer- Kirst said. "If it fails, there will be very sity and a former Assistant Secretary little interest anywhere else. If it of Education under Mr. Bennett. works, it will be a beacon for the coun- try. 09-03-89 for five days by protesting students. House Panel Warns Howard U. About Spending ning to talk of a major study of Howard tion paid to senior staff. The committee They charged that top school adminis- and its future. believes it appropriate that a larger trators, though among the best paid in In its report on financing at Howard, portion of its budget be devoted to di- the country, were inefficiently handling the House committee says that in- rect student services and less to cen- By DRUMMOND AYRES Jr. would give Howard almost $152 million The House committee's report asks students' requests for financial aid and creased financial independence for the tral administraiton.' that the Federal Department of Educa- that campus housing was dilapidated Special to The New York Times for its academic program in the fiscal school should be taken as a "major re- Over the past 10 years Congress has WASHINGTON, Sept. 1 - Howard year that starts Oct. 1. The amount is tion conduct a "full audit" of Howard's and poorly secured. They also opposed sponsibility" by the new president, who given Howard more than $1.5 billion, University, whose reputation as one of about two-thirds of the school's pro- finances to determine whether admin- the appointment to the university is yet to be named. The panel added: with minimal controversy. The univer- board of Lee Atwater, the chairman of "The committee has been concerned the nation's premier black educational jected academic budget. istrative costs are out of line, espe- sity is a private institution but qualifies the Republican National Committee, by management deficiencies at How- institutions is attributable in good part The bill includes $5 million less than cially the salaries of administrators. for such aid because it has been made a who was a major strategist in therelec- ard, which have threatened accredita- to heavy Federal financial support, has the Bush Administration requested, a "It is essential that Howard reduce "special institution" by Congress. tion campaign of George Bush. The stu- tion at certain of Howard's schools and 'No member is saying it outright, been warned by Congress to reduce its rare Capitol Hill reduction for the its dependence on direct Federal ap- dents were particularly critical of Mr. colleges and which have resulted in 14,000-student university. But the bill propriations," the report said. but there's a message for Howard in dependence on Government money and Atwater's conservative record. less than adequate support for many to spend more wisely. would allow Howard to recoup that $5 Howard officials refused to comment what the House has done this year and The protests ended when school offi- student services. This has happened million from the Government should on the House action. "There hasn't what the Senate is likely to do," said a The warning was issued by the cials agreed to try to improve school despite one of the highest per student Congressional aide who has followed House Appropriations Committee in the school raise $5 million on its own In been any final Congressional decision administration and conditions on cam- expenditures of any university in this the aftermath of student protests this matching funds. and we don't want to discuss anything Howard appropriations for many pus. Mr. Atwater withdrew from the country. The committee has been espe- years. The aide, who asked not to be year over the way the 122-year-old The Senate may go along with the that's still under consideration, said board. The school's president of 20 cially concerned by reports regarding identified. added, "There's a sense on school is administered and maintained. House action when it takes up the How- Roger D. Estep, the university's vice years, James E. Cheek, retired soon af- the high proportion of Howard's budget the Hill that we've been taken for The warning is included in a report on a ard request in a few weeks. In past president for development. terward, earlier than expected and just devoted to central administration, in- granted, that Howard feels it doesn't bill, recently passed by the House, that years, that has usually been the case. Last March, Howard was shut down as the university's trustees were begin- cluding salaries and related compensa- have to be very accountable." TIMES 09-03-89 Working His Way Through College With a Computer, VCR and a Saab TOP stay out of it, most of them go to work to education will continue to erode, as By David Glidden buy that car and pay that rent and acquire students have insufficient time to study. RIVERSIDE whatever electronics they need. As a As things stand now, the time squeeze n the Midwestern college I attended, result, many students, even on scholar- means that students make do, earning life was pretty strict. In loco parentis ship, work 25 to 40 hours a week to pay for money to live on but earning degrees that conferred authority on deans. When adult living. Those who don't have to in fact require less and less. the school year began, we knew that blue work, thanks to their parents, often hold California's Community College System jeans were forbidden on Sundays in the down a job anyway-to gild the Ifly understands the facts of modern student dining halls, that cars were forbidden on they've been given. It's hard to discour- life. Many working students take courses campus. So was dormitory sex. Violators age acquisitions when the purpose of one by one at night. By contrast, the were suspended or expelled. Zoe, for higher education is perceived to be the University of California expects students example, was dismissed in her freshman economic advantage it presents. Edu- to be full time. Given the hours UC year for making out in a local movie cation then becomes a means, not an end. students work at earning wages, the house, where she attracted the attention Even in high schools, students work result is an inevitable academic demise, of two dowagers who promptly reported long hours after school to buy a car or pay particularly among lower income groups, her to campus authorities. Liberal arts for going to the prom. Once upon a less because they're the ones who have to colleges graduated innocents into the material time, students brought that mon- work the most. world and unleashed the rebels early. ey home to share with other family The cycle of an undereducated, disad- That's the way it was in 1962. members-rarely, today. vantaged class repeats itself in college. More than a quarter-century later, Money matters; time for making money There simply aren't scholarships enough deans no longer serve as parents and matters. Few hours are left for homework for schoól and for living too. Yet part-time students are now considered adults. All after school, and the squeeze worsens in students have little place in private adults, including students, seem to want college, where the bulk of academic colleges. Consequently, lower-income to live in comfort these days, with styles, preparation is supposed to take place students are pressured, either to compro- possessions and sex lives of their own. outside class. Jobs come first instead. mise their studies to pay for the kind of This means having personal mobility, Education cannot go back again to the life their peers enjoy or to avoid the social evenings free-and lots of bills to pay. It's days of parental deans but under the life of college altogether. difficult to live that way and go to school. current circumstances it cannot go for- Yes, young adults could always scale The greatest expense public college ward either. The hours students spend at back their expectations, students could students face today is often not the cost of wage-earning work are hours not spent live like monks. But that seems unlikely education, but making payments on the reading or doing schoolwork. in a world where the credit-card firms car and the cost of car insurance, not to In the University of California, a typical hustle students in campus cafeterias. Most mention rent. Public universities are out four-credit-unit course is supposed to everyone wants more, from whatever of step with this changing situation and require 12 hours of homework in a economic class they come; it is better, oblivious to its effects on education. week-that's 36 hours of homework for a such people say, to be wealthy than be Expensive private colleges have a thing or minimum course load. College life is wise. two to learn as well. The old school supposed to be-is designed to be-a The ethos that transforms dorm rooms days-authoritarian and ascetic-will not full-time job. Such is the basis of accredit- into model homes makes appearance come back again. ation. But today's typical college student paramount. This same ethos affects the Not every student enters college with only spends a total of 12 hours on classroom. Grades matter more than what Louis Vuitton footlockers. But the materi- homework in a week. That student is learned, just as possessions matter more al needs of college life are different now, doesn't have the time to read, because he than what is earned. The bottom of the even for those who live in dorms, even for or she has to earn and live the life of an bottom line is what you've got. The same those without wealthy families. The adult. Being an adult is hard; ask any might well be said of faculty, who weigh standard of living has soared beyond clock single parent who doesn't go to college. their publications by the page. So it's only radios, record players and Tensor lamps. Banning cars on campus or imposing natural, I suppose, that students often try Microwaves are considered necessities, so limits on personal possessions would not to reconstruct their academic records too, personal refrigerators. CD players dampen acquisitive enthusiasms, espe- when performance in the classroom fades, and color TVs are a must, plus VCRs for cially when so many students come to as if courses were credit cards-bills to be self-help tapes and late-night movies. college later in life. They wouldn't put up negotiated later. In addition to creature comforts, there with such authoritarian nonsense. The Recently I found myself, as a temporary are expensive study aids. Computers and European solution also wouldn't work- dean, listening to a pre-law student their accompanying printers have made establishing a separate class between pleading his excuse to drop a course long typewriters obsolete. Some students have childhood and adulthood. with special after the established deadline passed. He their own personal copying machines, restaurants, cafés and services to provide was sure to get a B-, he complained. or many own tape recorders to do the work students with a recognized social status of even worse, perhaps a C. Law schools of lecture notes. Walkmen are ubiquitous, their own. That would require a cultural wouldn't like this. Worse yet, his father to keep the mind alive between classes or tradition needing several centuries to might take his car away and he might while wandering in libraries. I haven't cook. have to get a job to pay the rent. mentioned clothes or books. The only sensible thing to do IS recog- I listened sympathetically and promptly Students who cannot afford the extra- nize the reality that students have jobs, to turned the kid down cold. The following curricular cost of college living under- offer classes at night and encourage more week a faculty committee heard his case standably feel out of it and, rather than students to attend college on a part-time and overrode me. The young man didn't basis. That way, students could take only hold a grudge or gloat. He even waved David Glidden is a professor of philosophy as much of college as they had time to when he passed me in his Saab as I biked at the University of California, Riverside. give. Otherwise, the quality of higher home from work. WASH. POST 09-04-89 70 And Quality in Schools T'S A GOOD thing there are so many states in foundation endowment and to provide mentors. The I this country, and so many state governments. It mentors will go into the schools, private as well as means that when all those state governments are public, and get as many of the 3,000 8-year-olds and in general agreement on a problem-at the moment, their parents-or parental stand-ins, given the chaos the need for education reform-those who wait a year of families-to sign contracts. The kids undertake to or two before launching an ambitious plan can draw on stay off drugs, stay in school and send the foundation a wide range of laboratory examples supplied by their their report card every term. The mentors keep track. quicker-off-the-mark colleagues. The people charged Those who meet the contract and graduate get full with education reform in Rhode Island have taken tuition at a state public university or the equivalent advantage of that backlog of experiments, and the elsewhere. The crucial elements, argues state higher benefits-in design, at least-are clear in the plan education commissioner Americo Petrocelli, are four: dubbed the Children's Crusade, announced last week a clear link between effort and reward; a clear link by the governor, Edward DiPrete. between dropping out of the program and "rotten Like many of the state plans already launched, outcomes"; careful monitoring by a mentor; and a Rhode Island's lays heavy emphasis on the economic network of concerned adults, a stand-in for the extend- costs of a high dropout rate-currently 50 percent ed family that, as Mr. Petrocelli points out, traditional- among children with incomes below the poverty line. ly annoy children by constantly asking them how they But unlike many, it starts from the proposition that are doing in school and what they want to be when changing that figure-let alone reaping economic they grow up. benefits from reform-will be impossible without two elements: time, lots of it, and some concrete measure Simple enough points. They come, says Mr. Petro- of whether the reform is working as planned. Accord- celli, from observation of the federal Upward Bound ingly, the Children's Crusade will sign up third- and Head Start programs, the much-hailed "I Have a graders-because fourth grade, according to experts, Dream" Eugene Lang model and some university- is roughly when kids begin to show serious, and often designed programs that have worked well over the irreversible, effects of early deprivation. It will aim longer term in Rhode Island and elsewhere. The plan specifically at the 3,000 low-income third-graders refines similar ones floated elsewhere, like New York's (about 30 percent of the statewide age group) who are more sprawling scheme to supply all graduates with deemed most at risk. If those 3,000 students' dropout full-tuition "liberty scholarships." In a typical small rate can be cut in half, state authorities figure, that will improvement, the state will pay a yearly sum into the mean 800 more high school graduates a year starting endowment instead of an operating budget. Such in 2001-a clear, convenient benchmark. step-by-step refinements are the way to proceed. With The crusade itself is straightforward, a blend of too many reformers still addicted to abstract rhetoric, familiar elements and new twists. The state will ask and too many reports that sound identical to those universities, groups such as the Urban League, busi- issued three and four years ago, a plan that builds on nesses and others to contribute to a public-private and beyond other efforts is a promising variation. TIMES 09-04-89 Soviet Woman Is First To 178/70 Pursue U.S. Degree Special to The New York Times ATLANTA, Sept. 3 - An 18-year-old public opinion analyst in the Soviet Soviet woman who will start classes at Union. "Through her father I came to Emory University this week is appar- ently the first Soviet citizen to seek a know about her extraordinary grades and fluency in English," Dr. Mickie- degree from an American college. wicz said. The woman, Olga Grushin, arrived in the United States on Saturday. Emory's president, James T. Laney, wrote in June to offer her admission on She is the first Soviet individual to full scholarship. "When I was contact- pursue a full American degree, said ed, I thought it was impossible for me Gregory Gurin, director of the Presi- to come here," Ms. Grushin said Satur- dent's initiative on exchanges at the day. "A few years ago, this would have United States Information Agency. been impossible." "Olga's case breaks all precedent," "Emory is proud to have one of the said Dr. Ellen Micklewicz, a professor most dynamic centers in the United of political science at Emory who nominated Ms. Grushin for a full schol- States for Soviet studies," Mr. Laney said. "Our faculty members have col- arship. "There have been Soviet citi- laborated in a number of ways with zens who have studied in this country Soviet scholars. Olga Grushin's enroll- for a year or for a semester with ex- changes, and now it. seems that the ment at Emory is another example of these valuable collaborations." time has come to have a Soviet enroll as a normal student." 48 Steps to America Columbia University offered admis- To leave the country, Ms. Grushin sion and a scholarship to another had to complete 48 steps, including an Soviet student, Anna Meytina of Lenin- extensive medical examination. Al- grad, in 1987, but she had to give up her though Emory was optimistic about Soviet citizenship to accept the offer. the chances of her arrival, its officials The Emory administration said Ms. were not sure until she landed in New Grushin's enrollment is an extraordi- York on Saturday. nary sign of change in the Soviet Union. Although she was supposed to have "Soviet citizens have not been allowed arrived on Aug. 29, she was delayed be- to do this sort of thing ever before," cause of minor visa problems. Schedul- said Ildiko Flannery, international ex- ing a new flight presented a major change coordinator at Emory. problem. "To get a ticket out of Mos- Normal International Student' cow in rubles is almost impossible," Ms. Grushin's application to accept Mrs. Flannery said, "so we had to pull a few strings with Pan Am." Emory's scholarship was subject to the approval of the Soviet state committee Ms. Grushin has completed one year on public education, but the committee at Moscow State University where she will not monitor her classes. "She is received the highest grade in each of her classes and was named one of the simply a normal international stu- dent," said Jan Turner, director of 10 best students in her first-year jour- nalism class. news and information at Emory. This semester, Ms. Grushin will Ms. Grushin came to Dr. Mickie- wicz's attention during the Emory pro- study English composition, 19th-cen- fessor's research collaboration with tury Russian literature and sociology. the Soviet Union. Dr. Boris Grushin, She said she wants to use her Emory Ms. Grushin's father, is a well-known degree to become a sociologist in the Soviet Union. TRIBUNE 09-05-89 Critical weeks for Chicago's schools 70 To a scary extent, the future of Chicago's public trusted because of racial antagonisms or ill-formed schools will depend on what happens in the next six suspicions, as has been happening. weeks. Black and Hispanic leaders should realize that the Elections to the 595 new local school councils will local school councils can give their communities enor- be held for elementary schools on Oct. 11 and for high mous new control over their children's education. If schools on Oct. 12. Candidates for elementary elec- they fail to use the opportunity, local school reform tions must be signed up to run by Sept. 27, those for could fail, their children would suffer and city and high school councils by Sept. 28. state bureaucrats would have to move in and take over How well this new and untried experiment works to keep the schools functioning. will determine whether current efforts at school reform They must also understand that the local school stand a chance of turning the failing school system councils will begin the complicated new process by around, or give it a final push into disaster. which a Board of Education is chosen to replace the current interim board by next spring. Those who want to have a voice in choosing board members have some opportunity to do so through the councils-if they If the process works as intended, school reform will become active in electing and serving on them. transfer a large amount of real power from ineffective, 3. Entrenched school bureaucrats will have to learn remote bureaucrats to parents, teachers and communi- how to share power in new ways with parents, ty residents with personal knowledge of what their par- teachers and community residents. ticular school needs and how it can be improved. It This will not be easy for many of them, especially should energize and empower thousands of concerned those whose jobs are now less secure because of new people to help the schools. And it should create a school reform provisions. For example, a group of process for change that is independent of the city's principals, residents and a district superintendent al- political and racial conflicts and economic interests. ready has gone to court trying to overturn school re- But if school reform is to work, four dangers must form legislation on several grounds, including that it be avoided: impinges on principals' tenure rights. Even though a 1. Caring, informed people by the thousands must Cook County judge rejected their case and urged them volunteer for election to the local school councils. to get on with reform efforts, the plaintiffs quickly They must be motivated by concern for children and filed almost the same suit in U.S. District Court. for school betterment, not by a personal, political, ra- Many of the councils will be fragile at first, as thou- cial or business agenda of their own. And they must sands of noneducators learn how to function and bring be willing to contribute considerable time to meetings about the improvements they want. The new process and to learning how to cope with school problems that will depend heavily on the cooperation of principals baffle professional educators. and other school administrators, who also will be Some Chicago employers are urging employees to learning new roles and skills. run for the councils-which must have six parents 4. Potentially well-qualified parents and residents chosen by parents, two residents elected from the who may feel intimidated about running for the coun- community and two teachers selected by the school cils should not back away. They can do it. staff. Some companies are providing time off with pay They can be reassured that the school reform legisla- to campaign and to serve. More are contributing tion provides money for training sessions. Principals money to help neighborhood organizations and other have a vested interest in being helpful; the councils can groups push candidates or working with a private refuse to renew their contracts. But there also may be agency, Leadership for Quality Education, toward a new role for activist groups, education associations, school reform goals. foundations and other agencies in developing helpful, But time is short. Efforts to publicize the unprece- trusted support systems, informative task forces, dented election may not be adequate. Many qualified troubleshooters and other aids. people have excuses for not running. Some who could do a good job may lack the self-confidence to try. Without enough good candidates to fill the 595 coun- cils, school reform could be in jeopardy. Whatever the difficulties, Chicago is committed to 2. Attempts to play racial politics with school reform the particular school reform plan written into law last must stop. year. It could become an acclaimed national model for Actions by Mayor Daley and by the interim school improving education everywhere. Or it could fail, board must be judged by their consequences for school dragging the nation's worst public school system into children, not used as fodder for the 1991 mayoral even greater failure. election. Efforts to aid the school reform process by The hard reality is that the people of Chicago have business leaders, foundations and activist groups must no choice except to work as hard as they can to make be weighed on their merits, not automatically dis- the unprecedented effort succeed. BALT. SUN: 09-05-89 Question Marks in Education TOP Major question marks surround school districts recent years, these small systems have found in the Baltimore region as another academic year themselves sharing the kinds of budgetary prob- begins this week. lems Baltimore City faces. Undoubtedly, there will The success of reorganization of public educa- be efforts by these jurisdictions to persuade a re- tion systems will be put to the test in Baltimore luctant General Assembly to spend more on edu- City and Baltimore County. Anne Arundel County cation in the state's poorest areas. Jaces a work slowdown from unionized adminis- There is encouraging news, though, from a Gal- trators. Carroll and Howard counties continue to lup Poll on attitudes toward public schools. Nearly try to cope with soaring enrollments. three-fourths of the public thinks it is "very impor- In the city, the entire top echelon is new and tant" to improve inner-city schools. By a 2-1 mar- 'nearly 500 administrative staff members have gin, respondents say they are willing to pay higher been shifted into different jobs. In Baltimore Coun- taxes to support proper efforts to improve public by. the responsibilities of some 100 staff members education - including allowing students and par- have been altered. Of necessity, these kinds of ents to choose which public schools in their com- -lärge-scale changes will produce initial difficulties. munities the pupils will attend. This "parental Adjustments also may have to be made in Anne choice" movement is law in Minnesota, Arkansas Arundel, where a union representing principals, and Iowa and it is under consideration in several -vice principals and top office personal is involved other states. Respondents also favor a "standard- in a contract dispute and has ordered a work-to- ized national curriculum" as well as national "rule job action that is certain to affect some class- standards and goals for public schools and nation- room work. These are temporary difficulties that ally standardized tests to measure achievement. time will alleviate. The resounding message here is that the public One of the striking features of Maryland's pub- is ready for tradition-shattering changes in policies Fic education system is its diversity. Five of the that govern public schools. This is a finding that Tocal school districts - Baltimore City and Mont- should stir the intellectual juices of Maryland's gomery. Prince George's, Baltimore and Anne educators. It also gives additional weight to the Arundel counties - have budgets so large they proposals of the Governor's Commission on School rank among the 50 biggest in the nation. Yet Performance, including its recommendation that Maryland also has some very small school systems individual schools be subjected to an accreditation Somerset. Cecil and Garrett, for example. In process to improve quality and accountability. 09-05-89 A Chance for Bush To Refocus on Schools 285/701 Brizius estimates. And we now schools like 1920s Industrial con- Washington. by Ernest Boyer, head of the Carne- very competitiveness in the future as gle Foundation for the Advancement a nation, and to our very soul as a know that the "top-down" state glomerates. with orders from on high mandates didn't help underprivi- for how each principal and teacher, MATTER how you slice it. of Teaching: people." N "If a health epidemic were strik- Here is a president who even un- leged kids much at all. In lock-step. has to function. The President George Bush's edu- derstands that it's ultimately a mat- Third, business-school "partner- new model - proving successful cation "summit" meeting ing one-fourth of the children in this ships" such as adopt-a-school and even In deprived Inner-city areas with the nation's governors, set for country. If we had heaps of garbage ter of "national security" when September 27-28 in Charlottesville, on the curbs a national emergen- schools fail to reach and educate mentoring programs are helpful. But Is to give each principal and his or cy would be declared," said Mr. Boy- poor and disadvantaged students. what's needed is pervasive reform of her cadre of teachers the profession- Va. has to be good news. At a minimum, the meeting er. "But when hundreds of thou- Maybe Mr. Bush is simply surround- the way education Is run in America. al responsibility to decide how they What does that mean? will educate their charges. And hold sands of students leave school every ed by so many children and grand- children that he instinctively grasps We could start by taking control them accountable for the results. year shockingly unprepared, the na- By Neal R. Peirce tion remains far too lethargic. We society's nurturing and educating of schools away from independently School-based management fits elected school boards and putting nicely with letting parents choose need a larger vision - an urgent imperatives in a way the more isolat- ed "Gipper" never could. them under general-purpose govern- which public school their child will call to action and the president ment. If war is too important to be attend - a concept President Bush Should focus fresh national attention himself must lead the way. But without new federal mega- ch the faltering performance of the Addressing the Business Round- left to generals, education is too Im- supports. Like the rest of society. bucks, what can a "summit" nation's schools. At its best, it could table, Mr. Boyer went on to urge a portant to be left to petty political schools need to compete, each devel- achieve? oping Its own strengths, in effect be produce new urgency in launching a 812 billion "Marshall Plan" for edu- flefdoms and Imperious school ad- First, It can spotlight. in dramatic ministrators unaccountable to the coming its own "magnet" school. determined "second wave" of basic cation precisely the kind of solu- form, the deep threat that under- chool reform. mayors and councils. We ultimately American education must be- tion Mr. Bush rejects. If our schools The president promises to attend are still failing despite the total $330 performing schools pose to our soci- hold mayors accountable for the come an exciting enterprise. full of billion the nation Invests in them ety. whole municipal enterprise. Why fresh and competing Ideas. The **every minute" of the two-day meet- The with the governors. So important yearly, Mr. Bush reasons, "the chal- Second, the summit should honor not let them appoint the school su- president with his visibility. and the the meeting. he argues, that only lenge of education reform suggests but not falsely prolong the reform perintendents of their choice? And governors with their powers to two comparable summits ever hap- wave that began in 1983. It was im- then hold them accountable for the change budgets and set policies, are something much more fundamental portant to stiffen course require- results? the right combination to Ignite a new pened before — the first when Ted- than money." dy Roosevelt assembled the gover- Even Mr. Bush's critics should ments in such areas as math and A summit should celebrate and reform wave. The process can also nors to talk about an end to ravaging acknowledge his legitimate personal foreign language, to eliminate "80- promote the Idea of school-based goad more governors, and their the country's forests. the second in concern about the schools. In con- cial promotion" from grade to grade, management. This means radical states, Into launching full reform 1933 when FDR convened the state trast to Ronald Reagan, who rode to mandate teacher-competency slimming down of central school bu- agendas. executives to discuss ways out of the into Washington trying to abolish reaucracies that busy themselves But If It's to make any difference. tests. Great Depression. the Department of Education, Mr. But the reforms produced at most with fastidious micro-management George Bush can't leave It at one The need for a presidentially con- Bush appears earnest in asserting a 5 percent increase in the schools' of the schools. "summit." He'll have to keep on that, "education is the key to our effectiveness, education expert Jack We must stop running our leading. yened effort was pinpointed in June WASH. POST 09-05-89 TALKING POINTS Returned Copies of Constitution Brown pointed out that West Virginia has the second lowest-paid teachers and one of the highest Inspire Broadside From Burger dropout rates in the country. "We all know the limits our state presently has on its budget," he said, "so When it comes to the Constitution and former we want it to be clear to the president that real chief justice Warren E. Burger, there's no fooling money from Washington is more important than around. rhetoric." That's apparently what prompted Burger to fire Meanwhile, Delaware Gov. Michael N. Castle (R) off an angry letter last week to Rep. Fortney "Pete" convened his own summit last month in preparation Stark (D-Calif.). Sources at the Commission on the for the national meeting. "The president's education Bicentennial of the Constitution, which Burger summit offers us an opportunity to contribute to the heads, said "the chief" was incensed that Stark had national debate about the future of education-and returned 1,000 copies of the Constitution to the at the same time identify how Delaware's schools agency, "in the name of eliminating duplicative or can improve in the next few years," Castle said. unnecessary spending." In a three-paragraph letter on Supreme Court Hoover Institution Director Retires letterhead, Burger told Stark that someone on his staff had requested the materials earlier this sum- W. Glenn Campbell, for 30 years director of the mer. "Either I or someone on our staff will be avail- Hoover Institution of War, Revolution and Peace, a able to assure that the 'right hand' on your staff will conservative think tank at Stanford University, has know what some of the other hands are doing," retired. The think tank has been widely credited Burger said. with providing ideas and foot soldiers for the Rea- "I do not regard it as a "waste" of government gan administration. money to make 10c copies of the Constitution avail- Under Campbell, the institution tripled in size and able to as many Americans as possible," he told its endowment soared to more than $125 million. Stark. The growth led some Stanford faculty members to A spokesman for Stark said he had no comment propose that the university sever its relationship on why the congressman had rejected the copies. with the think tank. According to an Associated Press report, former States Prepare for Education Summit Hoover fellow Michael J. Boskin, chairman of the White House Council of Economic Advisers, has Hoping to attract some attention and put a little been mentioned as a candidate to succeed Campbell. pressure on President Bush to keep his pledge to be the education president, two states are gearing up Political Science Association Awards for the educational summit Bush plans to hold with the 50 governors Sept. 27-28 in Charlottesville. During its annual convention over the weekend, The West Virginia Federation of Teachers an- the American Political Science Association honored nounced plans to solicit comments from classroom a number of Washingtonians. Ronald Walters of teachers and citizens on their priorities for public Howard University received the association's Ralph education in the state. The information will be given J. Bunche Award for the best scholarly work on eth- to West Virginia Gov. Gaston Caperton (D) to help nic and cultural pluralism. Walters, an adviser to define his goals for the summit. Jesse L. Jackson, was honored for his book, "Black "The only way the governor can clearly under- Presidential Politics in America: A Strategic Ap- stand the challenges teachers and other school per- proach." sonnel in West Virginia face is to listen to the con- White House national security adviser Brent cerns of those who see the problems firsthand," fed- Scowcroft received the Hubert H. Humphrey eration president Rick Lyon said. Award for notable public service by a political sci- Bush said he hopes the education summit will set entist. goals for school districts, but federation executive The Carey McWilliams Award went to Lesley director Bob Brown said: "Education is largely con- Stahl of CBS News for a major journalistic contri- trolled by governors and localities-not by the fed- bution to understanding politics. eral government. The goals educators express to -Maralee Schwartz, Bill McAllister Caperton must be goals for the state to carry out." and David S. Broder WASH.POST:09-05-89 Md. Schools Reaching Out To Children Without Homes Programs Encourage Enrollment, Study 105 By Claudia Levy 70 were more than 2,500 children It was better than transferring to Washington Post Staff Writer without homes last year. still another new place, he said. State education officials also are None of his friends knew what he The lanky, quiet seventh-grader planning after-school programs in li- was going through. was ashamed that he and his family braries, a book drive and tutoring "The social worker notified me had been evicted from their apart- sessions at shelters for homeless because the boy had become de- ment, that he and his mother had children, said Peggy Jackson-Jobe, pressed," the head guidance coun- had to live for a while in their car state coordinator of the programs. selor at the school said. "I clued in a and had ended up in a shelter in School systems in this region few of his teachers, and indicated Wheaton. The only constant in his have formally adopted guidelines of that he needed some TLC. I feel life was his school, miles away in the McKinney Act ensuring that that that's probably the best way northeastern Montgomery County. children without fixed addresses we have." The teenager was one of more will be encouraged to enroll for Daniel Thompson, an unem- than 1,400 students in Montgomery classes, overriding the usual resi- ployed miner who was staying with last year without a permanent ad- dency requirements. his wife and eight children in a Gai- dress. The number of students reg- "Some states are being reason- thersburg motel last week, said he istering out of motels, shelters, rel- ably activist" about complying with was told he could enroll his children the McKinney Act, said Mary Ellen in local schools there, even though Hombs, acting director of the local the family has been homeless for office of the National Coalition for "Kids need a quiet nearly a year and lives off and on in the Homeless. "Maryland seems to a Toyota station wagon. place they can do be a pretty good example But Finding the money for housing there's nothing notable in Virginia's continues to be the family's most homework. In a report no display of real aware- pressing problem, Thompson said. ness." Virginia did not submit state- But in the meantime, "I'll probably room where there wide figures, but reported that Al- put the kids in school in Gaithers- exandria had 1,093 homeless chil- burg, and just live out of the car or dren. the motel," he said. are 50 other people, The District said it had 1,136 they don't have a children in shelters at the end of 1988. quiet place.' In visiting 45 shelters in seven Maryland counties this summer, - Peggy Jackson-Jobe Jackson-Jobe said the problems fac- ing schoolchildren were immediate. atives' homes and, in some cases, "Kids need a quiet place they can do even cars is expected to grow when homework," she said. the homeroom counts come in after "In a room where there are 50 school begins this week, officials other people, they don't have a qui- said. et place. When the teacher gives Across the Washington area, well them a project to do, if they don't more than 5,000 school-age chil- dren are believed to be homeless, have a library card, they can't get along with thousands of their one." younger siblings, according to Montgomery County libraries al- school system estimates. low students to list shelters as their As economic hard times and drug homes to qualify for borrowers' cards, a spokeswoman said. Jack- problems have pushed an increasing son-Jobe said similar arrangements number of families out on the were being worked out in other street. shelters that were once full counties this fall. only in winter now are crowded The Wheaton youth. now enter- year-round. social service agencies ing the eighth grade. said he is ac- said. customed to waking before dawn Maryland educators reported for the two-hour journey by bus to that the number of homeless chil- his old school. dren doubled in the state from 1987 to 1988, to an estimated 11,000. In the past year, school systems nationwide began being held ac- countable for the education of homeless children under provisions of the two-year-old Stewart B. McKinney Homeless Assistance Act. States were required to submit plans last spring. As part of its response to the re- quirements, Maryland is launching a new system to track children without homes. In Prince George's County, sec- ond in the state only to Baltimore in the number of homeless, there BALT. SUN: 09-03-89 John Toll's University In his 11 years as leader of the sprawling Uni- search grants. The faculty of seven programs are versity of Maryland, John S. Toll has tried to steer ranked in the top ten of public universities. Ad- the state's dominant higher-education institution mission standards have risen considerably. And toward academic excellence. By almost any mea- private fund-raising - almost unheard of at UM surement, UM has made encouraging progress. in 1978 - topped $20 million in 1988, with a When Mr. Toll returned to UM in 1978 as its $200 million campaign now under way. president, the university had finally erased its im- Mr. Toll has been especially active in linking age as a football factory. He provided the energy the university to industry and government. UM is and drive to push UM toward the forefront of pub- deeply involved in numerous high-tech research Ifc universities. concentrating on recruiting faculty projects and has opened thriving centers in Shady talent, starting programs to attract bright students Grove, Bowie and Baltimore that have drawn na- and initiating private fund-raising activities. Most tional attention. Important of all, he created partnerships with While Mr. Toll has won praise for luring good business. industry and government that could pro- faculty to Maryland and maintaining the high duce big benefits in the decades ahead. standards of its graduate schools, UM's under- John Toll has always been an academic build- graduate programs have not fared as well. His er. He turned a six-member physics department at micro-management style cost UM a number of College Park into a 70-member department with skilled administrators. And his failure to give the international stature in the 1950s and 1960s. Baltimore region a consolidated, comprehensive Then he transformed the State University of New university system stands as a major shortcoming. York. at Stony Brook from a sleepy Long Island The Toll era at Maryland officially ends on campus with 1,700 students into a bustling insti- Tuesday, when an Interim chancellor, James A. tution of 17,000. "Dolph" Norton. arrives at Adelphi. He takes over During Mr. Toll's 11-year tenure at Maryland, an enlarged UM with considerable potential. John the number of National Merit Scholars rose sev- Toll's university may not yet have reached the top en-fold. UM ranks among the nation's leaders in tier of peer Institutions, but It has taken some prestigious faculty fellowships and in federal re- large steps in that direction. TRIBUNE 09-03-89 Reform already affecting schools Confusion grows as 1st classes near 70 By Karen M. Thomas all in place the first day of school," Education writer said board Vice President William When school doors open Tues- Singer. "Some of those positions day in Chicago, attention that has are not even budgeted for the been focused on a far-reaching law whole school year. The most im- to reshape the failing school system portant thing is having a principal will shift from board chambers, and the basic school needs filled, corporate workshops and commu- and I think that will all take nity forums to the city's schools place." and their 410,000 students. Some of those new jobs are being While the school year typically sought by those with teaching cer- begins amid some confusion, several tificates who had held one of the school officials are predicting that 512 positions that the board cut this year's start may be rougher from its $2.2 billion budget. More than usual as rapid and sweeping than half of the school system's changes in the Chicago School Re- district superintendents and staff, form Act find their way out of the as well as a number of clerical, system's central offices and into the middle managers and administra- hallways of the local schools. tors at central offices, were affected "There is more confusion out by the cuts. there than usual, and I suspect that "I don't have a place," said this school opening will be a little Frank Ventura, former District 8 worse because there are a lot of superintendent, who lost his job questions yet to be answered," said under the cuts. "I think most of us Bruce Berndt, president of the Chi- have been offered that we could be cago Principals Association. placed on an eligibility list for Principals are finding themselves classroom teaching, but I don't at the forefront of putting in place have a grade to teach or a school new policies set by the interim to be placed as interim principal, Chicago Board of Education and so I'm out." preparing their schools for the Oc- It is up to the principals to de- tober elections of powerful local cide who will fill vacant slots; school councils, which are at the whether art or music should be re- heart of the city's efforts to im- instated at their schools; how many prove its public schools. new teachers will be needed to re- The councils to be formed at 648 duce class sizes by one pupil at city elementary and high schools each elementary school; and how will have the power to hire and fire elections for the local school coun- the principal, develop a school im- cils will be handled. provement plan and approve the Some principals say they are sim- local school budget. ply making choices-like choosing An early settlement with teachers between music and art-that they and other employees has guaran- expect could be overturned by the teed that teachers will be on the local school councils once they are job Tuesday and the children will elected. be in the classroom on Wednesday. "At this point in time, we are But that settlement and a pact with just more inclined to lean toward the federal and state governments music, because we have some tal- to improve special education serv- ent on our staff in that area," ices call for more than 1,000 new Brown said. "But that does not teachers and other changes that mean we are locked in if the coun- principals must spearhead. cil prefers art." "It is a different opening," said With the shift to the local Benjamin Terry, principal of Arm- schools, the board will now focus strong Elementary School. 5345 W. on the elections, the ongoing Congress Pkwy. "No one really search for a new school superinten- knows how this is all going to go. dent and negotiations with teachers It's kind of a challenge. and other employees for a mul- "Even though the contract is tiyear agreement that would ensure signed and people have security in smooth school openings for at least being able to return, overall there two years. seems to be something that per- The board and supporters of the meates the air. It's the uncertain- reform movement recently won ty," said Rufus Brown, principal of several important legai battles when Banneker Elementary School, 6656 two Cook County Circuit Court S. Normal Blvd. judges ruled against principals, dis- It is unlikely that the new posi- trict superintendents and parents tions will be filled by Tuesday or who had sought to have elements even by the end of September, of the school reform law blocked. since many are based on school en- "I think you will find everything rollment figures that typically are is under control and everything will not set for the year until early Oc- happen in a very orderly way," tober. Singer said. "My guess is that all is "I don't think we will have them going very well." As the Schools Go, So Goes the City 09-02-89 TOP ployment and crime resulting from as responsibile for the performance provided on a concentrated basis; come taxes have fallen from 9 per- By Felix G. Rohatyn the high dropout rate will drive more of the schools as for the cleanliness of tutoring could be provided by older cent in 1985 to 7.875 percent now, people and businesses out of the the streets. Accordingly, the students in exchange for educational and are scheduled to drop to 7.5 per- he failure of New York mayor should be empowered to ap- credits and might not involve large cent and 7 percent in the next two city. T City's public schools We should not accept Band-Aid ap- point the majority of the board, with outlays. years. and the implications of proaches and mere declarations of the borough presidents appointing the Sixth, the involvement of the busi- These cuts would amount to about their disintegration for good intent from the mayoral candi- balance. Under the current rules, no ness community should be institution- $400 million in 1990 and $1.3 billion in the city's future have dates. Turning the schools around one appoints a majority, so no one is alized. Business can assist in provid 1991. To maintain or increase state at long last become too will require fundamental changes responsible. ing summer jobs and after-school aid to meet local needs such as educa- and a new definition of what the pub- Third, we should recognize that training, furnish financial assistance tion, it's worth considering whether serious to ignore. As voters assess this year's mayoral race, they should lic schools are supposed to be. decentralization as it is now prac- for higher education and guarantee income taxes should be temporarily think carefully about the candidate It will require strenuous political ticed has failed miserably. The com- jobs for deserving graduates. frozen at present levels. who has the determination and vision effort on the part of Gov. Mario munity school districts are just pa- Seventh, clean and modern physi Still, it is sheer fantasy to deal with to create a school system to meet the Cuomo, legislative leaders, the next tronage sources and corruption is cal facilities should be provided by a major problem such as public city's needs in coming decades. No mayor, our Congressional delegation, rampant. The mayor, with the chan- the new school construction agency education without greater Federal issue is more important to New the business community, teachers cellor, should have the power to ap- on an accelerated basis. assistance. The budget deficit pro York. and parents. It will require a great point half the seats on the community Eighth, the schools need more vides Washington with an excuse to Major reform is required for two deal of money. boards. Parents should be heavily money. The question, of course, is do nothing. However, this is a reason reasons. First, a decent public educa- To begin with, we must have represented. where that's going to come from. to eliminate the deficit, not to ignore competent and experienced leader- Fourth, we have to develop new New York City cannot afford to im- major problems. The loss of Federal aid over the ship. At a time when continuity is teachers. To persuade students to go pose new taxes. However, it can ef TOMORROW'S NEW YORK critical, the tragic death of Chancel- into teaching, scholarships and fect savings that can be reinvested past eight years is dramatic. If Fed- lor Richard Green faced the Board of financial incentives should be pro- First on the list should be the awe eral aid had continued in 1989 at 1981 The Next Mayor Education with a challenge that it vided. To persuade them to remain in some educational bureaucracy, levels, the city would have received failed to meet. education, we need competitive com- which now consumes about $600 mil- $1.2 billion more in the expense An Occasional Series Chancellor Green had recently ap- pensation and civilized working lion a year. budget and $1.8 billion more in hous- pointed a competent and experienced conditions. Citywide labor costs, which will be ing programs. We cannot continue to tion should be considered a basic civil deputy, Bernard Mecklowitz. But the Fifth, schools must, in many cases, negotiated again in 1990, are another make up for these losses. right; the goal of equal opportunity board gave in to political pressures to become extensions of the family. prime target. An increase of 5 per- An alliance of the Democratic Con becomes a cynical slogan if decent begin a search for a minority candi- Schools should be open through the cent to 6 percent, which would cost gressional leadership and the na- education isn't made available. date. During this search, change is at evening to provide after-school study the city between $700 million and $900 tional business community could pro- vide backing for a tax increase to sup- Second, New York City's economy a standstill, and a new chancellor will and recreation facilities, meals for million, is clearly unaffordable. will rapidly deteriorate without a sup- need from 18 months to two years to those children who need them and The city should maintain its labor port public education. These funds ply of skilled employees for tomor- learn the system. evening sessions for parents in need costs at current levels by a combina- could be targeted to local govern- row's predominately service econ- It is wrong to bring ethnic stand- of educational assistance. tion of lower wage settlements and a ments for teacher pay, counselors, omy. Furthermore, the cost of unem- ards into the selection process. And it Counseling should be available be- smaller workforce. This can be longer school hours, etc. makes little sense to bring in an out- fore a child gets into trouble. There is achieved by attrition and manage- This is a difficult and costly agen- Felix G. Rohatyn, a partner with La- sider, unless he or she is truly out- now one counselor for every 700 chil- ment efforts which will produce con- da. But doing nothing will be costlier zard Frères & Company, is chairman standing, when we have a perfectly dren in the system; this should be siderable savings in future years. still. It will ultimately destroy the of the Municipal Assistance Corpora- experienced and able incumbent. brought down to one in 70 over the By contrast, the state does have city's ability to function as a leading tion. Second, the mayor should be made next five years. Tutoring should be some flexibility with taxes. State in economic and cultural center. BALT.SUN: 09-02-89 Testest Score Gap Maryland school officials have reported new than three times as many black children as whites findings that reveal a disturbing problem: a big are officially classified by the government as living gap in test scores between black and white school children in the state. An examination of achieve- in poverty, a condition that affects family stability and impacts on the level of support and encour- ment test scores found a distinct racial break- agement a child receives at home. down, with Asian students scoring highest, fol- lowed by whites, Hispanics and finally blacks. It The problems of teen pregnancy, drug use, vio- also revealed that blacks fall further and further lence and crime are also disproportionately high among poor, urban blacks, whose schools are of- behind whites as they advance from third grade to ten overcrowded and under-equipped. The trouble eighth grade, by which time they are reading at a was spelled out in a recent ABC television special, level two years behind whites and three years behind Asians. "Black in White America," produced by the net- work's black staffers, who noted there are more These findings are alarming, but they are not black men of college age in jail than in school. surprising since they are in line with national Maryland school officials said that the racial findings on achievement test scores. They also gap grows wider as children get older, but Prince follow state and national patterns of disparity be- George's County has provided an example of how tween blacks and whites in other aspects of life - from the higher rate of low birthweight among to turn that trend around. Over the past two years, black achievement scores in that suburban Wash- black babies to the higher rate of death among ington county have seen a dramatic rise because black men from violence, heart attacks and strokes. Black unemployment is twice the rate of a concerted effort by school officials and politi- cal leaders to bring about improvements. The ef- among whites, as It has been for many years. fort includes spending more money on instruction Poverty rates are even further apart. The national and encouraging greater parental involvement in poverty rate was 34.7 percent among blacks in education. It stands as a lesson to other school 1968, when it was 10 percent among whites. Al- most 20 years later, in 1987, It was 31 percent systems in the state that something can be done to among blacks and 11 percent among whites. More close the test score gap before it grows to the point of no return. WASH. POST :09-01-89 Jougs Math, Science and Spaceflight T HE VALIANT Voyager 2, now departing the the Voyager spectacle are built of familiar textbook solar system after its historic pass of Neptune, concepts, concepts that can be translated into math has been hailed as a groundbreaking mission, a and science for kids as young as third grade and then textbook example of planning and a cost-effective into progressively more complex ones. venture that paid back its relatively small investment a Take the appearance of Voyager's pictures, trans- thousandfold. But it was something else too: the best mitted by radio wave. Elementary school students can advertisement in a decade for showing school-age kids learn a good deal about the physical concepts of a radio the kind of magical payoff that can result from the wave. They can be shown the role in such transmission hard study of math and science. At a time when of base-two number systems; color enhancement means educators are agonizing over how to attract more learning about the spectrum; older kids can use equa- students into these fields, such a motivational bonanza tions to "smooth out" the images. Slightly older students should not go unnoticed. 26 TI Nor has it. While Voyager was nosing closer to can also learn something about navigation and how to Neptune last week, the Jet Propulsion Laboratory in plot the orbit of a planet: this requires the use of ratios Pasadena, Calif., was hosting not only hordes of and, later on, trigonometry. "You give students a reason journalists but also 700 educators who went there to to learn the skill," explains Gil Yanow of the JPL attend a conference on linking Voyager's accom- education program. "Actually, if you get them excited plishments to classroom activities. The JPL in Cali- enough, they'll learn it on their own." fornia and NASA in Washington both have long- Adult liberal-arts types who were taught math more standing programs of this type, and with each big traditionally may boggle at the idea of being given a event-Voyager, the Venus-bound Magellan launch reason to learn trigonometry. Wasn't trigonometry, like last May, the Galileo probe this fall-materials and so much else, just there to make you suffer? But this kind kits go out to classrooms, museums and, of course, of why-we-do-it lesson planning is now the forefront of planetariums. The slides and posters are fun, but the the latest new-math thinking. And when you see Nep- curriculum materials are even more useful in their tune and Triton rising in the Voyager viewport, that kind way: they show how the striking effects that make up of new thinking makes heartening good sense. TIMES: 09-01-89 Heroin-crack mix headed for schools entered drug treatment. Dr. Faggett By Jay Mallin THE WASHINGTON TIMES 1260/701 said the dealer pleaded with him to do something because he feared for Local drug dealers are planning to the well-being of his 8-year-old son. introduce a deadly, smokable mix- "It's been test-marketed [by local ture of crack cocaine and heroin dealers), and the marketing strategy next week to coincide with the open- apparently is to release it when ing of area schools, a substance- school opens because that is the tar- abuse expert at D.C. General Hospi- get population," Dr. Faggett said tal said yesterday. after testifying before a Senate Judi- The product, so new that it does ciary Committee hearing on illegal not have an established name, may drugs. turn a whole generation of District The appearance of the drug in the youths into heroin addicts, said Dr. Washington area "easily could be the Walter Faggett, director of sub- worst news since the emergence of stance-abuse services at the hospi- crack cocaine," Dr. Faggett said, re- tal. Names that have been used else- ferring to the time when crack re- where include "speedball," from an placed PCP [phencyclidine] as the older term for heroin, and "para- drug of choice in the District. chute," for the soft landing that her- At the same time, a spokesman for about very young people," Dr. Fag- oin provides after crack's brief high. the Metropolitan Police Department gett said. Dr. Faggett said he learned of the said yesterday that police narcotics Crack highs, which last only a few planned introduction by talking to experts told him they know addicts minutes, often end in a depression so several drug dealers, including a 45- sometimes combine cocaine and severe it drives users to suicide. In year-old heroin dealer who recently heroin - either for injection or the cocaine-heroin combination, the smoking - but that in the District heroin cushions that fall. the combination, so far, is used only But crack-heroin users "are, at a by older addicts. high risk of death," Dr. Faggett said, "They say it's not popular among because crack can cause heart fail- young people," Officer Quintin ure and heroin depresses the res- Peterson said. "It may very well turn piratory system so severely that us- that way, but right now it's not." ers may nod off and stop breathing. Many heroin users are in their Mr. Hopkins, who directs a team 30s, while most crack addicts are of ex-addicts in "street research" for teen-agers. The young crack addicts the state's Division of Substance have tended to avoid heroin because Abuse Services, told the Senate com- of "squeamishness" about the neces- mittee the new combination is being sity of injecting it, said Richard tried by New York City "yuppies" Lopez, a psychologist with D.C. Gen- and college students. Users report eral's substance abuse program. uneven success with it, possibly be- By providing a new product that cause smoking only will work with can be smoked like crack, D.C. drug varieties of heroin that vaporize at dealers are introducing crack ad- low temperatures. dicts to a second addiction-heroin. "You are going to end up with a Still, he said, use "is growing and dual addiction," said William Hop- growing rapidly." kins, who works with drug abusers Last year, area drug dealers intro- in New York City. He said the new duced a mixture called "Space addicts may turn to intravenous in- Base," or "Beam me up Scotty," a po- jections of heroin "and what that tent combination of PCP and cocaine would mean would be an entire new that was widely popular among generation on heroin." street users. "We are talking about a very pro- Tracie Reddick contributed to found addiction, and we are talking this report. Shake-up hits Hoover Institution to try to bring Hoover under "normal academic governance." "Basically what they want is our buildings and money," Mr. Campbell By Carol Innerst Campbell's deputy director for gentleman." said. "They don't care about our THE WASHINGTON TIMES 10 nearly two years, has been appointed "Tough in a different way," he said. books and archives." acting director while a search com- "Some think he's nicer. He'll handle He put Hoover's worth at "over A power shift occurred today at mittee looks for a new director. He it well. He was my deputy director, $300 million," not placing any value besieged Hoover Institution on the said he has been assured he is con- after all:" on the scholars. The endowment is campus of Stanford University as its sidered a "serious candidate" for the "I think Glenn and I share the goal about $130 million. long-entrenched director and guard- long-term directorship. of attracting the best possible public Hoover is formally a part of Stan ian, W. Glenn Campbell, grudgingly When Stanford's board of trustees policy scholarship we can attract - ford University. located in the center moved to the sidelines under terms gave Mr. Campbell the boot, they independent of ideological bent," Mr. of the campus and receiving about of a forced retirement. also gave him a golden parachute Raisian said. "I think I'm as commit- $4 million annually for library sup- Ousting of the crusty, hard-line that conveyed the probable lifetime ted to the best interests of Hoover as port. Hoover's budget is about $14 conservative who for 30 years pro- title of "counselor" in the Hoover Glenn is, but I don't know that we million annually. tected Hoover's autonomy has raised hierarchy. He also gets to keep his have the same kind of personality Stanford doesn't control Hoover. anew fears of the think tank's aca- 11th-floor office in the 285-foot Hoo- traits. I consider myself pretty darn The family of the late President Her demic and financial absorption by ver tower that looms over Stanford's conservative, but not as quick to bert Hoover drew up the incorporat- Stanford's traditionally liberal fac- red tile roofs. show my stances on particular is- ing documents in a way to make en- ulty and administration. Mr. Raisian views Mr. Campbell sues as Glenn is. I'm not as colorful, croachment by the university But there are indications that Mr. as a "top adviser" and will seek his without question, but most people difficult. In particular, the Stanford Campbell, at least for awhile, will input in the decision-making pro- consider me pretty conservative." provost, faculty and board of continue to wield influence. cess. He said that he's as committed as trustees have little control over the The acting director, John Raisian, Mr. Campbell, 65, still upset about his former boss to fending off "take- Hoover director's appointments to sees Mr. Campbell as "sidelined but the high-handed manner in which over" plots aimed at Hoover. research positions. And there is no not out" in his new role as "coun- Stanford President Donald Kennedy The first test of his mettle could tenure at Hoover, which gives the selor" at Hoover. and the trustees forced him out, come as early as October, when the director a freer hand than most uni Mr. Raisian, 40, who was Mr. praised Mr. Raisian as a "a tough Stanford faculty senate is scheduled versity presidents. :09-01-89 Rhode Island pledges school aid if students promise to behave By Susan Levine The program is being supported enthusias- Inquirer Staff Writer tically by Rhode Island's two teacher organi- A sweeping plan that would provide aca- The program will provide zations, business groups, the state Chamber demic help to students from the third grade of Commerce and the Rhode Island Urban through high school and promise graduates academic and social aid to League. money toward college costs was approved "It's just a total. effort by the state to yesterday in Rhode Island. students beginning in the provide something new and different," said Proposed by Gov. Edward D. DiPrete and Harvey Press, president of the Rhode Island passed by the state Board of Governors for third grade. Graduates will chapter of the National Education Associa- Higher Education, the "Rhode Island Chil- tion, which plans to contribute financially. dren's Crusade" will require a major commit- receive college scholarships. "It's a very ambitious program, but I think ment from the children it pledges to help. if people are committed they can in fact pull They and their parents will have to agree it off," said B. J. Clanton, executive director to obey the law, avoid drugs, work with celli said. Students attending other Rhode of the Rhode Island Urban League. mentors and tutors, have their report cards Island schools and apprenticeship programs New York state last year enacted "Liberty monitored by state officials and act as good or proprietary schools would receive less. Scholarships" for lower-income students ac- examples in their neighborhoods. Students attending private colleges would cepted by public or private New York col- "Rhode Island is about to become the first receive the maximum scholarship. leges. And a plan to take effect in 1993 at state to embark on a program of this magni- "Students will be able to hang a certificate Louisiana state colleges will guarantee to tude on a statewide basis," DiPrete said. on the wall and say, This is $10,000. This is waive tuition, fees, room and board for quali- The program, which is expected to enroll something to strive for,' said Leila Ma- fied students whose family income is less its first participants in the fall of 1991, is honey, DiPrete's senior assistant. than $30,000 a year. aimed at the estimated one-third of the Mahoney plans to ask businesses, founda- Mahoney said that Rhode Island's program state's 10,000 third-graders who are economi- tions. and schools to contribute to a state- will go further by enrolling students at an cally disadvantaged. Its goal is to halve the created foundation to get the program going. early age and giving them educational and dropout rate among those students, to 25 Rhode Island's public colleges should have social help. percent. an especially strong interest in the Chil- It is that non-financial assistance that may "We really feel that if the program is dren's Crusade since in an era of a shrinking prove more significant than the scholar- successful, we may have made a fundamental student pool, it may help ensure their fu- ships, stressed Chester Finn, a professor of change in certain patterns" that contribute tures as well. educational policy at Vanderbilt University to students' dropping out, said Americo W. The state is expecting to contribute $3.2 and a former assistant U.S. secretary of edu- Petrocelli, the state's higher-education com- million a year, bringing the fund, with inter- cation for research and improvement. missioner, who designed the program. est, to approximately $50 million after 10 "The real obstacle to going to college for a DiPrete said students who ran into legal years, Mahoney said. The money would pay lot of people isn't the money." he said. "It's problems or became pregnant should be for scholarships, tutors and administrative along the way, especially for minority and given a chance to get back into the program costs. "If it doesn't work, we'll give everyone inner city kids. They do badly in school and if they showed willingness to continue their their money back," she said. lose interest in education." studies. While the state Board of Governors for Those students are very difficult to work If the program is successful, an estimated Higher Education has the authority to create with and motivate and "you must not expect 1,200 additional students who complete the the program, the legislature still must appro- universal results," Finn stressed. program each year would attend college. priate the state's share of the money. Still, he added, "If they're really proposing Another 1,200 would go on to other training DiPrete plans to make a presentation about to soup up the elementary and secondary programs. the new program at the President's Summit [school] and proposing to give them what The maximum scholarship would cover on Education in late September. The gover- they're missing in their lives, then it is the estimated $3,436 yearly tuition at the nor said he would be "knocking on the door significant." University of Rhode Island in the year 2000 of the White House" to at least match the The Associated Press contributed to this and would increase 5 percent yearly, Petro- state's contribution. article. TIMES: 08-31-89 143 Tool or Exploitation? Offeted Free vid Bohrman said. "They (teachers Beamed via satellite by Whittle and students] can control It and use Communications, a media company what they want. It makes TV a TV Sends based in Knoxville, Tenn., "Chan- useful tool, instead of a passive nel One" is being offered to schools device." free-along with $50,000 worth of According to Paul Saettler, a Cal additional enticements, including a State Sacramento professor who New Signal television for every classroom and has written a book on the history of two video recorders. Each school American educational technology, also receives a satellite dish that televisions were first foisted on to Schools will pipe in the Whittle program. teachers in the 1950s by the busi- Schools can keep the equipment for as long as they show "Channel ness community. The idea was that By ELAINE WOO, 102/191 One." "master teachers" would be shown The catch is that the schools giving lessons in their area of Times Education Writer have to broadcast all 12 minutes of expertise, which would reduce the the program at the same time to number of teachers and classrooms Last spring, Gahr High School most classes-and, to the horror of needed and allow education to be Principal Nadine Barreto wit- many prominent educators, that delivered more efficiently. nessed the unimaginable. Includes two minutes of commer- Instead of grousing about their But the attempt fizzled, mainly teachers, two students who were cials pitching such products as because teachers, who were still waiting in her office to be disci- Coca Cola, Levi's jeans and Ford. needed to run the television, were plined were debating the case of Shortly after its debut, the pro- unwilling participants. John Tower, the embattled De- gram was banned from public "Most teachers felt neglected fense Secretary nominee. schools by officials in California because they were forced to stop As far as Barreto is concerned, and New York, which had not even everything they were doing [and] there is no question about what articipated in the pilot project. tune in at a particular time," Saet- sparked the Cerritos students' ap- Observing the brouhaha over ther said. "They felt like assistants. parently avid interest in the news. "Channel One," Ted Turner an- 80 they were hostile. There was a nounced that his Cable News Net- It was "Channel One," a daily lot of resistance." television news program that was work was plunging into the class- Most schools have had at least shown in a seven-week test run room, too, but with a one television for years, although last March at Gahr and five other commercial-free, 15-minute daily many use their sets only for special high schools across the country. news show called "CNN News- news events and, occasionally, to Stories about Tower, the Eastern room." Three other cable program- baby-sit classes. Today, observers Airlines strike and Japanese edu- mers, Discovery Channel, C-SPAN say, the majority also have VCRs. cation, among others, were served and the Arts & Entertainment And it is the ubiquity of the VCR, up by youthful anchors in a 12- Cable Network, also are offering they note, that has put teachers minute video blitzkrieg, embel- new shows geared for classroom more in control of, and more apt to lished with flashy graphics, music use. use, the television. and maps. Some observers say the new educational thrust is intended in Real Revolution' 'A Whole Consclousness' part to help repair the tarnished "High school students don't read image of the cable television indus- According to the U.S. Congress Office of Technology Assessment, newspapers or watch TV news," try, which is under fire in Congress 'he video recorder is, after comput- Barreto said recently. Watching for allegations that it is an "unreg- FE, "easily the second-most prev- "Channel One" gave them "a whole ulated monopoly." lent new technology" in schools. consciousness about another world Others, however, attribute it to finety-one percent of schools na- other than their own." "the quiet revolution" of the video- cassette recorder, which has tionally have VCRs, compared to At the other test high schools in 36% with computers, a study last Kansas, Michigan, Ohio, Tennessee helped reawaken educators to tele- rear by the federal technology and Massachusetts, the enthusiasm vision's potential as a teaching tool. assessment office showed. among local educators was just as "Televisions and VCRs are com- Because both "Channel One" and high. Despite such positive re- mon audio-visual equipment now," views, however, state and national said Linda Heller, director of edu- "CNN Newsroom" are broadcast in education officials, from California cational services for C-SPAN, a the middle of the night, teachers Supt. of Public Instruction Bill cable channel that began airing must preset their VCRs to tape the Honig to the National PTA, were educational short subjects on gov- shows, but they can play them back aghast. They charged that the ernment affairs last week. "Schools at their convenience later in the show was exploiting a captive are looking for more ways to utilize day. teen-age audience for commercial this equipment." Said Gary Rowe, vice president gain. Earlier this year, ABC News and marketing director for Turner "TV is a powerful tool," said began marketing interactive video Educational Services: "The VCR Honig, an advocate of technology discs that team up computers with represents a real revolution in the in schools. "That's why we want to way the television screen can be fight this battle now. We want television to give teachers and television to be an educational tool. students access to news clips from used. The teacher decides when to not a tool of commercial interests. its archives. The computer drives switch it on and how much to play. Although television has been used the video disc, which contains an That is a totally different way of hour's worth of news stories on using television. We expect in schools at all grade levels since the 1950s, educators still wrest.e subjects such as the 1988 presiden- the results to be very different this with how to use the technology 10 tial election and the civil rights time than what had been the case in the past." the fullest advantage. The advent movement. A teacher can call up a of "Channel One" which already clip of Rosa Parks talking about Fair-Use Doctrine has spurred imitators-has stirred bus boycotts in the South in the 1950s, for instance, for a lesson on Another change, other program- old questions about the usefulness and propriety of the medium as an civil rights leaders. Or a student mers say, is an emphasis on making the programs "teacher friendly" by educational aid. To many educa- can use the video disc to compile a allowing more flexibility in when tors. teaching with television. as video term paper. shows can be used. Under federal with computers. can help students The video disc is "much more fair-use guidelines. schools can succeed in an increasingly techno- useful than CNN or 'Channel tape and show any publicly broad- logical age, while to others, it is a One,' ABC News spokesman Da- cast program once within 10 days frill that good teachers do not need. of the original air date, unless the producer grants an exemption. Although many teachers are un- aware of the fair-use doctrine, those who have knowledge of it say that it discourages television use. Teachers need the flexibility to use WALL ST.J. :08-31-89 190 Academic Protectionism Stanford University finally man- only in a place such as Palo Alto. aged to get rid of W. Glenn Campbell, The politicized professors maintain who will begin his forced retirement the fiction that they are non-partisan. this evening. In 29 years as director of They want Hoover off campus. Typi- the university's Hoover Institution, cally, Stanford president Donald Ken- Mr. Campbell made it one the most nedy and the Stanford Board of Trust- important research organizations in ees are more oblique. They merely the world. It now has a magnificent li- want to gain control of Hoover and its brary, a $300 million endowment, and abundant resources, and they hope to a staff that includes five Nobel Prize do so by eventually replacing Mr. winners as well as notable scholars Campbell with someone more conge- such as Thomas Sowell, Robert Con- nial to what they represent. quest, Seymour Martin Lipset and In doing away with Mr. Campbell, many others. they claimed they were merely up- Stanford is purging Mr. Campbell holding Stanford's mandatory retire- for two reasons. He is demanding and ment policy; Mr. Campbell turns 65 sometimes strident, exactly the sort this year. But apparently this policy of rough-edged entrepreneur who applies only to Mr. Campbell. The doesn't fit into a bureaucracy such as Board of Trustees recently gave 64- Stanford's. And Hoover's staff, of year old Richard Lyman (who, like course, is more conservative than the Donald Kennedy, was a member of Stanford faculty, which isn't saying the Carter administration) a five-year much; the first 500 names in any town contract to head a new international in America would produce individuals relations institute at the university. more conservative than Stanford's His contract was approved at the faculty. same meeting the board forced out Many of the writings emanating Mr. Campbell. from Hoover strongly support free What is going on here is a form of markets and strongly oppose commu- academic protectionism: An ideology nism, views that would have been re- that is competing poorly in the real garded as impolite to press too hard world is trying to bar its stronger ri- in most faculty lounges over the past val. This intolerance in academia 25 years. By bagging Mr. Campbell, today has forced many conservatives Stanford hopes to bring Hoover more to flee to think tanks, such as the Her- into conformity with community stan- itage Foundation or the American En- dards. terprise Institute. Thus like others be- Now, there are at Stanford, as at fore them, if Hoover's freethinkers any university, good scholars who ac- are made unwelcome at their own in- tually believe in and welcome diver- stitution, they can move to Washing- sity of thought. But in recent years ton and possibly have more impact on Stanford has been overwhelmed by a policy. coterie of mediocre academics who Still, even a Stanford can't com- don't brook disagreement with their pletely escape the judgment of the world view. It's a typical problem in marketplace. Many of the donors who academia. Moribund professors win give money to universities support di- tenure about age 35. Unable to realize versity of opinion, and because of its the satisfactions of being either a good crabbed radicalism on Hoover and teacher or an original thinker, they other issues, Stanford has experienced spend their parched decades con- a decline in donor support. Perhaps, sumed with academic politics. And if as Glenn Campbell might suggest, their playpen happens to be a Stan- these donors are finding more produc- ford. they tirelessly press the sort of tive uses for their intellectual and fi- radical ideology that can make sense nancial capital. WASH. TIMES 08-31-89 JEREMIAH O'LEARY 10/122 see by the papers that Zeta Beta I Tau has become the first na- A lesson tional fraternity to eliminate the hazing of pledges and cut off spending on alcohol, and I had a flashback to 1937 when a classmate from the at George Washington University asked me if I was interested in drop- ping by the house of the prestigious Kappa Sigma fraternity. Greeks You ought to know that I was then a 17-year-old Washington native who worked by day and went to night quired to move in at the frat house classes six days a week, the Depres- for a week. I was issued a baby potty sion being at its dismal depths. On a with my name on it and in the potty salary of $10 a week, I paid $32 a was an egg, signed and dated by the semester to GWU, rode streetcars fraternity leaders. I had to carry this and buses and had one good blue potty with me at all times and stave serge suit. off every attempt by the brothers to You could not overstate the gulf break my egg. I would be thwacked between the day students, who had with a Kappa Sigma paddle, I was cars but no jobs, and the drudges told, if anyone broke my egg. I de- and grinds of the night school. We fended the egg vigorously against all lived in different worlds. I knew comers and it was perhaps the only there were a number of so-called successful enterprise of my two- "Greek" fraternities and sororities year college career. whose members looked and acted Another humiliation was that the like glamorous collegians but I never other pledges and I had to stand up dreamed I was fraternity material. at the evening meal and sing our I went to the Kappa Sig house, high school songs from start to fin- then at 19th and R Streets NW and ish. My school song, a direct steal found myself with a number of other from Cornell and Cayuga's waters, freshmen in the midst of the process had outstandingly inane lyrics, and known as "rushing." This essentially I grew to hate the song almost as was a beer party hosted by the broth- much as the ritual. ers and adorned by co-eds whose de- It was during this period that I sirability increased as the bibulous noticed that my friend Wilson night wore on. As the beer-glow bur- Brown was no longer around. I asked geoned within me, the more en- one of the fine-feathered senior frat- chanted I became at the prospect of men what had happened to him. He joining these paragons as an equal in was no longer a pledge, I was told. all their bacchanalian festivals. They had blackballed him for mem- At a dimly remembered and late bership because a background hour, I recall being kissed and check had revealed his mother was hugged by the star-quality sorority Italian and his father was a green- girls and having a black-and-gold grocer. pledge pin attached to my lapel by Of course, I knew that Jewish stu- the fraternity big shots. A pledge, dents had their own fraternities and you must know, is only a candidate, sororities at GWU, although nobody the fraternity equivalent of a recruit ever told me if this was their choice at Marine boot camp. Soon enough I or if Jews were not allowed in ele- was presented a book of Kappa gant fraternities like Kappa Sigma. Sigma history to be memorized and But I was thunderstruck at what a list of menial jobs. such as making the fraternity had done to a young the beds of the members. man because of his Mediterranean During the next few weeks. as blood and his father's occupation. In they looked me over for acceptance a quivering rage, I smashed my egg, or rejection. I recommended a threw my potty on the floor and told friend of mine. another night stu- Kappa Sigma to take my pin and dent who was from New Jersey and stick it where the sun doesn't shine. whose name was Wilson Brown. He. I walked out of the fraternity house too. became a pledge. and never returned. I found that I had certain other Thinking back on this now. I con- rules to live by: One of these was that clude that I did learn something I was required to date only girls who valuable in college. George Wash- belonged to Chi Omega sorority. ington University suspended me be- They were. I was told. my "sisters." cause I didn't study much and paid As a youth with a perpetually roving more attention to my job and to hav- eye, I had no interest in dating any ing fun than to attending class and sisterly person and quietly broke doing homework. Kappa Sigma had this edict repeatedly without detec- nothing to do with the fact that I tion. never received a diploma but every- Then came "Hell Week." I was re- thing to do with inadvertently teach- ing me a far greater lesson. In fact, I owe the fraternity a lot. Jeremiah O'Leary is a columnist It was the first time in my life I ever for The Washington Times. acted like a man. WASH. TIMES: 08-31-89 Agency to collect Mr. Cavazos earlier this summer announced a series of actions aimed GSL loans at keeping student loans from de- faulting. These included procedures to reduce the level of student loan defaults at for-profit trade schools and other post-secondary institu- By Carol Innerst you tions with consistently high rates. THE WASHINGTON TIMES The 100,000 defaulted loans he The Department of Education is has directed state agencies to turn taking over the job of trying to col- over to the federal government are lect more than 100,000 aged, de- worth more than $300 million. faulted student loans that state guar- In 1982- 17 years after the Guar- antee agencies have been unable to anteed Student Loan Program began collect, Education Secretary Lauro - $399 million or 36.5 percent of F. Cavazos said yesterday. defaulted loans went uncollected. At He attributed the move to the fed- that time, the volume of new loans eral government's greater success at coming due was about $11.8 billion. prying money out of deadbeats. De- In 1988 the annual volume had faults are expected to cost taxpayers jumped to $51.6 billion, with $4.3 bil- $1.9 billion this year alone. lion or 61 percent of loans remaining The Education Department has uncollected. The department has had the statutory authority to take forecast a record $5.8 billion in stu- over the collection of defaulted loans dent loan defaults by the end of fis- from state agencies since 1980. cal 1989 on Sept. 30. "It's time to exercise this option," Mr. Cavazos said that in the future Mr. Cavazos said in a prepared state- he expects to ask state agencies to ment yesterday. "The sheer volume turn uncollectible loans over to the of defaulted loans has become Department of Education on an an- greater than the guarantee agencies nual basis. can handle." According to a recent study by "This is the first time the depart- Advanced Technology Inc. of fed- ment has had aged loans assigned to eral collections productivity, the De- us permanently by the state agen- partment of Education generally cies," said Thomas J. Pestka, the de- has higher collection rates on de- partment's director of the division of faulted loans than state agencies. credit management and debt collec- The department has various col- tion. lection methods available, includ- What they can't collect after try- ing: ing for a number of years will have Withholding tax refunds by the to be written off, he said. Internal Revenue Service. Mr. Pestka would not estimate how successful this effort will be, Garnisheeing paychecks of de- but said past federal attempts to col- faulters who are federal employees. lect defaulted loans have returned Using IRS referrals to locate more than $1 billion to government debtors where state guarantee agen- coffers. cies have been unsuccessful. While the Education Department Reporting defaulters for a pe- had the authority to take over old riod of seven years to all major loans from state agencies for nine credit bureaus. thereby preventing years. "this is the first time we ve defaulters from obtaining additional had the computer program that al- commercial credit. lows us to collect efficiently." he said. Using private collection agen- explaining the delay. cies failure, especially for children from single- pectations for the all For Reforms to Hold, Focus on the Child parent families, according to a recent children, instructional programs that ac- national study. That study also notes that commodate residentially mobile doudents poor students are three times more likely as well as students who aren't. It alsordalls than others to become dropouts. for systems of education and humaneser. -By gilbert C. HENTSCHKE thing positive will happen for the child in how? What reforms in the curriculum will enhance learning? What technology? How These children who are failing swell the vices that reach beyond the class. bifocus and LYDIA LOPEZ the classroom as a result of their imple- will we know if the child is succeeding? ranks of functionally illiterate adults (now on the whole child places high priority on mentation. But it is not at all clear that estimated to be 20% of the population in supervised after-school education After several years of education reforms, these or other reforms, taken individually Most important, what and how much more Los Angeles County). They enter the tivities, and on affordable child care more evident than ever that our Los or together, will significantly improve the is each child learning? The 2000 Partnership, a group ft civic Angeles public schools are failing. The academic performance of our children. A To get a satisfactory answer to this last economy at the bottom where they are losers are our children and ultimately our question, we need a new child-centered likely to stay. That fact is a partial and business leaders who have been, study- longer school day hasn't resulted in higher test scores. More money for teachers and explanation for the widening gap between ing and proposing plans for how to meet approach to education that focuses on all of entire community. The symptoms of this failure have been administrators without accountability for the child's needs and connects human rich and poor in an economy that demands Los Angeles' quality-of-life cháll ges, performance does not ensure more effec- services to curriculum reform, teaching that workers possess more skills than ever intends to follow this line of inquiry and to well-documented 39% of Los Angeles tive teaching. Choice is not the optimal before if they hope to advance. build a broad base of community support students do not graduate from high school, methods and organizational change. Approximately 600,000 children attend A focus on the whole child prompts for change. We believe that single shot and current test scores indicate that many solution for communities where the alter- grades K-12 in the Los Angeles Unified consideration of solutions that involve approaches at reform will fail. We must who do graduate are ill-prepared for the natives are all below par and for parents School District. Approximately 80% are increased investment in the child's early surround out children with incentives to high-tech, high-skill jobs that will be who lack the time or interest to involve ethnic minorities. One-quarter of the dis- development: prenatal care and better stay in school and support program that prevalent in our 21st-Century economy. themselves in their children's education. Education reformers propose a range of In the complex debate over structural trict's children are classified "at risk" nutrition for expectant mothers in need; produce skilled workers and good milens. and curriculum reform, it's easy to lose the and prekindergarten programs like Head If we want to remain a compolMive solutions. Some of these have been put in because they lack proficiency in English. place a longer school day: a larger educa- central focusi the child. It is easy to ask If Start. Children who are better prepared economy and a caring society. weiquen ill Speaking many languages and possessing a afford to lose these children. 100 tien budget, greater teacher participation the schools are "ready" for our children, wide range of literacy skills, these children when they enter school perform better in the management of schools. Others are but it is also reasonable to ask, "Are our learn in classes that are among the most once there. A focus on the "whole" child 1603 children ready for school?" What is their prompts consideration of classroom chang- Gilbert C. Hentschke, dean of the school of proposed: greater choice for parents in overcrowded in the nation. About 60% of which school their children attend, and readiness when they enter kindergarten? the district's children come from impover- es in curriculum content and teaching education at USC, and Lydia Lopez,are breaking up the district into smaller units. Why aren't the bottom 50% learning? ished families. While some poor children do methods. It requires introduction of new co-chairpersons of the Education Working All these reforms presume that some- When should the community intervene and succeed, poverty is closely correlated with learning tools like computers, higher ex- Group of the 2000 Partnership Illinois School to Extend Drug Tests to All Interscholastic Activities 70p/r26p By DIRK JOHNSON Special to The New York Times The plan has the other hand, is a privilege, not a prevention, we've been out in front of right. And it can be taken away." the pack before," said Donald Kreger, HOMEWOOD, III., Aug. 28 - The The plan has met with overwhelming a member of the school board. "And school board here has endorsed a plan wide support support from parents here. here we are again." to test students for drugs in all inter- 'When kids face peer pressure to use Homewood's decision to test for scholastic activities, from the march- ing band to the math team. from parents. drugs, this would give them an out," drugs was approved by the Board of said Erica Hanson, president of the Education by a vote of 5 to 1. Under its The board has not yet worked out the Homewood-Flossmoor Parents Associ- bylaws, the board must vote a second details of how it would conduct the is largely uncharted. Indeed, decisions ation. "A kid could say, 'Look, I want to time on the matter before deciding how tests, which it estimates would be given in two similar cases that have reached be on the football team, or the debate to put the plan into effect. A second to more than 1,500 of the 2,100 students the Federal courts have yielded contra- team, so I can't risk it.' vote is scheduled for Tuesday. at Homewood-Flossmoor High School in this suburb south of Chicago. dictory results. Moreover, she said, the tests will Privacy and Cost Factors A Federal court in Texas ruled give school officials hard evidence to "It's a sad state of affairs when we earlier this month that drug tests of confront parents of drug abusers. Katherine Cerone, the lone dissenter have to consider this at a high school," students in all interscholastic activities "Denial is not just a problem with on the board, said she opposed the plan said Ed Rachford, the superintendent kids who use drugs and alcohol," Mrs. because of her concerns over privacy of schools. "But drugs are such a prob- at East Chambers High School and Hanson said. "It's a big problem with and because of the cost of the tests. lem in society, and in our school, that Junior High School were an unconstitu- The basic screening test costs about tional invasion of privacy. But last the parents, too." we feel we have to do everything we $35, school officials said. But a test that can to fight it." December a Federal court in Chicago Praise for Drug Programs would be admissible in court would The American Civil Liberties Union upheld the right of a school district in Homewood-Flossmoor has a reputa- cost about $75. Tests that would deter- of Illinois has notified the Homewood- Lafayette, Ind., to require athletes to tion as one of the top high schools in the mine the presence of steroids would Flossmoor school authorities that it submit to tests for drugs. Chicago area, both academically and cost as much as $200. will probably challenge such tests. The decision in Homewood was athletically. And its programs on drug "Who's going to pay for this?" asked prompted by a request from the foot- prevention and education have won Uncharted Legal Landscape Mrs. Cerone. "We recently won a hard- ball coach to test athletes he suspected praise around the country. fought tax increase. Are we going to "This kind of testing really opens the were using drugs. Rather than limit the The school has a full-time drug pro- spend it all on drug tests? And what if it floodgates into matters that should be tests to athletes, the school board de- gram coordinator, as well as a team of goes to court? I certainly don't want private," said Jay A. Miller, executive cided to cast as wide a net as possible. teachers charged with the specific re- taxpayers' dollars being used for law- director of the A.C.L.U. here. "Where Privileges 'Can Be Taken Away' sponsibility to intervene when a stu- yers' fees." does it stop? What if the school wants "Students are legally required to at- dent appears to be using drugs or alco- But Mrs. Cerone acknowledged that to find out if a student is on birth con- tend school," said Dr. Rachford, the hol. The school also sponsors weekend her stand was unpopular in the com trol?" The legal landscape for such testing Homewood superintendent. "Partici- retreats for students willing to talk munity. She said one unhappy parent pating in extracurricular activites, on about drug problems. sent her a letter accusing her of being "When it comes to alcohol and drug un-American. CHRIS.SCI.MON. :08-29-89 PUBLIC EDUCATION US Is Facing a Teacher Shortage Better pay, more say in decisions, and recognition are 'carrots' being offered by school systems ported recent proposals is an ef- to certification for these late improved. Salaries for beginning teachers have increased over the fort nurtured by the Carnegie Fo- bloomers. By Lucia Mouat last few years to an average of rum on Education and the Econ- Shortages do not necessarily Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor $19,548 last year. "That's taken omy to develop the first national mean teacherless classes. An NEA some of the edge off ]the task] of system for certifying teachers. survey a few years ago of the na- BOSTON finding new teachers," says How- This recognition of top per- tion's largest school districts found oT enough students - ard Nelson, a research specialist formers or master teachers, who that school systems in need did ev- N particularly in math and with the American Federation of may serve as catalysts for other erything from dropping courses the sciences - are choos- Teachers (AFT). The average pub- school structuring changes, is a to raising class size. "They were ing public school teaching as a ca- lic school teacher in the US last voluntary add-on to required state very creative in covering up the year earned $29,629. licensing. It would likely bring ex- problem without admitting there reer. Enrollments in college schools A stronger voice for teachers tra pay and serve to inspire other in school decisionmaking. teachers and boost the profes- of education have been increasing over the last five years, and some Forty states have drafted regu- sion's general image. Less than 50 percent 'of retirees in other fields are now lations to allow more school-based Those with a college degree elementary school teach- turning to teaching as a second ca- management in everything from and three years' teaching expéri- reer. But gains are unlikely to curriculum development and ence could begin to seek the acco- ers really understand the meet coming needs. It is widely es- textbook choice to class size and lade in 1993. Although details are science they teach.' timated that as many as half of the staffing. Noting that teachers are yet to be worked out, candidates - Albert Shanker nation's 2.5 million teachers may tired of being treated "like very would be judged on teaching ef- retire or shift jobs over the next tall children," savs Mary Futrell, fectiveness and probably would be few vears. outgoing president of the Nation- required to pass a written exam. That teachers themselves are al Education Association (NEA). The process is widely expected was one." savs Ms. Futrell. among the sharpest critics of the the shift should improve both to force changes in the content of "The issue is not so much num- public schools does not help. "I teacher morale and the quality of college courses for education ma- bers; it's getting the best people don't know of one teacher who is education. "Research shows that jors. Mr. Imig agrees that colleges possible," savs Thomas Shannon, encouraging his or her own chil- the best schools are those where will want to claim that a high per- executive director of the National ROBERT HARBISON STAFF centage of their students are na- Association of School Boards. "We tionally certified; but he contends need to do as much as we can to the bulk of the effort will fall much build a climate within the profes- more strongly on the post-college sion so that bright, able roung period of in-service training. "The people will say, 'I want to be a candidates first priority in that teacher.' three vears is likely to be getting To hit that quality issue head ready for the exam." he insists. on. many sav the teaching of President Bush's proposals to teachers must be improved from add dollars to the government's the elementarv-school level on up. annual verbal recognition of edu- "If you ask what percentige of cational merit would largely re- elementary school teachers really ward schools and individual understand the science the teach. teachers. Both teachers unions the answer would be unuer 50 have traditionally opposed ment percent." the AFT's Shanker savs. pay for individuals. on the The entry standard for in grounds that the selection process most countries requires wing IS likely to be subjective. science and math and the in to AFT president Albert Shanker write well. It's not true to: Emeri- proposes a competition among can colleges. and there's to schools over a five-vear rather catch up quickly." than 1 one-vear period and the Better guidance in - stu- awarding of $15,000 prizes to dent years also necessary each reacher in the top 10 percent minority students are of ill schools "The whole school ruited to teaching The wins." Mr Shanker alls The minority reachers has sellse of reunnwork would he clining at the ven name strengthenen rather That your black me Hispanic stude enec. that he lation would not have posed .n olleve scholarships award system at Tax age. ДОМ poora em. those are made Jose to the school reform farms and threats who are an of the n.: vid Imig. eNequitive prector the schools. she be states and there who say the cause the were saws American Associati n of Colleges Recent contracts between AFT could do the job better were the to take algebra and the track courses. for Teacher Education arfiliates and school boards in prod. Increased Govence and drug Dade County. Fla.. and Rochester. The expected teacher shortage "There got to increase the lise among students and stepped- N.Y., spell out several such deci- has prompted a number of other college-going rate." ins.s. Bar- up public greater ac- sionmaking rights for teachers in moves. Some states are trying to bara Holmes. who is directing we admittedly the process of sealing down make It easter for teachers to stay study on minority teacher countabilit made the ob of significant salary increases. Both in teaching " arranging pension and demand in five states teaching far tougher systems have charted dearer ca- packages that can be moved from Education Commissio reer paths for reachers Newh state to state. Efforts to recruit States. Even event. strong cur- rents of name .: under was hired teachers will staff :- interns teachers from the growing ranks Talking about the that court Make positive differ- working their will up under the of early retirees in other fields shortage considered ence in recruiting and holding guidance of more experienced have also increased. Most new best ways of warding good reachers and better paid veterans teachers in urban systems are now need to people kno Higher salaries. More recognition of jobs well people who have chosen tea hing need for teachers. NEA While still tal mom what most done. as second career. Almost half the Futrell insists. Many reachers :ee! the deserve pay has One of the most widely sup- states now otter a shortened route arent aware of the TIMES :08-28-89 The Teacher Corps, Reborn 70 70/195 The expected loss of a million teachers from the where there are geographic or subject-matter nation's classrooms in the next five years has shortages, particularly in school districts with large prompted Washington and New York City to revive numbers of disadvantaged children. Those who a useful idea from the 1960's: the Teacher Corps. volunteered for such assignments would reduce President Lyndon Johnson promoted a domes- their teaching obligation by one year. tic education version of the Peace Corps called the New York's Mayor, Edward Koch, seeking re- National Teacher Corps. Students from across the election in a city where troubled schools are a criti- country agreed to teach low-income students in cal issue, recently offered a similar proposal. He inner-city and rural schools in exchange for sti- would recruit 200 college juniors each year for a pends and tuition payments. program that included 200 hours of apprentice The National Teacher Corps survived until teaching, training by the Board of Education and 1981, when it was folded into an educational block support and guidance from mentor teachers. grant as part of an effort to trim the Federal budg- In exchange for tuition reimbursements of up to et. Some states have retained a version of the idea, $10,000, each New York Teacher Corps member but the national commitment faded. would be expected to teach for four years, either in Yet it was always a good idea, and now interest understaffed subjects, like science or math, or in in it-has revived. Next month, Senator Edward Ken- understaffed schools. nedy of Massachusetts will introduce legislation to By themselves, these programs will not solve establish a new teacher corps. He would offer schol- the teacher shortage. But the need for qualified, arships - perhaps of as much as $8,000 a year for committed instructors to teach low-income stu- two years - in exchange for five years of teaching. dents is as great now as in the 1960's. The teacher States would be encouraged to place teachers corps remains an excellent idea. WASH.POST:08-28-89 192/30 HONORARIA SCORECARD: THE MISSING MEMBERS ozens of members of Congress have refused to disclose their 1989 honoraria to The Washington Post's Honoraria Scorecard, which has been appearing in this $ $ space regularly in recent months. During the congressional recess, the honoraria those members earned in 1988 for speeches, appearances and articles are being published here. Although most members of the House and Senate have volunteered information to The Post about their 1989 honoraria, they are not required to disclose this year's honoraria until May. REP. JOHN EDWARD PORTER (R-III.): $500 from Southwestern Bell Co., April 29; $500 from Rand $1,000 from National Society of Professional Engineers, Food Fair, May 1; $2,000 from Arkansas Poultry Federation, April 6; $2,000 from American Diabetes Association Inc., June 11; $500 from Federal Express, June 16; $1,000 from April 19; $1,000 from Council of Engineering and Scientific National Restaurant Association, June 18; $1,000 from Society Executives, May 2; $1,000 from Arthritis Tyson Foods, June 20; $2,000 from AA Guage, June 21; Foundation, May 19; $500 from Illinois Society of $500 from Arkansas Pharmacists, June 24; $1,000 from Professional Engineers, May 24; $2,000 from American Lockheed Systems, July 20; $2,000 from AMI, Sept. 29; Society of Association Executives, June 9; $2,000 from $500 from Arkansas Electric Co-op, Nov. 7; $2,000 from American Association of Clinical Urologists Inc., June 15; George's Inc., Nov. 16; $1,000 from Highland Corp., Dec. $2,000 from Illinois Bell Telephone Co., Aug. 2; $2,000 21; $1,000 from Arkansas Reclamation Co., Dec. 21. from Association of Sikh Professionals, Sept. 8; $2,000 from TOTAL: $20,600 Underwriters Laboratories Inc., Nov. 10. TOTAL: $15,500 REP. TOBY ROTH (R-Wis.): REP. NICK JOE RAHALL II (D-W.Va.): $2,000 from National Association of Homebuilders, Jan. 19; $250 from Edison Electric Institute, Feb. 18; $200 from $2,000 from Waste Management, Jan. 11; $2,000 from Conservative Digest, Feb. 20; $2,000 from Association of Tobacco Institute, Jan. 12; $1,000 from Lamar Corp., Jan. Bank Holding Cos., March 14, $1,000 from Hopkins & 13; $1,000 from Association of Oil Pipelines, Jan. 21; Sutter, March 21; $500 from Chicago Board of Trade, $1,000 from United Holy Fund, Jan. 27; $2,000 from March 21; $500 from Chicago Mercantile Exchange, March Eastern Central Motor Carriers, Feb. 18; $2,000 from 24; $1,000 from Wisconsin Credit Union League, April 26; National Motor Freight, Feb. 23; $500 from American $1,500 from Shawmut Bank, May 3; $1,000 from Textron, Lebanese Club of Stark County, Ohio, March 9; $250 from May 3; $1,500 from First National Bank of Boston, May 4; National Wildlife Federation, April 4; $2,000 from Ashland $2,000 from BATUS Inc., May 8; $1,000 from Associated Oil, April 8; $250 from National Wildlife Federation, April Credit Bureaus Inc., May 10; $250 from International 21; $1,000 from National Association of Arab Americans, Insurance Council, May 14; $1,000 from Computer & May 31; $1,000 from Brown and Williamson Tobacco Corp., Communications Industry Association, June 4; $1,000 from June 8; $1,000 from National Association of Broadcasters, Grocery Manufacturers of America, June 4; $1,500 from Oct. 5; $1,000 from American Arab Affairs Council, Oct. 17; Bank Capital Markets Association, June 9; $150 from $1,500 from American Coke and Coal Chemicals Institute, Second Opinion Publications, July 28; $1,000 from First Oct. 20; $1,000 from Eastern Professional River Outfitters, Bank National Association, Dec. 28; $2,000 from Foley & Nov. 16; $2,000 from Eastern Central Motor Carriers, Dec. Lardner, Dec. 28. 5; $1,000 from American Arab Affairs Council, Dec. 7; $600 TOTAL: $21,350 from WTNJ Radio Station, Dec. 9. TOTAL: $24,100 REP. E. CLAY SHAW JR. (R-Fla.): REP. MATTHEW J. RINALDO (R-N.J.): $1,000 from American Trucking Association Inc.; $2,000 from National Structured Settlements Trade Association; $2,000 from Securities Industry Association Inc., Jan. 4; $1,000 from National Restaurant Association; $1,000 from $1,000 from The Tobacco Institute, Jan. 5; $1,000 from Armco Inc.; $2,000 from Cigar Association of America. Competitive Telecommunications Association, Jan. 7; $2,000 (Dates were omitted from Shaw's list of honoraria.) from Public Securities Association Inc., Jan. 11; $1,500 TOTAL: $7,000 from Television & Radio PAC, Jan. 25; $1,000 from U.S. Telephone Association, Jan. 28; $1,000 from Drexel REP. NORMAN D. SHUMWAY (R-Calif.): Burnham Lambert, Feb. 8; $2,000 from AT&T, Feb. 10; $2,000 from Rutgers University, Feb. 12; $500 from $1,000 from National Council of Savings Institutions, March Coalition for Regional Banking & Economic Development, 17; $1,500 from Bank Capitol Markets Association, March Feb. 24; $500 from T. Boone Pickens United Shareholders 18; $50 from University of the Pacific Young Republicans, Association, Feb. 25; $500 from T. Boone Pickens USA April 6; $500 from U.S. English, April 16; $1,000 from Foundation for Research and Education, Feb. 25; $2,000 California Bankers Association, May 5; $1,500 from from Motion Picture Association of America, Feb. 29; Assembly of Turkish Associations, May 20; $2,000 from The $1,000 from Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Feb. 29; $250 American Council of State Savings Supervisors, May 23; from Independent Lubricant Manufacturing Association, $2,000 from Wells Fargo Bank, June 6; $2,000 from March 4; $2,000 from New Jersey Bell, March 7; $1,000 American Bankers Association, June 25; $2,000 from from T. Boone Pickens, USA Foundation for Research and Consumer Bankers Association, Sept. 26. Education, March 11; $1,000 from Southwestern Bell Corp., TOTAL: $13,550 March 16; $1,000 from Television & Radio PAC, March 16; $1,000 from Chicago Board Options Exchange, March 25; REP. BUD SHUSTER (R-Pa.): $2,000 Financial Management Division SIA, March 27; $2,000 from American Bus Association, Jan. 7; $2,000 from $2,000 from AT&T, April 13; $1,000 from Chicago Board of Associated General Contractors, Jan. 12; $1,500 from Air Trade, April 15; $2,000 from Connell Rice & Sugar Co. Inc., Transport Association, Jan. 26; $2,000 from Regular April 15; $2,000 from Akin, Gump. Strauss, Hauer & Feld, Common Carriers, Feb. 2; $2,000 from Ackerly April 19; $1.500 from National Association of Broadcasters, Communications, Feb. 23; $1,000 from Railway Progress April 23; $1,000 from Pfizer Inc., May 6; $1,500 from Institute, March 1: $1,000 from American Public Transit National Cable Television Association, May 20: $1,000 from Association, March 6; $2,000 from American Public Transit Association of Independent Television Stations, June 23. Association, March 14; $2,000 from Safe Building Alliance, TOTAL: $38,250 March 17; $2,000 from Associated General Contractors, March 22; $1,000 from American Trucking Association, April REP. TOMMY F. ROBINSON (D-Ark.): 13; $2,000 from Gannett Co., April 19; $2,000 from $600 from Jacksonville Doctors Group, Jan. 26: $1.000 Amalgamated Transit Union, April 22; $1,000 from National from National Restaurant Association, March 3: $500 from Motor Freight Association, May 4; $1,000 from American Food Service and Lodging Institute, March 16; $1,000 from Movers, May 18: $1,350 from National Limestone Tobacco Institute, April 12; $2,000 from Alitel Co., April 20; Association, June 14. TOTAL: $25,850 08-28-89 Nat Hentoff In Iowa, Free Speech for Students In January 1988, Byron White-writ- school students were protected by the Amendment rights unless student ext: ing for a majority of the Supreme First Amendment. pression disturbs school operations. Alti Court-in Hazelwood School District & Since Hazelwood, while many prin- so-and this became part of the Tinkg Kuhlmeier-gave public school princi- cipals have been using the 1988 decision guidelines through the years-students pals virtually unlimited power to censor like a club, the message is getting may not print "obscene, libelous or slan- student expression, including newspa- around the country that individual school derous material." Otherwise, in Iowa, pers. One of the dissenting justices told "there shall be no prior restraint." me he was concerned that an accurate This law, though not without limits, is account of the decision go out to the SWEET LAND far less authoritarian than Justice country. OF LIBERTY White's ruling in Hazelwood that prin- "The decision," he said, "tells prin- cipals can, cut out of a student paper, cipals they can exercise this standard of play or speech anything inconsistent censorship, but it doesn't say they have districts and whole states can indeed with the school's "basic educational miss to. They can still use the Tinker stan- dard if they prefer." Tinker refers to a respectfully decline to follow Hazelwood sion." (The latter to be defined at will we and stay with Tinker instead. the principal.) gn case involving teenagers Mary Beth and John Tinker, who were among those Appropriately, in view of the historic Much of the credit for restoring then bringing suit against the Des Moines site of the Tinker free-expression case, Tinker spirit to Iowa is due the bill's Independent School District in the the Iowa legislature has passed-and principal sponsor, state Sen. Richardh 1960s for suspending them because Gov. Terry Branstad has signed-legis- Varn, as well as, among others, the lowan they had worn black armbands to school lation rescuing the students of that state Civil Liberties Union and the Iowa High to protest the Vietnam War. from the strictures of Hazelwood. School Press Association (a group of high In 1969, a kinder, gentler Supreme The new Iowa law, which took effect school student journalists and teachers). Court, in an opinion by Abe Fortas, on July 1, applies the Fortas principle According to Mark Goodman of the niv ruled that the Tinkers and other public that public school students have First Washington-based Student Press Law Center, there was little coverage by lowe dailies of the legislation's odyssey, and No" editorials in favor of the bill. The indifference of much of the adults press to the idea of student First Amend ment rights is hardly limited to lowa. Newspapers, worried that fewer of the young read them, keep trying to figure, out what to print that might attract these long-range consumers. Maybe news about First Amendment wars in student news rooms might help. As for why the Iowa law passed, Mark" Lambert, legislative coordinator of the Iowa Civil Liberties Union-and the key!! professional lobbyist working for the bill-believes that "it's due, in no small part, to the fact that the Iowa legislature is filled with 'baby boomers,' many of whom were students in Iowa while the Tinkercase was being litigated." What may make the Iowa statute attractive to other state legislatures-at least five more are considering bills discarding Hazelwood-is a clause free- ing school officials or other employees from any liability "for any student ex- pression made or published by stu- dents." But if school personnel have "interferred with or altered the content of the student expression, they are not free of liability. OHI So, if a principal wants to be a censor,' he may have to pay some dues. Now that the First Amendment has u been largely restored to Iowa student journalists, Varn makes the reasonable. point, in the spirit of Abe Fortas, that "students can't learn about fundamental; rights and freedoms unless they are allowed to use those rights." By contrast, under Justice White's educational philosophy-as Boston", Globe cartoonist Dan Wasserman had a student say in his strip right after Hazel wood came down-"according to the Suno preme Court,[the First Amendment}- guarantees freedom of speech and their press, except in real special cases like; schools, where it could interfere with kids : learning to be good citizens." Educating inner-city boys: All-male classes can help 70/122 primary education of inner-city boys was stopped by By Spencer Holland the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission after an anonymous complaint that the program C.TRIBUNE:08-28-89 An epidemic of academic failure is overwhelming discriminated against girls. The complaint and the black, inner-city male students. A staggering number eeoc action were misguided. For little girls, academic drop out of school. Many who do graduate are barely success does not appear to be predicated on the gender literate and destined for economic failure. For the sake of the teacher the way it is for little boys, particularly of these young men, and for society as a whole, we boys being raised in single-parent, female headed need immediate and radical actions. We should begin households. by creating experimental classes of all boys, taught by In the fall of 1988, I helped start PROJECT 2000, a male teachers, from kindergarten through 3d grade. program to give inner-city boys at an elementary The most common reasons cited for the academic school in the District of Columbia positive male role and social failings of young black males are that such models in the classroom. Of the 37 members on the boys come from poor, single-parent, female-headed staff of the PROJECT 2000 school, only the principal households, that they have no positive male role and four of the teachers are male. All but a few of the models and that they view the educational setting as 47 boys in the 93-student 1st grade class come from feminine and not relevant to their daily lives. single-parent, female-headed households. Under the auspices of a community service To override these aspects of the cultural organization, the local chapter of Concerned Black environment outside the classroom, we must develop Men Inc., male volunteers from the corporate world new, creative models inside the school. At present, the and Howard University were recruited and trained to carly elementary school environment may appear no serve as teaching assistants to the four 1st grade different to the young black male than his preschool teachers in the school. In addition to providing and outside school surroundings. classroom assistance, volunteers financed and The principals, assistant principals, teachers and accompainied the children on field trips. counselors are frequently all female. Most boys do not The response of the children, faculty, staff and have male teachers until the later elementary grades or volunteers to this pilot year effort has been excellent. junior high school, and for inner-city boys this is At the beginning, the teachers and principal targeted much, much too late. No matter how nurturing, loving for special attention several boys who were having and kind women may be, they just do not constitute academic and/or behavioral difficulty. All of these boys appropriate role models for these boys because the have made an incredible turnaround. behavior associated with them is always viewed as Concerned Black Men Inc. is committed to feminine. following the ( lass of 2000 until it graduates from For minority males, creating all-male kindergarten high school and to seek funding to ensure these through 3d-grade classes taught by male teachers leanor Mill/Mill News Art Syndicate children get the post secondary training of their choice. would provide consistent, positive and literate black If the black male is to be removed from the role models in the classroom. It also would help such an approach. In 1987, the Dade County (Fla.) "endangered species" list, educational reform in urban overcome many of the negative attitudes toward public schools created an all-male kindergarten class school systems must be radical and focused on the education as an unmasculine activity that now hamper taught by a black male teacher, and an all male 1st educational needs of black boys during the primary academic achievement. grade class taught by a white male teacher. Parents years. School districts should seek out community Only one school system that I am aware of has tried volunteered their children for participation in this organizations that can provide positive male role program. The results were impressive. On all academic models for inner city boys. Programs such as the one Spencer Holland is an educational psychologist in and behavioral measures assessed, the boys in these attempted in Miami must be given time to prove the division of curriculum and educational technology two classes outperformed their male peers in a control themselves, and bureaucratic barriers crected by the of the District of Columbia public schools. A longer group that had remained in traditional, coeducational, EEOC or other agencies in the name of equality must version of this article appears in the September issue female-headed classes. be fought with the fervor that accompanied the civil of Teacher magazine. Unfortunatcly, this innovative approach to the rights movement of the 1960s. MarKD 09/08/89 10:41:03 SPEECHWRITING AND RESEARCH OFFICES Page: 1 DAILY PRESIDENTIAL SPEECH SCHEDULE EVENT/LOCATION DATE PROJ. OFFICER WRITER/RESEARCH C.W. DRAFT STAFFING TO POTUS Treasury Depart. 200th Anniv. 09/11/89 McGroarty 09/05/89 09/07/89 09/08/89 Monday Dooley Tuesday Thursday Friday Treasury Building 2pm Vocational Education Event 09/11/89 S.Siv Grant 09/05/89 09/06/89 09/07/89 Monday Simon Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Rose Garden 11 AM Republican Hispanic Dinner 09/12/89 McGroarty 09/05/89 09/07/89 09/08/89 Tuesday Dooley Tuesday Thursday Friday Schools Speech 12:15 12:15pm 09/12/89 Lange 09/05/89 09/07/89 09/08/89 Tuesday TBD Tuesday Thursday Friday Smith D.A.R.E. Event 09/13/89 Davis 09/06/89 09/08/89 09/11/89 10am Wednesday Martin Wednesday Friday Monday Blessey Presidential S.E.S. Awards 09/14/89 D. Bates McNally 09/07/89 09/11/89 09/12/89 Thursday Simon Thursday Monday Tuesday Constitution Hall 2pm Video Session 09/14/89 Tron 09/07/89 09/11/89 09/12/89 United Way Video Thursday Thursday Monday Tuesday A. Sioux Falls Centennial 09/18/89 McNally 09/11/89 09/13/89 09/14/89 Monday Simon Monday Wednesday Thursday Sioux Falls, South Dakota B. Montana Centennial 09/18/89 McGroarty 09/11/89 09/13/89 09/14/89 Monday Dooley Monday Wednesday Thursday 9/08/89 10:41:07 SPEECHWRITING AND RESEARCH OFFICES Page: 2 DAILY PRESIDENTIAL SPEECH SCHEDULE EVENT/LOCATION DATE PROJ. OFFICER WRITER/RESEARCH C.W. DRAFT STAFFING TO POTUS Spokane Washington 09/19/89 Lange 09/12/89 09/14/89 09/15/89 Tuesday Dooley Tuesday Thursday Friday Young America Medals 09/21/89 Davis 09/14/89 09/18/89 09/19/89 Thursday Martin Rose Garden 11:30am Thursday Monday Tuesday 200th Anniv. Attorney General 09/22/89 McNally 09/11/89 09/13/89 09/14/89 Friday Simon Department of Justice 9AM Monday Wednesday Thursday Courter Fundraiser 09/22/89 Smith 09/15/89 09/18/89 09/20/89 Friday Blessey Friday Monday Wednesday New Jersey Red Mass Luncheon 09/23/89 Grant 09/15/89 09/18/89 09/20/89 Saturday Martin Friday Boston, Mass. 12:30pm Monday Wednesday U.N. General Assembly 09/25/89 McGroarty 09/06/89 09/18/89 09/20/89 Monday Dooley Wednesday Monday Wednesday New York City Amer. Film Institute 09/26/89 Studdert/Demare Smith 09/19/89 09/21/89 09/22/89 Tuesday Blessey Tuesday Thursday Friday Pension Building Governors Educational Summit 09/27/89 Davis 09/20/89 09/21/89 09/22/89 Wednesday Martin Wednesday Thursday Friday Charlottesville, Virginia 09/08/89 10:41:10 SPEECHWRITING AND RESEARCH OFFICES Page: 3 DAILY PRESIDENTIAL SPEECH SCHEDULE EVENT/LOCATION DATE PROJ. OFFICER WRITER/RESEARCH C.W. DRAFT STAFFING TO POTUS World Bank/Intern. Monetary 09/27/89 D. Bates McNally 09/20/89 09/22/89 09/25/89 Fund Annual Meeting Wednesday Simon Wednesday Friday Monday Sheraton Washington Hotel Retirement Adm. Crowe 09/29/89 McGroarty 09/22/89 09/25/89 09/26/89 Friday Dooley Friday Monday Tuesday Midland Community Award 10/00/89 TBD TBD TBD NRSC Inner Circle Gala 10/02/89 Andy Card 09/25/89 09/27/89 09/28/89 Monday Monday Wednesday Thursday Union Station Salinas State Dinner 10/03/89 B. Scowcroft Smith 09/26/89 09/28/89 09/29/89 Tuesday Blessey Tuesday Thursday Friday Coleman Fundraiser 10/04/89 Smith 09/27/89 09/29/89 10/02/89 Wednesday Blessey Wednesday Friday Monday N. Virginia Cossiga State Visit 10/11/89 McGroarty 10/04/89 10/06/89 10/09/89 Wednesday Dooley Wednesday Friday Monday Italian Society Dinner 10/14/89 McGroarty 10/06/89 10/10/89 10/11/89 Saturday Dooley Friday Tuesday Wednesday RGA President's Dinner 10/17/89 A.Card 10/10/89 10/12/89 10/13/89 Tuesday Tuesday Thursday Friday TBD 09/08/89 10:41:15 SPEECHWRITING AND RESEARCH OFFICES Page: 4 DAILY PRESIDENTIAL SPEECH SCHEDULE EVENT/LOCATION DATE PROJ. OFFICER WRITER/RESEARCH C.W. DRAFT STAFFING TO POTUS International Drug Conference 10/27/89 McNally 10/20/89 10/24/89 10/25/89 Friday Simon Friday Tuesday Wednesday Costa Rica Governor Martinez Funder 12/01/89 Andy Card 11/24/89 11/28/89 11/29/89 Friday Friday Tuesday Wednesday Tampa, Florida NAACP Fundraising Gala 12/15/89 12/08/89 12/12/89 12/13/89 Friday Friday Tuesday Wednesday New York City, New York President D. Eisenhower B-day 10/14/90 SENT BY:Republican Natl Comm ; 9-12-89 ; 2:39PM ; 2028638820-> 4566218;# 1 Republican National Committee FACSIMILE TRANSMITTAL DATE 9/12 TO Mark Davis TELEFAX NO. 456-6218 COMPANY white House FROM J.M Badenhausen TELEFAX NO. (202) 863-8820 NUMBER OF PAGES (including cover sheet) 4 Mark- Phil thought you would want to look at these recent polls. - fin Dwight D. Elsenhower Republican Center: 310 First Street Southeast, Washington, D.C. 20003. (202) 863-8500. Telex: 701144 SENT BY:Republican Nati Comm ; 9-12-89 ; 2:39PM ; 2028638820- 4566218;# 2 RECENT PUBLIC OPINION POLLING ON EDUCATION *81 HOTLINE/KRC POLL BEFORE BUSH DRUG SPEECH 1,007 registered voters were interviewed September 3 through 5, 1989. The margin of error for the full sample is 3% (BOSTON GLOBE, WBZ-TV, SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER, 9/7). BUSH, CONGRESS, EDUCATION AND TAXES When asked an almost identical question about whether Bush is right or wrong when he says that we can improve public education without raising taxes, voters split evenly. all Dems Inds GOP Bush right 48% 32% 53% 60% Bush wrong 48 64 43 34 MAJORITY SUPPORT TAX HIKE FOR EDUCATION IF CONGRESS SAYS NEEDED Here too, voters are prepared to support a tax hike for public education if Congress sees it as necessary. Democrats are more prepared to support a tax increase, but even a majority of Republicans says they would support a tax increase if Congress said it was necessary. all Dems Inds GOP men women support raising taxes 55% 63% 54% 51% 53% 58% oppose raising taxes 40 32 42 44 42 38 *81 HOTLINE/KRC: GROWING SIGNS OF A STRENGTHENING PRESIDENCY 1,000 registered voters were interviewed June 11 through 13. The margin of error is 3% (WBZ-TV, BOSTON GLOBE, SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER, 6/15). Bush administration rating on improving the quality of education all Dems Inds GOP 18-39 40-64 65+ excellent 4% 4% 2% 5% 3% 3% 7% above average 24 16 25 34 27 20 26 average (vol.) 12 11 9 14 10 14 15 below average 30 38 34 20 35 33 16 poor 12 16 16 6 14 12 10 "Which country has the best educational system, " all 18-39 40-64 65+ U.S. 31% 28% 29% 41% Soviet Union 5 5 6 2 China 4 6 3 3 Japan 51 51 54 45 SENT BY:Republican Natl Comm ; 9-12-89 ; 2:39PM ; 2028638820- 4566218;# 3 *51 HOTLINE/KRC TRACKING POLL: MIXED MARKS FOR BUSH 1,002 registered voters were interviewed May 28 through May 30, 1989. The margin of error is 3% (BOSTON GLOBE, SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER, WBZ-TV, 6/1). QUALITY OF PUBLIC EDUCATION TWO YEARS FROM NOW better 32% worse 24 about the same 39 *51 HOTLINE/KRC: HALF SAY SHOULD LEAVE CONGRESS IF VIOLATIONS 1,001 registered voters were interviewed April 16 through April 18, with 499 interviewed Sunday (before the release of the ethics committee report) and 502 interviewed after its release. The margin of error for the full sample is 3% (SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER, BOSTON GLOBE, WBZ-TV, 4/20). "Would you be willing to pay more federal taxes to preserve quality education in the United States?" yes 64% no 31 *53 USA TODAY POLL: MIXED REPORT CARD ON BUSH 1001 adults were interviewed April 15-16 by Gordon S. Black Corp. for USA TODAY. The margin or error is +/- 3% (USA TODAY, 4/21). Bush's report cards (A through F) Overall Education Environment Drugs Economy A 13% 14% 8% 15% 8% B 34 29 21 29 27 C 35 31 34 28 38 D 9 11 15 13 13 E 5 9 16 12 9 SENT BY:Republican Nat Comm ; 9-12-89 ; 2:40PM ; 2028638820-> 4566218;# 4 *51 HOTLINE/KRC POLL: BUSH FAVS HIGH, JOB PERFORMANCE LAGS 1,003 registered voters were interviewed April 2 through April 4. The margin of error is 3% (WBZ-TV, SAN FRANCISCO EXAMINER, BOSTON GLOBE, 4/6-7). EDUCATION "Looking down the road to two years from now, do you think the quality of public education in the United States will be than (as) it is now?" better 38% worse 23 about the same 36 "Do you think the federal government should spend more, less, or about the same as now on public education?" more 75% less 05 the same 17 *51 TIMES MIRROR FOLL: CUTS "SHOULD COME IN THE MILITARY BUDGET" The Gallup Organization surveyed 2,048 adults in person from Jan. 27 to Feb. 5. The margin of error is 2% (mult. 3/9). MAJORITIES FOR INCREASED SPENDING 65% supported increases for fighting drug abuse 57% supported increases for health care 53% supported increases for homelessness 52% supported increases for AIDS research 50% supported increases for the elderly 50% supported increases for public education CHRIS.SCI.MON.:09-08-89 US Education: Expectations Unfulfilled BACK'S A NEW school year begins in the the University of Connecticut, I have rope, and only 55 percent could pick out process at the expense of substance: at United States with the country's seen a broad cross section of its students New York State on a map of the US. colleges and universities, where a dv educational system still beset by a in introductory American government The study also showed us moving namic has been at work that rewards 10 central contradiction. No other people classes. Today's students are bright, at- backward. Young adults displayed much search at the expense of teaching. on earth are more convinced than tractive, willing to listen if you have less knowledge of geography than did One thing we must not blame for it Americans of education's importance. something to say, great fun to teach. their elders. White Americans in their is a pernicious delusion is a la of 10- None spend as much on it as we do. No They are not, however, on the whole 50s and older compared favorably to sources. How often have we been told other country involves as many of its cit- nearly so well grounded as were their their counterparts in other industrial our problems could be solved il only countries, while those 18-24 lagged far teachers' salaries were raised or some izens in formal instruction for as many counterparts a quarter-century ago in ei- years of their lives. And arguably, none ther the basic rules of written expression behind their peers elsewhere. The US program fully funded. can claim over the years more impressive or in essential historical knowledge. was the only country where the youngest But the fact is, educational expendi educational accomplishments. I have heard similar as- group did not score higher tures have increased steadily as the prob Still, the American educational system sessments from colleagues at E V E R E T T than the oldest. lem has deepened. Per pupil spending is now malperforming - and almost ev- many other institutions. The failure of America's CARLLLADD for primary and secondary edue ation, eryone connected with the enterprise Quite literally, I have never educational system to incul- $95 in 1940, climbed to $392 in 1960, knows it. Certainly many businessmen encountered a veteran fac- cate basic knowledge - of and $4,162 in 1988. Per student expen do. They complain increasingly of the ulty member who professes writing, geography, history, ditures in higher education leaped from system's failure to contribute to a work the opposite who argues etc. is now seen as its fun- $450 in 1940 to $1,985 in 1960, to $9. 165 force properly prepared for today's mar- that core knowledge and ba- damental problem, serious last year - even as the number of stu ketplace, and they spend increasing sums sic skills have been strength- in itself because the missing dents enrolled inc reased from 1.5 million on their own remedial programs. ened in recent decades information is intrinsically to more than 12 million. Inflation ехад The general public knows it. In survey across a general student popu- important, and even more gerates this climb, but the rease is still after survey it has called performance lation. critical as it suggests a deep- real indeed, enormous. standards and achievement too low, and A slew of recent studies er loss of intellectual disci- "Back to basics" often seems just a vac supported action to raise them: more among them, "What Do Our 17-Year- pline and coherence. uous slogan, but in the case of American homework; greater stress on imparting Olds Know?" by Diane Ravitch and There is no shortage of suggestions on education it in fact points us in the right to students basic knowledge in writing, Chester E. Finn Jr.; and "Cultural Liter- where to point the finger of blame: At direction. Basic knowledge is as essential history, science, and math; national stan- acy," by E. D. Hirsch Jr. have reached television, of course, but that's only an for today's students as it ever was: its dards for teacher certification and similarly disturbing conclusions. Gallup obligatory gesture, not serious analysis; boundaries are as knowable. It can be in statewide competency testing of all teach- surveys last year in the US and other in- at the family, the bedrock of any educa- culcated as readily if only we will make ers periodically; and compulsory na- dustrial nations, done for the National tional system, which has been experienc- up our minds to do so. tional testing to measure and compare Geographic Society, found 32 percent of ing problems of instability; at the educa- students' academic achievements. adult Americans unable to name any tion guild, from teachers organizations to Everett Carll Ladd is executive director of the Many of us in teaching recognize the members of NATO. Only 57 percent schools of education, which has often Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, extent of the problem. In my 25 years at could identify England on a map of Eu- seemed preoccupied with technique and University of Connecticut. WASH. TIMES : 09-05-89 JEANNE ALLEN / WILLIAM MYERS resident George Bush re- P cently invited the nation's School governors to an education summit on Sept. 27. The purpose: to hammer out a plan to reform America's failing school sys- summit tem. Several governors already have responded to the presidential call by asserting that what really is needed is more federal money. Others are primer 10P B usiness is spending some $40 billion on education this year expressing fears that they will be and thus is taking an urgent asked to shoulder more of the re- interest in education reform that sponsibility for improving education (hortly after he took office, Mr. could reduce the high tab for reme- without being given the resources they claim they need. These gover- S Bush pledged to remove cum- dial education for their employees. bersome regulations to make Countless reports and studies call- nors note that recent congressional it easier for schools to experiment. ing for reforms have been issued by legislation mandates that states as- The Department of Education is ex- business groups; firms are collabo- sume more of the burden of funding ploring ways to clear away these bar- rating with educators, parents and for health and welfare, and they sus- riers. Mr. Bush should announce to public-policy experts to develop new pect that education will follow suit. the summit that once this review is strategies. Yet business efforts often Even though there is overwhelm- complete, he will issue an executive are unfocused. ing evidence that more money is not order to eliminate regulations that The president should join with the the answer to the nation's education impede reform. governors at the summit in calling problems, the suspicions of gover- Mr. Bush also should challenge on the nation's corporate leaders to nors about the summit are under- the states to follow his lead and clear establish a Commission on Business standable. This should not cloud the away red tape at the state level. Edu- Support for Education. Patterned fact that the summit is needed - not cation mainly is regulated by after the Grace Commission, which to box in the states and force them to statehouses, not Washington. highlighted waste in the government pick up more of the education tab, Schools must abide by copious budget, the product of the commis- but to seek ways of removing road- state regulations, many of which in- sion would not be more studies or blocks that impede the states from terfere with a school's ability to im- research. Instead, it would highlight improving education. prove the quality of education. those strategies that have been im- The states already are setting the Examples: teacher certification proving education and indicate prac- pace in education reform. It is the requirements, vocational education tical ways in which business can states that are introducing wider and basic course requirements, and stimulate reform. choice for parents to spur more com- restrictions on the use of school fa- 4. Announce that he will order the petition among schools, and it is the Department of Education to assist cilities can constrain creative ap- states that are in the vanguard of states in reforming education. Mr. school management innovation. proaches by schools. Mr. Bush Bush also should call on each gover- should call on the governors to re- Thus what Mr. Bush needs to do is to move such burdensome red tape and nor to appoint a senior staffer to deal soothe the worries of the governors allow their school districts to ex- exclusively with parental choice. by assuring them that instead of the summit imposing new burdens on plore new ways of dealing with the States are taking the lead in pro- old problems. moting choice in education. But the states, it will seek ways to make 2. Seek agreement by the summit while the Department of Education it easier for them to introduce more reforms of the kind they are already for the goal of a school-choice plan supports these moves, many of its in at least 30 states within two years. staff lack the direction or authority pioneering. to help states reform in this way. Mr. In particular, at the summit Mr. The experience of Minnesota and Bush should tell the governors that Bush should: Iowa confirms that allowing parents the department now will work 1. Announce that he will issue an a degree of choice over which school closely with the states to develop executive order to free states from their child will attend significantly strategies to promote choice. To help cumbersome federal rules that frus- raises the quality of education. Mr. this, Mr. Bush should ask each gov- trate state education innovation. He Bush should signal his determina- ernor to appoint a "choice adviser" tion to see more more statewide also should challenge the states to do to work closely with the department the same for their local govern- choice plans by announcing a target on reform measures. to be reached in two years. He could ments. Many innovative education re- provide each state that enacts edu- Mr. Bush's call for an education forms are impeded by federal red cational choice for parents a bonus summit is a recognition of the crisis federal grant and technical assis- in American education. Something tape. Example: Washington imposes tance to administer the new plans. needs to be done to reverse the numerous restrictions on the use of breakdown in quality of a school Chapter 1 funds, which serve the 3. Call for a commission on busi- education. And by inviting the gov- needs of disadvantaged students. ness support for education. ernors to the summit, Mr. Bush rec- Thus states are prevented from ognizes that he feels the best hope using these funds creatively. Free- for reform lies in action by the :ng up this money would allow states states. to experiment with proven innova- What he must do at the summit is tive methods of instruction. develop a battle plan to unlock the pent-up creativity of America's statehouses. Republican National Mork DAVIS Committee MEMORANDUM TO: LEE ATWATER Chairman ATTN: MARY MATALIN Chief of Staff THROUGH: MARK GOODIN Director of Communications PHIL KAWIOR PC Director of Research FROM: JIM BADENHAUSEN Research Analys JR DATE: MAY 15, 1989 SUBJECT: EDUCATION: A WEDGE ISSUE A clear Republican agenda on education has developed, giving the GOP an opportunity to develop education as a wedge issue in the coming elections. Recent education reforms have had some success in improving the state of the nation's public schools but we still have a long way to go. As then-Secretary of Education Bill Bennett wrote in 1988 on the fifth anniversary of the release of A Nation at Risk, "American education has made some undeniable progress in the last few years. We are doing better than we were in 1983. But we are certainly not doing well enough." During the last five years, however, the Republican Party, in the public's eyes, has fallen further behind on the education issue. If were are going to use the GOP consensus on education reform to our partisan advantage we must be confrontational, willing to challenge the liberal Democrats and the NEA who oppose our proposals. We won't win on this issue by increasing federal spending because liberals are always eager to spend even more. At the very least an aggressive Republican position on education reform will neutralize the Democratic advantage on education and may even turn the issue to our advantage. Below is a review of the education issue. Dwight D. Eisenhower Republican Center: 310 First Street Southeast, Washington, D.C. 20003. (202) 863-8500. Telex: 701144 Page 2 Republicans continue to trail on education issue During the 1980s, the Republican Party has fallen further behind the Democrats as the party seen as best able to ensure quality education. In 1980, by a 4-point margin the public thought Democrats would do a better job than Republicans of ensuring quality education; in 1984 the Democrats led by the same margin; but by 1986 Democrats had a 7-point advantage on this issue; and, on Election Day 1988 the Democrats had a 15-point advantage on ensuring quality education despite George Bush's pledge to be the education president. (Wirthlin Group) More recent polling data indicates that Democrats continue to hold an advantage on this question, although the margin has narrowed. In April 1989, Democrats were favored by a 6-point margin on the question of which party could better ensure the quality of public education, but among those most concerned about education Republicans trailed by 12 percentage points. (MOR, 4/5-9/89) Public continues to give public schools low grades While the public's confidence in the public schools has improved slightly since a decade low in 1983, the public continues to give the nation's public schools only mediocre grades. When asked to grade the nation's public schools, only 23% of Americans give the schools an A or B, while 64% give them a C, D, or F rating. Nonwhites, inner city residents, and those under thirty, give their local schools the lowest grades. (Gallup, 1988) Funding isn't the problem Liberal Democrats and the NEA often try to fault any Republican education reform proposals for not including a major expansion in federal spending. The public, solution. however, recognizes that throwing more federal money at the problem is not the O Mark get article this Total education spending in the U.S. has already risen dramatically. In 1988, the average per-pupil expenditure in American public education was about $4,800, $1,500 more than in 1983, approximately twice as much per student as in the mid-60s and nearly three times the level of the mid-50s. Finn, Commentary, 5/89) Although Democrats often cite polls that show the American people are willing to pay higher taxes for better education, the public doesn't think funding is the major problem facing the nation's public schools. In Gallup's annual education survey in 1988, only 12% of the public cited increased funding as the most important problem facing public education. (Gallup 1988) Page 3 If Republicans allow the education debate to focus on funding we are destined to lose because liberal Democrats will always outbid us when they're playing with taxpayers' money. Republican Proposals Republican education proposals addressed in the President's education programs and more recently in the American Family Act proposed by Republicans Rep. Jerry Lewis and Sen. Dan Coats have offered a variety of education reforms that enjoy overwhelming public support and don't require major increases in government spending. Both packages promote the goals of choice, accountability, values in education, and drug free schools, all ideas that the public supports by wide margins. There are several potential wedge issues that offer Republicans the opportunity to regain the initiative on education. -- A Cutting Issue: Ethics and Values Was Drugo, on A majority of the public thinks that the public schools should in some way be involved in teaching values and ethical behavior. Forty-three percent said that such courses should be taught in the schools, and another 13% Indertinate Do volunteered that schools, parents, and churches should all be involved. Thirty-six percent said that only parents and churches should be involved. (Gallup, 1987) the 00 polucation Recognizing that many children are not receiving the moral and ethical leadership that was traditionally provided by families and churches, the American Family Act provides funds for pilot programs in Character Education. The bill also will include a requirement that all grant-receiving schools include the Pledge of Allegiance as part of the daily program. itsamatting A Cutting Issue: Accountability I highr Standards. Jadnes Accountability, which is one of the principles of President Bush's education reform package, is widely supported by the public. Seventy percent of the public supports using educational achievement test results to compare the quality of schools. Seventy-six percent of public thinks that telling school districts to require higher academic achievement of their students will help school quality. -- A Cutting Issue: Choice The opportunity for parents to choose which public schools their children attend is an idea that it widely supported by the public. Seventy-one percent of the public thinks parents should have the right to choose which local schools their children attend, while only 20% oppose the idea. And women and those parents whose children are average or below average in academic standing were the strongest supporters of parental choice. (Gallup, 1987) Page 4 The American Family Act 1989 includes funding to stimulate unrestricted enrollment programs within school districts throughout America. In President Bush's education proposal the Magnet Schools program would promote parental choice. -- A Cutting Issue: Cracking down on Drugs The public thinks the largest problem in public schools today is the use of drugs. In 1988, for the third consecutive year drugs topped the list of problems that Americans think are facing our public schools. Thirty-two percent of the public cited drug use as the number one problem in the nation's public schools, and discipline, a related problem has consistently ranked second as the number one problem facing the public schools. (Gallup) To curb the drug problem in the public schools, the public supports proposals that many liberal Democrats might balk at supporting. Eight in ten Americans support the expulsion of students caught using drugs and seven in ten support allowing school officials to search lockers when they suspect that drugs might be concealed in them. (Gallup, 1986) The American Family Act doesn't have any provision that specifically addresses drugs in the schools, but it does address juvenile justice and parental liability. The proposal includes a provision that would provide funds to states with laws that allow the court to find parents of juvenile offenders liable for restitution. Us against Them Finally, casting the NEA and it's Democratic boosters as the villains of education reform as Bill Bennett often did during his tenure at the Education Department would help crystallize the education issue, with Republicans and other. popular opinion one side, and liberal Democrats and the teachers' union on the CC: Bob Teeter, Fred Steeper, Ed Rollins, John Buckley, Mark Nuttle, Jim Pinkerton WALL ST :09-01-89 10/195/3 Seat Belts for School Desks? Not everyone will be coming back light at night. These legal costs are to school this fall. The latest victims passed on to taxpayers, so you'd think of the tort crisis are thousands of that public officials would do all they Americans who once volunteered to could to put an end to this destructive help-out in the nation's public schools. litigation. Instead, the state attorneys Our absurd tort laws with their unlim- general attacked the insurers with a ited potential liability have snuffed frivolous lawsuit. out a once-bright point of light. The National Association of Attor- According to surveys by the Amer- ican Tort Reform Association, nearly neys General-known increasingly as 60% of school principals say they have the National Association of Aspiring Governors-filed a massive antitrust dropped or cut back on school-related programs because of the threat of claim accusing insurers of somehow lawsuits and high insurance pre- concocting the tort crisis. A federal miums. Nearly 20% of school lawyers judge has announced that he plans to dismiss the lawsuit before trial. Cali- report lawsuits or settlements in the past two years alone that caused their fornia Attorney General (and aspiring schools to drop or restrict activities. governor) John Van de Kamp, who Hardest hit, say the school law- plotted the lawsuit, must now take yers, was volunteerism, with more some responsibility for the higher in- than one-tenth of schools either stop- surance premiums sure to be passed on to consumers because of the mon- ping or restricting volunteer work, strous legal bills insurers incurred such as driving or chaperoning, be- cause of liability fears. over the past year defending them- selves from the state AGs. Not surprisingly, gym, cheerlead- ing and diving are highly suspect ac- Society has become used to watch- tivities in many schools these days. ing goods and services fall victim to But so too are playground activities, the U.S.'s deep-pocket-picking liability field trips, vocational education, system, but burdening the public driver education, nurses stations and schools with these liability suits is a even recess. One school actually mod- special outrage. We need more parent ified its drum and bugle corps pro- volunteers to help teach and coach. gram because of fear of litigation. We need more businessmen willing to The Association of Trial Lawyers offer school-related work to under- of America has an answer for all this. class youth. The last place we need to The plaintiff lawyers say the culprits spend education money is on lawyers are insurance companies "reaping in- chasing the chimera of a risk-free en- credible profits" from premiums and vironment. trying to "pressure the public into Education, like almost every hu- thinking there is a crisis in tort law." man pursuit, entails some measure of The good news is that this game of risk. Some kids inevitably will be hurt contingency-fee lawyers attacking the learning carpentry or playing basket- messenger for bearing bad tort ti- ball. But they'll be hurt more if plain- dings may be just about over. tiffs' lawyers keep shutting down as- Lawyers for these schools have pects of education. Judges and legisla- had to go to court to defend against all tors should redouble their efforts to kinds of absurd charges, from reform tort law before our schools be- teachers giving low grades to a school come sterile hallways of risk aversion allowing a thief to fall through its sky- and boredom. CHRIS.SCI.MON. :08-31-89 Education Leader Stresses Job Readiness 10 WASHINGTON tional 5 million to 16 million jobs will require "vast- ly more education than they do today." T HE No. 1 issue facing the United States to- One-fourth of all US students today drop out day is job readiness, says Richard Berend- before completing high school; the percentage is zen, president of American University. higher in some cities. "The US faces an utterly staggering problem as we One-quarter of all American children now live enter the next century." in poverty; they are disproportionately black and Solving that problem requires a renewed na- Hispanic. tional emphasis on education, Dr. Berendzen says. In keeping with demographic trends, the Additional funds will be required, but they should American work force will be increasingly minority be looked on as a necessary investment, with the and female, Berendzen says. By the year 2,000, funds transferred from other areas of the budget, "less than 15 percent of all new jobs in the US will he says. be taken by white males." According to Berendzen, America must act now In the face of these trends, US education is to ensure that minority youth, upon which the US sharply split in quality, Berendzen points out. "The economy will largely depend in the 21 st century, top 10 to 20 percent are as well prepared for col- obtain the quality of education required in the leges as any in the world today" or in the US in the economy of the future. Otherwise the US will not past, he says. be able to compete in the world economy, he adds. "But 30 to 40 percent of our students in the bot- Step by step, Berendzen built his case before a tom academic rung are probably the least pre- small group of reporters. By the year 2000, be- pared of any in the industrialized world." These tween 5 million and 15 million low-skill jobs will are disproportionately minority youth. disappear from the US economy, he said. An addi- - Robert P. Hey WASH. 09-03-89 102 Principal Jimmie PRINCIPAL Warren believes that inner-city sleeves and work that much harder." Later, when I listened to a tape of kids can our conversation, I realized that po- lice and ambulance sirens had pierced the Bronx air again and again succeed on that warm afternoon. But the new principal of James Monroe High School had a presence and a message -and that made those interruptions in- significant. Like all profound mes- sages, his was deceptively simple: he knows "I'm interested in convincing young- sters that education makes a dif- how ference, that if they're living in an en- vironment full of unfulfilled dreams, they have the potential and the ability to make some changes, to dig down inside themselves to pull themselves up. I'm not telling them it's fair. These kids have to work harder than The Man Who other kids. I'm just trying to convince them that if they work hard, they can make it." You might mistake the 44-year-old Jimmie Warren for a starry-eyed ide- alist. When we talked, he was just a Shapes Up month into his assignment at James Monroe, a troubled school where test scores and graduation rates have been falling for decades. Any new princi- pal might be overflowing with opti- mism before he realized just how tough a job he had taken on. But Jim- Troubled Schools mie Warren is different. Monroe is the fourth troubled high school he has run in this decade. New York City's Board of Education has recognized 10 him as one of its best principals. Six years ago, he took over William H. Taft High, another Bronx school that HEN YOU SIT WITH JIMMIE WARREN W had been called the city's worst. The and listen to him speak. you find your- day we spoke, Warren had on his desk self believing that there may be a a letter from the Department of Edu- future for kids in this country's worst cation in Washington, D.C., announc- crack-ridden slums. "The problems ing that Taft had been chosen as a final- are evident." he told me in his warm ist in a national program to recognize strong baritone. "There's no need to superior schools. rehash them. You sit back and say Almost any expert would have told the problems are insurmountable. the you that the problems at Taft defied problems are so burdensome there's solution: 84 percent of the kids were nothing you can do. That's a cop- on public assistance. and 16 percent out. You just have to roll up your couldn't speak English proficiently Only two of the 2500 scored well BY MICHAEL RYAN enough on standardized tests to earn a Regents diploma-a recognition of achievement that more than 90 per- cent of the students earn in some top New York schools. "Taft was near the top of every negative list the city pro- duced," Principal Warren remem- bered. "It had one of the highest drop- outrates. just about the lowest attend- ance and achievement rates, nearly the highest suspension rate. The school had a very bad reputation. I had kids coming into my office with tears in their eyes, saying. We don't WASH. POST 09-03-89 2.62 think we're that bad.' I said, 'Let's prove it. They did-and Warren is proud of the fact that he never used bullhoms standardized tests-and the teachers or baseball bats or any of the other at Taft willingly volunteered their flamboyant devices that have been glo- time. "I wanted those teachers to think rified in the media in recent years. that their middle name was Taft," You can't intimidate people into learn- Warren recalled with a smile. ing," he said. "You can't use a base- The results were startling. The ball bat and say, 'Hey, you: Learn.' school now has a parents' association You have to serve as a positive role and active community support. Elev- model." en percent of the graduates. now get There are few better role models Regents diplomas, and 80 percent go than Jimmie Warren, who lives north on to some form of higher education. of the Bronx with his wife, Freda, and "Don't get me wrong," Warren said. their two sons. He was raised in Har- "We didn't solve all the problems at lem. He worked his way through col- Taft. The dropout rate is still too high; lege-acquiring a bachelor's degree the attendance rate is still too low. But from Long Island University and a mas- we made some dents in the prob- ter's from City College of New York. lems." With Taft on the road to re- (He is now earning a doctorate at Co- covery, New York City decided it need- lumbia.) By his own account, he was ed Warren in another tough school. the only kid in his neighborhood to Out in the front hall at Monroe, the make it to college-and many of his kids scurried past in a class change. friends ended up dead or in jail. Still, You could spot every type you ever kids at Taft had life rougher than he knew in high school-the dreamers, ever knew. the intellectuals, the wise guys, the "I was shocked," he said. "I had a jocks. They passed by a display of teacher complain to me about one stu- photographs of famous Monroe grad- dent who was not doing his home- uates: Regina Resnik, the Metropoli- work. I said, 'Bring him in. I'll read tan Opera star, is there; so is Leon him the riot act.' They brought him Lederman, who last year won the in, and I said, 'James, I want you to Nobel Prize in Physics. But nobody bring your mother in.' He said, 'I has updated the list for 20 years or so- can't. She's a drug addict. The courts since the school's demographics took me away from her. I said, changed and the students' faces be- 'Okay, bring your father.' He said, came largely black and brown. Jim- 'My father's a fugitive. I haven't seen mie Warren says he plans to make that him in four years.' I said, 'Who are honor roll current, finding distin- you living with?' He said, 'I was liv- guished recent alumni to recognize. ing with my aunt. She threw me "When I see a kid walk through the out.' Warren worked with a social door at Monroe," this principal says, worker to find the boy a foster home, he sees the makings of another Nobel and the new principal realized the kind Prize-winner. "These kids have the of challenge he was facing. potential. All they need is proper Instead of a quick, glitzy solution, encouragement." Jimmie Warren is Warren developed a series of answers going to make sure they get it. to Taft's many problems. A child in danger of dropping out would be en- rolled in the Adopt-a-Student pro- gram. in which faculty members- Warren included-invited kids to their homes, called them on weekends and during vacation, and constantly encour- aged them to keep trying. There was a program for pregnant girls, another for kids with low reading scores. Older students who had amassed a few credits entered an in-school GED di- ploma program. Kids with high ab- senteeism rates were enroiled in spe- cial after-school makeup classes that enabled them to get back in step with their classmates. Warren added extra periods of biology. math and chemis- try to help his students do better on N.Y. TIMES 09-03-89 A Seismic Shock for Education 70P By Chester E. Finn Jr. Yet for some time polls have found the public receptive to greater state WASHINGTON A poll shows influence and stronger state-led ac- countability measures. In 1987, some he annual Gallup T a preference 84 percent of those surveyed agreed education poll spon- that one of the things the Federal sored by the profes- sional educational fra- for national, Government should do is "require states and local school districts to ternity Phi Delta Kappa often yields standards, meet minimum educational stand- startling results. ards." On many issues spanning the sur- curriculum. Such changes imply greater homo- vey's 21-year history, the public has geneity than our state-based, locally declared itself in favor of seismic administered education system has changes in the ground rules of the ever displayed, as well as tougher education system reforms that go norms and consequences linked to far beyond what many educators fessionals and the incrementalism of school results. (and elected officials) are comfort- recent reform efforts and, instead, re- But in tandem with the uniformity, able with. write basic assumptions about how to people favor ceding more operational The 1989 poll, unveiled Aug. 24, chart the course and gauge the authority to individual principals and amounts to a major earthquake. The progress of the nation's schools. giving students choices among hoariest policy assumption of Amer- Whether those officials have the schools. ican schooling - that essential deci- courage to do so remains to be seen, Other tremors emerge from the sions about curriculum and stand- but it is clear the electorate would data. Virtually no one supports the ards must be locally determined - support such shifts. universal practice of allowing young- turns out to be another pólitical myth. Asked "would you favor or oppose sters to drop out upon reaching a In sharp contrast to a century-old requiring the public schools in this specified age. Forty-five percent practice, people say they want na- community to conform to national would keep them in school until they tional education standards, a national achievement standards and goals?", graduate, while 38 percent would curriculum and national tests. 70 percent of Gallup's respondents oblige them to meet "certain stand- The temblor couldn't be more time- were in favor, 19 percent opposed. ards of knowledge and skill" before ly. On Sept. 27, President Bush and Asked "would you favor or oppose being permitted to leave school. the governors will gather in Char- requiring the public schools in this lottesville, Va., for an education Asking one's opinion of a hypotheti- community to use a standardized na- "summit meeting." No weightier cal event is not the same as confront- tional curriculum?", the responses topic could be on their agenda than ing people with actual disruptions, in were 69 percent yes, 21 percent no. the challenge of developing common long-established patterns. Nor can we And asked about "requiring the school norms and curriculums for the public schools in this community to be certain the public would reward whole country - and a testing-and- public officials who take such initia- use standardized national testing pro- accountability system by which we grams to measure the academic tives. (Voter participation rates in can know over time whether those achievement of students?", the re- local school board elections are norms are being met. sults were 77 percent affirmative, scareely encouraging.) Many educators would surely balk, only 14 percent negative. But alarmed by the drab perform- for they would be protective of their In every instance, people with chil- ance of schools, despite years of mar- autonomy, the decentralization of to- dren enrolled in the public schools ginal reforms, parents and taxpayers day's system and the degree to which were even more enthusiastic about seem ready for profound changes. its results are blurred and its employ- these changes than adults with no The participants at the education ees spared from consequences. youngsters in school. summit meeting would do well to But Gallup's data suggest that it This doesn't mean citizens want heed the Gallup data. Helping guide may be timely for elected officials to Federal officials to run their schools. the public to where it says it wants to set aside the conservatism of the pro- As recently as two years ago, survey go is not a bad definition of leader- data showed 39 percent wanting ship. Besides, when the territory is Chester E. Finn Jr., professor of Washington to have "less influence covered with decrepit old structures, education and public policy at Van- on improving the local public an earthquake may be the only way to derbilt University, is director of the schools" (while 37 percent favored clear the ground for new construc- Educational Excellence Network. "more influence"). tion. White House News Summary Thursday, September 14, 1989 -- 1 2:00 P.M. NEWS UPDATE CAPITAL GAINS/WAYS AND MEANS (UPI) -- The House Ways and Means Committee prepared Thursday to approve a temporary cut in the capital gains tax after Chairman Rostenkowski failed to persuade supporters to let the full House decide the issue instead. In a move seen as a defeat for Rostenkowski and the House Democratic leadership, the committee was expected to approve by a 19-17 vote a 2}-year cut in the tax rate "We will try as hard as we know how to have the House not adopt a capital gains cut, said Rep. Gephardt. "This was George Bush's idea to help his wealthy friends and the people who are going to pay for that are the middle class." EDUCATION/DUKAKIS/PRESIDENT (UPI) -- Gov. Dukakis challenged President Bush Thursday to fulfill a campaign promise to be the "education president" by showing a willingness to pay for national goals to be outlined at an upcoming education summit "He must demonstrate that he is not only prepared to set national goals (but) he is prepared to pay for them,' Dukakis said Dukakis said he is not optimistic Bush will provide an adequate amount to fund a major educational effort, citing [his proposed anti-drug spending] and his thirst for additional defense spending. "(Spending for) B-2 bombers and 'Star Wars,' in my judgment, is not in the same category as comprehensive drug education and the Head Start program Dukakis said. BREEDEN (AP) -- Richard Breeden, President Bush's nominee to head the Securities and Exchange Commission, said Thursday that vigorous securities law enforcement was good for market integrity and could help U.S. markets compete globally for foreign investment. Breeden also told the Senate Banking Committee at his confirmation hearing that criminal sanctions are "a helpful adjunct to a civil enforcement program. When asked by Sen. Dodd how he squared his reputation as a free-market advocate with the need for strong enforcement, Breeden said it was a "perfectly legitimate role for government to keep the markets clean." SOVIET JEWS/LAFONTANT (AP) -- While some Soviet emigres may one day want to go back to the Soviet Union, the U.S. will not turn away any who have already left their country and wish to come here, a Bush administration official said today. Jewel Lafontant, U.S. coordinator for refugees, said reporters had "misunderstood" her comment at a hearing Wednesday that nearly 5,000 Soviet emigres in Italy and Austria who have been denied entry to the U.S. can "always go to Israel or return to Russia. In these days of glasnost, that's not an impossible thing. All those stranded in Rome and Vienna will be admitted to the U.S., whether as fully funded refugees or as parolees with private funding, Lafontant said today as she resumed testimony before the House subcommittees on Europe and immigration. EAST GERMAN REFUGEES/HUNGARY (Budapest/Reuter) -- Hungary has no immediate plans to shut its border to East Germans wishing to cross to the West, a senior Foreign Ministry official said Thursday. The official denied West German television reports that Hungary's border with Austria would be closed again Oct. 7 to mark East Germany's 40th anniversary as a state. -more- News United States Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics Washington, D.C. 20212 Technical information: (202) 523-1944 USDL 89-308 523-1371 523-1959 Media contact: 523-1913 FOR RELEASE: IMMEDIATE THURSDAY, JUNE 29, 1989 NEARLY THREE-FIFTHS OF THE HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATES OF 1988 ENROLLED IN COLLEGE About 2.7 million youth graduated from high school in 1988 and a record 59 percent of them were enrolled in college by October, according to data released today by the Bureau of Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of Labor. Nearly half of these college freshmen also were in the labor force. This information comes from the Current Population Survey, a monthly survey of 56,000 households which provides information on the labor force, employment and unemployment. Each October, this survey includes special questions on the high school graduation and college enrollment status of youth. Selected highlights from this survey follow. The percentage of high school graduates going on to college has risen nearly 10 percentage points over the past decade. The college enrollment rate of black high school graduates (45 percent) has remained well below that of whites (61 percent) and Hispanics (57 percent). Among the 1.6 million college freshmen, 47 percent were in the labor force in October 1988, a near record. The unemployment rate for these new students-most of whom were attending college full time was 11.6 percent. (See tables 1 and 2.) About 1.1 million members of the high school class of 1988 were not enrolled in college in October, and 85 percent of them were in the labor force. The proportion of this group with jobs (the employment-population ratio) was 76 percent for whites, 55 percent for blacks, and 57 percent for Hispanics. The unemployment rate for these recent graduates, at 15.1 percent, was at its lowest point in 10 years. Data on enrollment of recent high school graduates in vocational education courses were available for the first time in the October 1988 survey. About 100,000 graduates not in college were enrolled in at least one such course. These courses include secretarial, trade, or technical classes which typically are applied toward a certificate or license rather than toward an academic degree. About 550,000 young people dropped out of high school between October of 1987 and 1988. As has historically been the case, these dropouts experience much more difficulty in the labor market than the youth who completed high school, with a labor force participation rate of only 59 percent and a high unemployment rate--26.7 percent. Table 1. School enrollment and labor force status of 1988 high school graduates and 1987-88 school dropouts 16 to 24 years old by sex, race, and Hispanic origin, October 1988 (Numbers in thousands) Civilian labor force Civilian noninsti- Unemployed Characteristic tutional population Number Participation Employed rate Percent of Number labor force Total, 1988 high school graduates 2,673 1,677 62.7 1,450 227 13.5 Men 1,334 869 65.1 752 117 13.4 Women 1,339 808 60.3 698 110 13.7 White 2,187 1,421 65.0 1,254 167 11.8 Black 382 205 53.5 154 50 24.6 Hispanic origin 179 103 57.8 77 27 25.9 Enrolled in college 1,575 747 47.4 660 87 11.6 Men 761 362 47.6 328 35 9.5 Women 814 384 47.3 332 52 13.6 Full-time students 1,444 630 43.6 550 80 12.7 Part-time students 131 117 89.2 110 7 5.6 White 1,328 668 50.3 598 70 10.5 Black 172 49 28.5 37 12 (1) Hispanic origin 102 40 39.5 33 8 (1) Not enrolled in college 1,098 930 84.7 790 140 15.1 Men 572 506 88.5 424 82 16.2 Women 526 424 80.6 365 58 13.7 White 859 754 87.7 656 97 12.9 Black 211 156 73.9 117 38 24.5 Hispanic origin 77 63 82.2 44 19 (1) Total, 1987-88 high school dropouts2, 552 327 59.2 240 87 26.7 Men 307 229 74.4 164 65 28.5 Women 245 98 40.1 76 22 22.4 White 436 283 64.8 213 70 24.7 Black 107 42 39.4 25 18 (1) Hispanic origin 101 65 64.7 56 9 (1) 1/ Data not shown where base is less than Hispanic-origin groups will not sum to totals 75,000. because data for the "other races" group are 2/ Data refer to persons who dropped out of not presented and Hispanics are included in school between October 1987 and October 1988. both the white and black population groups. NOTE: Detail for the above race and Because of rounding, sum of individual items may not equal totals. Table 2. School enrollment and labor force status of recent high school graduates and dropouts 16 to 24 years old by sex, selected years, October 1978-88 Total Men Women School enrollment Civilian Labor Civilian Labor Civilian Labor status noninsti- force Unemploy- noninsti- force Unemploy- noninsti- force Unemploy- tutional partici- ment tutional partici- ment tutional partici- ment population pation rate population pation rate population pation rate rate rate rate 1978 High school graduates 3,178 64.5 13.8 1,500 67.9 11.2 1,679 61.5 16.3 Enrolled in college 1,593 42.9 13.0 767 45.0 11.3 827 41.0 14.7 Not enrolled in college 1,585 86.3 14.0 733 91.8 11.2 852 81.3 17.0 High school dropouts 839 68.8 27.6 479 80.2 24.0 360 53.4 34.4 1983 High school graduates 2,964 63.6 22.3 1,390 67.5 22.6 1,574 60.2 22.0 Enrolled in college 1,562 44.9 17.0 721 47.7 17.4 841 42.6 16.5 Not enrolled in college 1,402 84.5 25.5 669 88.8 25.6 733 80.5 25.4 High school dropouts 597 63.1 31.6 329 75.4 32.7 268 48.1 29.5 1987 High school graduates 2,647 62.6 15.5 1,278 63.6 11.7 1,369 61.7 19.2 Enrolled in college 1,503 46.5 12.3 746 45.4 9.0 757 47.5 15.4 Not enrolled in college 1,144 83.8 17.8 532 89.0 13.7 612 79.2 21.9 High school dropouts 502 66.4 37.8 274 73.7 38.1 228 57.6 37.3 1988 High school graduates 2,673 62.7 13.5 1,334 65.1 13.4 1,339 60.3 13.7 Enrolled in college 1,575 47.4 11.6 761 -47.6 9.5 814 47.3 13.6 Not enrolled in college 1,098 84.7 15.1 572 88.5 16.2 526 80.6 13.7 High school dropouts 552 59.2 26.7 307 74.4 28.5 245 40.1 22.4 U.S. Department of Labor Bureau of Labor Statistics First Class Mail Washington. 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