In this article, which appeared on Huffington Post, Alan Singer of Hofstra University in New York, nails the empty promises and misleading claims in President Obama’s State of the Union address. He calls it “Obama’s Mis-Education Agenda.”
Alan Singer writes:
I am a lifetime teacher, first in public schools and then in a university-based teacher education program. I think I do an honest job and that students benefit from being in my classes. I was hoping to hear something positive about the future of public education in President Obama’s State of the Union speech, I confess I was so disturbed by what Obama was saying about education that I had to turn him off. In the morning I read the text of his speech online, hoping I was wrong about what I thought I had hear. But I wasn’t. There was nothing there but shallow celebration of wrong-headed policies and empty promises.
For me, the test question on any education proposal always is, “Is this the kind of education I want for my children and grandchildren?” Obama, whose children attend an elite and expensive private school in Washington DC, badly failed the test.
Basically Obama is looking to improve education in the United States on the cheap. He bragged that his signature education program, Race to the Top, was “a competition that convinced almost every state to develop smarter curricula and higher standards, for about 1 percent of what we spend on education each year.” I am not sure why Obama felt entitled to brag. Race to the Top has been in place for four years now and its major impact seems to be the constant testing of students, high profits for testing companies such as Pearson, and questionable reevaluations of teachers. It is unclear to me what positive changes Race to the Top has actually achieved.
In the State of the Union Address, Obama made three proposals, one for pre-school, one for high school, and one for college.
Obama on Pre-Schools: “Study after study shows that the sooner a child begins learning, the better he or she does down the road. But today, fewer than 3 in 10 four year-olds are enrolled in a high-quality preschool program . . . I propose working with states to make high-quality preschool available to every child in America . . . In states that make it a priority to educate our youngest children, like Georgia or Oklahoma, studies show students grow up more likely to read and do math at grade level, graduate high school, hold a job, and form more stable families of their own.”
I am a big supporter of universal pre-kindergarten and I like the promise, but Georgia and Oklahoma are not models for educational excellence. Both states have offered universal pre-k for more than a decade and in both states students continue to score poorly on national achievement tests. Part of the problem is that both Georgia and Oklahoma are anti-union low wage Right-to-Work states. In Oklahoma City, the average salary for a preschool teacher is $25,000 and assistant teachers make about $18,000, enough to keep the school personnel living in poverty. Average Preschool Teacher salaries for job postings in Oklahoma City, are 17% lower than average Preschool Teacher salaries for job postings nationwide. The situation is not much better in Georgia. In Savannah, Average Preschool Teacher salaries for job postings are 12% lower than average Preschool Teacher salaries for job postings nationwide.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Right-to-work_law
http://www.indeed.com/salary/q-Preschool-Teacher-l-Oklahoma-City,-OK.html
http://www.indeed.com/salary?q1=Preschool+Teacher&l1=savannah+georgia
Obama on Secondary Schools: “Let’s also make sure that a high school diploma puts our kids on a path to a good job. Right now, countries like Germany focus on graduating their high school students with the equivalent of a technical degree from one of our community colleges, so that they’re ready for a job. At schools like P-Tech in Brooklyn, a collaboration between New York Public Schools, the City University of New York, and IBM, students will graduate with a high school diploma and an associate degree in computers or engineering . . . I’m announcing a new challenge to redesign America’s high schools so they better equip graduates for the demands of a high-tech economy. We’ll reward schools that develop new partnerships with colleges and employers, and create classes that focus on science, technology, engineering, and math – the skills today’s employers are looking for to fill jobs right now and in the future.”
Unfortunately, P-Tech in Brooklyn, the Pathways in Technology Early College High School, is not yet, and may never be, a model for anything. It claims to be “the first school in the nation that connects high school, college, and the world of work through deep, meaningful partnerships, we are pioneering a new vision for college and career readiness and success.” Students will study for six years and receive both high school diplomas and college associate degrees. But the school is only in its second year of operation, has only 230 students, and no graduates or working alumni.
http://www.ptechnyc.org/site/default.aspx?PageID=1
According to a New York Times report which included an interviews with an IBM official, “The objective is to prepare students for entry-level technology jobs paying around $40,000 a year, like software specialists who answer questions from I.B.M.’s business customers or ‘deskside support’ workers who answer calls from PC users, with opportunities for advancement.”
The thing is, as anyone who has called computer support knows, those jobs are already being done at a much cheaper rate by outsourced technies in third world countries. It does not really seem like an avenue to the American middle class. The IBM official also made clear, “ that while no positions at I.B.M. could be guaranteed six years in the future, the company would give P-Tech students preference for openings.”
Obama on the cost of a College Education: “[S]kyrocketing costs price way too many young people out of a higher education, or saddle them with unsustainable debt . . . But taxpayers cannot continue to subsidize the soaring cost of higher education . . . My Administration will release a new “College Scorecard” that parents and students can use to compare schools based on a simple criteria: where you can get the most bang for your educational buck.”
As a parent and grandparent I agree with President Obama that the cost of college is too high for many families, but that is what a real education costs. If the United States is going to have the high-tech 21st century workforce the President wants, the only solution is massive federal support for education. There is a way to save some money however I did not hear any discussion of it in the President’s speech. Private for-profit businesses masquerading as colleges have been sucking in federal dollars and leaving poor and poorly qualified students with debts they can never repay. These programs should to be shut down, but in the State of the Union Address President Obama ignored the problem.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/alan-singer/higher-education-for-the-_b_1642764.html
The New York documented the way the for-profit edu-companies, including the massive Pearson publishing concern, go unregulated by federal education officials. These companies operate online charter schools and colleges that offer substandard education to desperate families at public expense.
President Obama, celebrating mediocrity and shallow promises are not enough. You would never accept these “solutions” for Malia and Sasha. American students and families need a genuine federal investment in education.
Department of Teaching, Literacy and Leadership
128 Hagedorn Hall / 119 Hofstra University / Hempstead, NY 11549
(P) 516-463-5853 (F) 516-463-6196

Bravo, Alan Singer!
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Obama is a fraud, which should be obvious to anyone but the truest believers by now. He is selling snake oil and not getting called to the carpet nearly as much as he should be. There will be no relief from him unless we can turn away from the fraud in massive numbers.
Imagine if Lincoln had the intestinal fortitude and integrity of Obama. Where would we be today. Obama will be remembered as a bottom 1/3 president. A waste of 8 years when we couldn’t afford to lose 8 years. How is it possible that Obama is the best thing that could have happened to George Bush’s reputation?
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You are absolutely right! Read, “Yes We Are STUPID in America” and see just exactly how our leaders are encouraging mediocrity. It’s all about stupid leaders.
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Money, money, money….oh yeah! Too bad we won’t see any of it.
Privatizing Roads, Bridges, Schools and Energy Grids – Corporatism Pervades #SOTU Address
http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/privatizing-roads-bridges-schools-and-energy-grids-corporatism-pervades-sotu
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http://www.alternet.org/news-amp-politics/privatizing-roads-bridges-schools-and-energy-grids-corporatism-pervades-sotu
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“You would never accept these “solutions” for Malia and Sasha.”
That to me is the glaring siren that completely disproves the “but he means well and he’s trying hard” line that his supporters raise. If he actually meant well, he would be trying hard to get every child in America an education that at least attempts to approximate the education he wants for his daughters. The fact that he’s sought the exact opposite for his daughters from what he’s foisting off on the rest of the nation proves his utter knowing mendacity.
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I worry about P-tech also because kids are locked in at an early age. If you look on their website you find that students CANNOT attend a four year college without their counselor’s permission.
Fourteen year olds should not be locking themselves into a tech job rather than keeping open a four-year college program that leads to better opportunities and more enriched learning.
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Yikes! And what happens if they don’t complete the whole program? Can they get just a high school diploma, or is it only a package deal?
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Let’s add one more point to the cost of college: unfunded mandates. We are now in the throws of the edTPA. It takes a lot of time to implement this and each university basically needs an “edTPA officer”.
Unfortunately, I don’t see any improvement down the line. We have to write several reports a year for our State Board of Education. Some of them are several 100 pages =>Waste of valuable faculty/staff time.
Also, I checked the online scorecard. The information is misleading as it counts in grants etc. So the state university I am working at looks pretty expensive, even though actually it is much cheaper than many other schools for the average student.
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Once upon a time I believed in President Obama. I voted for him. I sent money. I was excited and proud to see such a wise man elected, and was so hopeful to see change. But, his failure to recognize the need to change his RTTT policies and his continued disrespect for hardworking teachers, makes me feel so manipulated. Alan Singer says it perfectly. If only President Obama would listen. Our children deserve more. Our teachers deserve more. Our country deserves more.
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Ruth Bader Ginsburg and I both took the easy way out of SOTU. Thanks Alan Singer for the wake up call.
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I was so angry while watching the SOTU. Clearly Obama was a better choice than Romney … but still. Just disappointing.
Not that it will do anything, but I started a petition on “We the People” … if anyone cares to sign on, here is the link:
http://wh.gov/dvM9
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Jen…
I checked out your petition. I think it is very worthy and makes sense to any of us who are educators. My recommendation is that you try and get the petition onto SumofUs.org or Credo Action. There are a lot of followers who are pretty level-headed and well-intentioned.
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Here’s Gail Collins in the New York Times praising President Obama’s proposals for universal 4 year old programs.
Professor Singer criticizes these proposals by saying that “Georgia and Oklahoma are not models for educational excellence.” I think the President ‘s key point was that these two state made it ” their priority to educate our youngest children…”
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Singer wrote an article that was right on the money. Obama’s speeches and ideas are full of rhetoric. Everything he says about education rings hollow. I always wonder what billionaire told Obama to promote his latest idea about education.
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Well said, Mr Singer. If it is not good enough for the Obama daughters, it is not good enough for the children of America.
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I was very disappointed in the P-Tech shout out. It’s unproven and while I’m sure Principal Rashid Davis has moved the needle for his students, I’ve heard him, let us say, exaggerate his successes before.
I put my take as a guy who’s actually built a successful tech ed (compute science) program here: http://cestlaz.github.com/2013/02/14/Schools-Snake-Oil-and-the-SOTU.html#.UR2OIZX9bRo.
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Thank you for calling it the way it is. That is refreshing.
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That’s it. You know the term, “think globally, act locally?” Do it! Forget about Obama & education & writing the White House and even thinking that anything at all that we have to say matters to POTUS–he would have replaced Duncan a looong time ago, & it’s not going to happen now. Work as best you can in your own community. (Again, I must ask you all to find out what’s going on in Chicago with all the school closing push back from the communities. The mainstream media? They’re COVERING the story, just like they did the CTU. People, run for school board, run for local office, organize-don’t-agonize, do whatever you have to do where you are. Parents, opt out of testing. But–forget about that which is a lost cause, and we all know it.No more wasting time letter writing, e-mails, petitions to the White House or DOEd. Move on, and make a difference where you LIVE. Yes, WE can!
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Chicago is proving what you are saying. It takes organization as CTU and Karen Lewis and her group have proven. You must get the community behind you also. This is what they are doing in Chicago.
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About the statement “The thing is, as anyone who has called computer support knows, those jobs are already being done at a much cheaper rate by outsourced technies in third world countries”: I’m not so sure of that. Salaries for many technical jobs are rising in India into the $40,000 range; and outsourcing has its drawbacks, such as bogus resumes and job-hopping. See my blog “Job Creation and Onshore Outsourcing: An Interview with Anil Budha,” 2/15/13, at http://politicswestchesterview.wordpress.com/.
For better or worse, the depression of US wages and rising middle classes in many other countries seems to be making the US more competitive.
For my own take on the SOTU address, and especially its overemphasis (in my view) on testing and technical fields, see “State of the Union, 2013, with focus on education,” 2/16/13, also at http://politicswestchesterview.wordpress.com/.
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When wages get too high in India, the multi-nationals will move to an even lower wage country.
Meanwhile, wages in the US are being depressed to meet the competition in China and India but the cost of living is not falling.
This is what Paul Krugman means when he refers to the hollowing out of the middle class. The elites are getting richer, and the number in poverty is swelling.
The NY Times reported yesterday that the income of those at the top grew by 11% last year, but fell for everyone else.
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