VoteMatch
Teach moral standards In Public Schools
POSITIONS
- Strongly Support means you believe: Judeo-Christian values are American values. Belief in God is what America was founded upon, so praying in school or other public places does not violate the separation of church and state.
- Support means you believe: We need to teach values in our schools. The more our children are exposed to prayer, the Ten Commandments, and other traditional values, the better off they are.
- Oppose means you believe: Prayer in schools in inappropriate because it fails to recognize American pluralism and religious diversity.
- Strongly Oppose means you believe: Separation of church and state precludes allowing school prayer. It also precludes other aspects of religion in schools, such as posting the Ten Commandments in public places. We should not violate the Constitutional principle in this case.
This question is looking for you views on how religion should play a part in public institutions. However you answer the above question would be similar to your response to these statements:
- Post the Ten Commandments in public schools
- "Separation of church and state" does not mean "keep religion out of schools"
- Nativity scenes on City Hall lawns are acceptable
- Organized Prayer In Public Schools
BACKGROUND
Education Buzzwords
- Social Promotion: Candidates debate whether students should advance a grade merely to keep up with their peer group.
90% of K-12 students are promoted (10% per year are retained).
- Teacher Pay: K-12 Teachers’ salaries average $34,200;
college instructors average $63,000; compared to $50,700 for similarly educated non-teachers.
Public school teachers earn 25% to 100% more than private school teachers.
Generally, any reference to ‘increasing teacher pay’ implies opposition to vouchers while negative references to teacher’s unions implies support of vouchers.
- Teacher Testing: Current law is that states certify teachers and decide what their requirements are; there are currently no national standards nor testing.
Liberals favor raising teacher pay and oppose teacher testing on the grounds of treating teachers more ‘professionally’.
- Student Testing: Many conservatives advocate for national testing standard or other forms of ‘standards-based education’.
Generally, any reference to ‘standards,’ or especially to dealing with ‘failing schools’, implies support of school vouchers.
- Smaller Class Size: Many liberals advocate for smaller class sizes, and/or building more schools to achieve them.
Generally, any reference to ‘smaller classrooms,’ or especially to ‘building public schools’, implies opposition to funding private schools.
- School Prayer: Current law is that schools allow religious groups to organize on school grounds as if they are any club.
Schools are not allowed to conduct prayers at the beginning of school,
but neither are they allowed to stop a student from praying.
- Bilingual Education: Schools may conduct classes in Spanish or other languages using federal ‘Title VII’ funds,
which totaled $380 million last year (1% of total spending).
13% of K-12 students speak a language other than English at home.
Generally, liberals favor bilingual education while conservatives favor ‘official English.’
- DOE: The Department of Education spent $38 billion last year (2% of the federal budget).
But federal spending only accounts for 9% of education spending; most of the annual $600 billion comes from state & local sources.
Hard-core conservatives favor abolishing the Department of Education, which was a Republican Party platform plank in the 1980s.
- Phonics: Phonics is a method of teaching children to read by sounding out phonemes (groups of letters that represent sounds).
Generally, a favorable reference to ‘phonics’ implies a conservative viewpoint on all the other education issues listed here.
College Education & Cost Statistics
- 61% of high school graduates continue on to some post-secondary education.
- 43% enroll at 4-year colleges; 33% graduate college.
- Race strongly determines the percentage enrolling at college
(49% for Asians; 38% for Blacks; 28% for Hispanics).
- Socioeconomic status even more strongly determines percentage enrolling at college
(19% from the poorest ¼ of families vs. 70% from the richest ¼ of families).
- Tuition plus room and board at public colleges averages $6,700, and at private college $18,500.
- Public college costs 15% of the average family’s income, and the percentage is holding steady (tuition rises are keeping pace with median income rises).
- Private college costs 42% of the average family’s income, and the percentage is also holding steady.
- K-12 Statistics are detailed on the ‘School Choice’ page.