Voters Favor Obama Over McCain on Education

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Nice article

arhiderrr of DE 10:29AM February 28, 2009

obama rocks and mccain sucks so give up.

JUSTIN RAMER of FL 8:21AM October 15, 2008

Vracer of GA - I'm curious what your experience in public education is to make a claim that public education does not need more money.

I am a teacher in Arizona (McCain's home state), which is currently the 49th lowest state in funding. Teachers here are grossly underpaid. I have worked with colleagues who were amazing teachers who ultimately had to give up the profession because they could not afford to pay their mortgage and feed their families. A friend of mine left the profession last year, after over 15 years of experience. It was an extremely difficult decision for her, but with health care costs becoming increasingly expensive for teachers, it is lowering our take-home pay each and every year, and she had gotten to the point where they were eating spaghetti almost every night because it was what she could afford after paying her bills. And this was after having to borrow money from friends and family to do so.

The education budget in this state gets cut further and further each year. Every year, teachers are expected to do more and more with less and less available to them. This year, our photocopy limits have been cut in half because the school cannot afford to pay for copies as they have in the past. Every day, I have to weigh my lesson plans as being valuable enough to teach if it involves making photocopies for students. I am having to get more and more creative with what and how I am teaching my kids (and this is not always in their best interest) for fear of going over my allocated limit.

Our office supply budget was cut from $250 per school year to $100 per school year. Which means that in order to have enough supplies for my classroom, I have to go out and buy more and more office supplies with my own (limited) funds. And this $100 limit even applies to new teachers who come in with essentially nothing, and are expected to run a classroom with a VERY limited supply budget.

Professional development funds for teachers have also been severely limited this year, and we have been forced to think long and hard about any professional development workshop we would like to attend to make us better teachers. Everything must be prioritzed, and many professional development opportunities that teachers in my department would like to take advantage of are not available. Also, if did decide to devote some of our limited funds to a particular workshop, we could really only afford for one representative of our department to attend and report back on what he/she learned.

And these are just a few examples of the areas where lack of funding has really begun to negatively affect my school.

And I teach in a school that is in a pretty affluent area in my city. To walk around campus and look at our facilities, you would never in a million years imagine that we have money problems.

I fear McCain becoming president because, as a resident of Arizona, I am very aware of his "solutions" to education.

Sharon of AZ 2:47PM October 04, 2008

no

of 6:06PM September 10, 2008

When health care is universal, it will be better and cheaper. (i could explain it, but I understand that you will have to see it to believe it.)

When preschool and college is free, America will be freer, smarter and stronger.

When we have a national commitment to develop alternative energy (to oil and natural gas), when torture is illegal (again), and our civil rights are restored (again!), and when we have a President who we can be proud of, ALL Americans will be happier than we ever thought possible.

Obama for President in 2008!

PT of CA 6:38PM August 26, 2008

If there is a strong teacher's union you can rest assured that removing a poor teacher is like backing a school bus up hill on a narrow road. The administration must fight the union and the tenure problem, neither of which is interested in students education, only a fat pay check.

Any extra money set aside in federal support is eaten up by the teacher's union before student performance is given much thought.

N. S. Neace of IL 7:37PM August 25, 2008

Mcain will continue the failied policies of NCLB. As a teacher I found it tragic that people who never have been in a real classroom have all the ideas that simply do not work. The brains behind NCLB never spent a day in a real classroom so why should teachers and students continue to have deal with something that doesnt deal with real life situations techers and students face every day. High risk standarized testing is useless. We need to train students to to think not to be robots.

Robert of NY 12:17PM August 25, 2008

I would like to see education play a more prominent role in the presidential campaign. Through education we inspire young people to go for their dreams and pursue the tools and knowledge to make our country and this world better. Who knows what the students of today will think up and create in order to make our world a better place - creating new jobs, new technologies, better energy resources. The first stepping stone to make the ideas and creativity of today a reality tomorrow, is to give education more of our attention. Second, we must monetarily support education and initiatives that benefit our students and their educational experience. We must be willing to make opportunities available for our students.

Andrew of OH 2:39AM August 24, 2008

McCain's fifth from the bottom finish in his class at Annapolis is reminiscent of another "C" student. Moreover, he most likely only got into the Naval Academy because of connections like W and Yale.

Does this represent someone who values education?

Crackerman of FL 12:14AM August 24, 2008

"What's missing in public education is effort, not money." It is absurd and offensive to presume that teachers are lacking effort. Why exactly are teachers teaching then? The money? It's easy? If that's the case, why don't more people flock to these jobs? Instead, roughly 1/3 of all new teachers leave the profession within three years. Public education is deserving of more support, ideologically and monetarily.

"Democrats want to continue to throw money at the problem. It hasn't worked and will not work." Why is it that increased funding is frowned upon in the realm of public education? When efforts in a war are unsuccessful, funds for weapons and personnel are not cut, they're increased. Why the double standard?

Briana of WI 8:34PM August 23, 2008

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