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Better than what I see on the table from most.
:thumbsup:
As a teacher, here is my plan for a vibrant, healthy public ed system for all:
*Universal preschool - college/trade/tech for all.
*National goals; not "standards," "benchmarks," or some other criteria that can be used to fail schools and students, but goals that all schools agree to work towards. Set them high, and all students will go farther, whether or not all students "meet" them.
*One national system for teacher certification that removes all the extra testing and hoops and re-education, allowing certification in one state to be equal to certification in another.
*Cap class sizes, no exceptions. Special ed and preschool classes at 10, all other classes, K-12, at 20 or less. K-3rd grade would benefit from 15 or less.
*Cap school enrollment at 500 for K-8, 750 for high schools. Smaller schools are a more cohesive community. When everyone knows each other, and all the students, it's easier to close those "cracks" that students slip through.
*Make sure that every school is fully staffed with PE teachers, music teachers, counselors, playground supervisors, librarians, tech support, special ed, and whatever other support needed to keep teachers focused on their students' academic progress and offer students any extra small group or one-on-one support they might need.
*Classrooms need to be large enough to fit all furniture, students, books, etc. with enough space left to walk around, breathe, and spread stuff out to work on.
*On-site cooking/preparation of fresh, healthy food for breakfast and lunch.
*On-site support for families who need help with medical care, day care, clothes, food, school supplies, etc..
*Contractual non-student days for abundant parent conferences, trainings, etc..
*A payscale that puts teachers in the middle class in the community they teach in.
*Abolish high-stakes testing and "punishments." Control over curriculum and instruction at the local level, with the stakeholders, teachers and families, making the decisions, and the administrations facilitating those decisions.
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