Oh, yes, our little Jebbie is STILL TRYING to reverse the FL Supreme Court's recent decision that his school vouchers are unconstitutional AND to reverse the voters' strong decision for SMALLER CLASS SIZES.
He will NEVER give up manipulating the rulings of the Supreme Court and the will of the voters. He will be booted out of the Governor's mansion at the end of this year, but, undaunted, he will forever try to micromanage from the shadows.
This is one individual who will not adjust well as his power is stripped from him. There will be painful consequences if we lose track of what he is doing after he leaves power, now just over 3 months away.
Operation: CONSTANT VIGIL
Gov. Jeb Bush talks about the recommendations for the Florida education system that were made by the Hoover Institution's Koret Task Force on K-12 Education, during a news conference in downtown Orlando on Tuesday.
(JOE BURBANK, ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Sep 12, 2006
Gov. Jeb Bush (right) talks with Florida education commissioner John Winn during a news conference about the recommendations for the Florida education system that were made by the Hoover Institution's Koret Task Force on K-12 Education on Tuesday.
(JOE BURBANK, ORLANDO SENTINEL)
Sep 12, 2006
Think tank urges school reforms, no class-size limitsBy Erika Hobbs
September 13, 2006
New educational reforms could be ahead for Florida schools now that a conservative think tank has called for better-qualified teachers, tougher reading and math standards and an end to the state's constitutional directive to reduce class sizes.
Gov. Jeb Bush looked on approvingly in Orlando as experts from Stanford University's Hoover Institution released results Tuesday of their nine-month review of the educational policies he championed for Florida's public-school system.
The 11-member panel called Florida a "trendsetter" and "national leader in education reform," but it warned policymakers they still had a long way to go to create a stronger academic culture.
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"The class-size straitjacket needs to be lifted," said Paul E. Peterson, a senior fellow at Hoover who edited the report.
Another recommendation, to restore taxpayer-supported vouchers that allowed children at low-performing public schools to attend private schools, would have to circumvent a ruling earlier this year by the Florida Supreme Court.
Critics of Bush's school policies, from class-size supporters to the teachers union, characterized the report as an invalid effort that serves only to document Bush's efforts to be remembered as an "education governor" when he leaves office in January.
Kevin Franck, senior education-policy analyst at People for the American Way, which helped lead the campaign to shrink classes, dismissed the recommendations as "fancy academic talk" by a group with a clear agenda to "privatize schools."
Voters won't accept a move to stuff children into already crowded classrooms, he said.
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Mark Pudlow, spokesman for the Florida Education Association, said the report's findings could have been predicted.
"Gov. Bush asked for the report, secured funding for the report and went to a group that totally agrees with his approach to education," Pudlow said. "Why wouldn't they praise his public-education policy?"
Bush invited the Hoover experts, known as the Koret Task Force on K-12 Education, to evaluate the programs and policies implemented during his two terms as governor, from school grades to school choice.
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