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(s)Elections See other (s)Elections Articles Title: Trump’s $20 Billion Plan to Break the Education Monopoly Trumps $20 Billion Plan to Break the Education Monopoly Marking words in a monopoly definition, shallow depth of field composition The Republican nominee for the presidency, Donald J. Trump, took the opportunity during his appearance at the Cleveland Arts and Social Sciences Academy to unveil his plan to redirect $20 billion federal dollars to create a block grant that he says will help disadvantaged children struggling in low-performing public schools to attend higher quality charter and private schools. I will propose a plan to provide better school choice to all disadvantaged children in the country, Trump said. The charter school where he made the announcement serves approximately 325 children, predominantly poor African Americans. The school is a K-8 academy where less than 50 percent of students scored at proficiency levels or above on standardized tests in 2014-2015. On the schools 2014-2015 report card, it received failing grades on the two most important measures of student achievement; reading and math. The school earned an F for student progress on tests, as well as on the gains made during the course of the year, and another F overall for its performance on the closing of achievement gaps. When asked about his decision to campaign in Cleveland, Ohio, Jason Miller, a trump campaign spokesman, wrote: Mr. Trump wants all children to have the opportunity to benefit from a first-class education. His school choice reform proposal will help to do exactly that. He is convinced that by challenging failed government education monopolies and introducing school choice we will be taking an important step toward helping students achieve better results. He intends to prepare our nations children to lead more prosperous lives. My plan to add a federal investment of $20 billion to fund school choice options would be done by reprioritizing existing federal funds, Trump said. Trump told attendees that states would be given the option to use the money in any way they like, but he would encourage them to let students use the funds to attend charter schools of their choosing. The Republican candidates desire to use federal dollars to move poor children from public to private schools of their choosing is not dissimilar to proposals other Republicans have offered in the past, such as last years retooling of national federal education law. However, that measure was not added to the Every Student Succeeds Act. Ohio offers a state program which supplies tax-funded vouchers to over 18,000 students currently. A recent study of the program found that those students who took advantage of the vouchers and attended private charter schools did not perform as well as hoped. Trump responded to this by saying that he would support additional merit pay for educators who perform exceptionally well, and he promised to use the bully pulpit of the presidency as a platform to advocate for political candidates who run on the issue of making school choice a more commonplace alternative. There is no school policy more in need of change than our currently government-run public education system monopoly, Trump said. He told the audience that he was proposing a new plan that will provide school choice to all disadvantaged students in the country. Outside of the event, a group of protesters decried Trumps campaign in total. A number of abortion rights activists carried signs stating the women deserve better than Trump. Another protestor held up a banner that read: Trump What do you have to lose? Everything! It was a reference to Trumps urging African Americans to vote for him instead of democrats who take their votes for granted. A more intimate crowd collected to hear Trump speak which included roughly a dozen schoolchildren, predominantly African American. Another, smaller group of students and educators participated in the discussion before the speech. Trump spoke of his desire to raise the number of charter schools and school choice options because, as he stated, The traditional approach, its just not working out so well. Trump has often criticized public schools for their failure to meet the educational needs of the children they serve. Part of his plan is to eliminate Common Core, an initiative that is infamous for grossly over-complicating simple arithmetic and uses confusing methods to impart simple principles. He promised to dramatically scale back or eliminate the Education Department, and expand options and facilities for school choice. Ohios charter school law has been criticized for years as too loose, allowing low-performance schools to persist. Lawmakers increased oversight in 2015 with a new provision calling for more transparency and accountability. We will save needy children from failing schools, Trump told delegates earlier this year at the Republican National Convention, and despite the ceaseless accusations on all fronts, he appears to be sincere. Poster Comment: I was educated in parochial schools in Chicago. The High School I attended, I come to find out that there are currently about 400 students there. This is ridiculous since when I went there it was more like 300 per class. We were a small school. I'm not sure how they can field a basketball team and baseball team. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
#1. To: BTP Holdings (#0)
Tramp, sorry Trump, wants to throw more tax payers money at a problem. Wake the frell up sheeple, that has never works, not in education, not in defense, not anywhere.
What I believe would immensely improve education for school age children is giving vouchers equal to the average amount currently being spent to all parents of school age children and allow the parents make whatever choice they wish including home schooling their children. In that case the vouchers would pay for all education material, expenses, and salary of the parent home schooling his and/or her children up to the amount of the vouchers.
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