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ObamaNation See other ObamaNation Articles Title: Woke Blue State Lowers the Bar for Teachers, Removes Basic Educational Requirements From Daily Caller: A New Jersey law that removes a requirement for teachers to pass a reading, writing and mathematics test for certification will go into effect on Jan. 1, 2025
Individuals seeking an instructional certificate will no longer need to pass a basic skills test administered by the states Commissioner of Education. We need more teachers, Democratic Sen. Jim Beach, who sponsored the bill, said according to the New Jersey Monitor. This is the best way to get them. New Jerseys New Low: Teachers Without Basic Skills In New Jersey, starting in 2025, aspiring teachers will no longer have to pass a reading, writing, or math test to become certified. Thats rightteachers who cant do math could soon be teaching your kids algebra. This baffling new law, Act 1669, was signed by Democratic Governor Phil Murphy as part of the states 2025 budget. The excuse? A teacher shortage. But instead of addressing the root causeslike burdensome bureaucracy or toxic union politicstheyve decided to just lower the bar. We need more teachers, said Democratic State Senator Jim Beach, one of the bills sponsors. This is the best way to get them. Sure, Jim. Because nothing says quality education like teachers who may not know how to read the lesson plan. New Jersey, like many other blue states, has been struggling to find enough teachers, especially in math and science. But rather than fix the systemic issues, theyve chosen to bulldoze the standards. Teachers unions, of course, love this idea. The powerful New Jersey Education Association called the testing requirement an unnecessary barrier. Maybe because nothing kills the dream of union dues like expecting teachers to prove theyre competent. Follow the Leader: Blue States Race to the Bottom New Jersey isnt the first to make this move. New York scrapped its literacy requirements for teachers back in 2017, citing diversity as the rationale. California and Arizona have followed suit, creating fast- track options for substitute teachers to become full-time educators. In Massachusetts, theyve gone even furtherlowering testing standards for students to make up for pandemic learning losses. You cant make this stuff up. Its not like these states are strapped for cash, either. New York spends almost twice the national average on education, yet only about half of its students in grades three through eight are proficient in English and math. Meanwhile, New Yorks teachers are among the highest-paid in the country. Wheres all that money going? Certainly not toward better outcomes for students. Unions Reign Supreme, Kids Fall Behind At the heart of this mess are the teachers unions. They have enormous power in blue states and use it to protect their interestswhether or not it benefits students. They lobby for policies that ensure job security for teachers, even those who arent meeting basic standards. And theyve fought hard to lower the bar for teacher certification. The pandemic exposed just how much sway these unions have. They kept schools closed for far longer than necessary, worsening learning losses that kids are still struggling to recover from. Now, instead of working to close that gap, states like New Jersey are making it easier for underqualified teachers to step into classrooms. Its like throwing gasoline on a fire and wondering why its getting worse. Whats at Stake? Lets not sugarcoat this. Lowering teacher standards will hurt students, especially in disadvantaged communities. These kids are already playing catch-up after years of school closures. They need more qualified teachers, not fewer. But under these policies, the most vulnerable students will fall even further behind. And as blue states like New Jersey continue to lower the bar, the message is clear: your childs education comes second to union demands and political expediency. Meanwhile, red states are watching and shaking their heads. In Florida and Texas, leaders are focusing on raising standards and giving parents more control over education. The contrast couldnt be starker. Blue states are racing to the bottom, while red states aim for the top. Key Takeaways: Blue states are lowering teacher standards. New Jersey will no longer require basic skills tests for teacher certification starting in 2025. Unions are driving these changes. Teachers unions have lobbied to eliminate testing requirements, calling them unnecessary barriers. Students are the real losers. Lower standards mean fewer qualified teachers and more struggling kids. Poster Comment: When I was 16 years-old, this was the reading list for my one semester World Litt class: Aristotle's Poetics, Plato's, the Symposium and the Allegory of the Cave, the 3 plays of the Oedipus Cycle. Gustav Flaubert's Madam Bovary, Herman Melville's Billy Bud (I saw the movie), Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment. Plays" Streetcar Named Desire, Death of a Salesman (saw it on Tv). When I was in college, I was 19 and we translated Albert Camus's L'Etrager in a 3rd semester class. 40 years later, students in 4th semester could not translate it. The Dept of Education was created in 1980 out of the Health, Education and Welfare Dept which had been created in 1953. There is a direct correlation between federal dollars on Education and the decline in the ability to read and write and societal values. Also the rise of teachers' unions. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread Top Page Up Full Thread Page Down Bottom/Latest
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12-Year-Old Girl and Mom Shot After Being Used as Human Shield In NYC A 12-year-old girl and her 40-year-old mother were among six people wounded in a brazen shooting that unfolded inside a Bronx convenience store Monday afternoon The Truth of 911 Shall Set You Free From The Lie
A coons that can't count bill?
Trump intends to eliminate the Department oof Education and send all that back to the States where it rightfully should be. Can you play chess? I haven't played it since I was in High School. ;) "When bad men combine, the good must associate; else they will fall, one by one." Edmund Burke
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