Opinion

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  • Opposition to CEQ Appointment Mounts

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    A growing number of environmentalists are opposing the appointment of a “proven ideologue” to the vacant chair of the White House Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ). George T. Frampton Jr.
  • Analysis: Reformulated Gas: EPA Didn’t Do its Homework

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    In taking the Hippocratic oath, fledgling physicians solemnly pledge they will, “First, do no harm.
  • Unscientific, Deceptive, and a Disservice to American Women

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    NBC health correspondent Dr. Bob Arnot's book, The Breast Cancer Prevention Diet: The Powerful Foods, Supplements, and Drugs That Can Save Your Life was published in October 1998.
  • Here’s an Opportunity to Make an Impact on Our Schools!

    Published March 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Bert L. Holt, program director for the Cleveland Scholarship and Tutoring Program, has been involved in education for 35 years, starting as an inner-city elementary school teacher in Cleveland.
  • Michigan School Boards Fall Down on Contract Bargaining

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    In negotiating collective bargaining agreements, far too many Michigan school districts have abandoned their obligations to protect employees' constitutional rights, according to a recent Mackinac Center study.
  • Chicago School Reforms Bring Improvement

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    During a 1987 visit to Chicago, then U.S. Secretary of Education William Bennett described the city's school district as the worst in the nation. He was not invited back for eleven years.
  • Becoming an American

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Learn about America Parents of all demographic groups embrace the teaching of traditional American ideals: Schools should teach kids to be proud of being part of America. Schools should teach the responsibilities of citizenship.
  • 02/1999 Parental Freedom in the States and Nation

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Distinguished political science scholar Quentin L. Quade, director of Marquette’s Blum Center for Parental Freedom Education, died on January 19 at the age of 65.
  • Grading North Carolina Schools

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Most North Carolina public schools score a "D" or an "F" when ranked on a traditional 10-point grading scale, according to a study released last year by the John Locke Foundation.
  • Prep School for Native-Americans

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    With 74 students from 32 American Indian tribes in 11 states, the Native American Preparatory School in Rowe, New Mexico, is "almost like a Native American United Nations," according to principal Sven Husaby.
  • Teaching About America

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    With many parents not knowing much about America, it is essential for schools to teach their children what it means to be an American.
  • Giving Choice a Chance in Cleveland

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Given the virulent opposition of the teacher unions to any and all forms of school choice, how is it that a pilot school voucher program was enacted in Cleveland, Ohio?
  • Texas Teachers Bring in NEA to Fight Vouchers

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Responding to a distress signal from its affiliate in the Lone Star State, the National Education Association is helping officials from the Edgewood School District organize a fight against school vouchers.
  • Hmong Families Spur Student Success

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Hmong students concentrated in six Wisconsin cities perform well in school despite demographic conditions that are frequently blamed for poor academic performance in public schools: family poverty, unemployment, gang activities, early marriage and teen
  • School-Induced Illiteracy Spurs Spending Explosion

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    The army of teachers, aides, and support personnel involved in K-12 remedial education has grown so dramatically over the past decade that it now approaches the size of the United States Armed Forces and will cost over $65 billion in 1998, according to
  • Private Schools Could Ease Enrollment Crunch

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    The problem of overcrowded public schools facing 22 urban communities across the country could be alleviated for a public investment of about $4,575 per pupil by making use of up to 150,000 available seats at private schools in those communities,
  • Parents Tell Schools: Teach American Values First

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Although there is much debate among teachers and academics about whether the mostly white, mostly male, and mostly European heroes involved in stories of the nation's founding can have meaning for students whose backgrounds and origins are different,
  • TIMSS: Why U.S. Students Performed Poorly

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Results from the Third International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) show that the longer U.S.
  • Remedial Ed–Little Bang for the Buck

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Despite congressionally funded assessments documenting that the two programs have been failures from the beginning, some 1.
  • Parents in Control

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Florida Legislators Support School Choice A bipartisan group of legislators--including the chairwoman of the legislative black caucus--has promised to deliver school choice to Florida's parents next year and to work with Floridians for School Choice
  • 02/1999 State Education Roundup

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    Georgia * Idaho * Illinois * Maryland New York * Ohio * Pennsylvania GEORGIA Mom, Put My Teacher in Jail In Savannah, Georgia, teachers are facing their worst nightmare: kids with “attitude” can have them arrested.
  • Urban School Systems Can Succeed: ‘Wall-to-Wall, for All Children’

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    The remarkable success of El Paso, Texas, Superintendent Anthony Trujillo's schools and students over a six-year period brings a refreshing message of hope and promise--that urban school systems can be transformed into cost-efficient, high-performing
  • Other Countries Overtake U.S. in Education

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    If it is true, as public educators insist, that today's high school graduates face competition in a world-wide marketplace, then 1998 was the year when--from start to finish--U.S.
  • Reporting the Unthinkable: Sex Between Teachers and Students

    Published February 1, 1999
    Opinion -
    ". . . John Shockro, a popular teacher and coach in Mattapoisett, assaulted numerous girls over 23 years. He pleaded guilty last year to seven counts of child rape and six other sexual-assault charges involving two students from 1994 through 1996. . . .

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