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The Answer to America's Most Serious Problem
| Article
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15846 |
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Section : |
CURRENT ISSUES
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| Issue
Date : |
1 / 1989 |
1,420 Words |
| Author
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Morton A. Kaplan Editor and Publisher |
The most serious problem facing the nation is education. In a world that is becoming increasingly more complex and dependent on sophisticated talent, the United States is developing a large pool of uneducated and uneducable individuals. This prospective permanent underclass, which by no means is restricted to blacks and Latinos, will become a major drain on our political system and even more on our economic productivity. Furthermore, even those supposedly doing well in school, with honorable exceptions, do not meet reasonable standards, while the teachers--who, even in the past came from among the least successful college graduates--are increasingly only semiliterate. The tests currently proposed to validate the adequacy of teachers, and which the National Education Association is afraid of, in principle should not tax those in their teens let alone attest to the worthiness of the teacher.
Because this problem has not yet created an immediate perceived crisis, it lacks political urgency. However, because the price of coping with the problem will increase geometrically with time, perceptions are not consonant with reality. If the crisis were smaller or affected fewer people, moral considerations concerning the distribution of blame for the problem might make sense. But the crisis is too large for that. Our position as an advanced country is at stake, not as precipitously as is the case in the Soviet Union but no less surely eventually, even though the causes are different.
The belief that we can shelter our middle-class children against this disaster may be comforting psychologically but is removed from reality. We may soften the shocks by such protection, but we cannot escape their effects. Even if we were to forgo concern
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