Thursday, May 24, 2012
workaround

Donate Now tile

To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.




workaround



Triangle Park Creative

New national poll shows respect for teachers & many of Minnesota's education ideas

August 21, 2011

While there is deep division in the US about some issues, a new national poll shows strong, and sometimes surprising support for several key ideas in public education.  Young people and families in Minnesota gain from the way these ideas are being applied here.

The results come from the 43rd annual collaboration between Gallup, one of the nation’s most respected polling companies, and Phi Delta Kappa, also a respected national education organization.  When I look at this year’s PDK/Gallup poll results, I see three trends emerging: respect,empowerment, and choice.

First, as a former urban public school teacher, married to a 33-year veteran teacher of urban public schools, and parent of an urban public school teacher, I was gratified to see that two-thirds or more of Americans respect the profession since they would encourage “the brightest person you know” and“a child of yours” to become a public school teacher. While some educators feel a lack of respect, this poll found considerable support for the profession.

Minnesota families benefit from this because for some teaching openings, there are literally hundreds of people applying. Unlike some states that have a difficult time attracting educators, Minnesota has a surplus in some teaching areas.  In fact, some states recruit teachers from Minnesota.

Second, that esteem is demonstrated in the willingness of 72% of poll respondents to empower educators by “giving teachers flexibility to teach in ways they think best,” rather than require them “to follow a prescribed curriculum.” I hope creative, committed, hardworking teachers find these responses encouraging.

Third, just as most poll respondents want teachers to be free to select materials and strategies,74% support allowing families “to choose which public schools in the community the students attend, regardless of where they live.” Seventy percent also favor the idea of charter public schools.” Poll trends show support growing for public school choice, including charters.

Minnesota families benefit from a variety of “Dual Credit” options. These allow hard-working high school students to earn college credit while still in high school. Students can take these classes either in high school or on college campuses. Students can simultaneously save  thousands of dollars in college costs, and by challenging themselves, be well prepared for college.  For more information, see http://www.centerforschoolchange.org/high-school-college-enrollment/index.html

In addition to options provided by local districts, families can use open enrollment in other districts or in one of the more than 140 charter public schools in the state.  Some of these are “on-line” schools.

The poll has just over 40 questions.  It’s online at http://www.pdkintl.org

Yes, there are strong, deep divisions on some issues in this country.  But this poll shows there is very strong agreement on a number of key ideas in education. These responses are consistent with empowering educators to decide how they teach. Some educators want more respect, but oppose allowing families to choose among district and charter public schools. Strong majorities of the public wisely support both educator and family public school choice.

Joe Nathan directs the Center for School Change at Macalester College.  He welcomes reactions, jnathan@macalester.edu



The Twin Cities Daily Planet is an edited news source produced by professional journalists working in collaboration with citizen journalists from the local community. We publish original reported news articles, articles republished from media partners, and some content (Free Speech Zone articles, reader-submitted blog entries, comments) that is moderated but not edited. Click here for a complete description of our editorial policies. Support people-powered non-profit journalism! Volunteer, contribute news, or become a member to keep the Daily Planet in orbit.

Joe Nathan's picture
Joe Nathan

 Director, Center for School Change at Macalester jnathan@macalester.edu

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
  • Web page addresses and e-mail addresses turn into links automatically.
  • Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <br> <img> <span> <div>
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • You may use [google_ad:ad_slot] to display Google Admanager ads within your content.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
Image CAPTCHA
Enter the characters shown in the image.
To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.
workaround

Blogs published in the Daily Planet come from our blog partners or from individuals who post blogs on the Daily Planet. We moderate, but do not edit, blogs, and publish all those that meet minimal standards. We choose about five blogs per day to feature in the newsletter and on the front page. More on blogs and directions for setting up your own blog here. The opinions expressed in the Free Speech Zone and Neighborhood Notes, as well as the opinions of bloggers, are their own and not necessarily the opinion of the TC Daily Planet.

Free Speech Zone

The Free Speech Zone offers a space for contributions from readers, without editing by the TC Daily Planet. This is an open forum for articles that otherwise might not find a place for publication, including news articles, opinion columns, and announcements. The opinions expressed in the Free Speech Zone and Neighborhood Notes, as well as the opinions of bloggers, are their own and not necessarily the opinion of the TC Daily Planet.

Click here to see a display of Twin Cities problem reports, from potholes to neighborhood eyesores. Click here to report a problem. Have you used SeeClickFix? Have you gotten any response from city officials? Let us know - email info@tcdailyplanet.net