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Guam Needs A Piece Of Feds' $4.35B Education Competition E-mail Print
News Analysis
Written by Michael Rudolph, Guam News Factor Writer   
Thursday, 05 November 2009 15:47

RaceToTheTop

Are We Willing To Earn It?

A Message To The Island: ‘No Excuses, Just Results'

By Michael Rudolph

GUAM - President Barack Obama is promoting a new $4.35 billion USDOE education program called "Race To The Top." The program is actually a competition for the $4.35 billion in Recovery funds that will be awarded to "places where they're really willing to innovate, really willing to push the envelope and get dramatically better," according to Education Secretary Arne Duncan.

Can Guam break away from the status-quo of waiting for the next DOE blunder such as libraries without books, bathrooms without toilet paper, cafeterias without lunch programs or fumbled procurements?

In his interview with ABC News Duncan's sentiments can be summed as "it's all up to parents with children in the public schools to pressure the local legislatures to enact real change by breaking away from the status quo and give every child a chance at a great quality education."

For example, California reacted to the pressure and changed state laws to allow a teacher's pay to be influenced by student performance in order to compete for a piece of the $4.35 billion dollar pie.

That is how a state shows that they are serious about change.

Now that the Guam Department of Education has been ordered by USDOE to relinquish its autonomy over federal funding, maybe now is a good time to start instituting the spirit of "Race To The Top" and get Guam's fair share through achievement, not entitlement.

Jeff Marchesseault contributed to this analysis.

Read or watch the ABC News story, "President Obama Touts Education Reform on Anniversary of Election" from November 4, 2009.

From The White House Blog:

High Expectations

Posted by Jesse Lee on November 04, 2009 at 05:37 PM EST

Earlier today, President Obama and Secretary of Education Arne Duncan visited Wright Middle School in Madison, Wisconsin to spotlight one of the most exciting and innovative initiatives in education reform history: the Race to the Top Award. Designed to reward schools that take initiative to improve, the award provides grants -- there is $4 billion on the table -- to districts that demonstrate a commitment to advancement and higher standards. As he almost always does, he took some time to talk directly to the kids there about how invaluable education has been to both him and the First Lady: "So that's the reason why we are spending a lot of time talking to folks like you, because we want all of you to understand that there's nothing more important than what you're doing right here at this school."

 

During his more formal remarks, the President discussed how the Race to the Top Award will make schools accountable to parents and students:

There's always excuses for why these schools can't perform. But part of what we want is an environment in which everybody agrees -- from the governor to the school superintendent, teachers, principals, and most importantly parents and students -- that there's no excuse for mediocrity. And we will take drastic steps when schools aren't working. (Applause.)

So these are the kinds of vigorous strategies that are necessary to turn around our most troubled schools: transforming our lowest-performing schools; using timely information to improve the way we teach our children; outstanding teachers and principals in our classrooms and our schools that are getting the support they need; higher standards and better assessments that prepare our kids for life beyond a classroom. These are the challenges, the four challenges that states have to take up if they want to win a Race to the Top award.

And these are the four challenges that our country has to meet for our children to outcompete workers around the world, for our economy to grow and to prosper, and for America to lead in the 21st century.



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