Posts Tagged ‘Education’

Teach Your Children Well

August 22nd, 2011 by John Feehery

Are you ready for some college football?

After a summer of revelations about how corrupt the college football system has become, you could be excused for not being quite ready for a new season.

Apparently, a University of Miami booster spent millions of dollars providing prostitutes, payola, and other perks to star athletes at the program in order to restore the Hurricanes to former greatness. Isn’t that special?

This followed a scandal at Ohio State University that forced its esteemed football coach, Jim Tressell, from his job. Tressell didn’t think it was particularly useful to follow the rules as set forth by the NCAA, and while that helped him short-term to a NCAA championship, it hurt his long-term job prospects.

Last year’s Heisman Trophy winner, Cam Newton, was so tainted with scandal that it became a open question as to whether he would be forced to quit before he was to receive the award. He wasn’t and he got it anyway. The chief allegation was that Newton’s father had put his son on the open market. You pay the father a lot of money and you get the son to play for the program, a clear violation of NCAA rules.

The Know-Yers

February 4th, 2011 by John Feehery

I gave a little talk to about one hundred brand new legislative directors at an event at the Ripon Society and I thought I would share what I said with you.

Jim Counzelman, a very good friend and the President of Ripon, asked me to give these new staffers some solid advice on how to work with their press secretaries and their bosses to come up with a effective communications strategy. The title of the panel was called: “A Clever Title is Not Enough.”

I told the assembled crowd my 10 know-yers that every staffer should know before they embark on any kind legislative communications strategy.

Here are the ten:

1.  Know-yer member: Is your member a show-horse or a work-horse? Do they want to move markets or do they want to move Glen Beck to tears? Do they want to see their names in the gossip pages or do they want to have legislation named after them?

2.  Know-yer constituency? What do the people back home want? What industry drives the district? What does Main Street care about?

3.  Know-yer political base? What do your most ardent supporters care about? What about the people who carry the signs, make the phone calls and give you the money? You can’t afford to cross them.

The Asian-American Republicans

October 25th, 2010 by John Feehery

courtesy: Asia Pacific Arts

This might seem like a simplistic truism, but I think it is worth noting that there are more Asians in the world than any other group of people.

The number of Asians living in Asia is rapidly approaching four billion. There are 1.3 billion Chinese and almost as many Indians.

But the Asians are not staying in Asia. They are immigrating in search of a better life for themselves and their families, and many of them are ending up in America.

There has been much talk about how Hispanics make up the fastest growing part of the American population and how Hispanic voters are becoming increasing more important as a potential swing bloc. That is all true, except for the fact that Asians actually make up the fastest growing racial/ethnic group.

From 1990 to 2000, Asians, as a percentage of the American population, increased 63%. In 2000, they made up 4.3%, but that number is closer to 5% today and is expected to hit 7% by 2030.

According to Wikipedia: “As of 2008, Asian Americans had the highest educational attainment level and median household income of any racial demographic in the country, and the highest median personal income overall.”

Education as a wedge issue

October 5th, 2010 by John Feehery

(Originally posted on TheHill.com 10/4)

Over the weekend, the NAACP and the NEA, without the slightest bit of irony, marched hand in hand in Washington in a rally that was touted as “One Nation Working Together.”

This comes on the heels of the National Education Association’s successful campaign to get Adrian Fenty fired from his job as mayor of the District of Columbia so that his successor, Vincent Gray, will fire Michelle Rhee, who is the last, best chance that the D.C. school system would improve.

The D.C. school system, by the way, is overwhelmingly black, and by firing Rhee, black students will be hurt the worst. But that fact seems to be lost on the NAACP leaders, who mindlessly march with teachers unions, thinking somehow that failing schools are good for the African-American community.

The White House thinks it can use education as a wedge issue against Republicans. It thinks that because some Tea Party Republicans have campaigned on the idea of getting rid of the Department of Education. But the question of whether the Department of Education exists or doesn’t exist is largely irrelevant to the bigger question of how you improve education in the country.

One More Theory on Education

September 28th, 2010 by John Feehery

The President has been talking education this week, and while it might be off the point for voters this election, it is on the point long-term for the country.

Not all American schools are failing.  We have plenty of very good schools that graduate top-notch students who can compete with the finest students in the world.

But a significant number are not very good, and they drag down the average of the good ones.

And like the gap between the rich and the poor, the gap between the good and the bad schools is getting wider and wider.

I write about education periodically on The Feehery Theory because I think it is an important issue for our country in the long run.  I am not exactly a policy expert, but I have been through my fair share of policy debates in my time in Congress, so I feel I have earned the right to at least share my theories, which may or may be legitimate.  You decide.

There is a story today in the Washington Post about how Democrats are going to try to attack Republicans, especially Tea Party Republicans on the education issue.  Some Tea Party candidates have been advocating the elimination of the Department of Education as part of their effort to make the government smaller.

March Against the NEA, Not With It

September 17th, 2010 by John Feehery

So, the NAACP, La Raza, and the Teachers’ Unions are organizing a march on the Capitol Mall next month.

Does anybody else see the terrible irony here?

Ben Jealous, who is head of the NAACP, loves to point to the possible racists among the Tea Party. Jealous is zealous in his pursuit of Tea Party racists.

In the meantime, he organizes a march with the organization that single-handedly killed school reform in Washington D.C. You couldn’t miss a commercial produced and paid for by the NEA extolling the virtues of Vincent Gray, who has promised to fire Michelle Rhee should he be elected the Mayor of Washington D.C.

D.C. Public Schools Chancellor Michelle Rhee speaks alongside D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty and parents and students at Maury Elementary School following a walks to school event in Washington on August 24, 2010. Rhee, D.C. Mayor Adrian Fenty, Education Secretary Arne Duncan and local D.C. school children walked from Lincoln Park to Maury Elementary School in an event to bring awareness to the importance of a safe and healthy lifestyles. UPI/Kevin Dietsch

The Real Problem with Our Public Schools

March 14th, 2010 by John Feehery

In a brilliant maneuver to change the subject from health care, the President announced that he was going to start talking about reforming President Bush’s No Child Left Behind law.

The premise of NCLB is that if a school is failing to deliver real results for students, that it stops getting financial aid from the federal government.  NCLB is not very popular with school administrators or labor unions because they don’t like the idea that their jobs hinge on the performance of a bunch of kids that may have very little interest in learning in the first place.

That is a valid criticism, because sometimes the problem is not with the teachers.  Sometimes the problem starts with the students.  Okay, that is not exactly fair.  Sometimes the problems start with what the students are being taught by their parents (or in many cases, their parent).

In a fascinating story that appeared in the American Enterprise Institute’s magazine, “Are Some Races More Equal Than Others?”, written by Abigail Thernstrom and Tim Fay, the authors highlight a persistent problem in American urban schools, racial discrimination.  And this is not the kind of racial discrimination that civil rights activists usually like to talk about.  This is the kind of discrimination where black kids target Asian kids with actual violence in schools in Philadelphia — and I am certain — in other places.