The Inquirer piece Glenn sent the link to,  yesterday, is so relevant that 
I'm copying the whole article here,  below, for people (like me) who sometimes 
don't take the time to go to a  link.  Everyone should read it!
 
We need to stop lamenting the problems, and start  lobbying for the 
solutions.  Over and over again, we read about the need  for:
 
Preschool to start children off right.  
Small classroom size to give them individual  attention.
Intervention for vulnerable teens who are likely to  drop out
Quality education to provide  relevant skills for their futures
 
What can we, as a community, do?  Can we at  least figure out who to lobby?  
Who can give us names and contact  info?
 
- Melani Lamond
 -------------------------------------------------
Posted on Fri, Apr. 11, 2008 

Improving our schools is a smart way to empty our prisons. Education - not  
incarceration
By Jerry T. Jordan  
In the same week this month, a study by a Washington criminal-justice think  
tank revealed that Philadelphia has the highest rate of incarceration in the  
country, while another study, by a Maryland-based nonprofit, reported that 
only  half of Philadelphia's students graduate from high school.  
At a cost of about $24,000 per inmate per year, Philadelphia's prison budget  
is the fastest-growing city expense, and it dwarfs the $9,951 a year  
Philadelphia spends to educate each of its 207,000 public and charter school  
students.  
The link between Philadelphia's shamefully low graduation rate and its  
incarceration rate is obvious. Around the country, states that fall below the  
national average in education spending have the highest prison populations,  
according to an Education Week article last month. It seems equally obvious 
that  
by investing in programs that we know will help students succeed academically,  
we could reduce our spending significantly on inmates and prisons in the 
future.   
Educators know that children who attend high-quality preschool education  
programs are more likely to graduate from high school. We also know that  
children educated in small classes are more likely to master reading and math  
skills 
on schedule and graduate from high school on time.  
Educators can pinpoint with surprising accuracy by the fifth and sixth grades 
 which 10- and 11-year-olds are at the greatest risk of dropping out of high  
school. The warning signs - low attendance, poor academic performance, and  
behavioral problems - are apparent by middle school.  
Instead of wringing our hands about the alarming dropout rate, we need to  
roll up our sleeves and put resources into reforms that we know help students  
succeed.  
First, we have to make sure at-risk children are enrolled by age 3 or 4 in  
educationally focused preschool programs.  
Then we have to invest in reducing class sizes, particularly in schools with  
persistently low reading and math scores. Students in classes with 20 or 
fewer  children master reading and math skills faster, perform above grade 
level 
in  middle school, and are more likely to take Advanced Placement courses and  
college entrance exams in high school.  
In grades five to eight, when the script for high school dropouts is largely  
written, we need systems that identify and track vulnerable children and 
provide  school and community resources to support these youngsters and their 
families.  Schools must have a variety of academic, health and social-service 
resources to  improve achievement, attendance and behavior.  
Finally, in high school, we must offer students a rigorous and relevant  
curriculum that provides them with the skills they need for college, job  
training 
or the workforce. Schools must offer a variety of opportunities,  including 
internships, mentoring, and programs through which graduates earn  recognized 
professional certifications and licenses that qualify them for jobs  after high 
school.  
Every high school needs art, music, libraries, clubs and sports. These aren't 
 frills. They are activities that keep kids involved in school and motivated 
to  succeed.  
Philadelphia is fortunate to have a mayor who is deeply concerned about  
raising graduation rates, a governor who has proposed a significant ramping up  
of 
state education funding, and dedicated parents and advocates working to end a 
 dropout crisis that condemns too many of our youngsters to unproductive 
lives  and incarceration.  
As a community, we cannot rest until we have the highest graduation rates and 
 the lowest incarceration rates. That won't happen until the city and state  
invest as readily in education as they do incarceration.  
The Pennsylvania Costing-Out Study determined that Philadelphia would have to 
 spend $14,925 a year on each student. That might sound expensive, but it's a 
lot  cheaper than spending $24,000 a year per inmate.  
We know which education programs will raise graduation rates and keep our  
young men and women from languishing in jails. We must create a first-rate  
education system that nurtures children from their earliest years and find the  
political will to make high school graduation and workforce readiness our  
highest priority.  
 
____________________________________
Jerry T. Jordan is president of the Philadelphia  Federation of Teachers.  





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