repost, but it’s been a while

  • Doctor_Satan@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    The problem with this is that there ends up being no national education standard. You take a state like Alabama, which ranks dead last in so many education metrics, and remove those federal standards. Now Alabama can just change their state standards, and suddenly they have a 100% graduation rate with all straight A students. Guess what happens when Cletus the Alabama valedictorian tries to get a job in the medical field or the tech sector.

    And that’s before we ever even talk about funding. States get about 15% of their K-12 funding from the federal government. Where are the states going to make up that difference? Higher state taxes? Higher property taxes? Or are they just going to let already struggling schools go to shit? Guess who that affects the most?

    You really haven’t put a lot of thought into this beyond “federal gubmint bad”.

    • sfu@lemm.ee
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      16 hours ago

      “Oh no, what will we ever do if the federal government doesn’t set our standards? We are too dumb to set our own standards!”

      I’m pretty sure the states can figure it out on their own. And any school can feel free to set their own standards even higher if they wish.