Educationfinalpaper
Educationfinalpaper
Educationfinalpaper
Fixing Education: Ending How the Rich Get Richer and the Poor Get Poorer
Aya Dudar, Ammar Khan, Dana Suleiman, Abigail Wallace, Rachael Washburn
PS 1010.525
26 April 2017
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Human beings are naturally curious, with a will to learn. Education, therefore, is a basic
right that should not be inhibited by any force, nor be left unaided by anything with the power
and ability to invest in a more improved society. Yet, education is still imperfect in that it is not
resourced efficiently enough that all members within society can learn basic skills and effectively
demonstrate competency. Without these skills, they cannot compete with others around the world
for a place in higher education and work in the global economic market. While the government,
civic, market, and family spheres attempt to come up with a perfect system, students struggle to
Although education is a national concern, this paper will be focusing on its circumstances
in Detroit. Detroit Public Schools have repeatedly earned among the lowest test scores in the
nation. Only three percent of fourth graders and four percent of eighth graders in Detroit public
schools met the national math standards in the 2011-2012 school year (Hammer 112). These low
numbers are in part due to the lack of resources and funding that Detroit Public Schools receive.
Students are left to cope with these inadequate resources which affects them not only in school,
The funding problem stems mostly from the system through which funds are distributed,
since American public schools rely heavily on funding from local and state governments through
property taxes. This means that schools in economically disadvantaged areas receive less money
than those in wealthier areas. Not to mention, the funding of Detroit Public Schools also declines
as a surge in under-regulated and under-performing charter schools open and attract students,
spreading out the already limited education funding between more buildings and dragging down
the quality of education for all. These factors make the difference in education that kids receive
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more prominent and dependent on the socioeconomic standing of the area, as evidenced in
Although this problem has been covered by media and addressed by politicians, little has
proven to effectively ameliorate this issue. The poor distribution of government funding, lack of
consistent benchmarks, and the effects of charter schools have caused a systemic lack of
resources within the Detroit Public School system, reinforcing a subpar education for students.
An analysis of efforts from the different social spheres can be used to identify successful
Background
The inadequate education that Detroit students receive is not a problem to disregard.
Children who receive an inadequate education throughout their elementary, middle, and high
school years will find difficulty catching up later in life. If they are accepted into post-secondary
education, they may struggle, or even drop out, making it more difficult for them to find a job
that will sufficiently support them and a potential family later. Research shows that in 2014, 30
percent of people who dropped out of high school were unemployed, whereas only 14.5 percent
of people that enrolled in college were unemployed (Employment). Without employment, they
will continue to live in an economically disadvantaged area where their children will attend the
same schools that they did. This cycle will then continue on through generations and, if not
The problem at hand is not only that students are receiving an inadequate education, but
rather the entire system through which funding is distributed to schools. The American federal
government provides only 13 percent of the total money received by public schools, while state
governments provide 43.4 percent and local governments provide 44 percent (What
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Pennsylvania). This shows that schools rely heavily on local and state government funding.
Public schools receive funds based mainly on the property taxes in that district. If the property
value is lower, then taxes are lower, and the schools in that district will receive less money than
schools in an area with higher property values. This difference in wealth distribution is clearly
seen between districts such as Detroit and Bloomfield Hills. In Detroit, $12,931 are allocated to
each student in public schools (Michigan 37), whereas in the Bloomfield Hills district, $14,894
are provided per student (Michigan 47). This difference can affect how well a building is
maintained, the amount and condition of the resources students receive like textbooks and
technology, and how much teachers are paid. Schools receiving less money, such as those in
Detroit, will struggle to pay their staff and supply their students with basic school supplies, while
schools with higher property values will receive more money than they need and will continue to
There have been several policies enacted in the government sphere on a national level as
an attempt to relieve the problem or solve it; however, none of these policies have been
successful. One of these policies is the No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB) created in 2001. The
NCLB both imposes mandates on states and gives them more federal education funding
(Duncombe 381). Through the NCLB, if schools set measurable standards for their students, they
receive more funding from the federal government. It is based on the idea that creating
measurable standards for students will result in an improvement in test scores and overall
schooling (Lee 209). It was implemented to encourage schools with low income students, who
did not perform well, to enhance their teaching methods. This act set a goal of achieving a 100
percent-proficiency mandate, which many believed was an unrealistic goal (Casselman). Schools
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that did not achieve this goal were penalized. This policy resulted in some success in schools, but
it also left some schools worse than they previously were. It was successful because it forced
schools to collect data about their students and acknowledge the students that did not perform
well. Moreover, schools had to collect information about their students and make it public, which
brought attention to the gap in education (Casselman). Nevertheless, the main problem with this
policy is that it is being implemented for the wrong reasons. The federal government wanted
schools to perform better simply to raise their overall national ratings. It is punishing the schools
that are unable to produce better numbers, and not giving them the resources they are lacking to
succeed.
One of the structures affecting this policy is that of language. Many students placed in
American schools do not speak English as their first language, and this greatly affects their test
scores. Schools that are not funded properly cannot afford to provide these students with the
extra help that they need. The NCLB did not take into account the reasons why schools are
performing below average, like language barriers, which is why it was unsuccessful as a policy.
In addition, this policy did not account for other struggles that the students experience due to
their low socioeconomic status. Some students may have jobs or problems within their
household that keep their focus away from school. The NCLB punished schools if they did not
improve, but it did not address any of the underlying reasons why these schools were performing
Another initiative in the government sphere was the Race to the Top Fund enacted in
2009. Through this policy, schools were awarded additional funding if they achieved better
teacher ratings, test scores, and overall reviews. States received points depending on how well
their schools performed. This policy included three rounds of competition, with only certain
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schools qualifying for the second and third round. According to the U.S Department of
Education, this policy was meant to encourage innovation and improve performance in low
achieving schools (Purpose). Similar to the NCLB, this policy only benefitted high achieving
schools. States such as Delaware, Florida, and Kentucky received additional funding; however,
Michigan, Arkansas, and Oklahoma did not receive anything (Race). This only benefited schools
that did not need assistance; it allowed for the thriving schools to improve, but it left the low
One aspect which will affect funding as well as the opportunities that higher and lower
class students receive is technology. Technology has become an integral part of higher education
and the United States job market, so schools without the proper resources to teach students how
to utilize it can set these students up for failure. Although venture funding for technology has
surpassed over two billion dollars in the United States, finding money for these necessary
technological tools has become increasingly difficult for schools. The biggest problem seems to
be the disparity between rich and poor schools, where schools that get more funding through
taxes have a better ability to provide their students with the experience they need with new and
advanced technology. Schools with as little funding as some of Detroits Public Schools barely
have the budget for textbooks, let alone the Macintosh computers and robotics equipment that
A great reason why funding is becoming more crucial for schools is the introduction of
technology in the classroom. In the twenty-first century, the new generation is being exposed to
technology in a way that people never have before, and several lucrative career paths now lie
within the field. This makes it apparent that technology can be an extremely useful tool for
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teachers to use in their teaching methods. With technology, the possible techniques for lesson
plans exponentially increase. The problem is that technology is an expensive tool. Not every
public school can give each of their students the most up to date technology, if any, to work with.
The challenge is making sure that students are all able to access technology to further
supplement their education. Many efforts are being put into solving the issue of the lack of
One policy enacted by the government sphere at the national level was the investment
towards technological upgrades in Detroit Public Schools. The Detroit Public School (DPS)
district invested over 49.4 million dollars into school technology upgrades which came from
federal stimulus funding. With this money, over 40,000 netbooks and 5,000 desktops were
purchased (DPS). All DPS students from grades 6-12 were given access to an Asus netbook.
There were also 1.3 million dollars raised in grant funds to purchase 273 SMART boards. With
this technology being integrated into the classroom, teachers had much more flexibility with their
lesson plans (Wainwright). This outlines one of the major benefits of bringing technology into
classrooms.
This policy has allowed for flipped classrooms, where the teacher serves more as a
facilitator to guide students with their learning, rather than being the only source for their
learning. With technology, students are able to view lectures and informational videos during
their own time at home. Furthermore, this allows them to do activities which are best completed
in the classroom, such as asking questions, collaborating on team projects, and group
discussions. They are still able to address any concerns they have with the teacher, so the
students are not on their own. This is very different from the traditional classroom setup where
the expected role of a teacher was to lecture for the majority of the class. With the time that
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would have otherwise been spent lecturing, the teacher can dedicate more individualized
attention towards students, who may lack this due to overfilled classrooms and not enough
teachers.
One structural problem that presents a challenge is that teachers did not grow up with this
type of technology in their own lifetime. Some teachers have been teaching for a long time, and
as a result, do not have much exposure to new technology. The structure of a classroom was
relatively consistent until technology was introduced. This makes it difficult for teachers to use
technology in their classrooms, as they do not have experience with technology in a classroom
setting. Their childhoods were at a time where todays technology was not there. However, this
problem is being solved with training programs that are directed towards showing teachers how
to integrate new technology in their classrooms (Technology). These programs help allow
teachers to be more comfortable with the technology that is coming into their classrooms.
Moreover, there is also a bias against technology as a distraction (Heick). Many people
believe that technology can distract students from doing their own work. They also believe that if
it were brought into the classroom, students would not concentrate as much on what was being
taught. However, this should not be something that sways teachers to take technology out of the
classroom. If a student does not want to pay attention, then they will be distracted by other
factors such as food, other students, or sleeping. Technology may distract a few students from
time to time, but its benefits are too powerful to not integrate into the classroom today.
The efforts towards bringing technology into the classroom have been relatively
successful. This has been accomplished by raising a general awareness on the importance of
technology in todays society. The future is deeply rooted within technology, and it does not
seem to be going away anytime soon. One major lesson that can be learned from this policy is
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that government funding plays a vital role in solving problems relating to education. Even
though the Detroit Public School district is in desperate need of money for more teachers, they
were still able to receive federal funding to give their middle and high school students access to a
Netbook. In fact, the option to access Netbooks was virtually identical to the option given to the
West Bloomfield School District middle and high schoolers. West Bloomfield is a much
wealthier school district than Detroit, but Detroit used government funding to give their students
the same opportunity to rent out a netbook. With the increase in funding needed from technology
being integrated into classrooms, this policy shows how government funding can step in to help
the DPS district, where there is both inadequate funding and resources. This ensures that students
in these poorer schools will not be put at an even greater disadvantage than they already are at,
While technology is relatively new to schools, standardized testing has been implemented
in the American educational system for several years. In modern society, standardized tests
measure competency for further education and the workforce, despite that the tests are
discriminatory and an unfair means of measurement. The results of these tests are often used for
college admittance, teacher and student evaluation, allocation of funds, and development of
curriculum (Rooks). The tests strangle youth who are already behind, because their lower tests
scores deprive them of gaining funds and resources that are essential to their success, instead
giving the wealth to students who are already succeeding. The United States Department of
Education published a report in 2011 that stated: more than 40 percent of schools that receive
federal Title I money to serve disadvantaged students spent less state and local money on
teachers and other personnel than schools that don't receive Title I money at the same grade level
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in the same district (More Than). While MSTEP scores show a more detailed local analysis,
other tests show a better comparison of failure of standardized tests that are not specific to just
Detroit Public Schools. A prime example of the failure of standardized tests as a method of
international economic and social forum. The PISA has been administered every three years
since 2000 to 15-year-olds in more than 70 countries, testing students in reading, mathematics,
and science literacy (NCES). It is supposedly designed to measure a student's ability to apply
The United States has historically had PISA scores lower than expected, so in analyzing
causes, the Washington Post stated that, A weak curriculum could be the culprit [according to
the PISA report]. Common Core Standards Policy was created in 2009 with the intent of
promoting Common Core, standards designed to be similar end-year goals for learning across the
country, to state legislators and local Boards of Education (Council of State Governments).
Common Core was developed by experts and grounded in evidence. The American Federation of
Teachers, a national and state unionized think tank, supports and advocates for Common Core,
framework to prepare students (AFT). With a strong, consistent curriculum, youth in Detroit can
have the same expectations as their wealthier-district counterparts, and those in charge of
overseeing the progress of students can distribute funds more fairly to districts in need of greater
support.
However, we are today faced with the reality of Common Cores effectiveness: it fails to
live up to the hopeful expectations of schools, educators, and policy-makers alike. The Michigan
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Association of School Boards (MASB) have reported that the Senate Education Committee had
passed Senate Bill 826, which replaced current Michigan State Standards [that] had been in
place since 2010 and [were] based on the Common Core State Standards that were developed by
a consortium of states and education professionals. Legislators use the argument that parents
are concerned that say they can no longer help their children with math homework because of
the convoluted methods that are part of the standards, and that the new bill would give parents
the ultimate opt-out authority[because] the bill requires the state to respect the right of a parent
to opt out of any public school activity, practice, or testing that the parent finds unacceptable,
with no negative repercussions to, or financial impact on, the child, parent, or school and with no
interference from this state (Higgins). The argument made by Jennifer Smith, MASB Director
of Government Relations, was that consistent standards are the only way to obtain accurate
results on student growth and achievement. We need to maintain certainty and consistency in our
schools (Smith). Changing the standard yet again in such a short period of time would, as put in
Higgins article by Kevin Slotts, President of Talent 2025, put us back five to seven years.
While the bill faltered in the State Senate (Higgins), this evidences that the state government
adopted a national policy and is too impatient to see if the standards will have any viable
outcome. Policymakers are either ignoring or not witnessing the full picture, past, present, and
effectiveness, which was explored in a case study in Georgia, where outcomes of the policies
have resulted in low public confidence in teachers and student performance despite years of
federal and state education reform (Croft, Roberts and Stenhouse). Common Core Curriculum
also fails to incorporate life skills, instead leaving learning tasks such as cooking, basic repairs,
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budgeting, and communication skills up to families, which in turn tend to rely heavily on the
civic sphere with organizations such as the Boy Scouts of America (BSA). I spent my service
learning examining how effective the BSA was at teaching life skills to young adults by working
directly with units in their advancement, contributing to service projects, and developing new
programs and policies to encourage youth to take greater interest in their education and skills. If
the federal government and the state could reach a consensus on a well-rounded education in
Lawmakers, educators, and families need to all agree that the best method to handling the
education of youth is to develop an evolving, extensive method of teaching that engages youth in
being interested in their own learning and skills, and observe the results after more than one
cycle of comparative measurability. While standardized tests are imperfect, they are currently the
most refined method for judging the short-term effectiveness of a youths education against their
peers. Far too often, people get too stuck on what worked well in the past, without truly
researching past the temporary results, and expect that new policies will fail to work before even
Civic Sphere
In regard to filling the gap left by the lack of resources within Detroit Public Schools, the
civic sphere acts as a storehouse of non-profit organizations which offer a variety of services to
aid struggling students. Some of these nonprofit organizations, such as the Kresge Foundation,
take a financial approach and attempt to fundraise for the district. Others, such as 826Michigan
and Bridgepointe, take a hands-on approach and match volunteers with students in order to help
tutor and mentor them. All of these efforts, in one form or another, help supplement students
There are several scientific studies which legitimize the basis on which the civic spheres
efforts are created: the aim of increasing students chances of success. In a 1997 study, a
community volunteer tutoring group called Book Buddies was tested to see if the tutoring
service of this group had a significant effect on the students academic achievement. The study
revealed that participants with greater than 40 [tutoring] sessions significantly outperformed
participants with fewer than 40 sessions on reading and word recognition tests (Invernizzi 277).
Furthermore, a similar study tested another volunteer-based tutoring program in Oregon in its
effectiveness in helping the students improve academically. The results indicate that the students
who were being helped by the tutoring program had a statistically higher reading and testing
performance than their non-tutored counterparts (Baker 507). These scientific studies suggest
that tutoring received from volunteers can indeed impact students academic success.
Despite data suggesting the impact of non-profit organizations, there are still many
obstacles that they face which may impede their effectiveness. There is one structure in particular
Bridgepointe is a nonprofit organization whose mission is to locate volunteers from the suburbs
to schools in need in Detroit. My task was to help 5th grade students prepare for the MSTEP, a
state-wide standardized exam, by building their vocabulary. My service learning was completed
at Neinas Dual Language Academy, located in the Mexican Town area of Detroit. My partner and
Is initial assumption was that the students would be prepared to learn and communicate in
English. The test, after all, was to be administered in English, and the vocabulary was all in
English as well.
Session after session, however, it became apparent to us that these students were facing a
structure which was hindering their academic success and communication skills: language. When
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we were not immediately talking to them, many of the students would communicate amongst
themselves in Spanish. Furthermore, in one of the sessions, a student informed me that his
classmate only spoke Spanish. I tried my best to communicate with her and teach her the
material in Spanish, but I wondered if she would be taking the MSTEP in English or Spanish,
and this led me to consider the consequences of this structure on her future education. This is a
difficult obstacle to overcome, given that it is deeply tied within the demographic of the area and
the students personal lives. However, it can be improved with programs from the civic sphere
socioeconomic status of the students in the area. According to the Education Policy Center at
American Institutes for Research, students from low-income families, students of color, English
learners, and immigrant students are more likely than their White middle-class peers to be taught
high turnover rates among the adults, and to be excluded from meaningful instruction by
learning, as well as in a previous classroom visit I did for my memo. Often times, the classroom
environment is inconsistent and unpredictable for the students. In my classroom visit, there were
three different adults taking shifts and circulating in and out of the classroom to supervise the
students. Two out of the three adults did not even appear to be teachers; but rather, security or
supervisors who just watched over the kids. This translates into a specific struggle for the civic
sphere, as organizations who tutor students directly in the classroom can be seen as disrupting
the students day-to-day educational routine and contributing to a more chaotic school
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environment. Socioeconomic status, like language, is a structure which cannot be solved with a
single solution. It is intertwined with factors such as poverty, crime, drug use, and more. An
structure.
When it comes to efforts from the civic sphere, the media can play a positive and helpful
role. The media can promote and inform the public about certain initiatives which have been
taking place, and encourage others to take part as well. An example of this is a news article
program [that] was developed to help provide resources necessary for academic and social
success helping prepare these children for college (Huhman). The program follows a specific
group of students from Detroit over the course of nine years and provides them with services
ranging from tutoring to swimming lessons. The articles published on this program gave it more
publicity and positive feedback across the media. Social media can also take part with this
publicity, as those who volunteer can share their experiences and inform their followings on what
they can do to help. Lastly, the non-profit organizations themselves can utilize this platform to
Market Sphere
While the United States ranks fifth in spending for students, it ranks 25th out of the 71
countries that participate in PISA testing, and only ranks at or below average in the three subject
areas (Ryan). This problem of overspending on education and in turn not receiving academic
results has spurred legislators to make changes to the current public school system. The solution,
for some, was to turn to the market sphere and spur on the creation of charter schools. Charter
schools are publicly financed and tuition-free, but operate independently from traditional school
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district governance. Charter schools have been around for a little more than 20 years, and more
than 5,600 charter schools exist in 39 states. Estimates of attendance range from 1.3 to 2 million
students in attendance (Knaak). Within two decades, the concept of charter schools has gone
from being the poster child for school reform to becoming a part of the establishment, with state
and national associations well-staffed with lobbyists and enormous support from mainstream
The idea of charter schools is not a new solution to the age-old problem of education
reform in Detroit. The idea was first conceptualized by Albert Shanker, President of The
American Federation of Teachers, in a 1988 address. He outlined a new kind of public school
where teachers were a part of the decision-making process and could experiment freely with
fresh and innovative ways to teach and reach pupils (Kahlenberg). These schools were meant as
a highly innovating housing for new experimentation in education that traditional public schools
could learn from. At first, conservatives in the Reagan era were against the idea, likely because it
allowed mobility and furthered the desegregation of schools. As time went on, however, the idea
of charter schools morphed as conservatives toted charters as a more open marketplace for
families to have choice, while using them as a tool against teacher unions. The 1993 law that
opened Michigan up to charter schools was not spurred on by a failing education system or
financial crisis, but by the free-market inclined governor John Engler who was against public
employee unions. Charter schools are now quite far from their beginnings, and used almost
entirely wrong from their inception. Charter schools now, instead of creating more economically
and racially mixed schools, are more segregated than most public schools (Kahlenberg).
Charter schools have done the opposite of what they are intended. While charter schools
were first envisioned to desegregate public schools by giving disadvantaged and minority
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students a choice of where to go to school, they have instead allowed the epidemic of white
flight. In the past 20 years, as African Americans have moved out of Detroit and into the suburbs,
white parents have, whether by chance or design, used the states schools of choice program to
move their children to less diverse, more white traditional public schools. At the same time, some
black families have chosen historically white suburban school districts to send their children,
while others are choosing charter schools that are strikingly more segregated and black. The
school of choice program lets more advantaged families leave the poor public and charter
schools for better schools in the suburbs, leaving economically poor families who cannot afford
to move or for transportation for their children behind in the overwhelming sea of poorly
performing charters.
Charter schools have changed dramatically from their creation, becoming a worse option
for students than traditional public schools. Charter schools have now become a business venture
for for-profit institutions, drawing a lot of interest from lobbyists and special-interest groups.
Groups such as The Great Lakes Education Project have become some of charter schools most
fierce advocates, getting state legislation passed that encourages competition for charter
schools while simultaneously making them more profitable. Pro-charter laws in states often
include laws such as: permitting an unlimited or substantial number of charter schools,
permitting a variety of individuals and groups both inside and outside the existing public school
system to start charter schools, providing automatic blanket waivers from most or all state
education laws and regulations, permitting charter schools to be independent legal entities,
guaranteeing 100 percent of per-pupil state funding to charter schools, and permitting charter
schools to control their funds (Holifield). These deregulations of charters allow the unfettered
growth of for-profit institutions that only compete for the state money that comes with each
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student on count day. As more charter schools open their doors to students, the limited amount of
education funding the state has to disperse is then spread out too thinly between more and more
Charter schools are also often given more credit than they deserve. While a lucky few
charter schools are meeting the high academic standards initially hoped for at their inception,
most charter schools are barely doing better than traditional public schools, if not worse. For my
community service, I tutored three kids in a family who had all gone to a charter school for their
first few years in middle school. These children were in a school that only had 80 kids enrolled
from kindergarten to 12th grade, and when they transferred to a normal public school after two
years, they were several grades behind their peers in mathematics and reading. The few examples
of charter schools outperforming public schools have been used as evidence of voucher
programs miracles by proponents, as well as scientific reports with strange and not adequately
explained methods that support their claim (Mathis; Maul). These reports are often to have
dubious means of gathering their data, creating meta-analyses that use extremely narrow data
sets and purposely misrepresent literature to support their cause (Lubienski). In reality, these
Charter school failings are exemplified nowhere better than in Detroit. For 23 years,
Michigan has encouraged the building of new charter schools to fix the prominent education
problem facing Detroit, but little success has been shown. Michigan started by lifting all limits
on the number of characters that could be created, and giving institutions 3% of the state money
that came with each student as an incentive (Zernike). This has encouraged the crazy growth of
charter schools in Detroit, over 170 in 2016. Carters are also no longer limited to be created by
non-profit institutions or colleges, but now include for-profit companies. Almost 80% of the
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charter schools in Michigan are operated by for-profit companies and institutions, creating a
landscape of cutthroat competition for students and the state funding that follows them (Zernike).
Charter schools have also lobbied for the regulations and oversights that traditional public
schools have to be dropped. These charters are now operating with no monitoring by the State
Department of Education, giving students many options, but not great ones.
The charter school movement has attained an acclaim as educational reform that is not
sustained by juried research or evidential experience. Charter schools will likely continue to
function in Detroit and the United States because of influential backers and the will of
educational needs, they are a failed initiative. Charter schools can be brought back from their
current poor design. With actual oversight on performance by the State Department of Education,
low-performing charter schools could be shut down before they ruin a childs life and chance at a
college education. Charter school creation can also be limited to universities and nonprofit
entities to keep students best interests in mind and prevent the glut of for-profit businesses
competing for state money. Charters can also be brought back to their original design by Albert
Shanker, and can become a place meant for innovation in education democratically run by
teachers. Smart charter schools and voucher programs could move the United States past the
bipartisan debates and towards what they were originally meant for, building models from which
larger systems of education such as public schools can learn innovation from and therefore,
propelling the education system into the future with better succeeding European countries.
Although no initiatives have yet solved the funding issue, one system which has proven
to be successful is the public school system in Finland. The Finnish have transformed their entire
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educational system around 50 years ago and have achieved a 93 percent graduation rate
(Hancock), where Detroit has only a 58 percent graduation rate (Hammer 112). Finland does this
by allocating resources and attention to students evenly, creating the smallest difference globally
between the weakest and strongest students (Hancock). The most important part of their system,
which differentiates them from the United States, is that they rely heavily on their federal
government for school funding. The federal government in Finland funds 57 percent of the
amount spent on schools and the local government funds the remaining 43 percent (Finland).
Each school in Finland receives the same amount of money per student no matter the economic
status of the area (Hancock). This allows for all students to get an equal education. They are able
to do this because they have higher taxes and they allocate more money from those taxes to
education. They also have a centralized curriculum meaning that all schools teach the same
material and the same goals. This differs from the United States system because there is no
national curriculum in the United States, but states are required to set standards to guide schools
if they want to receive federal funding (International 1). Teachers in the United States prefer to
have more freedom in the classroom, however, this can lead to differences in what children learn
The main difference between Finland and America is the way in which they fund their
schools. An institutional policy resembling the Finnish system in terms of taxation would greatly
relieve the gap in education in America. It would resolve the funding gap in education, therefore,
improving the quality of education in many schools such as Detroits. This policy requires that
property taxes are collected from an entire county or state and then redistributed equally
throughout all schools. This policy would begin on a smaller scale, where property taxes are
collected by district. Once its success is proven in individual states, taxes can eventually be
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collected and equally redistributed on a national level, equalizing funding in schools throughout
America. Schools would continue to receive funding per student, but each student would receive
the same amount of money. This would result in all schools receiving adequate funds for the
Overall, the amount of money a school receives will no longer depend on the
socioeconomic status of the area which it is in. Schools in lower socioeconomic areas will be the
same as those in wealthier areas. This will allow students to have the same opportunities in the
future in terms of furthering their education and careers, allowing children born into the cycle of
After analyzing the existing policies and structures in place, the conditions of the school
district, and current non-profit organizations working within the area, our group would like to
propose a direct-action organization that accounts for all these factors and does its best to try to
work with them. Like the institutional policy, the primary goal is to find a means for alleviating
the deficit of resources within the district. Our proposal is to create a student organization at
Wayne State titled Wayne Students for Students, or Wayne S4S for short. The aim of this
group would be to provide tutoring and mentoring services to students in Detroit Public School
Wayne S4S would maintain communication with community officials and teachers to
receive their input on what students need the most at that time and place. The group would take
this input into account, and use it to try to help students with their short-term struggles as well as
their long-term ones. Keeping this line of communication open is essential, as through our
analysis we have learned that a factor which has contributed to a shortage of resources is the lack
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of consideration for local needs and opinions. After receiving this communication, Wayne S4S
would create programs to cater for these needs. The logistics of this organization would entail an
elected board which receives proposals from members and ranks each proposal on criteria of
effectiveness, level of urgency, and practicality. From there, proposals which rank highest will be
aforementioned structures of language and low socioeconomic status. A program which Wayne
S4S could create is a tutoring service which utilizes Spanish majors and minors to target Spanish
speaking students and gives them supplemental education for strengthening their English
reading, writing, and speaking skills. Wayne S4S could help overcome the socioeconomic
struggle of the students by providing extensive mentoring services to students, and educating
them on the importance of abstaining from risky behaviors. According to a study which analyzed
Big Brothers and Big Sisters, a nationwide youth mentoring program, youth with mentors are
46% less likely to begin using illegal drugs, 27% less likely to begin using alcohol, and 52% less
likely to skip school, all the more reaffirming the positive effects Wayne S4S could have on
majors, and countless more students on Wayne States campus. In other words, this organization
would attract any student who desires to create a change in Detroit students education through
hands-on community service. Moreover, Wayne S4S would do its best to partner with other
existing organizations, such as Bridgepointe, Books for A Benefit, and 826Michigan, to increase
Ultimately, the creation of Wayne Students for Students is founded on the lessons that our
group has learned from other civic sphere policies and organizations. The first lesson is that local
key in solving the various needs of students. Third, the services of the organization must
integrate well within the existing classroom environment and not provide a sense of chaos or
inconsistency in the classroom. The last lesson integrated within Wayne Students for Students is
that is must be open to incorporating future lessons to be learned and accommodating for new
Comparison of Proposals
Despite the fact that both the direct action and institutional change proposals attempt to
solve the problem at hand, after further analysis, it becomes clear that one solution is more
practical than the other: the direct action proposal. The institutional change would require
property taxes to be equally distributed among all schools. Although this would benefit a greater
amount of less fortunate students, the problem is that the wealthy would be less likely to support
this policy. In theory, wealthier families move to certain areas because of their strong school
districts (Semuels). With this policy in place, these families will think that with less money going
towards these school districts, they are more prone to lowering both their performance and
standards. Therefore, it is anticipated that these families will be reluctant to agree to a proposal
of this type. This drawback will make it all the more difficult for a policy like this to be enacted.
Convincing these wealthy families of a policy that inhibits their higher property taxes from
directly feeding into their respective school districts would take a great amount of effort and be
difficult.
24
In comparison, the number one roadblock for the grassroots action proposal is finding
people to join the club and devote time out of their busy schedules towards a good cause. This, in
comparison to the previous solution, seems to be much more doable. Spreading awareness to
students around Wayne State University about the creation and purpose of this group while
advertising it as a great way to get community service experience would give Wayne S4S the
start it needs to become a successful organization. Students will also be attracted towards Wayne
S4S because the community service offered would be directed towards the students suffering in
Detroit. Many Wayne State students are passionate about the city of Detroit, and are actively
looking for ways to help solve problems in the city. This group would provide an effective way
for these students to help support a cause that they strongly believe in.
Although the institutional change proposal is less feasible, we believe that it would
provide a wider scale benefit than the grassroots action. The first reason is that the policy would
bring forth a more innovative solution than the grassroots proposal. Since the policy is being
instituted to equalize distribution of property taxes, it would give poor school districts money to
use that they never previously had. There are similar grassroots actions like Wayne S4S already
in place, so it would not provide a change as great as the institutional policy will. Rather, it
Second, the policy would not hinder the wealthier school districts as much as it may
seem. Although people may believe that less money means less success, a lot of this extra money
given to these wealthy school districts goes towards luxuries that do not directly affect the
success of students in terms of academics. If this money was directed towards needs in less
wealthy school districts, there would likely be a large increase in the success of those school
districts. It would help to solve the gap in funding, and would equalize school districts more.
25
Finally, there is also a comparable policy that has already shown a tremendous amount of
success. This is in Finland, where education standards rank among the best in the world, and
better than the United States. The grassroots action proposal has many comparable service
groups around many universities, but the impact of these groups does not seem to be nearly as
significant. While the grassroots action proposal is a more feasible and realistic option to bring
into action, the institutional change policy would be more beneficial to students and school
districts in need of money. With such a widespread problem plaguing the nation, using a solution
that could make the most change for the most students, such as an institutional policy, is needed
to propel the United States back to the top of the world in education.
Conclusion
Ultimately, the rise of charter schools, the common core curriculum, and competitive
standardized testing in public schools has aggravated the issue of an unequal distribution of
funds among public schools. Students have had to deal with being short-changed with their
resources and education, and teachers have had to try to work around the circumstances with the
mere incentive of an inconsistent paycheck. The upside to this chronic struggle is the opportunity
One clear lesson gained from our research is that it is going to take a great amount of
money to solve the problems of education in Detroit. Awareness should be raised to the general
public about the problems with the education system in Detroit. It is evident that Americans tend
to belittle the issues embedded in the educational system due to the recent budget cuts that have
been made in the education department. By raising awareness of the effects that an inadequate
education can have on people and society, we hope to gain the support of enough people to make
26
a change. Even with recent policies helping solve some of the glaring needs of students in the
city, there are still many problems left to be solved for this school district.
In an ideal world, class sizes could be reduced, more certified teachers could be attracted,
and property taxes could be equally distributed among school districts. If unwavering support
can be gained from people around the area, it would decrease the amount of resistance faced in
the future when trying to solve problems. Popular support could accelerate the speed in which
Detroits educational problems are solved, leading to solutions in the foreseeable future.
Overall, the educational struggle is one that can be conflated to American society as a
whole. In a society where the concept of a self-determined fate is prevalent, the sympathy for the
struggling can be blamed on their lack of work ethic. This is not always the case: in education,
the students rates of academic success are as good as the system implementing it. Nevertheless,
changing a societys conceptions of a topic as extensive as fate is beyond the scope of any one
initiative; as is convincing the wealthy that the lower class deserves a better education at the
expense of their added luxuries. In the meantime, what is feasible is direct solutions that have
short-term improvements on students and collectively translate into long term success. Through
applying the several lessons learned by analyzing initiatives, identifying and working through the
structures in place, and spreading awareness about the situation, a future can be anticipated in
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