Sunday, April 18, 2010

Top to the race

Reformation in schools. That is the primary reason that we are here today, well reason why I’m writing and that you’re reading this. Our school system that is in place right now is failing to prepare the children of these states for the outside world. Everyone can cite their own reasons and statistics to point at something that is wrong in the system. Like say the lagging test scores behind different countries in the world or the lagging graduation rates in some cities. Behind all of it we can all still agree on one unifying claim…that we need change in our schools.


Though there is one problem, I am a product of those schooling systems. I went through them all and came out the other side. Right now I am a junior at the University of Minnesota obtaining a double major in Communications and Psychology. I must have missed that memo about not doing well enough.


I just don’t get it. Nobody tried to get me to study hard or prepare for tests. I had to find my own reasons to make sure I got grades. This new race to the top fund is throwing billions of dollars at states to try and reform their system of education. I am curious to see what they have in store. How do you motivate people to want to study and do well on tests? It surely isn’t an issue of money, unless you literally hand money over to students for studying and doing well on tests. Motivation is not something that just happens with reform, it is found in each person in every walk of life. If you want to make it there are avenues and steps to take no matter where you live.


I did exceptionally well in high school like so many of my peers here at college but I never could say that I tried back then. That may be my most exceptional trait. I could breeze through high school without reading or studying and still pass with good enough grades to get into college. But when I read about all these new initiatives that people want to pass all I hear about is how we need to try and force these kids to do well on standardized tests and make sure they get to college.


What I hear about in my situation is that I was privileged with my upbringing and had all of these wonderful opportunities to succeed. I’m not sure when the last time those people went to high school was. There was nothing put in place to keep me or my fellow students in line. There was not the constant reminder that we need this diploma to do things in the world. All that was ever around me was the feeling of want. I wanted to get my diploma so I could move onto college. I didn’t know what I wanted to do for the rest of my life but I knew that college was a step in the right direction. No amount of money will sustain change if it isn’t made from within first.

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