WASHINGTON, DC – The White House today released a new report that finds
that the loss of teachers and other education staff is forcing
communities into difficult choices that harm our children’s education
and future, including increasing class sizes and shortening school years
and days. The report shows that more than 300,000 local education jobs
have been lost since the end of the recession – a figure that stands in
stark contrast to previous economic recoveries. As a result, the
national student-teacher ratio increased by 4.6 percent from 2008 to
2010, rolling back all the gains made since 2000. Increased class sizes
have negative consequences for the future of America’s children at a
time when education has never been more important to finding a good job
and maintaining our competitiveness as a nation. A copy of the full report is attached.
“This year, several thousand fewer educators will be going back to
school. Since 2009, we’ve lost more than 300,000 education jobs, in
part, because of budget cuts at the state and local level,” said President Obama.
“Think about what that means for our country. At a time when the rest
of the world is racing to out-educate America; these cuts force our kids
into crowded classrooms, cancel programs for preschoolers and
kindergarteners, and shorten the school week and the school year.
That’s the opposite of what we should be doing as a country.”
Analyses from independent academic experts confirm what we know from
common-sense: that laying off teachers, increasing class sizes,
eliminating critical programs, shortening the school week or shortening
the school year all mean that our students receive less attention and
fewer chances to achieve in their education.
President Obama has proposed a plan that would prevent teacher layoffs,
invest in comprehensive reform and strengthen public education. The
President’s plan would provide $25 billion to prevent layoffs and
support hundreds of thousands of teacher and other education jobs.
Unfortunately, Republicans in Congress continue to block critical
investments in the education of our children and the economic security
of our nation as a whole. Instead, they have passed a budget that would
slash education funding while showering massive tax benefits on
millionaires and billionaires. The budget passed by Republicans in
Congress would cut non-defense discretionary spending by almost 20
percent. If cuts were distributed evenly, this budget would imply $2.7
billion in cuts to basic Title I education grants, meaning that nearly
38,000 teachers and aides could lose their jobs as a result of cuts to
Title I spending alone. Cuts would also be made to early childhood
education and special education, significantly impairing schools’
ability to best serve their students.
“That’s backwards. That’s wrong. That plan doesn’t invest in our future; it undercuts our future,” said President Obama.
“If we want America to lead in the 21st century, nothing is more
important than giving everyone the best education possible – from the
day they start preschool to the day they start their career.”
No comments:
Post a Comment