Public schools vs. military spending
Public Schools vs. Post-Cold War Military SpendingEven though the Cold War era is a distant memory, encased in glass forever like some museum piece, our government is still spending as if the Soviet Union was in its prime. If the arms race is a forgotten memory, then why is the military still spending 86% of what it was spending during the Cold War. It's not that us Americans do not want a solid military, we just believe that our military is wasting billions of dollars at the expense of our children's education and well being. 50 years ago our country, and the entire world was in disparate need of a strong U.S. military. We inflated our military budget, and gave the government and private businesses an enormous appetite. Without a major threat to the United States since the collapse of the Soviet Union, our government seems to be in competition with itself. 50 years ago we sent tons and tons of troops overseas to fight in a foreign land, while we pumped private businesses up with the manufacturing of military equipment. The need for such products and the need for an over-healthy military allowance is long gone. While we sunk billions after billions of taxpayer's money on wars that we were boisterously proud to spend (it
This should not be too surprising, our children are studying history books that are from a decade ago. This creates difficult obstacles for our children to keep up on current politics and other global events. Also the over crowding of classrooms makes it extremely difficult for your child to get that personalized learning which may determine his or her ability to learn at all. Every child learns at a different rate and possibly in different ways, this makes it virtually impossible for teachers to tap into every child's full learning potential. If your child needs that extra, personalized attention, but is not "defined" as handicapped their specific learning needs will most likely be overlooked and that may be the beginning of your child's inability to learn. According to a study done by the state of Tennessee, reducing classroom size in early grades (K-3rd) can improve a child's performance even after being placed back into their regular sized class (FUTURE OF CHILDREN, 1995). Another major problem hindering our children's education is the fact that the teachers with the priceless responsibility of developing our child's mind are absolutely underpaid. Teachers barely make an honest living and are often subliminal role models to our young students. Although there are countless exceptionally dedicated teachers in America, a significantly higher salary would ensure the quality of almost all teachers. Remember what we were taught about incentives at a young age, the carrot in front of the rabbit, well that would definitely apply for these individuals we need to count on everyday.
Some common words found in the essay are:
Soviet Union, REPORTER NCR, Lawrence Korb, FUTURE CHILDREN, NATIONAL PTA, Cold War, It's Americans, Don Corleone, United Nations, Sensible Priorities, children's education, cold war, ncr 1999, business leaders, soviet union, military spending, leaders sensible priorities, 50 ago, military equipment, catholic reporter, national catholic, spending cold war, business leaders sensible, national catholic reporter,
Approximate Word count = 1203
Approximate Pages = 5 (250 words per page double spaced)
|