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    Schooling Matt Damon

    Michelle Malkin's column is released once a week.

    Actor Matt Damon is a walking, talking public service reminder to immunize your children early and often against La-La-Land disease.

    In Damon's world, all public school teachers are selfless angels. Government workers and Hollywood entertainers are impervious to economic incentives. And anyone who disagrees is a know-nothing, "corporate reformer" ingrate who hates education.

    Last week, the liberal box-office star addressed a "Save Our Schools" march in Washington at the behest of his mother, a professor of early childhood education. He attacked standardized tests. He praised all the public school teachers who "empowered" him and unlocked his creative potential by rejecting "silly drill and kill nonsense." Speaking on behalf of "an army of regular people," Damon decried the demoralization of teachers by ruthless, results-oriented free marketeers whom he mocked as "simple-minded."

    What Damon's superficial tirade lacked, however, was any real-world understanding of the deterioration of core curricular learning in America. Students can't master simple division or fractions because today's teachers — churned out through lowest common denominator grad schools and shielded from competition — have barely mastered those skills themselves. Un-educators have abandoned "drill and kill" computation for multicultural claptrap and fuzzy math, traded in grammar fundamentals for "creative spelling," and dropped standard civics for save-the-earth propaganda.

    Consequence: bottom-basement U.S. student scores on global assessments over the past two decades. Blaming the tests is blaming the messenger. The liberal education establishment's response to its abject academic failures? Run away. This is why the Save Our Schools agenda championed by Damon calls for less curricular emphasis on math and reading — and more focus on social justice, funding and "equity" issues.

    Out: Reading is fundamental.

    In: Feeling is fundamental.

    After his drippy pep talk absolving teachers of any responsibility for America's educational morass, Damon then lashed out at a young libertarian reporter who had the audacity to ask him about the negative impact of lifetime teacher tenure. "In acting there isn't job security, right?" Reason.tv's Michelle Fields asked Damon. "There is an incentive to work hard and be a better actor because you want to have a job. So why isn't it like that for teachers?"

    It's elementary that people will work longer and harder if they know they will be rewarded. There's nothing anti-teacher about the question. (And before teachers-unions goons go on the attack, I am the child of a public school teacher and the mother of two children in an excellent public charter school by choice.) But Damon's hinges came undone when confronted with the mild question.

    "You think job insecurity makes me work hard?" he retorted. "That's like saying a teacher is going to get lazy when she has tenure." Gathering all the creative potential he could muster, Damon unleashed crude profanities on Fields. "A teacher wants to teach," Damon fumed with his mother next to him. "Why else would you take a sh**ty" salary and really long hours and do that job unless you really loved to do it?"

    Never mind that most out-of-work Americans would find nothing "sh**ty" about earning an average $53,000 annual salary plus health and retirement benefits for a 180-day work year.

    Damon went on to deride standard, mainstream behavioral economic principles as "intrinsically paternalistic" and "MBA-style thinking." And when the young reporter's cameraman pointed out that there are bad apples in the teaching profession as in any profession, Damon called him "sh**ty," too.

    Tinseltown stars can afford to put emotion over logic, progressive fantasy over practical reality. The rest of us are stuck with the bill. And those whom bleeding-heart celebrities purport to care most about — the children — suffer the consequences of bad ideas.

    Interminable teacher tenure in America's largest school districts, from New York to Chicago to Los Angeles, has produced a rotten corps of incompetent (at best) and dangerous (at worst) educators coddled by Big Labor. As the D.C.-based Center for Union Facts reports, "In many major cities, only one out of 1,000 teachers is fired for performance-related reasons. ... In 10 years, only about 47 out of 100,000 teachers were actually terminated from New Jersey's schools."

    By contrast, as the educational documentary "Waiting for Superman" (produced by avowed liberal turned reformer Davis Guggenheim) pointed out, one out of every 57 doctors loses his or her license to practice medicine, and one out of every 97 lawyers loses their license to practice law.

    In Los Angeles, it's not just meanie tea party terrorists making the case for abolishing teacher tenure. When the Los Angeles Times exposed how the city's tenure evaluation system rubber-stamped approvals and ignored actual performance, the district superintendent admitted: "Too many ineffective teachers are falling into tenured positions — the equivalent of jobs for life." USC education professor Julie Slayton acknowledged: "It's ridiculous and should be changed."

    Pop quiz: Would multimillionaire Matt Damon apply the same warped employment practices and dumbed-down curricular standards to his own accountants that he champions for America's public school teachers? Film at 11.

    Michelle Malkin is the author of "Culture of Corruption: Obama and his Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks & Cronies" (Regnery 2010). Her e-mail address is malkinblog@gmail.com.

    COPYRIGHT 2011 CREATORS.COM

     

    613 comments

    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 mths ago
      There is a glut of people that have teaching degrees. There is a huge amount of unemployment for perfectly qualified, and recently graduated, teachers. The unions are unfairly and 'greedily' trying to manipulate the labor market to prop up incompetent, and lazy, teachers.
      Defund public schools. Privatize them via vouchers. The market works, unions don't. And I am in a profession where the competition is fierce and drives actual results and innovation, and somehow, without a single day in my whole life of paying union dues, I am still alive... wow. Amazing.
    • Celebrity BS  •  6 mths ago
      He looks great with his clothes off...HOWEVER, he should not speak. I endorse his decision to help lead the mega-rich in paying more taxes!!!
    • CottonL  •  6 mths ago
      the elevator stops where?
    • LP  •  6 mths ago
      People fail to realize that the biggest problem is cultural. Kids today do not read, they watch tv, play video games. text, and facebook. Homework is becoming a lost art and blaming teachers takes the place of personal responsibility. If a had a nickle for every parent who complained about little Johnny getting the grade he deserved, I wouldn't have to work a summer job to pay my mortgage. Blaming someone else is becoming the American way.
    • truth  •  6 mths ago
      I'm sure that major cuts to education funding and cutting teacher pay through higher healthcare premiums and less retirement funding will make the public education system in this country a lot better, Michelle. It would serve them right, huh? The very idea of teachers in a free country being able to join a Union. The idea that they would get almost a third of what members of Congress get paid who want to cut RIF programs and PBS school support educational media programs.
    • MacAttack  •  6 mths ago
      I agree that there is a curriculum issue. Our kids are stupid and uninformed, for the most part. How do you motivate them? Comes from the home, not teachers.
    • b  •  6 mths ago
      The teaching standards in Ohio are very high. You will not get a teaching job in today's market without at least a 3.5 accumulative average. You must pass at least 3 nationally administered Praxis tests and obtain a teaching license with numerous requirements. You will not make $40,000 per year until you have taught at least 5 years. Then there are Continuing Education Units and courses required to maintain your license. My daughter works to 8 pm nearly every night with her special education curriculum and required IEP reports. Many of them have to supplement their salary with coaching, after school extra curriculars and second jobs. They have to pay for classroom expenses out of their own pockets. It is a demanding job.
    • Jesse V Coffey, author an ...  •  6 mths ago
      Lady, where did you get your numbers? Because the only ones making $53K a year have been working 20 years to get it. And I think after working that long at a thankless job with uninspired children who have parents that place no value on education, who have no time to sit with their kids or won't make time to sit with their kids let alone what their kids are doing to begin with, they deserve to get that pay. Deserve to be assured that after a certain amount of time spent on the job and having gone to get more education for that certification and masters degree that they can count on that job being there. The fact that you can sit there and write that article and compose your thoughts is thanks to the teachers that taught you how to do it.

      Are there bad teachers? Sure there are. There are bad cameramen, bad ditch diggers, bad in every job. Are you planning on insisting that all cameramen stay on a contractor basis because of the bad ones? All ditch diggers need to remain "temporary workers" because of the bad ones? That's unfair. That's what certification is for, that's what mentoring is for. That's what observation is for. They have the years leading to tenure to determine--are you going to go after the principals and boards of education next? Because that's where the issue lies. That's where it starts if they're not doing their jobs right. NOT with the teachers.
    • The Professor  •  6 mths ago
      Teachers in my state go to school for 7 years before they get a teaching license. That means for 7 years they are PAYING OUT before they make even 1 dollar in profit. For the first 15 years of their professional life they will be paying back their student loans. And this notion that June, July, and August are vacation time is false. Teachers have to continually go to school to keep their licencse. Teachers become students in the summer. I've been the victim of incompetent tenured/union teachers. However, I also know that I would have had zero great teachers if they hadn't gotten a good salary and great pension. No quality people would go into the teaching profession without good compensation. To all you geniuses who want to make teaching a minimum wage job: once you succeed, what do you think the teachers will be like then? What are you going to get for minimum wage?
    • overthill  •  6 mths ago
      There is a saying I heard years ago when my own son was in school.
      "ALL THE GOOD ONES LEAVE"
      It's even more true today.
    • Amy  •  6 mths ago
      Sure there are some bad teachers out there, Lord knows I had a few. But I think the real problem lies with the current generation of children and parents. The kids are entitled, lazy, technology and entertainment addicts, who get away with everything because their parents are the same as them. They have no work ethic or sense of propriety in the classroom. It's no wonder some teachers lose their motivation to teach kids like that. Of course, to be fair, there are good and bad students as well.....
    • NadineP  •  6 mths ago
      This is a fine example of whats wrong with education in this country. Why attack teachers, as if thats the core of the problem. There are soooo many problems with education, and while some bad teachers do exist, they are not the cause of the decline in this country. I work at a Philadelphia public school and I see great teachers try and get the best out of those kids in over- crowded class rooms and with out appropriate supplies. Not to mention behavior problems that are constant and some parents that just do not care. Also, kids that have IEP's continue to just move on to the next grade when they are not ready to be promoted and a complete lack of special education teachers. This is a multi faceted issue. It's crazy to think that people are so quick to blame teachers because they're an easy target.
    • Sweet Potato  •  6 mths ago
      WHAT TEACHERS MAKE:
      The dinner guests were sitting around the table
      discussing life. One man, a CEO, decided to explain
      the problem with education. He argued:
      "What's a kid going to learn from someone who decided
      his best option in life was to become a teacher?"

      He reminded the other dinner guests that it's true
      what they say about teachers: "Those who can...do.
      Those who can't ... teach."

      To corroborate, he said to another guest: "You're a
      teacher, Susan," he said. "Be honest. What do you
      make?"

      Susan, who had a reputation of honesty and frankness,
      replied, "You want to know what I make?"

      I make kids work harder than they ever thought they
      could. I can make a C+ feel like a Congressional Medal
      of Honor and an A- feel like a slap in the face if the
      student did not do his or her very best."

      "I can make kids sit through 40 minutes of study hall
      in absolute silence."

      "I can make parents tremble in fear when I call home"

      "You want to know what I make?"

      "I make kids wonder."

      "I make them question."

      "I make them criticize."

      "I make them apologize and mean it."

      "I make them write."

      "I make them read, read, read."

      "I make them spell definitely beautiful, definitely
      beautiful, and definitely beautiful over and over and
      over again, until they will never misspell either one
      of those words again."

      "I make them show all their work in math and hide it
      all on their final drafts in English."

      "I make them understand that if you have the brains,
      then follow your heart...and if someone ever tries to
      judge you by what you make, you pay them no
      attention!"

      "You want to know what I make?"

      "I make a difference."
    • AllieU  •  6 mths ago
      What a teacher teaches (in general) is decided upon by the district. So, if we are criticizing the fact that "reading" is OUT and "feeling" is in, where curriculum is concerned.... it is not up to the teacher to decide the fundamentals. That is a district level decision..... and frankly, that is another issue. District level positions are "corporate". People making the decisions on how and what teachers teach, are not working with children.... they never step foot in a classroom. So don't criticize a teacher for what they are mandated to teach, or how they have to do it. Focus on the district officials first.........
    • LR  •  6 mths ago
      Anyone who has a problem with public education in America is invited to volunteer in a school of their choice for 2 weeks during the forthcoming school year. I'd personally recommend a middle school or a high school setting, as it's there you'll get a real taste of what teachers are doing in the classroom. Then you come back and discuss the issue.
    • The Professor  •  6 mths ago
      So what do all you geniuses think is a fair wage for teachers? Seriously. $20K? $30K? Do you know how much tuition costs? Who do you think is going to become a teacher and pay that much in tuition and give up that many years of their life to get a teaching license when all they get back is $20K a year? You think teachers are bad now? Wait and see what you get for $20K.
    • CraigK.C.  •  6 mths ago
      "LOS ANGELES — California will become the first state to require public schools to teach gay and lesbian history."

      And we wonder what is wrong with this country? Since when is this so vital a subject to teach in public schools?

      Then look at all the idiotic reality television shows that do nothing but spread immorality.

      This country is getting what it will deserve. A bunch of uneducated idiots who in turn elect other idiots to legislate law. This country has become pathetic!
    • Tyrone M  •  6 mths ago
      Time to blame the kids. Its amazing what you can learn when you put down the iphone and pay attention in class.
    • Jason from Denver  •  6 mths ago
      Why was this supposed article listed on the yahoo! homepage under the caption, "News for You?" This isn't reporting any news or even depicting credible reporting. This is a personal tirade by a right-wing nutjob who spews incorrect numbers in an attempt to bolster her angry position that teachers are overpaid. She attempts to make her position seem as though she's frustrated with the fact that, as in any profession, there are incompetent people that still have their jobs. She fails to acknowledge, however, that, in the case of tenured teachers, it doesn't mean they CAN'T be fired; it just means a process has to be followed in order to proceed with potential firing. This woman needs to check her facts as well as look up "truth" in the dictionary, and yahoo needs to put this article in its "Rabid Personal Editorials" section, not any section with the word "News" in it.
    • Eric  •  6 mths ago
      I support my public school system every day by sending my kid there and ensuring he shows up every day with a great attitutde!
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