Politics

Want to help school kids? Here are two places to start

Educators, politicians, philanthropists and parents should start with the basic values of family reading time and old-fashioned hard work.

Sponsorship

by

Dick Lilly

Educators, politicians, philanthropists and parents should start with the basic values of family reading time and old-fashioned hard work.

There’s hardly an issue more perennially popular with politicians than education. How many education governors have we had now? Legislators  willing to opine are legion. Our last couple of mayors have blustered  about how the city could do better job with schools than the school  district. And we’re in our 10th year — at least — of education presidents.

And nowadays, too, the superrich get to play. Offering exhortations and dropping packets of money here and there, the Gates-Buffet-Broad-Walton-Annenberg-Caseys and a dozen others have crowded into the wheelhouse.

There’s  no doubt that many of the experiments and changes proposed for  America’s schools have merit, and there’s a good chance that quite a few  of them (charter schools, perhaps) are just rearranging the deck  chairs. At any rate, what they all have in common is a “systems”  approach. They almost always propose ways to change how the K-12 system works.

And  all — politicians and philanthropists — are probably at their best  working outside the schools, funding social services that help kids from  low-income families come to school healthy and prepared. The Harlem Children’s Zone and Seattle’s Families and Education Levy are good examples.

But  our politicians, philanthropists, and other education leaders almost  completely ignore another area, another way, they could improve the lives of our children. In just two words, it’s the bully  pulpit. More sociologically, it’s changing community values.

Politicians,  particularly, would serve us better if they stepped up and took every opportunity to  talk about what parents and other members of our communities can and  should do to help kids succeed in school.

There  are two subjects I’d suggest:

First, a number of communities including  Kennewick, Wash., have improved third-grade reading rates through broad,  multimedia campaigns urging adults to “Read aloud with your child 20  minutes every day.” Imagine if politicians and other prominent people  repeated that message every chance they got. After a while, the message  would sink in and families rich and poor, parents, aunts and uncles,  caregivers — all of us — would be reading with kids.

Over time — and it  would take time — it would be a community value, something expected of  everyone. By the way, there are seeds for a city/region-wide program at  the Alliance for Education. (Full disclosure: I helped plant that seed back  in 2006).

Second  is the simple idea of hard work. Admittedly, there’s a hornets’ nest of  controversy in talk about America’s values (in decline, just  great, no big deal) and what we impart to our children. Nevertheless,  leaders with guts have got to tell us the truth. Whatever else is going  on, or competing for kids’ attention, success in school means stepping  up and doing the work. Personally, I think a lot of parents neglect to  mention this. It’s another community value that our elected leaders  could help rebuild.

Dick Lilly

By Dick Lilly

Dick Lilly is a former Seattle Times reporter who covered Seattle neighborhoods, City Hall and public schools during 14-years with the paper. From 1999 until his retirement in 2015, he worked for Seat