Location: The Heritage Foundation's Lehrman Auditorium
Twenty-five years ago, the National Commission on Excellence in
Education issued the landmark "A Nation at Risk" report,
highlighting the serious crisis existing in American
education. "If an unfriendly foreign power had attempted to
impose on America the mediocre educational performance that exists
today," the Commission warned, "we might well have viewed it as an
act of war."
After a quarter century of reforms and increased government
involvement in education, American education remains in a state of
crisis. National test scores reveal that millions of children
continue to pass through the nation's public schools without
receiving a quality education. In many of our largest cities,
fewer than half of all students graduate high school. This
failure imposes great costs - on students, families, and our
communities - and even imperils our future national prosperity and
security.
When the report was released in 1983, President Reagan outlined
a bold vision for reforming education. He called for
increasing parental choice, limiting federal government
involvement, and restoring state and local control in
education. But conventional wisdom and education reforms have
followed a different path over the past quarter-century -
increasing federal authority and expanding government control of
education. Today, educational failure seems to be as
persistent as communism once appeared to be. President
Reagan's strategic vision conquered communism, and it's time we
revisit his wisdom for education policy as well.
More About the Speakers
The Honorable Jim DeMint (R-SC)
Member,
United States Senate
Edwin Meese
Ronald Reagan Distinguished Fellow in Public Policy,
The Heritage Foundation
Hosted By
Dan Lips
Senior Policy Analyst
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