SCHOOL ELECTION page 5 that our schools have an oblig- ticularly incisive question and ation to teach much more than print all of the candidates' re- reading, writing, and 'rithrnetic; sponses in order to t ter dis- our students must be critical tinguish between they thinkers and problem solvers Of primary importanC ever, is that any repot of who can strategize and theorize candidate races needs to be both„ about concepts more complex circumspect and objective. The than we can ever imagine. Educators today know so rule of thumb is usually" much more about how the brain each candidate is afforded. eq - ad how learning actu- space and coverage; if this can . ally happens; on the cutting -nit may be not be achieved, edge are those professionals better not to offer coverage at who can integrate sound, all. though not necessarily new, re- Yet there was potential here search data with the best as- for powerful, continuing educa- sumptions about what the tion that began earlier in this future will hold for our children election season with the infor- in order to create optimal, 1.1S3- mation presented at the forum held at Adat Shalom on "The New Right," a joint effort of th. --- - '41schcois must continually in- ,1ove and ultimately, reform. National Council of Jewisi, In order to advance, however, it Women and the Jewish CoraL will take broad-based commu- munity Council. This was an nity support and participation outstanding and extremely well- attended panel discussion, and the Jewish community was primed and ready to receive good information of the candi- date races. Everyone who left the pre- sentation was able to ask better questions of the candidates, and analyze.:their responses more critically" People had a height- ened serve of urgency with re- gard to~ the importance of — a renewed sense of shared r . participIion in school elections sponsibility for the future of thi-, as a grat3S-roots expression of great nation. political and intellectual free- Important issues and que<;'- dom. The Jewish News had also tons will have to be addresse I regularly offfered informative sooner rather than later. Can stories on the activities and im- we create, in our communities, pact of the "New Right." a shared vision of what we ex- Two consistent themes that pect from our public schools? Do were identified by opponents in we want our schools to become all of our districts were "back- N more like businesses, where as to-basics," or a return to tradi- an offshoot of corporate compe- tional teaching methods, and tition comes increased spending disagreement with Supreme on advertising, and decreased Court decisions that upheld the spending everywhere else, like separation of church and state. art, music, etc.? What kind of In fact, one candidate told a graduates do we want to have? group of students at a candi- Will they be what we, as a soci- dates' forum that nowhere is the ety, need? separation of church and state Most importantly, though, written; this is the same candi- are we going to be able to stave date who also told students to off challenges from non-credible exercise only one of their two al- critics of the far right, who do lotted votes in order to vote only not have the best interests of all for him, and to vote against the - children at heart? And how 7 4 millage renewal as a means of much time will they consume „/ protest. from the really important dis- Prior to this, the same candi- cussions we need to be having ; -/\ date, as part of his opening re- in our communities about h_,w marks to the students, gifted the we can best serve the students K school media center with a and parents to whom we are di- Bible, "the history of God's cho- rectly responsible? sen people, the Jewish Nation." As you can see, there is much This candidate came in third in to be done. It is in our best in- Bloomfield Hills with 1,388 terest to stay informed about votes. and involved in our schools. Our School officials should not un- public system of education, that derestimate the power of the refuses no one, is what contin- "back-to-basics" rhetoric. It is ues to distinguish us among the very appealing to the majority nations. It remains one of the of registered voters in our midst fundamentally democratic in- — those without any school-age stitutions in our country. I am children. proud of the way our communi- We ought not waste another ties came together, and I am minute in making it abundant- hopeful that we will continue ly clear that the schools in our our quest for accurate informa- communities are teaching "the tion about the very real threats basics" and teaching them ex- to public education. ❑ tremely well. So well, in fact, Only community involvement will save our public schools. ust because your children attend college out-of-town doesn't mean they have to be out-of-touch. Sure, you can call them every week. But you can't cover everything. After all, that's what we do. We'll tell them all about what's happening in their hometown, the nation and world. We'll give them stimulating viewpoints, and interesting features. But most of all, we'll bring them home every week. 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