Over the past few months, politicians have proposed numerous plans to address the shortfall in federal and state budgets. Texas is facing a $15 billion revenue shortfall, and Gov. Rick Perry proposes cutting $5 billion -- one third of this shortfall -- in education.
One of the first places politicians begin slicing and dicing is the education budget. I seldom see them talk seriously about reducing their salaries or staffs.
Let me be honest right up front -- I'm a school teacher, so I have a vested interest in paying close attention to cuts in education. But I bring to the classroom 20 years in the business world where I was the one complaining about waste in government spending.
So when I read about budget cuts, I'm trying to look at the ledger sheet from both sides of the political fence. Cuts Perry is proposing are in the arts, pre-kindergarten programs and financial aid for incoming freshmen.
That would mean cutting back funding for our budding artists, poets and musicians, youngsters who have no voice in the adult world and young men and women looking to find a way to contribute to society.
Hidden in that gargantuan proposed budget, which I actually looked through, employees in Perry's office goes from an average of 120 to 132. Why does one governor need more employees than a high school has teachers for over 1,500 students?
Perhaps it's because governors can rationalize overseeing a bloated budget they control. So they point their fingers and say there's waste in the public schools. I'll admit that's a valid claim as almost all of us could tighten our financial belts.
But if Texas wants to be number one in education, the state cannot accomplish that goal by hog-tying teachers and sacrificing youngsters.
One of the cries I've heard over the years is that school should be all about academics. The fine arts, activities like band, choir, art and theater, are better left outside the classroom.
The fine arts, however, allow youngsters to find their hidden talents. The child who has trouble reading in school might excel in art, find a receptacle to plug into the educational process and, in turn, become excited about life.
The student who excels in math and science might find they love debate and, thus, hone their interpersonal skills.
The fine arts classes that round out the human psyche are just as important as math and science. Yet these same classes that add the ability to think deeply about subjects and to find what lights the creative fire in one's soul are the first ones slapped on the chopping block.
Forgive me for not being a statistician, but I fail to see the good that comes from limiting a child's imagination.
The second sacrificial lamb is the number of students per classroom. The number one indicator of student success is the ratio of teacher to student, yet the first thing politicians feel they need to do is increase the teacher-to-student radio in the classroom.
When 35 fourth graders are clamoring for the teacher's attention, it's extremely difficult to spot the children who are too timid to ask for help. As a result, they silently slide through the crowded system and become quietly disinterested in school.
In turn, they become disinterested adults instead of motivated people who understand a good education requires the support of everyone -- parents, the community, the state and the federal government.
We are sacrificing the future of our country because people are not willing to put up the funds or make cuts in the governor's office to ensure our children are receiving a well-rounded education. The old cliché that children are our best hope for the future remains true.
Instead of being the wind underneath their wings, the government is greedily plucking the feathers out of those wings one by one, dollar by dollar and never looking at the plump nest they're built for themselves up in Austin.
An investment in a child's mind is our best investment for the future. It's time to stop robbing youngsters and give them what they deserve: a well-rounded and well-funded education.
This column was originally published in The Fort Bend Herald.
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