JACKSONVILLE, Fla., Sept. 13, 2007

Thompson: Bush Education Program Failing

Candidate Says No Child Left Behind "Not Working," Vows Federal Funding With Fewer Strings Attached

  • Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson makes a campaign stop in Greenville, S.C., Monday, Sept. 10, 2007.

    Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson makes a campaign stop in Greenville, S.C., Monday, Sept. 10, 2007.  (AP)

  • Interactive Education In America

    Backpack ready? Learn more about education in America through fun facts, national statistics and unusual schools.

(AP)  Republican presidential candidate Fred Thompson said Thursday that President Bush's signature education program isn't working and that he would provide federal education money with fewer strings attached.

"We've been spending increasing amounts of federal money for decades, with increasing rules, increasing mandates, increasing regulations," Thompson said. "It's not working."

He added that there are problems with Bush's No Child Left Behind program, which requires annual testing and punishes schools that don't make progress.

"No Child Left Behind - good concept, I'm all for testing - but it seems like now some of these states are teaching to the test and kind of making it so that everybody does well on the test - you can't really tell that everybody's doing that well. And it's not objective," Thompson said.

Instead, he said the federal government should be providing block grants as long as states set up objective testing programs.

He said his message to states would be, "We expect you to get objective testing done and publicize those tests for the local parents and for the local citizens and suffer the political ramifications locally if things don't work out right."

The former Tennessee senator and star of NBC's ``Law & Order`` was responding to a question as he began a three-day bus tour of Florida, his first visit to the state since announced his candidacy last week. A woman asked what he would do for education. He told her decisions on how schools are run should be made by local and state decisions, not dictated out of Washington.

"It's your responsibility," he said. "If you don't like what's going on, don't get in your car and drive by your school board and maybe drive by the capitol and get on an airplane and fly to Washington and say, 'I don't like the way the school down the street is being run."'

©MMVII, The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Share:
  • Share
  • Yahoo! Buzz
  • Mixx
Add a Comment See all 13 Comments
by cassandragop September 15, 2007 3:32 PM EDT
So where are thier parents? Why didnt they teach thier kids english before dumping them on our tax dollars in english speaking schools....
Their parents may have been remiss in not teaching their children how to string together an understandable sentence....and perhaps those children do not even know how to spell "their" or use a spellcheck program.
Reply to this comment
by socrates392 September 14, 2007 4:54 PM EDT
One of the biggest problems with all this is that 40% of the students in many big city schools cannot and will not learn english. This holds back the kids that want an education, and holds back money that should be used to give it to them.

Posted by pwrslm at 08:49 AM : Sep 14, 2007

Why are you trying to turn education reform into a debate about illegal immigration? I live in Detroit and the vast majority of the kids in the Detroit school system are native English speakers-- they are also some of the most underachieving students in the country! You can''t blame everything on immigration!

If you want better a educational system, pay your teachers more!
Reply to this comment
by pwrslm September 14, 2007 11:49 AM EDT
No child left behind? So where are thier parents? Why didnt they teach thier kids english before dumping them on our tax dollars in english speaking schools....
Reply to this comment
by pwrslm September 14, 2007 11:48 AM EDT
I missed the part of the constitution that said the Government should run schools and dictate what our kids should/should not learn.

One of the biggest problems with all this is that 40% of the students in many big city schools cannot and will not learn english. This holds back the kids that want an education, and holds back money that should be used to give it to them.

If a family doesnt speak english, they need to teach thier children to speak english in they want the education we provide. America should not be held responsible for all these millions of illegal immigrants who refuse to assimilate into our society, and we should not be taxed to our own detriment. OUR kids are what this educational system is for, not for non-english speaking foreigners looking for babysitters so they can work.
Reply to this comment
by realpatriot1 September 13, 2007 11:50 PM EDT
cfin5,

Your sour moods are better than some people''s best days. No probs.
Reply to this comment
by cfin5 September 13, 2007 10:16 PM EDT
realpatriot1,.....It''s a deal. I was earlier and still am somewhat in a sour mood as to what happened to that poor little girl in Texas. parrot2''s one sided posts touched me off. I see no problem in giving credit where credit is due to whoever it is. Same goes for rebuking where needed and including myself. Fair and square.
Reply to this comment
by realpatriot1 September 13, 2007 7:28 PM EDT
cfin5,

It was a bipartison agreement and involved elements of both sides approach to the issue. Testing was Bush''s main component, that wasn''t Kennedy. You can blame the democrats for the red tape.

Better yet, let''s skip the blame and see if we can''t work together to make it better; that''s what would be beneficial to the kids.
Reply to this comment
by realpatriot1 September 13, 2007 7:17 PM EDT
This is a good start for Fred.

He''s actually talking about taking something that doesn''t work and trying to fix it. It certainly beats knocking the opponent and not offering anything better.

The public deserves more of this and less of the smut.
Reply to this comment
by rushlimpdrug September 13, 2007 6:05 PM EDT
Wasn''t Reagan''s rule to not criticize another fellow repub?
So much for Freddy being like Reagan.

Here''s my one tip to Fred:
Fred, keep your wife away from Vitter.
Reply to this comment
by cfin5 September 13, 2007 5:57 PM EDT
President Bush''s mistake was letting Ted Kennedy write the "ejukashun" bill for him to sign. Some bi-partisan efforts just don''t work when partisans are the author. The three "R''s" take a back seat to "socialist" studies these days.
Reply to this comment
by frankinaz September 13, 2007 5:51 PM EDT
The "No Child Left Behind" is really failing along the border states with Mexico, primarily due to large numbers of illegal immigrants who put their children in schools that have to teach them English. This concept is getting more expensive to solve every day, because no one is controlling the numbers of illegal immigrants that not only bring their children to this country, but also have their children here. Maybe the Federal Government should block further illegal immigration to this country, along with providing the states block grants.
Reply to this comment
by micma-2009 September 13, 2007 5:28 PM EDT



Thompson is absolutely right and what we need to solve the nations problems is a career lobbyist turned actor as President. Not!

Thompson represents everything that''s wrong with Washington. A career lobbyist will only turn the country over to corporations and special interests. If you like Bu$h you''ll love Thompson. He''s a multinational corporation posing as a human being.


Reply to this comment
by gkc99 September 13, 2007 4:46 PM EDT
NO! Bushit is succeeding. Bushit and his ilk do well when people are stupid and ignorant. Learning is dangerous to the neoconscum fascists.

Bushit is succeeding in keeping the American Sheeple fat and stupid and watching TV sitcoms and "reality shows". Don''t want those peasants actually thinking, do ya?
Reply to this comment
See all 13 Comments
  • MOST POPULAR

Exclusive Webshow

Mike Huckabee on GOP "rock stars," 2012, health care reform and more. Watch Now

Latest News
News in Pictures
Scroll Left Scroll Right
Connect with CBS News

Stay connected with the CBS News using your favorite social networks and online news applications: