Again ... I've said both sides need to put their isms at the door and create a real plan. But seriously, you're saying Democrats aren't at least trying to address education? I saw a post from you yesterday I didn't have a chance to respond to and I didn't see it going through threads now, but you said something about we are spending more money.
The problem is not just total money, but how it's being distributed. Rich school areas have plenty of money. Poor schools are strapped. It keeps the poor poor. If you'd actually read my posts, you'd know I don't think we're going to fix the problem overnight. My proposal is if we give poor kids in schools a path, a small percentage of them will make it. But if we keep building on that path, over years it compounds to where you really do start reducing poverty. Kids in those areas don't believe they have a future. Better teachers who are compensated reasonably help accomplish that. The kids with motivated parents have the best shot. Vouchers are a way for those parents to self identify. I was a good student gradewise in high school, A's and B's. But I mailed it in a lot on ability. I didn't get serious until I was in college. If I'd been a poor kid, I've had mentally checked out by then and never accomplished everything I ultimately did.
Whether or not we have improved, we are rated in the 30s with results while spending the most money. Maybe there has been some positive, but it's sure not enough