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tv   Stossel  FOX News  May 6, 2012 9:00pm-10:00pm PDT

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is kids aren't learning but school spending is through the roof. what has gone wrong. in the bureaucracy is what is wrong. >> the unions and paper pushers. >> let's destroy the system. >> good, ring on the recraytive destruction. who would disagree. teachers' unions disagree and they are are mad at me and mad at reformers who care about test scores.
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>> the blob also opposes charter schools. unions are mad because some charters can fire bad teachers. >> i call it freeing up a perpetrator's future. >> a teacher wants to teach. >> this actor says teachers need tenure. >> why else would you take a [ bleep ] salary. >> most positions don't have tenure. at least now there is some good news. at some schools where teachers can be fired, kids learn. >> give us the worst school anywhere in america and we will jut perform the other schools in five years. >> how good are the test scores at his charter school? >> there isn't even a word for are it. >> about you unions say such charters avoid the problem kids. >> no way, i love fools. >> sadly, up until now, adult fools have won the show and
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mead us stupid in america. school spending has tripled over the past 40 years. we now spend much more than other countries but what do we get? fancier schools, more assistant principals but student learning no improvement. there is the line. for 40 years. scores have been flat. much more money. no improvement. this is awful. but, there is some good news. around america, some very cool things are starting to happen. >> but school is boring. >> no, it's not! >> yes, it is. i know. i went to school. grade school was boring. so was high school. so was princeton. except for the party part. but fourth grade? you have to learn reading and writing. that is work. >> reading is work. but it's rockin' awesome.
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>> rockin' awesome? and these kids say school is fun? >> yes. >> how is it fun to learn. >> they just teach us in a fun way. >> so you guys look forward to going to school in the morning. in. >> yes. >> these kids attend one of those newhart schools. free public schools but their charter. including teacher union rules. this school enrolls the inner city kids bureaucrats label at risk of failure but these kids learn. >> devin is 100% on top of her game right now. >> going to or school is a ticket to educational success. >> this woman runs several heart schools. charter schools. all get outstanding test scores. >> you do it with the same money public schools less. >> we do it for less. >> how for less money do they get the kids so interested? you are interested in math?
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>> and reading. writing. >> reading is work. >> it don't matter. [ laughter ] >> the school day here is longer. kids often stay until 5:00 p.m. charter teachers can be asked to work more than the union would have' loued. they told us they don't mind. >> but you are going to burn out. why aren't you kicked off? >> that is not an option for us. because we kind of have our eye on the prize with these kids. >> they use all sorts of new teaching techniques. sometimes teachers wear ear pieces during class and then they are coached by their losses. >> what are they telling you. >> thens that i don't see. if i don't think of a great question in the moment my principal is able to kind of feed that to me through the ear piece. >> we kind of view teachers as athletes in the olympics and they need constant support and coaching to be at the top of their game. >> kids at this school constantly wave their hands around. it confused me but then the students explain it is what
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they call active listening. instead of interrupting class to clouters out say can i go to the bathroom or i agree with that the students make hand gestures. >> what is the symbol for agree? >> this. >> high test scores made these charters so popular that parents line up hoping to get their kids admitted. >> this line goes on. and on. forever. goes around the block. >> so many applicants, but not that many spaces. >> so what do you do when you have thousands of people and just a few hundred slots? they hold a lottery. >> the winners are happy. sadly, wil there are many more losers. >> in oakland california another charter chain gets similar top results using different methods. >> give me the worst school in oakland, black, mexican, polka dot, give us the worst school anywhere in america and we will
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take it and we will outperform the other schools is in five years. >> ben chavis created the model of the american indian charter school right in the heart of a rough neighborhood. >> [ bleep ]. >> now, these are hard workers here. >> the kids at american indian schools now have some of the highest test scores in california. >> and you can do that on the same amount the state gives every school? >> we get less. we get less than every other school. >> the kids in american indian public charter schools are scoring so far above the average for the state for public school children that there isn't even a word for it. >> they use different techniques from the charters in harlem. here at american indian they pay some kids to tutor other kids. >> we hire our students and we pay them. >> thank you. >> they are excited. they are going to make some money. >> chair vis is politically
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incorrect. >> what are you going to study? >> science. >> a mexican in science? good for you, you will be a rare bird. >> they are stricter because they want to make us succeed. >> a teacher made this student do pushups in the hallway because he don't follow directions. >> i hate saturday school. >> my other school we didn't have as much homework. we had like one page of homework and here we have six subjects of homework and the teachers were a lot nicer and here they are a lot meaner. >> meaner and yet no student has been expelled sense the school began in 2000. no way! >> i love fools. i love the kids who get in trouble. because you can take a kid who is acting like a fool or gets in trouble and a use them as an example. it. >> it is cruel your critics say. a 6th grade student acts up in class he will be sent to sit
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on the floor in an 8th grade class. >> yes, that is true. and embarrassment keeps people in mind whether they admit it or not. >> this our old school we play games for p.e. here it is either running for ten minutes or running around the block. >> you fired a teacher after one day. >> she was incompetent. >> you could tell in one day? >> yes, she was incompetent. >> last year i i was going to get fired a few times. if i'm not doing a good job it is over and that could happen at the drop of a dime. >> that is not true at most government run schools. union teachers are happy that they can't be suddenly fired but the charter teachers can be. >> you can get canned in a moment. does that bother you? >> if i'm not doing my job per se and i was fired for that so be it. >> if i was a doctor and a i wasn't good i mean i wouldn't have a job. no one would come to me, right? >> i would hope not?
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>> you cannot maintain quality unless you you can fire people says this charter found. it is as many as we must and as little as we can. >> have you fired more than ten? >> in three schools in eight years, yes, he. >> but while bad teachers might get fired good teachers are given freedom. >> they can choose their textbooks and teaching methods as long as they every quarter and every year make sure that the students are learning what they need to learn at the end of the day. >> in harlem, 43% of 8th graders get passing grades on state math tests. 100% of her kids passed. if such charters work why aren't there more of them? because unions and supporters of traditional schools hate charters. this protest occurred outside of one of eva moscowitz's charters. >> he hope it is not personal but it may be. >> this union boss doesn't want charters in what he calls his
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school. body they ared bodhi they are going to come there. >> does he get to stop there? i. they said we shouldn't judge teachers by how well students do on test. >> how do you know they are learning anything. >> i know when i look in their eyes. >> what? more "stupid in america" when we return.
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>> competition makes everything better. but there are some people who don't like my saying that. >> shame on you. shame on you. shame on you. >> the teachers' union, 5 million members strong.
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this group is mad at me. >> we are here to hear an apology from 20/20 john stossel. >> i had done another show called stupid in america that sade it was impossible be to fire badded teachers. the union boss said because of my program. >> educators all over the country feel that they have been kicked in the teeth. >> they were surprised when i came outside to hear them. the union said i should be educated. >> just teach for a week. >> the crowd liked the idea of me teaching for a week. >> see john teach. see downteach. >> i think i surprised them again when i said okay i'll teach. but then they changed their mind. the union president won't talk to me any more but two other union bosses did. >> city school is are are
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terrible because of unions like yours. >> i would disagree. we have progress as a result of unions. >> three days before saunders led this protest march to complain about plans to pay teachers based on how well their students do on tests. the protesters even composed an antitest song ♪ >> i think i know why the union doesn't like testing. >> your results are awful. they are among the lowest in the nation. >> you make an argument that it is the lowest in the nation based upon the test scores. now, i would say that ours can get better but i would say that ours are -- >> the unions have been saying that for years. >> i think the unions have a strong history of advocating for high quality public education. >> but not achieving it. >> high test scores are not what we choose to focus on. we choose to focus on teaching
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kids. >> but how do you know if they are learning anything if you don't test them and compare. >> i know my kids are learning when i look in their eyes. >> the protesters had celebrity you support. actor matt damon. he was asked by a come from reason tv about the rules that make it hard to fire a union teach. in acting there isn't job security, right. why isn't it like that for teachers. >> do you think job insecurity is what makes me work hard. i want to be an actor are. that is not the thing. you you take this mba style thinking, right. >> business school ideays. well, yes. charter schools, vouc vouchersn obama's race to the top are based on the idea that competition is good. if kids fear to take their school money to any school, competition among schools including for profit chains will force all the schools to get better or go out of business. the best schools with expand. but the unions don't like be that market competition.
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>> there is profit motive behind all of this extra testing. >> we need to get the corporations out of the schools. >> the union says school of choice would enrich corporations but further immoverrish teachers. ♪ >> teachers paid enough? >> no. >> you have some teachers making over a hundred thousand dollars a year. >> and they aren't making enough. >> matt damon agrees with that. his mom is a union teach. a teacher wants to teach. why else would you take a [ bleep ] salary and really long hours. >> teachers make a [ bleep ] salary. well, maybe to matt day mop but today american teachers make more per hour than accountants, is nurses, architects. >> i can guarantee it is not about the honey. >> kevin chair vis was a former
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dv politician. >> i gave the school system 300 million new dollars. teachers got more money than ever and the test scores went down. what they did do, they grew central office. they had more deputies to the assistant to the deputy to the assistant. they grew the bureaucracy. >> and the former district chancellor michelle reid found that the bigger bureaucracy didn't even get school supplies to the deads. >> walking in to schools and seeing that there were no books in the library. kids didn't have supplies and pencils and then the following week i visited the warehouse of the school district where there were boxes and boxes of books and kissers and glue. >> why didn't they get to the school? >> exactly. that was the question. >> why didn't they get to the school. >> it was just a complete and utter sense of dysfunction and the lack of accountability. >> the reason they call the school bureau crazy the blb, it
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is like this jaba the hut thing that can't be budged. the teachers' union. janitor's union. the politics and school board bureaucrats and if you you try to make a change they say. >> we don't do that here. we have to have four or five people to sign off and the deputy director of curriculum has to say okay. it's crazy. >> you went to private school. >> that's correct. it kind of made me feel that i had better do pretty goal in that school or else. >> i will confront the union losses when we return. why can't other people have the choice they had? also, why does it cost a third of a million dollars to fire just one union teacher? what is wrong with these people?
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nancy pelosi. hillary clinton. al gore. the people who are making the rules already have choice. you know, the politicians and i used to be a politician. the politicians have choice. >> yet all the politicians who sent their kids to private school oppose school of choice for regular people. >> i want to know whether or not you think mallia and sasha a would get the same high quality rigorous education in a d.c. public school. >> fy wanted to find a great public school for mallia and sasha to be in we could probably maneuver to do it. >> apparently he didn't want to. the president now sends them to viceame school the s & p's
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president's grand kids attend. tuition $32,000 a year. and the union leaders? >> you went to private school. >> that'that's correct. i graduated a catholic high school. >> at this school board meeting when chairman said he he used up his speaking time del grasso marched up to the front to demand more saying my union contract mandates 7 more minutes than i got. the ri rigidity of the stupid union contract is the problem. >> he opposes letting them to attend charter schools in an existing school building. >> over my dead body i'm going to come there. i'm going to be there and physically try and stop them. there is certain things that don't mix. oil and water you can't emulsify. >> there is no room. there aren't half emcity
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schools. >> there is not. >> del grasso says charters favor rich kids but newark public schools spend almost $400,000 per classroom. the charters get less. >> not that much less. according -- >> they get less. it is hardly the rich versus the poor. >> happy for them. >> then let them into your schools. >> don't want them in our schools. >> you are not happy for them then. >> listen does fox and cnn, are they in the same building? i don't think so. >> but fox and cnn can't been aish the come pa degrees. competition is good. competition is why we have fox, cnn and msnbc. when you have a choice of what channel you are going to watch or what school you attend competition makes things better. del brass sew understands that about his own education. >> my mother paid for me to go to it and it kind of made me feel that i had better do pretty good in that school or else. >> sounds like you are arguing
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against the unionized public schools. >> i'm not arguing against them. >> most of the independent schools are still catholic schools doing a great job for less than half the money you spend. >> i wouldn't say that. >> 17,000 versus $5,000. >> tell them to have another bingo game and get it over with. >> catholic schools fire bad teachers but government run schools really can't because teachers have teen your. >> most protections don't have tenure. >> when you got into organized crime you got to be a made person it was like a ceremony. but not getting tenure. >> kind of like organized crime. you are in forever unless you die are or killed. >> if you are a good teacher there shouldn't be a problem with it. >> one problem. not every teacher is good. some are really lousy. >> it is impossible to fire the teenured teachers.
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>> we. >> because there are a million steps. >> there aren't. there is only one. >> it is not one step. it is all these steps. this is the list of steps required to fire a teacher in my town. this is why most principals don't even try. they look at the list of appeals like this one and just give up or push the worst teachers to transfer to another school. that is such a common way to' voided these rules there is even a name for it. the dance of the lemon. it would be funny except it leaves some kids stuck with terrible teachers. >> lots of people said he hit kids. >> and other teachers said it that were present in the classroom. took me four years and $283,000. $127,000 in legal fees, plus what it cost to have a substitute fill in all while he is sitting home having popcorn.
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>> still being paid by the state. >> still being paid by the district. >> he couldn't even fire the teacher who faked his doctorate. >> and he went to sleep in class. >> and was quite disturbed when the supervisor came in and woke him up. >> he complains? >> it never ends. it never ends. >> when we return, meet someone who successfully fired hundreds of teachers. >> fired your own daughter's principal. >> that was a chilly night at home.
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from america's news headquarters i'm patti ann browne patti ann browne. new developments in the 9/11 hearing at guantanamo bay. one of the defense attorneys says the judge does not have the expertise to handle the case. a military commission is trying confessed mastermind khalid shaikh muhammad and four others. the defendants face nearly
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3,000 counts of murder and terrorism. the charges care relationship the death penalty. and good news for drivers this weekend. the price of a gallon of gas went down 7 cents in the last two weeks is. the nationwide average for a gallon of regular is now $3.85. tulsa, oklahoma the lowest price at $340. chicago the highest at $4.32. average prices dropped more than 12 cents in the past month. the drop at the pump was triggered by lower crude oil prices. i'm patti an patti ann browne. now, back to "stupid in america" with john stossel. education in america is a mess. what will fix it? who might fix it? >> somebody needs to fix it! you can do it! >> oprah thinks is this woman
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can fix it. >> thank you, michelle. i'm rooting for you. >> michelle is michelle reid. >> michelle reid. >> five years ago the may your picked her to manage d.c. schools. >> you had never run a school system before. >> i had never run a school before and that is why people thought that adrian was nuts. a 37-year-old girl from toledo, ohio. >> and people said what? who? >> yeah. people said he has lost his mind. >> her friends said she had lost hers. >> i had two kids, two daughters 9 and 12 and i put them in the d.c. public schools. >> the schools were a disaster. test results among the worst in america. chancellor reid quickly learned that although only 8% of d.c.'s kids were on grade level there was something odd about how the teachers were ar rank. >> when i looked at the per performance evaluation of the
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adults in the system, how good are the teachers doing, i found 95% of the adults were being rated as doing a great job. how can you have a system where all the workers are thinking we are doing a great job for our kids and what we are producing for them is 8% success. >> she visited schools and saw empty classrooms. >> i walk into this one school and go to the first classroom. five kids in the classroom. same classroom. nine kids. third, three kids. seven kids. i'm thinking what is going on and i get to like the fifth or sixth classroom and i ask the teacher where are all the kids. and she said well, it's friday. i thought really? i just couldn't believe that was the answer. so i said is that all? and she said no. i thought great she is going to tell me that some of the kids are on a field trip or something like that. she said it's raining, too. >> it turned out not every classroom was empty.
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attendian varied by teacher. >> i'm walking through and finishing my visit and i walk into one classroom and there are 30 kids in this classroom. there are not enough desks for the number of kids there. there were kids sit only the radiators and i go to one of the kids and said what do you thing about the teacher. he said this is my best teacher bar none. >> as i was leaving the school and this is 10:00 in the moring that young man and two of his friends were walking out of school in front of me. i tapped them on the shoulder and said where do you think you are going. >> they said our first period teacher was great so we came to school but our second period teacher is not so good so we are going to roll. i thought this is not the picture that the american public have in their minds of truants. they were making a conscious decision to come early and get to first period because they were going to get something out of it and leave after that
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>> and this great teacher gets paid no more. >> right. gets paid to more. >> reid decided she would pay good teachers more and fire bad teachers. >> that did not go over particularly well. >> reid must go. >> a few weeks into this i was visited by my then general counsel and he comes rushing into the office and says you have to stop firing people. i said why? i mean people are not doing the jobs that they are supposed to be doing. we need to move them out. and he said well, welcome to d.c. public schools where we never fire any one. >> but you did fire a lot of these people. >> we did. >> reid found a 90 day loophole that let her close some lousy schools and fire some teachers. >> nothing short of a firestorm surrounding the future of the d.c. public school system. >> 30 public school teachers being fired. >> it was a plan. a plot even before she took the
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job to get rid of people who have been around who have tenure. >> you fired 200 of 4,000 teachers. closed 15% of the city's schools. feared your own daughter's principal. >> that was a chilly night at home. >> she upset families, communities. students and teachers. a lot of people got fired. >> she said they deserved to be fired. the system needs change. >> many of those thought she needed to be fired in people really hated you. hate you still. >> yeah. i was the wicked witch of the west. they called me the hatchett lady. the dragon lady. the teacher terminate. big bad witch. time magazine even put you on the cover with a broom. >> i took to that mean sweeping the schools. >> don't you have some union teachers who are just lousy.
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>> we need to left up the low performers and help them do better. >> why not just fire them. sorry, maybe teaching is not for you? >> there is a cost to fire teachers. the quality of life of that person is deeply affected by that termination. >> so nobody should ever be fired? >> well, what we should do is help people improve their skills. >> people would say to me well, if a teacher is not effective you should talk about spending the time and effort to professionally he develop that person, right. i would say okay, but whose children are we going to put in that classroom for this year? >> who are you going to practice on? >> right. who are you going to say oh, and it didn't work out, sorry. yom get one chance at first grade. >> so she changed the policy. >> i made the decision we will do the layoffs by quality instead of seniority. and this really upset the apple cart and people were
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protesting. >> why would it upset the apple cart? it is just common sense to do it by quality. >> common sense to you and me but it was absolutely counter to what the district had always done. it is the way that unions operate, right. i mean seniority. >> just cheats the good young teacher. don't they get bad. >> for get the young teachers. >> kids were a little less cheated under rhee. test scores went up when she was chancellor. in the end the union won. >> you can get her out. >> we will fight. we have to be here every day all day all night we will. >> the mayor who appointed her was voted out and when lost rheeed quit before she was fired. >> so rhee lost in d.c. but elsewhere in america all sorts of new schools are succeeding and exciting things are happening.
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people who try to start charter schools often say the bureaucrats make is so hard and put up all these obstacles and whether that is why there aren't enough charters yet to have a real market except in one town most kids now attend charters. how did that happen? hurricane katrina on track to make a direct hit on the low
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lying city of new orleans. >> it happened because of a hurricane. >> in all eyes on new orleans. >> this entire area will be under water. ♪ >> mother nature is in charge and now mother nature has dealt one horrific blow. >> when katrina flooded new orleans it didn't just destroy much of the city it h also destroyed the school system. some school reformers thought maybe that is what needed to happen. >> it was probably one of the worst school districts in the country. was a who are. before katrina our schools were just failing. >> the choice was do you rebuild what was there or build something entirely new? >> louisiana built something new. they made it easy for people to open charters. >> you tell the state here is my plan. >> ben marcowitz started a charter school.
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>> we have complete control over the walt of our instruction. >> when started the school he was the only employee. he drove his car around new orleans until 3:00 in the morning putting up signs advertising his school. >> and this number right here that was my cell phone. >> he had to advertise because students had to choose to go there. >> they didn't just get sent here because they live nearby. >> we are putting these up everywhere. >> he even went to people's houses to recruit. >> living in new orleans, we never had that. >> her son reggie goes to the academy. >> he came out and he interviewed and talked to me and talked to reggie and was explaining to him about the hours and academics and stuff. >> when the school opened only a third of the students were proficient on state tests. >> i know half of them didn't know how to read. >> now, the academy test results are among the test in the city. even though the school itself is just a bunch of trailers. >> there is a plan in my mind to have a permanent building
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but if you walk into a school and the first thing they he tell you are complaint complait the facilities they are probably not focused on the right things. >> how did they do it? well, teachers have to perform because the principal can fire at will. >> we have at will contracts at the school. >> sharon clark runs another new orleans charter and she, too, fires the weakest teachers. >> i call it freeing up a person's future. >> it also allows parents to fire a school. if they don't like this school they can send their kid to another. sharon needs to work hard because she worries about losing her charter. >> every day, sir. >> good morning, class of 2013! >> the competition drives schools to try different things like this morning ritual. >> who are you. >> my education is my future and the future is now. >> why are you here? >> this seems a little cult like and some kids didn't take
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it ear siriusly but something worked. >> it is an amazing difference. since he has been here he has become more responsible. thinking. >> even though i didn't like the school at first as i went to school i started to want to go to college more because i saw how important it was. >> now, reggie's mother is getting ready to start college so reggie tutored her for a test learning skills he learned. >> this is how it should have been before katrina. >> this charter has gone from one employee into another school that is so popular is holds a lottery to decide who gets in. >> we are going to have a waiting list of about 200 students long. >> as you saw in harlem, nervous kids and relatives sit anxiously hoping their name will be he called. some go away happy. >> yeah! >> most do not.
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>> it just goes to show this kind of school is sadly needed in the city and this kind of education is exactly what we need to be offering every single kid. >> today, most kids in new orleans attend charter schools and test scores across the city are better. >> many of the greatest cities in the world have been reborn amid crisis. the chicago fire resulted in a greater chicago being built. the san francisco earthquake resulted in a much more dynamic safer city emerging. the fire of london resulted in a much greater capital emerging. well, you know, people in new orleans are rebuilding the city for the better. the school of choice movement is here to stay. it will never go back. >> and next, some more good news, this time from the internet. the blob should be worried because look how excited these kids are about math. ♪
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do your kids have a good teacher? how do you know? maybe the teacher next door is better. maybe there is a better teacher in another state. maybe there is a world's best teacher or several. wouldn't it be great if your kids could have that teacher? well, today, yes, you can. >> yeah, i got it! >> wooed! >> yeah! >> these kids are this excited about a math website. >> it is amazing. >> negative four minus four and we are done. >> it taught me a lot of things. >> five years ago, hedge fund analyst sal khan created videos like these to tutor his cousin. >> that worked out well and i
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started tutoring h her brothers and i had to do the same lecture over and over again so i had a friend who said why don't you put your lectures on you tube. i decided to give it a shot. >> soon, thousands watched his lectures. >> i started getting letters from people and comments on youtube and they are not like hey, i think this kind of might of helped on my math exam. they are like i got -- i failed calculus the first team and i started watching the videos and now i'm acing the class. >> the youtube numbers kept rising and he got letters from the middle east, africa. >> what he has done is amazing. >> now, he is funded by bill gates and offers web lectures on everything from history to economics to computer science. h his videos are are viewed million is of times. >> not only is it reaching millions of students right now but even if i got hit by a bus when i walked outside it will still be able to reach millions
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and maybe even billions of students. >> he happened to be good teaching. >> i will take that as a compliment. >> it is a compliment. he is a great teach. i hope that helps. see you in the next video. >> it is helping us learn a lot more. >> it is exciting that he gets kids so excited about math. >> yeah. >> in most parts of life, things have gotten much better. cars, computers, cell phones. education not so much. >> right. you know, you rewind 80 or 90 or 00 years and you would have the local band if you had a party that was the only gig in town. >> each village might have a story tell are or singer. >> exactly. once you have mass media coming out they say why don't we take the best musician and best actor and story teller in whatever way and record it and put it out on radio and put it out on records or whatever and i think in theory that could have happened with education before. >> but it hasn't. even for basic math,
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multiplication tables i thought they would be using video games. >> why not. >> there is a huge bureaucracy which wants to say no to change the system. >> a about blob people call it. >> it is the blob. and it is. protesters whawhat is fun fromf view is we are able to reach students outside of the blob. >> teachers were skeptical but how to know are impressed what it does for the kids. >> they are happy to walk in the door and excited about math. it isn't like we are doing math. it is like oh, my gosh, we have math this morning. it's great. >> we assume that most people on their own tonight want to learn or get engaged in math mathematics. >> i think they are frustrated because most are in classrooms that are not catering to them. >> at first teachers worried that the online instruction could replace them. >> i think it is so wrong as me teachers would tell you they have taught more math than they have ever taught before.
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>> now, teachers can tutor kids one on one. >> i notice you were having issues with fractions. >> you can go on your own pace. >> and because kids can go at their own pace. >> i have students who are still working on easy multiplication and then i have kids working in high school math. >> some epijoy the lessons so much they study at home. >> some are doing two or three hours a night at home and i'm asking for 15 minutes. >> i log on. it is fun to do math. >> finally after all these years of kids being bored in school and not learning math that is over. >> i think it might be. >> hope so. if it happens it will be thanks to those online classes. for the charter school. or other ex-pairments that break out of the union dominated government kno monop. let a thousand flowers bloom. competition has given us better medication, technology,
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everything. don't our kids deserve that, too? >> that is our show. i'm john stossel. captioned by closed captioning services, inc. to that car insurance alone just last year. mmm, it's got a nice bouquet. our second car insurance, y. mmmmm, oh, i can see by your face they just lost another customer. you chose geico over the competitor. calm down, calm down. you're getting carried away.
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