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"A person can grow only as
much as his horizon allows."
—John Powell
HOW EDUCATION FARED ON
ELECTION DAY
The Education Commission of the States (www.ecs.org)
reported on the results of education initiatives around the country in Tuesday's
election in the USA...
In Massachusetts, voters overwhelmingly rejected bilingual education and replaced
it with all-English classes, defying educators and politicians who had warned
the contentious measure would spell disaster for thousands of students struggling
to learn English. Returns showed Question 2 winning with 70% of the vote.
Until Colorado, every place
he tried to eliminate bilingual education by ballot initiative, Ron Unz won
by a landslide. But Amendment 31, the Colorado version of the "English
for the Children" initiatives Unz has been placing on state ballots since
1998, went down to defeat Tuesday night. Voters rejected the measure, which
would have banned native-language support for
immigrant pupils and mandated one year of English immersion.
In Florida, Amendment 8,
which will make pre-kindergarten available to all 4-year-olds throughout Florida
-- easily won passage.
In California, a measure designed by actor Arnold Schwarzenegger to funnel more
state money into after-school programs was approved by California voters. Proposition
49, the After School Education and Safety Program Act of 2002, earmarks up to
$550 million of the state's annual budget for tutoring, homework assistance,
and other enrichment activities.
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