|
|
||
Spotsylvania School Board Battlefield District candidates talk about the issues Date published: 10/22/2007
BY KAREN BOLIPATA
Two veteran educators are running for the Spotsylvania County School Board's Battlefield District seat, a position Charles Cowsert is leaving to try for the Board of Supervisors. Nathaniel Young, 67, is a former Fredericksburg School Board member and high school teacher. Linda Wieland, 52, taught in Spotsylvania for 30 years. Young, pastor of Beulah Baptist Church in Woodford, said parents should be more involved with their children's education to improve academic achievement. "The parents need to be made aware of the fact that they're basically responsible for their child's education, not the school system," Young said. "They need to work in partnership with the school system." Schools should have a friendlier environment for parents and provide workshops or programs, he added. To encourage participation, some meetings could be held in the community, perhaps in centers or churches. The honor roll should include all students with a 3.0 grade-point average, regardless of C's on their report cards. Currently, the county disqualifies students with C's. The Fredericksburg School Board changed their honor-roll policy during Young's nine-year tenure. "I think it's more inclusive," he said. Wieland said joining the board would be a natural transition from a long teaching career. "I have, for 30 years, fought for the kids in doing what's best for them," she said. "If I'm elected to the School Board, I will continue to do that because that's what the school business is all about." She said she's concerned about the emphasis placed on standardized testing. As a parent and former teacher, she has been on both sides of the issue. Her son feels he is being tested too much, Wieland said, yet she has administered the tests. "I think we need to take good hard looks at what kinds of assessments we're doing with the children--are they all necessary?" she said. And the 100-percent-pass rate of No Child Left Behind in 2014 won't happen, she said. "In a realistic society, not everybody is going to, no matter how hard we try," Wieland said. "But our job as educators is to channel those children, in my mind, to areas where they can succeed." Both candidates want to expand the county's vocational training program.
Date published: 10/22/2007
1. Be respectful. No personal attacks.
|
|
||||||||||||||