Opinion

MARY ANN WOLF: Top N.C. education issues for 2023

Monday, Feb. 13, 2023 -- We are not talking about throwing money at problems and hoping they somehow get fixed. We're talking about research-based solutions and shifting from viewing education as an expense to viewing it as an investment in our state, our economy, and our communities.
Posted 2023-02-12T22:01:41+00:00 - Updated 2023-02-13T10:00:00+00:00

EDITOR'S NOTE: The following is the "Final Word" by Mary Ann Wolf from the Feb. 11, 2023 broadcast of Education Matters: "Top Education Issues." Wolf is president and executive director of the Public School Forum of North Carolina.

The polarization of the last few years is undeniable. Many people have chosen vehement support of their own side over any alternative without even exploring those alternatives, but that should not and cannot be how we make our education policy decisions in North Carolina. Public schools are the cornerstone of our communities, our democracy, and our economy.  Putting aside political differences and centering our students is imperative to making the policy decisions necessary to secure a better future for our state.

Decades of disinvestment in public education compounded by a life-changing pandemic have left our schools in need of immediate action which many would likely call drastic. However, I’d argue that the more drastic matter is North Carolina being ranked as the Number 1 state for business while also being ranked 48th in per pupil expenditure and dead last in school funding effort. The billions in surplus funds from the 2022-23 state budget prove that we have the means to provide better for our children, but as a state have chosen not to.

The Public School Forum’s Top Education Issues represent The Forum’s policy agenda for the 2023-24 biennium and reflect our belief that North Carolina can overcome differences in political ideologies in order to provide our children with the sound education guaranteed to them by our state constitution.

2023 Top Education Issues:

  • Ensure fair and competitive compensation for educators
  • Grow, retain and diversify the teacher pipeline
  • Address the root causes of mental health and school safety crises
  • Prepare students for the world they live in
  • Implement, monitor and evaluate the Comprehensive Remedial Plan

You can view the full report, including the policy action items and background on each issue here.

At The Forum’s 2023 Eggs & Issues Breakfast, nearly 400 education stakeholders from across our state gathered with many more chiming in on social media, demonstrating that preparing our children for the future is something people in North Carolina care deeply about and is undoubtedly worth the investment.

We are not talking about throwing money at problems and hoping they somehow get fixed. We’re talking about research-based solutions and shifting from viewing education as an expense to viewing it as an investment in our state, our economy, and our communities. If we want to remain a top state for business, we must also become a stop state for education and prepare North Carolina’s kids to become the leaders of tomorrow.

Possibly more important than the investment, though, is the responsibility. In November 2022 the North Carolina Supreme Court issued a ruling upholding our state constitution and the rights of our students by calling on the state to fully fund years 2 and 3 of the Comprehensive Remedial Plan. We now have a legal obligation to do better, and it is my hope that it will motivate us to continue to provide our public schools with the resources they need, without extensive legal and political battles.

Divisiveness got us to our current state, which is why it cannot continue to have a place in education policy decision-making. This year, The Public School Forum of North Carolina urges our lawmakers and stakeholders to recognize the responsibility we all have and the urgency to act quickly to meet the needs of each and every student in North Carolina.

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