News
May 2, 2008
Bob Wise book urges reforms in high schools
Advertisement - Your ad here

Former West Virginia Gov. Bob Wise sees a crisis in American high schools, and hopes citizens and politicians take note.

Wise, who left office in 2005, is president of the Alliance for Excellent Education, a Washington, D.C., nonprofit organization that seeks better high schools and strives for more graduates.

Wise says his new book - "Raising the Grade: How High School Reform Can Save Our Youth and Our Nation" - is a call to action.

In the book, Wise speaks fondly of his West Virginia roots and remembers visiting workers at a shirt factory before it closed. He wrote that "the economic forces rumbling thousands of miles away from rural West Virginia were inexorably in play."

He still wonders where those workers ended up.

"I talked about West Virginia because West Virginia is what I've known all my life," Wise said. "I wish I had known as governor and in Congress what I've learned the last three years of my life."

Wise now works primarily in urban areas, but has noticed that the crisis affects people across the country. Every day, America's education system lags further behind its competitors in the global workforce and turns off high school students in the process, he said.

"Those low-skill jobs that paid a livable wage are gone and they're gone across most of the country," he said.

As governor, Wise hoped his efforts helped expand students' access to college and opened up more opportunities for pre-kindergarten children.

"Having said that, I think I missed the middle," Wise said. "I didn't focus enough on high schools and middle schools. A lot of this book is about what I wish I had known. High school is the jumping-off spot for the rest of life."

Wise wrote in the book about 10 elements of a successful high school, such as rigorous coursework, personal attention given to all students, extra help for students who need it, family and community involvement, skilled teachers and more.

He describes a new federal role that focuses more resources and attention on "reinventing the American high school experience." That said, Wise does not want to take dollars away from early and post-secondary education.

"I am saying that education is a continual process," Wise said. "If you build us a foundation, you still need help finishing the house."

Advertisement - Your ad here
Report a violation or offensive comment.
[X] Close
to report abuse.

It's easy to follow the top stories with home delivery of The Charleston Gazette.

Click here to order home delivery.

Advertisement - Your ad here