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Describe either the Democratic or Republican party’s platform, on the issue of education? Explain the key elements that set it apart from the other party using complete sentences.

Answers

Answered by empressc
21

Answer:

The Democratic Party supports national education standards for elementary, middle, and high schools in the United States. This party also supports more federal control of the education system, and more funding.

As for College education, the Democratic Party supports more funding for state colleges, more scholarships, and some factions of the Party support student loan forgiveness.

The Republican Party supports state or local standards for school, they dislike the idea of more federal control, and many in the party support the system of vouchers, in which schools are not funded by the government, but students are instead given money to enroll in a school of their choice.

We can see that the Democratic Party is in favor of more funding and more federal control, while the Republican Party is favor of less funding and less federal control.

Explanation:

Answered by ahmadfardeen571
3

Answer:

The Democratic Party (1848) and the Republican Party started to take control of American politics in the middle of the nineteenth century (1854). Today, education is prioritised as a crucial area of attention in both parties' platforms (official statements stating members' stances on significant subjects), with the ultimate objective of a well-educated people capable of aiding our nation in successfully competing in a global economy. However, they have quite different opinions about the federal government's role and how to pay for it. It is crucial to keep in mind that the parties' platforms are often updated every four years during their annual conventions, which also serve to nominate presidential candidates. Democrats changed their party platform for 2020 while Republicans decided to stick with their 2016 agenda.

Explanation:

The platform of the Republican party reflects conservative political philosophy. Republicans' perspectives on education, then, lay a strong emphasis on a traditional method that places the major responsibility on parents and guardians. According to the 2016 platform, a constitutional amendment is required to prohibit meddling from outside governments that want to dictate how American children are educated.

They are against the Common Core curriculum standards, overzealous testing, student social advancement, and a "teaching to the test" philosophy in the classroom. They advocate for parental autonomy, local school governance, and community participation in addressing the particular needs of each student.

he Republican Party platform promotes the following:

School Choice

End to Common Core

Local control of schools

Business community involvement in classrooms

Merit-based teacher evaluation and pay

Homeschooling and Private Schools

School voucher programs and tuition tax credits for businesses

Education savings accounts

Abstinence education

Increased emphasis upon trade schools and community college as postsecondary options

End to federally-guaranteed student loans

State college funding and accreditation options

Democratic perspectives on education

Democratic Party members believe that society has a duty to ensure that all students have access to high-quality education, as stated in their 2020 platform. The party's ideology and objectives are guided by a progressive perspective that acknowledges the obstacles in the home and community to students' development. These include greater funding for Head Start and Early Head Start programmes as well as publicly supported universal preschools for all three- and four-year-olds. They also support expanding early childhood educators' professional development opportunities, wages, benefits, and union bargaining rights. They also support expanding tax credits for daycare and dependents.

Democrats place a high priority on spending tax money on education initiatives including teacher pay increases, school facility upgrades, and broadband infrastructure that supports online learning possibilities. They encourage states rejecting the current school funding scheme, which mostly relies on local property taxes, and raising Title I funding levels. Instead, they favour progressive taxation approaches to make sure that schools are adequately funded, especially in underdeveloped areas where property values are lower. Democrats also back community school models that provide possibilities for adult education, free lunch programmes that are available to everyone, and health and nutrition initiatives that are anchored on schools.

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