McGraw+Hill+Research+-+U.S.+Should+Raise+Teacher+Status

Amid a nationwide stir in which teachers' rights are up for discussion, a new report says the U.S. should raise the status of the profession.
==The McGraw-Hill Research Foundation's "What the U.S. Can Learn from the World's Most Successful Education Reform Efforts" says the U.S. should take a hint from education systems in top-scoring countries. Nations such as South Korea, Singapore and Finland seek out top level college grads and offer greater pay and mentoring for teachers, the report says.== ==In an education speech Monday, President Obama repeated sentiments from his State of the Union address, calling for greater respect of teachers and lauding foreign education system, the //New York Times// reports.== > =="In South Korea, teachers are known as nation builders. I think it's time we treated our teachers with the same level of respect right here in the United States of America."== ==Obama has made education a primary focus and is pushing Congress for reform by September. He'd like to see better efforts made that support teachers, leaving much room for creativity and growth and little room for poor teaching, the //Associated Press// reports. Obama has stressed that education cuts are not an option.== ==Andreas Schleicher, one of the report authors, tells the New York Times the U.S. spends education dollars disproportionately on areas such as bus transportation and sports facilities.== > =="You can spend a lot of money on education, but if you don't spend it wisely, on improving the quality of instruction, you won't get higher student outcomes," Mr. Schleicher said.==

Some of the school's chosen teachers include Rhena Jasey, a Harvard grad who's been teaching for eight years and Gina Galassi, an accomplished violist who teaches music.
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