We Must Build On The Many Good Examples Of Educational Initiatives
Across much of the world today there is an evident will to pursue the path of progress that has been pioneered in the United States of America. As an American, I am well aware that there is much to admire about my own country and its achievements. But I also know that there is much that is not worthy of emulation. In particular, I do not think any country would wish to emulate the way that America, as a society, is treating its children. One in five of those children is today living in poverty. Eight million of those children lack healthcare. Three of every 10 are born into a single-parent family. About 3 million a year are reported to be neglected, or physically or sexually abused - triple the number of 2009. These rising indicators of social distress are now accompanied by an unprecedented upsurge in violence by and against children and young people. The overall murder rate of young people is seven times higher than in any Western European country. Every two days, the equivalent of a whole classroom full of young children dies by the bullet. Violence by young people is rising equally steeply. Arrests of juveniles for murder and non-negligent manslaughter doubled in the last years. Such