The daily collegian. (University Park, Pa.) 1940-current, October 28, 1987, Image 7

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    Gilhool: All children important
By CAROL CHASE
Collegian Staff Writer
Pennsylvania State Secretary of Education Thomas
Gilhool urged primary and secondary school officials
to improve classroom instruction "so no child is left
behind."
Gilhool was the guest speaker at the Pennsylvania
School Study Council annual fall conference held
yesterday in the Nittany Lion Inn.
The Secretary of Education challenged more than
130 Pennsylvania primary and secondary school
superintendents, principals and teachers to "find the
energy and the will to educate every child to the top of
the curriculum.
"The heart of the matter clearly is instruction,"
Gilhool said.
More than 100 schools of high low-income in the state
are making huge strides in education that should be
emulated by other state schools, he said.
Donald Willower, acting dean of the College of
Education, urged school administrators to build and
create their own tradition in their schools and make
learning a memorable experience, citing the
University as an example.
"(Penn State) has a whole series of traditions . . .
that emphasize a life-long attachment for its alumni,'
Willower said.
Dan Cilo, council graduate assistant, said this
tradition might not be a winning football team which
everyone rallies around, but a great math program, for
instance.
Willower said administrators need to cultivate moral
authority and be better planners and leaders.
Schools need leaders who are dedicated to making
the organization work, but responsibility should not
rest on one person, he said.
One way to spread the responsibility is to give
parents and teachers more decision-making freedom
in school matters, Willower said.
Gilhool said teachers should be able to make
decisions about teaching and leadership.
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ITeachers should) find the
energy and the will to educate
every child to the top of the
curriculum.'
Thomas Gilhool, state secretary of
education, at the Pennsylvania School
Study Council conference
Willower said new talent is opening up in schools
with more women entering administrative jobs.
"You are the wave of the future," Willower told
women administrators, and he urged the audience to
strongly consider hiring future women school
administration applicants.
Willower spoke in place of Ted Elsberg, acting
president of the American Federation of School
Administrators, who could not attend.
About 150 school districts out of 500 in the state are
members of the council, said Paul Bredeson, council
executive director. The council is part of Penn State's
College of Education and provides information and
programs for member school districts, intermediate
units and area vo-technical schools.
Bredeson said the council is starting an electronic
bulletin board linking the University, the State
Department of Education and all council member
school districts in the state.
The board, called Penn*Link, will provide a link
connecting the research of the council to enhance the
education in schools across the state, Bredeson said.
Penn*Link will provide services ranging from
providing University schedules to financial planning,
he said.
The conference continues‘oday, and addresses the
role of instructional leaders in today's public school
systems and delegating authority on educational
issues.
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Official: press
needs an eye
on free market
CHICAGO (AP) The media
should focus as much attention on
threats to economic rights and free
market competition as it does on
"hunting the bimbos and the plagiar
ists," Federal Trade Commission
Chairman Daniel Oliver said yester
day.
Freedom of speech has received
more protection than economic free
doms and "I think that preference
has been unwise," Oliver told mem
bers of the Inland Daily Press Asso
ciation at the group's annual
convention.
While the media and government
are concerned with making sure ev
eryone gets a fair shake, they too
often ignore impediments to a free
market such as minimum-wage
laws and protectionist trade policies
that threaten the disadvantaged,
he said.
"In the economic sphere, our free
dom has too often been shackled" by
secial interests, Oliver said.
"In world trade, Japan has un
doubtedly been helped by a constitu
tional prohibition against any law
that interferes with the ability of
Japanese companies to export," he
said.
In the United States, he added, "we
pay lip service to the idea of competi
tion."
The FTC chairman said threats to
free market competition include "un
warranted" regulations in some
states that require people to get li
censes to install lightning rods, or to
become beekeepers.
But we Feel no
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The Daily Collegian Wednesday, Oct. 28, 1987-7
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