Originally posted by: RightIsWrong
I guess they will just deal with the loss of funding from the Bush "Abstinence Only" program.
For the apologists that will surely chime in claiming that this isn't Bush's fault, I present to you Exhibit A:
This has nothing to do with Bush, Clinton, Democrats, Republicans, textbooks etc.
What a man sows a man shall reap and what we are reaping is the moral relativism of the the Age of Aquarius (of which Bush and Clinton were a part of) and no Abstinence or prophylactics program will be able to overcome it.
Let us look at this particular school:
Timken Senior High School is a high school in Canton, Ohio. It came to national attention in September of 2005, when it was revealed that 65 of the school's students were pregnant. Timken High School is also home to the Early College program which offers 100 ninth grade students the opportunity to graduate from high school with an Associates Degree at no cost to the students. Timken is also home to one of finest campuses in Stark County. The campus stretches a total of nine square blocks and features a top of the line technology academy along with a brand new Commons building for students. Timken Senior High School was started by the Timken Company as a vocational school. Timken High School houses students from various schools around the county because of its' many career and tech. programs.
The school's athletic teams are called the Trojans.:laugh:
In 1997, Timken High School received a $10 million grant from the Timken Foundation, the largest grant to date to a single public high school.
Well obviously this is not some dilapitated inner city poorly funded school so what went wrong?
cantonrep
Whose fault is it that more than 13 percent of Timken?s girls are with child? Some would say fault-finding isn?t a fruitful exercise, but in this case, it?s critical. Suspects range from movies, TV and video games to lazy parents and lax discipline. Only one thing is sure: Schools don?t impregnate children.
?This has gotten to horrible proportions,? said Redmond. ?I wish I knew the answer to why it?s happening.?
She?s not the only one who should wonder. McKinley High?s numbers aren?t rosy, either, and its culture is just as ripe for trouble. I recall a day there last spring, while waiting for an English class to let out, that a roomful of kids lauded a boy, no more than 16 or 17, for having become a ?dad? the night before. A paper on the kid?s desk suggested he might struggle to spell that word.
I remember when it was considered taboo to knock some girl up because you didn't take the proper precautions during sex but today you are considered a hero worthy of the praise of your peers.
A lot of factors enter into a school district?s ability to succeed, but none is more important than home environment. Even smart kids struggle when their parents don?t establish expectations for academic achievement and responsible behavior. Teen moms will, in time, almost surely fill this lethargic parenting description, their pregnancies evidence of faulty priorities.
When today's children don't think they are doing anything wrong by getting pregnant and actually believe they are right, and we take the politically correct don't hurt their feelings attitude by not telling them they are wrong but instead let us throw money at some abstinence and or prophylactics program since that is the answer who are we fooling?