Trust in South Carolina: A Comprehensive Strategy and Movement to Realize the Human Potential of Everyone: Coming Onboard?

Are there enough of us to spark a fire to reinvent South Carolina? Leave your comment below or join our group on Facebook

The greatest opportunity we have in South Carolina is tapping into the innate human potential of everyone in the state.

In the past decade, we have laid important foundations of our future success, and it is time to consolidate our gains and accelerate the pace of progress. There is no better time to launch this movement than at the depths of an economic storm, because major institutions from industry to academia to government will be very different coming out of this crisis than they were going in. The storm has positioned some incredibly talented people, through their choice or not, to launch the greatest entrepreneurial explosion of our lives in the coming years.

It is also a good time to build this movement because in 2010 we will elect a new South Carolina Governor for the first time in eight years, whose vision and mandate will determine much of what we can accomplish as a state in the following four to eight years. The Trust in South Carolina movement is built on elements to influence the debate in the coming year and create a constituency to support reinventing education and economic development policy as the basis for realizing the full human potential of everyone in South Carolina.

Enormous Potential in South Carolina - Realize the untapped human potential of everyone. Everyone benefits from living in an educated, prosperous community with technically skilled people around us who deliver everything from healthcare to car care. Deep, focused clusters of educated, innovative people are our only sustainable, competitive advantage in a global marketplace. Our enlightened self interest and our mutual responsibility is ensuring that all children have access to high-quality K-12 education that develops their critical thinking skills and is as diverse as they are, and that all adults have access to a high-quality, affordable higher education.

Modern Economic Development - Build a strategy around talent as only sustainable competitive advantage. Economic development strategies must be based on growing clusters of globally preeminent talent supported by a workforce with word-class skills. The state must have a strong pipeline of talent from K-12 to technical colleges to four year institutions to graduate programs to employment and entrepreneurial opportunities.

Accessible Higher Education - Enhance access to low cost higher education for all adults. Per capital income in South Carolina will not increase without raising the level of educational attainment in the state. Any adult, from recent high school graduates to working adults, should have low cost access to a technical college in South Carolina to improve their skills. A seamless transition must exist from the first two years at a technical college to the final two years at a four year institution, so more students start out low cost at home and finish at a university. The quality of our research universities must continue to improve so they serve as magnets to attract and retain preeminent talent in South Carolina, through programs like the endowed research chairs and Palmetto Scholarships.

Innovative K-12 Education - Empower parents and teachers to run excellent, innovative public schools. People should come to South Carolina to learn how we created one of most effective and innovative public education systems in the world. The key to rocketing to the top is giving teachers their profession back, by operating all schools as charter schools, with clear, transparent accountability that emphasizes critical thinking skills and creativity as essential to our children's success. While doing that, we must ensure access to high quality public schools for all students, especially children in poverty. We should consolidate the SC Department of Education and school districts into one statewide entity providing oversight and support, freeing parents and teachers in affluent areas to manage their schools, and providing the dollars saved to poor communities for salaries of excellent teachers.

Low, Broad Tax Base - Everyone pays a little bit of what is required. Our tax structure must be reformed to create low rates and a broad base that generates the resources needed to provide essential government services to the citizens of the state.

Modern State Government - Legislature creates policy, and Governor executes it. Our current constitution was adopted in 1895 and intentionally fragments state government because the authors were concerned that a black would be elected Governor. It is essential that we write a new South Carolina constitution as a foundation for an effective and efficient state government appropriate to the needs of the 21st century.

Consensus Based Leadership - Working together in our enlightened self-interest. Because of our fragmented state government, currently our strategy for moving the state forward is fragmented between departments like Commerce, Agriculture, Transportation, Parks, Recreation and Tourism, and Education, as well as agencies like SCRA, the Commission on Higher Education, and the Ports Authority. Given that most of these entities do not report to the Governor, but are essential to modern economic development, the next Governor must have a strong track record of leading by consensus.

See 11256 other posts submitted by John Warner. Find articles, people, and videos related to: Economic Development

Steve - I did an interview one time with Virginia Uldrick, founder of the Governor's School for the Arts and Humanities. She said she was an out of the box thinker, and she recruited out of the box thinkers on her faculty. One was Stanislav Issaev who had won the Nijinsky Prize, also won by Nureyev and Baryshnikov, as the best male dancer in the world.

She raised money from the Legislature, and so was accountable to them for results. I asked her how she managed that creative tension between being accountable while being out of the box. She told me that she told Stanislav that he had to give her what was essential for the school to exist. Once he did that, she would build him a stage to perform at the highest level.

That is the school we all want our children to attend. In fact, that is the organization we all want to work in.

We need to give teachers their professionals back and let them do their jobs. That does not mean teachers are unaccountable, any more than Stanislav was. We need clear, transparent accountability for all schools, published on their web sites for all the world to see, that emphasizes critical thinking skills and creativity as essential to our children's success.

Creative, innovative teachers will develop excellent educational alternatives for students, and parents can choose from among the best options available for their children.

That is how we break out of the stagnant, bureaucratic education culture we have today, to create an education system that is among the best in the world. Be clear with teachers about what is essential, then get out of their way and let them do their jobs.

John

I like the idea, but I dislike the idea of making every public school a charter school. Getting rid of some of the rigidity would be great, but not all bureaucracy is bad, and that assumption seems to underlie the premise. How would you coordinate and manage what would essentially cease to be a "system"?

I also like the idea of a progressive system of taxation, and I'm not sure a "low, broad" system meets that requirement. I'm also worried that a "low, broad" system will unnecessarily burden those with the least ability to pay, especially when the state needs to raise taxes to pay for essential services such as k-12 and higher education. What we need is a total revamping of the state's revenue system, to go along with a new constitution.

A new constitutional convention for the state is necessary: it has been necessary since 1895. This time, the constitution should be submitted to the people for ratification. That has only happened once in the state's history, if I recall correctly.

Well said, John, all of it. South Carolina's special challenge is to retain our commitment to self-reliance but lose our insistence on ideological libertarianism.