(Chronicle U.)-Sen. John McCain’s chief education adviser, Lisa Graham Keegan,
found herself in a tough spot Thursday when asked by the moderator of a
New America Foundation forum to lay out the Republican presidential nominee’s agenda for higher education.
“I can’t do that because the Senator hasn’t done that yet,” Ms. Keegan said. “I apologize for the timing.”
“I
am going to let him do that when he wants to,” Ms. Keegan said, “and
simply say that he has been a long-term supporter and enthusiast about
the idea that we have to connect kids in high schools immediately into
their postsecondary experience, whatever that’s going to be. That
transition is so fragile mostly because we are not doing a good job in
the K-12 system.”
It was not like Ms. Keegan had nothing at
all to say about education. The forum on John McCain and Barack Obama’s
education plans focused mainly on how the two presidential candidates
would improve public education from kindergarten through 12th grade,
and she had plenty to say about Senator McCain’s plans to try to get
more good teachers into schools through alternative certification. LINK to Article