^^^ If you're interested enough in his concrete plans, pick up his book. He is more detailed in it, for instance, on his view of education policies. He says that he supports programs that pay teachers at least partially based on merit, but is careful to point out that the means of evaluating good teachers should be designed by educators themselves (not merely an evaluation of students standardized test scores).
I'm not 100% sure on this next part, but I'm pretty sure he also talks about how he'd like to see the public school funding system change so that property taxes more evenly fund schools (so you don't have adjacent districts with incredibly disparate resources based on the economic differences between those districts).
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