http://www.cnn.com/2009/LIVING/03/30/cafferty.schools/index.html?iref=mpstoryview
3/30/2009 2:52:16 PM
3/30/2009 3:07:05 PM
Yay, homeschooling.
3/30/2009 3:10:08 PM
Much like other parts of the economy I think the public school system is broken. The federal gov't should never had gotten directly involved in the public school systems around the country. I have not met one teacher who likes NCLB; granted though thatthe issue of "teaching to the test" has existed way before Bush took office. I for one am a supporter of school vouchers. Every workingamerican pays into the public school system. If I have school age kids though I should be allowed to use my "portion" of taxed moneyto send my kids to a private school; espicially if the state of my local public school is sub-par.The current economic crisis has various causes due to the housing bubble, wall street, irresponsible consumers, and greed that we all know aboutbut I believe the economic struggles of this country will continue as our general overall level of education continues to lag behind.The meltdown of wallstreet has shown us that we can not rely on paper pushing and creating "virtual" wealth will no longer cut it. Tocreate real wealth we will have to continue to innovate and make "goods"/"services" people want to buy. A well educated people is the keyto this. Yet a quick glance at graduation ceremony quickly shows a disparity when over half the students in post undergrad engineering and PAMS classes are offoreign birth.
3/30/2009 3:16:07 PM
Wait, you mean only learning to speak one language fluently while coasting through public school systems that teach virtually nothing, will mean that our kids are significantly less intelligent and adaptable to the stresses of a global marketplace compared to students aboard who speak several languages fluently, including English, and strive for excellence in all fields of study for the hope of escaping their lower standards of living? What.... Ever!!..!!. My BFF Jill thinks ur lame...[Edited on March 30, 2009 at 3:17 PM. Reason : -]
3/30/2009 3:16:17 PM
http://arstechnica.com/science/news/2009/03/mixed-results-for-science-in-texas.arsWhen I read articles like that, it really does make me clamor for school vouchers. Our country is doomed when in this day and age, these dimwits talk about "fighting experts" when deciding science education policy. It's baffling, in a very sad way.
3/30/2009 3:39:48 PM
Not too long ago, an NYT video op-ed highlighted Sweden's system of school choice, which, based on the video, looks to work well. http://video.nytimes.com/video/2009/03/15/opinion/1194838660912/swedens-choice.html
3/30/2009 4:00:51 PM
Just to play devil's advocate here for a second: What long-term studies have been done on the effect that today's education will have on the future's society?Did the education of the children of 40-50 years ago have a significant impact on America's status as the dominant global power? How about before that? Were America's children more educated than Germany and Japan or Russia?Generally speaking, we don't need every kid to have the best education. Not everyone is going to Harvard (or even NCSU). America needs fry cooks, janitors, mechanics, maids, etc. And (though I can speak 2 languages) I question the whole superiority complex over knowing multiple languages. The only reason any of those people speak English is because Britain and then the US established this language as the global language. There are so many languages out there anyway that I suggest that if the goal is being "adaptable to the stresses of a global marketplace" that you will always have to hire someone who has a specific language skill for the job you're doing at the time.I guess I ask this because I see America as the most powerful, most influential nation in the world, but I don't imagine that the education gap between our children and the rest of the world's children was all that different 30-60 years ago.Finally as it stands now, my child will be going to public school. There is a lot more to school than the learning. At that age, I feel that learning social skills is probably way more important to gradual success. Plus I'll be requesting copies of the lesson plans and filling in the gaps or undoing any of the idiocy that may come through. That is, unless they teach Intelligent Design. Then it will be home school or move to a different school district.[Edited on March 30, 2009 at 4:36 PM. Reason : .]
3/30/2009 4:36:09 PM
lol, crisis? Haven't we been in an education crisis for the past 40 years? I know, let's just through more money at it, that will fix it! That is the mantra of our government right?
3/30/2009 4:49:53 PM
3/30/2009 5:32:00 PM
3/30/2009 9:39:17 PM
3/30/2009 9:46:17 PM
There are some very long posts in this thread, and I am drunk. I may read them later. You may refrain from reading my post now. Whatever. I shall post my brief thoughts on the subject, from the point of view of a substitute teacher, who both witnesses the flaws in public education and is generally separate from said system most of the time.There are key subcultures -- and, before HUR starts, these are not limited to the offspring of people named Shaneequa -- that do not value education, and who view active participation in the process as a sign of betrayal and weakness. I maintain, from my admittedly limited experience, that this is one of our chief problems.On more than one occasion, I would look over kids work -- not because I had to as a substitute, but because I was bored or curious. And on more than one of those occasions, I found that far and way the best work came from kids who went out of their way to avoid doing well. These were people who, despire missing many classes or refusing to turn in much work, still ultimatley performed better than most if not all of their classmates. And it doesn't take a genius to figure out why. Kids who excell at school (at least in certain environments) are targets for all sorts of abuse.Teaching to the test may not be the most efficient way to do things, but it's not our biggest problem. Federal involvement in education -- which I'm opposed to -- is not, either. Smashing the culture of proud ignorance and defiance is what needs to be done. The problem is, it can't be done without enormous overhauls in our operations.
3/30/2009 9:58:08 PM
3/30/2009 10:08:44 PM
Depressingly, I find myself agreeing wholeheartedly with your post.Obviously enough, the federal government needed to intervene in issues of segregation. Just as, now, they should intervene to force the teaching of accurate science and history (though, if other school systems want to teach "alternatives" alongside those in a remotely fair manner, I can live with that, too)I don't mind feds distributing some educational funds, with certain caveats (like those I mentioned above), though I do think such things should be reduced/redistributed to states.For once, though, we seem to be in agreement.
3/30/2009 10:15:08 PM
I question the number of those "proud and defiant" students who are doing work that is "far and away" the best in the class. Most of those kids really can't do basic work let alone stuff that is "far and away" the best...that's why it's so sad.I mean, if they were doing work that is far and away the best, then that would be a genius problem--kids who are tremendously smart and talented who don't want to stand out or who don't "buy in." I don't think this is the case with most failing students.About this culture of "proud ignorance and defiance," I've seen some kids who were neglected and socially promoted so much that, by the time they reached the seventh grade, they were completely over their heads. Not being able to read as well as their peers and having people laugh when they tried to answer a simple addition problem...that's embarrassing...and it's at that point that the "proud ignorance and defiance" kicks in as a defense mechanism. And it's fucked up they got ignored and neglected so bad by teachers (and maybe parents) when they were younger.
3/30/2009 10:56:25 PM
3/30/2009 11:05:47 PM
^Leave it to me to what?GrumpyGOP was the one who was trying to paint them as secretly talented people who are capable of far and away the best work but go out of their way to fail."If you only applied yourself, you could be the best!" does not apply to middle schoolers who can't read or solve math problems beyond a third grade level.It's just sad.
3/30/2009 11:16:27 PM
3/30/2009 11:38:06 PM
3/30/2009 11:43:03 PM
3/31/2009 12:06:59 AM
3/31/2009 12:52:52 AM
Actually, they aren't returning it to the state -- they are giving it to other, poorer states.
3/31/2009 4:38:18 AM
Watch this video, it will help to describe what I mean by the stresses of a global marketplace and the challenge Americans will face very soon:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cL9Wu2kWwSY
3/31/2009 7:27:04 AM
3/31/2009 7:44:40 AM
Stimwalt,I want my five minutes back from watching that garbage of a video. Oh god the Indians and Chinese are having more babies than us!
3/31/2009 10:46:58 AM
3/31/2009 10:50:26 AM
Well, in absolute terms, yes, the Chinese are having more children than we are. 500 million couples having one child each will produce more children than 150 million couples having three children each.
3/31/2009 10:57:53 AM
According to that video they are, and OH THE HORROR the Internet is expanding at an alarming rate.
3/31/2009 10:58:57 AM
That video contains factual data. Glossing over it all and commenting on only one statistic seems to suggest that you are being willfully ignorant of the details presented. I understand this may be a personal issue for you, but ignoring and/or rejecting what the video is conveying overall is simply a mistake. To each his own.
3/31/2009 11:49:44 AM
Then sum it up for me, Stimwalt. All I saw were statistics that were uninteresting and unrelated. Maybe it's my substandard American education, but I'm not seeing how any of it is relevant to the current discussion.
3/31/2009 11:54:38 AM
It should be a fairly easy task to see the disturbing parellels of a failing American public education system alongside the exponential expansion of the globalization of the world. If our public education systems do not align with progressive global trends, we will fall behind as the beacon of enlightenment in the world.
3/31/2009 12:04:54 PM
3/31/2009 12:30:04 PM
sorry bud; half of my posts occur during the day and are usually quick type-ups. I got other stuff to do than proof read checking grammar, spelling, and good sentence structure for everything I say.
3/31/2009 12:52:46 PM
Are there any legitimate reasons to oppose private school vouchers? We should be increasing the use of vouchers as much as possible every year until the public school system is shut down.
3/31/2009 12:53:30 PM
What are your arguments in favor of vouchers?Or is this going to be another one of those threads where you think that your position is so self-evidently correct that you don't need to deign to explain yourself to us mere mortals?
3/31/2009 1:44:28 PM
3/31/2009 1:56:31 PM
You can't really make a general conclusion that vouchers are good or bad based on the data that is out there. In some places, it has produced results. In some places, it has not. One big problem is that the private schools that pop up to get this voucher money are just as incompetent in their management and recruitment as the government. If an area tries out a voucher program, finds that it works, then good for them.Education reform debates tend to devolve into pointless bickering about policies that are neither here nor there. Instead of policies, the federal government should be figuring out ways to get talented managers and staff into schools and giving them the leeway to use their talent. The problem is that the different level of governments know that they are not recruiting high-level talent, so they feel that strict control is the way to make up for this deficit. However, it's sysiphian to pile on processes, tests, standardization, and micromanaging to make up for the known talent problem. Rather, the government should address the talent problem directly. If you have smart people running your schools and classrooms, they will figure out what works. This is how any successful organization works. Eduction is no different.Another good idea would be to not require an extreme level of altruism from applicants. [Edited on March 31, 2009 at 9:04 PM. Reason : .]
3/31/2009 9:00:25 PM
Rarely is the question asked, "Is our children learning?"
3/31/2009 9:32:46 PM
3/31/2009 11:52:30 PM
4/1/2009 8:22:26 AM
4/1/2009 9:40:04 AM
^ Well, some people do want to go to college. As such, even if the argument in favor of competition is not persuasive to you, allowing choice certainly should be. Afterall, if you kid wants to go to college, send them to the college prep school. If your kid wants to attend a vocational school, send them to one. You don't need vouchers to have choice. Simply permitting charter schools and allowing the money to follow the students would create choice and competition.
4/1/2009 4:00:27 PM
I'm sick and barely comprehending this thread, or else I'd have a real response. Until then, I'll just say that if you look at how schools are funded in places like Memphis, where I used to teach, you can see pretty clearly that it makes little to no sense.
4/1/2009 6:38:51 PM
^ I'm going to agree with you and concur that funding public primary education makes no sense whatsoever. The reason vouchers will never become universally available is simple. Our government cares more about its own self-promotion than any success of the children. Moreover, if you just let the $$ go where the talent resides, or the best system exists etc... (whatever you want to believe is the magic bullet for teaching the kids) then you have to ask yourself how will a particular politician or party promulgate its propaganda to the public?If control is not direct, if education is just judged on the merits rather than education plus "socialization" and "diversity training" etc... then how will the government spread its new vision to the children? How will government redefine "right" and "wrong" to be centered around the state instead of the individual?
4/1/2009 8:50:52 PM
^^^ Where did I say anything about vouchers or that there shouldn't be college preparatory courses?
4/1/2009 9:17:28 PM
^ You did not, I did. One glaring problem with public schools is that they are trying to be all things to all people and burdenning themselves with devastating diseconomies of scale.
4/1/2009 9:42:44 PM
4/2/2009 2:59:02 AM
Everyone talks about what should be done and what's going wrong now, but really what is the end goal? Every classroom in America has a PhD teacher? The schools I went to were hicksville schools and my fourth grade teacher tried to convince the class that the sun revolved around the earth.Holy shit, I still managed to graduate college, land a career, marry a smart and attractive woman, etc. How did I manage to do that when I attended an 8th grade science class where the teacher couldn't tell us the difference between a test tube and a beaker?I give credit to my dad on this one. He taught me how to read, add, subtract, multiply, and divide before I started kindergarten. And he always fostered my curiosity about animals, space and history.I'm not denying that our schools could probably use some improvement, but I strongly believe that parents are the main motivation for children to fail or succeed. My daughter will be going to public school to learn crucial social skills and independence. I will be actively involved in her teaching and will correct/fill in the gaps as much as I see fit.
4/2/2009 9:26:31 AM
[Edited on April 2, 2009 at 10:42 AM. Reason : aa]
4/2/2009 10:35:18 AM