Japan also has the highest child suicide rate, but you don't hear me though.
8/7/2008 2:25:09 PM
ezra klein had an interesting take on a related topic a while back:One of the problems that some low-income schools have is that rather than boasting a lot of intensely involved, fairly affluent parents willing to come together and raise hundreds of thousands of dollars to better the school, they find coalitions of intensely involved, fairly affluent parents willing to come together and raise hundreds of thousands of dollars in order to sue the city so their kids can go to a whiter, richer school. So that sucks. Meanwhile, as Dana points out, one of the big problems afflicting urban schools is that parents look at aggregate achievement, rather than achievement for kids with similar demographic characteristics to their kids:
8/7/2008 2:29:39 PM
8/7/2008 2:35:58 PM
8/7/2008 2:40:35 PM
I think at the heart of this debate is one's value of personal freedom. Do you believe each parent should have the freedom to choose their child's education or do you think the government should deny and supersede such freedom in the name of an agenda that has continually failed for over a half century?
8/7/2008 2:50:09 PM
8/7/2008 3:03:42 PM
8/7/2008 3:16:13 PM
You're not making sense. You're saying 4= 1+1+1+1+1 if you split it aprat. If the money is the same as it is now at the minimum schools (which is already a huge problem which I thought we were trying to fix.) and money is going into other private schools then there is less money in the cheapest schools.
8/7/2008 3:51:11 PM
^ you clearly don't understand how vouchers work.Read up on the topic, and get back to us.[Edited on August 7, 2008 at 3:53 PM. Reason : 2]
8/7/2008 3:52:58 PM
haha they don't "work" thus won't ever be used. Its just a way for rich people to try to figure out a way to trick the rest of the population into letting them out of being accountable and funding public schools.
8/7/2008 3:57:25 PM
8/7/2008 4:46:56 PM
8/7/2008 5:03:35 PM
8/7/2008 5:16:39 PM
and i've said over and over the voucher would only pay to go to a school that is equal or probably worse than public schools are today. The schools won't need to be good because the only requirement these poor parents will have of it is that the voucher cover all costs.
8/7/2008 5:19:02 PM
engrish plz?
8/7/2008 5:22:09 PM
^^ you still haven't provided a logical reason why choice would lead to worse schools than we have today[Edited on August 7, 2008 at 5:22 PM. Reason : .]
8/7/2008 5:22:22 PM
because private companies will want to maximize profits just as they do in every other industry. They might not be worse but they certainly wouldn't be btter. I want to fix the problem not throw in the towel.
8/7/2008 5:27:52 PM
8/7/2008 5:58:55 PM
I'll admit that yes, it could turn bad by certain companies entering into this market. It will depend on how you set it up. You have to look at what people's sensitivities are.Specifically for low-income 100% voucher paid education...The School- Must meet the basic education requirements, else the government cuts or reduces the voucher funding- Income constant per student, so increase # of students- Keep costs lowThe Parents- Convenience cost of transportation, ie lower it- Reduce or eliminate costs exceeding voucher stipendSo, we're interested in the bad things that can happen, so therefore we assume that both parties have absolutely no interest whatsoever in the actual education of the kid. Meaning that all education is left up to federal standards.Parent puts kid in geographically closest schoolSchool cuts costsKid does worse on testSchool gets less moneySchool spends more money on test teaching, and goes in the redSchool highers cheaper teacherSchool goes underParent puts kid in next geographically closest schoolI don't know how it would end, because I don't know what framework they would be operating under. From the standpoint of a motivated kid, this worse case could still feasibly work if they had proper resources, and if the federal government could just give them all the $100 laptop and establish a standard WikiBook for every subject in the curriculum, then well... might not be so bad.
8/7/2008 6:23:28 PM
8/7/2008 7:04:26 PM
^ 7777 Posts![Edited on August 7, 2008 at 7:14 PM. Reason : ]
8/7/2008 7:14:05 PM
at 7pm on the 7th [Edited on August 7, 2008 at 7:32 PM. Reason : 70th post in this thread. ]
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8/8/2008 1:44:03 PM
ludicrous.
8/8/2008 2:26:59 PM
Who would make sure every child was in school? What happens when there is space for 20 kids and theres an extra 20 kids one year?
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8/12/2008 4:50:55 PM
mrfrog is right. Most schools that go out of business will not just close but be bought out, either by a new entrant or by an existing business seeking a new location or additional capacity for itself.
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