The big problem is that all the kids now days think they are too good to work with their hands. I have seen kids on the college track that would be far more successful and happy cutting hair or something. Sadly the problem with learning a trade is that you have to fight for business with the illegals that don't pay taxes, and it's impossible to compete with that as far as price.
4/9/2010 3:26:44 PM
4/9/2010 4:20:24 PM
^^ Working a trade is one thing. Committing to it when you're a teenager is very different. Be honest, would it be your first choice? How about when you were 15? You can learn to be a plumber when you're 20. It's tougher to get into a good engineering program when you're diploma is from the average Plumber High. Not to mention all of the other things that come from going to vocational schools which may limit your ability to be successful at a standard 4yr college.
4/9/2010 4:42:24 PM
4/9/2010 5:20:23 PM
I know everybody wants to talk about "school culture" and "parent culture."But this thread is about budget cuts, and I don't think people know how ridiculous it has gotten.Schools don't even have enough cheap paperbacks to go around when they're working on fiction. So when they "study" a novel, that means they come into class and sit there and read as much as they can in an hour before having to turn the book back in for the next class. Obviously, there isn't enough class time for them to actually finish entire novels so often they only read excerpts and then watch a movie of it or they read only the first half of each chapter or sometimes they just stop halfway through and move on to the next thing on the pacing guide...And I can actually see how that's not that big of a deal.But if you remember settling into bed to devour a good book and come in the next week to discuss it with your teacher and your peers and do fun projects about it...that doesn't happen anymore. And it's not cause of "school culture" or "parent culture." It's because schools can't even afford to send a kid home with a paperback novel.
4/9/2010 6:56:21 PM
I'm just depressed by the state of education in general and frightened to see where it's going.Someone mentioned merit based pay for teachers, which is fine as long as you can find a better merit system than test scores. When you teach a kid whose parents kick them out of the house the night before their EOC, or at the other end a kid who refuses to come to your class all semester and shows up for the test, how is it your fault when they get a 1? Also, a lot of the merit systems states are looking at (Florida springs to mind) disregard advanced degrees and National Board certification, which is total bullshit.My class of 28 high school juniors is my favorite one, though. Large class sizes can work, to an extent, if they're well-planned. My class of 26 sophomores last semester made me near suicidal.
4/9/2010 6:57:55 PM
One of the worst horror stories I've heard (from the teacher it happened to): after being hired in her first year as a Spanish teacher, she discovered she was the only Spanish teacher in the entire school and would be teaching all the levels (1-AP). The materials that the school had to offer? A class set of ancient Spanish 2 books.
4/9/2010 7:17:26 PM
4/9/2010 7:30:57 PM
HUR, I don't think duro982 it talking about what they do in Germany and the like.He's talking about the way we implement vocational ed in the US: an extremely watered down version of the basics (reading/writing/math) plus a half day of dicking around and trying to make bongs in shop or leaving early to work a minimum wage job so you can have more cash to soup up your car and buy weed.If we were to put more kids in voc ed, we'd need to overhaul the program entirely: rigorous coursework in reading/writing/math plus intensive preparation for a trade that includes an apprenticeship that leads directly into a job.Furthermore, you need to understand that, in Europe, once a person picks and succeeds in a trade (mechanic, electrician, mason, etc...), that's his area of expertise and the government respects that. If there is decline in demand for those jobs, they are fully supported by the government in their unemployment or in their transition to another career.Also, countries with successful trade school systems (like Germany) rely heavily on the exploitation of undocumented workers to fill unskilled labor positions. Those undocumented workers in Germany will eventually gain rights, representation, and social services, and they'll "burden" the system in the same way you believe our native unskilled workers do now.I support a trade school system--one that prepares them for a job and actually links them up with employment after high school. Of course, they should also be educated in the basic skills necessary for them to succeed at a prep school for a university if they change their minds and want to go to college later in life.[Edited on April 9, 2010 at 7:54 PM. Reason : ]
4/9/2010 7:53:03 PM
4/9/2010 8:16:13 PM
4/9/2010 8:24:55 PM
4/9/2010 8:31:48 PM
^^ i'm curious about that too.^ Americans are not Japanese. Very different culture. And I don't know enough about Japan to really know how "well" it "works out." I don't know what sort of problems Japanese citizens think their school systems have. I don't know much about their school systems in general. I do know Americans though, and I'm familiar with American school systems. I don't see it working with the current system. I'm not saying it's impossible with a different system, set of courses, etc. But I just don't see it as a reasonable expectation at this time.Also, there are Americans who decide what they want to do when they're 13 and stick it out. there are also really smart 20 yr olds that don't know what they want to do - and there's nothing wrong with that imo. And that's just in the U.S. So, big deal that kids in Japan are forced to choose when they're 14. I have no clue if they're even happy about having to decide that or how many regret their choice, etc.
4/9/2010 8:38:49 PM
4/9/2010 9:31:08 PM
4/9/2010 10:04:31 PM
When our kids fail, we can still import Europeans for the jobs of the Creative Class.
4/9/2010 10:14:58 PM
4/10/2010 6:07:01 PM
Warning ... WORDS ahead.http://www.governor.state.nc.us/budget.aspxYeah, I thought this was going to happen. 7000 lines on a spreadsheet all rolled up with no ability to drill-down into specifics of each line item.Recommended costs in 2010, showing highest costs first.
4/11/2010 9:14:55 AM
You want to potentially turn a conversation to go wrong, try talking about:- Religion- Politics- Kids / Parenting- Money- Other deeply held cultural beliefs that may not fall into one of those categories.This circles back to parenting cultural issue (which influence in large part how budget is allocated): - The amounts and types of reinforcement given- Everybody should have an equal opportunity to succeed, no matter what their background is- Do NOT do anything which violates one of the five items aboveAnyways, to highlight some things from the budget review that jumped out at me.
4/11/2010 10:19:14 AM
Teacher quality is far and away the most important thing any school can improve to improve performance. Budget cuts mean lower pay, meaning that you will just get teachers of even lower quality (the low-paid positions already attract less-talented people).
4/11/2010 10:46:45 AM
My life as a teacher: first period class is limited to 26 students for safety sake...I have 30 students - 5 can BARELY read. One of those 5 has a one on one due to his autism and diabetes. Another student has a one on one because she is wheelchair bound and has cerebral palsy and cannot write, draw, feed herself. I travel to three different classrooms and teach a "living skills" course.A good teacher can teach the kid who comes to school wearing a lampshade...but we are fighting an uphill battle.Thankfully, I am not in the first wave of cuts this year but I was last year. They cut two and a half and I was next. Merit based pay is bullshit unless the teachers are allowed to make the test. I've had 0% passing on this one question for this one objective because I have no idea what they are asking them about. Out of our test bank, I've found 20-30 invalid questions. All that aside, I have outstanding test scores.
4/11/2010 8:57:16 PM
4/11/2010 10:37:14 PM
-the world needs ditch diggers too.-most of the problems at schools, not all, but most can be traced back to lackluster parenting -that the school system should not/ doesn't have the $$$ to reverse the problems.-the government can be blamed for the rest of the issues...(Lottery? Where are those gazzillion dollars going?)-The answers are obvious...but somehow they get overlooked...so who is finally going to take care of it? -not everyone will or needs go to college, and we need to realize that as well.
4/12/2010 12:36:14 AM
4/12/2010 12:51:21 AM
4/12/2010 3:57:16 AM
In before conspiracy theories of sabotaging the school systems in order to push private schools owned by the saboteurs.
4/12/2010 9:53:09 AM
^ Naw, that's WCPSS's hat trick, not NC's
4/12/2010 8:25:00 PM
4/12/2010 9:17:25 PM
Vouchers, is the answer.And you need to cut some medicaid services to help shore up the budget. However, it appears states are going to be forced to pay for an even larger number AND without limits on payments. Unreal.
4/12/2010 9:30:39 PM
Education already gets too much of the budget. Get back to the basics. I hate to sound like this but I'm tired of reading about a laptop for every child and teaching assistants in every classroom and then a lot of bitching and moaning about the budget. A class size of 35 isn't bad and WTF difference does it make if you're in a trailer or regular classroom? I've heard this a lot but it's never made any sense. Are teaching abilities reduced by trailers?
4/13/2010 9:10:01 AM
Laptops for every student? I barely have a working computer for myself. I respect your opinion, but class size is most definitely an issue while teaching. perhaps you are thinking of the days when teachers actually were teachers... these days many of us spend more time dealing with discipline than content. When you have 35 students in a science classroom, safety is a concern, especially when labs are involved. My professional organizations recommend 25 students maximum for science. (I teach middle school, so the students are still very immature.)And classroom vs trailer... Students cannot be monitored both in the trailer and outside on the path easily. I teach science, and have no running water, no safety equipment, and the classroom barely fits the science tables that I have. (I only have enough tables to sit 28 students.)I'm not trying to make excuses, just point out valid concerns.
4/13/2010 11:02:54 AM
^^ are you trolling?
4/13/2010 11:12:19 AM
4/13/2010 11:36:17 AM
4/13/2010 2:57:12 PM
There are light years of difference between a class of 35, a class of 30, and a class of 25. Also, I was silent when they took our copier's staples, but now they've stopped buying scantron cards. THIS WILL NOT STAND.
4/13/2010 5:53:24 PM
4/13/2010 5:56:50 PM
Merit-based pay is awesome. Bring it on.
4/13/2010 6:01:54 PM
4/13/2010 7:40:08 PM
4/13/2010 8:44:43 PM
4/13/2010 11:11:39 PM
ehhhh inhuman can technically mean lacking kindness, mercy, etc. although I think inhumane is more commonly used
4/13/2010 11:16:57 PM
Inhumane teachers are a huge problem. It's very enticing to see it as a job to have to get summer/holiday vacations but in reality, the people who are in it just for that get out quickly because the rest of the job can be very grueling for low pay. It's sad for me to hear other teachers talk about their jobs and how much they hate them when there are good teachers waiting in the wings.
4/13/2010 11:20:26 PM
WCPSS is going to be entering a hiring freeze for the upcoming year, which is likely going to result in even larger class sizes and tighter budgets for all schools.
4/14/2010 9:25:09 PM
Durham employees were recently surveyed which they would rather face: A one time furlough to help cut job losses or a permanent pay decrease to help cut job losses. (you could chose neither if you were of the "fuck em fire em" mindset)Well the vast majority picked the furlough. An email was just sent out informing us that district mandated furloughs are ILLEGAL and cannot happen.
4/15/2010 4:28:51 PM
^ lol you would think that'd be the sort of thing they would research before asking for opinions.
4/15/2010 7:06:27 PM
is there any talk of counties/districts selling tax advantaged municipal bonds to raise funds?
4/15/2010 7:06:45 PM
^^^ so the state can mandate a furlough to all employees, including teachers, to generate funds. But the district cannot? Seems kinda odd. Personally, I'd rather that mandate come down from the people closer to me and who are more familiar with the needs of the specific district.If the majority of the employees would prefer for everyone to take a "little" hit vs people losing their jobs, that shouldn't be illegal. I can see why maybe it was made illegal to begin with. But it seems to be getting in the way of people doing what they think is a good thing in this situation.
4/15/2010 8:57:20 PM