9/16/2012 6:26:27 PM
I'm going to repost this, since it will be lost on the last page, and this page has begun with the assertion that our schools are broken:Our education system is a pretty good one. When you account for poverty rates, the fact that we test a higher percentage of our students than other countries, and that the difference between 1st and nth on international test rankings is often within the margin of error, our children do pretty well. And they've never been doing better. If you're interested in not repeating falsehoods about our schools, read part 3 of this study:http://www.brookings.edu/~/media/newsletters/0216_brown_education_loveless.pdfThis is a pretty good overview/opinion:http://ajr.org/Article.asp?id=5280[Edited on September 16, 2012 at 6:36 PM. Reason : ]
9/16/2012 6:34:15 PM
9/16/2012 10:17:02 PM
I know it's been said, but it bears repeating. They are only talking about salary in the strike because legally it has to be what they're striking over. The strike has been about a lot of issues, with money and benefits being pretty low on the totem pole.
9/16/2012 11:38:14 PM
9/17/2012 6:34:41 AM
9/17/2012 12:05:22 PM
My original post sounded too mean.I'm just saying...you don't exactly contribute a lot of stuff so it's kinda weird to be asking people to carefully read your posts. I wish you would contribute more.^^^^^Yes. Unfortunately, the myth that our public education system has "failed" has become so entrenched and widespread that it's very difficult to convince people of the truth.A random, short, easy to read article about education reform: http://www.epi.org/blog/reformers-playbook-failing-schools-facts/Unfortunately, this CTU thing just looks bad. And I don't think it's going to do much to help the larger movement against scrapping public education as we know it. There is actually so much I want to post, but the things people believe and say about public education are just so wrong-headed and mean, I don't even know where to begin...how do you overcome a disdain that actually starts in childhood and gets openly/proudly/emotionally reinforced over and over and over in adulthood?[Edited on September 17, 2012 at 9:43 PM. Reason : ]
9/17/2012 9:26:30 PM
9/20/2012 9:32:54 PM
This is a classroom example of unions gone wrong. Seriously, as far as the problems of unions go, this is the best example of an argument against them. This should be Chinese iPhone workers striking, not cushy overpaid government employees that get paid more than most of America and only work 9 months.
9/21/2012 12:11:19 AM
Yes, this is an example of how awful unions are. Unfortunately, what you've got here is exactly what unions strive for. Minimum work, maximum pay, no accountability, and a monopoly on a particular regional labor market.
9/21/2012 9:27:27 AM
9/26/2012 10:58:31 AM
Yeah, I don't know where you got that 100k number.But you know, Chicago can always do what the NFL is doing with their refs, and just get scab employees to replace them. That seems to be working out well.Yes, I know the NFL refs are private. Spare me. All this shows is that unions (and labor), as a bloc, are under attack from all angles.[Edited on September 26, 2012 at 12:27 PM. Reason : ]
9/26/2012 12:05:49 PM
^^That "article" is awful.
9/28/2012 10:14:19 AM
What's wrong with it, aside from a slightly snarky opening paragraph? Unfunded public sector pensions are a huge financial liability.
9/28/2012 11:45:05 AM
Well its based on the false assumption that a Republican president would not bailout states and that goes against what has been seen so far. There is no reason to assume that's true.
9/28/2012 12:28:23 PM