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Keith Hughes wrote:
snip No, it is lack of adequate parenting that causes the majority of the problem, IMO. You apparently think the existence of the public school system is a valid basis on which parents can abdicate responsibility for child rearing. Nobody said that!!! Indeed this thread is all about the parents wanting to take responsibility?? You can read?? or did you get a union organised education?? Home education *in addition to* that provided by the public, or private, education system, has *always* been a prerequiste for first rate education. West or East. This is nonsense, you seem to want to take away from the fact western education standards are dropping & blame parents, that's your right just as most every parents these days blame unionised dead beat lefty teachers, the difference is the parents are putting their money where their mouth is & sending their kids to private "proper" schools instead of lefty union indoctrination camps. snip Yes, and parent should get involved (as in PARTICIPATE, not spectate) in their kids education! So again you agree?? this planned boat trip is a good idea educationally??? Apart from your mantra about not having access to any govt funded programs because what?? it competes with the unions draining the system dry?? Few parents I encounter even know the names of their children's teachers. Schools, and school boards, respond to the demands of the community (read 'parents'), and unfortunately, those demands are too often for a baby-sitting service that passes children from grade to grade irrespective of their level of attainment. Let me ask you a couple of questions: You are in fairyland!! The majority of union teachers are not interested in anything nor anyone but themselves & how much they can bludge from the system. Krause claims to have been a teacher, probably a lie like everything else he claims, but can you imagine letting your kids anywhere near him??? By all means teachers can hold views on all sorts of things, other than the curriculum just don't teach them to other peoples' kids. 1. Do you think teachers (or professors for that matter) *like* to reward students for substandard performance? Of course not, indeed they even help students cheat to avoid it, so their institutions don't look bad, the parents don't ask how come?? & the general public don't get wise to the lousy teaching job they're doing!!! The jig is up, the public have figured it out & don't just take my word for it; look at how many people are prepared to forgo life's little luxuries so they can "pay extra" to have their children properly educated, without the lefty union bias attached. 2. Do you think teachers (or professors for that matter) *like* to to have students so disruptive that the learning environment for other students is degraded, without having the disciplinary tools available to address, or even ameliorate, the situation (small clue here...parents don't *like* other people to discipline their unruly progeny)? So first you blame the parents now it's the kids?? give it up it's the unionised public teachers. But again have a look at the stats public lefty union teachered schools are avoided like the plague by any parent who can afford to save their children from them. 3. Do you think the responsibility for teaching respect, courtesy, and discipline lies with the public school teacher (i.e. instead of with the parents, as it has been since time immemorial)? Again so you agree then that these people will do a better job of educating their boys than your union teachers??? Great ... we agree. As for the money thing well we can just disagree:-) If you answered "yes" to any of those questions, I'll be happy to mail you a quarter should you like to purchase a clue. Purchase a clue!!!... ahhhh the true socialist:-) They demand everything be given to "them" free, but have a different view about themselves you miss the point. Parents have the responsibility for preparing their children *for* school, monitoring their performance *at* school (P.T.A., parent-teacher conferences, etc.), and changing the educational system when it isn't functioning properly. Parents have a responsibility to protect their kids from lefty union teachers who don't educate (have a look at the stats) but do try to spread the lefty socialist mantra in the classroom. We live in a democracy in the US, and inherent in the democratic process is both personal and social responsibility. Vote out the school board, the system *will* change. Sit back and carp on newsgroups on the other hand, and...oh, that's right, nothing happens. Get it? Get it ?? Hmmmmm the socialist control freak, you're wrong & wrong because you're an uneducated simpleton, pretty much it seems another wasted life, we measure them in Krause lives:-). I hate to mention this here, but do you think we may have our oxygen back??? Ever heard of greed? We (in the US) live in the short term. We artifically elevate our standard of living (on the cheap labor of third world countries, to a large extent) without thought to long term consequences. That is a serious social/cultural issue we certainly need to address. You are another Krause type socialist, who's totally uneducated & has no understanding of anything. World trade is the best thing going for the US & the rest of the west & wait for it....... also the countries you pretend to be worried about. You've never looked into it but don't bother, for you don't have the wherewithal to understand. Your postulate, however, that (and I'm paraphrasing of course) if our children were better educated, *we* would be making the clothes, shoes, toys, TV's, VCR's, DVD players, etc. that comprise the bulk of that "95%", is ludicrous on its face. These are produced by unskilled, or semi-skilled workers (as commonly defined), where the cost per unit rules the day (almost entirely a function of living standard), NOT the education level of the workforce. It's the desire for those things from the west that makes the market, but it's also the design inventive skills & much more importantly the capital from the west that creates all those jobs, & those jobs are the driver of a better world for all. Now if the funds saved assembling cheap widgets & helping the 3rd world at the same time, could have created a better education system in the west then we would invent ever better things, which we would demand be manufactured etc etc. The flies on the dung heap are the western unions, particularly the teachers, who are living in the past & can't see past the comfort of their union organised thug campaigns. Sorry to snatch the easy bone from your jaws It's easy to see which bone you hang onto. , but no, I'm not a teacher (never have been, not married to one). I was, however, lucky enough to have been raised by parents and grandparents who believed in education, and their rearing techniques reflected it. So I know adequate parenting when I see it, even seeing so rarely. You're not a teacher, you can't understand anything the socialist mantra hasn't fed you, which end did they feed it??? And to those whining about a tax rebate for home schooling, Nobody asked for a rebate!!! you brought up that you didn't want these boat boys to have access to the system their parents have helped pay for. Yes education is a social good but let parents decide how they achieve it for their own kids, subject to mandated standards of academic achievement. Hey lefty parents can support the lefty teachers?? oops no no no:-) guess what?? it's the lefty parents leading the charge of sending their kids to proper schools. Damn the union teachers won't even allow us to test to confirm what we all know, which is they're hopeless at what we pay them for; to teach. how about for those who have no children? Shall I get a rebate for the 30 years I've been paying property taxes for schools I'm not using? Or the roads *I* don't personally drive on, or the Fire Department *I've* never personally used, or...get the point? Public education, as with all social services, benefits *society as a whole* when done properly. We all reap the benefits, we all pay the costs. We all have a responsibility to get out and do something when it's not done properly. Look at voter turnout and tell me how involved people are in society. Well at least it's good to know Darwinism is at work as regards you. Now how about that oxygen, any chance we may have it back??? K Keith Hughes |
K. Smith wrote:
snipped because for the 4th or 5th time he hasn't had a damn thing to say about the OP's question I'll be brief. Normally I don't respond to this type of polemic but after having read your posts in this thread, and getting my giggling under control, I've decided that your ignorance is so overwhelming as to demand informing. I'm not confident that it will be more than a pearl to you. You sir are the poster boy for right-wing boneheads everywhere. There is no discussing anything with people like you because a) your writing makes you appear to be as dumb as a post and (this is the scary part) b) you think *You're right* and everybody else who doesn't think like you is not only wrong, but somehow a threat to your narrow little world view. The anti-teacher, anti-union vitriol you're spewing in here verges on the pathological. Were you found to be incompetent and fired from a teaching job? The grapes seem _really_ sour. In the meantime, pull your gaze away from your self-satisfied little American navel and read a book or two -or better still- take your boat somewhere foreign, keep your big mouth shut and just watch and learn. You're in desperate need. |
Harry,
I'm not a fan of K. Smith, but post of this venomous nature are what get you villainousised. Paul "Harry Krause" wrote in message ... snipped Actually, K. Smith is female, and presents as an early parolee from an Australian asylum for the mentally challenged. She's a general failure in life who tries to compensate by being an attack dog, and lives in a fantasy world of right-wing extremism. She's best ignored, and her 9000-word posts dismissed with throwaway lines. |
On Sat, 25 Dec 2004 04:28:38 UTC, "Tuuk" wrote:
No, not at all, I am talking the east such as the Asian countries, the ones that are economically exploding. Of couse there are poor countries everywhere, and middle east and the islamic or muslims teach the wrong things. That is why they attacked on 911. Those schools focus so much on the koran, teaching to hate non muslims, hating non islam and they do not spend enough time on the maths and sciences etc. When they become 20 years old and ready to compete in the workplace, they fail and see others so wealthy then the jealousy, rage, anger, and they rebel against the apex. I know you are generalising, but let's look at a fact or two, shall we .... At least one of the 911 hijacker pilots was apparently very well educated at an expensive Lebanese private school which has a mixed intake of various Christian and Muslim denominations, they promote racial and religious harmony - not hate - and he came from a rich, protective, family where he was the only son. So I don't think you can specifically say ' That is why they attacked on 911'. But to better answer the caller's question, yes with proper resources, motivation and training a student could learn more in that environment. What they might miss would be the public speaking opportunities, team work, friendships, but at their age, they could easily go one on one with the computer and yes learn more than at a public school. A large number of studies have found that the major factor in the average success (ie some fail dismally, some excel) of home educated students is the fact that their parents care about their education and show it. The same child, with the same parent showing the same amount of interest might very well do better in a public school. On the other hand public schools have their average dragged down by all the kids whose parents don't give a damn and only send their kids because they are made to. Chris |
From one of my favorite writers, only a bit OT, but certainly no further
afield than the subject has wandered. The writer can be found at fredoneverything.com Down With Education Sort Of December 29, 2004 Some years back, while laboring in the grim vineyards of police correspondence for a metropolitan daily, I appeared as a guest lecturer before a class of undergraduates in criminology at the University of Maryland. The idea of a major in criminology struck me as peculiar, but apparently there was one. I was to explain to the students the realities of police work. The adventure was a revelation. The kids, a scruffy bunch dressed in student tatterdemalion, heavy on minorities, were as lacking in polish as in grammar. Their intelligence seemed low. They had strong, simple prejudices instead of ideas, and no inclination to examine them. The intellectual level was that of a rural high school. They appeared to be bored. They had no business in a university. Why, I wondered, were we forcing these bedraggled beings to feign a scholarship which appealed to them not at all, which they at once endured and degraded-and that at great expense to the public? Why do we make this burdensome imposition on people who do not want schooling, do not need it, and do not understand what it is? It is wrongheaded. I submit that it makes no sense to inflict on the unprepared and incapable a pretense of a university education for no other reason that to further a pretense of equality. What real purpose is served? And yet this forcing of the unneeded on the undesirous runs through all schooling in America. It makes little more sense to require that the intelligent but uninterested study what they do not like-usually, the liberal arts. Doing so accomplishes nothing. An engineer forced to read Blake is merely an annoyed engineer. He will never touch a book of poetry in his academic afterlife. There is no reason why he should. I think that we ought to abandon utterly any requirement that vocational students waste time on the liberal arts. Schools of engineering, criminology, and business management are just that, vocational schools, nothing more. They may be of a high order. Graduating in electrical engineering from a school of the first rank is not easy. Yet the document awarded is not a diploma but a trade-school certificate. So is a degree chemistry or ophthalmology. All are evidence of training, not education. If a student of chemistry wants to study history, and many might, he should certainly be enabled to do so. But it should not be required. Universities usually defend requirements in the liberal arts on many grounds in which few believe. I suggest that we cease to defend them at all. A liberal schooling should be a luxury, like a yacht, and should be regarded as such. The arts are not for many and should be forced on none. They require much and exact a price. Only the intelligent can profit by them, and of the intelligent, few want them. Why not make them voluntary? I now hear of departments of English literature which award degrees to students who have never read Shakespeare or Chaucer. The students of course say that such authors are "irrelevant." The literate respond with horror, leaping to such barricades as may be found in publications on coated paper. But the students are right. Shakespeare is irrelevant. More accurately, Shakespeare is irrelevant to anyone who believes that he is irrelevant. You do not get a federal job by knowing Chaucer, or having heard of Chaucer. Those forced to study writers, or philosophy, or history they don't want to study will gain nothing. Those who do want to study them lose much, because the courses will often be of sufficiently little rigor as not to oppress the bored. Yet there are intelligent young of inquiring nature and breadth of mind to whom liberal studies appeal-students actually attracted to reading Aeschylus in the original , and Asian history and the Elder Edda, who want to study Fragonard and Watteau. Let them. By so doing they harm no one. Being turbulent adolescents under the influence of evil hormones, they will need direction. Nonetheless if a student chooses such schooling, knowing what he is choosing, it is his business. It is not just in the universities that we force the young to study things that mean nothing to them and will have no influence on their lives. As soundings of the public monotonously reveal, a minority of the population is in possession of such arcane information as the century in which the Civil War occurred, or who fought in World War I, or where Italy might be found on a map. Things are yet worse: Far more people than we admit can barely read. Most who can, don't. The United States is not the well-schooled nation that it seems to believe that it is. The public schools, say some, have failed to such a degree as to make their continuance rationally unjustifiable. Yes, they fail, but why? To some extent it is because they are expected to do what cannot be done-to educate the uneducable. For reasons of dizzy idealism, we pretend that all students have the wit to learn. Thus we suffer high-sounding programs like No Child Left Behind. You cannot ensure that no child will be left behind. You can try to ensure that no child will get ahead. To this we incline. As in the universities, the difficulty is that we refuse to separate the able from the rest, yet insist on attempting to teach to the uninterested things that they do not want to know. If this effort bore fruit, it might be justified: A disputable case can be made that the historically literate are better equipped to vote, etc. But it is easily demonstrated that the majority do not learn much. Why bother? A wise course, and therefore one impossible of realization, might be to recognize that schooling is inherently hierarchical and not susceptible to populist leveling. A beginning would be to make all study voluntary beyond, say, the sixth or eighth grade. By then all would have learned to read who were ever going to learn. Below the university level, private schools unregu lated by government are the only way to let people study the subjects they choose at the level of rigor that they want. Freedom from federal intrusion is crucial. Nothing else can prevent resentful minorities from imposing invertebrate standards on all. Fat chance. I didn't write this - but I like what he sez... L8R Skip -- Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig http://tinyurl.com/384p2 "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 17:05:23 UTC, Keith Hughes
wrote: YES! Finally, a sensible entry into this 'debate' . I AM a teacher - and in the 'east' - the kids that do well TEND to be the ones who have parents that give a damn. About them and about their education. The kids that don't get that TEND to not do as well as they could. Chris |
On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 22:12:02 UTC, "Alan Gomes" wrote:
Now, even if there were a "rebate" for home schooling, that money would be used to eduate the children in question, though outside of the public system. This would still provide the alleged societal benefit you are touting above. Unless, of course, the real issue isn't whether children receive an education but whether it is the government doing it? Yes, but we all benefit from OTHER people's children getting an education too... Chris- |
On Mon, 27 Dec 2004 18:17:40 UTC, "Alan Gomes" wrote:
Ok, Keith. You win. I'm convinced. The public school system produces such a massive societal benefit that no amount of taxation to support it is excessive. Without it we'd have a society of kids who could not read or write and who are in general functionally illiterate, who could not do simple math, and who had no knowledge of world history or even of the great books of western civilization. Oh, wait! That's what we presently have *with* the public school system. Quick! Someone raise my property taxes so we can throw some more money at it! A pathetic strawman setup - that's not what he said, as you well know, but you don't know how to address what he did say. Just to summarise/simplify it for you and the other 'public bad, private good' folks, he did say: the system has flaws; it won't be fixed by opting out with your money; it is the result of people (parents in this case) opting out with their other resources, like participation. Well, it's been fun playing. Gotta get back to life beyond usenet. So go ahead and have the last word and I'll see you around sometime--maybe on the water. (A feeble attempt at getting back to something sailing related here....) --Alan Chris -- |
On Tue, 28 Dec 2004 16:17:54 UTC, Harry Krause
wrote: prodigal1 wrote: K. Smith wrote: snipped because for the 4th or 5th time he hasn't had a damn thing to say about the OP's question I'll be brief. Normally I don't respond to this type of polemic but after having read your posts in this thread, and getting my giggling under control, I've decided that your ignorance is so overwhelming as to demand informing. I'm not confident that it will be more than a pearl to you. You sir are the poster boy for right-wing boneheads everywhere. There is no discussing anything with people like you because a) your writing makes you appear to be as dumb as a post and (this is the scary part) b) you think *You're right* and everybody else who doesn't think like you is not only wrong, but somehow a threat to your narrow little world view. The anti-teacher, anti-union vitriol you're spewing in here verges on the pathological. Were you found to be incompetent and fired from a teaching job? The grapes seem _really_ sour. In the meantime, pull your gaze away from your self-satisfied little American navel and read a book or two -or better still- take your boat somewhere foreign, keep your big mouth shut and just watch and learn. You're in desperate need. Actually, K. Smith is female, and presents as an early parolee from an Australian asylum for the mentally challenged. She's a general failure in life who tries to compensate by being an attack dog, and lives in a fantasy world of right-wing extremism. She's best ignored, and her 9000-word posts dismissed with throwaway lines. AUSTRALIAN? Oh the shame ..... Chris -- |
On Tue, 28 Dec 2004 21:35:41 UTC, "Paul Schilter"
paulschilter@comcast dot net wrote: Harry, I'm not a fan of K. Smith, but post of this venomous nature are what get you villainousised. Paul And K Smith's don't? They're pretty nasty, not to mention illogical. Chris -- |
On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 17:24:32 UTC, "Steve" wrote:
I have met (US and other) families in the Philippines and the Pacific Islands who have home schooled out of necessity (lack of comprehensive western education). We considered it while living in the Philippines for 8 years with 3 school age children but opted for an international school (another story). Do tell... :) Chris -- |
WaIIy wrote:
suggest that all kids' learning abilities are not equal, the proven solution of tracking has been rejected. Of course, everyone is reduced to the lowest common denominator in order to avoid hurt feelings and "self-esteem". As the (socialist) Minister for Education said in Denmark a few years ago "If one child can`t learn it, then NO child should learn it" |
"Chris Lasdauskas" wrote in message news:mPcurcJnILSl-pn2-WRHg7dJwntVU@localhost... On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 17:24:32 UTC, "Steve" wrote: I have met (US and other) families in the Philippines and the Pacific Islands who have home schooled out of necessity (lack of comprehensive western education). We considered it while living in the Philippines for 8 years with 3 school age children but opted for an international school (another story). Do tell... :) Chris Chris, if your referring to my last comment in this thread, here goes:: We enrolled 2 of our 3 sons in one of the international schools. The name was Magellan's (unsure of spelling) International School. This would have been in 1979, during Marshal Law, under Marcos.. The school bus picked up our children in the BF Homes sub-div. outside of Makita. The first thing I noticed was an armed guard on the bus and was somewhat surprised but not impressed. Given sometime to consider the political situation, I realized that by enrolling my children in an international school, with the children of international public official and wealthy business people.. The guard was to prevent possible hijacking of the bus and kidnapping of these children.. With only a single guard, I felt at most he might only start a gun battle (with his one or two bullets) or at least, surrender the children to the hijackers. Although there were never any kidnapping attempts at this school I heard of attempts at other schools where the children of wealthy family attended. We moved out of Manila, to the rural province and enrolled them in a Catholic school. Not the best quality education but a lot safer. When our oldest son reached the age of 12 we moved him back to the states for traditional schooling and the following year we all moved back. Overall, the Philippines is a nice place and the people are wonderful but life is too short and children need to be exposed to "both the East and West", but not under the barrel of a gun. How did my children do after a mixture of education and culture?? All were high achievers in their high school years with various honors and awards. One graduated from UCSD with a dual degrees (if that is the proper term), another from San Fran. State followed by a Masters from Samuel Merritt and the third from UC Berkley and a MMA from Syracuse U.. My experience and opinion, FWIW. Steve s/v Good Intentions |
On 31 Dec 2004 09:26:03 -0600, Dave wrote:
On 30 Dec 2004 22:16:19 +0700, "Chris Lasdauskas" said: Yes, but we all benefit from OTHER people's children getting an education too... Ah, the old trickle-down theory. Actually, not red-side trickle-down economics, but blue-side "Altruism pays off for the long-sighted" Brian W |
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 15:26:03 UTC, Dave wrote:
On 30 Dec 2004 22:16:19 +0700, "Chris Lasdauskas" said: Yes, but we all benefit from OTHER people's children getting an education too... Ah, the old trickle-down theory. well, yes, partly, but I was thinking more like - do you benefit from your doctor, lawyer or mechanic's education? Can you be sure that that poor, illiterate kid, wouldn't, if educated, turn into a Nobel winning scientist, a future president or what have you? Some also believe that there is a strong negative correlation between education and crime (especially blue collar) ie an educated person is less likely to mug you; hence we ebenfit from a genrally higher level of education. (Exactly how that should be provided is a different question) Chris -- |
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 13:06:26 UTC, Harry Krause
wrote: Chris Lasdauskas wrote: AUSTRALIAN? Oh the shame ..... Chris If you're from there, you must know of her... well, sure isn't she J Smith's brother? (Australia is slightly bigger than a small town!) she claims to be the inventor and manufacturer of a diesel outboard motor with the brand name of Taipan. The only photo anyone has ever seen of such an outboard makes it appear as if someone bolted an old. small Japanese truck diesel to a homemade lower unit and covered both in rusty steel painted white. Never heard of it. But it may exist. Naturally, when I found out the "brand name," I thought of Clavell's novel, but it turns out a taipan is a particularly nasty Australian snake. Seems to fit, eh? No comment. Taipan's are one of the 3 or 4 most deadly snakes on the planet, and one of the few aggressive enough to actually chase a person to bite them. Chris -- |
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 15:38:04 UTC, Dave wrote:
On 30 Dec 2004 22:16:17 +0700, "Chris Lasdauskas" said: I AM a teacher - and in the 'east' - the kids that do well TEND to be the ones who have parents that give a damn. About them and about their education. The kids that don't get that TEND to not do as well as they could. Correlation is not, of course, causation. It may perhaps be that smarter parents TEND to have smarter kids and also TEND to be more involved in their kids' education. That's true. But I seem to remember that some of the studies addressed that and were able to argue for causation as well. My gut feeling is that parent involvement (given a reasonable learning environment) counts for a lot.-- even if it as simple as 'modelling' something like reading a lot, kids tend to benefit from that. Chris |
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 17:03:41 UTC, "Steve" wrote:
but opted for an international school (another story). Do tell... :) Chris Chris, if your referring to my last comment in this thread, here goes:: We enrolled 2 of our 3 sons in one of the international schools. The name was Magellan's (unsure of spelling) International School. This would have been in 1979, during Marshal Law, under Marcos.. The school bus picked up our children in the BF Homes sub-div. outside of Makita. The first thing I noticed was an armed guard on the bus and was somewhat surprised but not impressed. Who would be? I teach in Jakarta, as you may be aware there have been some bombings here over the last few years, including a grenade thrown in to the Australian International School compound. Folowing this several of the larger schools set up full security fences and paid the armed forces to provide protection. Several of the parents moved their children from those schools to ours because they didn't want their kids educated surrounded by machine guns (and I mean machine guns, in sand-bagged nests, not just automatic rifles). That aside, all schools here have security guards to protect the kids from the perceived threat of abduction - which does happen, but not as often as people think. Any kid at a private school, not just international schools, is a target as the parents are udoubtedly much richer than the general populace. To give you an idea the 'minimum wage' in Jakarta is about US$ 75 per month or US$900 per year (and many people earn way less than that), this is supposed to support a husband wife and several kids. Kids in our secondary school cost around 10 x that per year in school fees (and that would be a pretty typical fee for the other better 'internationally-foccused' private schools too, while the big international schools are about US$ 13-15,000 per year), so the kidnappers deduce that kids at these schools come from wealthy families and they are an attractive target - one ransom could be 10 or more years work.... My experience and opinion, FWIW. Thanks, it was interesting and I'm glad your kids turned out well, and hopefully happy! Steve s/v Good Intentions Chris -- |
Frank wrote: ....snip... Rather than recommend a curriculum, I'm gonna recommend that you look into unschooling. Check unschooling.com and/or just google the term. ....snip... Self-followup: If the unschooling.com website is too radical for you, or even if you're uninterested in the concept, you might wanna try a little book called _The Teenage Liberation Handbook_. Good luck, Frank |
On 31 Dec 2004 09:26:03 -0600, Dave wrote:
On 30 Dec 2004 22:16:19 +0700, "Chris Lasdauskas" said: Yes, but we all benefit from OTHER people's children getting an education too... Ah, the old trickle-down theory. Interesting choice of words. The public school system MUST continue (and fixed of course). The alternative is the world of 1800, when only the wealthy and some of the working class got an education. Today's schoolkid is tomorrow's nurse, daycare worker and bum-wiper at the Senile Old Sailors' Rest. I want that person to be able to read...I'm funny that way. Given our failure to cover our societal bets by reproducing enough to replace ourselves (guess we had boats to buy and cars to drive), I would suggest we put an immediate priority on ALL education...because the private and public school kids seem dimmer as a group than they used to be. R. |
rhys...well stated....imho...everyone benefits from an educated
population... that is why everyone pays property taxes...duhhhhh.... ---snip-------------------------- Today's schoolkid is tomorrow's nurse, daycare worker and bum-wiper at the Senile Old Sailors' Rest. I want that person to be able to read...I'm funny that way. |
"Dave" wrote in message ... On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 09:03:41 -0800, "Steve" said: during Marshal Law, under Marcos I take it you mean martial law. General Marshall was indeed a great planner, but he predates Marcos's rule. Thanks, I stand corrected. It's these kinda things that a spell checker doesn't ketch. :) Steve s/v Good Intentions |
"Dave" wrote in message ... On Sun, 26 Dec 2004 21:08:42 -0500, prodigal1 said: In my case, if the local public schools had been even close in quality to the public school I attended I would have had no qualms about sending my daughter to one. They aren't, and I didn't. I got my education in the '40s and '50s and began in several rural one room schools for my elementary grade. Then on to rural small town schools, where the school board were a bunch of farmers or retired farmers and fundamentalist church leaders. The quality of teaching was pretty good but the subjects were the "3 Rs" (plus vocational agriculture (3yrs required, home economics required), band and a little basic music). There was also typing and book keeping class. No physics or higher math (just algebra, that's it.). No literature or any of the classics. No art appreciation. Admittedly we had a small school, with only about 100 students in the entire four high school grades. However I found the absence of the higher math and literature appreciation a serious short coming when I ultimately took college entrance exams. Now, by comparison, my three sons all went to a high school in San Diego, in a low to middle class neighborhood. Each did very well and had no problem getting into the UC university system. Two now have masters and the third has a 'dual degree' (what ever that means). Now adults, they entered the job market well prepared and adjusted and earn more money than I could have ever imagined. Why do I mention this here?? Well, I can't imagine an average parent with only 'normal' high school education, tutoring and directing the studies of 'home school'er' and achieving as good a result as a public high school. Given a choice, I believe those who opt for home school over public school are depriving their children of the opportunity to develop social coping skills in addition to some of the subjects mentioned earlier in this post. Given a proper home guidance and parental involvement in their public school education, a great deal can be achieve even in a below average public school. "Don't let the thugs and punks drive your kids out of the school house!" they are the minority and the majority of the students want and deserve a good education. That's what our taxes pay for and we should all be evolved and demand better control of our schools. Sorry about the Rant! Steve s/v Good Intentions |
On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 08:31:45 -0800, "Steve" wrote:
Why do I mention this here?? Well, I can't imagine an average parent with only 'normal' high school education, tutoring and directing the studies of 'home school'er' and achieving as good a result as a public high school. Given a choice, I believe those who opt for home school over public school are depriving their children of the opportunity to develop social coping skills in addition to some of the subjects mentioned earlier in this post. The statistics show just the opposite. Home schooled students score higher on their college entrance tests, spelling bees etc... There are many resources out there available to help the home schooling parent and most make good use of them. As for socialization, there are many ways to provide for this as well, including getting together with other home schoolers. Given a proper home guidance and parental involvement in their public school education, a great deal can be achieve even in a below average public school. "Don't let the thugs and punks drive your kids out of the school house!" they are the minority and the majority of the students want and deserve a good education. That's what our taxes pay for and we should all be evolved and demand better control of our schools. The facts are that most public schools in the US are extremely poor compared to any other education systems in the developed world. Rather than home schooling, my son is in a private school. I am not well off but between my ex, myself and my parents we manage and all of us consider that our child is much to valuable to turn him over to the current public school system. I wish it were not so, but right now the teacher's unions matter more than the kids they are supposed to be teaching. Sorry about the Rant! One good rant deserves another. Weebles Wobble (but they don't fall down) |
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