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#471
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A Usenet persona calling itself KMAN wrote:
in article , Scott Weiser at wrote on 4/1/05 11:26 PM: A Usenet persona calling itself KMAN wrote: "BCITORGB" wrote in message oups.com... Thanks to KMAN: ============ If I may, for many a person with a disability, "handicapped" is like the n-word to many a person with black skin. I realize no offense likely intended frtzw906 :-) ============= You're right, none intended. As I was writing, I occasionally was about to write "disabled" but wasn't sure if that was perhaps the taboo expression. In another lifetime, I was in the public school system, and was more "aware". Now I occasionally get caught using n-word equivalencies... Sorry! As to the anecdote in question, you can't begin to imagine how the hypocrisy of those parents ****ed me off. And for them to malign the public system as they were in the process of diminishing it! It stills makes my blood boil! If I were king for a day, private schools would be on the chopping block. [I might be persuaded that "choice" in education *might* be a good thing through some sort of voucher system so long as -- ditto the medicare program -- nobody could spend more than the voucher amount. I'd have to think this one through.] frtzw906 The challenge is to promote flexibility and excellence in education without ending up with nothing but elite schools for the gifted/rich and slums for everyone else. Well, the free market, combined with stipends for the genuinely poor solves that problem. It won't work. The amount of the stipend is obviously going to have limits, and the amount of taxes the free market payers are going to want to contribute to those vouchers is going to be next to nothing. Not unless society as a whole decides to abandon the poor, which is unlikely. If they were going to do so, they would have done so by now. You imply that contributing to public school education is optional or voluntary. I never suggested any such thing. I suggest that the stipend be based on need, and that it come from taxes that are levied equally on all, to reduce the burden to any individual as much as possible. Even the selfish rich would be unlikely to complain about a few dollars, or even a few hundred dollars in additional sales taxes paid to fund public schools. However, in the present system, if "slum schools" happen, the blame falls on the government, not on the parents who put their children in private schools...while usually simultaneously paying for a by-right public school education for the same students. The fact is that the more students who are moved to private schools, the more money and resources available to those remaining in public schools. What on earth could be wrong with that? What's wrong with that is it is total crap. You don't know that. You merely assume it because you have no faith that the people will be willing to tax themselves to achieve it. Problem is, they ALREADY ARE. If they can get a better education for their children, while providing a better education for poor children for the same amount, or less, than they are now paying for a public school education, why wouldn't they? The only real difference in the money stream is that the money goes with the child, not to the district. In this way, the educational system has something to compete for, which always results in a better product. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
#472
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A Usenet persona calling itself frtzw906 wrote:
Scott Weiser wrote: As for the "handicapped" one, she has a RIGHT to that education, by your own argument, and to suggest that her presence drags down the educational environment for other children, which ought to be balanced out by forcing her sister into academic slavery, is astonishingly uncaring and dismissive of the fundamental value of each child, no matter how handicapped. I can't believe you really mean this. ======================= I don't know whether you've ever been in an elementary classroom, but I wonder, are you suggesting that disabled children, mainstreamed into classrooms, do not impact on the educational environment of other children? Are you saying that they do? How undiverse of you. How dare you buck the politically-correct dogma and suggest that disabled children are...well...disabled. Shame on you. I maintain that my position is neither uncaring nor dismissive. Can you demonstrate otherwise. What's uncaring and dismissive is your implicit suggestion that the gifted child has some duty to accept an education inferior to what she might be able to obtain in the interests of egalitarian pain-sharing. The disable child is not to be discriminated against because she's disabled, nor is the gifted child to be discriminated against because she's gifted by being made into an intellectual prop for others. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
#473
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A Usenet persona calling itself Michael Daly wrote:
On 1-Apr-2005, Scott Weiser wrote: I just call 'em like I see 'em. Given your self-imposed blindness, we can all ignore what you call. Self-evidently, you cannot. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
#474
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A Usenet persona calling itself BCITORGB wrote:
Scott figures: =========== It's not the "handicapped" that bothers me...people can be handicapped and I don't subscribe to the pressure to use "politically correct" speech, what offended me is the compartmentalizing of the handicapped child as a debit to the system and your presumption that this debit ought to be leveled out by abusing her sister out of egalitarian zeal. ========= OK. in my anecdote, there was the need for brevity. To fully explain the hypocrisy: here's the rest of the story. The parents in question have a province-wide reputation as advocates for the disabled. A cause celebre for them is school mainstreaming of disabled pupils. OK, so given their passion for this cause, they then remove their bright daughter to an elite private school that does not admit pupils with disabilities. Um, is this true? I find that extremely hard to believe, particularly in Canada, because even here in the USA, it's illegal to discriminate on the basis of physical disability. I sort of imagined it as being a hanging offense in Canada. As I recall, their "rationale" for doing so was that there were too many ESL students in the public school their daughters were attending. "ESL" meaning "handicapped" I presume? Surely, if "mainstreaming" is good for the goose, it ought also to be good for the gander. That's why it was hypocritical. Hm. Well, given what you say, I'd say they were being perfectly consistent with their beliefs and advocacy. They are "mainstreaming" their disabled daughter, just as they argue ought to be done. Clearly they *could* provide the very best individual, specialized care and education for their disabled child, but choose instead to keep her in public school in order to "walk the walk" and demonstrate that disabled children can be "mainstreamed." I laud them for standing by their principles. On the other hand, their gifted daughter evidently needs a more intellectually stimulating environment to reach her full potential, so they decided not to stint on her education by keeping her in private school. I see no hypocrisy at all. I see rational judgment and a concern both for their children and other disabled children, because they evidently genuinely feel that the public school environment provides a SUPERIOR educational AND SOCIAL environment for their disabled daughter. I happen to agree with them. Putting disabled children in "special ed" programs, even very good ones, isolates them from society and from their peers, and it leaves them in the lurch when it comes to the necessary socialization skills they can only learn when interacting with other non-disabled children. "Mainstreaming" is specifically intended to get disabled children out of isolation and get them involved in the community and society, where they can both learn to cope with their disabilities in the real world as well as learn to make friends and dispel prejudices and preconceptions that are often part and parcel of "normal" childhood experience when "normal" children are isolated from the disabled. Anything that leads towards the understanding that the disabled are not "freaks" of some kind is good, and I applaud these parents for sticking with it. As to the other daughter, being gifted, she is unlikely to have as many problems with socialization, and will experience socialization at her new school as well, and will receive a better education. Keeping her in public school would be unfair to her, particularly so if its done *because* she has a disabled sister. -- Regards, Scott Weiser "I love the Internet, I no longer have to depend on friends, family and co-workers, I can annoy people WORLDWIDE!" TM © 2005 Scott Weiser |
#475
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Scott objects:
============ OK, let's look at the Westernworld: Finland. Canada. ============ Both socialist states. Socialism = bad. ================= Irrelevant (even though I don't accept your assertion) as we were talking about quality of education or educational outcomes ("Any number of nations do a better job of educating their children"): Canada and Finland leave the USA in the dust. As do a host of other nations. Depending on what's being measured, anywhere from 12 to 20 nations have better outcomes. frtzw906 |
#476
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Scott maintains:
================ It's hardly a faulty conclusion. Every study ever done shows that private school educations are far superior, particularly when it comes to individualized instruction for the gifted, than public schools. ========== Hey, you've quoted the Fraser Institute before. Why not look at their report on education in BC (I'm not a huge fan but look anyway). While you'll find many private schools at the top of the list (please review their entrance requirements -- top being a Catholic girls school with very stringent entrance requirements), you'll also find quite a few public schools in the top 20. You say "Even in the best public systems, which provide special "charter schools" and special schools for the gifted, the quality of education is far inferior to a private school education targeted at an individual student. " This report will show that you're wrong. Then we should talk about those public schools; what's "special" about them? frtzw906 |
#477
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Scott asks of my libertarian views on social issues:
=================== What makes you think that your opinions are either important or determinative? ============= The fact that I'm a voter and will almost always prefer the candidate with similar views makes my opinion important. Or did you think my vote doesn't count? frtzw906 |
#478
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Scott wonders:
=========== Um, is this true? I find that extremely hard to believe, particularly in Canada, because even here in the USA, it's illegal to discriminate on the basis of physical disability. I sort of imagined it as being a hanging offense in Canada. ============== Well, Scott, you've admonished others more than once for not reading carefully. Now I get to return the favor. At no point did I indicate that the girl in question was "physically" disabled. She was, but that's wasn't the issue. She was also severely mentally disabled. As such, she would have been denied entrance to the private school on academic grounds. Scott asks: ============== "ESL" meaning "handicapped" I presume? =========== Not in my opinion. But the parents in this anecdote clearly felt that the ESL numbers in the school constituted a "debit" (to use your terminology) insofar as the overall learning environment in the school/classroom was concerned. Interestingly, several of the ESL students from Korea and China were the top students in math/arithmetic and music. Scotts asserts: ================ I see rational judgment and a concern both for their children and other disabled children, because they evidently genuinely feel that the public school environment provides a SUPERIOR educational AND SOCIAL environment for their disabled daughter. I happen to agree with them. ============ Yet somehow you are unable to see that by taking their brighter daughter (not gifted, just bright) out of the public school, they diminished the very environment they felt it was important for their disabled daughter to be exposed to. Sorry, that's hypocritical. Scott, again displaying uncharacteristic, left-wing, concern for the societal underdog, argues: ================== "Mainstreaming" is specifically intended to get disabled children out of isolation and get them involved in the community and society, where they can both learn to cope with their disabilities in the real world as well as learn to make friends and dispel prejudices and preconceptions that are often part and parcel of "normal" childhood experience when "normal" children are isolated from the disabled. ============== Yes. And mainstreaming also places an undue and, at times, unfair burden on teachers and classmates. If a "non-disabled" child were to exhibit behaviors shown by many of the disabled children, they would be immediately removed from the classroom and, eventualy expelled from the school. As a teacher-school-society we need to find accommodation for pupils of all capabilities. However, it is an axiom of teaching that, if a pupil consistently undermines the learning environment of the majority of pupils, then that pupil must be removed. In the case of the disabled child in the anecdote (and many, many others), the learning environment was compromised by loud, random, unintelligible utterances that bore no relationship to the matter being taught. This was complemented by random physical outbursts of the child rattling her wheelchair and otherwise thrashing about. There can be no doubt that, notwithstanding the positive attributes of mainstreaming, there are many "debits" (your word) that can be attributed to it. So, back to the parents in question: of course it is hypocritical to expect others' children to try to learn in an environment compromised by their disabled daughter's outbursts while taking their brighter daughter to a private school simply because they have the money to be able to do so. Sheer hypocrisy! frtzw906 |
#479
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KMAN being ever-so clever:
"Both socialist states. Socialism = bad" -- Scott "I Wish I Was" Weiser But why do I have this feeling that people have had similar fun with that surname before...? frtzw906 |
#480
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KMAN in making the case that an exodus of "wealthy" families from the
public school system will eventually leave it impoverished: There will be less and less money. It will become like your plan for health care for the poor...unless a charity provides it, there won't be any. Absolutely correct. frzw906 |
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