Get rid of public schools and then induce salary caps on the teachers of the remaining private schools, so that even inner-city students get a chance at good teachers.Also, you could have a teacher draft every year and fantasy leagues for teachers. I love my idea.
12/6/2009 10:52:48 PM
i am 100% on board.wow. that's actually a top-notch idea.
12/6/2009 11:03:44 PM
most teachers would TAKE LESS MONEY to not work inner citys. This would completely fail unless you paid teachers more based on how poor the area is. Inner city teachers would make the most and suburbia (cary, collierville) would make the least. It still wouldn't work. A nationwide cookie cut system like the post office is whats needed. That way everybody gets good education (ie mail is delivered everywhere everyday with all of the same great services in each local post office)
12/6/2009 11:11:09 PM
12/6/2009 11:17:20 PM
12/6/2009 11:18:34 PM
12/6/2009 11:28:32 PM
12/6/2009 11:38:31 PM
12/7/2009 12:05:35 PM
12/7/2009 12:25:57 PM
I've gotten into debates with other libertarians about public school. I make the point that public education is essentially "infrastructure," like roads or water. Without an educated population, we can't possibly expect to be a competitive nation. There are going to be parents that have children and just don't care. Without "free" public schools, they probably wouldn't bother sending them to a private school.As far as capping salaries, that won't work. One of the problems is that there isn't much incentive to be a teacher these days. You have to work for years and years just to make decent money. We need to have excellent teachers that are well trained, in all grades, so something has to make teaching a more lucrative career. In private schools, teachers get good salaries, and they're also more skilled and the kids get better educations.
12/7/2009 12:43:01 PM
12/7/2009 1:06:59 PM
12/7/2009 1:12:00 PM
12/7/2009 1:17:08 PM
I assumed they would get paid more, but I guess there probably are private schools that are actually worse than some public schools. What about in high performing private schools, though? How could they attract needed talent without paying competitive salaries?
12/7/2009 1:25:31 PM
^ He answered that with the second part of his sentence. By not requiring teachers to go into debt to the tune of a down payment on a nice house just so that they can have a piece of paper that says they can add, they can afford to pay a lower salary while still allowing a teacher to maintain a quality lifestyle.
12/7/2009 1:35:29 PM
12/7/2009 1:45:35 PM
12/7/2009 5:29:10 PM
A salary cap would be meaningless, because then they'd just come up with non-salary ways to provide compensation.Not to mention the current breed of Republicans would definitely oppose this scheme because of the salary caps.
12/7/2009 5:35:40 PM
12/7/2009 9:00:58 PM
12/7/2009 10:16:47 PM
12/7/2009 11:07:15 PM
12/7/2009 11:55:58 PM
12/8/2009 7:37:22 AM
When people think of "private" schools they automatically picture places like Cary Academy or Providence Country Day (Charlotte). The fact is their are just as many 2nd tier high schools that are "private"; kind of like the Miller-Mottes of high school. There was a "private" school next to my high school. It was merely 40 kids who were either expelled out of my school or were to ADD to sit through a normal program. Instead they got an "alternative" style education.
12/8/2009 8:38:35 AM
12/8/2009 9:46:52 AM
Theres no way you can generalize private schools because there are so many different types of private schools with many being garbage and some being college for teenagers.
12/8/2009 12:37:27 PM
12/8/2009 2:01:54 PM
12/8/2009 3:16:34 PM
12/8/2009 3:26:11 PM
In other words, "not being able or willing to hack it in public schools."And seriously. ITT, people who've never taught tell teachers what teaching is really about.
12/8/2009 4:52:44 PM
12/8/2009 5:00:16 PM
^^People who are inside the system are often the worst people to ask on how to reform it. They've bought into the assumptions and framework of the institution where they work. It's almost impossible to stay anywhere very long and avoid that.So, from teachers, you're going to get suggestions about better ways to do things within that system, or how to make small changes, but you're rarely going to have anyone advocating a serious overhaul.[Edited on December 8, 2009 at 5:02 PM. Reason : a]
12/8/2009 5:01:35 PM
^^ She's 21.And a troll.
12/8/2009 5:04:00 PM
12/8/2009 5:18:23 PM
teacher quality really is the answer. (well, of course, not THE answer, but it should be one of the top priorities).increase teacher pay, fire the crappy ones, be more selective in hiring, etc. teach for america's got the right idea. but it's hard to retain teachers with 30k salaries.
12/8/2009 6:56:30 PM
12/8/2009 8:19:19 PM
12/8/2009 8:31:27 PM
I'd like to clear up also, that I'm not arguing for the abolition of K-12 public schools or public funding of K-12 schools either. The system needs a massive overhaul, and a reduction in the amount of mysticism afforded to it (i.e. "you can't teach or talk about what makes a good school without going through training") but public funding is not the problem in this case (though it is the camel's nose so to speak).
12/8/2009 8:49:47 PM
public funding isn't even close to being the problem. it's the mishandling of public funds that is the problem. screw this rehashed professional development for the sake of professional development that the counties are dumping on their teachers without offering any real accountability. screw smart boards and laptops when the teachers don't know how to teach. you can have classrooms full of laptops, but if you don't have a teacher who can motivate, teach, and hold their students accountable then the kids aren't gonna learn jack. but give a struggling students a pen, paper, a white board, and a great teacher and they'll learn a lot. and then take all of the wasted funds and put it towards increasing teacher salaries to attract fresh minds and relentless workers and you have a big step towards solving education right there.[Edited on December 8, 2009 at 9:16 PM. Reason : ]
12/8/2009 9:11:45 PM
do the math if someone graduates in 3 and a half years and the age in profiles doesn't update...
12/8/2009 9:18:31 PM
12/8/2009 9:40:15 PM
because every teacher brings their political opinions into the classroom and lets play your game and assume my political views are "crazy". Well its very easy to integrate ones "crazy" political views into science.
12/8/2009 9:46:04 PM
I don't mind crazy opinions. On science or politics or anything else. I have a few myself.I don't mind those things when I can trace out an intelligible thought process that led to them. People who are reasonable, stable, and very bright can come to conclusions that are very different than my own.That's not the problem, here. This is because there are also people who believe crazy things without an ounce of intelligence or mental stability. In fact, of those with crazy opinions, this set comprises the majority. You are one of them.
12/8/2009 9:56:43 PM
^^ It's hard to argue with you when your rebuttal isn't a complete thought.[Edited on December 8, 2009 at 9:57 PM. Reason : moo.]
12/8/2009 9:57:19 PM
12/8/2009 10:08:24 PM
12/8/2009 10:10:03 PM
12/8/2009 10:11:52 PM
you're obviously just a political homer
12/8/2009 10:19:29 PM
I'm not gay, if that's what you're referring to.
12/8/2009 10:25:53 PM
12/8/2009 10:38:58 PM