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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Brown introduces D.C. teacher incentive bill"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]In that case will we now see it's not just the teachers teaching that will get his or her scores up but the assistance of an active parent. Then again some parents aren't able to help their children with homework etc. so what happens then. I myself remember a little Algebra etc. but still pay for a tutor for my child. What I'm trying to say is that it's more to just getting a highly effective teacher in a low perfoming neighborhood, who knows what goes on in a child home, which could effect their learning. [/quote] Given that you seem to think teacher quality doesn't make much of a difference, why on Earth are we bothering to get certified teachers in these inner city schools, anyway? Why not just save some cash, and pick up a bus full of "teachers" every morning from in front of the Home Depot?[/quote] Teacher quality makes a difference, and teachers know they can be more successful with kids who have help at home.[/quote] ...or with kids who are from wealthy families. Or kids whose mother has a high level of educational attainment. All this is well-known. I'm just puzzled that the counter-argument is inevitably "Sure we can try to get effective teachers into these struggling schools, but that will only have a relatively small impact compared with "Solving Entrenched Social Problem A". [b]Personally, I'd like to see a mandatory national minimum wage of $50k,[/b] as that would do more than any other thing to improve educational outcomes (along with everything else). Maybe someday that will happen. Maybe it won't. But DCPS will not be solving that particular set of problems.[/quote] Wow. That's a great way to send unemployment from 10% to 20%. You go girl. [/quote] Great, so have government simply write a check to make up the shortfall. In other words, salaries paid by private industry would be subsidized by public funds.[/quote] Increasing the role of government is hardly a formula for success in DCPS. That's why it continues to languish and charters continue to thrive. This is a merely a political stratagem by the beleaguered Kwame Brown masquerading as educational policy. It's not designed to improve either schools or education, it's designed to capture WTU union votes.[/quote]
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