Anonymous wrote:There may be two challenges here.
In the public schools, to get beyond this negativity to see what is good.
In the private schools, to get beyond the polite office staff and fancy bathrooms to evaluate whether the education is really better than the public schools.
Anonymous wrote:There may be two challenges here.
In the public schools, to get beyond this negativity to see what is good.
In the private schools, to get beyond the polite office staff and fancy bathrooms to evaluate whether the education is really better than the public schools.
Anonymous wrote:For us the start of public school felt like a slap in the face. It did get a little better as the year went on - met plenty of very nice parents and kids - but you kind of have to "suck it up" to get through a lot of it (the take or leave attitude of the administration, silly grading, unwelcoming front desk, poor communications, etc). It is not just the parents - kids who have experienced a good-fit private who switch to
an average public do pick up on these things as well.
Why are public school parents so defensive?
But let's be candid here: a huge percentage of these masters degrees ^^ are distance learning degrees from online-only "universities", or the Continuing Education wing of [not at all competitive] State U. And they're completed in < 13 months. Whoop de Do.
Not saying some percentage of modern teachers aren't smart -- clearly, some are. But I pay zero credence to this "and public teachers must have a MASTERS!!" boosterism. Seriously, the stupidest person in my family is a teacher with a Masters. The most incurious, anti-intellectual person in my family is a principal with a Masters. She can make the ship run smoothly, but she's a drooling Creationist at Thanksgiving dinner.
How do you know this?
Just ask the schools themselves. Or work backward and talk with the local higher ed places like Towson. Think critically - the teachers who obtain their masters *while teaching kids * -- how could they do that simultaneously, in one year, if many of the hours WEREN'T distance learning? And that's how it works, you start teaching with the contingency that the masters will be completed by date X.
In VA, there is no education major for an undergrad degree. Teachers must get a undergrad degree than get a teaching certificate. Once completed, there is usually only a few classes left to take and one completes a masters so yes, many teachers start to teach and then take the last few clases to get their masters degree.
Anonymous wrote:Well, at our public school, many parents know each other, the staff are very pleasant and friendly, and they even had a welcome back "breakfast" for parents in the gym after drop off (where we got to walk our kids to their classes). So you can't assume all public schools are the same.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
But let's be candid here: a huge percentage of these masters degrees ^^ are distance learning degrees from online-only "universities", or the Continuing Education wing of [not at all competitive] State U. And they're completed in < 13 months. Whoop de Do.
Not saying some percentage of modern teachers aren't smart -- clearly, some are. But I pay zero credence to this "and public teachers must have a MASTERS!!" boosterism. Seriously, the stupidest person in my family is a teacher with a Masters. The most incurious, anti-intellectual person in my family is a principal with a Masters. She can make the ship run smoothly, but she's a drooling Creationist at Thanksgiving dinner.
How do you know this?
Just ask the schools themselves. Or work backward and talk with the local higher ed places like Towson. Think critically - the teachers who obtain their masters *while teaching kids * -- how could they do that simultaneously, in one year, if many of the hours WEREN'T distance learning? And that's how it works, you start teaching with the contingency that the masters will be completed by date X.
Anonymous wrote:What do they have in the bathrooms of private school?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What do they have in the bathrooms of private school?
Usually there's a nice basket on the sink with an array of hand lotion, hair spray, tampons (for upper level girls, obv.), breath mints, etc.
Anonymous wrote:What do they have in the bathrooms of private school?