Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want a democratically run school, choose public.
+1. You are clearly so miserable just go to public. Making thread after thread after thread is insane
I enjoy most things of my private school, and also I enjoy when the money pay is used efficiently to benefit most kids. In a capitalist economy , as a customer you can request some standards to a provider. In a communist regime, you have to comply and don’t have the right to ask or discuss. You seem to be better suited for a communist regime.
Did you eat a lot of crayons as a kid?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want a democratically run school, choose public.
+1. You are clearly so miserable just go to public. Making thread after thread after thread is insane
I enjoy most things of my private school, and also I enjoy when the money pay is used efficiently to benefit most kids. In a capitalist economy , as a customer you can request some standards to a provider. In a communist regime, you have to comply and don’t have the right to ask or discuss. You seem to be better suited for a communist regime.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You clearly have no experience with organizational leadership.
I attend school board meetings and that’s precisely why I posted my comment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you want a democratically run school, choose public.
+1. You are clearly so miserable just go to public. Making thread after thread after thread is insane
Anonymous wrote:If you want a democratically run school, choose public.
Anonymous wrote:Too much power?
Maybe potentially, but rarely in practice.
Members are chosen by the Administration with an eye to their likely support. And the Board receives almost all their information from the Administration.
Anonymous wrote:Most people on the boards are there for their financial connections not their neural connections. At our school the real estate agent went on the board the first day he was at the school. I’ll bet he downloaded every parent contact. Embarrassing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You clearly have no experience with organizational leadership.
I attend school board meetings and that’s precisely why I posted my comment.
Do you understand the laws associated with nonprofits? Each state has its own nonprofit code that sets forth powers and responsibilities and then case law. There is no collective.
But you could base your decisions on the inputs from parents, right? No law prevents that.
The board has to act within the requirements of their duties. Whether other parents agree or not really isn’t relevant. The parents may want them to do something that breaches a duty. Even if all parents want that, they cannot act in that way.
Delaware has a lot of case law. Maybe Google.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You clearly have no experience with organizational leadership.
I attend school board meetings and that’s precisely why I posted my comment.
That sounds like you have zero experience with organizational leadership.
This post is like looking inside the mind of a toddler.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You clearly have no experience with organizational leadership.
I attend school board meetings and that’s precisely why I posted my comment.
Do you understand the laws associated with nonprofits? Each state has its own nonprofit code that sets forth powers and responsibilities and then case law. There is no collective.
But you could base your decisions on the inputs from parents, right? No law prevents that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You clearly have no experience with organizational leadership.
I attend school board meetings and that’s precisely why I posted my comment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You clearly have no experience with organizational leadership.
I attend school board meetings and that’s precisely why I posted my comment.
Which school? Ours doesn’t have open meetings.
I didn’t say it was open to everyone, I was invited.
Why would you be invited?
For the topic discussed. If you have attended board meetings you would know.