Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bad for poor kids great for rich kids. Take two kids growing up in DC, one poor and going to public school and the other rich and going to an elite private. These kids have nowhere near the same opportunities. I kind of wish they would get rid of privates altogether, and I went to a catholic school growing up.
Poor kid, give an example. I agree with you somewhat regarding the extracurriculars (exotic vacations, tutoring, internships/networking for summer jobs) that more affluent families have access to in supporting their kids' navigation through a private school education, and also the extra nudge that some teachers may provide wealthier clientele. I think lower middle income kids can benefit from educational opportunities at private schools as long as they come in with confidence and a clear understanding that they need to focus and not become bedazzled by their rich peers who enjoy bragging about their more lavish and "easier" lifestyles. Parents of lower income kid have to work harder at finding enrichment opportunities and programs outside of the school.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree with the whole premise of who's bad and why. I wholeheartedly agree that the public education system is an extremely vital national asset and that it should be supported. But I also think that our public education system is fundamentally broken and needs serious overhaul. The public education system has in many places become watered down and broken, to serve in many cases as little more than a glorified daycare. We are churning out class after class of kids with minimal literacy, numeracy, minimal understanding of science, geography, current events, civics, et cetera. Schools have been placing lower and lower expectations on students, in terms of schoolwork, rigor, organizational skills and discipline. Universities are horrified at how underprepared students are - even as they water down their own curricula - for example, the battle raging in the engineering community about whether to require a Masters degree for licensure due to the erosion of university engineering programs. And for those students who aren't destined for academia, there are far too few opportunities for vocational or other types of education. The educational system seems to have little clue of what preparation kids need for entering the workforce or even general life skills needed which could even help them with routine things like adequate math for managing their household budget and financial planning. Many public schools are at this point little more than a glorified daycare with watered-down educational content. A lot of what's happening with regard to families abandoning public schools has to do with a fundamental lack of faith in the traditional public school system - and that's not just reflected in private school enrollment, it's also in wildfire charter school enrollment along with, surprisingly, a huge increase in homeschooling - a huge component of that is a vote of no-confidence in local schools. Berating parents and calling them "bad" is not the answer - fixing the school system and winning families back is the answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP - Interesting study, 10:16. But is it actually measuring by the exact same standard across all years going back to 1973? Somehow I doubt it is.
Luckily, you don't have to speculate about the answer for this question. You can look it up:
http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/about/
http://nces.ed.gov/nationsreportcard/about/ltt_main_diff.aspx
Anonymous wrote:Bad for poor kids great for rich kids. Take two kids growing up in DC, one poor and going to public school and the other rich and going to an elite private. These kids have nowhere near the same opportunities. I kind of wish they would get rid of privates altogether, and I went to a catholic school growing up.
Anonymous wrote:Bad for poor kids great for rich kids. Take two kids growing up in DC, one poor and going to public school and the other rich and going to an elite private. These kids have nowhere near the same opportunities. I kind of wish they would get rid of privates altogether, and I went to a catholic school growing up.
Anonymous wrote:NP - Interesting study, 10:16. But is it actually measuring by the exact same standard across all years going back to 1973? Somehow I doubt it is.
Anonymous wrote:Disagree. Options in the country are what makes things so innovative. I'm glad there are all types of schools out there and everyone isn't a cookie cutter replica of each other. I hate the elitism of some privates, but in a way are glad I don't have to deal with a lot of elitist families. In a way I think the segregation goes both ways.