Per the National Center for Education Statistics, there are over 98,000 public schools in the US. Divide 330 million by 98,000 and you get $3339 per school spent over several years. Just how many teachers did you think you were going to hire for $3339?
Anonymous wrote:Good God, I certainly hope you are not a math teacher, because your grasp of math is atrocious. Do the math on $330 million over several years.
Per the National Center for Education Statistics, there are over 98,000 public schools in the US. Divide 330 million by 98,000 and you get $3339 per school spent over several years. Just how many teachers did you think you were going to hire for $3339?
You are forgetting to add in the cost of the tests and study materials and reporting administration in all the schools. That is way more than 3339.
Anonymous wrote:Whoah. Again, what makes you think the money would be available to spend if Common Core and NCLB were nixed? Congress would cut that funding.
There is no "spend the money on x instead of y." It's probably a fluke that there was even money made available for CC and NCLB in the first place, and with a hostile GOP-run Congress that wants Department of Education DEAD AND GONE your chances of getting anything but cuts are virtually guaranteed.
So the choice is between wasteful spending and no spending?
Good God, I certainly hope you are not a math teacher, because your grasp of math is atrocious. Do the math on $330 million over several years.
Per the National Center for Education Statistics, there are over 98,000 public schools in the US. Divide 330 million by 98,000 and you get $3339 per school spent over several years. Just how many teachers did you think you were going to hire for $3339?
Anonymous wrote:I'm saying it's not as easy as saying that's what should be done and then it's done.
This is the country that defeated the Japanese, landed on the moon, and so much more. Those things were not easy either. They weren't just "done". Sometimes the things that are easy to do are not the ones that matter.
Nobody is saying this will be easy. We can see that it won't be, but we're not quitters. This is worth winning.
Whoah. Again, what makes you think the money would be available to spend if Common Core and NCLB were nixed? Congress would cut that funding.
There is no "spend the money on x instead of y." It's probably a fluke that there was even money made available for CC and NCLB in the first place, and with a hostile GOP-run Congress that wants Department of Education DEAD AND GONE your chances of getting anything but cuts are virtually guaranteed.
Anonymous wrote:http://www.ed.gov/news/press-releases/us-secretary-education-duncan-announces-winners-competition-improve-student-assessments
Just a start: 330 Million from feds to develop tests aligned with Common Core.
This is just peanuts to the total--but it is difficult to find it all in one place.
Gates has several hundred million in grants for Common Core development.
I'm saying it's not as easy as saying that's what should be done and then it's done.
Anonymous wrote:
And what would you have spent it on instead?
Easy. Teachers in classrooms.
Anonymous wrote:
And what would you have spent it on instead?
Easy. Teachers in classrooms.