Anonymous wrote:I disagree that private schools have more resources and better training than the public schools. Not at all true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I disagree that private schools have more resources and better training than the public schools. Not at all true.
I was just thinking the same, especially about the resources.
I have taught in a public school for 24 years and have never needed anything that wasn't provided. Everything I have requested beyond that has been provided by the school.
Then come to my Title One school where we run out of basic supplies regularly or don't get them to begin with. I have used toilet paper as tissues since February. Ran out of pencils a month or two ago and despite asking for more, I just bought more myself. Same is true for other supplies. We run out of copy paper every other year or so in the spring. Etc.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I disagree that private schools have more resources and better training than the public schools. Not at all true.
I was just thinking the same, especially about the resources.
I have taught in a public school for 24 years and have never needed anything that wasn't provided. Everything I have requested beyond that has been provided by the school.
Anonymous wrote:I disagree that private schools have more resources and better training than the public schools. Not at all true.
Anonymous wrote:Oh come on. This is ridiculous. Most independent schools in this area are outstanding. It's ridiculous to presume that teacher freedom has really back fired. Being highly educated and knowledgeable in your subject is pretty amazing and frankly beats the teacher certification (which I have), which mostly involved studying common sense, like students respond better to positive reinforcement rather than negative words. No shit. If you need to be told that, you are in the wrong field.
Anonymous wrote:I agree with pp, there is a distinct downside to giving teachers all that freedom to teach any way they want. I've seen teachers gather the week before school starts to hash out what they plan to do for curriculum that year. It's kind of nice to have a county mandating that certain things definitely get taught. There's also something odd about the fact that teachers don't need any certification or in fact any experience working with children. You just need a college degree (and being able to coach lacrosse helps).
Anonymous wrote:At our private our teachers have very small class sizes and well supported students. They also have flexibility to adapt the curriculum to suit the class' needs. Their professional development opportunities are amazing and provide observable benefits to their students. I chaperoned a field trip and one of the teachers who planned it told me she had applied to our school for several years in a row knowing full well that there were no advertised openings. Her hope was that when an opening became available, she would be considered since the school would know of her dedicated interest. We have very little turnover in the teaching and admin staff.