Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Center left voter who historically has voted Dem here. I would love alternatives like charter schools and backpack funding. Deep blue places like California and DC have public school alternatives. In California, you can use state funds to homeschool! Why can’t we have options?
APS and FCPS both have options: many immersion and magnet schools available in both.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be very skeptical of reports coming from people who were appointed to these roles for the specific purpose of undermining confidence in public education to create an opportunity to roll out for-profit charter schools.
Good heavens. Where do you get your news from?
Anonymous wrote:Center left voter who historically has voted Dem here. I would love alternatives like charter schools and backpack funding. Deep blue places like California and DC have public school alternatives. In California, you can use state funds to homeschool! Why can’t we have options?
Anonymous wrote:I would be very skeptical of reports coming from people who were appointed to these roles for the specific purpose of undermining confidence in public education to create an opportunity to roll out for-profit charter schools.
Anonymous wrote:Um no, Bellwether, who is listed as their "partner" accepts donations from:
Algiers Charter Schools Association
American Center for School Choice
The American Center for School Choice
American Federation for Children | Alliance for School Choice
Aspire PUblic schools
And I haven't even LEFT the A's in the alphabetical listing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The report is getting noticed by education folks who are Democrats as well, and they aren't dismissing it as a partisan Youngkin document:
http://www.eduwonk.com/2022/05/the-honesty-gap.html
Except if you look at who donates to that particular website it is many many charter schools…. Nice try toungkin troll farm
We know you want to break public education. I say look to the founding fathers who wanted a public education system and stop thinking solely about yourself and your kids.
Lots of organizations donate and only 1 is a charter school. Nice try.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The report is getting noticed by education folks who are Democrats as well, and they aren't dismissing it as a partisan Youngkin document:
http://www.eduwonk.com/2022/05/the-honesty-gap.html
Except if you look at who donates to that particular website it is many many charter schools…. Nice try toungkin troll farm
We know you want to break public education. I say look to the founding fathers who wanted a public education system and stop thinking solely about yourself and your kids.
Anonymous wrote:The report is getting noticed by education folks who are Democrats as well, and they aren't dismissing it as a partisan Youngkin document:
http://www.eduwonk.com/2022/05/the-honesty-gap.html
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would be very skeptical of reports coming from people who were appointed to these roles for the specific purpose of undermining confidence in public education to create an opportunity to roll out for-profit charter schools.
And I’d bet my FCPS paycheck that OP is one of those parties interested in dismantling public education.
I bet you are one of those parents whose kids benefit from inflated grades. Maybe you have connections such that your nearly illiterate kid will still have a steady income no matter their life choices. But the rest of the 98% of income earners need their kid to actually learn enough to be competetive in the workplace.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wasn’t it republicans in Virginia who fought against the common core because #StatesRights? And because Obama was the one who was pushing it?
I’d love a national curriculum and national standardized tests. But I don’t think that’s realistic and it would be great if at least Virginia could invest a lot in public education and get excellent curricula and excellent teachers and have high standards for all our students. Too bad Virginia Republicans don’t seem too interested in doing that.
(And can we not blame state-level democrats for long school closures, it was democrats who passed a law mandating schools stay open, schools being closed too long was the fault of county reps in heavily democratic areas)
Exactly. But people won’t let the truth stand up to a good narrative.
Anonymous wrote:Wasn’t it republicans in Virginia who fought against the common core because #StatesRights? And because Obama was the one who was pushing it?
I’d love a national curriculum and national standardized tests. But I don’t think that’s realistic and it would be great if at least Virginia could invest a lot in public education and get excellent curricula and excellent teachers and have high standards for all our students. Too bad Virginia Republicans don’t seem too interested in doing that.
(And can we not blame state-level democrats for long school closures, it was democrats who passed a law mandating schools stay open, schools being closed too long was the fault of county reps in heavily democratic areas)