AngryCorvair wrote:
i've seen at least three posts in this thread mention "the alternative" to public schooling:
Mental said:
I agree that the return on my investment is a bit disapionting, but I don't mind paying becuase I have seen the alternative both here and abroad.
Oh, good piont. In this particular instance, I was refering to the alternative being an unfunded, or underfunded school sytem. In some western states the tribal systems are pretty bad. The bus rides take hours (thats plural) over bad roads so they can't do school work while they ride. In some of smaller southern towns and the midwest a lack of any extra-curicular activity outside of sports limits college oppurtunities, so a lot of kids drop out and take the mill job they are going to have to get when they graduate anyway. Overseas, where I was in Africa, if they kids are lucky enough to go to school, they cannot enter the final grade until they complete their open-ended compulsary military service. I have seen the trucks roll up as the school lets out and they "recruit" the kids there at gunpiont.
The other part of it when I was in Germany was a brilliant school system that prepared children for adulthood. If you want to go to college, the system prepares you while you are in High School. If you want to work a trade, they do that as well. I saw 17 year old kids on a work training program assembling engines at the Porsche factory. By the time they enter the workforce, they are skilled craftsmen
AngryCorvair wrote:
then Mental sums up his position with:
I am kinda with Tim on this one. The mere fact we have to spell this out does kind of underscore the need for a proper education system
but what's the definition of a proper education system?
and since i disagree with what's being spelled out, does that mean that i didn't get a proper education?
Another excellent piont. I did fail to clarify my position. There is no obvious detailed answer. Bu I would think most of us could agree a decent education system should preapre youth for adulthood, regardless of their choice of career path, or as a minimum, offer at least the oppurtnity for success. Not everyone is going to be a corprate CEO (on account of most them have souls) and not everyone wants to be. If a young person wants to learn construction, good on em. If they want to go to college they should be prepared for that as well.
Your disagreement of what is being spelled out simply means I failed to clarify my piont, and you are right. But I would venture almost all parents feel the piont of an education is to provide some training and oppurtunity. Those with means and the sense the public system is not providing it find other ways to give it to them. Private school or home schooling. But there are many who are without the means to do so.
Few expect a public school system to provide these things on the same level as a good private school, or as tailored as a well structured home schooled kid, but they should provide something, which if I understand correctly, Margie's system isn't doing at all. No extra-curicular activities and no AP courses. My old GA high school actually provided qualified training for basic entry level medical jobs, bottany, and entry level mechanical skill. Children who graduated from those programs were ready to start working. If Margies system is cutting the extra-curricular and well into a hiring freeze, I would almost garuntee those programs are not availible either.
So, you have joe average high school student in Voluisa county. He/She has no way of separting themselves from a college apllicant to UofF frm a better local system who was a cheerleader/football player in AP classes. Not becuase they weren't smart enough, becuase the program wasn't there. They also haven't learned a skill, so they aren;t as competitive for an entry level position to allow for more school, or start a career or both. Hello Mc Donald's. Home schooling and private school weren't options becuase both praents worked, or it was a single parent or what ever.
So for all ther input and taxes paid by the residents of that country, they have basically created a high school graduate with the same oppurtunities at some kid who graduated from summer school in the bottom 3rd of the class (That would be me).
At that piont, why is the kid even trying? and what is the piont of paying property taxes.
As for the solution, I don't have a specific one. It sure isn't more standards and testing and dear god is it not the No Child Left Behind Act. But I am, sure it involved both education mamgers and buracrats with the intestional fortitude to make better decisions that positivly affect the future, not just their job and a group of taxpayers both with children and without that realize uneducated and untrained children are a burden or our society and getting a proper school systems that preaprs them to compete is an ivestment for all of us to share, not just parents.
Buuuuuut if we were capable of that, we wouldn't be having these problems would we.