IrishJayhawk
Rock Chalk
- Messages
- 7,181
- Reaction score
- 464
Wrong on both points.
1) The fundamental argument is based on choice for parents and students. Politicians and teachers unions don't want choice. Why? Competition for public education causes major problems for public education enrollment, which effects that district's budget, which effects the teachers' cushy pension/ benefits/ salary. We can't have that, can we?
2) Private/ charter schools aren't required to admit students with special needs, but those numbers in public schools aren't sticking out like a sore thumb. Those same private/ charter schools also don't have 98% of their kids with a 3.9 GPA and top of the line SAT/ ACT scores. Every private school isn't like a high end NYC prep school. Do you think St. Xavier in Ohio or Acquinas in Florida doesn't have middle of the road kids or below? It's not all determined by ability/ genes/ IQ. It starts at home, goes to school and the environment, the discipline, the parents, etc.
Even if you removed the special needs students from the equation, there is no comparing the academic achievement between public schools and private schools. Charter schools I'm not going to stick up for. Many are shady, they still get their money from the state, and are there for reasons outside academics (sports).
With all due respect, anyone who describes teacher salaries and pensions as cushy loses some credibility in my book.
I have a friend who lives in Scottsdale, Arizona. This person has not had a raise in 5 years, despite the union. This person has been teaching for eight years and is incredibly good at it. She has a high quality master's degree in her field. She still makes $37,000 and can't afford to live in the community in which she teaches. There is no tenure in Arizona. She can be fired for no reason whatsoever. This is SCOTTSDALE...one of the richest suburbs in Phoenix.
Riddle me this...if teaching is easy and the salaries and pensions are so amazing, why don't all of the best people do it? Why don't you? Why doesn't IrishPat? He's clearly the best and the brightest... Isn't that how the invisible hand works?
Here's my opinion...biased as it may be as a 13 year veteran teacher... as to why....
Teaching is hard.
Teaching is not very well compensated (in most of the country).
The ability to retire with some measure of comfort after a long teaching career used to be incentive for getting into the field. That incentive has been stripped.
Class sizes continue to increase.
Standardized tests continue to be a meaningless metric that determines "success."
Teachers are constantly told how to do their job by people who haven't spent a day in front of a class.
Last edited: