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However, I don't think doing away with the public school system is the right idea for a couple of reasons. 1. it will continue to feed the mentality of: the rich get richer, the poor get poorer. 2. The public school system is intertwined with other aspects of American life (Sports, music, politics, economy, etc.). To destroy the system in one fell swoop, could bring down the whole house of cards. Now a gradual replacement of working ideas with ones that don't work is what I'm for.
Quote from: Colin Michael on February 24, 2009, 11:36:07 PMDemolish public school.If there is a need for education, free-market will provide affordable schools to the poor.You class-ist Bourguoise! The problem with "free-market" education is that only the rich will be educated and we will eventually revert to a highly structured class society where $$ determines how smart you get to be. I may not like public school but I like the idea and I think that public education has done wonders for our society creating a highly skilled labor force.
Demolish public school.If there is a need for education, free-market will provide affordable schools to the poor.
I do like how our country gives the opportunity to all, and allow each person to make their personal education as much or as little as they can.
I agree and I woudl go further to say that for many people, their education is what they put into it...but some dont want to put anything into it.Would this cost? yes, very much so. But those who want education would get it in spades because only earnest and willing students would be left on the main campuses, and those who are troublemakers would find themselves in a more closely supervised and structured situation (which is probably what they need anyway) and in that program they would find a basic education and the value of hard work.
The problem with private school (which seems to be gettign advocated by a couple people) or homeschool is that those domain's simply can't offer variety that a publically funded school can, and as someone who attends a private school, we miss out.
Free market ideals may work in the economic sector but I dont believ e that education should ever be fully free market based. Free markets always provide an answer to the problem, but the problem is whether it is the right answer to the problem.Even in economics free market advocates will scream "The Market will fix itself" and they are right. The problem is that the market is a Giant that has no heart and no soul. It is a Titanic force of nature that will grind up the living bones of humans to make its bread. The market will fix itself, but people will die. They always have in a truly open and free market.I have no reason to believe that the same thing will happen if we totally privatize education. People wont die, but their souls will. When only the rich can afford education then we will be condemning the poor to a second class life and we will be losing the doors on their options.
I also know I will sound heartless when I say this, but it is not the responsibility of those with money to be forced to give to those with none. The larger the safety net becomes, the more likely people are to fall right into it. If there is a cusion for the poverty class, then more people will sit back and enjoy their "poverty" as the rich pay for their laziness.
I think Israel provides a good model of education. When you were of the age of learning, you pursued academic interests. If you didn't show the capacity to be taken on as a disciple by a rabbi, you went to vocational school (via apprenticeship).
We need to separate the intellectual elites from the workers; that kind of oligarchy works as long as its based of intellectual merit rather than heritage.
How do you come to terms with this biblically? We are called to be good stewards of our resources.
Sadly though, it is this mindset that there are a huge amount of people sitting around doing nothing getting paid enough to survive that has been portrayed by the media and others to make ourselves feel righteous anger and injustice, when that's often not the case at all....
Now I KNOW we've had this conversation before. What surprises me is you're still not acknowledging how stupid some smart people can be.
I had thought it was mentioned somewhere here in this thread already, but America's status as a production nation has been declining for years. Production is outsourced and we are moving into a service-oriented economic model. There wouldn't be nearly enough jobs in the country to support all the rabble that you are deliberately excluding from any opportunity for self-improvement.
you guys are biased agenst homeshcool i HATE public shcool it is 100% agsent the lord and itteaches lies and its crap!
I'm speaking of people of intellect and will; not just "well read" sophists.
The difference between proletariats and "providers of service" isn't really important.
There-in, splitting education between academia and vocational interests will allow both societies to progress (as the ivory tower will be teaching the vocational schools, thus progressing them).
Competative market will provide both forms of education at affordable levels (no one is going to open a school to accomodate educational needs in Harlem that no-one in Harlem can afford).
Thinkers need to be taught how to think by the education system; doers need to know the information required for them to do. Both types are necessary for society.Those adept for natural sciences and such will learn nothing from a philosophy or logic course while those adept for the liberal arts will gain nothing from a biology or physics course. Basically, education does nothing to account for the large percentage of "free-thinkers", who are commonly labeled with ADD.
Quote from: Colin Michael on February 26, 2009, 05:54:59 PMThinkers need to be taught how to think by the education system; doers need to know the information required for them to do. Both types are necessary for society.Those adept for natural sciences and such will learn nothing from a philosophy or logic course while those adept for the liberal arts will gain nothing from a biology or physics course. Basically, education does nothing to account for the large percentage of "free-thinkers", who are commonly labeled with ADD.You honestly think that natural sciences do not need philosophy or logic? Where are they going to learn about the ethics of stem-cell research or cloning or the like? And what about the other side...liberal arts have much to gain from a basic understanding of how the world works. Again, I allude to the fact that students change their minds multiple times about what they want to do. Hence why a specialized education, ESPECIALLY one separated by "spheres of influence or what have you" is not going to be a good move in the long run....
If you want to talk about degrees of effectiveness, he probably does. He doesn't seem to be in any hurry to have an excluded middle.
Quote from: The Schaef on February 26, 2009, 09:15:26 PMIf you want to talk about degrees of effectiveness, he probably does. He doesn't seem to be in any hurry to have an excluded middle.Well, is there a compromise to be reached between the two?I mean, clearly, if the German and Japanese schools are beating ours, they're either being better educated or they're the master races.
Quote from: Colin Michael on February 26, 2009, 09:20:19 PMQuote from: The Schaef on February 26, 2009, 09:15:26 PMIf you want to talk about degrees of effectiveness, he probably does. He doesn't seem to be in any hurry to have an excluded middle.Well, is there a compromise to be reached between the two?I mean, clearly, if the German and Japanese schools are beating ours, they're either being better educated or they're the master races.Or American schools teach to tests (see SAT, various state tests used for funding gauges) and students don't actually learn.
We already have both. Some people go on to college for more book learnin'. Others go to technical schools to learn how to do stuff. Others just get jobs.I've known people who have gone on to college and earned degrees in things that qualified them for basically nothing except going on to get a Masters degree. I've known people who have gotten a job at a convenient store right after high school, and stayed there. I've known people who have gone to cooking schools, hairdressing schools, computer certification schools, and other "vocational" type schools. All of these are available now
But the problem is, these schools don't start until 18 and should be started much sooner.
There are also vocational high schools.
Quote from: Colin Michael on February 26, 2009, 11:50:39 PMBut the problem is, these schools don't start until 18 and should be started much sooner.This I would agree with. I would like students to have the option to gaina general education that is balanced in all areas, but as they approach jr.high school and Sr. high school they are able to focus on the skills they like or preffer. I think the magnet school approach is a step in the right direction here. If someone knows they want to be a doctor after school, then I think they should be able to either go to a school that helps them focus on those skills or take classes in their school that will help prepare them for that skill.I say this also knowing that many students will still not know what they want to do after HS and will therefore need a "general education" school just like what we have now.
I mean, the stuff learned in undergraduate college could easily be copy/pasted into highschool. Teaching kids more difficult things when they're younger makes them smarter. Also, if we move undergraduate down a step (or even just move down college general education), we will progress the entire chain of education proportionally.There are some things that students learn senior year of high school or freshman/sophmore year of highschool that are both basic concepts and essential concepts for good intellectual development. High School freshmen and sophmores most definitely will benefit from taking logic courses, rhetoric courses, and grammer courses (for these things matter in any job far more than natural sciences, for they teach you to think rather than to memorise). Also, learning at least basic latin greatly helps both ones grammer and capacity for understanding romance languages (although this could very well be done in middle school; my brother and I had no problem with it then).As for mathematics and natural sciences, students should definitely possess basic knowledge of them; however, the goal of institutions currently is to make kids pass tests rather than make them brilliant. Memorising facts doesn't build the logical side of one's mind.