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Yeah, the world would be better if we all behaved the way we saw some guys act in a movie.Reminds me of the people who said Fight Club changed their life.
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 could have done better, but my education was what I put into it.
So it's loose and dropping to the ankles for some and riding up the cracks of others.
You class-ist Bourguoise!
you guys are biased agenst homeshcool i HATE public shcool it is 100% agsent the lord and itteaches lies and its crap!
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.
Quote from: crustpope on February 25, 2009, 02:40:26 PMYou class-ist Bourguoise! Proud of it. 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.
Quote from: Colin Michael on February 25, 2009, 05:16:45 PMWe 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. Therein lies the dilemma. Our country has a long history of empahsizing the latter which leads to lost potential. I wish I could say that we have learned from the past, but I still work with teachers who discriminate because of heritage and race. I currently teach in a school that is 90% Hispanic. I have several students who show exceptional potential, comparable to students I had in a gifted-only magnet school in Virginia Beach. When the possibility of an AP Calculus class was mentioned in a department meeting, I thought it was a great idea. However, the other teachers felt that our students couldn't handle that level of Math and that we should steer them to the simpler classes since they would only be "hotel workers" anyway.
Quote from: Colin Michael on February 25, 2009, 05:16:45 PMQuote from: crustpope on February 25, 2009, 02:40:26 PMYou class-ist Bourguoise! Proud of it. 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. Oh don't even get me started....Colin, at what age does someone actually know what they want to do with their lives? How often do we change our minds about what we want to do? What is the latest report from colleges about students changing majors, at least 50% change it once, and over 30% 3-4 times? How much so would it be for a student who was placed in vocational work but had the aspirations of college? How often do we see students nosedive freshman and sophomore year and then get serious their junior and senior year of high school? One track schooling is not the solution at all...I am in the middle of a class on educational history from 1800-2000 and we have been discussing these concepts time and time again. Read Left Back by Diane Ravitch for a general overview...You would be saying a very different tune if you were from the other end of the spectrum...namely a minority in a urban setting where your school is falling apart and teachers are forced to make due with what they have to provide you some form of education. I harp this on you, because before I left small town Ohio, I believed like you, that the "Golden Opportunity is there for everyone". Reality, it's not. Schools are not identical, by any stretch of the imagination. Name me one other country that has to deal with as many different socio-economic, political, and cultural factors as the US? Germany has a much lower diversity and separation of classes as does Japan. Comparing internationally based on output alone is not a fair scale at all...Red, you are entitled to your opinion little brother, but please comment on things that you are more informed about. Not all public school is 100% AGAINST the Lord, although that is how it appears. I felt like you did growing up in high school, and I was from a conservative hometown. Now, looking back, I see that there are many many other topics and matters that need to be handled. Also, be wary of saying public school is full of lies without evidence. I realize you are young and I appreciate your enthusiasm, but I wanted to pass on some advice that others should have passed on to me. Or they probably did and I was too stubborn to listen And regarding the lack of interest in education of some, yes, it will still be there. It has been I'm sure since the concept of education began and probably will be there until the Glorious Appearing. Why? Because of a carnal desire to be lazy. Or perhaps he/she view the education as meaningless and without value. Hence I have tossed around an idea that every student from Kindergarten to High School would participate in one project of their own, something they enjoy, appropriate to grade level of course. Logistics, how it works, what teachers do what with the students, standards, etc, are still rummaging through my brain. But my argument is that as a society and what has been passed down to students today is that book learning is boring, find snippets of something someone said on the Internet, cite the source, and call it understanding the concept. Thus, I am very very wary about the current multimedia infrastructure plan President Obama is enacting to have every school have wireless internet....
I currently teach in a school that is 90% Hispanic. I have several students who show exceptional potential, comparable to students I had in a gifted-only magnet school in Virginia Beach. When the possibility of an AP Calculus class was mentioned in a department meeting, I thought it was a great idea. However, the other teachers felt that our students couldn't handle that level of Math and that we should steer them to the simpler classes since they would only be "hotel workers" anyway.
Quote from: YourMathTeacher on February 25, 2009, 06:02:54 PMI currently teach in a school that is 90% Hispanic. I have several students who show exceptional potential, comparable to students I had in a gifted-only magnet school in Virginia Beach. When the possibility of an AP Calculus class was mentioned in a department meeting, I thought it was a great idea. However, the other teachers felt that our students couldn't handle that level of Math and that we should steer them to the simpler classes since they would only be "hotel workers" anyway.Wow. That would make a great plot for a movie. You could call the teacher, "Mr. Escalanza", and the students could go on to pass the AP Calculus exams. You could call the movie, "Stand and Deliver"....Wait a minute, that's already been done
I prefer to be a better than average teacher, and win "Husband of the Year" or "Father of the Year."
Sydney Portier?
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.