On Aug 20th, there was what I though was a significant
exchange dealing with primary education. I repeat it here on this web site thus
call attention to the entire exchange on +Google Discussion section: +Education
Revolution in the General Discussion section. The exchange points out the differences
between conservatives and liberals. In essence, regardless of politics, we both
want our children to have the best education possible. The Difference is that
conservatives want the best education for
their children where as liberals want he best educations for all children—there is a stark
difference. This discussion clearly point out that difference.
URL: firetreepub.blogspot.com Comments Invited and not moderated
I pushed back on the results of a recent Gallup Annual
Survey on the Public’s Attitude about, which showed 68% of parents “do not
believe that standardized tests help teachers know what to teach”. I do not
agree with the poll results but have no choice but to believe the accuracy of
the result, therefore, I addressed the consequences of parents’ attitudes on
education. It was the political implications of the response to my remarks I
found interesting and enlightening as to why the strong right wing bias is getting public education in trouble.
I agreed with the contributors initial response on the Google
site, “Without standardized testing and the precious information it yields we
would have no way to determine international and intra-national rank lists on a
subject by subject basis to gauge competitiveness and to identify where in the
world kids are learning best with a view to emulating the best of the best
(were appropriate), determining which of the many curricula is best for both
student engagement and objective success among heterogeneously performing
groups of students among differing socioeconomic backgrounds . . .”. OK up to this point but then the respondent
launched into a tirade against unions and teachers.
The respondent accurately identified multiple solutions and
suggested responses; fire poorly performing teachers, identify waste in the
system, allocate resources, better pay for educators, and a whole litany of
good things; things that should be done. He talked about shrinking resources without
saying why resources are shrinking, which is that conservatives want to cut taxes as though there is not
connection between the problems and tax income. Seemingly in verification
of that lack of understanding, he wrote, “to make the case for bold changes
such as significant tax rebates for home or small group schoolers [sec]and
reallocating funds from underachieving schools to overachieving charter
schools; and so on and so forth”. Of course, the implication is that it is not good
for children to be in public school.
I responded: “I agree with some of what you say, however . .
. your 220 word sentence seems to endorse what some of us feel is at the heart
of the problem with public education”—he had written his response as a very long
sentence. We all recognize that there is a need “to design innovative learning
techniques and environments that will maximize each group’s potential”. Then
you seem to launch into an argument in support of making “bold changes such
[as] significant tax rebates for home or small group schoolers [sic] and
reallocating funds from underachieving schools to overachieving charter
schools”. The correctness of tax rebates, on top of voucher programs, both of which
remove funds available public schools and move them into private programs, is
debatable. The obvious result of doing these things is that there is even less
support for under achieving schools, which often happens to be the very schools
for students who come from poor neighborhoods. This is what the anti bussing
program is all about; do not waste “your tax” money on buses; this keeps poor
children in poor neighborhoods.”
His response, in addition to some bantering about my English
and criticism of his long sentience was, “Parents and students simply want
educational choices available to them so that they can take advantage of the
option(s) that best meet the needs of the individual learner. On the whole, they couldn't care less about the latest
ridiculous demands of a self-interest group whose principal task is to maintain
the status quo from which union members greatly benefit over against what is
best for students and their families.” The respondent went on to claim teacher
unions “have a monopoly on the education sector”. By controlling what is
tantamount to a monopoly on the education sector “they stifle competition,
innovation as well as the cognitive and overall growth of Canada's youth.” This
is the standard hate the union spiel of conservatives.
The writers most telling sentence was, “The irony is that
teachers are as much victims as the children they claim to educate since the
CBAs [I have no idea of what the acronym means]
quickly snuff-out great ideas and authentic enthusiasm possessed by younger
teaches as they enter the profession having unwittingly participated in the
union's nefarious activities designed to create a quagmire of unmerited
privilege based entirely on seniority rather than performance, general fecklessness
encouraged by a culture of mediocrity supported by a bloated bureaucratic
system lead by weak-willed ineffective managers who generally care more about
counting down the days to their very comfortable retirement.”
In summary, what I took his statement to mean is that the
problem in education boils down to teachers and “weak-willed ineffective
managers”. On this blog site, firetreepub.blogspot.com, I have repeatedly made
the point, conservatives think something is right or is working only if they
are in charge. To me, the correctness of tax rebates, on top of voucher
programs, which remove funds from public schools and move them into private programs,
is the center of the debate. The obvious result of doing these things is that
there is even less support for under achieving schools. This is what, for
example, the anti bussing programs are all about; save “your tax” money by
keeping poor children in poor neighborhoods where under achieving public school
keep impoverished; thus, forcing parents to want to end their children to
charter schools.
The only reason there are charter schools in poor neighborhoods
and special needs students, and that is where they often are located, is
because corporation, headed by
conservatives, who are making big money off taxpayer dollars that should be
going to the public school. As time goes on, it is predictable; polls will
reveal educational standards are failing in both public school and charter schools
(all of them) but are getting better and better in expensive private schools.
Now that the greedy genie is out of the bottle, free enterprise in education—education FOR PROFIT—will only work if the
rich get richer and the poor get poorer. Education only works for everyone if
it is socialized, which it is in a democracy. Income disparity, better known
as Reaganomics, has affected university level education in a big way, and is now
eroding away primary education; you want your six children to be physicians? It
will cost you $50,000 a year tuition for four years for each child not counting
premedical years; in case you didn’t do the math it adds to over $1,200,000.00
just for med school. Did I mention they will be competing for entrance to
college against children who were educated in privates schools; as they say;
good luck.
URL: firetreepub.blogspot.com Comments Invited and not moderated
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