I doubt that. Many homeschooled children are smarter than average.
Now this isn't to say that homeschooling is superior. Some parents make horrible teachers and I know by experience. However, parents who are patient and knowledgable, together with kids self-motivated to learn, make homeschooling a far better choice than public school for some.
I'd say that the students, parents, and schools are unequal; no number of microscopes and midnight basketball programs is going to stop lousy students from being lousy and awful parents from being awful.Kids do not get an equal shot, because public school options are not close to equal.
We had this dicussion about Washington D.C., which (again) receives more per capita funding than any U.S. state.Why? Well, public districts are mostly paid for via the district's property taxes. Naturally, if the district is a poor area (and thus, has low property value), the district gets less money, even if it takes in more students than a more affluent district.
You failed to mention the money that is wasted. So a school in Minneapolis hires new teachers and buys new computers, so what? That doesn't mean the kids get any smarter.Why I don't pretend to paint the issue of educational disparity as just a "pump more money into it" sort of thing, (I know it isn't that simple), its obvious that poorer districts are at a big disadvantage, and students lose because of that.
There are a few purposed solutions. One is to increase the involvement of the state and federal governments (grants to poor districts). They do this to some extent already, but some groups would like more involvement to close the gap. I'm not really a fan of this, because I think its dangerous to get administrators hooked on free money. Plus, the state/feds will then want more control over what goes on in each district, which most people don't want.
The private schools would have no interest in keeping a poor administrator on staff. Public schools, on the other hand, have their hands tied by threats of strikes by teacher's unions, wrongful termination lawsuits, and anti-"discrimination" legislation.Another solution are school vouchers, which allow children to attend private school. I'm really not a fan of this either. First, its using taxpayer money to support religious education (if I wanted to support catholic schools...I'd send my kids to one). Also, private schools have no oversight from the state, so basically anybody can work there, which leads to subpar administrators.
Most of the Teachers in public schools are not qualified to teach Senior-level math,physics,chemistry,biology, ect.
This is largely because the vast majority of parents are not qualified to teach Senior-level math, physics, chemistry, biology, english, AND social studies. It takes a decent amount of expertise in a subject to teach it to another person. To have that expertise over 6 subjects is very rare.
If you created a good work environment, perhaps you could attract that math graduate who has just completed a master's and wants a fulfilling job. Perhaps a class of 23 students that doesn't include 8 emotionally disfunctional "special" cases will encourage them.
I'd say that the students, parents, and schools are unequal; no number of microscopes and midnight basketball programs is going to stop lousy students from being lousy and awful parents from being awful.
Sharpe said:We had this dicussion about Washington D.C., which (again) receives more per capita funding than any U.S. state.
North Dakota, on the other hand, spends the lowest per capita ($4,612 - one third of Washington D.C.) yet has a graduation rate of 88%, second highest in the nation.
sharpe said:You failed to mention the money that is wasted. So a school in Minneapolis hires new teachers and buys new computers, so what? That doesn't mean the kids get any smarter.
Sharpe said:The private schools would have no interest in keeping a poor administrator on staff. Public schools, on the other hand, have their hands tied by threats of strikes by teacher's unions, wrongful termination lawsuits, and anti-"discrimination" legislation.
And
I think all schools should be run like D.O.D.D.S. shools (department of defence dependant schooling).
To do this, you would have to eliminate a lot of the bureaucracy and break the strangle-hold that the unions have on hiring and firing. You can't attract top talent into a profession where lazy, apathetic old teachers make more than more than brilliant young teachers performing the same task much better. Public school compensation is not a merit-based system. Things only change where parents decide that they are willing to pay more for top talent, and even then, the unions rule.
I'm in a boarding school, were my mum pays some # thousand to make me learn stupid British stuff.
After all, in a true meritocracy, space must exist for people to move 'down' a class as well as up ie, maybe not to become professionals like their folks but plumbers or carpenters instead. The problem is, who is going to allow a curriculum that allows that?