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- Path: sparky!uunet!spool.mu.edu!studsys.mscs.mu.edu!marcr
- From: marcr@studsys.mscs.mu.edu (Marc Rassbach)
- Newsgroups: uwm.general,milw.general
- Subject: Re: MPS PLAN HIRES THE WRONG WORKERS
- Date: 26 Jan 1993 06:23:27 GMT
- Organization: Marquette University - Department MSCS
- Lines: 69
- Distribution: milw
- Message-ID: <1k2lcv$38e@spool.mu.edu>
- References: <1993Jan12.010953.28946@mixcom.com> <1iuu0eINNacg@uwm.edu> <1993Jan13.021201.18514@mixcom.com>
- NNTP-Posting-Host: studsys.mscs.mu.edu
-
- In article <1993Jan13.021201.18514@mixcom.com> daniel.offutt <daniel.offutt@mixcom.mixcom.com> writes:
- >voucher system. But there is no reason to belive that. The worst
- >schools in a competitive system would be better than the worst schools
- >available now, under the public school monopoly.
-
- Dan, can you provide PROOF for this statement?
- (and answer this: is NO school better than a BAD school?)
-
- >First, the literacy rate in the United States, prior to the introduction
- >of the public school system, was higher than it is today. Second, no
-
- Please provide PROOF of this. As my foggy memory kicks in, Thomas
- Jefferson (great man, IMOSBOT) suggested the first govenment
- sponsored school. And given the timeframe of Thomas Jefferson's
- life, I also remember the %age of educated vs non-educated people
- was rather low. Now if you can prove otherwise, feel free to do so,
-
-
- >I'm all for parental involvement, but I cannot accept the assumption implicit
- >in your argument that the lack of involvement of parents of public school
- >students derives from the attitude of the parents.
-
- What would it take you to convince you?
- What data would have to be provided for you to re-think that, just perhaps,
- the parents of America want a 'nice, simple, low-cost (time and $$) solution'
- to a very complex problem.
-
- > It is possible that they
- >are not *permitted* by the public school system to be involved in the way
- >that parents in the private and parochial schools are permitted to become
- >involved.
-
- Or, gosh, I work 9-5 and when I get home/on the weekends I don't
- want to spend any time WORKING, or calling up/meeting the people who
- run the schools....no, watching the Super Bowl is more important.
-
- > One way to enable parents of children to become involved is to
- >empower them with the choice of which public school their children will
- >attend. Introducing competition to defeat the public school monopoly is
- >a large part of what is needed.
-
- And once you 'pick' the school, your work is done. Lazy,lazy, lazy.
-
- >I haven't seen the facts, but this seems pretty much in accord with common
- >sense. The problem is that it costs somebody money to do this, while school
- >choice costs neither parents, nor taxpayers anything, and can be expected
- >to reduce costs.
-
- Ahh, we get to the heart of it! Not only do 'we' not want to have to
- take time to get involved in the education of the child, but we also
- don't want to spend any additional money to make things better.
-
- And I suppose we want the schools to act as baby-sitters too?
-
- (not that throwing money at the problem will solve things either.
- I find it interesting no one has commented on the idea that perhaps
- the present MODEL for education is wrong, and perhaps some of the new
- tools (aka computers) should be exploited. Ideas?)
-
-
- (I also find it interesting no one has asked the following "Is the
- statement "Schools today are WORSE than yesterday"" revisionist
- history? How many of the 'problems' of the schools are just that?!?)
-
- --
- Marc Rassbach marcr@studsys.mscs.mu.edu If you take my advice, that
- MS-DOS - it's not marc@milestn.mil.wi.us is your problem, not mine!
- my problem! If it was said on UseNet, it must be true.
- Unix - It's a nice place to live, but you don't want to visit there.
-