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Wednesday, May 14, 2008
Dr. Matthew Ladner :: Townhall.com Columnist
The Way of the Future in American Schooling
by Dr. Matthew Ladner
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 In the Aviator, director Martin Scorsese tells the story of Howard Hughes, had perhaps the biography of Howard Hughes been written by Ayn Rand. Hughes is portrayed by Leonardo DiCaprio as obsessively pushing the envelope forward in aviation, breaking both technical and legal barriers to progress.

Hughes’ pursuit of progress runs him into conflict with Pan-American airlines and their servile minion in Congress, Senator Brewster, played by Alan Alda. Brewster seeks to protect Pan American’s trans-Atlantic flight market, and uses the investigative powers of Congress in order to coerce Hughes. Consumers will be better served by a monopoly, Brewster explains, a position that Hughes finds “Un-American.”

Hughes asks Brewster “Do you really want to do this? Do you want to go to war with me?”

Brewster replies:

“It’s not me, Howard. It’s the United States government. We just beat Germany and Japan. Who the hell are you?”

This being a Hollywood movie, of course, our rugged individualist hero prevails, decisively crushing Senator Brewster and Pan-American in dramatic fashion in a Senate hearing showdown. Travelers enjoy the enormous benefits of aviation competition to this day.

Sadly, in the real word, other monopolies have rather more staying power than Pan-Am, including sadly our education laws. A fine line exists between stability and stagnation. In education policy, we have been content to sail well past that line. Our answer to all education problems was to put in more money. In 1960, the average spending per pupil was $375 (around $2300 in inflation adjusted dollars). Today, we spend close to $10,000 per pupil. Even after adjusting for inflation, spending per pupil in the public school system as more than tripled since the first baby-boomers attended schools.

Our education problems worsened despite the increased spending. Today, 38 percent of our 4th graders have failed to learn basic reading skills, and around a third of our high school students dropout of high school.  As today’s dropouts are largely those students who failed to learn to read in elementary schools, tomorrow’s dropouts are already in the pipeline.

Andrew Coulson recently noted that the last great innovation to transform American classroom instruction came with the invention of the chalkboard in 1801. Consider this level of stasis in comparison to the computer industry. Today, you could literally throw a dart in the computer section of a department store and have it land on a personal computer which is more powerful and cheaper than what was available two years ago. By comparison, the school system continues to plod along, always spending more but often producing less.

The productivity of spending in our public education system has collapsed over the past half century. We spend beyond the dreams of avarice for a public school superintendent of the 1960s, but we don’t produce better results. For decades, we have been throwing money at our public schools and failing to notice that students were failing to benefit.

Fortunately, this status-quo will not endure forever. A growing consensus on both left and right recognizes that our most disadvantaged students suffer most from the shortcomings of our schools. Children relying most heavily on schools to prepare them for the future are tragically the most likely to be shortchanged.

Our nation’s poorest families cannot afford to buy into high-quality suburban school districts, or to pay private school tuition in addition to their school taxes. Policymakers from both parties have therefore increasingly embraced policies creating options for parents. Nationwide, nearly a fourth of K-12 students won't be attending their neighborhood public schools this fall, opting instead for an array of public and private options- including magnet, charter, private and home schooling. For many, especially for inner-city children, however, these options remain far too scarce and this momentum must accelerate.

Charter school operators such as KIPP, Yes Academies and Amistad have proven definitively that low-income inner city children can learn at an accelerated pace, and can even outperform our complacent suburban schools and attend elite universities. These innovators face huge political and practical obstacles in making these schools more widely available, but don’t bet against them. Already, they have settled the question of whether we must settle for today’s failed status quo: we don’t. Our students can learn. We adults simply have to learn how to follow the example of those who are getting the job done.

Our students need a market for K-12 schools. The market mechanism rewards success and either improves or eliminates failure. This has been sorely lacking in the past, and will be increasingly beneficial in the future. The biggest winners will be those suffering most under the status-quo.

New technologies and practices, self-paced instruction and data-based merit pay for instructors, may hold enormous promise. Before the current era of choice based reforms, they didn’t fit the 19th Century/unionized model of schooling, so they weren’t seriously attempted. Bypassing bureaucracy, a new generation has begun to offer their innovative schools directly to parents. Some have already succeeded brilliantly. Some states have been much keener than others to allow this process. Expect the laggards to fall in line eventually. We can hardly continue to cower in fear that someone somewhere might open a bad school when, in reality, we are surrounded by them now.

A market system will embrace and replicate reforms which work, and discard those that fail to produce. A top-down political system has failed to perform this task. Where bureaucrats and politicians have failed miserably, however, a market of parents pursuing the interests of their children will succeed in driving progress.  

We cannot feel satisfied with a system that watches helplessly as a third of pupils drop out before graduation each year. We can do much better. The key lies in matching disadvantaged students with high quality teachers and school leaders. Parental choice programs help to achieve this by providing new education delivery methods.

While there will be enemies to fight this progress, but they won’t prevail. America is rousing itself from a century long slumber of stagnant schooling practices. We have nothing to lose and everything to gain from the coming education renaissance, so long as we have the wisdom to embrace it.

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About The Author
Dr. Matthew Ladner is vice president of research for the Goldwater Institute and an expert on educational reform and school choice. Dr. Ladner holds a Ph.D. from the University of Houston.
 
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the market system
The free market system really worked out for the morgage loan business didn't it. How about how much better the airlines have worked since they were deregulated. How about the way the free market has worked to protect us from imports from China? Why do we think it will work any better for the public schools.

Well...
Since the public schools in the US are like Chinese steel mills--they are both bloated, both over bureaucratic, and both produce an inferior product at an inflated price.

Since American schools are some of the worst in the industralized world, I can hardly see how free-market solutions can hurt--you will notice that private k-12 schools do much better.

Monopolies are always bad, government monopolies are always the worst.

Schools
This sounds like a good plan. But I have one other thing to add---the parents MUST be involved in the process of education and promoting education at home. Like all problems, this one has many doors at which to lay the blame. We can put all the bells and whistles on education we want, but a majority of parents are content with poor quality education. They genuinely don't care if their child reads or writes.

The way it is now, the average American family and the school system are churning out illiterates. We are creating a permanant slave class that will never have the hope of moving above poverty level, much less achieving the American middle class dream.

You're Right
Dr Ladner

You're right. Period. Now what? Vouchers have been proposed and defeated. Unions own the public school system via the pols. The only way this happens is if pols are ELECTED to change things. If the parents of illiterate children aren't looking out for their kids, how can we expect them to vote for pols to change things? More than likely these are the same folks who shouldn't have had kids to begin with ... irresponsible.

Hello Hoosier
The problem with the mortgage loan system was that the free market was interfered with by government. Government wanted a specific social outcome so it interfered with the free market and coerced lending institutions to make loans to individuals that were not otherwise credit worthy.

Some have succeeded, others have not. Approximately 96% to 98% of the outstanding loans were being paid on time. But government had to manufacture a "crisis" for political expediency.

Oh by the way. I was educated during a time when there was no Department of Education or teachers unions. Maybe that is why in the minds of the "enlightened ones" that I am perceived as a "brain-dead" conservative.

Tibby

Blaming the parents won’t fly…

There is a reason that parents lost influence over the public schools. The admins in all the public schools I had to deal with made it clear that parental influence was no longer welcome. The reason for this was that the things of home, family and church were systematically being attacked and exchanged for a world view contrary to the traditional values of most Americans.

For the parents you say don’t care, consider that they are products of the failed system. By blaming the parents you admit the system is a failure. Resetting the system back to a Christian world view is the only path to recovery. Naturalism must be recognized and rejected as a destructive philosophy.

Now for the parents that want something better for their children, they are trapped in a failed system by a confiscatory tax policy. Providing a choice for these parents is a path back to sanity that would restore the rightful accountability to parents.

Solution: elect Libertarians
Conservatives who believe in less government still tend to vote Republican, for reasons known only to God. Republican administrations ALWAYS increase federal spending, federal debt, and central government meddling in local and individual affairs.

If you want change in education, vote Libertarian. Libertarians understand that you can't fix the government propaganda camps (aka public schools): you have to shut them down, period. Nothing short of this will improve education.

Actually, the propaganda camps are NOT failing. They are succeeding brilliantly at what they were designed to do: create legions of obedient citizens ready to kowtow to authority. Our schools, over a hundred years ago, were deliberately modeled after Prussian schools by Horace Mann. Rockefeller, Carnegie, and Ford followed in Mann's footsteps, stating explicitly that schools should not teach people too much, less they become less malleable.

If you want change in education, ditch the Republicans, and vote Libertarian.

Only Part of the Solution
We can open free market for education until the Cows come home, but until PARENTS actually realize that their childrens Education is there RESPONSIBILITY Nothing will change! Majority of Parents in America Today expect "The Teachers" to do it all....

Money and schools
Two comments. First, the way money is spent is the exact opposite of what common sense -and even basic justice- suggests. In public school funding, the good is punished and the bad is rewarded. If you have two schools, one of which is successful and the other of which is failing, the government will insist on giving more money to the failing school, sometimes even diverting it from the good school or district. (Welcome to Vermont.) Second, people do have some control: they can vote down budgets until they are heard. Put teachers, administrators, et al. out of work for six months or a year, and something will be done.

First hand observations
As a teacher in an inner city (failing) school in the northeast, my biggest problem is the students who have no parent to back up the teachers. I know students who have been unsuccessful at my school and have gone on to one of the best charter schools in the city. They are back in one of our failing schools the next year because they refuse to accept the rules and discipline that are required to absorb the lessons of their classes. The parents would rather have the child returned to the failing system rather than put in the time and effort required to create the most basic discipline required to operate in any school. Since there is no discipline at home, the child naturally refuses to conform to school norms.

Now before you think that something must be done that hasn't been done, forget it. The child I refer to is not ADHD or ODD (oppositional defiant disorder). He has been given tutors, and has an IEP (individual education plan). The plan is difficult to adhere to because the child is so disruptive (often violently) that he becomes a liability to the education of the other 15 students and must be removed from the classroom. The child simply has no boundaries at home and refuses to accept any at school.

Idaho's system is making changes...
Because the money follows the student to the public charter schools. My children have attended a variety of charter, magnet, and virtual schools. The local school districts have made great efforts to lure parents like me back to their districts with programs focusing on math & science, fine arts, medicine, etc. With the districts providing free transportation, the only drawbacks are a longer bus ride and friends who don't live in the neighborhood.
We had to persuade the state education committee that money used for 'transportation' for traditional schools should be used for computers and internet access for virtual schools. Other innovative ideas may have to be fought over, like incentive pay, but all it takes is concerned parents and articulate students to plead their case in the public arena. Work within your state to make it happen!

Changes Coming...Like it or Not
While some competition between schools would be great for education, one fear I have is that vouchers would allow government control of private schools. I won't favor vouchers until I can be assured that protections are built into the law to protect private and religious schools.

An innovation that I really like is online coursework. Even some public schools are getting into the act. I see the possibility of more individualized instruction, competition between schools for students, and the flexibility for students to design a personalized curriculum.

Free Markets Work
The free market has always worked better than government solutions and always will. Public schools in this country have no motivation to get better because they have virtually no competition. Teachers unions in this country will fight tooth and nail to keep the status quo. Politicians in the Democrat Party will fight just as hard keeping one of their largest contributors happy. Where people are given an option of vouchers they gladly take them and there is almost always a better outcome for their children. Start giving people their tax money back to spend on education as they see fit and you would instantly see education alternatives sprout up everywhere. Introduce competition into education and the government schools would either get better or one by one they would be forced out by the competition

It's not that parents are idiots..
--
...but rather that they're effectively without the power to make choices for their children.

Says dsom:

"Start giving people their tax money back to spend on education as they see fit and you would instantly see education alternatives sprout up everywhere."


And this is true. Even the least literate single parent "welfare mom" - handed a voucher that can be expended for no purpose other than educating *her* child - will suddenly find herself with the ability to make an important choice.

Now she's got an incentive to find out what the best choice might be. She'll start asking neighbors, friends, family members. She'll get on the Internet (if she has to do it by way of the township's public library computers) and learn how to dig out the information she needs.

She'll begin paying attention.

And now you've got an active, determined parent getting involved in her kid's education because *NOW* she has the power to do something effective.

And this is just what the NEA leadership fears more than somebody breaking into their national headquarters (which is, after all, a "Gun-Free Zone") with an assault rifle and a truck full of explosives.

I don't think it's all that un-conservative to raise my fist in the air and yell: "Power to the People!"

--

faeden #10
"The plan is difficult to adhere to because the child is so disruptive (often violently) that he becomes a liability to the education of the other 15 students and must be removed from the classroom. The child simply has no boundaries at home and refuses to accept any at school."

My wife is a public school teacher (28 years) in Mississippi. Her school system serves a relatively small county and is 95% black. She has the same problem with some students that you describe.

I don't know that there is a solution to what you (and she) describe. 40 years ago, such children where given the choice by a judge of the Army or prison. That is not possible now.

All I think you can do is pray and continue "the good fight".

Inspiring!
"We can hardly continue to cower in fear that someone somewhere might open a bad school when, in reality, we are surrounded by them now.... a market of parents pursuing the interests of their children will succeed in driving progress."

Just think what our kids can do, with the right tools in their hands! Let's roll.




Squirrel Guy and Paolo
Squirrel Guy

I too have a deep aversion to getting the government involved in the private education sector. I think tremendous caution should be used before any type of legislation is proposed.

Paolo

I think there is a very important philosophical/Constitutional conversation that needs to happen in our culture. We need to start loudly questioning this assumption that education is the role of government.

When we do we will also have to seriously consider that small percentage children with criminal, addict, apathetic, disengaged parents from all socio/economic backgrounds who have the least chance of all. Those are tough questions with tough answers that will have to be addressed.

By the way, do you live in The Valley? Are you Paolo over at Human Events too? I like to read your posts. You have that rugged independence thing I like about the West.

Choice Has a 'Carbon Footprint' ?
Hope this isn't too much a tangent, but IMO it's food 4 thought on this issue. I don't even have kids or any direct stake in this, but it occurred to me.

The anthrogenic CO2 induced climate change (ACO2ICC) dogma will result in restrictions on our access to energy & thus ability to drive private vehicles. I honestly believe the ACO2ICC dogma has the legs it does because so many leftist & big-gov parties see so many "fringe benefits" for their agendas.

One such, I fear, is the backlash by the "brick box" educracy & the teachers' unions against the movement to empower parents/guardians in education.

If parents cannot independently transport children to schools they choose, their choices will be curtailed. Furthermore, if they are forced to live closer to their employment, they have less ability to choose residences based on good public schools.

Furthermore, suppose public schools & school buses are exempted from any carbon restrictions (quite likely, IMO), while private alternatives must get their carbon rations from students' parents to operate. Close off the homeschooling option with onerous "certification" requirements, & many families would be forced to send their kids to the public school chosen for them, regardless.

Think of that when you contemplate "cap & trade" & "carbon taxes."

You are Hope Filled

As I told my friend last week end, if we actually had school choice, I'd weep with gratitude for weeks. It will be our salvation.

Eliminate school busing

Eliminate school buses and do school kid IDs that allow them on any bus/metro in the City.

Rural areas

Rural areas may not have the infrastructure to allow for the elimination of buses.

Computers may be the death of the NEA
By allowing free speech and discusssions such as this.

By allowing parents to find out information they normally wouldn't have access to

By allowing students to stay in the SAFETY of their homes while pursueing an education.

DEATH TO THE NEA!!

Teachers cannot
do the job alone. It takes hard work and sacrifice on the part of everyone, teachers, parents and students. Sadly, all of the above are products of a society that has become soft and wants things given to them (like government programs). Learning is really hard work. Look at all of the young college students swooning at the feet of Obama not knowing even what he stands for other then hope and change and too lazy to dig into the facts of what change is really needed. These are the same students my children (one who trains medical students in psychiatry and one a college professor of engineering) who tells me of their struggle to keep students awake or off their computors where they are surfing or off their cell phones where they are text messaging.

Reply #23 is oh so typical

Oh the poor teachers. They need help. Society is to blame.

Well, society isn't getting paid to teach---the teachers are.

And while I'm at it, let's get off this flawed notion that charter/magnet schools are a solution. Where do the teachers come from that teach in those schools? Why, from the very pipeline that produces the public school teachers!!!

No, the FIRST solution is to

1. close the education departments in every university

2. refuse to hire any public school teacher for any position above 2nd grade who has an education or social science or art degree. You want to teach middle school? Then you'd better have a degree in history, math, business or science.

3. eliminate tenure. There is no justification for 3rd grade teachers having tenure.


To Hoosier
Your opinion would make sense if you had the facts. The morgage companies have problems because Uncle Sam said you have to make EEOC sub prime loans. Uncle Sam knew the mortgage companies had proven and solid quidelines for borrowers that would produce.
But our legislature found it neccessary and has this misguided opinion of thinking they know how to run a bank better than the banker.
The only time education produces quality results is when government is not involved.

Since when was the mortgage market free?
Most of the problems we confront today in failing areas of our society are the direct result of meddling by government. While the intentions are good, the results are horrific. Thankfully, these folks are judged by their intentions.

Anyway, if you think that the mortgage market was a "free" market, think again. It's hardly a free market in the true sense of the word. With the current "bailout" we reward fiscal irresponsibility and punish fiscal diligence... but are you really surprised? That's government, and we certainly deserve it because we voted for it.

ignornce in your education or deliberate
your statements about the state of public eduction do, as usual, forget one of the single most important facts about that syatem. it b
after slavery and the reconstructionetrays an al

most colplete lack of information
after slaver and reconstruction american blacks were put in a state of limbo. they were almost completely forgottan about excepy when one was lynched or dragged behind a truck. but they were learning things in those day, things that were forced upon them by the people aroud them.. family life is not the most important thing you can engage in work is the most important. do not pay any attention to the legal system, it is so hopelessly biased towards whites that you may as well forget it. it will do you no good. there is no sense getting an education, yiou cant benefit from it anyway and it wont help you working as a fieldhand for the white man. do not attemp to take any kind of control over you economic life. whites contrl it and will do qwith iot and with you what they will.learn that you are not really a part of this society that you are supposed to be a mmber of. you cant vote, you must use separate bathrooms and if onwe is now available when you want one wet yourself. move to the back of th bus. sit in the balciomy. dont swim ourm pools.. etc etc

2

THIthis treatment resulted in the creation of a culture within a culture. one that still exists. in the 60s and 70s the blacks had had enough and told the whites thatb they wanted and deserved more.,.. ift is important to fully understand that they had to riot and burn ciies in ordr to get the white mans attention even though the white man was manifestly worng.. even then whites who held and hold almost all political and ecomnomis power have been and are reluctant to giver up anything in this struggle.. what they havegiven the blacks is trhe same as every rukling gfroup has given any protesting group thrioughout histiory as little as posible spread out over as long a period of time as possible all th while telling the group and the world that the whhites were really doing a great thing.

3

the blacks asked for education well , the whites asaid,. we will give them an educaion. we will throw them into our educational system (whic was then and is now, for the right people and excellent one) and then tell the world what great benefactors we are., we wont do anything to account for or try to help the schools adjust to what was a 30 percent rise in attendance. instead we will create condition wherein they are sure to fail and tehn spend a lot of time telling the world what poor student they are. these student did and do make up 30 per cent of or=ur student. they are included in every statistic that comesout about the educational system and make those stats worthless. we still have not come close to accomodating our educational syatem to these new cultural people. but they make a good target when talkingabiout our shortcomings. in education. this is a very short description of something that should be a long description of a very complex story. it is all true.

The Asian values
Until American youth are taught the so-called "Asian values" of hard work, persistence, self-discipline, respect for education, more money thrown in the system will not make a damm bit of difference. Why don't Americans look at the Asian model -typical Asian-American kids from modest background who end up being valedictorian and go on to colleges to become engineers, doctors, lawyers and other professionals? The liberals are avoiding the Asian issue like the plague because they can blame all social ills on the imperfect and racist American society rather than on the family, where responsible parenting is the answer to all problems. Asians are the model minority and should be the example for other minorities to follow. Asian teenageers cram, study, avoid teenage sex (sources of STD, aside from pregnancy and distraction) so that they can concentrate on getting best grades, get in schools of their choices and onto successful careers. Simple hard work and self discipline are the keys to a dignified lifestyle. Please stop blaming society and the government for lack of self-discipline...America has good schools and only if parents and students cooperate, we can make it work for all.

If only we HAD a free market...
Did the free market system work for the mortgage industry? We'll never know as the free market was saddled with government interference. As far as the airlines go, do you remember CAB? Fuel costs aside, I can not think of a single metric that the free market did not perform better than the CAB on. Also, I'm curious as to how free markets are supposed to "protect" us from Chinese imports. Seems that's a federal concern, not a commercial one. And why do we think private schooling will be better than government schools? Perhaps because if you look at the product private schools produce, you'll find students who can actually perform? Just a thought, but that seems like a good indicator to me.

Not to Teach ...
In today's colleges prospective teachers are taught Not To Teach. When teachers were taught years ago, they were taught that it was their responsibility to make sure their students learned. Now the grads are taught just to present the material. If the student doesn't learn, it isn't the fault of the teacher.

Wrong. A teacher's job is to teach, not present materials. Further, a teacher must know what to teach. That is also not true in today's school system.

All "advances" in education in the last forty/fifty years isn't to help the student learn but to make the teacher's job easier. How many other jobs allow their employees to take time off whenever they like at full pay? How many other jobs allow their employees months of vacation each year. How many other jobs allows multiple days off, holidays, and even a Spring Break?

No wonder people don't show a lot of concern over teacher pay. They are overpaid for the job they do.

Oh, how I wish.

Hey, Ladner... do you mean to tell me that all those inner city parents are finally going to wake up to the fact... that all those nice people who they have been voting for all these years, have actually been scr**wing their kids.

If that happened, we should have a new national holiday - Our Kids Day.

And thank you Carol @ #24... that would be a good start.

But I don't think enough of us parents (voters) are mad enough. Not yet.


Binh Vu

You nailed that one right one the head.

My ansestors came over on the Mayflower. They were pilgrams and had a very strong work ethic, lived simply, had a strong faith and had very strong family ties. They and I believe education very important.

I am so glad to see a Vietnamese here. I have about 500 Vietnamese clients and I am absolutely convinced that I have more in common with them then I do my white liberal neighbors who talk like they are from a completely different planet of reality.

The nail tech next door

Today, the nail technician next door said Edwards has given Obama the edge.

I said if Obama wins the Presidency the government size would be similar to the size and usefulness of the Vietnamese government.

She says, yes but they are corrupt and hire their unqualified Viet Cong son's as Generals. And I said, when the US government gets so large that the majority are either employed or profits from government action, then nepotism and other corrupt practices are harder to enforce.

There is no countervailing force large enough to replace or reduce government for it no longer serves the people but the people serve the government.

ScottK is right
I agree that people are not mad enough yet. They will have to be mad enough to DO SOMETHING THEMSELVES, and most do not want to take on the responsibility of paying for a private form of education for each of their children. They say education is SOOO important, but then their actions show it's not important enough to take immediate action.

Some people who public school their kids think homeschoolers and private schoolers love to listen to them rant on about "they system" and all its problems. When the tirade is over they usually stare blankly and look confused when the homeschooler or private schooler suggests websites for information about homeschooling or locating a private school in the area.

(Do not assume all of us are "refugees" from the public school system, some of us are anti-institution for children whether students in those institutions are doing well academically or not.)

Binh Vu

I said in Vietnamese what do you call someone who tell you he can solve all you problems and end suffering.

She said "Su Chen". It means "Liar" in Vietnamese. Can you spell it correctly for me? I think it a word worth knowing.

ScottK and Homeschooler

I am a single parent and after two horrific years in public school I called everyone I could to get my child into the church school with a scholarship the first few years.

Private school is doable but very hard in the cities where the cost of living, mostly high taxes, dig into everyones ability to invest in anything but the basics epecially when you are just starting out.

Single parents do NOT have the time to research much less implement a campaign for school choice. They would love it if they understood what it could do for their child. The mechanism would have to have simple and reliable comparatives for making choices, applying, acceptance, easy uniform transfer of medical and educational records, other testing, universal child access to city transportation - all of these things would make it possible for real school choice.

choice
I see many good posts here but one angle is not covered.
When parents have options, they must choose. Therefore, they cannot complain and fight the curriculum, they chose it. It seems like a small difference but it is huge. We are making the parents once again responsible for their children's education. This requires commitment on the parent's part while allowing the teachers to do their jobs. Too often teachers and parents are on opposite sides when dealing with children. Choice eliminates that problem.

Saudi Text Books

However, before universal school choice happens, anti-american, bigoted, incorrect things need to be taken out of arabic school text books.

I still believe creationism and evolution should both be taught - I'm talking factually inaccurate things.

They'd also have to agree to take students, if there is room, who can waive the religion class requirement and yet still maintain their religious identity.

Just a thought, if we were to really consider what has worked in the scattered voucher programs.

End 'grade' levels
In the old country schools, kids of all ages studied with older kids helping the younger. When you teach something, you must really learn it first.

Why must children be trapped in a grade all year if they can finish in 6 months? Or why not let someone else take longer?

Institute a pass/fail system and let children learn at their own pace advancing only when they 'get it' and pass.

There are too many children who are trapped in boring schools and made to take drugs to keep them quiet.

Lisa
"I still believe creationism and evolution should both be taught - I'm talking factually inaccurate things."
If you want facts, demonstrably factual, then you can't want creationism because there are no facts involved.
Evolution is science, creationism or its step-child, intelligent design, is faith. One is social science and should only be taught in those classes. ID is fiction, not science.

Go see Ben Stein's movie

Koolhand,

Go see Ben Stein's movie.

Joe is the smartest guy in the room
I am so glad you posted what you did.

Some people also assume homeschoolers have bad opinions of school teachers, but I think we are far more sympathetic to them most people realize. Here's why:

We spend a lot of time deregulating homeschooling nationwide because we know it is the teacher (in our case also the parent) who does the teaching, and having someone outside that roll dictating how, what and when we should do it is a terrible handicap.

Now imagine the school teacher in a class of 20-40 students. All those kids have parents with different ideas about what, when and how things should be taught, but they are in the position of NOT being the ones ACTUALLY doing it.

Parents want to dictate to the teacher what (s)he should be doing with THEIR kid, but the practical result is if they get their way (good or bad) they will be dictating what the teacher is doing with ALL those kids because customized educational approaches required VERY low student to teacher ratios. Other parents aren't going to happy about it.

All it takes is 2 parents with two differing views and it's a mess. What if 5, or 10 of those parents are able to make demands? What about the teacher who spends all day with each kid and bears the responsibility of teaching them? Shouldn't his/her insight matter?

By the way, I have just finished designing an education choice class for parents that covers HOW they can formulate and articulate their own educational philosophy including determining their educational goals and their preferred educational methods BEFORE they go looking for an educational environment. That way they are not angry and labeling as "bad" a teacher, administration, curriculum, or homeschool approach when sometimes it's just a matter of it being a bad match for them.

In order for that to work, there has to be a variety of choice accessible to parents.

This approach has been proven effective
There is a myth in our culture that we live in a two income economy. Millions of people around the country earning average incomes are living proof this is not true. They are able to homeschool their larger than average number of children on one income.

Others have mom working during school hours to cover the cost of tuition at a private institution (many of which have a tuition at the same or lower cost than the state's average per pupil funding.)

To insure educational options on a modest income do the following:

1. Ladies, marry a man with a marketable skill and an excellent work ethic who shares your views on finances, child rearing, religious/philosophical beliefs, and lifestyle choices. If you are not practically compatible in addition to romantically attracted you will probably get divorced. Single parenthood almost always eliminates financial freedom to choose educational options unless you earn a lot of money.

2. While you are a "Dual Income No Kids" couple make every single financial decision on the husband's income. NO EXCEPTIONS! Put the wife's income in savings.

3. Avoid debt like the plague. Debt is the enemy.

4. Mom stays home and raises the infant-prechool kids herself careful to instill nurture and discipline. Badly behaved children are difficult to teach and will not make it in a homeschool or private school setting. Look into private and home options in these years so you don't make any knee-jerk decisions.

5. If you choose private school over homeschooling, mom returns to the workforce during school hours and her income covers tuition.

6. If you like your local charter or public school and prefer it to the other options, save that money for college.

Way too many couples marry for the wrong reasons and make financial decisions based on the moment- not long term. They eliminate choices in their futures by making bad choices in the present.

Lisa-
I always feel for those divorced people who did nothing wrong, their spouse cheated on or abused them, and now they are divorced.

Government dependence on education is another example of how broken families cost taxpayers.

Wouldn't it be great if providing for a private education was factored into child support payments? That way innocent people are not paying for the sins of others.


Lisa-clarification
That last comment should have read,

"That way innocent people, like former spouses, are not paying for the sins of others."

marjon
Lots of people homeschool for that reason.

It's fun to be at a homeschool group with new homeschoolers whose children left the system within the last year or two. They start polling the veterans with, "So, um, once your kid is done with everything for their grade level in all subjects, what do you do for the rest of the school year?"

That's when we jump in with the, "Well, not all of us do the grade level thing. Let me explain the Living Book philosophy to you." and "Those of us who do grade levels just move on to the next and send our kids to college earlier." or "Some of us spend that extra time allowing our child to pursue his/her passions and interests."
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