skeptech said:
Usually kids who are "way ahead" or "way behind" are either moved up in grades or held back. (It doesn't seem that you should be opposed to this, based on your previous comments on age-grouping.) But there are always going to be exceptions. Public schools aren't perfect, but they don't need to be, and no method will achieve that. Just because public schools aren't meeting everyone's needs fully doesn't mean that the very idea is bad. And for the extreme cases, or those who don't want public schooling, there are the options that you advocate -- private schools, tutors, home schooling, etc.
Neither in Indiana nor in California did the public schools I've dealt with move kids up grades. In California, the private school I dealt with didn't move kids up grades either. But, none of the schools I've dealt with have a problem with making a child who is gifted academically slow down to allow the other students to keep up with her or, in the case of a Christian school in California, with wanting to hold that child back because she's not got good socialization skills (my daughter was shy). They didn't have a problem telling me that I shouldn't have allowed her to learn to read before first grade or that I shouldn't have taught her multiplication tables in kindergarten or algebra in first grade because what they were teaching her bored her to tears. This is why I say that
I have never seen a good school when dealing with my daughter's education.
My little sister (now 22 years old), in Illinois, was in the gifted programs and AP classes in public school. She showed me some of her work. It was the same stuff I learned in non-gifted and non-AP classes in high school! She ended up graduating high school with a 4.3 gpa. She told me that her classes were way too easy for her.
I think it's great to be encouraging about the alternatives, but it's important to remember that public schools can be the best alternative in some cases, too.
Although I believe that it's a parent's choice on how their children are educated, I agree with docrob about the public education system being shut down. As it is, it isn't working how it's supposed to. They throw more and more money into the program to "fix" it and then ask for
even more money the following year.
If they would closed down the education system that we have now, I think that businesses should take over by sponsoring schools. They could make them private schools that charge tuition with scholarships available to those who couldn't afford it. Or they could make the entire thing except for schoolbooks and lunches free. And, without the government "owning" the education system, parents would have no choice but to step up and do what they're supposed to do (morally) and see to their childrens' educations, whether private school or homeschool or co-op.
The "skating" part was pretty much the same for me, except I've never heard of a gifted program being cancelled. And my "surprise" came a little more conventionally, after college and marriage. I definitely would have felt a LOT less prepared if I'd had a kid right out of high school....
In California, they're more politically correct than any other state that I've been in. They were the first state that I heard of that considerred doing away with the SAT and ACT testing for college because the tests were racially biased, according to some minority parents and students.
Maybe the issue is more a matter of balancing the education we get at school (that prepares us to be productive to society) with what we get outside of school (that prepares us to have good personal lives). Maybe there's a good way to introduce real-life-preparation into public schools. (Or maybe it shouldn't be! This is a new idea for me. I'll have to think about it some more.)
I don't know. I kind of doubt that the government could handle it, although I have no doubt that they'll someday try it.
It doesn't seem that public schools are set up to meet the individual's needs, but rather society's needs... or maybe "the system's" needs. I agree that a one-size-fits-all approach is not the best, but that's exactly why I keep jumping in on these threads to say that home-schooling isn't for everyone either. But for the "common man", I think that public schooling will always be the default alternative. On such a massive scale, meeting individual needs is impossible, and good enough will always be good enough. Even in a co-op, the issues would be the same, just on a smaller scale.
As for meeting individuals' needs, I don't think the school system will ever get to that point again. From what I saw as a child, what my grandmother told me, and what my mother told me, the system has been going downhill with each generation.
Believe it or not, anyone
can homeschool. I know there are people who say, "I can't do it." But, I've taught people who used to say that how to homeschool their children. And, like I said before, without the government being involved in the education system, someone, whether it be businesses or parents coming together as a group, would have to pick up the slack. Right now, public schools are pretty much babysitters/daycare for parents who either don't know how to or don't want to deal with their children's educations.
Do you think that it will ever be practical to eliminate public schools? Or that co-ops are significantly different somehow, more than just in scale?
My opinion of co-ops is that they are a lot like public schools except the parents are in charge of the children's educations. I have no problem, whatsoever, with co-ops taking the place of public schools.
Do I think it practical? Yes. Do I think it probable? No.
But you have to draw the line somewhere. And if it isn't right, then it should be improved, not just abandoned. I think there will always be a healthy need for public schools.
If the public schools were handled the way they should be, on a state and local level, I would have less of a problem with them I think. But, I also think that there are more people out there like me, who would have no problem helping to educate children not in public school with no financial gain (in fact, I tend to lose money when it comes to educating children).
Well, maybe it's done poorly, but I wouldn't say it can't be. But if you're going to standardize education, then there must be some way of standardizing the measure of success.
My point is that I don't want to standardize education. The government has been doing it since, at least, WWII. From what I've seen, instead of the standards getting higher, as they should in any well-working organization, standards are getting lower. People are not pushing themselves or their children to be the best that they can be.