nicholsmom
New member
I agree, but how can we change the school system to make this happen? Penalize the parents for their kid's failing grades? Detention for parents :think: I like it.One of the greatest problems facing many public schools is parental apathy. I have no idea how to encourage to get involved with their kids lives. The best teacher in the world cannot teach a kid who doesn't want to learn and if the parents don't value education, the kids wont either. This is one of the two major reasons private schools are perceived as being better than public schools. After all, if you are paying for school odds are good you are going to make sure your kid is working hard.
What? Like the school nurse putting a bandaid on an owie? I think that sort of thing is for liability reasons - the kid gets hurt on their property on their watch, they'd better handle it. That's sop for any business.Public schools are also forced to provide medical services for students that need them. This is wrong. Schools are to educate children, they are not in the business of providing medical services.
I agree, what medical services are you talking about? I've never heard of such a thing being provided by the school.If your student needs special medical services then the parents should be responsible for providing those services, not the school district.
And they aren't. The school must, however do all that it can to give every child an equal education, no matter what that means. It might mean that the child needs to have a paraprofessional in the classroom, or a one-on-one aid to make sure that he can succeed in that classroom. The teacher might have to alter the lessons for the child or the child might have to have some classes with a special education teacher, but none of that means that the child cannot succeed in that classroom. It only means that he needs some supports to succeed in that classroom. If a child cannot make progress in the classroom, in spite of proper supports, then, and only then, is the school to place the child in a more restrictive environment.Also, children who cannot be educated in a typical classroom should not be there. Harsh as it sounds, it does nobody any good to force a student into an environment they are equipped to deal with.
Let me explain to you why this is absolutely necessary: Public school is for the public. That means everyone is included. It is absurd that title 7 even had to be written to clarify what that means. It is the main problem with compulsory education - it requires the state to provide that education equally to all children regardless of the financial ability of the state to pay, regardless of the cost of providing the supports needed to equally educate the disabled.
Yep.This is the second reason that private schools are perceived as being better than public schools, private schools do not have to accept every student regardless of abilities and health needs - they can be selective.
I would do away with the lottery & all gambling since it has been shown to be a family killer. Parents care too much about the lottery and not enough about their kids' education.I would change the lottery so that it provided money for school infrastructure. School building should be safe for students and fully equipped to educate those students.
As for buildings - you would think that ours had gold-plated lockers based on the tax rate (ours is itemized so I know how much is going to the school that my kids don't attend).
How? I think that the parents ought to be able to vote out a teacher.I would like to see more accountability for teachers.
Who gets to decide what the students "need to learn?" Shouldn't the parents have a say?CSAP is a waste of time and money as it is currently implemented. Teachers do need a way to evaluate their students to make sure they are learning what they need to learn but the focus that is put on CSAP does more harm than good.
One of our best government schools does just that. There are at least 3 levels per class, plus special education pull-out class rooms.I would add more teachers and segregate classes more so that slow and advanced learners get the help they need to either succeed or excel, respectively.
I couldn't disagree more on this one. If you want parents to care more about their kids' education, we'll have to quit catering to the parents' ability to avoid altering their lives to fit that education.I would change the start times at our schools to better fit both the parents work schedules
Ours start at 8:30.and the studies that show kids learn and retain more when they start later. (Classes in Jefco at my daughters middle school start at 7:25. Just stupid!)
What do you mean? My sister has no trouble keeping discipline in her classroom, and she's a tiny woman. Discipline was not taught her in her education classes in college, but she knows what works and what doesn't. If parents could fire a teacher by a super majority vote, we wouldn't have discipline problems in schools.I would like to see stricter discipline return to the schools.
Public school didn't make any of that happen - education did. Education goes on with or without public education. We lean on it to our detriment.Our public schools have problems that need to be addressed. But America had something that the rest of the world did not have. Something that allowed us to walk on the moon, to develop computers, invent numerous technologies, continuously raise our standard of living - public schools.