Quote:
Originally posted by Aristotle
"The average cost per homeschool student is $546 while the average cost per public school student is $5,325. Yet the homeschool children in this study averaged in 85th percentile while the public school students averaged in the 50th percentile on nationally standardized achievement tests."
Quote:
American Enterprise Article Quote
Imagine a hard-working couple, the Grays, who own four season tickets on the 40-yard line for the local pro football team. They invested lots of money and sweat in obtaining the seats, and now use them to share a special experience with their two children. The Grays value these hard-won tickets highly.
Now imagine that the Grays show up one Sunday to find that the stadium has adopted a first-come, first-served seating pattern. What do you predict their reaction is likely to be? Will they smile and say, "Oh, then that's all right!" after the stadium management explains, slowly and in few words, that the old system had produced inequitable results for the poor? Seems unlikely, doesn't it?
A great deal of American family life is now driven by the quality of the public schools in the district where a family happens to live. Parents who have sacrificed to purchase an expensive, heavily taxed home in a better school district have often done so largely because it confers a ticket to the local classrooms for their children. From their perspective, school choice proponents are suggesting that their tickets be torn up.
Quote:
Originally posted by Cyrinne
"As for my opinion on testing an accountabily, I am now beginning the second month of school. I have not been able to hold even one session of small group instruction because I am so busy with testing. The pendulum has swung so very far towards testing/accountabily/performance that there is no time to teach. It is a sad situation for our students, and I hope very dearly that some kind of balance is struck soon.
This is what I wanted to hear more about. What are the suggestions for how to improve performance and yet decrease the constant testing that are floating around amongst the teachers themselves, or perhaps the unions, or even other professional organizations teachers are part of that I don't know anything about? One of your posts states the NEA, "has long supported measures to encourage teacher accountability and standards that use a variety of measures to evaluate the -teacher- not the children." The problem as I understand it is that the concern is with the outcome after all, and not the methodology. If the students are still underperforming, it hardly matters what method is being used.