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Both sides making quiet voucher moves
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What's being said is that there's a very simple way to improve the value we're already receiving.
Let me ask something. I live in a Utah school district where the students can take university courses during High School. The classes count for both college and HS credit. Half of the students graduate with an associates degree a month before they graduate with their HS diploma. These students go on to get their BA's just fine.
Think about that for a second. What that means is that either the first two years of college or the last two years of HS are NON-ESSENTIAL. And if there's that much waste in the last two years I wonder how much waste is in the first 10.
The first time I actually remember learning and feeling educated was when I was accepted into an accelerated program during 5th and 6th grade that was set aside for some of the top test scoring students in the district. In the 6th grade I learned 180 coutries and capitals, diagramming sentences, algrebra, and computers. Unfortunately, when this 2 year program was over I went back to regular classes and learned maybe another year's worth of information in the next 6 years! It was horribly boring.
I would vote for vouchers as I see a potential solution to help students like myself have opportunity to excel and not be held back by others by getting the attention they need.
So the solution is to pay teachers more so you attract better talent? That's the key? There are many implications you make by saying that about the current set of teachers.
If you actually free up the market, then the best teachers will be sought after becasue they produce results. And they WILL be paid more automatically. Parents will say: I want Susize in Mr. X's class. I want Jimmy in Y school because they deliver. And the schoool admins will know that if they don't keep teacher X their enrollments will suffer. The teachers who are excellent will be paid more because they will have more options.
The current system keeps the best teachers from being paid what they're worth. It keeps the innovation low. The BEST system would allow free choice of all public and private schools. And let the teachers sign contracts and shop their talent.
Parent Choice? It's their choice but our money. Vouchers don't even begin to cover the cost of private school tuition. You still have to be rich to afford it even with vouchers.
More money for public schools? In twelve years all of the students in private school will be subsidized under this bill. Right now we pay nothing. We will be paying for millionaires to send their kids to private schools we can't send our kids to.
This isn't a Parent Choice Bill. Its a tax subsidy for the wealthy.
Some Choice.
People who want to send their kids to private religious schools are welcome to do so - but not with public taxes.
Since when has the teacher been the focus in schools? The focus has been on the student and testing not on teachers.
The fight against vouchers was spearheaded by the PTA, the parent organization that exists in most Utah schools. Perhaps they have something in your state (maybe even the PTA)?
Vouchers are opposed by parents and teachers because the belief that they will harm children's education. When you allow Private enterprise to make a buck off the government with children involved, there must be accountability to protect the kids. This voucher bill had only one shred of protection--mandating a background check at Private schools which had to be added as a later amendment. Unscrupulous people are going to make a quick buck, and children are going to suffer.
The public does want vouchers. The NEA, UEA, school boards, and anyone that listens to them don't want vouchers. Can you say monopoly and power?
Go read the voter info pamplet - the fair review. It will be a good thing, if not for the education system, just because the UEA doesn't want it.
Let's make schools better. Lets get rid of the UEA and the NEA.
Public funds should be used on public education, period. If you can't afford to send your kids to private school, but want to afford it, work 3 jobs, borrow the money, live in a trailer instead of a house, but don't hold out your hand asking others to help pay.
In the meantime, work on making public school education better.
Most teachers only sign up for the liability insurance.
Yes someone said something stupid and the anti-vouchers are looking for blood pounced on it.
While I think there are some legitimate reasons to oppose vouchers, I think they provide are more benefits than not so I will be supporting them.
They want more money for less work and they want lifetime employment for all but a few convicted pedophiles. (Yes, it almost takes a sexual pedophile conviction to terminate a radical,unionized and tenured public school teacher)! The Radical Teachers Unions that are the Foxes running the school systems....are not about kids.
They are about protecting Radical Unionized School Teachers. It is an American Disgrace! And, the results are very clear. Public Education, just like public housing costs more and the reslults are miserable.
All parents of school aged children and all Americans need to shut off funding for the bloated, disfunctional and Radical American Public School System.
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