C-dad wrote:I don't know what the teachers' motivations are, I just see the results. It was clear that the public school teachers and administrators could not be bothered by us and our son - he was not a trouble maker and not failing so why did we keep bugging them was the attitude. While the top public school my kid used to go to had some great teachers, it had some mediocre ones and some genuinely crappy ones as well. So far (limited sample admittedly) I only see great ones at the private.
The issue with discussing this here is that people want to talk about reality as "attacks." There are many limitations that public schools nationwide face. The responsibility of students' test scores, regardless of what students do, is the sole responsibility of the teacher. The vast majority of educators get into the profession for all of the "right" reasons. Many learn to "play the game" and others leave the profession. There are reasons there is great turnover in the public education field. There are many factors to that.
The teachers at private schools and public schools are very rarely much different from each other. The situations they are put in are, though, much different.
Additionally, many public schools aren't "bad," it is the people that go to them that are "bad". Much like rainer's example, if you switch the students at "affluent suburban school of your choice" and "poor inner city school of your choice" the same students would likely do well. There are minor differences, but overall from what I have seen, it is not the school itself that is the issue.
rainer makes some good points. My issue is the extensions he makes from them:
If you are a committed hockey player, would it be better for your development to be on a) a team full of other committed hockey players or b) a team with some committed players and some not very as committed players?
Very few (myself included) say that "the academics are better." It is more along the lines of "the setting for learning/education are better" which doesn't dispute the quotes you gave.
I have seen both settings first hand on numerous occasions and know that it is more complex than saying one is better than the other.
I'd honestly be curious to hear how they measured the "achievements" between these socioeconomically controlled groups as there are very few measuring sticks that can be comparable between the two.
stpaul wrote:rainier wrote:Don't believe the hype.
C-dad, you apparently are not supposed to believe your own eyes.
