88% and declining. Joe is making sure tax dollars go to Public Sector unions and then straight to the DNC.Dnicknames said:
The only change is Biden has called for a ban on federal funding for charter schools that are operated by for-profit companies.
Since 88% of charter schools are non-profits, the change is not necessarily material.
I'm for both school choice and against federally funding for profit schools. It's not that radical of a view.
Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
What an uneducated post. While I am sure there are some problem charter schools, the premise is what we need, particularly those that serve underprivileged students who are in failing schools with no hope. As someone that has served on a charter school's board where we had the most impoverished student population in an underperforming district, the results were stunning. Our students not only graduated but most already had college credit and vast majority attended college or a trade school, the first in their family. Charters are critical to challenge underperforming public schools and provide innovative strategies in very challenging circumstances. Liberals that really want to help like yourself should be all for charters, it provides those students who need opportunity the most, the chance to succeed. Most importantly, good charter schools provide support and challenge those students, something they do not get at home or at their standard public school.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Not always, The fact there are Methodist and Presbyterian churches down the street from GT's "church" doesn't make him any better.midgett said:Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Competition makes everything better.
Why is for profit a problem? And this position is in conjunction with his belief that all charter schools siphon off money from public education. But you will be closing charter schools, moving students to inferior schools, and putting teachers out of work by cutting off the federal funding.Dnicknames said:
The only change is Biden has called for a ban on federal funding for charter schools that are operated by for-profit companies.
Since 88% of charter schools are non-profits, the change is not necessarily material.
I'm for both school choice and against federally funding for profit schools. It's not that radical of a view.
I can agree with that.Dnicknames said:
I'm for both school choice and against federally funding for profit schools. It's not that radical of a view.
Sorry...in a for-profit world that may be true. I know of some good charter schools and some bad ones. Having said that, you cannot compare a publically-funded school with a private school. They are not, and cannot be in competition with each other.midgett said:Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Competition makes everything better.
I agree. There are bad charter schools and tons of bad public schools.fadskier said:Sorry...in a for-profit world that may be true. I know of some good charter schools and some bad ones. Having said that, you cannot compare a publically-funded school with a private school. They are not, and cannot be in competition with each other.midgett said:Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Competition makes everything better.
I disagree that school choice will make a difference. As long as public schools have to take whomever walks through the door and private schools get to pick and choose, it will never be equal.midgett said:I agree. There are bad charter schools and tons of bad public schools.fadskier said:Sorry...in a for-profit world that may be true. I know of some good charter schools and some bad ones. Having said that, you cannot compare a publically-funded school with a private school. They are not, and cannot be in competition with each other.midgett said:Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Competition makes everything better.
A combination of school choice and the ability to fire bad teachers and kick out bad students would allow for competition among public schools. Teacher unions have too much power.
I wish there was a fair way to judge teacher performance. A great teacher could have bad students or vice versa.
Weeding out the bad teachers and allowing more discipline would be great as it would be in other occupations with union power. We could get rid of bad police and come close to solving that problem.
I agree on the good teacher comment. I had several growing up. My 11th grade English teacher was feared in our school. When I took her class it wasn't sectioned. There were students of various abilities in the class. I figured I would be able to coast.fadskier said:I disagree that school choice will make a difference. As long as public schools have to take whomever walks through the door and private schools get to pick and choose, it will never be equal.midgett said:I agree. There are bad charter schools and tons of bad public schools.fadskier said:Sorry...in a for-profit world that may be true. I know of some good charter schools and some bad ones. Having said that, you cannot compare a publically-funded school with a private school. They are not, and cannot be in competition with each other.midgett said:Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Competition makes everything better.
A combination of school choice and the ability to fire bad teachers and kick out bad students would allow for competition among public schools. Teacher unions have too much power.
I wish there was a fair way to judge teacher performance. A great teacher could have bad students or vice versa.
Weeding out the bad teachers and allowing more discipline would be great as it would be in other occupations with union power. We could get rid of bad police and come close to solving that problem.
Although Texas does not have unions, teachers are on contract. They are difficult to fire and I understand why...prior to having contracts, teachers were fired for bad reasons and schools were suffering.
I think a good teacher is like pron...I can't describe it but I know it when I see it.
Shoot...there's not many 20 and 30 year olds (people with kids) making enough cash to support that.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
So you are really an elite liberal. Crappy public schools for thee, private schools for me.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
Now, that is BS. As I said, it would take some sacrifices. We sent our 2 kids to Private School in our early 30s and yes, it required some sacrifices, but it was important to us. Wife stayed home, so no day care which helped. Yes, you are correct, generally it costs between $1K-$2K per month depending on school. No car payments, no house payments. It's doable.Doc Holliday said:Shoot...there's not many 20 and 30 year olds (people with kids) making enough cash to support that.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
My combined income is about $120k and there's no way in hell I can afford private school and barely daycare.
We're talking like an extra grand a month bro and by the time my child is in college Baylor is going to be $80k a year if things keep going the way they are with very small increase in wages.
I suppose I could buy a trailer home and a Dodge Neon.
No, I'm speaking to people on this board. Hardly an elite Liberal. More like Conservative Elite is you must label. We made the choice and sacrifices. I hear all the hard righties railing on govt and govt schools. I am merely saying there are options if you just hate public school education. I feel for the inner city kids with no option and I have no idea what the solution to that is. I was speaking to this audience. It's much easier to send your kids to private schools in larger cities than rural areas to be sure. We sent ours to a private Christian School in Dallas till 9th for one and 7th for the the. Public School after that, so I know the difference.midgett said:So you are really an elite liberal. Crappy public schools for thee, private schools for me.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
It's the low income kids stuck in crappy inner city schools who have ZERO choice about their school.
Why should their futures be limited just because of where their house or apartment is located?
and sending your kid to BU for $80K is insane.Doc Holliday said:Shoot...there's not many 20 and 30 year olds (people with kids) making enough cash to support that.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
My combined income is about $120k and there's no way in hell I can afford private school and barely daycare.
We're talking like an extra grand a month bro and by the time my child is in college Baylor is going to be $80k a year if things keep going the way they are with very small increase in wages.
I suppose I could buy a trailer home and a Dodge Neon.
fadskier said:I disagree that school choice will make a difference. As long as public schools have to take whomever walks through the door and private schools get to pick and choose, it will never be equal.midgett said:I agree. There are bad charter schools and tons of bad public schools.fadskier said:Sorry...in a for-profit world that may be true. I know of some good charter schools and some bad ones. Having said that, you cannot compare a publically-funded school with a private school. They are not, and cannot be in competition with each other.midgett said:Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Competition makes everything better.
A combination of school choice and the ability to fire bad teachers and kick out bad students would allow for competition among public schools. Teacher unions have too much power.
I wish there was a fair way to judge teacher performance. A great teacher could have bad students or vice versa.
Weeding out the bad teachers and allowing more discipline would be great as it would be in other occupations with union power. We could get rid of bad police and come close to solving that problem.
Although Texas does not have unions, teachers are on contract. They are difficult to fire and I understand why...prior to having contracts, teachers were fired for bad reasons and schools were suffering.
I think a good teacher is like pron...I can't describe it but I know it when I see it.
As usual, Doc speaks the truth .Doc Holliday said:Shoot...there's not many 20 and 30 year olds (people with kids) making enough cash to support that.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
My combined income is about $120k and there's no way in hell I can afford private school and barely daycare.
We're talking like an extra grand a month bro and by the time my child is in college Baylor is going to be $80k a year if things keep going the way they are with very small increase in wages.
I suppose I could buy a trailer home and a Dodge Neon.
I live in Texas and charters are treated like public schools. However, they absolutely do get to choose which kids they take in. I have three near me and they reject any student who has discipline issues or attendance issues. But my wife, who teaches at a public high school takes every kid regardless of any issue.BU99 said:fadskier said:I disagree that school choice will make a difference. As long as public schools have to take whomever walks through the door and private schools get to pick and choose, it will never be equal.midgett said:I agree. There are bad charter schools and tons of bad public schools.fadskier said:Sorry...in a for-profit world that may be true. I know of some good charter schools and some bad ones. Having said that, you cannot compare a publically-funded school with a private school. They are not, and cannot be in competition with each other.midgett said:Link, please.George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
Competition makes everything better.
A combination of school choice and the ability to fire bad teachers and kick out bad students would allow for competition among public schools. Teacher unions have too much power.
I wish there was a fair way to judge teacher performance. A great teacher could have bad students or vice versa.
Weeding out the bad teachers and allowing more discipline would be great as it would be in other occupations with union power. We could get rid of bad police and come close to solving that problem.
Although Texas does not have unions, teachers are on contract. They are difficult to fire and I understand why...prior to having contracts, teachers were fired for bad reasons and schools were suffering.
I think a good teacher is like pron...I can't describe it but I know it when I see it.
Just to clarify, a charter school in Texas is a public school. It simply operates independently and gets less funding (primarily facilities funding). Charter schools are free and can not selectively choose who they enroll with some minor exceptions. In the school I was involved with, we used a lottery system. Actually, I wish we could have selected but not for the reason you think. Over the years are demographic went from almost entirely underprivileged and minority to probably 60%. The reason, the success was so strong that local kids that would have otherwise went to private schools were applying and and the lottery pool was more diverse. I respect their desire to be in the school for all the right reasons, but in effect it took away spots from kids in more need.
I did and and paid ungodly property taxes and was quite fine with it.fadskier said:
I'm conservative and absolutely believe in and support public schools. If you want to send your kid to private school, go for it..but you don't get to use public money for it.
No it is not. I know several people who do it. All about priorities.Canada2017 said:As usual, Doc speaks the truth .Doc Holliday said:Shoot...there's not many 20 and 30 year olds (people with kids) making enough cash to support that.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
My combined income is about $120k and there's no way in hell I can afford private school and barely daycare.
We're talking like an extra grand a month bro and by the time my child is in college Baylor is going to be $80k a year if things keep going the way they are with very small increase in wages.
I suppose I could buy a trailer home and a Dodge Neon.
Private school is beyond the financial capabilities of most people making even 150 per year.
Private Universities ...forget about it .
You used public money to pay for your child's private school?J.R. said:I did and and paid ungodly property taxes and was quite fine with it.fadskier said:
I'm conservative and absolutely believe in and support public schools. If you want to send your kid to private school, go for it..but you don't get to use public money for it.
The private school closest to me is $16k a year. That's not mentioning all the other expenses that go with having children. $200k+ for K-12. It's like nearly buying another house with no monetary ROI. Imagine doing that with 3 kids!J.R. said:No it is not. I know several people who do it. All about priorities.Canada2017 said:As usual, Doc speaks the truth .Doc Holliday said:Shoot...there's not many 20 and 30 year olds (people with kids) making enough cash to support that.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
My combined income is about $120k and there's no way in hell I can afford private school and barely daycare.
We're talking like an extra grand a month bro and by the time my child is in college Baylor is going to be $80k a year if things keep going the way they are with very small increase in wages.
I suppose I could buy a trailer home and a Dodge Neon.
Private school is beyond the financial capabilities of most people making even 150 per year.
Private Universities ...forget about it .
Come on guy.J.R. said:No it is not. I know several people who do it. All about priorities.Canada2017 said:As usual, Doc speaks the truth .Doc Holliday said:Shoot...there's not many 20 and 30 year olds (people with kids) making enough cash to support that.J.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.
My combined income is about $120k and there's no way in hell I can afford private school and barely daycare.
We're talking like an extra grand a month bro and by the time my child is in college Baylor is going to be $80k a year if things keep going the way they are with very small increase in wages.
I suppose I could buy a trailer home and a Dodge Neon.
Private school is beyond the financial capabilities of most people making even 150 per year.
Private Universities ...forget about it .
George Truett said:Good.Doc Holliday said:
"We are pro-choice!"
Cool. I choose to pull my kid out of a failing public school and send them to a charter school.
"NOT THAT CHOICE!"
Most of them are a waste.
In our state, students at charter schools score lower than kids in public schools.
They also drain needed funds for public schools.
"you right wingers"? But but but, we thought you were a lifelong RepublicanJ.R. said:
It's fairly simple for you right wingers who don't like public schools. Work hard, send your kids to private schools. It's not that difficult. It may take some sacrifices, but it is doable.