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Teachers Union Opposes Virtual K-8 Charter School

theodp writes "'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,' said unimpressed Chicago Teachers Union president Marilyn Stewart of the Chicago Virtual Charter School, which will open to Chicago elementary school students this fall if approved by the state board of education."

772 comments

  1. But of course you can by A+beautiful+mind · · Score: 4, Funny

    First post!

    (an essential skill...)

    --
    It takes a man to suffer ignorance and smile
    Be yourself no matter what they say
    1. Re:But of course you can by novus+ordo · · Score: 1

      Damn kid. Probably copied it. They're all alike.

      --
      "You're everywhere. You're omnivorous."
    2. Re:But of course you can by PunkOfLinux · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is, it's becoming more and more evident that kids won't learn in a classroom, either. I don't see how someone can claim that a charter school won't teach skills necessary to succeed in society when the brick-and-mortar schools don't teach these skills either.

    3. Re:But of course you can by plague3106 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Its important to learn social interactions, which you DO get in current school systems.

      The problem is that you also learn negative solical interactions; i.e. getting picked on, bullied, etc. So it is a crap shoot as far as helping kids be social. I learned to be not very social and it was years before I became more outgoing after my experiences in school.

    4. Re:But of course you can by michrech · · Score: 0

      The problem is that you also learn negative solical interactions; i.e. getting picked on, bullied, etc. So it is a crap shoot as far as helping kids be social. I learned to be not very social and it was years before I became more outgoing after my experiences in school.

      I don't see those as negatives. Getting picked on, bullied, etc, teach the kid early on how to deal with these jerks in real life.

      --
      bork bork bork!
    5. Re:But of course you can by PunkOfLinux · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm a firm believer in the theory that teaching a kid "Well, that's what the real world is like," too early will end up essentially keeping the same system in place. Rather than say "Go with the flow, that's the way things are," I think we should be saying "If you don't like the way something is, then change it!" Schools place too much emphasis on obedience, without teaching kids anything about thinking for themselves.

    6. Re:But of course you can by Nevynxxx · · Score: 1

      I don't see those as negatives. Getting picked on, bullied, etc, teach the kid early on how to deal with these jerks in real life.

      I love when people say things like this.

      Why, pray tell, is school not "real life".

      I don't mean to get at you personally, it is more a societal thing, but I am reminded on of the story last week, which diverted into a thread about "good Dads", all of which seem to have one thing in common: NOT treating children like sub-humans.

    7. Re:But of course you can by michrech · · Score: 1

      I love when people say things like this.

      Why, pray tell, is school not "real life".

      I don't mean to get at you personally, it is more a societal thing, but I am reminded on of the story last week, which diverted into a thread about "good Dads", all of which seem to have one thing in common: NOT treating children like sub-humans.


      Way to misread what I said. I don't equate school to 'real life' because there is less at stake for an individual than when they get into the 'real world'. If they miss a few days, they get to make it up. They don't have to worry about where money will come from to keep them fed (if their parents can't do it, the state will). They don't have to buy their own clothing, school related materials, keep a car/house, etc. They can't be 'fired' and loose out on the education ('less, of course, they do something utterly stupid, and end up getting kicked out; this, however, is quite rare).

      Before kids get to the "real world", they have no idea how to interact with people. Most parents, from what I've seen as of late, that keep their kids home schooled, do a POOR job of helping them in this respect. Going to a public/private school teaches the kids about schedules, dealing with other people (as mentioned previously), completing assignments (directly translates to your "real" job later in life), etc.

      I don't look at school as "real life", I look at it as practice.

      I noticed my first message in this thread was moderated "overrated". Looks like SOMEONE was home schooled...

      --
      bork bork bork!
    8. Re:But of course you can by oldwarrior · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Hear the feeble cries of a dying industry. We cannot afford the bricks, gasoline, or other inefficiencies of our victorian educational plan if we truly want to educate all the worlds children, whereever they might live.

      There is no way to hold back the future. This, like working remotely from home, makes far too much sense to be shouted down by unions, or corporate directors. Think of all the gas alone we will save.

      --
      If it were done when 'tis done, then t'were well it were done quickly... MacBeth
    9. Re:But of course you can by utopianfiat · · Score: 2, Funny

      Welcome to Slashdot University, where your karma determines your grade and all your facts must be confirmed by netcraft.
      Slashdot University makes an honest and open effort to promote tolerance, lest we all become insensitive clods.
      (one more...)
      At Slashdot University, our registration process is arbitrated by AI-based computers. We sincerely hope that you, for one, will welcome your new grade-assigning overlords. We don't know who will strike first, but we do know that it will be us that scorches the sky.

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    10. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You hit the nail on the head there: The schools, in all the nations of the world, especially in early age are exactly society fabrication facilities, that is the place (spare movies and TV shows) where all the indoctrination is happening. It is used to mould citizens and perpetuate their basic mindset (patriotism, rituals, taboos, cliches, diction, "proper language") and iron out, or isolate, marking it as "interesting", peculiar, strange, funny, locally significant (insignificant) any cultural differences one may have (local slang, accent, certain POV on historical events) thruout a nation.

      Now, I don't think teacher's union has that kind of goodies for the society in mind when they profess going to actual school instead using unique capacity for learning young kids have to maximum extent. I am certain they fear that, given opportunity to choose not to go to school, many kids won't: first, all the kids from the bottom of the school foodchain will deflect, shouting "Hallelujah!", then gradually those near to them untill in the end even the bully's will get bored in school and leave, at which point only the flocks of girls gathered around iron-fist ruling "most popular girls in classes" will hang there. The schools will of course, end with excess number of teachers and many teachers are going to get fired, while many of the schools will be closed and sold.

      Now THERE's a case for union action!

    11. Re:But of course you can by Viol8 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "If you don't like the way something is, then change it!"

      Yeah , I can really see 10 year olds drafting policies to change the world.
      Up to a certain age kids just need to learn. End of. If you let kids do what
      they want you end up with the hippy commune style of teaching where the kids
      learnt nothing except how to piss about and consequently were hardly qualified
      to flip burgers aged 18 , never mind get a well paid white collar job.

    12. Re:But of course you can by RsG · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Couldn't have put it better myself. Where the hell are my mod points when I need them?

      I went through the public school system; my younger brother was home schooled. Guess which one of us is the cynic? Saying he "wasn't taught what the real world is like" is a compliment; it's better not to see injustice as "normal", just because that's the way things looked growing up.

      As a side note, he's become the more gregarious of the two of us. I'd say anyone who assumes you need public school in order to become socialized is either completely ignorant of what they're talking about, or else their cross section of "home schooled" kids are the previous generation of religious kids who were taken out of school by their parents.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    13. Re:But of course you can by Nevynxxx · · Score: 1

      Way to misread what I said.

      Ditto

      As I said, nothing personal, I was picking up on society's bias that school, or the whole of life up to the age of 18 is not *real life*.

      School kids commit suicide because they are bullied. It happens. A lot.

      Missing out on school can ruin your life, having everyone in a schoool pick on you can ruin your life, or as I said, end it.

      I was simply making an off-optic comment, picking up on one sentance, it seems I hit a nerve, and that you are as short-shighted as the gross generalisation I was picking apart. That was not intentional

    14. Re:But of course you can by sk8dork · · Score: 1

      give them school seperate from social learning. parents could take their kids places where they can meet other kids and have a good time and learn social interactivity seperate from their learning environment. social interaction in school is mostly just a distraction. you say it encourages competition? a leader-board of the virtual classroom would do just that. of course, with virtual learning parents would have to regulate the computer use of the student so that they don't seek other distractions on the net while they should be learning.

      --
      ...all cock-blockery aside...
    15. Re:But of course you can by Fallingcow · · Score: 1, Interesting
      their cross section of "home schooled" kids are the previous generation of religious kids who were taken out of school by their parents.


      Yeah, that's exactly what it is.

      It doesn't help that every Christian-themed store in the country has a sign in the front window advertising "homeschooling supplies and materials" or some such. Or that a huge chunk of the online homeschooling-assistance communities are infested with religious loonies.
    16. Re:But of course you can by rainman_bc · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Schools place too much emphasis on obedience, without teaching kids anything about thinking for themselves.

      Dude, kids are incapable of thinking for themselves, especially in the grade school years. They need to be taught the difference between right and wrong before they can be taught how to ascertain whether something is right or wrong.

      The real problem is that parents have too many escapes nowadays from parenting. The TV and video game consoles offer more stimulation to children than anything else, so they are captivated by it. And parents need to get things done, so they don't mind dumping off their kids in front of the TV for a few hours while they do some house work. Seems to me people have the attitude that if my kid is in front of the TV, at least I know they are safe, right?

      Few children will actually turn of the TV or the Video Games and open a book and do some reading. When a child reads, they become better spellers, and better writers. They learn good habits. The TV is a waste of time, even educational shows.

      --
      09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
    17. Re:But of course you can by FractalZone · · Score: 1

      I guess knowing how (loudly) and when (quickly) to whine to the authorities or to the public (via the media) is an essential skill, too! From 0 to +5 in what, ~2100 seconds? When little Johnny can't read, his parents call a greedy, publicity-seaking trial lawyer! When all the fuss is over, little Johnny still can't read... How will Virtual Schools change that?

      --
      "You're young, you're drunk, you're in bed, you have knives; shit happens." -- Angelina Jolie
    18. Re:But of course you can by Shajenko42 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Schools place too much emphasis on obedience, without teaching kids anything about thinking for themselves.
      That's actually one of the main purposes of compulsary public schooling - to enforce the status quo. I recall very early in my schooling that I was punished for working further ahead in the lessons than the rest of the class.

      The Underground History of American Education.
    19. Re:But of course you can by cliath · · Score: 1

      Nobody said kids should be set free to do whatever they want. The problem is, currently, schools tell you how to act and think rather than explaining and giving reason to why you need to behave a certain way in public.

    20. Re:But of course you can by jank1887 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Most parents, from what I've seen as of late, that keep their kids home schooled, do a POOR job of helping them in this respect

      ahhh... and now we see the real issue, and source of your bias. You're basing it on 'what you've seen as of late'. Which would be? A couple stereotyped examples? South Park's spelling bee? comments on slashdot? A detailed (study or survey?

      in contrast, what I've seen as of late are home school parents actually being the people taking the time to help their kids in this respect. I've known about half a dozen home school families (I'm not one of them). About 15 kids altogether. A few were very shy/introverted. Many were very outgoing with a significant social life, typically including non-homeschooled kids, kids from the neighborhood, kids from other groups they're involved with, kids of parents' friends, and yes, friends from church. A couple of the families were not "church-goers", just people who felt they could do a better job themselves. And I would say that at least, they were on par with the local public school district. I would surmise that you're likely to get a similar spectrum of social outcome from homeschool as well as anywhere else.

      (note, the above linked study surveyed over 7300 people. Wikipedia summary of study. That Wikipedia summary mentions more studies by ERIC. (didn't have time to look up myself, but: "According to the findings, children who were educated at home 'gained the necessary skills, knowledge, and attitudes needed to function in society...at a rate similar to that of conventionally schooled children.'"

      Home schooling can be done horribly. It can be done well. By itself, it is not a bad thing. If good homeschooling is a positive thing for society, programs like this one supporting it are also a good thing.

    21. Re:But of course you can by soft_guy · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's not what is going on in the article, though. The online school is basically there to help parents who are home schooling their children.

      Frankly, there are a lot of things that children "learn" in school that I think are counter productive. We just moved to New York (Long Island) this year (from the west coast), and the school here is terrible. All the kids are "dating" in 5th grade (which I think is the parent's fault). The school has dances for 5th grade. They are two years behind where her old school was in pretty much every academic subject. The kids are allowed and even encouraged to use profanity in school.

      So, next year she will be attending a private school. One semester at the crappy New York school is too much.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    22. Re:But of course you can by Millenniumman · · Score: 1

      You've got it completely wrong. It isn't maintaining the status quo, it's imposing a false equality.

      --
      Stupidity is like nuclear power, it can be used for good or evil. And you don't want to get any on you.
    23. Re:But of course you can by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Most parents, from what I've seen as of late, that keep their kids home schooled, do a POOR job of helping them in this respect. Going to a public/private school teaches the kids about schedules, dealing with other people (as mentioned previously), completing assignments (directly translates to your "real" job later in life), etc.

      Great. Why don't you provide empirical evidence, published in an accredited, peer-reviewed journal supporting your claims? Fact is, even the U.S. Department of Education admits that homeschooled kids do far better on tests, tend to be considerably more literate (slashspeak: they know the difference between "lose" and "loose"), are usually at least one grade ahead of their public-school peers, etc. Other studies have shown that homeschoolers are more likely to go to college, and earn incomes well in excess of the average.

      As for that 'chestnut' about homeschoolers being socially-inept geeks (especially funny, seeing that here on Slashdot), not a single study published in a scientific journal supports this claim. It appears that the people who most often make it are a) public school supporters, or b) parents who're still pissed off that raising a kid is more difficult than taking care of a puppy, and will be damned if they're going to put out any more effort than they already have. Or perhaps are people who're still righteously pissed that THEY had to go through the public school system, and want to inflict that cesspit of contrived age-based caste-system conformity on everyone else's kids as a form of payback.

      There are nearly two million homeschoolers in the U.S. alone, and that number is growing explosively with every passing year. It seems that more and more parents are convinced that public schools are shit, and would rather their kid get a real education - one they can use to beat your second-rate whelp with when it comes to, say, getting jobs. Or thinking independently. Or reading above a sixth-grade level.

      At any rate, the anti-homeschoolers need to sit down and shut the fuck up. It isn't their business whether someone else's kid is homeschooled or not. And if the homeschooling makes your neighbor's kid more competitive than yours in the workplace, too fucking bad for your little Johnnie. Perhaps he'll learn an important life lesson, along the lines of "suck it up and deal with it".

      Just to put this in perspective: I'm a former teacher in the public school system, and am currently teaching at a private academy. The schools ARE shit, and their goal is to produce brain-dead idiots who won't question authority and who can easily be used as interchangeable parts in the corporate world. Note how few 'movers and shakers' went through the public school system, and ask yourself why. It doesn't take a rocket scientist (or any sort of scientist) to figure this one out.

      Oh, and my little girl will NEVER set foot in a school, public or private; she'll get the best that I can provide, because ultimately that's my fucking job as a parent. And she'll be one of the ones telling your publicly-educated brat when he can take his vacation days from his McJob, while she spends the summer in Tahiti.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    24. Re:But of course you can by tompaulco · · Score: 2, Informative

      The problem is, currently, schools tell you how to act and think rather than explaining and giving reason to why you need to behave a certain way in public.
      Currently as in 1950?
      In my state, which is fairly conservative, kids are taught that no matter how they act and think, there is nothing wrong with it, that if you are bad in class, that they can and will do nothing to correct it (because parents will sue them), and that no matter what you do wrong, it is somebody else's fault. So in fact, I would have to say that my biggest problem with public schools is EXACTLY the opposite of what your biggest problem with them is.
      The schools in my area also openly accept advertising, send kids to presentations by commercial interests which then send home flyers with the kids for signing up for various commercial programs. One time, they even let some newspaper subscription subcontracter conman come in and sign up kids to sell papers for him which benefited them at several cents per hour.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    25. Re:But of course you can by raehl · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Apparently public school also failed to teach you that anecdotal evidence doesn't prove anything.

      Maybe he just has a naturally gregarious personality?

    26. Re:But of course you can by jcr · · Score: 1

      The problem is, it's becoming more and more evident that kids won't learn in a classroom, either

      Classrooms worked well for centuries in this country, and other countries seem to get far better results than the USA with their classrooms.

      Personally, I'm inclined to blame teacher's unions for demanding nothing but more funding, all the time. They fight like hell against any move to allow choice among schools, to allow teachers to be compensated on any basis other than seniority, etc, etc.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    27. Re:But of course you can by jcr · · Score: 1



      What a refreshing thing to read. I'm damned sick of people complaining that the schools are failing their kids, but leaving them there to have every last bit of creativity, independence and imagination ground out of them.

      You have a very lucky little girl.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    28. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The real problem is that parents have too many escapes nowadays from parenting. The TV and video game consoles offer more stimulation to children than anything else, so they are captivated by it. And parents need to get things done, so they don't mind dumping off their kids in front of the TV for a few hours while they do some house work. Seems to me people have the attitude that if my kid is in front of the TV, at least I know they are safe, right?

      Few children will actually turn of the TV or the Video Games and open a book and do some reading. When a child reads, they become better spellers, and better writers. They learn good habits. The TV is a waste of time, even educational shows.


      Or maybe the real problem is our modern work-a-holic society? Think about it, you take a child from about 4-5 years after they are born, and start drilling them into school 6-8 hours a day. Then do that for 13 or so years straight, then add another 4 years of university, then more if you want to go further. Then every so often keep changing and updating the curriculum every so often, and also piling up more and more useless work they wont remember for kids to do so they can "compete" in the "market".

      School is a little more then a place to churn out slaves to powerful industries of the economy, many people end up being little more then depressed, maturity stunted worker bee's. It's no wonder parents and their kids dive off into entertainment and fantasy land, the whole culture and it's associated economic idealogy is simply fucked up, and is putting unrealistic academic and work pressure on people.

    29. Re:But of course you can by michrech · · Score: 1

      As I said, nothing personal, I was picking up on society's bias that school, or the whole of life up to the age of 18 is not *real life*.

      School kids commit suicide because they are bullied. It happens. A lot.

      Missing out on school can ruin your life, having everyone in a schoool pick on you can ruin your life, or as I said, end it.


      And as I said, school isn't "real life". It prepares you for it. School kids commit suicide because they are either in a home environment that isn't nurturing enough for them to feel they can come to their parents with problems, have the same environment at school (I was in this camp for a while), or both. In the latter example, the parents aren't involved enough in what is going on in the kids life. My mother had her nose in every place she could stick it when I was going through school, which was what saved me. Unfortunately, especially lately, parents don't seem to give a shit what their kids are doing, or what they are going through while at school, which leads to your exaggerated example of suicide. I'd like to bet you $100 it doesn't happen as often as you are trying to make it sound.

      I was simply making an off-optic comment, picking up on one sentance, it seems I hit a nerve, and that you are as short-shighted as the gross generalisation I was picking apart. That was not intentional

      You were simply making an off-topic comment, taking one sentence out of context, in a hope to gain karma, which failed. You even grossly generalized in trying to make whatever point you thought you had. Nice try, though. It's too bad facts get in the way of your "comment".

      --
      bork bork bork!
    30. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      [T]he public school system is run by communists.
      Not Communists, I'm afraid, but Bolsheviks: those that demand admixture with violent and ressentissant aliens.
    31. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Dude, kids are incapable of thinking for themselves, especially in the grade school years.

      This is total crap!

      Of course kids think for themselves, they have to in order to make decisions. If you ever fought with your parents when you were in grade school, it's precisely because you wanted to think for yourself and your parents were not ready to let you yet.

    32. Re:But of course you can by michrech · · Score: 1

      What a refreshing thing to read. I'm damned sick of people complaining that the schools are failing their kids, but leaving them there to have every last bit of creativity, independence and imagination ground out of them.

      You have a very lucky little girl.


      I am not even going to bother to reply to the parent as he is more interested in belittling me, and telling me to "sit down and shut the fuck up", than to actually have a civil debate, etc. That, to me, just shows how weak his position really is.

      I will, however, tell you what I'm damned sick of. I'm damned sick of these parents who think the public schools are shit, however, beyond complaining about it (and pulling their child out), do absolutely NOTHING to fix the problem at all.

      You don't like the public school system? DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT. Quit your job and run for a position on the board. Can't be bothered to quit your job to help fix the school? Find someone who you believe will do so and VOTE THEM IN.

      It really is that simple to fix things. No, it won't get fixed over night. For the last 13 years I've been a computer technician, going into peoples homes (which is where I get the bulk of my observations on home schooled kids -- There are a TON of families in this area that take this route. Too bad the parent to your post and other posters to my first post didn't bother to try to find out how I came to my conclusions). I've also done work in multiple school districts. I know very well how screwed up some of them can be. Only YOU, the voter, can fix it. The longer you sit on your (very possibly) fat, lazy, asses, the more the public school systems will remain in the condition they are in now.

      --
      bork bork bork!
    33. Re:But of course you can by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

      Not according to the people who originally designed the public school system.

    34. Re:But of course you can by pNutz · · Score: 1

      You had a crappy teacher who wanted everyboy to be on the same page.

      How is this an indictment of public schooling?

      This wouldn't happen in a private school, or in a web-based charter school?

      --
      Death and danger are my various breads and various butters.
    35. Re:But of course you can by Malakusen · · Score: 1

      I was homeschooled K-12, and it did absolutely nothing to prepare me socially for the outside world, while giving me both an excellent "book smarts" education and an unhealthy overdose of religious indoctrination. I was kept separate from other kids so I wouldn't pick up foul language, or opposing belief systems, or want to go to public school, or for any other of a host of reasons. My four younger siblings are all turning out as maladjusted as I am. Homeschooling can be done right and it can be done wrong, but that depends on the parents, and there's no control over it. Public schooling is horrible in that it enforces conformity and forces acceptance of social standards, but it provides the experience in dealing with people that homeschool may or may not. The education can be better or worse, depending on location, but a homeschool class size will always be smaller.

      --
      Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to conviction
    36. Re:But of course you can by VGR · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Why, pray tell, is school not "real life".

      Remember that jerk in school who used to punch a select few nerds in the head as hard as he was able? Remember how the teacher always ignored it?

      Go try that in "real life." Punch someone in the office like that. Or even your neighbor. Let me know how it turns out.

      The absurdly antisocial behaviors which go on in schools every single day are things that no adult would put up with in the workplace for an instant.

      --
      The Internet is full. Go away.
    37. Re:But of course you can by tecie · · Score: 1

      This is the problem -- the point of training kids for the real world isn't the same as taking them places to have a good time. It's about taking them places that they HAVE to be and will most likely be miserable at for at least part of the time.
      School is a perfect example: Most people are absolutely miserable through at least part of secondary school. Hormones are raging, social circles are among the most vicious and hurtful that they will ever be, and to top it off, those involved are by definition the most emotionally vulnerable that they will ever be.
      Real world work will make everyone absolutely miserable at times, especially those first few jobs where you don't exactly have the corner office.
      Further, in social and romantic relationships, people need practical problem solving skills and need to be able to cope with the fact that everything isn't always going to go as planned. These are not skills that can be taught, but must be learned.
      These skills are necessary to the real world.

    38. Re:But of course you can by RsG · · Score: 3, Informative

      You're trolling. But what the hell.

      Virtually every single person in this article thread, and in TFA itself, is using non-scientific evidence, especially anecdotes. See the post further down by some AC about "Lauren" the college dropout he taught who was home-schooled. It therefor stands that, if nobody is linking studies/research at all, one anecdote is as good as another. Your only valid counterpoint would be a scientifically credited link; as it stands my direct experience is more valid than your uninformed opinion (neither of us is being scientific).

      What proof is there anyway? Even if you could study the students (this is being done BTW, my brother was tracked by one such study), then any data gathered over the last few decades will be skewed by the number of religion based home schooling.

      As for comparisons between the two of us, we're damn similar people. Close to the same intelligence, similar academic performance (I test better, he get's his assignments done more often), similar personality. Why do I dislike people far more than him? I was taught froma very early age that people are scum. He never learned that lesson.

      However, learning that lesson did me no practical good, whereas ignorance has actually benefitted him. We have wound up at about the same place in life as well, so arguements that I must have a better job/higher education/whatever don't fly.

      And even if he were more gregarious than me, all you've proved is that, in our case, which system we went through had no positive or negative impact on our lives. Ie, home schooled kid fairs no worse than public schooled kid when all other variables are as close to identical as possible. Which would still be an arguement in favour of home schooling.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    39. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      yeah, the public school system really has screwy standards. In K-5th, the kids learn the same stuff every year about basic math. In 6-7 the learn the same stuff, with a hint of algebra. In 8th, its usually beginning algebra. For the "exceptionally bright," beginning alg. (or ALG I) ends at 8th grade and they move on to geom, int. alg (ALG II), trig and calc in high school. this is total bull shit. the info in 6th and 7th could be easily taught before 5th grade, in which alg I then can be taught. Kids do not have to go through basic math for 6 or more years. They are not retards (initially) and needn't be treated as retards. there are many who either come from other countries, or are tutored independently, who come into 9th grade taking AP calc ab, and by the end of high school, finish multivar calc.

    40. Re:But of course you can by greg_barton · · Score: 1
      I went through the public school system; my younger brother was home schooled. Guess which one of us is the cynic?


      Plainly neither of you learned about the effect of birth order on personality.
    41. Re:But of course you can by whoop · · Score: 1

      Who's better to know how to fail at education than the ones that have spent 50+ years and trillions of dollars perfecting it?

    42. Re:But of course you can by zaphod_es · · Score: 1
      Great. Why don't you provide empirical evidence, published in an accredited, peer-reviewed journal supporting your claims?

      And why don't you?
    43. Re:But of course you can by rolfwind · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Dude, kids are incapable of thinking for themselves, especially in the grade school years. They need to be taught the difference between right and wrong before they can be taught how to ascertain whether something is right or wrong.


      You mean kids are incapable of thinking how we want them to think (as in socially accepted ways) until we teach them how. Then they need to be taught what we think of right and wrong before they can ascertain whether something is right or wrong according to our system.

      Kids can think plenty, but since they don't know all the consequences for every action (subtle and the obvious, not that some adults do either, though) they are apt to get into trouble (or cause it).
    44. Re:But of course you can by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "Schools place too much emphasis on obedience"

      Actually...I think the opposite is the problem. Teachers nowdays get no respect from the kids, and their hands are tied with regard to punishments. Anarchy rules in so many of the classrooms today...and the kids that want to act right and learn are prevented from doing so due to all the attention going to the troublemakers.

      Maybe we should make education more of a priviledge than a right...if you can't behave and go the normal route...strike out...and you get to go to a special school...maybe to teach you a vocation. If that doesn't work...well, we'll find a job for you till you're 18 and an adult.

      This way, order could be more easily kept in the classroom, and those kids who want to learn and have a proficiency to learn, won't be held back by the lowest common denominator.

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    45. Re:But of course you can by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      do absolutely NOTHING to fix the problem at all.

      No, we aren't interested in fixing the problem the way that YOU want it fixed. We think that public schools are fundamentally flawed, and have decided to route around them. We do this with OUR child, and if you have a problem with that - too fucking bad. It isn't your decision to make.

      We still have to pay taxes, despite the fact that our child doesn't use a single penny of that money for her education. That should be more than enough for you. If you want to 'fix' the public school system, go right ahead - do it. You even get to try on our dime. But don't expect us to do it for you, because we aren't interested.

      You don't like the public school system? DO SOMETHING ABOUT IT.

      We did. Our daughter will never go to a public school. That fixes OUR problem right there. It's up to YOU to fix YOUR problem. Try for some personal responsibility, if you can. Your the one concerned about public schools; we're no longer involved with them in any way, shape, or form.

      e. Too bad the parent to your post and other posters to my first post didn't bother to try to find out how I came to my conclusions

      Your anecdotal evidence doesn't mean shit, which you'd know if your public education did you any good at all. There's a wealth of information showing that home schooling is far superior to public schooling, and none whatsoever to the contrary. All of it published in peer-reviewed, accredited scientific journals. That trumps your personal observations hands-down.

      Fortunately, our child will know the difference between 'anecdotal' and 'empirical'.

      The longer you sit on your (very possibly) fat, lazy, asses, the more the public school systems will remain in the condition they are in now.

      Whine, whine, whine. You expect US to 'fix' the public school system for YOU. I suggest that you get off your fat, lazy, ass and do the job yourself. We don't think it's fixable, and even if it were we'd STILL homeschool our child. Again, you just need to 'suck it up and deal with it' because it isn't our job to conform to what you think we should do, just to make you happy. And to beat a dead horse, you even get to do it with our property taxes!

      Really, knock yourself out. I won't hold my breath. And I'm not particularly interested in whether you succeed or fail since, as I said, we've settled on homeschooling and that's that.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    46. Re:But of course you can by Slashdot+Junky · · Score: 1

      The kids are allowed and even encouraged to use profanity in school

      Although I know that schools vary considerably on many levels from one another and from what I experienced as kid, I was shocked to read that your kid's particular school encourages the use of profanity. I can imagine that it is allowed as long as it remains nonexcessive. I'm just surprised that anyone other than other kids would encourage it.

      Later,
      -Slashdot Junk

      --
      .
      Landfill Mining Co.
      Managing the (Un)natural Resources of Tomorrow
    47. Re:But of course you can by SStrungis · · Score: 1

      At a certain younger age there isn't any room for reasoning. Sometimes the answer of "that's the way it is" or "because I said so" is what has to fly. There's no reasoning with preschoolers, kindergartners, or even first through third graders.

    48. Re:But of course you can by RsG · · Score: 1

      From experience, my family in no way resembles that distribution.

      For one thing, it says firstborn tend to be overacheivers - I'm a born slacker. For another it says intelligence goes down with second and third children, which (taken in the context of my family, where I went to public school and my brother was home schooled) would indicate that home schooling made my bro smarter, in addition to being less cynical and more social. Talk about a raw deal for me!

      I'd say that those theories either only apply in the most general average sense, or else the two of us are exceptions to the rule. At a guess, it's the former; none of the families I know fit that entire distribution of personality and capability.

      I doubt that home schooling vs. public schooling actually made a huge difference. I do know however, that most of my dislike of the human species can be traced back to high school. What gets on my nerves is people saying that this somehow "prepared me for the real world"; it did nothing of the sort.

      For one thing, I can plainly see another person similar to me who was not thusly prepared, and suffered no negative consequences, so obviously school can't have done me that much good in preparing for reality. For another, school bears little or no resemblance to reality, and dealing with the challenges there prepares you for nothing. Cynicism is not a useful trait, whereas charm (which requires a certain ability to like a complete stranger) is in fact a real world skill.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    49. Re:But of course you can by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Cynicism is not a useful trait...

      Au contraire, mon fraire! Everything has it's use, you simply need to look.

      More required reading for you: http://search.barnesandnoble.com/bookSearch/isbnIn quiry.asp?r=1&isbn=0553379593

      I suggest starting with the section on mild depression.

    50. Re:But of course you can by RsG · · Score: 1

      Ok, let me rephrase.

      The arguement being presented is that school "socializes" it's victi^H^H^H students. Ergo, they become more able to function in society, having learned to deal with other people.

      Except school doesn't actually do that. There are thousands of better venues in life for meeting people and learning to socialize. What school does do is teach you a deep cynicism with regard to people and society. That's if you're lucky. I didn't go to a violent school, but there were at least a few suicides I heard about, and some of my old friends wound up deadbeats or doing McJobs. Being crammed into a free-for-all environment with their peers didn't do them a lick of good.

      The ability to deal with people with a certain amount of optimism is a useful trait for functioning in society. Charm can get you places where other skills and traits can't. Cynicism, OTOH, isn't terribly useful. It's not useless, it's just not the best way of interacting with others. Note that these two possiblities are not mutually exclusive, but it's much harder to fake charm if you view other people with suspicion and pessimism.

      If the anti-home schooling arguement were valid, then home schooled kids would be unprepared for the world and public schooled kids would know how to deal with people. Instead, in at least some cases, you get the opposite - my brother has better people skills than I do, despite our similar nature.

      Since correlation =! causation, the most correct statement is that home schooling and public schooling do not offer any obvious social advantage over each other. And it is possible, though not easy to prove, that home schooling is better from a socializing perspective, as it doesn't teach it's students to hate each other. That was essentially my only point.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    51. Re:But of course you can by j-beda · · Score: 1
      The absurdly antisocial behaviors which go on in schools every single day are things that no adult would put up with in the workplace for an instant.

      Unfortunately, bullying and other "bad" behaviour goes on in the "adult world" all too often. Sometimes it is more subtle than "a boot to the head", but often it is just as blatent, and goes unaddressed.

      "workplace bully" at google.com results in a bunch of hits.

    52. Re:But of course you can by koreaman · · Score: 0

      frère
      its

    53. Re:But of course you can by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      You're not cynical about others, just yourself. Otherwise you'd change.

      Of course doing that would invalidate your worldview, and you may not be prepared to do that.

      Anyway, have fun, or at least a close approximation of it.

    54. Re:But of course you can by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Today Im diacritical mark deficient.

    55. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      also, this is done in the name of keeping kids "sociable", which is utter nonsense. by their use, "sociable" = "idiotic"

    56. Re:But of course you can by koreaman · · Score: 0

      "brother" then.

    57. Re:But of course you can by michrech · · Score: 0

      My, I must have hit a nerve, what with your potty mouth and all. Is that your only defense? You can't come up with anything against my points so you cuss at me?

      Whine, whine, whine. You expect US to 'fix' the public school system for YOU. I suggest that you get off your fat, lazy, ass and do the job yourself. We don't think it's fixable, and even if it were we'd STILL homeschool our child. Again, you just need to 'suck it up and deal with it' because it isn't our job to conform to what you think we should do, just to make you happy. And to beat a dead horse, you even get to do it with our property taxes!

      Uhhh.. I hate to burst your bubble, however, home schooled kids most certainly use tax payers money (YOUR taxes -- you know, the ones you JUST complained about having to pay?). What do you think pays for the testing your child(ren) go through? Where do you think the money comes from for administration to keep your child(ren) are being taught properly by you? Where do you think the money comes from for any books the kids might need?

      In my state, it's the school district the child would NORMALLY attend that provides all of this. You don't use the taxes, indeed. You must think I (and everyone else reading this) am quite stupid to try to pull that on me.

      What is really sad in all of this is that the kids missing out on the wide variety of interactions they'd have with other kids their own age isn't my biggest grip with home schooling. It's letting people who are totally and completely unqualified to instruct their children. As I have stated in the past (you can view my comment history if you are a subscriber -- it was some time ago), there are exceptions to this, but I wouldn't trust the vast majority of kids parents to flip my burger at (insert fast food chain here), let alone teach their children. Public/private school teachers don't have to go through years of training and certification just because they want to rack up huge loans and soak years from their lives just to teach. The same (or *very* similar) should have to happen for with at least one of the parents before their children are allowed to be home schooled (in my opinion).

      From what I saw in the Antelope Valley School District (when I lived in SoCal), I don't believe home schooling is as effective as whatever reports you may point at would say, anyway. Much of the testing my friend (and his entire class) went through were "rigged", in my eyes. The kids had to meet three times a week for a few hours, in separate classrooms from the "public" kids, for testing and homework assignments (there goes your "I don't use the taxes!" diatribe). While the kids were taking their tests, once the instructor graded them, he'd send them back *to correct their answers* until the tests were perfect!

      If this is happening in one district (which is rather large), I bet you it's happening elsewhere.

      Even home schooling didn't help him, anyway. He dropped out of public school while he was a sophomore (but only had the credits of a freshman -- I'll never figure *that* one out). His parents forced him into the home school program where he lasted less than a year before dropping out again. This goes back to my argument that home schooling isn't the answer, either.

      I guess what my entire argument boils down to is this: If you think the public school system is so "fucked up", and you believe you know how to fix it, why not spend that time and energy you are putting into your child for the betterment of society as a whole? If you, and all the other "I'm better than you because MY child is home schooled" parents did the same, I firmly believe other parents would join in and society as a whole would be bettered.

      But that's just me -- thinking that, since we're all sucking up space together on this planet, we should all be *helping each other* make this a better place to live instead of segregating ourselves. What a fool I am, eh?

      --
      bork bork bork!
    58. Re:But of course you can by RsG · · Score: 1

      You seem to have drawn an awfully large conclusion there.

      Change takes time. Experience cannot be unlearned; altering one's worldview is not merely a matter of deciding one day to ignore the last X years of your life. If you have even the basic psychological knowledge required to make the kind of conclusions you're making (and you have the air of an armchair quarterback to me, so perhaps you don't), then you already know this.

      As for myself, I've mellowed considerably since I graduated, and I'm far less a cynic now than I was. To use your terminology, my "worldview" as it stood when I graduated has gradually become less valid. That does not however make my memory of the public school system any happier.

      My point was directed more about the state of the school system than myself; I'm doing better, whereas I see no reason to think it's improved since I left, nor any reason to think it does it's students any good. Do you have anything at all to say on that topic?

      And as a side note, I'd tend to say that holding a cynical view of things like the public school system isn't a matter of having an invalid worldview. If something is broken and faulty, then it a cynic is right to consider it as such, despite his cynicism.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    59. Re:But of course you can by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Change takes time. Experience cannot be unlearned;

      Yet it can always be reinterpreted. ...and you have the air of an armchair quarterback to me...

      And what a big comfy chair it is! By all means, do what you must to ignore me.

      Do you have anything at all to say on that topic? [high school]

      Not really. It's irrelevant.

    60. Re:But of course you can by RsG · · Score: 1
      Yet it can always be reinterpreted.
      Oh, I don't disagree. See my comment about it taking time however. When all your practical experience tells you that situation X will lead to event Y, then it takes a great deal of practice not to expect Y when confronted with X.

      By all means, do what you must to ignore me.
      Whatever gave you the idea that I'm ignoring you? You were acting like the proverbial armchair quarterback, proffering unsolicited and misdirected advice over an internet forum. I'll take the advice of those in a position to make intelligent firsthand observations, thanks.

      If I wanted to ignore you, I'd have simply left the thread alone.

      Not really. It's irrelevant.
      This is a slashdot discussion, not a psych class. Check the thread topic - public school vs. home school. We've gone offtopic, which I think is your doing more than mine, but that is where we began, right? Ergo, if you have something insightful or interesting to add to the thread, other than amateur night at the psych ward, then that would be the topic to add it to.
      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    61. Re:But of course you can by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Ergo, if you have something insightful or interesting to add to the thread, other than amateur night at the psych ward, then that would be the topic to add it to.

      Nah. This has just been a way to distract you from what's really been going on.

      Now...LOOK BEHIND YOU!

    62. Re:But of course you can by jcr · · Score: 1

      I am not even going to bother to reply to the parent as he is more interested in belittling me, and telling me to "sit down and shut the fuck up",

      So, you don't like him treating you like a kid in a public school, eh?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    63. Re:But of course you can by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      "If you don't like the way something is, then change it!"

      Of course you can say that, you can also wish upon a star and sing with Mr Cricket. But it isnt going to do you much good. If you are looking to change something especially as an underling int he business world you are just going to bury yourself professionally. That is life.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    64. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Few children will actually turn of the TV or the Video Games and open a book and do some reading. When a child reads, they become better spellers, and better writers. They learn good habits. The TV is a waste of time, even educational shows.

      While I agree with the point made, and think you have the right idea, I feel compelled to point something out. I was a rather slow reader all through school, and it cost me a lot of time with reading assignments (seriously, almost all assignments involve reading). Then I discovered subtitled anime, and now I'm up to better than normal speeds. Just saying.

    65. Re:But of course you can by michrech · · Score: 1

      So, you don't like him treating you like a kid in a public school, eh?

      While I was in school, I was very rarely treated this way. When I was, I ignored these people. This is the way (in my opinion) to deal with these people. The more you respond, the more you lower yourself to their level.

      You take away the responses, they become irrelevant.

      --
      bork bork bork!
    66. Re:But of course you can by Wavicle · · Score: 1

      What do you think pays for the testing your child(ren) go through? Where do you think the money comes from for administration to keep your child(ren) are being taught properly by you? Where do you think the money comes from for any books the kids might need?

      You have a point here, however as the rest of your post shows, you (like me) are from California. Many school districts here have some sort of program to "support" homeschoolers. The cynic in me wants to point out that by doing this the school districts get state money they otherwise would not get. I was a bit suprised by the books thing. Where I live in California, the homeschool charter school doesn't pay for books, parents have to cover supplies themselves. The program local to you is not universal, nor I imagine is it very common.

      From what I saw in the Antelope Valley School District (when I lived in SoCal), I don't believe home schooling is as effective as whatever reports you may point at would say, anyway.

      One of the problems with this is you are presenting entirely anecdotal evidence. There is a book by Thomas Gilovich titled "How We Know What Isn't So." I discovered it because I was intrigued why a book like this would be required for a BioChemistry couse at Stanford. Gilovich covers in detail why one should never trust anecdotal evidence, even one's own. What it boils down to is that even the best intentioned of us tend to filter data that supports what we believe. Thus if you had seen cases where home school was as effective or better than what the school district provided, you would unconsciously fail to register it (or register it but assign it far less significance). Not because you are deficient, everybody just does it.

      If you think the public school system is so "fucked up", and you believe you know how to fix it, why not spend that time and energy you are putting into your child for the betterment of society as a whole? If you, and all the other "I'm better than you because MY child is home schooled" parents did the same, I firmly believe other parents would join in and society as a whole would be bettered.

      I believe that these parents believe that the homeschool environment is superior to systemized schooling. If this is true, they ARE likely doing what they think is the best thing for their child which also happens to be the best thing for society. If the research on the subject is correct, if everyone were homeschooled society would be much better off because violent mal-adjusted kids occur far less frequently in homeschooling than the general population of their peers. (The problem with such a hasty generalization is, of course, that people who homeschool are also a quite different sub-population.)

      --
      Education is a better safeguard of liberty than a standing army.
      Edward Everett (1794 - 1865)
    67. Re:But of course you can by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      Physical abuse, mental abuse, I would say that mental punches happen all the time in the workplace, along with bullying and professional burial. Sure we dont get bruises from it but people lose their jobs, lose their reputations, or get demoted because some "office bully" decided to step on you because they had a bad day or were threatened by you.

      I was punched several times in high school, middle school, and grade school. Had I known how strong I was at the time I probably could have kicked their asses but as it turned out my religious upbringing taught me to deal with it. Just as I have to deal with it now when co-workers are threatened by me. Or fellow workers have to deal with managers trying to force them out of the workplace. You deal with it. If you cannot correlate mental punches with physical punches you have issues. If you have never been under the foot of someone, consider yourself lucky.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    68. Re:But of course you can by jcr · · Score: 1

      So, by replying to me, you pretend to ignore him?

      He's right, you're wrong. Go cope.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    69. Re:But of course you can by cliath · · Score: 1

      I imagine they aren't trying to enroll students who are that young in this program.

    70. Re:But of course you can by gpmidi · · Score: 1

      When I was little I read tons and tons of books. I have yet to learn how to spell. (I'm 20) -Paul

    71. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I was in school, I was very rarely treated this way. When I was, I ignored these people. This is the way (in my opinion) to deal with these people. The more you respond, the more you lower yourself to their level.

      Yes, because as anyone who's been through highschool knows, ignoring the bullies makes them go away. I can't remember ever seeing a kid trying to make himself invisible while a pack of other kids threw things, hit them, destroyed their personal property, etc.... can you?

    72. Re:But of course you can by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It seems that you're forgetting to ask yourself one question: why should parents whose children aren't going to be attending public schools worry about fixing public education? They are already contributing their portion of resources to the school in the form of taxes. Vouchers aside, as those do not apply to homeschoolers, it's not like they can opt out of paying for the schools even though their child isn't attending them.

      Also, to be perfectly honest, the part of the school system that they can help to fix through lobbying is not the only thing they're worried about. The hard truth is that a substantial, if not the majority, portion of the school experience—and consequently the overall quality of the school—is decided by the students attending it. Regardless of how successfully they are in lobbying for school reform, if the parents of their childrens' peers do not also care as much about the education of their children, their child is very likely to have an exceedingly poor experience.

      I went to one of the worst public high schools in my state—and my state consistently ranks among the worst 5 of all states in the US on almost any metric you care to name, from teen pregnancy, to standardized test scores, to average literacy—and I can tell you that there is no way that you can pin it all on the teachers and the rest of the educational system. It's nowhere near perfect, and could definitely use some serious reform, but attempting to blame all of the underperformance on the teachers and administration is both grossly unfair and cowardly. You may not have explicitly stated that you blamed the educational system for all of public schooling's failings, but that is the implied assumption if you believe that it's even possible for home schooling parents to fix public schools through lobbying for reform. It doesn't work like that. You would not only need to reform the schools, but the other parents as well, which is not necessarily something that you even have the right to do.

      In contrast to my high school experience, I ended up in college at Harvard. I also dropped in on some lectures at my local state university, and attending summer courses there during high school. While there are many amazing professors at Harvard, the massive difference in quality of education (let me assure you from firsthand experience, the difference is quite real) is mainly due to the difference in qualities of the respective student bodies.

      Now don't get me wrong, the people in my high school weren't bad as human beings. My best friends to this day happen to be the ones I went to high school with, for instance, and I strongly disagree with the ethical beliefs of many of my classmates from Harvard. However, there is absolutely no question that the fact that my peers at Harvard were dead serious about their goals dramatically increased the quality of the educational environment. On the other hand, in high school, and while I went to the public university, I managed to learn in spite of my peers rather than from them.

      If/when I have kids of my own I intend to send them to public schools because I learned many important life lessons there. However, I have absolutely no illusions that they will receive an education from a public school, regardless of how much I might lobby for reform, so I'll be seeing to that personally.

    73. Re:But of course you can by jenilyn · · Score: 1

      The tax expenditures you list for homeschoolers vary wildly from state to state--and most don't require more than one of them. Several require none. I'm sorry to burst your bubble.

      My property taxes go for the education of kids not my own. I homeschool. I am willing to settle for this. Telling homeschool parents that they have a responsibility to fix a system, if they believe it inherently flawed, is a peculiar stance to take.

      But go with it, maybe you'll eventually find the parent willing to 'fix' the public schools. Maybe by freeing the kids.

    74. Re:But of course you can by soft_guy · · Score: 1

      We attended a DARE graduation ceremony for our daughter and several of the children "performed" various skits, raps, songs, etc. Many of these included profanity which (we later found out from speaking with the principal) the school had encouraged because they had to "keep it real" in order to "get through to the kids" so they wouldn't use drugs.

      This reasoning seemed completely faulty to me.

      --
      Avoid Missing Ball for High Score
    75. Re:But of course you can by alphamugwump · · Score: 1

      I am a homeschooled religious looney, you insensitive clod!

      J/K

    76. Re:But of course you can by Serveert · · Score: 1

      I went to an evil hippy commune school until middle school. We didn't get grades, called our teachers by their first names and we went on a lot of field trips. And I turned out pretty good. I started my own business and I can't complain. It really depends on the kid, sometimes your typical rigid school structure doesn't quite work well.

      --
      2 years and no mod points. Join reddit. Because openness is good.
    77. Re:But of course you can by bareshiyth · · Score: 1

      "You can't sit a child in front of a unionized tenured teacher and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,", think many a parent, nowadays....

  2. But... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Will it run Linux? Duck time, I know.

  3. Why not? by Moraelin · · Score: 5, Funny

    Why not? Back in my day, I sat all evening in front of the computer, and I learned all I need about functioning in society. Don't ninja-loot, don't let your pet aggro the whole room if you're a Warlock, get your shield from the vault before joining a raid if you're a Warrior or Paladin... err... ok, I see what you mean.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Why not? by arth1 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yeah, but were you learning that using an Intel? If so, it's irrelevant to this discussion, which is about AMD K8... Er, or am I missing something?

    2. Re:Why not? by Praedon · · Score: 3, Informative

      To be very honest with any comments like this, and comments that bash schools online, everyone should take the time to visit a site called Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow. If it wasn't for this possibility, students that made a few bad mistakes, young teenage parents, and socially impaired individuals that I knew growing up would have just ended up dropping out all together and getting their GED. Instead, they got their high school diploma.

      To anyone who thinks it isn't possible to sit in front of a computer at home to go to school, and actually learn, my sister was one of those people who graduated from Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow. I have never seen such a determined school in all my years of moving, relocating, and some REALLY bad experiences with normal schools. When I graduated back in the day, Electronic Classroom of Tomorrow JUST Came out, and I wish every day it would have came out a few years earlier.

      The importance of having the option to elect out of a public school system, and to go to school online, is the best thing that has ever came to Ohio. For those individuals that can't handle the daily routine of public school systems, and the people who needed the extra help and support, that basically ALL School systems should cater to anyways, ECOT Is there for them here. It is a real school in Columbus, and they even have events, field trips, prom, graduation, and support staff that will work with you for at least several years after you graduate, to make sure you have someone to go to, if you needed that help.

      We all know what kind of things happen in a public school system, and we know what can happen in a private school system. People can be so mean at times, and can knock other peoples self-esteem to no end. With ECOT, the people that I knew that used it, had their confidence boosted up, their self-esteem up, and they admitted to learning more at ecot than they ever did.

      So think about that, when any of you take cracks at a Electronic Classroom... Cause if you farted around, they took their learning experience seriously, and normally you were suspended for not doing your homework and course work online. They were the only people to actually care for those, who felt they didn't fit in, and lost their self-esteem when others knocked it down. All Electronic Online Classrooms should be molded like ECOT.

      --
      Just me
    3. Re:Why not? by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      On a serious note, this is mainly intended as a learning enhacement for home schoolers. Many parents can teach but don't know every subject. Who here would opposed providing educational software for students inside a normal classroom.

    4. Re:Why not? by Andrewkov · · Score: 1

      As much as I agree with you, and as much as I hated all levels of school when I was a kid, I believe that the socialization aspect is one of the most important things you learn in school, especially at the younger ages. Hey, just look around your company to see who the successful people are, usually they are ones who are popular and have good social skills, not usually the smartest or best educated. Sad but true.

    5. Re:Why not? by Creedo · · Score: 1

      That's common objection to home schooling, and it doesn't wash. All of my kids are homeschooled(although a wonderful charter school is about to open, and we may place them in that), and they all have exceptional social skills, for which we get complimented on constantly. And that's the norm for such kids. For a lot of kids(I bet a lot of /.ers fit into this category; I was one) school was a gauntlet of abuse to be run everyday. Learning to accept abuse is not what I want for my kids.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    6. Re:Why not? by Andrewkov · · Score: 1
      For a lot of kids(I bet a lot of /.ers fit into this category; I was one) school was a gauntlet of abuse to be run everyday. Learning to accept abuse is not what I want for my kids.

      I don't mean to accept abuse, but learn to deal with abusive people. There will be abusive people in adult life too. You can't protect them forever. (obviously I don't know your specific situation, and I wouldn't tell anyone what's best for their kids, so take all this with a grain of salt)

    7. Re:Why not? by Praedon · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. I plan to raise my kids in Ohio and let them have the first few years in a public school, then pull them out before they reach that age that others will be just completely immature cause their parents don't teach them right from wrong. ECOT is really a great thing to have in Ohio for the simple fact that it will keep their self esteem high and allow them to excel without the interruption of others in the classroom.

      --
      Just me
    8. Re:Why not? by unborracho · · Score: 1

      Too bad there's no Mod -1 "Christ, It's A Joke"

      --
      "You had this look that of an angel, it was such a bad disguise" --Dishwalla
    9. Re:Why not? by Creedo · · Score: 1

      I don't mean to accept abuse, but learn to deal with abusive people. There will be abusive people in adult life too. You can't protect them forever. (obviously I don't know your specific situation, and I wouldn't tell anyone what's best for their kids, so take all this with a grain of salt)

      I do teach them to deal with abuse. But in a public school environment, there is nothing to mitigate the abuse. There are too few teachers to stop the quite persecution that goes on behind their backs. My kids do have to deal with bullies and the like in the various sports and clubs they are part of. But there is more adult supervision there, so while they get a taste of abusive people, and learn how to deal with it, they also don't have to suffer the fear and isolation that can come in the schools. I learned to deal with it by becoming an angry headbanger, and those who would have attacked me either decided I was cool or were scared of crossing me and my group. I would rather my children not have to adapt such defensive techniques.

      --
      All that is necessary for the triumph of good is that evil men do nothing.
    10. Re:Why not? by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      Sad but true indeed. It could be considered one of the failings of society is that success is based on who you know, not what you know. Perhaps if everyone were home schooled and social cliques weren't being introduced and reinforced from age 4, we'd see more intelligent qualified people rise to the top of society instead of what we have now with every bit of society being run by those who socialize best.

    11. Re:Why not? by ifitzgerald · · Score: 1
      Actually, virtual charter schools can be very useful and effective, and I have firsthand knowledge of this.

      I have a long history of lower back problems, and in the beginning of my senior year of high school I was experiencing debilitating pain. My school district didn't (and still doesn't) have an online charter school, and my principal was a complete dick and was unwilling to make any accomodations for me. Somewhere around the beginning of the second quarter of the school year I ended up dropping out of high school. My girlfriend's school district did have an online charter school, and since we were talking about moving in together anyway, I decided to move in with her. I enrolled in the online charter school, and was able to finish my high school diploma on time, even after I had back surgery. If it wasn't for that, I would have been a "super senior" in my high school the following fall, and would have delayed my college education. Obviously this is a huge difference from attending elementary school online, but I don't think it's fair to make broad generalizations about online schools being "bad."

    12. Re:Why not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wish we had this option when I was going to school.

      Frankly, it's sort of disgusting that school, which was intended only to teach kids to read, write, and do match, has been turned into something else. Not only is actual teaching of the base subjects pretty much doomed, but the advertised intent of teaching is now socializing of children. The actual process isn't even doing that so much as trying to force beliefs and obedience down their throats.

      Schools should be no more than a set of teaching servers, with teachers reviewing each student. No freaking classrooms. Each student learns on his/her own, which eliminates issues of Johnny not paying attention or Susie talking in class. This would allow each student to go at their own pace. Considering that classrooms actually slow even the slowest student, even the slow kids would learn fsater than they do now.

      Move the socialization out of school. Communities run kid sports and various weekly events. With faster student learning, elimination of recess, the kids could get out of school sooner and spend the afternoon in their socialization group. This socialization group is picked by the parent, and can be adjusted. No art in school. Move that, and music, to the socialization areas. If Bobby's parents want him to take a music class, he can do it then. No reason to force it on the kids that aren't ready or willing for it. That just wastes everyone's time and money.

      Frankly, if music had been an option instead of a requirement, I might have enjoyed it instead.

    13. Re:Why not? by SetupWeasel · · Score: 1

      Well I'd sometimes like a "-1 Hack," but we can't always get what we want.

    14. Re:Why not? by boingo82 · · Score: 1
      But are they good at socialization BECAUSE of school?
      I have twin brothers...I and one of the twins were homeschooled for 4 years. The other twin was homeschooled only 1 year. My sister and two youngest brothers, not homeschooled at all.
      We're all equally socially inept.

      I agree that learning basic social interaction is necessary, but one can learn that at home. You're talking as though school teaches people to be popular extroverts. It doesn't. Most popular extroverts were born that way and would be that way no matter what.

      --
      As a republican I feel it my responsibity to manufacture criminals. People need punished!
  4. Online Universities by Kuxman · · Score: 1, Interesting

    If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities. Why should I (and any private high schools/colleges) consider a student who comes from an online middle school?

    --
    http://www.asti-usa.com
    1. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one would be very careful not to look too hard at degrees or school names because I would be concearned that I might just by sheer presumption about a specific school, educational method or degree lock out the people who could become the greatest assets for my company/school ever...

      But then again that's just how I look at people. I rather like to look at what the person is capable of myself rather that look at how others have judged that person and there are many ways to do that...

    2. Re:Online Universities by syntaxglitch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      There's more involved in a university environment than just the final degree. A lot of the value is in being surrounded by other intelligent folks and interacting with professors who know their stuff. In a middle school kids are forced to be there, so there's less benefit (if any) from peer groups, and we all know what happens when you have math or science being taught by someone whose only degree is in "education".

      Actually, with all the potential for abuse an online program could have, as with home schooling, if someone comes from that sort of background and still knows their stuff (scores well on standardized tests, etc.) they're probably smarter and/or more self-motivated than someone with an equivalent score from a regular school.

    3. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities.

      Why? What do you value physical presence in a classroom?

    4. Re:Online Universities by Shivetya · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you are kidding right?

      Why should even some regular college degrees deserve respect? Countless colleges allow students to pass through the system with degrees simply because they excel at sports. Many pass on students who only get through sub-par course.

      That college degree doesn't come with a grade point average, is a C student at your local state university going to do as well as someone with a higher average from an online university?

      Besides, doesn't this smack of elitism? We still have cases where some degrees are worth more than others. Some colleges are looked down upon because in truth the education they provide is better. Why not discriminate based on the fact that applicant A's football team regulary hands your school's ass to it every year?

      Education is what you make of it. Public education is no longer about turning out good students who are well balanced with the skills needed to enter the real world. Its a damn jobs program with a bunch of social engineering thrown in to convince kids that the government knows whats good for them.

      --
      * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    5. Re:Online Universities by Raideen · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I went to brick and mortar schools--just online. The format works a lot better for me because it doesn't matter if the professor is boring as all hell. I'm not wasting time sitting through lectures and since it takes more independent learning, I know the material better. If they're properly accredited (i.e. not by Joe's Accreditation Board), what's the problem?

    6. Re:Online Universities by Average_Joe_Sixpack · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities
       
      This is of course rubbish. As someone who has been in the position of hiring I can say there are many factors to consider. To "disregard" a resume based on the university is a disservice to the company and candidate. In more senior positions the education section is almost irrelevant.
       
      If we're talking junior technical positions (ie straight out of school) then you will be expected to take a test prior to any sitdown interview. Often that means dozens of candidates in a room with all sorts of diverse backrounds (English majors to CS grads).

    7. Re:Online Universities by GigsVT · · Score: 2, Informative

      I would disregard any degrees from online universities

      I think you should disregard all degrees, but beside that, why would you disregard online universities?

      I've gone to physical university and I'm currently going to an online university, and I can tell you it's a hell of a lot more work and learning in the online one.

      The classes don't have 500 people in them for one, unlike the physical university I went to. The professor actually interacts with us personally.

      It also costs about 5 times more to go online, on the down side.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    8. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now is the point where you get thoroughly embarrassed for being a completel moron: you cannot get an "education degree" without actually getting a degree in your chosen field. The only "education degrees" are special ed and Master's of Education - the latter requiring you already have a degree in your chosen subject.

      To become a teacher, you earn your degree in your chosen field, just like everyone else, then you take some additional classes on education so that you can be certified to teach in whatever state(s) you intend to teach in. So, in reality, where you never bothered to check up on any of the facts, a teacher must not only earn the same degree as such great and powerful minds such as yourself, but they must actually do additional work in order to be allowed to teach it to other people.

      I love how on Slashdot nobody ever seems to have any facts, but everything everyone says is Insightful and Interesting none-the-less. This entire place is like one great, big idiot convention.

    9. Re:Online Universities by nkv · · Score: 1

      I'd prefer to do that as well but when you have 15 positions for which 15000 people apply, your selection metrics have to become a little coarse to reduce the number of applicants. Here in India, if someone's from an IIT, there's a VERY good chance that he'd be pretty good. If I get 15000 applications in which 15 are IITians (which is hard since they usually get good jobs quite quickly and don't have to compete with the masses), I'd definitely shortlist them. It's not just the University/college which they went to. It's the amount of effort/skill/intelligence that's necessary to get into a place like that which people usually look at. A sort of quick rule of thumb when you have too much data to process.

    10. Re:Online Universities by johnashby · · Score: 1

      This is why you are not in such a position. And yes, I would like fries with that.

    11. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities.

      But since you're the garbage man and are in no position to hire anyone, we don't fucking care.

    12. Re:Online Universities by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Although I agree with you that some professors are as boring as hell, and could probably do with some education of their own on how to keep an audience, I think that they are still a very important part of the learning process. No matter how boring they are, they usually (except for a few cases where they really are useless) have something important to say and worth listening to. I think that most people severely underestimate their ability to learn from listening to a person. I know it's just anecdotal evidence, but from what i've seen, the students who never went to class, or didn't listen when they were in class, had a much harder time in school than those who went to class and paid attention.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    13. Re:Online Universities by Xest · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The UK has a distance learning University called the Open University, nowadays it's courses are based almost entirely online. It also extends into Europe somewhat and even other parts of the world (www.open.ac.uk btw). You're generally assigned a tutor who you submit assignments to online (or by post for some courses that haven't updated yet) and the only time you really have to leave your house is to attend exams or to go to tutorial sessions if you feel you want/need to (these happen like once every 3 weeks or so for an hour or two) but essentially you could do an entire degree remotely bar the exams. Now, I can understand your concerns and the OU maybe an exception to the rule but it is proof that distance learning can and does work. Just to demonstrate how well the OU has done, the OU is the biggest University in Europe and also, the OU is responsible for 25% of Masters degrees in the UK. I think the real issue is seperating scam-like online institutions from the distance learning based institutions like the OU that are extremely credible. Distance learning works for those who have passed the University age and are working full time yet can't afford to give up their job, I'm one of those - I work full time and can't afford to just quit my job and go to Uni for 3years for another degree so I'm doing it with the OU, studying for 30hrs a week I'll be done with my physics degree within 3 years. Also the quality of OU material is absolutely fantastic, it's better than the stuff I've come across at most conventional Unis! I'm biased because the OU has treated me well and I've found it fantastic, and most importantly, it's given me chance to gain a 2nd degree that I'd never have had chance to gain otherwise. I've actually enjoyed it so much I could be tempted to do it again and get a 3rd degree ;) I do realise my experience isn't relevant to the discussion about the social impact, because I did go to a real school, I work a real job and so social skills are gained that way, however when someone makes a blanket statement that they wouldn't hire someone from an online university I feel the point has to be made that online Universities can and do work and that to ignore them in recruitment is ignoring 25% of the UK's Masters degree graduates ;)

    14. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the "completel" moron in this case is the one flying off the handle at one small inaccuracy in a post. If he'd said "someone with a degree in English teaching math or science" would you have a problem with it? No? Then STFD and STFU. You could have corrected the post without making yourself out to be one of the biggest idiots at the "convention".

    15. Re:Online Universities by Actual+Reality · · Score: 0

      I pay big money to send my child to a private school to keep her out of the clutches on liberal teachers and their unions. However, I still have to pay taxes to fund the public school system. Why shouldn't the public school system provide what amounts to assistance to home schooling familys? I know several kids that were home schooled and they excel academically. They easily got into college and have done well. In fact, all of the kids I know that were home school were accepted into college. Perhaps home schooling is the way to go. In any case, it is not unreasonable to ask that assistance be provided from the public school system which we all have to pay for. ~AR

    16. Re:Online Universities by Warg!+The+Orcs!! · · Score: 1

      If I had mod points I'd mod you up.

      Those of you who have watched University Challenge will recognise that the Open University regularly fields series-winning teams. These are not idiots taking an easy online course. I thought about taking an online master's through the University of Liverpool but the fees put me off (£14,000!!!)

      Most of the work required for a degree takes place at home or in a library - not in a classroom.
      Most of the work - whether for Russian, Physics or Psychology - will be done on a computer.
      What is the difference between emailing your tutor when s/he's in the same town as you and doing the same when s/he's 1000 miles away?

      --
      Travelling forward in time at a rate of 1 second per second.
    17. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now you think you can cover up your stupidass snide remark by posting anon and pretending to be someone else? Oh, that's cute. And older than the internets.

      What you said here and what said originally are two entirely different things. If it was a typo, it was one massive typo.

      You fail, GTFO.

    18. Re:Online Universities by zacronos · · Score: 1

      Dude, you're wrong.

      You *can* get a degree in a field and then get certified on your own, but you can also get an undergraduate degree in one of many areas of education. Or a graduate degree (including PhD) in one of even more programs. There's an entire College of Education at the Univeristy of Kentucky. Ironic that you made such a big deal about how wrong GP was, huh?

      I took a look at the University of Kentucky simply because that's where I am, but I'm sure it's the same many other places. Look for yourself.

      There are a total of 18 undergraduate degrees offered by the College of Education, fully 2/3rds of which "lead to initial teacher certification", whatever that means. There are a total of 45 graduate degrees offered, some of which seem to be variations on the same thing based on your certification level, and some which are admittedly focussed on school administration rather than education, but I'm pretty sure at least half would be considered unique and education-based. Even if only 10% did, that would still prove your "there are only 2 degrees you can get in education" assumption wrong.

      I don't usually get a kick out of proving people wrong, but I do when they make a big deal about rubbing someone else's face in the mud, especially when that other person was correct to begin with.

    19. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities.

      whyich is why you are not in management.

      Here are some truths.

      Many people lie about their degree. Most HR departments dont check.

      Hey I have a masters from MIT. wanna hire me?

      I have 5 masters degrees from the university of Mexico. I fucking dare you do verify them, or all the Indian and european workers here with "advanced degrees" have degrees that are not verifyable.

      anyone that looks at education when hiring is a complete and utter retard.

      maybe you are upper management material after all!

    20. Re:Online Universities by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      they're probably smarter and/or more self-motivated than someone with an equivalent score from a regular school.

      Or have parents who are control freaks or slave drivers. But as long as the kid knows his or her stuff I guess that still counts as "smarter"

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    21. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should I (and any private high schools/colleges) consider a student who comes from an online middle school?

      Well, for one, he might be the only student who actually learned something other than how to carry concealed weapons in order to avoid being beaten to a pulp.

      Of couse, this online student will lack social skills, such as knowing where the nearest crack house is, and the current price of various street drugs.

      You'll need to be more accepting of such differences.

    22. Re:Online Universities by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities.

      Better yet, unless it's an occupation that legally requires a degree like law or medicine, then disregard all degrees and interview the person himself...

      -b.

    23. Re:Online Universities by Mo+Bedda · · Score: 1

      Oh, but it is you who is the flamebaiting moron.

      Educational regulations vary by state. Many universities offer some sort of general education degree intended for grade school teachers, such as the USC B.S. degree in General Studies. Beyond that, there are programs within other colleges which are education specific, such as the programs in Agricultural Ed., Art Ed., Exercise Science Ed. at OSU. And even beyond that, within other colleges there tend to be multiple degree offererings, such as a B.A. or a B.S. in Mathematics or Physics.

      So, there certainly are education degrees beyond Spec. Ed. and Masters of Education. There are so many degree programs out there that saying anyone needs to earn the "same degree" for anything makes little sense. Many EE programs put you within a class or two of getting B.A. in Math AND Physics. All of them could get you into a variety of careers or grad programs, but they are not "the same degree".

      This entire place is like one great, big idiot convention.

      Then you should fit right in.

    24. Re:Online Universities by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      No matter how boring they are, they usually (except for a few cases where they really are useless) have something important to say and worth listening to.

      You may think that, but the 10 year old in math class doesn't.

    25. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't have any children, and probably never will. I still pay for the public education of other peoples' children, waaaah. Whine all you like; you derive benefit from the fact that 90+% of the people around you on the street received some sort of education *and* acculturation. You also benefit from the fact that most of them are able to hold down some sort of job. Suck it up and deal with it.

    26. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously you've never taken a real online course. They don't tend to be the click-through sexual harrassment training that you may be accustomed to.

    27. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WTF are you talking about? Out of all the degree programs listed that involve teaching certification, every single one of them (oh, excuse me, I didn't count the pre-secondary degree which is never course-specific) involves recieving a degree in the related field.

      You just don't know what you're talking about. "leads to certification" just means that in addition to obtaining your subject degree you also take the courses required by your state to obtain teaching certification, as well as complete the necessary student teaching hours.

      The only items listed I can even imagine you're blabbering about are things like "Communications Disorders" and "School Psychology" which are program geared toward counselors and administration, not teachers.

      You proved nothing, you just don't seem to have bothered to actually have read any of the material you linked to.

    28. Re:Online Universities by williamhb · · Score: 1
      There's more involved in a university environment than just the final degree. A lot of the value is in being surrounded by other intelligent folks and interacting with professors who know their stuff. In a middle school kids are forced to be there, so there's less benefit (if any) from peer groups, and we all know what happens when you have math or science being taught by someone whose only degree is in "education".

      Slashdot might be the wrong place to point this out, but a lot of middle school students' learning of social and communication skills also occurs while interacting with peers and teachers at school...
    29. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're foolish, and should never be in position that manages others. There are any number of reasons why an individual may have obtained an online degree. In fact, taking the initiative to teach yourself is likely more difficult than simply dividing the work up in a study group, and in my opinion speaks volumes as to the work ethic of the individual. And no, I don't have an online degree, but have been programming/managing for nearly 20 years. Good luck with that closed minded attitude.

    30. Re:Online Universities by ArcherB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities. Why should I (and any private high schools/colleges) consider a student who comes from an online middle school?

      I may be a bit biased as I graduated from an online university. Unfortunately, I do not have a rich mommy and daddy to pay for my school and even if I did, I still would have done it myself. I didn't have time to go to frat-daddy mixer keggers or get into squirt gun fights in the dorms after binge drinking. I had to work a full and a part time jobs just to make ends meet, and was still able to make a 3.51 GPA at an accredited university. I tried going to a couple of "real" universities, but always had to drop as soon as I hit a required course that was only available at during the hours I had to work. An online university gave me the opportunity to work, travel for work, and do my coursework whenever I could squeeze in a couple of minutes to get stuff done. Most of the work I did was between the hours of midnight and 3:00am and I was still able to make it to work at 7:00am and 6:00pm every day.

      So if you won't even consider this type of self motivated, hard working and goal oriented applicant, you are selling your company short.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    31. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There's more involved in a university environment than just the final degree.
      There is more to a real education than a piece of paper.
      A lot of the value is in being surrounded by other intelligent folks and interacting with professors who know their stuff.
      There's a lot of value in being able to avoid the mostly stupid people (and their time wasting questions), as well as professors who simply regurgitate material from the text book.

      I've had the pleasure of experiencing both a brick and mortar college and an online college. After having had a wonderful learning experience at the online college with less cost, flexible schedule, and no driving time or parking fees, I will continue my graduate studies online as much as possible. I compared my text book, materials, assignments, and tests to those in the exact same class who were attending the classes, and everything was exactly the same. The only variable was the actual class time or social interaction, which I personally did not miss.

      It is a matter of personal preference though. For those that need support and regular structure, online classes are not for you. If you have the will power and desire to learn mostly on your own, then you might want to consider an online class or degree. Just make sure they are accredited and recognized by the Department of Education and you'll be OK. You'll save money, time, and your diploma will still have the same school name on it.

    32. Re:Online Universities by washort · · Score: 1
      There's more involved in a university environment than just the final degree. A lot of the value is in being surrounded by other intelligent folks and interacting with professors who know their stuff.

      Man, you obviously went to a different college than me. Pretty much all the students were just there to collect the degree and get a job; practically no interest in the subjects being studied beyond what it took to get a passing grade.

    33. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me put this as simply as possible.... don't waste my time again until you understand what I'm arguing with the other guy about, because nothing you said here contradicts any of that.

    34. Re:Online Universities by oldwarrior · · Score: 0

      >>A lot of the value is in being surrounded by other intelligent folks and interacting with professors who know their stuff.

      One can do both with current technologies. Sometimes better than in a crowded, rushed classroom.

      --
      If it were done when 'tis done, then t'were well it were done quickly... MacBeth
    35. Re:Online Universities by thrillseeker · · Score: 1
      If I were to hire an employee, I would disregard any degrees from online universities.

      Yes, it's far more important to only hire people who earn degrees from brick and mortar universities, where attention to academic quality is of the first order, such as Auburn.

    36. Re:Online Universities by Silverstrike · · Score: 1

      Let's start with my favorite argument of all time:

      I do not have a rich mommy and daddy to pay for my school

      Okay, see that's a complete load of crap. I get that all the time from the people I know that drop out half a semester into a year at a real school, because they can't handle it.

      I'm 22 years old. I graduated last summer from the University of Pittsburgh, with a BA and BS (Classics, Computer Science, and Mathematics). While not IV leauge, Pitt certainly is a large, physical, accredited, research institution, that charges roughly $10k/year.

      Now, how did I pay for that (4 years + 3 inbetween summer terms too)? Well, I'm the son of a bartender (mother) and a bricklayer (father). They divorced when I was three. I grew up in a 2 bedroom apartment that was the size of a freaking shoe box. Now, I'm not complaining, I wouldn't trade my childhood for anything, I'm just illustrating the financial situation.

      How much do you think my parents were able to pay for my schooling? (I'll give you a hint, the first and last digit is 0, w/o any left padding :-P).

      So, how did I manage that minor miracle? I sacraficed a portion of my income for the next 15 years by going into student debt. That's my burden to bear, and I certainly don't whine that I didn't have "a rich mommy and daddy". Suck it up. All you need is a passable credit score, a $300 limit Visa that you charge to and pay on time is more than enough.

      As for hiring people with online degrees, I personally wouldn't care if they even had a degree, as long as they had either demonstrable experiance or skills.

      But don't sit there and say you were too broke to go to school. Its a lame, lame, LAME, excuse. Sallie Mae will happily take the next 15 years of your salary, a pint of blood, and your firstborn to send you anywhere your heart desires, and that's without any grants/scholarships. Also, on that note, if you can't find a grant or scholarship, you must be extremely lazy, as there are THOUSANDS available, for anyone and anything imaginable.

    37. Re:Online Universities by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Just make sure they are accredited and recognized by the Department of Education and you'll be OK.

      And this does not include the damn University of Phoenix, who are accredited only in their own mind.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    38. Re:Online Universities by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Anyone paying 5 times as much as a normal school for a 500-student classroom isn't smart enough to get a college degree.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    39. Re:Online Universities by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Of couse, this online student will lack social skills, such as knowing where the nearest crack house is, and the current price of various street drugs.

      This is pretty poor planning on his part. When society collapses in ten years and the only job available for 60% of the workforce is running errands for the rich, knowledge of illegal things will come in very handy.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    40. Re:Online Universities by tdeuces · · Score: 1

      Frank Grimes? Is that you?

    41. Re:Online Universities by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Good for you. Unfortunately, not everyone is 22 with only themselves to support. I am 35 with a mortgage and a family to support. Unfortunately, Sallie Mae, who I also owe money, would not loan me enough to pay for school, keep a roof over my head and put food in my family's mouths. The GI Bill helped, but still wouldn't pay for everything. I still have to keep everyone in my home with the same last name alive, which means I have to work full time. So it's great that you were able to do it, but we have different circumstances that make up our lives. Should I be denied a job because I was able to fulfill my other responsibilities while still achieving my degree objectives?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    42. Re:Online Universities by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      Silly coward. They're not complaining about paying taxes. They're simply suggesting that the same government which collects those taxes to pay for education would not be too far put out to make the material available for home schooled children as well.

    43. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree completely with the parent post. I have been taking OU courses for 3 years now. They are extremely well done and as detailed and difficult as any I did at a bricks and mortar University (I have a BSc in Physics). As a bonus, if you want to meet really interesting people go on the OU summer courses - seems they self-select interesting people. The 6 hour a night TV watchers never bother.

    44. Re:Online Universities by blugu64 · · Score: 1

      I hear ya there, While I did the Brick and Mortor route, I paid for quite a big chunk of my college experience, 40+ hours a week at work and around 18 hours a semester makes for a intense experience. Mostly I leared how to figure out what is importent and what needs to get done when.

      --
      "Personal ownership is a hallmark of conservative capitalism. And I don't believe I am entitled to anything that I did n
    45. Re:Online Universities by GigsVT · · Score: 1

      Anyone who can't read shouldn't reply to my messages!

      (Hint: The physical school had the 500 student classrooms. The online school has about 10-15 students in each section, and costs a lot more.)

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    46. Re:Online Universities by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an EE major with a math minor, and I can tell you, the EE program at my University (one of the top programs in the world) doesn't include any number theory, advanced analysis, or modern algebra, because it's irrelevant to the major. I had to take those classes on my own. I somehow doubt any EE program in the world includes them, with the exception of possibly including more analysis beyond the normal elementary single variable and multivariable calculus + diff eq series. Any math program that doesn't include those subjects is worthless.

    47. Re:Online Universities by Silverstrike · · Score: 1

      Should I be denied a job because I was able to fulfill my other responsibilities while still achieving my degree objectives?

      Interesting point, considering your sig:

      why are Communist in the US? With Cuba so close, it's like going to KFC when you want a Big Mac!

      I'm just sayin'....

      Now, a couple of points:
      1) I've been living with my wife for four years in various apartments. We also are the guardians of her younger (teenaged) sister. So no, I don't just have myself to support -- I have a family too.
      2) I wish I had a mortgage. Where I live, the mortgage on a 3 bedroom home is almost 2/3 of the rent on a 2 bedroom apartment. (I'm looking to buy ASAP, renting is awful)
      3) I worked between 20-40 hours a week while in school (nope, haven't had a social life since HS). However, I supplemented my earned income with student loans to help pay living expenses (just as most students do to pay for their dorm rooms). Hence, Sallie Mae owns my soul.

      No one said it was easy or for anyone, the point is that it CAN BE and IS done all the time. Of course, your situation might dictate that it wouldn't work for you. There are always exceptions.

      I just felt like I needed to point out that the assumpts you made about me, because of my age, were all wrong. Its okay though, I get that all the time.

    48. Re:Online Universities by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      I just felt like I needed to point out that the assumpts you made about me, because of my age, were all wrong. Its okay though, I get that all the time.

      You are correct, I did make assumptions. Of course you didn't give me all the information, but no one can expect you to post your life's story in every post. That would make for one hell of sig!

      No one said it was easy or for anyone, the point is that it CAN BE and IS done all the time. Of course, your situation might dictate that it wouldn't work for you. There are always exceptions.

      No, it's not easy. It is certainly not impossible either. However, for me, an online school made more sense. It certainly wasn't easier, but it allowed me to keep working while going to school. That was the best choice for me. Granted, I could have quite my job that was paying $35,000/yr at the time and taken one paying $6.00/hr so I could make that 8:00am class, but that didn't make much sense for me. I chose the online route instead. Now, instead of having just a degree, I now have a degree with 10 years of experience. Of course, this may not be the best choice for everyone, it just worked best for me.

      What set all this off was someone saying they would not consider someone with an online degree. Not all of us have the opportunity to attend a brick-and-mortar four-year university. Saying I will not be considered because I did not have the opportunity seemed a bit elitist to me, even though I found my own, non-traditional path to a degree.

      Interesting point, considering your sig:
      OK, my sig... My sig is in response to Cindy Shehan and the founder of code pink who said that Cuba and Venesuela were both paradise, yet they came back here to the US. I don't understand that. If you like Communism, go to a Communist country. If Cubans were free to leave Cuba, do you think they would stay there and protest? No! They'd leave and go to Miami. Those that are trying to make America Communists, and they are out there, would make life much easier for everyone, especially themselves, if they just moved to a country that already has what they want. No one is trying to change KFC into McDonalds. Why? We already have McDonalds. If you want a burger, that's where you go. If you want chicken, go to KFC. I like KFC and appreciate it very much if you don't turn into a McDonalds just because you think it's better. (Not you personally of course. I'm speaking figuratively)

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    49. Re:Online Universities by kalaf · · Score: 1

      If someone knows their stuff I don't care what their education is. I've had high school co-op students outperform college graduates many times over. As a programmer, problem solving skills are more important than rote memorization, and I want self-motivated people who can take a task and do it without my holding their hand. A piece of paper says very little about these qualities.

      I'm a high school dropout. I rarely went to class and never did homework or studied; I mostly smoked pot, drank, and got in trouble a lot. That had nothing to do with my ability, just the wrong person in the wrong situation. I can guarantee I would have done better in an online environment, and looked for one at the time. Of course I was the only high school student I knew with internet access, and the only courses I could find were university level...

      I did go to University after a year off, and did much better than a lot of the high scoring high school students. I have a degree, but never did finish high school. My story may be a little unusual, but I'm far from alone. I got a break because I found a job that I could excel at, many people I know were never that lucky, and their talent wastes away in dead end jobs to this day.

    50. Re:Online Universities by Raideen · · Score: 1
      ...the students who never went to class, or didn't listen when they were in class, had a much harder time in school than those who went to class and paid attention.

      I don't really understand your point. If a great deal of what you're supposed to be learning comes from the lecture, I would imagine that someone that didn't listen to that lecture wouldn't do well. You're also talking about students that weren't motivated enough to attend, or pay attention to, the lectures. Between missing something important and being unmotivated, it's no wonder that they didn't do well. Would you expect someone that's taking an online class to do well if he or she doesn't read the lectures and is unmotivated to do the assignments?

    51. Re:Online Universities by is+as+us+Infinite · · Score: 1

      Rubbish? You've built your own truth. He did say, and I quote your quote, 'I would disregard any _degrees_ from online universities' (emphasis obviously mine) and didn't say that that candidate's resume would be rejected just because they had a degree from an online university.

      --
      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur. . . . . . . .
    52. Re:Online Universities by alphamugwump · · Score: 1

      Online classes come in all shapes and sizes. If the instructor is well organised, they can be pretty good. If the instructor is "moving things over to a new website", and insists on giving "virtual lectures" in realtime over a crappy Java web interface, it can be pretty damn painful. Also, when you do get pissed^W confused, there's no way to throttle^W meet with the guy in person.

  5. What's the point of going to school... by bakayoko · · Score: 1

    ... if you can't hide surprises inside the teacher's desk?

    --
    A decibel - a RELATIONSHIP between two values of POWER http://arts.ucsc.edu/EMS/Music/tech_background/TE-
    1. Re:What's the point of going to school... by LiquidCoooled · · Score: 1

      Sure you can,

      Look, here is my english assignment http://slashdot.org/EnglishAssignment01.doc.exe.vb s.bat.pif !

      --
      liqbase :: faster than paper
    2. Re:What's the point of going to school... by bakayoko · · Score: 1

      Yeah...

      "Sorry, Liquid. I didn't get your English assignment. Can you try sending it again?"

      What a blast.

      --
      A decibel - a RELATIONSHIP between two values of POWER http://arts.ucsc.edu/EMS/Music/tech_background/TE-
    3. Re:What's the point of going to school... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Try this English assignment. You can learn a lot of things online, including some things you'd rather not know about...

  6. first.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    First post! ..to an article with no meaning :(

  7. Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As the article says, you can't learn social skills sitting in front of a computer. And some of the people here on slashdot prove that. However, this is Chicago, and the public schools there ain't so safe. The article didn't mention it, but for families whose choices are 1) Send their kids to public schools where they'll either become criminals or get beat up by them, or 2) Use this virtual school, well, I'd keep them home. A lot of people in Chicago home school because the private schools are very expensive and the public schools are terrible.

    1. Re:Not the best idea by strider44 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      So make sure you keep him snuggled up in bed and don't let him outside in case those bad kids get to him!

      I think that you're too worried about the mere possibility of them becoming a bad criminal or getting beat up by them, when if they don't interact with kids of their own age then they're *definitely* going to become pretty fucked up.

      I think a much better solution to your problem is to instead try and clean up the schools and get rid of the little arseholes in there.

    2. Re:Not the best idea by JanneM · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Which brings up a point - why is this any worse than home schooling? It seems like exactly the same thing, except here the kid is taught by actual teachers and a syllabus with (assumedly) some idea about giving a balanced education, not whatever lunatic fairy tales the homeschooling parent happens to want to impart.

      --
      Trust the Computer. The Computer is your friend.
    3. Re:Not the best idea by Savage-Rabbit · · Score: 1

      As the article says, you can't learn social skills sitting in front of a computer. And some of the people here on slashdot prove that. However, this is Chicago, and the public schools there ain't so safe. The article didn't mention it, but for families whose choices are 1) Send their kids to public schools where they'll either become criminals or get beat up by them, or 2) Use this virtual school, well, I'd keep them home. A lot of people in Chicago home school because the private schools are very expensive and the public schools are terrible.

      At best this is no more than another tool to use for those who have opted for home schooling. One thing is for sure, andyboy who expects to be able to plant his/her children in front of a computer and have them start doing math lessons on the internet unsupervised is delusional. Kids will not sit and do math or physics lessons when they could be playing Quake or running around the neighborhood getting into trouble with their friends (putting potatoes in peoples exhaust pipes, dropping firecrackers into mailboxes etc...) and they will abscond the second you look away. Children need teachers if they are to learn anything. I can see how a virtual learning service would be useful if you opt for home schooling because your public schools are training camps for aspiring criminals and you can't afford a private school but I would always prefer a public or private school to home schooling and home schooling to unsupervised virtual learning.

      --
      Only to idiots, are orders laws.
      -- Henning von Tresckow
    4. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I think that you're too worried about the mere possibility of them becoming a bad criminal or getting beat up by them, when if they don't interact with kids of their own age then they're *definitely* going to become pretty fucked up.

      Depends on the school. When you think "public school," you're probably thinking of the ones near where you grew up. In that case, dealing with the annual wedgie is no reason to pull the kids out of school. However, I think they may be much worse in Chicago than you might be used to. In many of these schools, violence is pretty much guaranteed. Now I'm definitely against home schooling - those kids turn out like complete losers way too often - but if your school has a statistically defined murder rate, I'll take the loser over the dead kid.

      I think a much better solution to your problem is to instead try and clean up the schools and get rid of the little arseholes in there.

      I'd have to agree with you, but the bleeding hearts in this country would never let that happen. To them, it's apparently better to subject 1000 kids to daily violence and a shitty education than to "leave behind" a few kids. Since that choice (getting rid of the arseholes) isn't available to parents, you have to get your kid away from the arseholes. Sometimes, some form of home schooling (or charter schooling) is the only real option.

      Fortunately, the wife and I are very lucky, as we have good jobs that allow us to live in a very good area that has probably the best public schools (non-magnet) in the country. So, unless we pack up and move to Compton, our kids will never have to face that. But for parents who are not so lucky, it can be a hard decision when your kid gets beaten up everyday. Or when you start hearing about kids bringing guns to school. Or when your kid starts getting pressured to join a gang. Or when your 12 year old daughter starts getting hit on a little too strongly by convicted 17-year-old rapists. At that point, you do what you have to do to get them out.

    5. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      Which brings up a point - why is this any worse than home schooling? It seems like exactly the same thing, except here the kid is taught by actual teachers and a syllabus with (assumedly) some idea about giving a balanced education, not whatever lunatic fairy tales the homeschooling parent happens to want to impart.

      I think the people who criticize this would also criticize home schooling. This is basically home schooling with some help. It also gives the home schoolers affiliation with an actual school district in exchange for following a real curriculum, to ensure, as you put it, that the home schoolers aren't learning lunatic fairy tales. Seems like a win-win to me, for those parents who have decided to home school already.

    6. Re:Not the best idea by Fiznarp · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Kids don't have to go to school to socialize with kids their own age. They interact with neighborhood friends, or join a club (Boy/Girl Scouts, 4-H), etc.

      It's a common concern that home schooled children lack social skills, but I've found it to be quite the opposite. The home schooled kids I know are better socially than most of the public school children I've met. Guess what? Home schoolers don't stay at home all day. They often take trips to educational and recreactional places. They meet up with other families and have fun.

      I think home school kids actually socialize *better* than public school kids. They tend to hang out with other children who have a positive impact on their social development, rather than children who might get them into trouble.

      Speaking as an adult who was home schooled through the 8th grade (then I went to a public high school), I'm very glad I was given the opportunity to grow up in this environment. Sure there are some extremists out there who give home schooling a bad name, but you'll have that in any situation.

      Having said that, the key to making this work is loving parents who take an active role in their child's development. I'm not sure if teaching kids via computer will have the desired effect if the parents are not involved to help externally socialize the children.

    7. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This could also be better than a home school only solution. Since a kid is enrolled in a district endorsed program, that kid might have access to extracurricular activities(athletics, drama, band). This could alleviate any social hinderances brought on by a homeschool only solution.
      Also, for parents, the district approved curriculum can reduce hassles from the state.

    8. Re:Not the best idea by strider44 · · Score: 1

      You're probably right that I don't know in detail of the schools. I live in Australia, and though I lived near, but did not go to, quite possibly the worst school in Sydney it's my understanding that even that's nothing like the schools in America. I probably shouldn't have taunted you in my comment when you have highlighted a special case where those facilities would be worth-while, and when I was really arguing against a different point to what you were arguing about.

      Though if I can move the conversation on slightly, I don't think it's the case for pretty much all the kids that would use these facilities. I don't think we're talking about poor families who have reason to be afraid for their kid's life or wellbeing, we're talking about families that are rich enough to afford a computer with broadband internet. Even though I personally have this, it's still not a light thing, and I'd think that most families who have this would either not live near the schools you are talking about or have the opportunity to move away to a better school.

      And if they have the opportunity to commute to "downtown Chicago" once a week (I'm relying a bit on my bad knowledge of American vernacular here, I think downtown means the centre of the city?) then why can't they travel to another school in Chicago? Surely there'd be some school in Chicago that won't get a child beaten up.

      I think chances are the kids going to this place would be much better going to a public school, since it doesn't really give a complete education. Interacting once a week with the kids going to this place isn't enough - you need to be able to interact with the community socially. I believe that is vitally important.

    9. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      School isn't about teaching "social skills" -- and whatever skills it does teach have more to do with subjecting yourself to hierarchy or ganging up on those who don't conform.

      Like it or not, learning social skills is an enormous part of child development. That includes learning social heirarchy and the relative merits of conformity vs. identity. The problem is that you'd prefer the peer group not to be future gang members, but future productive members of society.

      Despite whatever the teacher unions claim, public schools are an expensive and abysmal failure. The fact that parents line up to send their kids to charter schools whenever they open is testimony to that.

      You say that like you'd expect anyone to disagree with you!

    10. Re:Not the best idea by moosesocks · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Then why not correct the underlying problem?

      If kids attend classes online for fear of being shot at in the 'real' school, they're gearing themselves up for a life out in the 'real' world where they're just as likely to get shot.

      Am I missing the picture here? Spend the money elsewhere correcting the underlying problems, rather than beating around the bush trying to work out a compromise. New York City has proven that it is *very* possible to reduce crime, and go from being one of the most dangerous cities in the world to one of the safest per capita, and do so in an incredibly short amount of time.

      Magnet Schools and Charter Schools don't seem like such a great idea anymore either, and put the 'normal' kids at a *severe* disadvantage.

      My county disbanded its charter and magnet programs several years back, and redirected the funds to public schools, in addition to making several reforms to improve the schools. People were upset at first, but in a very short amount of time, average test scores in the regular public schools were wildly surpassing those that the charter/magnet programs were seeing when they were in operation. THAT's progress.

      On a more observational note, the public school that I attend has many students from charter/magnet schools in it, and the generalized observation shared by most is that they are arrogant, socially-inept, and no smarter than the 'normal' kids. The kids who were smart enough to attend magnet programs, but chose for one reason or another to stay in their local school tend to be the most well-adjusted and intelligent people I come across.

      Private schooling is also not the answer, but for very different reasons.

      --
      -- If you try to fail and succeed, which have you done? - Uli's moose
    11. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      Am I missing the picture here? Spend the money elsewhere correcting the underlying problems, rather than beating around the bush trying to work out a compromise. New York City has proven that it is *very* possible to reduce crime, and go from being one of the most dangerous cities in the world to one of the safest per capita, and do so in an incredibly short amount of time.

      Yeah, but you have the Daleys running Chicago. Let's just say that as mobsters, they have a slightly different relationship with crime than, say, a former DA (Guiliani).

    12. Re:Not the best idea by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Interestingly, the charter school students I've been in contact with were pretty well adjusted; that school had lots of social functions, some sports, music classes, team or group based work in class, the whole works. On the whole they seemed to be much better spoken, more polite, considerate, and socially adjusted compared to the public school innmates (for context this is out in the rural part of western north carolina)

      I didn't percieve any general arrogance, with the exception of the facaulty and student parents. The superiority complex there was astounding, and saddening when I think that it might rub off on the kids if their parents exhibit it too much around them.

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    13. Re:Not the best idea by MyNameIsFred · · Score: 1
      ...it's my understanding that even that's nothing like the schools in America...
      Don't get to carried away with news stories. As with most things in big cities all over the world, there are bad areas and there are good areas. The bad areas stay away from, the good areas are pretty safe.

      My daughter currently attends elementary school in a major metropolitan area in US. Since she has been there, the two big horror stories is one year a kid sat on a sink in the bathroom and broke it. Another year, some kids threw some toilet paper around bathroom. Big deal over the toilet paper. The kids had to draw posters about respecting school property. They had an all school assembly to discuss the problem. Etc. Etc.

      Is her school representative of all schools in the US? No. Are there really bad schools? Without a doubt. All I ask, is don't lump all American schools into one category. It is a big, diverse country.

    14. Re:Not the best idea by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      then why can't they travel to another school in Chicago? Surely there'd be some school in Chicago that won't get a child beaten up.

      In many cases it's a geographical thing. If you live in a certain area you have a set of (in my case just one, i grew up in a rural setting with not many people compared to Chicago) schools more or less nearby, that you can have your child attend. If it were a matter of just picking one, parents would flock to the best schools, and the others would be empty or inhabited by whoever is leftover

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    15. Re:Not the best idea by d3ac0n · · Score: 2, Insightful

      FTFA: The Chicago Teachers Union says children need the classroom.

      Seems to me that the Teacher's Union needs the classroom more than the kids. Online learning through accredited schools is proven and effective. Teacher's Unions, on the other hand, have only been proven to look out for the Teacher's best interests, often to the detriment of thier students. I choose to take the Teachers Union's opinion with a grain... make that a truckload of salt.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    16. Re:Not the best idea by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If kids attend classes online for fear of being shot at in the 'real' school, they're gearing themselves up for a life out in the 'real' world where they're just as likely to get shot.

      Bullshit. The norms of the real world are nothing like the norms of a second level school. A second level institution operates in its own private sub-culture that is almost totally detached from reality. It's a morbid, almost fantastic perversion of the way the world normally works.

      Do you have people in your place work work running around throwning pieces of half eaten fruit at you? Do you walk down the corridor past groups of senior members of staff and have them push or trip you over? Do you have to put up with people screaming, laughing and joking as you try to get work done? Are you prohibited by law from leaving if any of these things happen?

      This kind of thing does not go on in primary education, or teritiary, or in the real world. It's a phenomenon peculiar to second level institutions only, and is the result of good intentioned efforts to educate teenagers by surrounding them with other teenagers with little meaningful adult contact.

      People don't learn how to socialise in secondary schools. In most cases, they have to unlearn bad social habits they picked up there. If you want your child to learn how to socialise, have them socialise with adults more often.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    17. Re:Not the best idea by strider44 · · Score: 1

      Ha ha! OK, I admit it, most of my teachings of the schools in America comes from Hollywood films and news reports. Doesn't every American school student carry a knife to school?

      (Just as a sidenote: funnily enough, I knew someone who actually did actually carry a knife to my school but he was one of the nicest guys you could meet. Someone tried to rob him once though, and ran away *very* quickly once he knew what he was up against)

    18. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      Seems to me that the Teacher's Union needs the classroom more than the kids. Online learning through accredited schools is proven and effective. Teacher's Unions, on the other hand, have only been proven to look out for the Teacher's best interests, often to the detriment of thier students. I choose to take the Teachers Union's opinion with a grain... make that a truckload of salt.

      Yeah, I'd say you cut through the BS on that one, there's clearly an interest for the teachers not to be replaced by computers. However, one caveat: if the classroom isn't a warzone, kids do benefit from actually going to school. They learn to socialize, and they avoid developing a second umbilicus from being home with Mommy all day, every day, for 18 years. Have you met kids who were home schooled?

    19. Re:Not the best idea by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

      then why can't they travel to another school in Chicago? Surely there'd be some school in Chicago that won't get a child beaten up.

      I think you're underestimating what shitholes most American cities are.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    20. Re:Not the best idea by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      Have you met kids who were home schooled?

      Yes, two of my good friends from college were, and they turned out fine. Home schooling, incidentally, doesn't imply a lack of socialization - parents can and do form cooperatives and their kids play and maybe even learn together. And the quality of play might actually be better than schools', since schools recently have been cutting unorganized recess during lunch and replacing it with "structured activities" - that's maybe good for girls, but boys need their rough play...

      -b.

    21. Re:Not the best idea by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      Kids don't have to go to school to socialize with kids their own age. They interact with neighborhood friends, or join a club (Boy/Girl Scouts, 4-H), etc.
      The trouble is that a lot of middle class parents are now too scared to let their kids do anything as unsupervised and dangerous as hanging out with other local children . Instead it is drive the kids to school, drive them home from school, and keep them safe inside away from the hordes of marauding child rapists. So school is the only chance they get to meet anyone apart from their parents, which I agree seems bizarre.
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    22. Re:Not the best idea by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      "And if they have the opportunity to commute to "downtown Chicago" once a week (I'm relying a bit on my bad knowledge of American vernacular here, I think downtown means the centre of the city?) then why can't they travel to another school in Chicago? Surely there'd be some school in Chicago that won't get a child beaten up."

      With the exception of Magnet schools, you can't pick & choose what school you go to.

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    23. Re:Not the best idea by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Um, you realize that everyone here probably attended a brick and mortar school. So how exactly did that help anyone's social skills here?

    24. Re:Not the best idea by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? We had some pretty big problems in our school with violence (even a few shootings) and we certainly got rid of the problem. They put a policy in place where if you were a constant problem, they shipped you off to another school.

    25. Re:Not the best idea by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Is her school representative of all schools in the US? No. Are there really bad schools? Without a doubt. All I ask, is don't lump all American schools into one category. It is a big, diverse country.

      Indeed, I would ask those who haven't been to the US to remember that we have states as big as countries in other parts of the world. I believe the economy of California is larger that that of France.

    26. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, by "criminals", you mean "niggers". Gotta read between the lines sometimes I guess...

    27. Re:Not the best idea by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Ha ha! OK, I admit it, most of my teachings of the schools in America comes from Hollywood films and news reports. Doesn't every American school student carry a knife to school?

      Heh.. stupid media. Listen to them, you'll believe that. The actual truth if you look at statistics is that there are VERY few instances of shootings, and school crime has been dropping for the past 10 or 20 years. However, with almost 300 million people, there's always going to be something somewhere in the country. With the news how it is, these stories go national in no time and every local news adds 'could it happen in OUR schools???' Bleh.

    28. Re:Not the best idea by dheltzel · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Now I'm definitely against home schooling - those kids turn out like complete losers way too often

      You need a bigger sampling. I home school my kids and and know dozens of other home school kids and not a single one is a "complete loser". In fact, they are (compared to both public and private schooled kids) much better socialized, better mannered, and better educated. When my oldest daughter was 10, she could hold an intelligent convo with an adult, and probably even teach them some algebra concepts, yet when she entered a private school in the 10th grade, she was immediately accepted socially among her peers (and the teachers). Her first semester at college she got a 4.0 and is on the student government. And I'm just as proud of my 16YO son, who clearly likes being home schooled, he's got a great job and a car he paid for, he's learning piano (his idea) and is very active in a number of teen groups, even leading some of them. So the idea of home schooled kids being poorly socialized is a complete non-starter. For every "loser" who you can find that was home schooled, I bet I can find a dozen in the public school system that are worse.

      So your sample of home schoolers is obviously tainted. I respect your right to not home school your kids, but if you're going to argue that public schools produce better kids, you're going to need to fudge a lot of statistics. Maybe you could borrow some ideas from the MS "Get the Facts" campaign about how to twist statistics to your benefit.

      The main reason that home schooled kids do so well on tests, in college, and later is life, is because their parents are highly involved. This is the same advantage that the cyberschools have and the reason that the teachers unions hate them (and home schoolers) so much.

      Teacher unions are no different than the AFL-CIO, they exist to protect the jobs of their members and get them more money, their "concern" about the childrens education is just a pretext, like the auto workers union's "concern" about the quality of the cars they produce. Childhood education is just a product that they produce in order to make money for themselves. So, don't ever be surprised that they come out against anything that might reduce their control of education, they would suggest shutting down all private and parochial schools if they could get away with it.

    29. Re:Not the best idea by kabocox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      In that case, dealing with the annual wedgie is no reason to pull the kids out of school. However, I think they may be much worse in Chicago than you might be used to. In many of these schools, violence is pretty much guaranteed. Now I'm definitely against home schooling - those kids turn out like complete losers way too often - but if your school has a statistically defined murder rate, I'll take the loser over the dead kid.

      Actually, this is exactly the reason why most people who can homeschool. You might not think some other kid giving yours a wedgie is a bad thing, but some of us would like to come down on that person like a ton of bricks to stop that type of behavior. Of course in the public school system, nearly anything is allowed and teachers often are prevented from doing anything other than teaching. I'm not sure that I like this concept of virtual schools, but I'd much rather lock every kid in a closet with a computer for most of the day rather than put them all together and have the worst behaved be an example to all the rest. (I actually like public education because I couldn't get my kid to sit still and learn. My wife and I would go crazy trying to homeschool though we've thought about it. Reality hit us first though.)

    30. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And of course, according to Hollywood lots of kids still in high-school are in their late 20s and drive flash cars. How many years have they been held back?

    31. Re:Not the best idea by d3ac0n · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think we need to keep in mind that Western-style schooling is a bit of an anomaly, historically speaking. It's actually MORE normal for children to spend more time at home with family than kids do today. Even throughout America's history, home-schooling and private-schooling were much more the norm than public-schooling.

      I would posit that the public school system as it stands today is actually more HARMFUL socially to our kids than helpful. This is mostly due to the large class sizes, the overall lack of discipline and the lack of healthy student-teacher interaction. This is not something that is really "fixable" within our current structure. Teacher's Unions have too much power, and things are too centralized in a large and inefficient government beaurocracy.

      Learning is a highly personal experience. It is something that should be done OUTSIDE a large social atmosphere where peer pressure and concern with social standing can take mental precedence over learning the material at hand. Also, by personalizing the learning experience, one learns self-assurance and the ability to work alone and self-start. These are CRITICAL skills in society today. Those in public schools who learn these skills do not do so BECAUSE of public schools, but DESPITE public schools.

      We need to encourage the uptake of more Teleschooling and small, private schools, and get away from large, Socialistic beaurocratically run schools. It's in our kid's best interests.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    32. Re:Not the best idea by mspohr · · Score: 1
      You are assuming that there is no skill or valued added by teachers and that they are all just "baby sitters".

      While that may be true for some teachers, I personally have had many good, dedicated teachers who definitely made a difference in my education. I think that anyone who has been to school has had similar experiences.

      Teachers unions do have the vested interests of their members at heart but they also have the people who know the most about education. As with all sources, you need to understand their biases and areas of expertise.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    33. Re:Not the best idea by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      1) Send their kids to public schools where they'll either become criminals or get beat up by them, or 2) Use this virtual school

      This is just BS. Millions of kids go to the public school system, and nearly all of them turn out just fine. If someone is going to become a criminal, they'll do it in a private school, or elsewhere as well.

      That line of ``public schools are bad'' is a myth spread by private schools, that are in reality are worse than any public school around. Virtual schools aren't the answer. Private schools aren't the answer. If some public school district is falling behind, then improving -that- is the answer (not creating a market opportunity for someone to rip off kids).

      Consider most politicians who went to private schools, yet somehow ended up using drugs pretty early in their lives.

      And yes, I did go through the public school system, and actually taught in a private school; and there's a HUGE difference in quality: in public schools, YOU are responsible for learning; in private school, THEY are responsible to get money from you every semester (whether you learn or not is irrelevant).

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    34. Re:Not the best idea by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      I absolutely disagree.

      Teacher's Unions know the most about keeping themselves in power. Home-schooling, Teleschooling, and Education Voucher programs have all been proven time and time again as SUPERIOR methods of schooling or obtaining quality schooling. Yet what have Teacher's Unions opposed time and time again? All of the above. They aren't interested in what is best for our children. They are interested in keeping thier jobs and thier power.

      Yes, there are plenty of INDIVIDUAL teachers that are very good. That has NOTHING to do with the Teacher's Unions, and everything to do with a talented individual succeeding DESPITE the system they are in. Please don't try and use standout teachers as examples of why we should continue to deny our children the best opportunities and continue to prop up a failed socialist government beaurocracy. It's an insult to our intelligence and a waste of our time.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    35. Re:Not the best idea by WhiplashII · · Score: 4, Informative

      Since there are a lot of people asking, here is how schools work in Chicago:

      There are 3 levels: Gifted, Magnet, and normal. To get into gifted, you have to test highly (they administer tests to 5 years olds, no kidding) - only 1 in 40 to 1 in 100 that apply get in. To get into a magnet school, you have to be lucky - it is a random lottery (about 1 in 10), though you can apply to any that you want (unfortunately, it is heavily weighted by race - so if you are white you are virtually guaranteed to be accepted into a school in an area of town that would literally get you killed). The normal schools are done by geography - and there is only one that you are assigned to. These are the school with guns+kids - even though you have to pass through metal detectors to get in.

      Almost everyone that can afford it goes to a private school, or the magnet and gifted schools. So the normal school students self select for parents that don't care or are destitute. (If the parents cared enough presumably they would move into a better district, or at least lie!) If you look at the school statistics, what happens is that all the kids do just fine until about the 4th grade. Presumably, at this point some of the kids get into drugs and violence - the grades, test scores, etc. all take a nose dive (from everyone, including african american kids achieving near 90% - to the african american kids achieving less than 50% in one year).

      Most of the information is available online - I actually know some of the people in the Chicago Public School system management, and they are good people really trying to get things fixed, but there is too much politics, too little parental involvement, and too little money.

      --
      while (sig==sig) sig=!sig;
    36. Re:Not the best idea by Proteus · · Score: 1
      I'd have to agree with you, but the bleeding hearts in this country would never let that happen. To them, it's apparently better to subject 1000 kids to daily violence and a shitty education than to "leave behind" a few kids.
      Actually, most liberals (the ones to whom "bleeding hearts" usually applies) oppose stuff like No Child Left Behind.

      Most of the teachers I know (including my partner) are liberals; all of them would rather see kids with severe behavioral problems — which is to say, behaviors that are regularly violent or otherwise require an inordinate amount of teacher/assistant resources to mitigate — put into specialized programs. The problem is, of course, that when we have done that, the programs were ill-designed, and set up as essentially detainment centers rather than environments where the behaviors would be addressed. So, the problem was only made worse for those kids.

      With crap like No Child Left Behind, though, the problem isn't helped at all — merely ignored. And to make matters worse, not only does it lower the quality of education that the average student recieves, the same programs also effectively eliminate programs for gifted students. And that's why most liberals are against such programs: they simply aren't effective.

      Despite these programs, though, I'm absolutely in favor of the possibility of home schooling: I just wish that those home-school parents would be required to take a few courses on educational psychology and cirriculum design. Home school doesn't have to mean poor socialization (in fact, in our community there is a group of home-school families that gets together regularly for field trips, sporting events, etc.). In fact, it can be better because the parents have the opportunity to socialize their kids to a more diverse population in terms of age and, in some cases, race. (Side note: does it bother anyone else when an all-African school is marketed as "diverse"?) Unfortunately, parents have to be aware of that need, and the courses I suggested above would (hopefully) solve that.

      Unfortunately, there seem to be a lot of parents who choose home schooling as a way to "protect" their kids from society; no amount of courses is going to convince these parents to socialize their kids. Since they were (are?) the majority of home-schooled kids, home-schooling got a bad rap.
      --
      We may not imagine how our lives could be more frustrating and complex—but Congress can. – Cullen Hightower
    37. Re:Not the best idea by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      there are group activities for kids such as boy scouts, summer camp programs, YMCA and just plaing old going down to the park and shooting hoops

      children NEED classroom style teaching about as much as they need a hole in the head

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    38. Re:Not the best idea by ArmyOfFun · · Score: 1
      The main reason that home schooled kids do so well on tests, in college, and later is life, is because their parents are highly involved.
      This is key. I don't think the method of schooling is as nearly as important as family involvement (and investment) in the child's education (and well being). For obvious reasons, home schooled kids will always have the most parental involvement. Most teachers I know would absolutely love, not hate, if the parents got more involved in their children's education. When they call the parents because their kid was being disruptive or is doing poorly, most of the time the parent doesn't care or they'll turn around and blame the teacher for not doing their job well enough.

      If I had to point to one problem with public schools, it's a problem with the public part. Most kids don't care, and most parents don't care more than the 4 times a year they see a report card. Really great teachers can sometimes overcome the apathy, but it takes a tremendous amount of effort and energy.
    39. Re:Not the best idea by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      you can if you are rich enough, but you have to pay tuition on top of your local school taxes. at least that is how it is around here

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    40. Re:Not the best idea by MoneyT · · Score: 2, Informative

      Have you met kids who were home schooled?

      I have actualy. In fact, just the other day I met a kid at my workplace who was with his dad. Turns out the kid was being home schooled and the father was there to pick up some supplies and get some information about what he would need to teach his kid some video production / editing. The kid was probably the most well mannered, nice and appropriate kid I've ever met. To tell the truth his demeanor was more appropriate than 95% of the adults I work with on a daily basis. If that's what home schooling produces, then more power to the home schoolers.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    41. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I also have to disagree with you. I got to know quite a few very good teachers in my time in school (I was lucky to know them) and they had one very common thread through all of them. They hated the restrictions and decisions of the teachers unions and the administrations of the schools. In fact, I had one teacher who had originaly quit because the school administration kept changing his grades.

    42. Re:Not the best idea by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      You want to see "imparting fairy tales," sit through a history class in a public school.

    43. Re:Not the best idea by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      I think you need to be a bit more specific. Teachers would love appropriate parental involvement. Growing up where I did (every third house a doctor or a lawer) no teacher would dare fail a kid from their classes. Well one did, but his grades were changed by the administration. The problem was, too many parents thought of their children as the perfect angels who could do no wrong and therefore whenever they got involved it was because someone was pointing out that their kid was doing wrong.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    44. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Now I'm definitely against home schooling - those kids turn out like complete losers way too often
                You seriously need to do a little research before you post, amigo. Statistically, home schooled graduates tend to score higher than their public schooled counterparts on average. Now, these tests are skewed probably by those homeschoolers who opt out, but the data still exists.
                As far as being properly socially adjusted, I know at least a dozen homeschooled students in my age group (20-30) who are now perfectly functioning members of society. Several are college graduates (two I know are UC Davis grads), several others are current college students. All of them are gainfully employed.
                The students you are refering to as "losers" are the homeschool students who are not in public school anymore because they were problems. I know firsthand how that works. I went to public school until the end of my 7th grade year, at which point I told my parents I wasn't going back. I was in the advanced classes, but I didn't fit in with the average kids, and of course they weren't really understanding at the middle school level. I watched several of the trouble student get expelled and go on homeschool programs during this time. They continued to be trouble students. Those are the students you are thinking of.
                A little background to my social development: I wasn't really a puny kid, but I was always told to stay out of trouble, so I just didn't hit back, because fighting got you in trouble. Anyway, I was a very introverted, depressed person when I went on homestudies due to my treatment at the hands of my classmates (in a primarily upper-middle-class, quasi-rural community school, which got Cal. distinguished school awards while I was there), and I was not in any way comfortable around people my own age. I would act out because being myself was not accepted by my peers.
                The homeschool group I was exposed to however, was a group of children used to socializing with their parents and other adults and were understanding and encouraging towards me. Being a homeschool student from that point was actually the best thing for my social development.
                Furthermore, of the parents in the homeschool group I was in there were two ex-schoolteachers who opted not to send their children to the public schools, our family pediatrician, several computer programmers, a UC Berkeley employee, and a civil engineer. All from public school backgrounds. I always found it interesting that the teachers didn't want their kids in public school.
                And, might I add, I graduated from a school district run alternative education program using the same curriculum as the regular high school, with a cumulative 3.8 GPA. I scored an average of 96.2% on all sections of my college entrance exam, was better prepared than most students I took classes with, and am now holding down a good, full time job as a mechanical designer.
                I have a wife and two wonderful children, and am in the process of building a house in the Sierra Nevada foothills of northern California on five acres of land. If I sound like a loser to you, I would love to hear your definition of a winner.
                I will make sure that my children get socialization, but I certainly have no plans to send them to public school. Homeschooling has proven to be a very good alternative in my experience, and circumvented a continuance of my harrasment as well. I think you need a bit more exposure to a properly implemented homeschool program perhaps. A blanket assesment of "loser production method" is certainly in need of a reassesment.

    45. Re:Not the best idea by UncleMidriff · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I am one. What's your point?

      People need to realize that locking kids up in a basement and throwing away the key is not prerequisite for home education.

      I was home schooled K-12, using a curriculum so religious and conservative it would likely make the majority of Slashdot readers barf, and yet, I like to think that I turned out relatively OK. I'm a college graduate, I have a good job as a programmer, and I'm happily married. I even have friends!

      The only negative effect that homeschooling had on me socially is this damn inferiority complex I have from people like Mr. Underbirdge never missing an opportunity to tell me and my parents how screwed up I was going to end up for being home schooled.

      Seriously, I grew up thinking I was stupid because my friends would constantly whine and gripe about how much homework they had to do and how long they had to be in school each day. They'd tell me that I had it so easy, not having to wake up until 10 and only doing school work for 2-3 hours a day. It wasn't until I took the ACT and scored about 8 or 9 points higher than most of them that I finally started to realize that I probably wasn't so stupid.

      That said, I'm sure there are some pretty screwed up home schooled kids out there, just like I'm sure there are some pretty screwed up public schooled kids out there. There is no one solution that fits everyone. I really don't mind if people don't like homeschooling. But what irritates the hell out of me is the assumption that homeschooling = guaranteed social retardation.

    46. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      at this page: http://education.qld.gov.au/publication/production /reports/

        you can find this report: http://education.qld.gov.au/publication/production /reports/homeschooling.pdf

      pdf. Can't be bothered linking tonight. There are a couple of other files there too, to do with homeschooling.

      Check out page 19, debunking homeschooing myths. They start with the myth that home schooled kids are not as well socialised, and draw the opposite conclusion, then go on to the myth that home schooled kids are not educated well, and draw the opposite conclusion.

      The publication is by the Queensland education department, some of it based on American studies. Not a homeschooling group with self interest in the report.

    47. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm critical of home-schoolers too. It seems, unless you absolutely know what your doing, to be a good way to mess your kid up educationally and socially. However, I'm probably guilty of applying an availibility heuristic here. I don't normally go around thinking about how people were educated; I only pay attention if something is obviously wrong. Therefore, all the examples of home-schooled students that I can call to mind are examples of what happens when things go wrong. The socially normal, academically well-prepared home-schooled student is indistinguishable from every other socially normal, academically well-prepared student.

      Speaking from my experience teaching college students, I would say that the one's prior educational experience isn't the determining factor in one's success -- but the college admissions process is a big filter, so I don't know if one's odds vary if one is home schooled.

      Speaking from my experience as a college student, I would say the students who I knew were home schooled tended to be less "worldly," in that they seemed less aware of the religious, cultural, and socioeconomic diversity in the world, but that would be quickly within a year of college life. They also seemed to miss a lot us public-schoolers' sexual innuendo and jokes, but I don't know if I can honestly say that is a bad thing.

    48. Re:Not the best idea by ArmyOfFun · · Score: 1

      I'd lump those parents in with the ones I said "don't care more than the 4 times a year they see a report card". A sufficiently involved parent would've known there was a problem and worked on correcting it before the grade came in.

    49. Re:Not the best idea by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Then there are the parents whose involvement is directly harmful.

      A BS in Ed. major here related to me a story about a kid in one of her 3rd or 4th grade classes in which she was a student teacher. There was a little girl in there who always used "seen" as the past tense of "to see". As in, "I seen a bird" instead of "I saw a bird". She was very resistant to changing this behavior. The reason?

      Her father would get upset and "correct" her if she used "saw", since she wasn't cutting (sawing) the thing that she had seen. She didn't want to make him mad, so she stuck with the incorrect word.

      Yes, this was in Kansas. Yes, I can't wait to get the hell out of here.

    50. Re:Not the best idea by jorenko · · Score: 1

      "I don't think we're talking about poor families who have reason to be afraid for their kid's life or wellbeing, we're talking about families that are rich enough to afford a computer with broadband internet."

      From the article: "The virtual school provides all the supplies, including a computer."

      And if they have the opportunity to commute to "downtown Chicago" once a week (I'm relying a bit on my bad knowledge of American vernacular here, I think downtown means the centre of the city?) then why can't they travel to another school in Chicago? Surely there'd be some school in Chicago that won't get a child beaten up."

      "They don't commute to downtown, they live there. These are poor families, a large amount of which live in 'the projects' (government-funded housing for families that can't afford their own). The schools become this bad because the kids are influenced by the gang culture of many of their elders in the area.

      I do agree with you that kids need social interaction. However, the grandparent makes very good points that I don't think you can counter at all.

    51. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ha! You and those who modded you up were obviously losers. I never had any of this happen to me, high school was a blast.

    52. Re:Not the best idea by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      That line of ``public schools are bad'' is a myth spread by private schools

      And by those of us who have attended public schools. I don't think you realize just how many teachers are lazy and/or stupid. Some are just outright mean! I remember being derided in front of my 3th grade class about spelling my name wrong when the teacher was actually mis-spelling it! No worse a bully have I met than many of my teachers... You want your kids to socialize with other kids, sign 'em up for sports and camps.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    53. Re:Not the best idea by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Brav-o. I couldn't have written it better myself.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    54. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey now, I go to a CPS school, and I'm not a criminal or a druggie. Niether are most of my friends. Nor is most of the school. A little bit too much overgeneralization there, my friend.

    55. Re:Not the best idea by VGR · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I would posit that the public school system as it stands today is actually more HARMFUL socially to our kids than helpful.

      And I would agree with you.

      One of the most harmful, even detrimental consequences of a school's warped social atmosphere is the massive (though not total) inhibition of dating. As Slashdotters know all too well, if you're not one of the popular elite, any attempt at dating will not only be rejected but will be the business of 400 other kids within twenty-four hours. When you detain kids for six hours a day, under threat of legal enforcement, it's only natural they'll be extremely bored and behave like this.

      But it sure doesn't teach all those non-elite how to interact with the opposite sex in a normal manner. If anything, it teaches them to be separate and distant. I think we all know people who never overcame that handicap.

      I can't imagine how this prepares anyone for adult life. When I date someone, it's no one's business except mine, hers, and possibly a few friends and family. I'm obviously not the only one who places value on this, considering the lengths to which celebrities have been known to go in order to get a little privacy where their social lives are concerned.

      --
      The Internet is full. Go away.
    56. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you can't learn social skills sitting in front of a computer

      Try reading the article and doing a bit of research. They are not proposing that the kids be learning by sitting in front of a computer. What they are basically proposing is essentially (on-computer) workbook learning with an untrained adult helping. Sounds like home schooling to me. Yes, the kids will miss out on the day-to-day social interaction.. recess, chatting with friends between classes, kids high on drugs disrupting class, fear, etc. Guess they'll miss the good with the bad.

      Unfortunately, they assume Grandma will be around to help the kid all day. Heck, if Grandma had that kind of time and interest, they'd probably already be homeschooling the kid -- workbooks, also designed by professionals, are not that expensive.

      So let's consider what is likely to be the case: Grandma takes care of the other kids while each kid gets their turn on the computer doing the workbook work. Alone. Probably without anybody to help them because the adult is busy babysitting the other kids. Not so idyllic anymore.

      I'm glad to see school systems trying some non-traditional solutions.. education in the United States is having serious problems precisely because the old traditional ways of doing things are no longer working. Programs like this won't be right for all kids, but for some it will work wonders. Opt-in non-traditional solutions like this are going to have to be the wave of the future because there just isn't going to be a one-size-fits-all educational solution anymore (never really was). I just hope they look more at how many students this program works for rather than judging the program on how many it doesn't work for.

    57. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Teacher unions are no different than the AFL-CIO, they exist to protect the jobs of their members and get them more money, their "concern" about the childrens education is just a pretext, like the auto workers union's "concern" about the quality of the cars they produce. Childhood education is just a product that they produce in order to make money for themselves. So, don't ever be surprised that they come out against anything that might reduce their control of education, they would suggest shutting down all private and parochial schools if they could get away with it.
      Maybe who have jobs wouldn't be so concerned if those people who spent years in schools, or their jobs, weren't left to flounder by society at large. I really hate it when people blame groups of people without looking at why people "fight" to protect their jobs in the first place -- because no one gives a shit one another. Think of all the years of sacrifice many teachers went through to get their jobs and get that pay, then some technology comes along and makes many of them obselete, it's not an exciting prospect for anyone to lose their livelihood and have to go get "re-educated", provided you have the money, time, ability and are at a place in your life where you can do so.

    58. Re:Not the best idea by Reziac · · Score: 1

      What I've seen with homeschooling is that it's nearly always more about the fact that the PARENTS can't cope, not about the *child* getting "picked on". The PARENT is afraid of some situation, so they unconsciously want their kid to be afraid in the same way.

      This is every bit as bad as the parent who tells their kid to just "suck it up and be a man" (IOW, "tough shit, kid, you're on your own"). Fact is, kids can deal with almost anything, provided their parents support them -- even by simply LISTENING when the kid needs to vent.

      And bullying often results from parents setting their kids up to be bullied, by ensuring that their kid is "different" or "weird" -- frex, making a kid wear clothes or get a haircut that stamps him as a "loser" in the eyes of other kids.

      And when you pull your kid out of school because of "bullying", no matter what you SAY to your kid about it, your kid is going to INTERPRET it as "You are a loser who cannot cope." What sort of message is THAT to send your kid??

      And then the homeschooled kid has to "perform" for the parent 24 hours a day, instead of getting a chance to decompress simply by being around *other adults with other expectations*. End result -- every homeschooled kid I've ever known has been stressed to the max, often to the point of becoming self-destructive, and THEIR PARENTS NEVER KNEW IT. -- I've personally had to pull two otherwise-normal homeschooled kids back from the brink of suicide, wholly caused by the overwhelming stress of being under mommy's thumb 24 hours a day.

      Furthermore, what makes you think that as an untrained and amateur educator, you can do the same job as a professional??

      Anyway... all this is why I've come to regard home schooling as child abuse.

      If you've got to pull your kid out of public school for sheer safety reasons, reconsider where you're living and whether keeping your own career is worth fucking up your kid with home-schooling. And if you still must do so... swap kids with other families or find a study group lead by a professional teacher WHO IS NOT ONE OF THE PARENTS. But DON'T try to teach your OWN kids -- unless you WANT your kids stressed beyond all rational tolerance.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    59. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man, it's no wonder US citizens take such a dim view of public social services. It seems like the way they're run in a lot of the US is an ongoing disaster.

      I wonder if it's like this in other parts of Canada, and I simply haven't heard about it.

    60. Re:Not the best idea by kalaf · · Score: 1

      I can't claim to have experienced this exactly, but I can tell you right now, my parents had to pull me away from educational games when I was a kid.

      Now maybe these classes aren't as interesting as Robot Odyssey, but that isn't a fault of the medium.

    61. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1

      No I don't, you racist piece of shit, I mean criminals. Don't put words in people's mouths.

    62. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      What are you talking about? We had some pretty big problems in our school with violence (even a few shootings) and we certainly got rid of the problem. They put a policy in place where if you were a constant problem, they shipped you off to another school.

      Think that one through and I think you'll see where the problem lies.

    63. Re:Not the best idea by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      You seriously need to do a little research before you post, amigo. Statistically, home schooled graduates tend to score higher than their public schooled counterparts on average. Now, these tests are skewed probably by those homeschoolers who opt out, but the data still exists.

      Oh sure. I'm not talking about tests; home schoolers by definition have parents who actually give a shit, which describes a depressing fraction of regular parents, and parents who give a shit tend to have kids who do better in school. No, by 'loser,' I didn't mean 'doesn't score well on the SAT.' I meant 'less likely to be asked out to drinks with coworkers' kind of thing. Naturally, it's not a guaranteed syndrome, and in many situations, it's better than the alternative (ie, being shot), which was the original thesis of my point. But I do think that getting the kids away from mom and dad is a good thing, and that not doing that can have, shall we say, social repercussions. If nothing else, it's good to learn to deal with assholes you can't get away from, as that's a pretty good thing to learn for the professional world.

    64. Re:Not the best idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Do you have people in your place work work running around throwning pieces of half eaten fruit at you? Do you walk down the corridor past groups of senior members of staff and have them push or trip you over? Do you have to put up with people screaming, laughing and joking as you try to get work done? Are you prohibited by law from leaving if any of these things happen?

      Yeah, but my lawyer says he can get me paroled in about 2 years.
    65. Re:Not the best idea by Frozen+Void · · Score: 1

      Society at large are not yet capable of understanding that homeschooling is far less harmful then any school.
      Its safe,productive,and require very little investment.
      A online education is the next step,which is essentialy homechooling with remote source.
      Its inevitable progress which present establishment(and especially teachers) will try to curb and delegitemize to preserve their jobs and massive expenses(education at schools costs millions in resources,plus the schools themself are financial burden which most don't realize:People driving their kids to school,buying lunches,dead-paper books,etc).

    66. Re:Not the best idea by lorcha · · Score: 1
      As Slashdotters know all too well, if you're not one of the popular elite, any attempt at dating will not only be rejected but will be the business of 400 other kids within twenty-four hours.
      I don't know where or when you went to school, but in my public high school, this was totally untrue. Not only did I date, I typically dated 2 or 3 girls at the same time without them finding out about each other. Clearly, the girls I was dating was NOT known by all 400 kids in my class. And it ought to be obvious by the fact that I'm posting on slashdot, but just in case it is not, I certainly was NOT anywhere near being "one of the popular elite". Dating helped though--from the standpoint of, "Ok, if I'm going to be seen in public with you, you've gotta fix XYZ."


      My point is that you should not blame your inhibitions on others. If you were too chicken-shit to ask chicks out, that was your own goddamn fault. Hopefully you're more comfortable with it now. BTW, if you ask out chicks at the office.... well, you'll find out... ;)

      --
      "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
    67. Re:Not the best idea by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      I don't see a problem. The school was designed for these assholes. Personally, I think they should just be executed, but thats me.

  8. But what about socialising? by Nursie · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I object to this in the same way as I object a bit to homeschooling - sure the kid will learn stuff, but they won't learn to be around other people their own age, how to work with others, or how to be a member of society in general. Some may consider that a blessing, but I certainly wouldn't. I think it'll lead to some serious problems when they finally are turned out into the world.

    1. Re:But what about socialising? by CdXiminez · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Social things learned in school:

      Don't be smart around stupid people - they'll come and beat you up for it.
      Avoid gatherings of other people - they'll beat you up because you 'looked funny at them'.
      Don't speak to classmates - they'll chase you around the school yard for using 'funny words'.
      Hate - it's difficult to learn to love people who chase you all the way home.

      Should I go on?

      I know, this doesn't go for everybody, but I can see that this on-line teaching will do some people a lot of good.

    2. Re:But what about socialising? by Koadah · · Score: 1

      Yep, very good point. However, the world is a very varied place and school is not going to be the right place for everyone. Children are likely to be expected to attend some face to face group sessions. Probably at least once a week. Parents will also need to get the children to other social events. E.g. church, scouts, sports clubs e.t.c.

    3. Re:But what about socialising? by cbelle13013 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There are plenty of other ways to socialize your kid beside sending them to school. You can have them go to Karate two nights a week, soccer two nights, piano/music lessons one night a week, and maybe an art class or two. Then it's up to you as a parent what your child learns, instead of some public school. Plus you'll actually meet the people teaching your child, as opposed to some 23 year old who just graduated and needed a job.

      I don't think the homeschoolers of today are the same ones of 25-30 years ago. Most parents I know who intend to homeschool are not religious nuts. They just don't want their kids to go to government schools for obvious reasons.

    4. Re:But what about socialising? by syntaxglitch · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Uhm. Since when is school the only place for kids to socialize?

      Not to mention, that a harmful social environment is potentially worse than no socialization at all. It's fairly easy for a public school to become a Lord of the Flies scenario, with a combination of kids who have to be there, a self-contained social structure with no goal or purpose, and administrators who don't care.

      School is supposed to be for learning, anyhow. Let the kids socialize on their own time. Maybe if they actually taught kids things in school instead of "socializing" them, things would work better in the first place.

    5. Re:But what about socialising? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah the problem you describe is now very serious. What we need to do is to show kids that being smart is rewarded. Here is how I envision the system working. If there is an incident in school, we just assume that the smart kids were behaving apropriately. I mean no system of 'justice' actually works. In school it is the big kids who rule, in the 'real' world the rich rule. Why not set up our schools so that the individuals who win are the most useful?

    6. Re:But what about socialising? by xusr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I am about to make some generalizations based on my experience and the experiences of colleagues.

      My experience has shown precisely the opposite. Homeschooling, when done well, produces individuals that are better equipped to meet the world and its challenges than "traditional" schooling. Instead of being surrounded by individuals of one's same age (and, often, one's same race, social status, etc) the homeschooler learns how to interact with people of all different ages, and adults in particular. Most homeschoolers I know actually spend more time at the local school, theater (stage, not cinema), library or college than they do at home.. Respect for adults, something conspicuously missing from many young people these days, is the norm among homeschoolers.

      To say that a "traditional" school is the only way to get a grasp on society is preposterous. This is not to say that homeschooling is failproof; I have also known homeschoolers that completely fit the bill of the sheltered and socially-backwards. Pointing to these as the standard of homeschooling, however, is akin to leveling any other group of people to their lowest (but loudest) population.

      Finally back to the topic, I can see this sort of online schooling to be an asset for the homeschooling community. Again, if used in isolation, it will almost certainly result in awkwardness. Homogeneity in ethos and context inspires only lethargic lemmings. I would submit that traditional schooling is the actual socially restricting option.

    7. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How are children supposed to learn how to be adults? It used to be children learned how to be adults by being around adults, now they learn how to be adults by being around other children and watching TV. And we wonder why they are so messed up. We wonder why we do not have money for books, but we have the better security in our schools than in our airports.

      I have seen some posts about home schooled children here, but how many of you have met them? In my experience, they are far more mature, better socialized, and exist in a more "real" world. Of course, it takes a lot of time and commitment from their parents. How's that again? Parents make a difference?

      Who ever came up with the thought that children should learn how to be a person from other children. Watch them sometime, they are monsters. They naturally are selfish, violent, intolerant, agressive/passive agressive. They are animals, and this is what we want them to learn?

    8. Re:But what about socialising? by Bogtha · · Score: 1

      Don't be smart around stupid people - they'll come and beat you up for it.

      I agree that socialisation in school is crappy. But to play devil's advocate, would you really prefer it if your kid didn't learn that other people might resent his intelligence, so when he starts work he thinks that everybody is stupid and he's clueless about why people get pissed off with him?

      I was significantly smarter than my peers all through school, and at first I didn't actually realise that other people had difficulty understanding the things the teachers were saying, I took it for granted that everybody else was as smart as I was. If I hadn't had school to get me used to it and teach me how to handle this situation gracefully, I'd have had a massive shock when the time came to get a job, and I'd probably form much lower opinions of other people.

      Look at it from the opposite direction - schools might teach "don't be smart around stupid people", but they also teach "don't look down on people who aren't as smart as you".

      --
      Bogtha Bogtha Bogtha
    9. Re:But what about socialising? by ClubStew · · Score: 1

      I don't think the kids would even learn so much. How many times do teachers have to say "[Jimmy], pay attention!" Most kids don't have the greatest attention span (damn dreamers - ridalin for everyone!). Put them in front of a computer - even with supposed blocks, which at least one person will work around then post on MySpace for everyone else to do - and they will do other things.

      When will this country (USA - maybe even others, too) wake up and realize that we should put more focus - not less, and not closing down schools all over - on our kids' education. They are the future - good or bad. I prefer good (i.e., well-educated).

    10. Re:But what about socialising? by chrismcdirty · · Score: 1

      When I was in high school, the smart kids actually got punished more seriously than the screwups. The advisors "expected more from us," while the screwups were always in the advisors' offices and built up a friendly relationship, resulting in slaps on the wrist when they broke the rules every week.

      --
      It's like sex, except I'm having it!
    11. Re:But what about socialising? by Dahlgil · · Score: 1

      I don't homeschool but I have done some activities with homeschoolers and one thing I can say is that there is nothing necessarily isolating about it. In fact, many homeschoolers band together in groups/organizations that form a unique kind of social network that has no real analog in the conventional school system. In some ways the term "home school" is a bit of a misnomer as it conveys that students always remain confined at home. I'm not saying that some homeschoolers avoid networking or that there are not other issues with homeschooling; but in terms of being able to work with others or learning how to be a member of society by interacting with other peers, I don't think this is necessarily the problem some think it is. In fact, overall there is probably just as large a risk (if not larger) that students in conventional schools will become social misfits by connecting with wrong peer groups as homeschooers will have of becoming social misfits by having limited social interaction. As far as this virtual classroom stuff goes, I am very much opposed to that. I'm a software engineer and have spent a lot of time with computers in the classroom. But they are tools, not teachers. There is something intuitively bad about sitting a student in front of a computer and saying "have at it", even if there is a teacher available online. Remember that teachers are not just conveyers of information, but they are also ever-present role models and supervisors. If you take those latter things away, you may be able to still pump information into the student, but will they be educated? I guess it all depends on what you believe education is.

    12. Re:But what about socialising? by RsG · · Score: 1

      Don't forget:

      Have sex as early and often as possible. Sex makes people cool! Don't use a condom either; real men pull out!
      Drink hard and drive fast. You'll live forever, don't worry!
      The bong is your best friend. Listen to his years of wisdom.

      Seriously, who the hell thinks school does kids a lick of good? Teaching kids = good, socializing kids = good, throwing kids into an enviroment of peer pressure and rampant apathy = BAD. If you can somehow meet the first two without getting into the third, then what's the problem? I'll admit that "online" schooling might not help much with getting kids used to socializing, but there's gotta be better ways to do that then to drop them into a free for all full of their peers.

      I think the entire current school system needs a rehaul. I'm not sure what it oughta be, but what it is is a waste. Half the people I grew up with have horrible memories of the place; the other half are dropouts.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    13. Re:But what about socialising? by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Should I go on?

      Please, allow me

      Justice is arbitrary.
      Law is arbitrary.
      Society is the Tribe.
      Keep Your PLace.
      Don't Rock The Boat.

      Nobody Cares. Nobody.

      School would have been a great place if it wasn't for all the fucking teenagers.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    14. Re:But what about socialising? by anothy · · Score: 1
      Uhm. Since when is school the only place for kids to socialize?
      it's not the only place, certainly, but it's an important one. at the latest, since the introduction of modern western public education, that's a very important part of the purpose (likely for earlier educational systems, but i don't really know much about educational systems between the ancient greeks and our modern western variety). socialization can certainly be done elsewhere, but it requires specific attention on the part of the parent. when home schooling fails, it's generally because the parent overlooks that.
      School is supposed to be for learning, anyhow. Let the kids socialize on their own time. Maybe if they actually taught kids things in school instead of "socializing" them, things would work better in the first place.
      you have an overly-narrow definition of learning. yes, school is for learning, but in addition to the material written on the curriculum, there are many, many more lessons to be learned - arguably far more important ones. these range from simple meta-accademic concerns - for example, you do homework not just to memorize the specific facts/formulas/&c, but to learn how to learn more difficult things - to more abstract life skills, like how to work with people with different interests and backgrounds, how to understand differing viewpoints, and so on. perhaps if people spent more time in school focusing on those, instead of an obsession with test scores, things would work better in the first place. ;-)

      note also that the balance between "life skill" type learning from socialization and academic learning changes over the course of a student's life. the charter school in question is K-8, when most folks agree the balance is in favor of the former.
      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
    15. Re:But what about socialising? by evilviolist · · Score: 1

      Socialization doesn't mean hanging out and chatting, necessarily. Working on projects together, helping/learning from your peers, learning how to listen to others (especially when other kids are talking), being responsible enough to work within classroom rule structures, learning how to work with adults who aren't your parents or family members - these things are harder to get on the playground.

    16. Re:But what about socialising? by LinDVD · · Score: 1

      So the local teachers union objects...no surprise, as they don't want to be marginalized, or even threatened, if this union is anything like the California teachers union.

      As for home schooling, "...lead to some serious problems when they are finally turned out into the world" is not universally true-it depends on a lot of factors, from the parent and child's personality, their ability to learn, what they are taught and so forth. Applying a blanket statement to home schooling without considering additional details has the same meaning as applying a blanket statement to pretty much anything...partial or complete ignorance.

      --
      Just because you get modded "insightful" on Slashdot doesn't mean you actually are in real life.
    17. Re:But what about socialising? by John+Straffin · · Score: 1
      I object to this in the same way as I object a bit to homeschooling - sure the kid will learn stuff, but they won't learn to be around other people their own age, how to work with others, or how to be a member of society in general. Some may consider that a blessing, but I certainly wouldn't. I think it'll lead to some serious problems when they finally are turned out into the world.
      This is just wrong. <alert style="bias">I am a home schooling parent</alert> and my kids (1st Grade and 4th Grade) are *much* better "socialized" than their peers. They don't spend all day inside... they also go on field trips, deliver food to the elderly, go grocery shopping, play with kids in the neighborhood, etc. Who do you believe is going to be better adjusted: a young kid thrown into an unfamiliar room with 25 (or 30. 35. 40?) other kids their own age and a complete stranger to manage them, or a kid left in a comforatable environment with family members present with individual attention and frequent trips "outside" to interact with others of all ages?

      When their schooling is done, my children won't need to be "turned out into the world" as they will have spent their entire lives a lot closer to it than most other kids. Plus, what's the make-up of your workplace look like? I haven't been "around other people (my) own age" since college... in a department of 13, I've got co-workers 10+ years younger and 25+ years older than me.

      Now, just as there are public schools that suck, home-schooling is no guarantee of a good education. It's frankly more work than I would have imagined, but it's work I wouldn't have anyone else doing and wouldn't miss for the world.

      - John
      --
      My contempt for the behavior and beliefs of the two major political parties cannot be adequately expressed in 120 chara
    18. Re:But what about socialising? by zotz · · Score: 1

      [I object to this in the same way as I object a bit to homeschooling - sure the kid will learn stuff, but they won't learn to be around other people their own age, how to work with others, or how to be a member of society in general.]

      Family, neighbourhood, religious group, sports team, band...

      I enjoyed many of the social aspects of my schooling, but before I moved out into the bush mid way through, I had lots of interaction on my street. I also had lots of cousins. School is not the only place where these sorts of things can happen.

      all the best,

      drew
      (da ida man)

      --
      FreeMusicPush If you want to see more Free Music made, listen to Free
    19. Re:But what about socialising? by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      I can think of at least one major problem with this who line of reasoning.

      It should NEVER be the STATES responsibility to socialize and teach morality an or philosophy and or religion to it's students.

      The whole separation of church and state thing ( a good idea btw) prevents them from doing any such thing efficiently or officially. Not to mention the fact that even if they were supposed to be teaching morality they would still be the wrong people to do it.

      The whole 'children need to learn social skills' argument basically is a round about way of saying 'we need to teach people how to behave properly'.
      Unfortunately or perhaps fortunately for the school and the argument what does and does not constitute 'proper' behavior is a moral issue they have no right to
      teach about.

      What the argument really comes down to is that the state wants the right to indoctrinate children in whatever the prevailing culture believes is correct behavior.

      This indoctrinization is usually termed 'socializing'.

      I've known plenty of home schooled children who were well 'socialized' they spent time in various church groups, did ballet and played sports, all of which 'socialize' much more efficiently and effectively.

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    20. Re:But what about socialising? by RyoShin · · Score: 1

      True, kids might have other opportunities to socialize outside of school (though it gets hard if you live on a farm out in the country, or in a small town full of mostly old retired people). However, school teaches important social values because you're basically forced into a situation with a large number of unknown people. Unlike regular scenarios like that, you are almost constantly at work on something, so the ensuing uneasiness is much easier to ignore.

      You learn to mind others, what can set off bad (and good) reactions in a group, how to best approach someone you don't know, working in groups with people you may not like, and so forth.

      In the case of Chicago, with the violence that happens routinely, I can understand the benefit of keeping a child home to do school work on a computer. This is only a positive if the neighborhood you live in is less violent than the school tends to be.

      Regardless, a lot of this will then transfer to the parent to make sure the kid is actively paying attention and not goofing around on the computer. This means we'll have parents doing basically home schooling, but without the motive/will. Also, if a family is able to have a stay at home parent, they're probably much more likely to either live in a suburb or nicer area, or they don't have a computer to begin with.

      Something does need to be done about violence in schools, but this might not be the best course of action.

    21. Re:But what about socialising? by Lumpy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      sure the kid will learn stuff, but they won't learn to be around other people their own age, how to work with others, or how to be a member of society in general.

      I have a 14 year old. and if you tell me that the social environment in scool is beneficial then you are completely stupid.

      Let's see the lessons she is learning from her peers....

      1 - drugs are cool
      2 - sex is cool
      3 - harassing the odd kid is cool
      4 - being an asshole is cool
      5 - smoking is cool
      6 - stealing is cool
      7 - EMO is cool
      8 - Smart is un-cool
      9 - if you are a jock then you are cool
      10 - if you are not a jock then you are uncool
      11 - manipulating others is cool
      12 - being mean is cool
      13 - it's great fun to make someone believe you like them and then make them cry.

      No thanks, I'd rather her not deal with the social interaction thank you. Having a child come home crying and needing therapy because the other kids are pieces of trash is not "beneficial"

      Personally most of those kids need their asses kicked, then the parents need their asses kicked.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    22. Re:But what about socialising? by JudgeFurious · · Score: 1

      I think you're completely correct. In some cases it's a good thing or at least it could be a good thing.

        Just out of curiosity have you by any chance seen the clip "Fear of Girls" on Google Video? Those two guys would be perfect candidates for online schools.

        http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7521044027 821122670&q=Fear+of+Girls

      --
      Appended to the end of comments you post. 120 chars.
    23. Re:But what about socialising? by hey! · · Score: 1

      No risk, no reward. You can't spend your life inside your house after all. Or you could, but you'd miss out on a lot of things, like hanging with friends, struggling with relationships, growing up, falling in love and having a family.

      What children need are teachers, not necessarily peole who are employees of the school system, but mature adults who know them and know their situation. They need teachers to help them draw the best lessons possible from their experiences.

      For example:

      Instead of "Don't be smart around stupid people - they'll come and beat you up for it.", "If you're smarter than somebody, don't be arrogant about it. Just because you are smart doesn't mean you're always right. And in the end it's not what you can do, it's what you accomplish that matters."

      Instead of "Avoid gatherings of other people - they'll beat you up because you 'looked funny at them'.", "People are stronger as a group than as individuals. So cultivate your friends so you'll never be isolated and vulnerable."

      Instead of "Don't speak to classmates - they'll chase you around the school yard for using 'funny words'.", "Talking to people is an exchange, not an opportunity to rub their noses in how much smarter you are than them. Learn first to understand the person you're talking to. Then learn to listen to how what you say is going to sound to them before you say it."

      Instead of "Hate - it's difficult to learn to love people who chase you all the way home.", "Don't be a passive victim. Use your brain: there is a way to to become the master of your situation. There is no quick fix, but intelligence, determination and effort will succeed in the end."

      None of these lessons are ones you can learn sitting at home.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    24. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow you mean like using the school for TEACHING?! It's so crazy it just might work!

    25. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      pffffft, I just did

    26. Re:But what about socialising? by w0d3h0us3 · · Score: 1

      I've never understood this argument. Humans somehow became "members of society in general" before the advent of public education.

    27. Re:But what about socialising? by datagen24 · · Score: 1

      I disagree, myself (till 11th grade when I decided I needed a diploma to get where I wanted to be) and all of my siblings where home schooled. I have a sibling at USMMA at Kings Point another sibling who is JNROTC and plans on going to Annapolis. I am 3rd Assistant Engineer in the USMMC (United States Merchant Marine Corp) having just graduated from college. I must note that No one else in my family took the route I that did and that at least one who is at very prestigious school.

      But I also realize that my parents kept us in social activities be it Boy Scouts, Sea Cadets, Activities with other home schooling families And that some people do not take the time to properly educate their children and socialize them while they where home schooling them, those are the people who give home schooling a bad name.

    28. Re:But what about socialising? by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      There are plenty of other ways to socialize your kid beside sending them to school. You can have them go to Karate two nights a week, soccer two nights, piano/music lessons one night a week, and maybe an art class or two. Then it's up to you as a parent what your child learns, instead of some public school. Plus you'll actually meet the people teaching your child, as opposed to some 23 year old who just graduated and needed a job.

      Plus, if "homeschooling" becomes the norm, parents will set up cooperatives for things like sports and other extracurriculars.

      I don't think the homeschoolers of today are the same ones of 25-30 years ago. Most parents I know who intend to homeschool are not religious nuts. They just don't want their kids to go to government schools for obvious reasons.

      I've heard that schools have become appallingly bad in the last 10 years:

      Random drug testing and other invasions of privacy

      Increasingly branding kids ADHD and forcing their parents to drug them

      No unstructured recess/play periods for kids (esp boys) to let off steam

      Paranoia of school shootings and/or terrorism - kids now need badges and are tagged like meat

      Chemistry class isn't fun - teachers and admins are terrified of chemicals. When I went to HS in 1993-1997, we actually used cyanide salts in chem class!

      Over-reliance on computers. Computers can be a good teaching tool, but they're not an end in themselves, and certainly don't replace a good teacher.

      Police in schools. Even nice, safe, suburban, schools. Start 'em young...

    29. Re:But what about socialising? by mshiltonj · · Score: 1

      I don't want to be rude, but this ingorant comment warrants it. Dude, you don't know what the fuck you are talking about.

      My 6 year old is homeschooled, and regularly interacts with other kids -- both homeschooled and public school.

      In my experience, my kid in particular and other homeschooled kids in general are many times more socialized that public school kids. Public schools kids excel at standing in line, taking orders, and being alternately withdrawn or mean and agressive. Homeschooled kids, by comparison, are animated, engaging and generally much nicer to each other and to adults, although a bit more independent-minded. It must be the lack of Ritalin. Homeschooled kids really do seem more like *people.*

      Public school in America sucks. It doesn't need to be saved or reformed, it needs to be junked outright -- starting with that fucking teacher's union that only wants to protect their own jobs. The "socialization" argument supporting mass public education is a straw man. Homeschooled kids are not locked in a closet, you moron.

    30. Re:But what about socialising? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Apart from 9, 10 and 13 there, I think the other kids are right. If your kid needs therapy because she's learning what life is like then you've done something wrong. Life's a bitch, all the way through, may as well learn now.

    31. Re:But what about socialising? by GalacticCmdr · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I object to this in the same way as I object a bit to homeschooling - sure the kid will learn stuff, but they won't learn to be around other people their own age, how to work with others, or how to be a member of society in general.
      What a blindingly stupid statement to make - it is quite obvious that you are the product of a public or private education.

      According to the US government, which obviously only covers US households, in 2000 1.7% of the K-12 students (1.1 million kids) in America where listed as homeschooled. Of these students, just around 20% also attended public/private school for part of the day. ~65% of the students listed as home-schooled, were homeschooled in multi-student/multi-family environments. As a group they also score above average for their grade level on all three standardized tests (again USGov stats only). They have a statistically higher average of college degrees and lower rate of incarceration (these last two statistics came from a home-school site so expect them to point out the best and ignore the worst).

      Personally I came up through the public education system, but I was lucky enough to have a rural school where at least some of the teachers cared. We also make enough in our current household to move to a good school district; however, given where we lived previously it would have been far better to homeschool our children rather than subject them to the crap that passed as public city schooling.

      --
      Programming: Its not just a job - its an indenture.
    32. Re:But what about socialising? by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      Should I go on?

      I'll drop a pearl of wisdom on you.

      When they come to beat you up, kick one of them in the face. You might *still* get beaten up, but next time they'll pick an easier target.

      I did the face-kick thing twice, I lost the fight the first time. I won the fight the second time.

      Dealing with stupid people is like dealing with dogs. If you show fear, you'll draw aggression. Project dominance and draw respect instead.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    33. Re:But what about socialising? by mshiltonj · · Score: 1

      You can't spend your life inside your house after all.

      Idiot. You don't know what you are talking about.

      None of these lessons are ones you can learn sitting at home.

      Wait. I'm sorry. That's *exactly* what homeschoolers do. They sit at home picking their nose while staring at a wall. Then, when they are 18, the parents boot the kids out the door into the "real world" for the first time. You've got it all figured out.

      Honestly, I don't get the ignorant prejudice against homeschooling as a concept. I understanding it coming from beauracrats and teacher's unions. but from the general population? It doesn't make sense.

      How hard is it to see that public education in America is *BROKEN* ?! Get out while you can.

    34. Re:But what about socialising? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      I'd dispute that kids socialise better on their own time.

      Rather, they socialise better with friends on their own time, sure. They don't then have the benefits of being forced to deal with people they don't like, learn about how not everyone in the world is either smart or nice and how sometimes you have to deal with their presence anyway...

      Lots of things. Socialising kids isn't just about them hanging out with friends, it's about preparing them for society.

    35. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most objective studies on socialization of children in homeschool environments show that children in homeschools have better social skills than children from traditional education formats.

      Furthermore, they tend to score better on standardized tests.

      The online charter schools report similar scores on both metrics.

      The one area online and charter school fall very short in is lining the unions pockets with extra cash.

      It amazes me how so many people with so little information can post so much. Must have gone to public school.

    36. Re:But what about socialising? by CdXiminez · · Score: 1

      I agree with you and wish that those understanding teachers were readily available, since a ten-year-old is not easily going to figure the positive approach out on his own.

      It's hard for a kid to empathize with another kid, they're simply to young to understand that other kids feel and view the world differently.

      Where it went wrong in my case and some others I have heard of: teachers are often blind to the social mess that classes are.
      Or unable to inspire children not to hurt other children.

    37. Re:But what about socialising? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but lets support geeks by not punishing them when the do this. The defacto assumption is that if a smart student is in a fight, the other person asked for it. Lets show no mercy to the average moron, and then our schools will be places where those members of society who will be useful are supported.

    38. Re:But what about socialising? by Nursie · · Score: 1

      Well firstly let me say I don't think it's by any means a rule that home schooled kids are going to turn out socially awkward, but more of a suspicion on my part. You raise the point of college - well they may find it difficult to adjust to the classroom at that stage, but I don't think that's too big an issue, and as long as they are making friends their own age as well I'm sure you're doing a fine job. BUT I do think the answer to your question of who is going to be better adjusted is the one who's had to deal with people who are not smart/nice/whatever. The world is full of assholes and learning to deal with them is IMHO, important. And I think you'll find the age thing depends heavily on the office, I've worked in dev groups of 30-60 people all pretty much within a 10 year window of ages, and I've worked in very varied places. I'm sure that making friends regardless of school defined "year group" will actually help your little ones. For me though, what I loved about school was that I was away from my family. I learned to be my own person there. I only had one childhood so I can't compare and make a value judgement, but I'd hate to have missed out on that.

    39. Re:But what about socialising? by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      Being smart IS rewarded. That's part of the problem.

      Everyone saw how easily I floated through school. It was quite obvious that I did all my homework in-class before the bell and had nothing to take home. It was obvious that I went to 'Gifted' 1 day a week because my IQ was high enough (learned that years later) and I could obvious handle in 4 days what others couldn't handle in 5. The teachers that noticed this helped this along. My 3rd grade teacher made me write stories with my spelling words. And when it become clear that it was too easy, she made me read the stories to the class. I was the -only- one doing this. Next year, everyone had to do it, but by then, I was challenging myself by using the words in the order they were given to me. (I think I failed at that 1 time.)

      My reward? Knowledge came extremely easy and I didn't 'work' as hard as everyone else.

      The obvious response was that every other kid hated me. I was teased, tripped (fixed that later) and called names. (I fixed the tripping issue by kicking someone's foot as hard as a could, at a run, when they tried to trip me. Didn't happen again for years.)

      So don't assume that rewarding aberrant behavior is the way to make others copy it. They must find out for themselves that such behavior is desirable.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    40. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a father, and I have taught and been involved in classes similar to "Sunday school".

      Our solution to the bullying problem is simple: we control the social environment.

      Mistreating other kids is considered the worst possible offence so kids are discouraged for such behavior (it takes surprisingly little effort). Treating each other well encouraged and rewarded (in emotional ways). So in general there are very few problems of this sort. If during sports a child mistreats another (even verbally), he's not allowed to play.. simple as that.

      At your job you aren't allowed to abuse your co-workers.. so why should kids be allowed to get away with it in school?

    41. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the recent grads are the most likely to support non-traditional teaching methods and reform in schools...after all, they just put up with 16+ years of teachers with undeserved tenure (literal and figurative), entire classes taught from powerpoint slides provided by the textbook manufacturer, and 'professionals' stuck in not their 2nd or 3rd but their 9th or 10th choice job.

      As a recent grad, I'm excited that teaching salaries in my area have risen over $10,000/yr since I was in high school...now it's actually possible for schools to pick from a range of candidates, rather than the two people who show up with certification.

    42. Re:But what about socialising? by MoneyT · · Score: 1

      No unstructured recess/play periods for kids (esp boys) to let off steam

      This is the biggest failure of modern schooling. There is no "free time" to enjoy. All through grade school you have recess. And while you may not be popular with everyone, you almost always had your little group of friends. Then you get into middle school, recess goes away and all of a sudden you can find yourself highly ostracised with little chance to meet or interact with new people in anything other than a "learning environment". And don't think because they had friends in elementary they'll have them in middle school, more often than not I've seen kids lose whole groups of friends at once. It's natural because kids grow and change. So it continues into highschool. And yet when I was in highschool something happened to change it. The school got the bright idea to impliment a "study hall". A roughly 45 minute period in which there were no classes. It was supposed to be used so that if someone needed extra help they could meet with any teacher because the teacher was guaranteed to be not teaching a class. In reality it became a recess of sorts, and it was during that time when I saw a lot of people (myself included) learn much more socialization than they learned in the previous 6 years of their lives.

      --
      T Money
      World Domination with a plastic spoon since 1984
    43. Re:But what about socialising? by hey! · · Score: 1

      Wait. I'm sorry. That's *exactly* what homeschoolers do.

      But we are talking about a virtual school, not home schooling. Homeschooling is an intense, hands on, engagement with a teacher in a very small class size; it just happens that the teacher is the parent. Furthermore, the main proponents of home schooling in the US are conservative christians. These people have a powerful social network in their church.

      Taking a student who is not well served by conventional public schools, and put them in a virtual school... that looks like a recipe for disaster. Not necessarily in every case of course, but one of the main predictors of school problems is level of parental involvement. Among home schoolers, this is very high. It is likely that this population of students would do better than average even in public school. Take a kid who doesn't have this level of adult involvement, then further isolate him, that's seems like a bad idea to me.


      Honestly, I don't get the ignorant prejudice against homeschooling as a concept.


      Well, I think there are good and bad things about home schooling. The good thing is that if the parent is well educated, then the small class size will give the student a considerable advantage in tests of knowledge and possibly of skill. However I think students are somewhat at a disadvantage with respect to learning to work with others and particularly at a disadvantage when it comes to dealing with people who have different viewpoints than them.

      Learning to work with others is something that I think can be addressed at the college level. Patrick Henry College, for example, has a huge number of home schooled kids, and they start with very high academic levels but not necessarily so strong at working with others. After four years the students seem figure it out. It's hard to say whether on average those students are on par with their peers, matched for socieconomic class, because there isn't a measureable test of this, but I'd be willing to concede this is probably the case. However, I doubt that unless the parent is a person of rare character, that students ever recover from their lack of exposure to alternate world views. In fact for many people shielding children from dangerous ideas is one of the chief attractions of home schooling.

      Idiot. You don't know what you are talking about.

      Your violent reaction to the very idea that being schooled in the community could have advantages to a student is an example of what I am talking about. It's black or white thinking: if community schooling offers something that home schooling does not then home schooling must be worthless; logically therefore if home schooling is not worthless, then there is nothing that community schooling offers that home schooling does not equally.

      It is not the case that people who don't believe exactly what you believe are necessarily idiots or ignorant. Furthermore just because somebody doesn't believe some of what you believe, it doesn't mean they disagree with you on everything.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    44. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      this report by the queensland department of education [pdf warning] has a section on myths about home schooling, including why kids usually get better socialised by homeschooling than going to school. Page 17.

    45. Re:But what about socialising? by Suddenly_Dead · · Score: 1

      What the hell? It's not always the stupid ones who are causing the problems. I had a relatively "smart" (as in A student) kid that was verging on Neo-Nazi at my highschool. Yes, let's just assume that the swastikas painted on the desks were put there by the kids with the lower grades...

      And yeah, I Godwin'd it. So what?

    46. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      socialization ... [snip] ...when home schooling fails, it's generally because the parent overlooks that.

      Try some research. Page 17 is particulary intructive.

      "One of the more popular myths about home schooling is that children who do not attend
      regular schooling are not socially developed and do not mature into confident well-
      balanced individuals. While there is an absence of detailed Australian research on this
      matter, there is much research in the United States of America and studies archived at
      the US-based Home School Legal Defence Association in Oregon. This research is
      broadly applicable to Australia.

      In summary, researchers have found home schooled children are as well socialised as
      students educated in traditional State and non-State schools. Boyer (1993)4 researched
      the social stratification of children in schools by the lock-step age and grade approach to
      schooling. He concluded that by the time children are teenagers, they have little idea how
      to socialise with anyone outside of their peer group because of this approach to
      education. Tillman (1995)5 has documented that home schooled children participated in a
      wide range of extra curricular and community activities both with age peers and with
      those of more than two years age difference outside the immediate family."

    47. Re:But what about socialising? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      You have completely missed the point. School is an environment where justice is impossible. You have to reward one group over another. The scenario you list is a classic example.

      "I fixed the tripping issue by kicking someone's foot as hard as a could"

      And if you had been caught doing this you would be punished. And that would be wrong. Given that you were clearly smart you should have been given pretty much a free run. Another kid picks on you, ends up beaten senseless, his fault for starting the fight.

      Anyone who has read Ender's Game can follow Ender's logic exactly. If smart kids are allowed to exert supremacy over the stupid though arbritrary justice then smartness will once against become a valued trait. If we don't crush the resurgent stupid in this world before it is too late, we will enter another religion fuel dark age.

    48. Re:But what about socialising? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      That's great, except that you almost always punish the wrong person. The bullies are socially smart. They pick on the kids when you are not looking. If you are always able to look then the environment is no comparison to school. When you are watching a more subtle tactic is employed, you goad the other kid into doing something stupid. Bullies will use whatever system you put in place to pick on other kids and then get them punished for it. You are better off using heuristics to punish the likely culprit. In my experience the vast majority of bullies are stupid.

    49. Re:But what about socialising? by pjgeer · · Score: 1

      Here is how I envision the system working. If there is an incident in school, we just assume that the smart kids were behaving apropriately.
      True or False: Stalin was smart.

      In school it is the big kids who rule, in the 'real' world the rich rule.
      In my experience the big kids had to watch their Ps and Qs more because they were considered more of a threat. The real rulers were the kids with rich parents who had influence on the school board. Good luck changing that.

      Why not set up our schools so that the individuals who win are the most useful?
      They're not our schools, they belong to the government. The government sees high fliers as a necessary evil, useful only as long as they are loyal. Put any gifted person in a regular reading group (or government job) and watch them stultify faster than you can wave goodbye to "your" tax dollars.

    50. Re:But what about socialising? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Your violent reaction to the very idea that being schooled in the community could have advantages to a student is an example of what I am talking about.

      The reaction is understandable. Fucking idiots seem to think that by virtue of drawing breath they have the right to tell us homeschoolers what we should and should not do when it comes to educating our children. We hear it every day, from assholes on all sides, who volunteer their unwanted opinions repeatedly and incessantly, when what they really need to do is just piss off and mind their own business. Or better yet, tend to their own little brats (if they have the balls to assume responsibility for their upbringing, something that seems to be rarer and rarer with every passing day).

      As for those who don't have kids, the arrogance of them giving us advice on how to raise kids is laughable at best. Nothing like having an ignorant novice tell you everything that you're doing wrong....

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    51. Re:But what about socialising? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      When I was in public school (1960-1972, grade school in Minnesota, and the largest HS in Montana) the smart kids were who everyone looked up to. EVERYONE wanted to be friends with the geek set, and anything odd about 'em was assumed to be part of "being smarter". And you couldn't be a proper jock if you didn't have good grades to match.

      We had "big" classes (30 to 32 kids per classroom) and a very traditional approach to learning -- essentially you had no choice, you just did the work required, and learned whether you liked it or not. Peer pressure was toward getting a grade that was at least not embarrassing, and teachers were allowed to enforce order (and were respected for it), tho frankly their invervention was seldom needed. -- Academically, teachers knew their jobs and their subjects, and noticed when someone needed help (and would bend over backwards to make sure the kids learned). And no one was just handed a grade -- every achievement was fairly earned.

      There was no truancy, no gangs, and drugs were for losers.

      I don't think it's coincidental during my years in high school, which at the time had about 1500 kids, there were exactly TWO dropouts.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    52. Re:But what about socialising? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      The idea that every waking minute has to be scheduled is part of the problem. Kids DON'T have the time and space to just "be a kid" anymore. Want to watch ants, climb a tree, or just loaf in the dirt? You can't do that, because you have to be doing something "productive" ALL the time.

      Which is stressful, because after school, homework, soccer practice, and whatever else, kids have NO time left to decompress, even tho kids need it even more than adults do. What if every adult had to go to work 8 hours a day, come home and do 6 more hours of homework, then get dragged off to some "socializing class" whether they really want to do it or not, and oh yeah, eat and sleep somewhere in the 6 hours that's left of the day?? Can you say "burnout"???

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    53. Re:But what about socialising? by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      Actually, in that situation, I wouldn't have been punished. It happened quick enough that I didn't 'plan' anything, but it simply looked like I kicked the foot of someone while they were trying to trip me. I had a few seconds warning and so I was prepared for the trip, but I doubt any teacher would have been paying enough attention to notice.

      As for 'exerting supremecy' with my 'smartness' ... How would I do that, without resorting to violence? Name calling doesn't really affect them much. And there are very, very few social situations where knowledge will help you come out on top when everyone else is against you. Quick wits, yes, but not knowledge or logic.

      You said 'justice' is impossible, but I think you mean 'equality.' Of course equality is not possible. Not at school, not at work, not on the street. Everyone is different. Equal rights, that's available in theory but it rarely works out that way.

      Also, don't assume religion is the result of stupidity. It's not. It's the result of the very human desire to believe in something. But we could have a dark age that's fueled by many other things than religion. Political desires, for instance.

      All of this actually helps prove my point, though. Online virtual schooling will remove some of the barriers preventing 'equality' in school, and it can be done without sacrificing the social interaction the detractors so strongly voice the need for.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    54. Re:But what about socialising? by kalaf · · Score: 1

      And then the smart become the stupid. I fail to see how this would help. The one good thing about bullying is that it allows the people who will eventually end up with the power to know what it feels like.

      I know a lot of smart people with very little empathy, and we all know where that leads.

    55. Re:But what about socialising? by Groovus · · Score: 1

      Social things learned in school (public school):

      Self confidence in dealing with peers and teachers
      Standing up for myself
      How to balance intelligence and sociability
      Heartache - how to deal with it
      Competition - both good and bad
      How to recognize and cultivate good relationships - how to recognize and avoid bad ones
      Responsibility, how to make choices and deal with the consequences - particularly in the ever unfolding social web that exists in a public school
      How and when to ask questions, and stick to with it until you get a satisfying answer
      How to filter and process input from other people, both classmates and teachers

      Other invaluable things I gained from public school:
      Being exposed to a wide variety of people, from different backgrounds, having different personalities
      Great friends, many of whom are still great friends to this day (many, many years later)

      Maybe you could have obtained the same results by home schooling, I don't know - it seems like it would be tougher for some of the above - but I do know that I got quite a bit out of the much maligned public schools.

      Of course just about everything everyone's posted in this thread is anectodal, and my list is no exception, but public school isn't as bad as some would have everyone believe, we're all just rehashing our own personal experiences - good or bad.

      Education isn't a time, isn't a place and it isn't an institution. If someone has a desire to learn they will learn, wherever they are from whoever they can. If anyone is repsonsible for that desire it's parents though - they are the greatest influence on their children. I thank my parents for instilling that desire to learn in me, I would hope other parents out there do the same favor for their children.

    56. Re:But what about socialising? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry but Life is not like that. I have worked in corperate world for 10 years and other businesses for another 20 and the world is not like that. The world is full of assholes, but they dont have the balls to do things to you directly like school. An asshole in a SUV cutting you off is one thing, One girl getting pissed at her for throwing the class curve and starting a widespread rumor she is gay is another. sorry but feeling like your peers all hate you does require therapy so she understands they are not her peers but people who actually in truth are beneath her. Being able to blow off morons and idiots who wear abercrombie is something you need help learning so that when you become highly sucessful you can ignore the idiots without effort.

      No-where is life anything like middle school. Only a complete and utter idiot would think otherwise. What are you, a 4F in the army? Your IQ below 80? because your comment made you sound like the stupidest person on the planet (No not George Bush, dumber than him.) The only peole that can say that school is identical to life are the wee-be-lows that rode the short bus and went to the "special" classes and all had the downs syndrome look on their faces.

      So how is making keychains for the salvation army to sell working out for you?

    57. Re:But what about socialising? by anothy · · Score: 1

      i'm not entirely clear on what your point is. i emphatically agree with everything your quoted study claims. from context, it seems you were presenting it as a counter to something you misunderstood me to be saying. my only claim is that when home-schooling does fail - and, like any system, it inevitably does at least sometimes - the most common cause is the parent overlooking the need for proper socialization. i make no claim about the frequency of such failures. were i to speculate, based on personal experience with youth i've had the opportunity to work with i'd say they're probably not very common, somewhat less common than the failures of the western public school system.

      --

      i speak for myself and those who like what i say.
  9. Irony by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society

    Funny... that's how I feel about the school system...

  10. Oh really? by 9x320 · · Score: 2, Informative

    This website allows you to read an entire Holt, Rhineheart, and Winston textbook online if you already have a keyword from a textbook you buy online. If you're into foreign languages, it has French, German, and Spanish, and aside from that,

    These sites teach you basic Japanese if you study enough.

    Parents just have to watch to make sure their children aren't looking at porn instead of studying and help them along.

    1. Re:Oh really? by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      That's not the meaty issue. At heart is the need to have some basic assurance the person has actually learned something useful. No that the public system is any better at it.

      The person also has to have the basic skills of interacting peacefully with their co-workers. Not ranting, swearing, playing dangerous pranks, or pranks at all, for that matter. It's not their time -- something posters here seem to have a hard time understanding. Many home-schooling parents treat the teaching as a job; make the kid study certain subjects in certain orders, spend distinct times at tasks, etc. Most don't. It would probably be worse on-line. This gives people a sense of entitlement and the "I can manage my time effectively" attitude when they actually are lousy at it.

      Show me an on-line high-school diploma or a university one earned by a less-than-adult and I'll show the holder the door.

    2. Re:Oh really? by captainPenguin13 · · Score: 1

      There's a HGUE difference between being multi-lingual and being socially adept. Books can teach you all shorts of things, but they can't teach you how to interact with the world. I know a ton of people who have insanely high IQs, are multi-lingual, had insanely high SATs and and acing college like nobody's business; but can't for the life of them walk up to another human being and hold a conversation that isn't about WoW or their classes. This is a good idea for the aquisition of intellectual knowledge, but if it's implemented everywhere we're going to have a nation full of people who can't interact with each other because they never had the chance to learn it. "So yeah, 10 out of 10 for style, but minus several million for good thinking, yeah?"

    3. Re:Oh really? by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      I would suggest that if everyone was taught that way, then everyone would want to talk about WoW... so conversations would be fine.

      In all seriousness though, the assumption here is that the problem is with the geek. It is not. Geeks have well defined social structures just as complex (if not more so) as everyone else. Geeks are, contrary to popular opinion, social creatures. I mean the very example you listed is a social game. The problem is that in every society one culture is selected to be vilified at every level. In the US and Britain, it's the geek. Being smart is uncool, you all know the drill. In Japan being stupid will land you in the same position (probably part of the reason Japan has had such sucess turning itself around after WWII). What is needed is a way to manage culture so that those cultures that are negative get vilified (as is the case in Japan), and those that are positive are reinforced. This system is merely a stop gap solution because public schools are little more than places where geeks get beaten shitless day in day out. What is needed is a system where it is the ignorant, the cruel, the useless are punished, irrespective of who started it, whoes fault it is, etc. There can be no justice in school (because the burden of proof is so low), so we are better off just socially engineerig the system to reinforce positive traits.

  11. Like home school by MxTxL · · Score: 3, Informative

    In the end, like homeschooling, it boils down to the parents taking responsibility for their children doing the work. Maybe with virtual school the teacher can do a little bit to make students sit stil, but surely it's still mostly on the parents to make sure the work gets done. That is a scary thought since many parents these days completely abdicate their parental duties.

    And this doesn't speak to the socialization aspect. Half of what is taught in school isn't just the three R's. The other half is how to become a responsible adult functioning in a society where you must interact with others. Sheltering kids from the outside world does not teach them that.

    1. Re:Like home school by rowama · · Score: 0

      You are unquestionably correct in that the quality of a child's learning is the parent's responsibility. That is why giving the parent choices is vital. The same applies to the quality of socialization -- It is the parent's responsibility. The parent may not want her child to be socialized in the PS environment, and she should have that choice.

      Every time the socialization argument comes up (in regard to homeschooling), I wonder what civilized people did to socialize their children before the advent of public school. Was the world full of socially incompetent people before public schooling came to the rescue? I think not.

    2. Re:Like home school by samh004 · · Score: 1

      Just because they're learning at home doesn't mean they are completely sheltered from the outside world. Speaking as a home-schooled student who is now doing just fine I can say you can be home-schooled and enjoy a great social life at the same time, with friends around your neighborhood and further...

      Why diss something you have never done, it's pointless because you really know little about the subject.

      The fact is home-schooling works and kids can socialize at the same time, with real people, in real life. People that say otherwise have clearly never been in the same situation and so know nothing about what they are talking about or were just loners themselves and think everyone else is like them.

    3. Re:Like home school by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And this doesn't speak to the socialization aspect. Half of what is taught in school isn't just the three R's. The other half is how to become a responsible adult functioning in a society where you must interact with others. Sheltering kids from the outside world does not teach them that.

      And they're going to learn to be a responsible adult by associating with irresponsible kids and teachers who refuse to take responsibility?

      Let me explain something you clearly don't understand:
      School is what shelters kids from the real world.

      While his friends were getting beat up in public school for being 'nerds', one of my young home-schooled friends was busy getting his pilot's license. Don't you think he learned more (science, math, etc) and associated more with actual responsible adults by doing that than he would have in a year in school?

      Besides, how many kids come out of the 7th grade with a job skill that they know can earn them good money in the future?

    4. Re:Like home school by wateriestfire · · Score: 0

      As someone else who was home schooled for two years of my school life, I can say that my social life increased wile I was out of school. I met most of my friends during this time and interacted with people far more than before. This is how the school social scene boils down to, the idea that if they take a bunch of kids and teens from all different backgrounds. Throw them all together into the same building and force them to be there, not able to leave or even move around. I mean this is the highest sence of the term, like they need a pass or they have to ask the teacher to go to the nurse, (this can be very embarrassing for girls who have their period) go to the bathroom or even have a drink of water. They will all become friends in this minimum security prision. The "socializing" that you talk about turly doesn't exsist outside of a controlled enviorment. Such as, kids and teens arn't allowed to speak unless they raise their hand to ask a specific question about the learning. The "group work" is your very own chance to be forced to be paired up with the worst member of class yet this is the time the only socialization really takes place. In some isolated and controlled enviorment. It is almost funny how they don't even let you talk during that. It if you got put next to a stranger and someone said "SOCIALIZE". Or better yet they think we are forms of rabbits which they just put together and they live in harmony. They also tend to give EVERYONE in the school bogus "awards" in your elementry years because they want to make you think you acheived something. This of course paralizes you when you realize that you could have done no better than a kid that did nothing and got the same "award" Which also leads to the puppet or mock student elections that they hold which everyone knows are so meaningless words can't describe it. This doesn't even go near however the embarrassing and useless class of PE (yet again how they want your work, play, social life, and pretty much your whole life to revolve around this institution.) In this you are FORCED to stip in front of the whole class, change and then be FORCED to like a sport or some of the other pointless and unrewarding activity they make you do. Then be made fun of if you don't do it right or good. Recess or as they call it in prision as "The Yard" is where they take a bunch of kids who have been building up tensions all day are finally released, no wonder so many kids get beat up during this time. Although don't worry this is soon to be taken completely out of school so kids will just snap and go insaine when all of this rediculous behaivor is finally reached its maximum. Then in the end they spit you out into a world which everyone always says "is nothing school" so in other words if you are homeschooled you learn how actually deal with life or the "real world" and when you are in the "real life simulation" known as school you learn how to deal with school and nothing else. This comes from me, a male 18 year old graduate of 2006 that came in the top ten percent of my class and received many certifications and awards and scholarships. One for "Outstanding Character" (this one was a REAL award as in not one given by the school but by someone who looked at my record and gave real cash) because I also never got into a fight or ever got in trouble.

    5. Re:Like home school by readin · · Score: 1

      And this doesn't speak to the socialization aspect. Half of what is taught in school isn't just the three R's. The other half is how to become a responsible adult functioning in a society where you must interact with others. Sheltering kids from the outside world does not teach them that. How did people for generations raise kids on farms, isolated from others while doing chores?

      --
      I often don't like the choices people make, but I like the fact that people make choices. That's why I'm a conservative.
  12. Thanks for illustrating it by Moraelin · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Thanks for offering the prime example of why us techies laugh at humanities students. Or at least at the utterly retarded types who spew such cretinous stuff as "Research simply follows the fad of the day." or "Science is 95% opinion then facts" or "What about astrology, the most rediculious of the sciences!"

    Guess what, simpleton? Noone considers astrology a science nowadays.

    Basically all you've told me is that you're exactly the kind of ignoramus we loathe: the kind that isn't just content to be an ignorant, but tries to drag everyone else down to his level. The kind who isn't just content to have no fucking clue about real science, but _has_ to bandage his ego by looking down upon those who do.

    Tired of elitism? Well, that starts at home. Stop acting like an elitist idiot yourself. The whole "I'm so much better than you because I don't understand science" ivory-tower is what gets us techies to reply with elitism right back. Most of us can accept that not everyone has the inclination or in some cases the IQ for science. Sure. Society needs painters and plumbers too. But seeing an idiot trying to present his ignorance and idiocy as proof of superiority _will_ get a sneer from those who do understand why your arguments only betray massive ignorance.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
    1. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by fernandoh26 · · Score: 0

      Mod Parent Up! O god I wish I had mod points....

      --
      Chums up, let's do this!
    2. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when is "plumber" a liberal arts job? It's damn closer to engineering than it is to, say "Spaces of Desire: Doing Cultural Studies".

    3. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by strider44 · · Score: 1

      Don't waste too much time on the poor little arts student. Remember he does sociology, not English, so he probably doesn't know the meaning of the word "science" (hint to grandparent, it contains the word "falsifiable").

      Bah, some people just don't have a sense of humour and concentrate too much on people teasing them to realise that the same people will tease themselves readily enough. I think that if someone thinks that everyone who makes jokes about them is an elitist arsehole, and that someone can't laugh at himself, then that someone leads a very sad life.

    4. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am majoring in gullibility.

    5. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by giorgiofr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I am a humanities student AND a computer geek and I can attest that you are BOTH idiotic know-it-alls who think they're so much better than everyone else. How about you both go down your own road and mind your own business? How about you spend your time LEARNING what you like instead of convincing yourself that it's worth learning in the first place? If you were so sure of your superiority you wouldn't be arguing about it.

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
    6. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by syntaxglitch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Stop to consider what the chances are of someone that flawlessly foolish even knowing /. exists?

      Don't waste your time; that was almost certainly a calculated troll, trying to hit every negative stereotype of humanities majors to provoke reactions.

    7. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Goodness people, you all certainly do have to realize that working with computers does not mean that you are some savior to the world. Engineers, scientists, etc. are, for the most part, very conceited when it comes to their outlook on others they deem to be 'below' them on the totum pole. Do I necessarily agree that humanities are the most vital thing in the world? No. But I also must say that techies certainly aren't either.

      Oh, before I forget let me just say that I hold not one, but two degrees in Computer Engineering and Electrical Engineering. Getting through college was quite a chore - not because the material was hard, but because of the smug morons who walked around with the 'high and mighty' attitude all the time. "Ha Ha! I'm using teh interwebs and you're not!!111one You are teh inf3rior!!11" was commonplace, and I still can't stand it. 'Computer people' are taught to think in a one track mindset, and talking to them is like pulling teeth since every conversation always resorts back to computers eventually. Talk with a person rich in the humanities and you have someone who is cultured, creative, and well-spoken; they generally are much more plesant to interact with.

      Heck, 100 years ago none of us techies would have had a job, so get over it - the world can live without you. Do I enjoy what I do in engineering? Absolutely - I can't picture a life otherwise. Nonetheless, I think we could all stand to learn a thing or two from the 'non-techies.'

    8. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by siride · · Score: 1

      > (hint to grandparent, it contains the word "falsifiable"). Or not. You can't really say science is objectively falsifiable because that requires a framework in the first place by which you can accurately judge correctness. But since a scientific theory is the only framework you get, what ends up happening is that falsifiability is couched in terms of the existing theory, which is no good.

    9. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by kjart · · Score: 1

      Booya! I just calculated the intensity of that burn to within 10 significant digits! Looks like the OP was wrong about technical skills being useless.

    10. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by RsG · · Score: 1
      I think we could all stand to learn a thing or two from the 'non-techies.'
      Non-techies... ...like the troll that started this thread for example?

      Average human beings are about equal when it comes to stupidity, regardless of education or profession. There is an even distribution of jerks, trolls, morons and idiots in most walks of life. If you're suggesting that techies need humiltiy, then you're preaching to the wrong crowd; few on earth seems to care about that particular trait, techie or otherwise. The people who do care about humility don't need to be preached to, and the ones that don't aren't going to listen.

      As for the statement that there were no techies 100 years ago, the OP and the GP were both talking about all forms of geek, including scientists (in fact the most telling remark by the troll was refering to sciece as "opinion"), and there were scientific minds as far back as ancient Greece. Us geeks may not be neccesary, but then again neither are humanities majors; the only absoluteley neccesary people in any society are the food providers (farmers, hunter/gaterhers, etc).
      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    11. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, everyone knows lib arts majors wind up in McD's. :-P

      Old joke: "How do you get a philosophy major off your porch? Pay for the pizza!"

    12. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not at all saying that scientists are not vital to a mondern-day soceity, but when we have everyone and their mothers becoming one, we end up with areas of research that are really not deserving of the money and thought we pump into them.

      I mean do we really need scientists crossing the genes of a pig and an elephant (which btw, we now know just won't splice)? Where do many of these things get us? It just seems that having too many bright minds ends up being counter-productive. We could advance our own soceity quite well even without much of the work done today by researchers/engineers/mad-scientists...

    13. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Engineers, scientists, etc. are, for the most part, very conceited when it comes to their outlook on others they deem to be 'below' them on the totum pole.

      A certain amount of this conciet, is to some degree justified. Techies', engineers in paticular, build the infrastructure on which humanity operates. Look at projects like the pyramids of Egypt, the Great Wall of China, the Golden Gate Bridge, the Internet. Concieved, designed and built by engineers, these works have lasted, and will outlast the work of their humanity comtemporaries. When Plato is forgotten for whatever it is he did, Pythagoras will live on in his theorem.

      The fact is, engineers, scientists, programmers; work in things that are unambiguous. They find and make things with absolute truths, not with fuzzy interpretations. That's why their works live on when those of thousands of Aristotles fade into obcsurity. Because they can stand the test of time, and the elements.

      Techies deal with things, not people. Things tend to be more concrete.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    14. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I just calculated the intensity of that burn to within 10 significant digits!
      No fair! You changed the outcome by measuring it!
    15. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by bensafrickingenius · · Score: 1

      While I like your post, I think you got trolled. Here's a quote from GP:

      I have to read *3* *books* *a* *week* on average. Not picture books either I assue you. It is a lot of work, but the upshot is improved grammer and spelling skills that are lacking in the technical."

      Now go back and read the whole post, carefully... I could not help but think as I was reading it that the only way to be *so* bad grammatically and spelling-wise was to make a serious effort to screw every sentence up as horrifically as possible! I don't get the thrust of the troll, but I really don't think it was a serious post.

      --
      I am not left-handed, either!
    16. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by strider44 · · Score: 1

      Well if we're going to argue metascience, then so be it.

      A scientific theory makes specific predictions about natural occurences and so is inherintly falsifiable: if those predictions are wrong then the scientific theory is false. If a scientific theory tells us that if I let go of an apple from two metres in the air it will go up, then that scientific theory is false. Note that there is no "almost right" or "sometimes right", it's either right or wrong. There are some approximate models that we use that are actually false, such as newtonian physics, but that is not "scientifically correct".

      So yes, science must always make specific observations on the natural world that, if wrong or inaccurate, can disprove the scientific theory. All science does this. Astrology doesn't, therefore it is not a science.

      The entire point of science being falsifiable means that much of what we hold at the moment to be true simply isn't. Probably nearly all of our current scientific theories are inaccurate therefore false. This is why people looked at DDT as good when it wasn't, though I think it's funny that you trash science for this when it was science itself (if the science was questionable - try seriously looking up DDT sometime) that went for the ban of DDT. Of course if I were to take that argument I'd point out how you're using a computer created using pure science to post that message. On the dieticians front, I'm still not sure what you're on about since serious dieticians have been pretty constant for a while. You may be thinking of statistical studies, which is an entirely different game and most definitely not science.

    17. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by RsG · · Score: 1

      Eh, I'm not in a position to judge. I doubt you are either though.

      Got a link for that pig/elephant thing? It sounds more like an april fools joke to me, but stranger things have happened.

      As for the "we have too many scientists" meme, according to different people we have too many of just about everything. We have too many lawyers; they can't find legitimate work, so they chase ambulances as a way of finding new clients to lauch frivolous lawsuits with. We have too many politicians, so they end up finding new and annoying ways to interfere with people's lives. We have too many white and blue collar workers, so they get downsized. We have too many students and professors, so the permanent positions in universities all have long waiting lists. We have too many people willing to work for Walmart, so they treat their employees like crap knowing they can be replaced.

      What don't we have in overabundance? Seriously, I can't think of many jobs where people complain of a shortage. I'm inclined to think that where there is an overabundance of something, it's a sign that the job market overcorrected for a previous shortage.

      In the case of people like scientists, I'd say there's room enough for plenty. For every scientific question we answer, two more take it's place. As long as we consider those questions worth answering, scientists will have jobs. There can be too many mediocre scientists (which I think is more in line with what you're talking about), but then the solution is to raise the bar for entry and wait for the tenured ones to die off or retire.

      --
      Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
    18. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Sax+Maniac · · Score: 1
      Come on, don't feed the trolls!

      "It is a lot of work, but the upshot is improved grammer and spelling skills that are lacking in the technical.

      I just laughed out load at this one, given the vast amount of writing errors that preceded it. Maybe the troller is right, we do need better social skills to recognize a troll - and not even a particularly good one at that. Zero points for subtlety, but ten for knowing the target and it working despite that.

      --
      I can explanate how to administrate your network. You must configurate and segmentate it, so it can computate.
    19. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Going by some of the comments around here, very high.

    20. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by siride · · Score: 1

      I think you miss the point. There is no objective way to say whether some prediction is right or wrong. The only means to judge correctness (or even make observations in the first place) are based on the terms proposed by the model. So scientific theories are effectively circular arguments that are probably right (because the universe probably isn't malicious), but can't be guaranteed to be right.

    21. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by No.+24601 · · Score: 1
      That's why their works live on when those of thousands of Aristotles fade into obcsurity.


      You, sir, are either a troll or otherwise exceedingly brain deficient. Aristotle and Plato are two of the major founding fathers of Western thought. You are probably the kind of ignoramus who insults Islamic thinking, Islamic countries and other non-Western cultures, but every time you do so you have only Socrates, Plato and Aristotle to thank for that fact that you live a different life. Of course, this is not something you would know reading computer manuals and hacking your Xbox all day, right? So go back to your small world and don't talk about things you don't understand.

    22. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by DarkDragonVKQ · · Score: 1

      I have to agree. I'm a psychology major and a computer sciences minor. The thing that makes psychology a science, and not another mind reading group of people out there is the science. We come up with theories. We test the theories in experiments and observational studies. We have emperical evidence that what we do works the majority of the time.

      --
      "I thought what I'd do was I'd pretend I was one of those deaf-mutes" ~ Laughing Man - GITS:SAC
    23. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by daniil · · Score: 1

      Thanks for feeding the troll. I got a good laugh out of the responses to your post :7

      --
      Man is a slave because freedom is difficult, whereas slavery is easy.
    24. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Got a link for that pig/elephant thing? It sounds more like an april fools joke to me, but stranger things have happened.

      Worse. It's a South Park episode.

    25. Re:Thanks for illustrating it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and sadly, us kids have only the perpetrators to go to for help, not unlike sending rape victims to rapist for therapy.

      It seems to be all about manufacturing a lipstick-friendly reality at the expense of a few generations. Try, try and try again and of course paid for with our tax dollars.

  13. How would this be... by thebdj · · Score: 2, Interesting

    any different then regular home schooling? The biggest deficiency in both will be a lack of interaction with other students. You know the sort of interaction that helps develop good social and behavioral skills when we are young, and yes, I can attest to many home-schooled individuals that I know who were sadly underdeveloped in these areas. Concerns from teachers on this are not really going to make me concerned; these are people who are worried they may be without jobs if this catches on too quickly or too much.

    Yes, there is a lack of PE; however, if you are done with school in half the time and/or can be much more flexible with when you are actually doing school work, children can find plenty of time to take on physical activities, which is really the main reason for having PE in the first place. I am not going to worry too much about the lack of music in the system either. Most of my grade school musical education was a complete waste. I barely remember the musical scale (though that might be better then most my peers), and I certainly wouldn't have felt cheated if I got to hear less Bach, Beethoven, et. al. I actually would be surprised if 1/2 the US population even realized they heard a piece by a famous composer in their lifetime.

    I think this is actually a good idea and a bad one at the same time. On one hand, I would be a bit worried about children not gaining certain social skills that develop during these early school years. On the other, I believe it would be a great thing for children who have problems focusing in class or for those who have had behavioral issues, because this is a far better alternative then the "alternative" schools I have heard stories about in most every school district.

    --
    "Some days you just can't get rid of a bomb."
    1. Re:How would this be... by will_die · · Score: 1

      That social problems is a major myth spread by groups opposed to home schooling, such as the NEA, where you get quotes such as "Home schooling is a form of child abuse because you are isolating children from human interaction."
      Sure you are going to get some kids with social problems that are in home schooling, same as you are going to get kids with social problems that attend a normal school, such as Columbine. However you look at studies you find there is no such difference. for instance a study by the University of Florida showed vido tapes of various kids at play and in group activies, home schooled and otherwise, to trained counselors. The counselors were unable to tell the differences between the two, except that the home schooled ones were better behaved.

    2. Re:How would this be... by Secrity · · Score: 1

      This may be better than regular home schooling because it is taught by real teachers and there are more resources available. Some parents do a good job at home schooling their kids, many parents -- not so much. There are potential socialization problems with regular school, home school, and on-line school. This would eliminate the bullying and harassment problems for "nerds" or gay students. If done properly, this could help those students who would normally lose interest in a class because they are more advanced than the rest of the class. I understand that music (and art) education has already been squeezed out of many traditional schools, this could be an opportunity to expose students to musical (and art) history at a modest cost to the school district.

    3. Re:How would this be... by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Certainly it's un-clever to say that all homeschooled children will have social problems, but it seems to be dependant on other circumstances, like the concentration of homeschool families, and the parents motivations.

      With the interaction of a homeschool co-op or group or whatever you call it in your area I'd be willing to guess there wouldn't be any noticable social dysfunction. Not all areas have that luxury though (think rural-ish places), and a saddening number of parents seem to homeschool their children strictly as a control method; this is where the problem arises, and it doesn't seem to be all that uncommon (disclaimer: I do live in what some call the bible belt of the east coast so I may be seeing this more than other places)

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    4. Re:How would this be... by Dan+Slotman · · Score: 1

      I was homeschooled from K-12. I can personally attest that everything you hear from both sides of the homeschooling debate are true in isolated cases. Yes, some children get an inferior education. Yes, some children have social problems. Yes, some children get straight-As and learn seven languages.

      However, homeschooling has the advantage of rewarding the effort invested. If a kid wants to learn, they are going to learn more about what they like when given the freedom and support to do so. All to often I see homeschooling used as a solution for failing students. In a few cases, this works, but in most cases, the damage of popular culture and public schooling has already been done--the child no longer wants to learn. If the child doesn't want to learn, homeschooling will never work as it is intended to.

      I belonged to a rural homeschool coop with approximately 30 regular attendees. Even so, I feel that I was socially stunted along with many of the others in the coop. In my opinion, interacting with others once or twice a week doesn't bring enough exposure to strange situations. I'm a moderately outgoing extrovert, but when I arrived at college I did have trouble making close friends at first because I tried too hard--I didn't realize that it wasn't normal to be starved for interaction and attention. It took me a couple years, but I feel that I've recovered from the social problems. (Though coming into college I would have said I didn't have any.) On the flip side, an homeschooled introvert has the opportunity to completely close themselves off from the world, leaving them with an inability to relate to strangers.

      That being said, I do not regret being homeschooled. I wouldn't make the same decision for my children should they ever come, but I absolutely got a first-rate education. Learning the subtlety and patience to engage with others later in life than most has made me a good listener although it is contrary to my nature. For every negative, there can be a benefit, just as for every benefit there are negatives. Like everything else in life, homeschooling is a trade off that is right for some but not for all.

    5. Re:How would this be... by zx75 · · Score: 1

      "I am not going to worry too much about the lack of music in the system either. Most of my grade school musical education was a complete waste. I barely remember the musical scale (though that might be better then most my peers), and I certainly wouldn't have felt cheated if I got to hear less Bach, Beethoven, et. al."

      You may not be interested in any sort of technical aspect of music or appreciate classical compositions, but that is no excuse for brushing off exposing our future young to such things. We *want* to expose children to as wide a variety of culture as possible, so that they can choose and find something that they are happy with. Taking that away because it isn't something that interests you is the worst thing we could do.

      I'm not a teacher, nor do I have any vested interest in public education at the moment (no kids, yet). However I am a great lover of classical compositions, and music in general and I abhor the thought of raising children without giving them at least the opportunity to decide whether this is something they would like or not. I play three instruments (piano, flute, and bass guitar), not many yet but I have started learning the clarinet, oboe, and saxophone, and it all started with grade school music class, playing the recorder and asking to take piano lessons.

      And in case someone gets the wrong idea, I am not a professional musician by any means. I'm a programmer, graduate of Computer Science, music is just my hobby.

      --
      This is not a sig.
    6. Re:How would this be... by NeoSkandranon · · Score: 1

      Interesting account, thanks for the reponse :)

      --
      If you can't see the value in jet powered ants you should turn in your nerd card. - Dunbal (464142)
    7. Re:How would this be... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We home schooled my 1st grader last year (okay, my wife did the work). We are not religious nuts, neither are we hippies.

      During the course of that year we met other parents who choose to home school. Some parents were terrible at it and did it out of a sense of fear - fear of their babies being corrupted or fear that their kids would not learn. Those parents usually did a poor job.

      Then there are the parents that wanted to offer more to their kids (as is their prerogative). Those parents usually travel with their children or expand the education area for their child in others way. I think we fit into this group. However, my wife worked her tail off to make that happen. For social activities, we joined a couple of co-ops and participated in several sports leagues. Finally my 5/6 year-old ran in several 5K races coming in under 30 minutes - so, yes, we even did PE (a 5/6 year-old does not run a sub-30 5K without running 3 miles at least every other day). My wife also is teaching my son piano.

      This year we decided to try public school again (they are not bad in our area). Since we home schooled, he had to take some standardized tests. Based on those tests, they want to place him in the 3rd grade - which we are opposed to. Let a kid be a kid!

      I really have no point, except to say that some kids kick-ass at home schooling other at public schools. To think that public schools are the only "good" way to learn and socialize is naive and arrogant.

      Think of home schooling as "open sourcing" education. Some can do it well and use the tools effectively. We should keep trying to push the boundaries of the establishment - we can drive quality, reform, and innovation.

    8. Re:How would this be... by tnk1 · · Score: 1

      The lack of PE bothers me not at all. When I was a kid, I lacked coordination and wasn't all that athletically inclined. I know, big surprise from someone on Slashdot. However, I wasn't a lazy couch potato, either. I like being active and getting out. Even when I was young, I enjoyed biking and being outside in general. Being fat and lazy was never my problem. For my part, PE class did nothing for me but act as a session where I could potentially be ridiculed for not having the skills to play a certain game. This really caused me to shun most team athletic situations entirely, even though, in theory, I may have enjoyed myself playing certain sports. The best thing that ever happened to me was getting out of public school and not having to take PE and deal with idiots. I go to the gym regularly as an adult, and when I was in college, I went to the gym five days a week to lift and do cardio. I didn't need a PE course forced on me to get me to want to take care of myself, and if I didn't want to work out, PE courses would have provided just the sort of negative feelings that would reinforced that viewpoint. I can safely say that I have an interest in taking care of myself in spite of my PE class, rather than because of it. Home school kids may well lack required PE classes, but I've never seen a school PE class that has taken a truely unmotivated, inactive fat ass and made them into a more healthy person. Generally, those kids just have their low self-esteem reinforced. That fat kid who takes forever to climb the rope probably would have done both better and even perhaps enjoyed that activity if he had the ability to take his time and get it right, and wasn't made to feel like an ass in fron of his peers. It's like throwing an athletically inclined amateur into a situation where he has to play against professional althletes and facing getting jeered because he can't keep up with them. I think that a home schooled child would actually have a better chance to get active and turn themselves around if they had the ability to work on their issues without the harsh scrutiny of those little monsters who are their peers. Yes, it would require that the home school parents actually make that part of their schooling, and there may be parents who will let that slide. Still, given the choice between a mandatory school PE class and nothing at all, I actually think some kids might come out of school better if they had no PE at all.

  14. Unions are bad m'kay by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All I heard when the teachers union responded was "OH GOD, if people can learn online what do parents need with teachers, or more importantly what will happen when the union revenues from membership fees start dropping!!"

  15. What a load of rubbish. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A lot of my education was self-directed study in front of a computer without any teachers, and I was in at top university doing a physics degree by the time I was 17, finished by the time I was 19 years old, was working at a major software company as a software architect with a multi-million dollar budget at 20 years old. I'm now 21 and a director and major shareholder of a different technology company. The folk I know who had similar educations are doing similarly well.

    Socially I'm fine as well: Got a long term girlfriend, plenty of friends, great family.

    Put bluntly, the schools can fuck off. - The only reason they're up upset is that they've realised new methods of education are better for today than the old fashioned schools they work in, so they're are out to protect their jobs at the expense of our young people's education and the profitability of nations.

    1. Re:What a load of rubbish. by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      Nice work, Mr AC, but you forgot to mention your chiselled good looks, athlete's toned body, IQ of 267, successful stand-up career at weekends, Nobel prize for Peace (at the age of 7), 4 honourary Doctorates, fluency in 19 languages, mastery of Karate and Dimac, ability to drink 28 pints of Guinness and three dozen oysters and still run 100 metres in under 10 seconds, and the fact that you are Immortal.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    2. Re:What a load of rubbish. by Funakoshi · · Score: 1

      I would expect you to be an exception to the rule. We had two kids doing CS when I was doing my undergrad who were both 16 in their 2nd year, both completely void of people skills. Also, success is defined differently by different people. Not everyone wants to be 21 and the major shareholder of a tech company (I wouldn't mind though :P).

      On a side note, I would say that two things about your post strike me as a possible indication that you aren't "fine" (not meant as a flame, just an observation).
      1) You posted anonymously. You seem to be passionate about this, but not enough so to put your name to it.
      2) You have some kind of crazy conspiricy theory going on the teachers and department of education.

      Moreover, I'm not entirely convinced that a bunch of geeks (myself included) are the best subset of society to be discussing whether or not home schooling is good/bad/whatever. I'm seeing a lot of shit about getting beat up and picked on in these posts. I was a geek growing up (we used to talk about a mud we played all the time at school :P) but I didn't get beat up. As a result, it will alter my opinion on the matter. If you ask someone who had a completely shit time in school about this concept, they will tell you its a great idea to get kids outta the schools. If you ask the quarterback of the football team that tagged the whole cheerleading squad, he will likely disagree.

      Oh, and to the general posting population, stop shitting on teachers. Anyone who has gone to a university or college and taken a class from a PhD should know that just because you are smart, doesn't mean you can teach. They are two different things. I commend teachers for shitty pay to "baby sit" people's kids and maybe try to teach them a thing or two.

    3. Re:What a load of rubbish. by OG · · Score: 1

      That's great for you, but not everyone has the same learning style/ability that you do. Alot of us here on Slashdot do, so you'll probably get many people agreeing with you. My sister was a teacher for a number of years and worked mainly in the lower maths. There's no way her students could have learned math without a classroom setting and one-on-one time with their teacher. Some kids need the structure that school provides, especially if they don't have any at home. For some kids, school provides resources that they might not otherwise have, such as the ability to take art classes, music classes, etc (again, I'm talking about kids who's parents aren't invested enough to help their kids explore options, so school at least provides a place where kids might be able to find something like that). Foreign languages are easier learned in a class situation, and many families wouldn't be able to hire private tutors to teach their kids a language.

      Basically, don't be so arrogant to think that no one will benefit from pre-university public schools. In some communities and for some kids, public school is still the best option for helping students succeed.

  16. No need to make friends by strider44 · · Score: 0, Troll

    After all, there's absolutely *no* reason for someone to be at school other than to learn is there? Who cares about forming relationships with other people, learning how to socially interact and getting exercise.

    I think that we should just lock our children up until they're twenty one and by then they'll have learnt everything they need!

    1. Re:No need to make friends by mobby_6kl · · Score: 1

      Of course, there's no way to form relationships outside schools. And there's only one place where kids can exercise, and that's the school gym!

      Why don't we just lock children up in schools until they're 21, so they can have all the social interaction and exercise the need?

    2. Re:No need to make friends by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      After all, there's absolutely *no* reason for someone to be at school other than to learn is there?

      Of course there is: to buy/sell drugs.

      Who cares about forming relationships with other people,

      Yea. Gotta know who you can safely beat up, and who you have to shoot.

      learning how to socially interact

      You mean, who you can safely insult, and who will beat the shit out of you?

      and getting exercise.

      Yep. Running from bullies.
      I'm surprised you didn't mention how crapping your pants keeps you regular. Just another benefit of public schools.

  17. Hmm... by badevlad · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The care of social education is shifted on parental shoulders.
    But most of them do not think about it at all.

  18. It can work. by rowama · · Score: 5, Informative

    The summary quote is misleading. Before I actually read the article, I envisioned hordes of children sitting in front of computers operating some sort of computer based training s/w. If you read the article, the children are not just sitting in front of a computer. There is an entire support structure built around virtualizing the important aspects of their learning experience. The support structure starts with a parent who cares and continues with curricula, equipment, supplies, and facilities provided by the city's education system.

    I know that homeschooling works, and works well, because my daughter is homeschooled. She scores very high on achievement tests. She is so socialized (outside of public school), we have to sometimes limit her socializing in order to spend non-educational time with her. When she started high school level curricula, we associated ourselves with an umbrella school for advise, transcripting, focused tutoring, etc. This took some of the anxiety off of us when we started considering college prep issues.

    This Chicago effort appears to merge the homeschooling concept with oversight by the city's education system. This closely parallels what we have found to be a very successful combination.

    1. Re:It can work. by Geoffreyerffoeg · · Score: 1

      Homeschooling is awesome. Every time I've heard someone mention homeschooling, it has turned out well.

      What we don't hear is the silent majority of parents who either don't have the time to homeschool their children (e.g., single-parent family or even two-parent families where both parents must work to make a decent living), or are unqualified to. If your parents barely graduated high school, how can they properly teach you? You'll have better luck hiring current high-schoolers as tutors.

    2. Re:It can work. by Moofie · · Score: 1

      It's almost like the Teacher's Union has a vested interest they're protecting, and trying to play the "For the Children!" card. But they're teachers! They'd never put their own interests above their students!

      Right.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    3. Re:It can work. by tcgroat · · Score: 1
      As a parent who uses the K-12 curriculum in a virtual charter-school setting, I appreciate the potential of this program. COVA has state-licensed teachers on staff to review the students' progress and confer with the parents. There are field trips. There is Art, Music, and Science in the curriculum. The Chicago program adds weekly in-person attendance to this formula. Parents must be dedicated and work with their children, or a wash out will soon follow in either program. If you think home-school means goofing off and getting by with token efforts and sloppy work, avoid these virtual charter schools!


      Because this program is a charter school of a school district, the teachers' union sees it as a threat similar to brick-and-mortar charter schools. Every student in a charter school program, virtual or physical, means one less student in traditional public schools. Per-pupil funding follows the students, threatening the status quo favored by the incumbents.

  19. so true by Adartse.Liminality · · Score: 5, Insightful
    'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,'
    That's so true it hurts
    A basic element of learning-teaching is the teacher, who just can't be replaced, the kids need far more than data, need also affection, support, guidance and motivation, I find hard to believe a computer will provide much of it, not to mention that we might see physical problems later and probably conductual issues.

    He and his mother say they look forward to building a better relationship through schoolwork.
    A common lie, every teacher knows...that it might be true for a lil' while, but later: "ain't doin' your work".

    don't get me started in the lack of arts, music and p.e.
    --
    Smokin' & rubying away
    1. Re:so true by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      the kids need far more than data, need also affection, support, guidance and motivation, I find hard to believe a computer will provide much of it,

      and from what I have seen in my Childs old school system, the teachers dont provide much of it either.

      Let's see where they are lacking..

      Her math teacher - Lost a large amount of the students homework, gave all the kids F's and told them that it is their responsibility to keep copies for when things like this happen. Great motivation there!

      Her English teacher - actively telling students they are "stupid". Gobs of affection and support there.

      I can go on. She was in the #3 Middle and high school district for Michigan. Rated highest and has the second largest population of rich students. (Making $80K+ means you are rich)

      Fellow students are raging assholes, parents dont care their kids are assholes. Teachers dont care that drug dealing is going on in the school because the kid's dad is the highest power lawyer here in town and he has spanked the school once already for having his brat arrested.

      Yeah, Schhols are good for kids.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    2. Re:so true by planetmn · · Score: 1

      And from what I saw in my own public school education: My math teachers - exceptional. My calculus teacher had formerly taught at the State's public university (U of MN). She taught us calculus incredibly well. So well in fact, that the entire class scored either a 4 or a 5 on the AP test that year. And this was her first year of teaching. My grammar teacher - exceptional. What made him so interesting was that he was also an assistant football coach. So he got all of the football players to take the class because they liked him, and he convinced them it was a good course to take. They learned a lot because he brought his friendliness and relationships from the field, to the classroom. I learned a lot from him as well. I never had any teachers that were like the ones you described. There were some hard ones, and ones who didn't provide much in the way of affection, but I can't recall a teacher ever calling a student "stupid" even if he or she was stupid. Some of my fellow students were raging assholes, and some were incredibly nice people, just like society, there was a mix. And part of the experience was learning how you deal with people who are different than you are. My point is that public schools are different all over the place. You complain about your child's schools, but how active were you in the School Board Meetings? If you were active, great, but if you weren't, it's like democracy, shaped by those who show up. Public schools are public, meaning that they are subject to a school board, elected by the population, of which anybody can run for a seat. Poor public schools are the fault of the public, not the teachers (though there are bad teachers and should be dealt with accordingly). I went to school in an affluent suburb of Minneapolis, which I'm sure means that I got a better public school education than a lot of people out there. But public education can, and does, work. The people I've found who have had the hardest time in a college and real-world atmosphere are the ones who were either home-schooled, or otherwise sheltered from society in some way, shape or form. Which isn't to say that all home-schooled students aren't successful, it's just that everyone I've met have had very poor social skills, to the point where they don't know how to respectfully interact with a customer. It's also been my experience that kids who went to private school run the full range from respectful and successful, to a failure who has a chip on his shoulder. -dave

      --
      /., where "Apple and Google provide Iran with nukes" will be refuted with "But Microsoft is a convicted monopolist"
    3. Re:so true by Chas · · Score: 1
      A basic element of learning-teaching is the teacher, who just can't be replaced,

      I call bullshit.

      affection

      I don't recall a lot of affection from my teachers. Must've been spread thin among the other 20-30 people in the class.

      support

      You ARE joking aren't you?

      guidance

      Okay, you ARE joking.

      motivation

      "Please hold on while I go and spend time with these other students" Yes. VERY motivational.

      I have an exceptionally low opinion of public education. 12 years of "hurry up and wait for everyone else" and a vast quantity of indifference from my teachers. And the collegiate environment is only slightly better.

      --


      Chas - The one, the only.
      THANK GOD!!!
    4. Re:so true by StyroCupMan · · Score: 1

      don't get me started in the lack of arts, music and p.e.

      Most of the musical education that a child will miss with the computer-based teaching can be supplied by watching TV and playing computer games.

      For example, I became very familiar with many famous clasical works like Wagner's "Kill the Wabbit" by watching Bugs Bunny cartoons, and the "Autopilot Waltz" by Strauss from playing countless hours of Elite.

      --
      If I may say so, life is a game, and there's so much to do and so few turns.
      -Reiner Knizia
  20. This is appropriate for some students ... but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There are many different learning styles. What works for one student doesn't work for others. For instance, a visual learner gains nothing from a lecture. Computer based learning works for some people. Indeed, for a few people, computer based learning is the only thing that works (other than a private tutor). For instance, some students can't get anywhere near a classroom full of students because of anxiety attacks.

    The problem I have with this is that students will be selected (or select themselves) for the virtual classroom based on criteria that have nothing to do with their appropriate learning style.

  21. Put the kool-aid down. by Shivetya · · Score: 4, Insightful

    And quit parroting the teacher union's crap they spew about home schooling.

    Look, anyone can find examples of students both home schooled and public schooled and use that as reasons to support their side of the story. Fact is home school kids do just fine in society, many scoring far higher than their peers.

    home schooling is villified by those who fear its results. Common methods include claims of lack of socialization with peers or religious dogma. Usually the "religious angle" is played out more up north than elsewhere.

    You can expect similar arguments from the Teachers Unions and those who are held in its thrall to any advance in education which leads to a loss of their power and influence.

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:Put the kool-aid down. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fact is home school kids do just fine in society, many scoring far higher than their peers.

      Scoring? In society?

      Are we talking about the same thing?

      Are you sure you know what "society" means?

    2. Re:Put the kool-aid down. by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      Fact is home school kids do just fine in society, many scoring far higher than their peers.

      In the town where we live, the public schools are excellent. Still, an appreciable portion of our friends and acquaintances home school, often stopping when their kids enter high school. As far as I know, none of them are doing it for religious reasons. They just want their kids to have an even better education than the public schools can manage (whether they actually achieve that is another story, but that's the honest intent). Every kid that I know that home schooled through elementary and junior high is excelling in high school.

      My kids are in the public schools (yay, public-funded Montessori!), but I'd probably home school em' if I could. Mom is a surgeon who minored in German and also studied history voraciously, dad is a comp sci guy who minored in physics and took polysci and philosophy courses for fun. Yeah, I think we're qualified to teach them a few things.

      And socialization? I'd be hard-pressed to find something I cared less about. I was "socialized" until it almost broke me. My kids aren't my clones, of course, but if they do happen to follow in my footsteps then I'll cross off "peer interaction" as something I'll never consider.

      If they wanted to be around other kids, we'd sign them up for non-school-league sports (or more precisely, we'd continue the ones they're already in). If they really need peer interaction for academic studies, we'd get them together with the home schooled kids. I haven't met one yet that I wouldn't want my kids to hang out with.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    3. Re:Put the kool-aid down. by jahudabudy · · Score: 2, Funny

      You can expect similar arguments from the Teachers Unions and those who are held in its thrall to any advance in education which leads to a loss of their power and influence.

      Seriously? You really think there is a cabal of educators out there that are spreading FUD in order to scare their thralls back into line in order to avoid a loss of power and influence? You, sir, are AWESOME! I would tip my hat to you, but you and I both know that is exactly what they want...

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    4. Re:Put the kool-aid down. by SharkJumper · · Score: 1
      Wow. Spot on.

      And quit parroting the teacher union's crap they spew about home schooling.

      Look, anyone can find examples of students both home schooled and public schooled and use that as reasons to support their side of the story.

      Here's mine: The church that I attend lets a homeschool organization rent our facilities once a week. They have about 100 kids come in for group lessons. Parents with specialized skills teach at that time. I don't know what all of the classes are, but I know that art is one of them because I'll come to church some Sundays to find the halls turned into art galleries.

      I've walked in to see orderly lines of students, older students willingly helping with the younger students (instead of beating them up). It is the students' responsibility to set up, break down, and clean the classrooms, and I've seen them doing this -- not just without complaint -- but eagerly and efficiently. If I happen to be at the church building on the day that they meet, the children look you in the eye and greet you politely. They say things like "pardon me", "please", "thank you." It's almost hard to picture if you've been through the public school systems. They have a bulletin board with all of the announcements for the organization in one of the halls. On the occasions when I've stopped to read it, I see that they have sports leagues, proms, and academic contests. The feel that I get is that there is all of the benefits of the public school system and few of the drawbacks.

      The school that I grew up in was far removed from the inner-city, graffiti-coated, gang-invested stereotype. But if I look back on my own "socialization", I have to wonder at the arguments against homeschool. It almost seems that it's a blind "quantity trumps quality" generalization -- that being properly introduced into society requires that I be surrounded by 30 other children in the classroom, and a sea of them during the lunch break. And one couldn't possibly function as a proper lady or gentleman in society without that. It seems more a Darwinian approach. The ones with certain traits survive and thrive. And many on Slashdot know that those traits aren't generally the traits that necessarily make you thrive in the real world. In fact, it usually takes a good deal of unlearning, unsocialization, before you realize that the world doesn't necessarily work the way it did in school.

      home schooling is villified by those who fear its results.

      You can expect similar arguments from the Teachers Unions and those who are held in its thrall to any advance in education which leads to a loss of their power and influence.

      And thus the reaction against this charter school. The fact is, it is not just this charter school. It is ALL charter schools. The online content is really a secondary issue. The real key here is the unionization. In the public school systems, the union holds a monopoly. Charter schools represent a threat because they fall outside of the monopoly's clutches. Teachers in a charter school can *gasp* be fired for poor performance. Like him or hate him, John Stossel did a very interesting program called Stupid In America: How Lack of Choice Cheats Our Kids Out of a Good Education. It was about the union opposition to charter schools. I remember that there was an interview with a teacher's union official in which the reporter tried to get the official to admit that there could be a union teacher that was not fit to teach and should be fired. The official would not say it, instead claiming that there was no such thing as a bad teacher and there was absolutely no good reason to fire one. Again, this doesn't ring true with my education experience.

      This is also one of the reasons there is nearly a universal backlash in the field of education against No Child Left Behind. This is a hate that crosses party lines, be

  22. Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These are the same teachers that say, "you cant educate a child at home and expect him/her to get the skills they need to succeed in the world." Yet home schooled kids are far better educated than public school educated kids. Teachers unions will always go against anything that does not use them as the delivery system.

    People want alternatives, Public schools suck, Teachers do not do their jobs, administrators do as little as possible to get by, the social atmosphere inside the school is very similar to that of a state prison. Middle School is simply 3 years of cruel punishment to kids and the public schools refuse to do anything to fix it.

    Parents are seeking out charter and private schools in droves because of the poor quality of public schools, this is another step that allows the child a huge amount of educational freedom. Unsupervised, yes a kid would rather play than learn something that they would consider useless to them at that time. (Social Studies, English, Math) but with supervision a kid that understands math like it was her native language can accellerate way past everyone else including her teacher and get the education she needs. I remember being berated by a science teacher in school because I disagreed. I brough in a paper that proved that I was right and I was sent to the office for being a smart-ass. Teachers in schools hate it when they encounter a child that is smarter than they are and they lash out at those kids to get them back in line. When a kid knows far more about astronomy and astrophysics than the 8th grade general science teacher knows that teacher should STFU instead of telling the kid to STFU.

    I am all for anything that eliminates the bad teachers, and that means upsetting the entire teachers union, so be it.

    Private schooled kids are better educated.
    Charter schooled kids are better educated.
    Home schooled kids are better educated.
    finally I will bet that computer schooled kids are better educated.
    when compared to public schools.

    It is a written in stone fact. only the fools believe otherwise.
    Unfortunately, most of the poor can not afford the $200-$300 a month for their kids private school tuition.

    1. Re:Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh, try $400-$500/month - even for Catholic schools that are supported by parishes. YMMV. Some generalized observations on home-schooled kids:

      1. They tend to act more maturely, since they have focused exposure to adult behaviour;

      2. They can sometimes be awkward with their non-home-schooled peers, who often act their age, leading to bemusement or confusion on the part of the home-schooled kids;

      3. More often than not, the reason for home-schooling is to provide a religious setting, which amplifies the behaviour in (1) above.

      Like it or not, the child's behavior and the environment the child is immersed in are critical factors when it comes to learning at a young age. Combined with home-schooling, I think the use of virtual schools can only enhance the learning experience.

      What *is* vexing is that for all the experimentation these "educationalists" were conducting in the 80s and 90s, they seem to suddenly be resistant to computer-assisted learning? Perhaps they see (rightly) that their value is diminishing.

    2. Re:Yeah right. by lawpoop · · Score: 1

      "Private schooled kids are better educated.
      Charter schooled kids are better educated.
      Home schooled kids are better educated.
      finally I will bet that computer schooled kids are better educated.
      when compared to public schools.

      It is a written in stone fact. only the fools believe otherwise.
      "

      Right now the people that are pulling their kids out of ppublic school to home school them are highly motivated and have the resources to do so properly. You're telling me that when *everybody*, every crack-addicted single mom and every set of end-times Evangelical parents are teaching their kids at home, those kids will be better educated? Call me a fool.

      --
      Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
      -- Pablo Picasso
    3. Re:Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Middle School is simply 3 years of cruel punishment to kids and the public schools refuse to do anything to fix it."

      What part of PUBLICLY FUNDED in PUBLIC school do you not understand?
      Schools don't have the resources to fix the problems because the public does not give them the funding or the authority to do so. It is our own damn fault.

      "I am all for anything that eliminates the bad teachers, and that means upsetting the entire teachers union, so be it."

      So here is a wacky idea...how about supporting your local public schools instead of turning your back on them. Maybe that will get rid of the bad teachers instead of creating more.
      I grew up in a public school district that was closely tied to the community (lower middle / middle class neighborhoods, were not talking rich here) and recieved far more financial and other support than the city-wide district and guess what? It outperformed every other school.

    4. Re:Yeah right. by minerat · · Score: 1

      My 8th grade science teacher didn't study to be a science teacher. She was english/social studies, but they needed someone to teach science. Fortunately she wasn't threatened by a kid knowing more than she did about earth science.

      --
      ...and you've eaten your pen. simply stunning.
    5. Re:Yeah right. by professionalfurryele · · Score: 1

      "You're telling me that when *everybody*, every crack-addicted single mom and every set of end-times Evangelical parents are teaching their kids at home, those kids will be better educated?"

      Well, if these parents did the governments job for them and kept them at home, the public schools would probably improve.

    6. Re:Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Attitudes towards public education like yours are the reason public education is heading for a fall. Don't blame the teachers; they've got a thankless, low-paying job that the good ones do out of a sense of duty and love. They sure could use some attention, in the form of parent participation and a healthy dollop of public funding. Either you want to educate kids or you don't--public schools can afford to be choosy (though for enough money they'll take your dumb kid) and that's why they appear to do better. They just don't let the poorly-performing kids in. Public schools can't do that. So if you want a two-tiered society where the smart and rich kids build higher and more expensive fences to keep out the rest.

      Public education is broken and needs work. The last thing we should do is give up on it, because then everyone's standard of living drops and we become a second-rate country of uneducated lower-middle class sheep.

    7. Re:Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing that makes all those forms of education better is really quite simple. Parent participation. A smart kid will learn anyway, given the chance. Other kids may need direction. Almost no kid will do well if his parents don't give a damn. Public schools are large institutions that parents just can't be bothered getting involved in. Make the schools smaller and you can achieve more with less money simply because parents will get involved.

    8. Re:Yeah right. by lbmouse · · Score: 1

      My 8th grade science teacher didn't study to be a science teacher. She was english/social studies, but they needed someone to teach science. Fortunately she wasn't threatened by a kid knowing more than she did about earth science.

      My 8th grade sex-ed teacher didn't study to be a sex-ed teacher. She was english/social studies, but they needed someone to teach sex-ed. Fortunately she wasn't threatened by a kid knowing more than she did about fellatio.

      Of course I went to a Catholic school taught by nuns.

    9. Re:Yeah right. by kabocox · · Score: 1

      People want alternatives, Public schools suck, Teachers do not do their jobs, administrators do as little as possible to get by, the social atmosphere inside the school is very similar to that of a state prison. Middle School is simply 3 years of cruel punishment to kids and the public schools refuse to do anything to fix it.

      I'll agree with the atmosphere, but I'll disagree with private, charter schools, or home schooling automatically being better. I liked public school when there. I went to public school in Arkansas. When I went to college, I learned how much that I learned compared to others through out the state, foreign students, and out of state students. I was really startled when most of American History 1/2 and World History 1/2 were mainly rehashes of public school education. The same thing happend all through out my math minor as well. After being told all through school how awful public education was, I found it comforting to find out that I had learned more than these private & charter school kids. I felt that I understood something then. Public school education isn't that bad. The Teachers Union loves to have the idea that public education needs more money and that our students aren't top notch.

      I wish school kids could vote and could vote away teachers, school adminstrators, school board officals, and school bonds with little purpose other than funding teacher salary increases. You'd be surprised how often the students would forcibly vote against their education. Personally, I'd like all the hidden educational taxes to be stopped and everyone to see an upfront itemized bill of how much public education actually costs them. Public education is most likely costing you money reguardless if you even have children in school. I'm more concerned about reducing the costs of public education.

    10. Re:Yeah right. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My 9th grade driver's-ed teacher didn't study to be a driver's-ed teacher. He was PE, but they needed someone to teach driver's-ed. Fortunately he wasn't threatened by a kid driving in the future. Oh wait...

    11. Re:Yeah right. by Mean+Variance · · Score: 1
      People want alternatives, Public schools suck, Teachers do not do their jobs, administrators do as little as possible to get by, the social atmosphere inside the school is very similar to that of a state prison. Middle School is simply 3 years of cruel punishment to kids and the public schools refuse to do anything to fix it.
      At least you're not generalizing. I doubt a sampling of schools across demographics and geographies would bear that out as the absolute truth. There are lousy schools, teachers, administrators. I have seen them, so have you. There are some good ones in each of those categories, and there are some excellent ones.

      The teacher's union is a double-edged sword. They get so pent up in the rallying cry for an issue, be it salary, politics, that dissenters are frowned upon. On the other hand many within the unions work hard to genuinely get a voice for the teachers. That's the ying and yang of the union, any kind of union.

      I know a vice principal in Fresno at the "good" high school. By that I mean the upper-income demographic where most kids graduate and go to college. Even there, she commonly works 10+ hour days dealing with problem kids. Most often, the problem is the parents. They don't give a crap about their kids, themselves, or anyone else. It's the school's job to raise the kids. I can imagine it's only worse at the other 9 high schools.

      I believe in having choice to educate kids in the way that the parent sees fit. But that doesn't imply that public schools, all publics schools, are de facto crap.

      Private schooled kids are better educated. Charter schooled kids are better educated. Home schooled kids are better educated. finally I will bet that computer schooled kids are better educated. when compared to public schools. It is a written in stone fact. only the fools believe otherwise.
      Now your just making statements as if they're religious dogma.
    12. Re:Yeah right. by Penguin+Programmer · · Score: 1
      Private schooled kids are better educated.
      Charter schooled kids are better educated.
      Home schooled kids are better educated.
      finally I will bet that computer schooled kids are better educated.
      when compared to public schools. ...
      Unfortunately, most of the poor can not afford the $200-$300 a month for their kids private school tuition.


      So, maybe we should be rallying behind _improving_ public schools, rather than developing alternatives. Every child should have the opportunity to get a proper education. The fact that rich kids can afford to go and get good educations at private/charter schools while poor kids are limited by the public schools they must attend is sad and disgusting.

      I'm very glad that I live in a place where private/charter schools are extremely rare and the public system provides a fairly good education. If only everywhere was like here.
    13. Re:Yeah right. by Tweekster · · Score: 1

      or we should disband the public school failure as it is a failure and develop a competitive market place.

      Public schools get 6K per semester per student for their education. That would be far better used at a private school instead of wasted on new uniforms for whatever team (year and year).

      I dont care about football, why should that activity have budget 3 times larger than the entire art department.

      --
      The phrase "more better" is acceptable English. suck it grammar Nazis
    14. Re:Yeah right. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      What part of PUBLICLY FUNDED in PUBLIC school do you not understand?
      Schools don't have the resources to fix the problems because the public does not give them the funding or the authority to do so. It is our own damn fault.


      Totally wrong. Public schools are overfunded. Look at any comparison between Catholic schools and public schools; Catholic schools cost far less per pupil than their public counterparts, yet the quality of education is far superior. I went to both, and the public schools were a joke. I was learning Latin in 7th grade in Catholic school; you'll never see something like that in public schools.

      The problem with public schools is not funding, it's the way the funding is spent. Most of it is wasted on incompetent administration and sports programs, rather than teachers' salaries. The other problem with public schools is this idiotic idea that everyone deserves an education, no matter how much of a troublemaker they are. In adulthood, when someone commits even small crimes like theft, they go to jail. In school, you basically have to kill someone to get expelled. How can you expect kids to learn (or want to learn) when they're surrounded by a bunch of thugs? Private schools don't generally allow thugs to attend, so they solve that problem handily.

    15. Re:Yeah right. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Either you want to educate kids or you don't--public schools can afford to be choosy (though for enough money they'll take your dumb kid) and that's why they appear to do better. They just don't let the poorly-performing kids in. Public schools can't do that. So if you want a two-tiered society where the smart and rich kids build higher and more expensive fences to keep out the rest.

      This is EXACTLY what needs to be done. Get the stupid kids out of the system so they stop bothering the smart ones.

      They actually do this in other countries, like Germany, and it works well. There's separate schools for different kids: the smart ones go to one school to prepare them for college, the other kids go to different schools that are basically more like trade schools or remedial schools.

      Segregation isn't always a bad thing. There's no law forbidding discrimination based on intelligence.

      If companies were required to be run the way public schools are, they wouldn't be able to require any sort of qualifications (degree, certification) for any job, and even worse, they wouldn't be able to fire employees who commit sexual harassment or physical assault in the workplace. You think a company like that would survive long? Then why do we run our schools that way?

    16. Re:Yeah right. by tompaulco · · Score: 1

      Part of the problem with better funding public education is that parents understandably care more about their own kids than about the rest of the kids in the country. An extra $300 a month means a much better education for your own kid if you send them to a private school. On the other hand, if they contributed an extra $300 a month to a public school, all of the kids would benefit equally. That helps society, but it doesn't help your own kid stand out, which is what most parents want.
      It is also my opinion that $300 invested in a private education would result in more improvement than $300 in the public schools, because I believe the goverment to be a poor steward of educational (or any) funds, and incredibly inefficient in applying the funds.
      My state just approved teacher's raises for the first time in a long time. That is excellent news. Oh wait, they only approved the raises, they didn't actually fund them.

      --
      If you are not allowed to question your government then the government has answered your question.
    17. Re:Yeah right. by falcon9x · · Score: 1

      Before I begin, I'd like to say that I graduated from a public high school and went on to a state university to get my degree. I agree that many public schools are in trouble. I also agree that teachers can be bad. However to say that, "People want alternatives, Public schools suck, Teachers do not do their jobs, administrators do as little as possible to get by..." seems a little over the top.

      I am sure that you will find that those areas that are more affluent tend to have better performing students. There are multitude of factors for this, which include more opportunities, better teachers, etc. I am NOT saying that poor people are stupid, but I am a firm believer that they are not given as many opportunities to advance themselves because of their circumstances (i.e. they need to worry more about whether they'll be able to afford the rent/food/whatever over their grade in class). The reason more affluent areas tend to have the better teachers is because they tend to pay more.

      I was lucky enough to go through my high school years in a more affluent county and I can say that I have been very happy with my public school education. The computer science teacher I had was a great mentor and I honestly had no major problems with the other teachers I took classes with. That being said, I did hear horror stories about other teachers, so I know that bad teachers exist. But to say that public schools in general suck, and that teachers don't do their jobs, and administrators barely do enough to get by is false. Again, I'm sure it occurs, but it doesn't occur everywhere.

      You also said that:
      Private schooled kids are better educated.
      Charter schooled kids are better educated.
      Home schooled kids are better educated.
      finally I will bet that computer schooled kids are better educated.
      when compared to public schools.


      Well I can't really say anything about charter schools, but I did have a conversation with a friend of mine regarding private schools. I personally believe that the reason private schools are "better educated" is because the more affluent kids tend to go there and they happen to have more opportunities. With public schools, kids who don't want to be in schools are forced to go there, and those kids will perform badly, and the schools "performance" is lowered. Whereas private schools can just kick out any kid that they don't like.

      I believe that home schooled kids do better because of the higher level of parental involvement. If you look at kids in a public school that have really involved parents, you'll notice that those kids also tend to perform very well.

      So we have two factors that I've identified (among many others) that heavily influence a student's performance. Socioeconomic status and parental involvement. Private schools get those students with a higher socioeconomic status, while home schooled students have the higher parental involvement. Public schools are basically forced with what's left. It seems that it's no wonder that public schools "perform" poorer than their private/home counterparts.

      Naturally there will always be exceptions to the rule, but I'm sure you'll find that most of what I've just said to be "written in stone fact..."

    18. Re:Yeah right. by AnyoneEB · · Score: 1
      A smart kid will learn anyway, given the chance.

      s/smart/motivated/
      I know plenty of smart unmotivated kids. In fact, a lot of kids tend to sorta burn-out in high school because they realise that the work is ridiculously simple and cannot be bothered to do it.

      --
      Centralization breaks the internet.
  23. Re:Agree Completely by the_pooh_experience · · Score: 1
    I have to read *3* *books* *a* *week* on average. Not picture books either I assue you. It is a lot of work, but the upshot is improved grammer and spelling skills that are lacking in the technical (missing noun). As for those that say "you will be working at mcdonalds(no capitalization of proper noun)" , I'm going on to so a PhD in socialolgy where I'll be line for tenure where I have a much more rewarding job then being a science freak or an engineer.

    Oh the irony. This coming to you from a "science freak", so what do I know. I guess I should check my contract because the wool must have been pulled over my eyes when they claimed to have given me tenure (evidently tenure is only given to non-technical degree holders).

  24. The major concern, IMHO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The major concern, I feel, is not that the new system will be ineffective but the level of radiation and exposure the kids will be subjected to, on top of the hours spentt watching TV and playing games. Even as adults- I sometimes find myself slightly disoriented after some hours spent coding or even just plain browsing.

    The most effective education and learning, I believe has always been delivered in the most 'traditional' of ways despite what many experts may think.

    1. Re:The major concern, IMHO by nkv · · Score: 1
      The most effective education and learning, I believe has always been delivered in the most 'traditional' of ways despite what many experts may think.

      Recently, I've been trying to learn Arabic from a teacher near where I live. I have started and given up a couple of times before mainly owing to lack of motivation. I figured that going to concrete classes would keep me running. Anyway, the last time I started, my teacher was someone who seriously believed in the traditional ways of teaching the language (memorising verb conjugations etc.). The modern variant which I sampled 2 days ago relies on giving students sample texts and teaching them things as they go along.

      There are quite a few students of the language where I come from and I can say quite confidently that all the ones who studied the language in the boring traditional way are capable of speaking quite eloquently and the more creative ones can even write poetry. The ones who got the pre digested package can't translate a simple sentence without referring to their books.

  25. Financial Interest by CharlieG · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Just remember that the Union has a significant interest in opposing ALL charter schools. From what I can see, most teachers unions have never met a Charter School that they liked....

    Wonder why? Is it the kids, or is it the jobs/pay of the teachers...

    --
    -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    1. Re:Financial Interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the main issue with charter schools that people seem to miss is that they suck money from the public school system. They get the money that was meant for the public schools, so if you think public schools are bad and underfunded now, wait till a few charter schools pop up around the neighborhood. The kids stuck in public school will be even worse off.

    2. Re:Financial Interest by CharlieG · · Score: 1

      Of course there is also the case that 1)The suck, but 2)Are NOT underfunded, but that they waste funds

      Want a good joke? I'll look at NYC. Did you know that the best school districts (and there are some that are VERY good) actually get significantly LESS money per pupil than the horrible districts?

      Did you know that the big 3 specialized High Schools (BxSci, Stuy, and Tech) get WAY less money than average?

      Perhaps it IS time to suck the money out of the underperforming schools, and get the same results by paying the "teachers" minimum wage to watch the kids. Heck, the kids aren't learning anything anyway - and if we give their parents a voucher, maybe they will spend it on a school that WORKS.

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
    3. Re:Financial Interest by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of COURSE they get less money than the horrible districts, you dipshit! What do you propose, some kind of bizarro "free market" idea where the schools that are doing the best get the most assistance, and those that are struggling to get by should be cut off to fend for themselves? Sort of a "tough love" system of public infrastructure?
        "Hey, your roads are bad even though we gave you $20,000 for road repairs. Next year you're only getting $10,000. That way, maybe you'll get that WILL TO SUCCEED like the guys in the next county. Their roads are so well-cared for that we're increasing their road-repair funding from $1,000,000 to $1,010,000!"
        Oh, and count me out for the "Teacher's Unions are conspiring against me" nutjob crowd. I can't see them as very fucking powerful when they're hard pressed just to get $20k salaries for their members. That's shit money! If they had any real power, that number would be three times as high. Instead they're just a political football to be bought off with false promises by one politician or another every election, just a name to put on a commercial, and then forgotten about afterwards.

    4. Re:Financial Interest by CharlieG · · Score: 1

      How about the SAME money? BUT the big thing it shows is it's NOT MONEY to the classroom that makes the difference (BTW another interesting factoid - a greater amount of money makes to to the classroom in the better districts, even though the get less money.. Wonder of the bureaucrats have anything to do with THAT

        - Oh, and 20K/year? hahahahahahahahahahaha Maybe starting. But after spifs, the average teacher around here is in the 70s, and in Nassau, up in the 80s to 90s

      For a part time job

      --
      -- 73 de KG2V For the Children - RKBA! "You are what you do when it counts" - the Masso
  26. Teacher's Union in Canada by roman_mir · · Score: 4, Interesting

    In Canada, the Teacher's Union uses its powers to hold this country hostage once in a while. Public school teachers are basically government employees, they get summers for vacations, they get benefits, above average salaries, and they often (just about every year) exercise their union powers on the people of this country. When they strike during the school-year, they are putting millions of families into really difficult situations - the kids have to stay home, someone has to be there or someone has to be hired or a parent has to stay home, if it is a single-parent family, then it is even more difficult (I have no kids, but I see this all the time.) The kids' education suffers, they have nothing to do during the strike, many of them can go to the streets and do whatever, join gangs maybe?

    In Ontario, the provincial liberal government is gutless, they always cave in to ANY union, and so they just give away our money for no reason, and the unions know this and they take advantage of this even more than in the rest of the country. Teachers get more 'professional development' days (during business days) in Ontario than anywhere else it seems like and they don't really spend those days for any development, and this happens while in private organizations PD days are taken during weekends. Those who bother to show up for those days don't really learn anything new, or if there is anything, it is all about the administrative part. In reality, teachers have entire summers that could be dedicated to 'improvement' in their profession, but what they do, is get summer jobs and make even more money instead. (they earn all of their money in the winter, but those ARE the money for the entire year, but they get to work 2 jobs and make double during the summer, isn't that great for them?)

    So whenever I hear that a teacher's union opens their collective mouths to say something, all I can think of is that the parents, the kids, and the rest of the society is about to get a shaft.

    (Ontario, you have to wake up and fire this union, fire those teachers who are lazy and useless and get yourself into a better alternative deal.)

    1. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by Arketype · · Score: 2, Insightful

      DO you like what happened to our school system while the teachers were fighting? Do you think it is wise to completely ignore the crumbling of our education system, while we demonize the union? Regardless of your personal politics, it is a fact that nearly every major advance in workers rights has come from unions excerising their might. If you abolish the teachers union, per your suggestion, we will be left with an impotent mouse standing against the giant behemoth of government/business. How well do you think that would stack up for the public. Once again: Almost ALL gains in worker rights have come from unions. Do you enjoy your eight hour workday? Thank the unions. Do you enjoy worker safety legislation which requires your employer to train you and keep you safe? Thank the unions. Do you enjoy sick leave, maternity leave, vacation time? Unions. So what is your suggestion to the teachers. Don't strike? Just let everything go down the crapper? What... please give a concrete answer as to what they should do when, say... Mike Harris closed hundreds of schools, upping the class size all over the province? Is that A-OK when class size goes up from an already high 28-30, to a whopping 33-36? How about when preparation time was cut in half? Or when Harris suggested that we fill the shortage of teachers with UNTRAINED teacher-helpers, whom we can pay less? Yeah, your right, the teachers union is just a big baby and all those problems are insignificant. DONT BLAME THE UNION, it is like killing the messenger of bad news. The school system is being torn apart whether you notice or not. The reason that the union is villified is because they are MAKING YOU NOTICE.

    2. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by kabocox · · Score: 1

      So whenever I hear that a teacher's union opens their collective mouths to say something, all I can think of is that the parents, the kids, and the rest of the society is about to get a shaft.

      This is why I'd want upfront itemized billing for public education. I'd like to see exactly how much my kids teachers are making through me. I'd to have to buy books and other things similiar to what we had to do in college. I'd like to see fees for each lab type class that they have ot use. I'd also love to have students be able to be far more active in school education, administration, and government. I knew more about what the teachers had in plan and what was going on around town while in public school than I do know. I could have been a far more informed voter and I'd have always voted against any taxes are pay increases that teachers believe that they need. I'd say give them a cost of living increasing an maybe a small 4-5% increase every other year as a raise, but they start off making more than alot of parents. (That's also going to be a sticking point. No parent will want their teachers making more than they do. Personally, I think that we need a year round school year with 1-2 weeks of vacation during the Christmas/New Year and some more random holidays. It's basically what us adults have to put up with. Why shouldn't our kids have to learn that one as well?

    3. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Certainly unions USED TO BE usefull long time ago. Today, they are nothing but a cover up for the lazy, incompetent people, who believe they should be paid above market wages.

      Those people who are teachers that are hard working and competent do not need the union, often do not agree with the union and could make above average wages in any system.

      Do I enjoy my 8 hour work days, sick days, maternity leave and other benefits? You are talking to the wrong guy, fella, I work on contracts and I am paid by the hour and I have to PERFORM, otherwise I'll be out of work in no time and noone will hire me.

      --

      Mike Harris, oh the great Daemon. The first guy in Ontario government who actually did what he promised and was chastised for it. From my point of view the only thing that Harris did that was stupid was renting the 407 to Spain for 99 years. Yes, that was a dumb idea, but everything else was a ok (and it was as promised.) Now we have McGuinty, a liberal, who has broken every single one of his what, 170-180 promises. The only thing that this dude is doing is caving in to any pressure from any union.

      I forgot the name of the city politician (a female,) just about a month ago she suggested, that the city may want to remove some of the government unions, such as the teachers and TTC unions. She was chastised just for a suggestion to look at this possibility.

      Today is not 100 years ago, we have to understand that unions today are not good for business and not really doing anything good for the hard working people, they are a shelter for the lazy and the incompetent and they are forcing OUR tax money down the drain.

      And by the way, you are saying that increasing the class size from 28 to 33 is really such a huge deal, I would like to see the proof of that. I don't believe that it is a big deal at all actually, I think that anything lower than 40 kids in a class is just fine and dandy and you will have hard time convincing me otherwise.

      Personally I would like to stop paying my ridiculously high property taxes to support public schools at least until the union is removed from power. At this point teaching the kids maybe should be just moved into the 'essential services' area and it should be made illegal for the teachers to strike during the school year.

      And, oh yes, move the professional development days into the summer time.

    4. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      This is why I'd want upfront itemized billing for public education. I'd like to see exactly how much my kids teachers are making through me. I'd to have to buy books and other things similiar to what we had to do in college. - impossible to achieve this with the current government, who are sucking the unions' collective penises, while the tax payers are getting shafted.

      Personally, I think that we need a year round school year with 1-2 weeks of vacation during the Christmas/New Year and some more random holidays. It's basically what us adults have to put up with. Why shouldn't our kids have to learn that one as well? - not a bad idea at all. I was schooled in the former USSR, I remember we had summer schools. It was more of practical stuff during summer, more field trips as well, more interesting stuff we even had day-time siestas. Parents had a choice to use the summer schools or not to use them, but the choice was there.

    5. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by Pinkybum · · Score: 1

      This post gets modded 5, Interesting you have got to be fucking kidding me. Teachers in the US do not get "above average salaries" (maybe they do in Canada but I doubt it). If I went into teaching I would have to take a 50 percent pay cut. How the hell are well qualified people going to be attracted into that profession?

    6. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because of the teachers union, the teachers are basically immune from being fired, because the union will strike if it's not for a reason that they agree with. Isn't that nice, they pick what they can or cannot be fired for.

      I know a lot of F-ed up teachers that cripple the education of their students that you can't do anything about. You go to the department head, they wash their hands of it. You go to the principal, they say "take it up with the teacher".

      The union makes sure that no on has the balls to actually hold teachers accountable.

    7. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1
      I know a lot of F-ed up teachers that cripple the education of their students that you can't do anything about.
      ....And I know good teachers that educate thier students who have F-ed up parents who would see them fired for teaching "evolution" and "history". The blade cuts both ways....
      --
      Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
    8. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      This post gets modded 5, Interesting you have got to be fucking kidding me. Teachers in the US do not get "above average salaries" (maybe they do in Canada but I doubt it). If I went into teaching I would have to take a 50 percent pay cut. How the hell are well qualified people going to be attracted into that profession? - I was specific that I was talking about Canada, not the US. Education is a calling, noone is ever going to make huge salaries in this field. How do we make sure that well qualified people go into this field? We open the market, remove the union and let the teachers be actually rewarded for performance.

    9. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A teacher has much more influence, or rather, complete influence on how their class is taught. They can do a lot more damage than an extremist parent (however annoying they may be).

      When I talk about holding teachers accountable, that of coarse doesn't mean that I think they should be at the mercy of the parents. I understand that that can cause many problems too. But the system as it is, at least here, it one where everyone in the school administration washes their hands clean of anything that has to do with a problem with a teacher. No matter what, the response is "take it up with the teacher," even if you have already done that. Short of physical abuse, they just refuse to listen.

    10. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck? "Open the market?" That'll get more teachers in, will it? What, do you think Teacher's Unions are actually HOLDING DOWN TEACHER'S SALARIES? You are a fucking idiot, man.

        I love the "education is a calling" thing, BTW. Oh, we're all Adam Smith, and how it's not for the love of baking that we get our daily bread, and why yes, the pursuit of self-interest improves the lot of everyone, etc., all up until the moment we get to teachers. Then suddenly it's an about-face, and they should be happy to get paid less for more and harder work, because we rely on the assumption that teachers should all be selfless and altruistic comrades, giving up on their own interests for the betterment of everyone else.

    11. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      It is YOU, who is an idiot though, because you don't realize that the unions cause equalization of salaries accross the board, no matter what the performance is AND it causes the useless, lazy, incompetent 'teachers' to be protected from getting fired.

      Yes, I think for the harder working teachers, for the more talented ones, the unions are totally unnecessary, but they are a blessing for those teachers, who I would not let teach a goat, not only human kids.

    12. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so you have a vague idea of what the hell you're talking about. Yes, the unions can cause an equalization of pay. That is a side effect of what the unions do when they fight AGAINST pay cuts and FOR pay increases, and the hiring of more teachers. Without unions, the pay for teachers, across the board, would decrease. A few teachers might make more, but most would make far less. Many would flee the field, so how in the fuck would that increase the number and quality of available teachers again? Oh, that's right. It WOULDN'T. It would make the current problems far worse.
        Many people who'd like to teach cannot do so as it is, because the pay is too poor. The unions prop up the wages so the problem is lessened. A starting teacher gets about as well paid as a star teacher with years of success, but that only serves to lower the barriers to becoming a teacher, which are still too high for the market to really sustain. Face it, the only reason teaching is a calling is because the market forces on the other side (the non-union side) won't raise wages to a level high enough to attract anyone who isn't either stubbornly determined to teach, and not so skilled as to get a far higher-paying job elsewhere. Because wages don't rise (which has nothing to do with the unions) the pool of teachers will never grow swiftly enough to meet our needs.
        The biggest obstacle to fixing this is not the unions, but the administrative bureacracy of the school boards and the desire of many in politics to dismantle the public school system entirely.

    13. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Without unions, the pay for teachers, across the board, would decrease. A few teachers might make more, but most would make far less. - so what you are saying is that we are OVERPAYING for these teachers right now, we, the tax payers, are paying MORE than the MARKET VALUE, correct? Well cry me a river! I don't want to pay them more than their market value.

      Those who deserve to be paid better because they are the top performers, their market value is underappreciated right now. What is their incentive to be all they can be if they cannot get ahead of those, who shouldn't be teaching in the first place?
        HA!

      GET RID OF THE UNIONS! The wages may go down first, many may LEAVE that profession, but the best ones will actually start growing fast, and then, if there are not enough teachers, the wages will go up, because that is what happens when there is more demand than supply.

    14. Re:Teacher's Union in Canada by manly_15 · · Score: 1

      While everyone's entitled to their own experiences, I must disagree with your assertation that those in the educational profession make above-average salaries.

      From the first perspecitve, I have a close family member who is the principle of a school. He started as a teacher then worked his way into the management side of things. How he describes it is that in most government jobs you are trading salaries and bonuses for job security. For example, while most people at an equilvalent management position in a corporation would have a company-provided car, this doesn't happen in education. You have to look beyond just the base salary and include the values of bonuses and equipement essentially given to the employee. He did mention once that while *teachers* in the US make significantly less than their Canadian counterparts, that *management* positions in the US make significantly more. Perhaps a redistribution of funds in the American system is in order.

      I also know another person who used to work in IT, but now teaches tech and math in high school. He makes significantly less money than he did before, but feels that he is making more of a real world difference instead of being just another code monkey.

      Of course, all of this is hearsay. I'd love to see some stats with perfomance reviews and such - especially with different governments at the helm :)

      I'm still in my undergraduate degree, and am still fresh with memories of the public (Canadian) schools I went to. While some teachers were amazingly great, some were "average" and some were pretty horrible. But looking back, I think that's a valuable lesson. Regardless of where you work (I see this in most of the jobs that I've worked at), you have the great, the average, and the poor. Being able to work with any individual to complete a task is what's important.

  27. Online Universities-correspondence courses. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well aside from the fact that your attitude goes counter to the "The Internet will save us. It's good for everything", slash-meme. You sound like someone who would have had a problem with correspondence courses (pre-internet). An accredited online school is just as good as any other (some are affiliated with brick and morter schools). Maybe what you should have said is either "I don't understand alternative education, so I'll dismiss it". Or "My education was a regular school which is naturally better than anything else, so I'll dismiss any faux-school alternatives".

  28. Re:Agree Completely by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    As for those that say "you will be working at mcdonalds" ,
    I'm going on to so a PhD in socialolgy where I'll be line for tenure
    where I have a much more rewarding job then beeing a science freak or
    an engineer.


    translation : I'll be a manager at a McDonalds.

    You do realize that the number of liberal arts phd's around big campuses is huge? I know of 2 people I was good friends with that went to University of Michigan and one has a PHD in political science, the other has a phd in Philosiphy and a phd in music history.

    He is in line for tenure as well, 15th in line, in about 15 years he MIGHT get it but right now with some of the cuts made he works part time tutoring students and still lives in the campus housing and looks like a 38 year old gen-X hippie. He is a great friend, but still dreams of driving a bmw and living in the big stone house near campus (IT WILL NEVER HAPPEN!)

    That is the other path that can and will happen, when financial cuts come the "foofy" classes are the first cut. I can go to any resturant in Ann Arbor and get served by a myriad of Masters and Doctorate degrees.

    It's more of an addiction to the campus and College lifestyle than seeking an education. Many of the career students in the wierder degree fields are there to fill their addiction.. IT exists everywhere though. RMS was a career student, and the IT building of almost any campus has some hermit that has several degrees but still lives there. (same for the physics and chemistry building as well.)

    I'm just saying that going to be a professor is great, but dont bank on your tenure until you have it in your hand. With your education level you should know that trusting fellow humans is folly at best.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  29. The Union opposes it? by Aladrin · · Score: 2

    Disclaimer: I don't like unions.

    For the Teacher's Union to oppose this is like a cow opposing a new steak restaurant. Of COURSE they don't want it. The reasons given will probably not be the real reasons, either.

    Quite simply, this means fewer teachers and probably lower pay for teachers as well.

    And since when do teachers have responsibility for our children? Oh, that's right, it used to be that way and recently we've taken away all their power. They can't discipline children, they can't even give them a good stern talking to without a parent claiming they are singling out their child. And now they think they have the right to dictate WHERE children are taught? Yeah, right.

    If a parent wants to send their child to a virtual school, LET THEM. It's FAR better than home schooling. There WILL be interactions with other people, just not interactions as people born in the 50s require. My best friends are on the internet, not local. (I'm 29.) You CAN learn to work with others at a distance. You CAN learn to appreciate that others have feelings. In fact, with the internet being what it is, I find it vital that they DO learn that skill. Many people today hide behind the internet and use it to 'grief' people, inside games and outside.

    This type of school will require a different teaching style, of course. There will have to be more emphasis on group projects and individual accountability within groups. I have seen very little of that in public schools, and not much more in college, despite the 'group project' class we had for programming.

    And this isn't saying there won't be field trips and occasional group physical projects. There just won't be an official classroom to have to go to every day.

    Also, let's not forget the time savings. Riding the bus to school is an hour trip. Another hour getting home. That's 2 more hours for studying, socializing, or relaxing, depending on how the teacher deals with it. I think you might find that 2 hours is a LOT of extra time to get things done.

    This goes WAY beyond 'we're not forcing them to socialize'. This could be a very very useful method of teaching children.

    Last, as noted in other posts, some schools have severe problems with violence. Those same students will still be disruptive, but when they can be contained with a click of a button and prevent disruption of the class, without taking away their option to learn (1-way communication, instead of group conference for that student) then most of their motivation is gone. Class clowns won't have a reason to pull that for more than a few seconds.

    Something to think about.

    --
    "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    1. Re:The Union opposes it? by fermion · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The fact that a cow opposes steak houses does not change the fact that the excess of red meat that is served in such places has been repeatedly shown to be not so good for the human body. In other words, it may be selfserving(ha) to want to alter the food choices in the place, but that does not necessarily imply it is the wrong thing to do. After all, enlightened self interest is the basis of the American way.

      As far the other points, the teaching styes you mentioned are already in wide use at schools. Bus trips of an hour are only an issue at higher grade levels or rural or suburban schools, which merely prepares them for a commute to work. Most kids in the city have an elementary school with in mile or so of them. Time is seldom an issue, although with budget cuts transportation can be.

      As far as socialization is concerned, what are the two most important work skills? One, waking up in the morning, getting ready, and being on time to work. I have worked at home, and worked far away. I have worked odd shifts. I thank the schools for preparing me for the most difficult task of getting to work on time. Skill number two is working thing out in peaceful ways, even with people who are not peaceful, thus avoiding the disgruntled employee. Remember, the kid you keep at home, and never teach how to control themselves, may be the person rampaging through the plant with a shotgun in a few years.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    2. Re:The Union opposes it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The reasons given will probably not be the real reasons, either.

      This is where your analogy breaks down.

      A cow would not hesitate to provide accurate reasoning for opposing a new steak house. I think you underestimate the integrity of the cow.

    3. Re:The Union opposes it? by FirienFirien · · Score: 1

      http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2004/03/19

      Have you ever come across someone under 14 online? The greater chance is that they will fit the greater internet fuckwad theory. Sure, you can learn to work with others, have good social skills, and so on. But nuance and so on are things that have to be learnt elsewhere and can only be vaguely applied to online interactions; the only way my italics work is because you can hear me emphasising that word in your head. Your click-of-a-button is a great idea if it can be made to work - but secondary socialisation (as soon as everyone knows that they're on this other irc channel too in another window) becomes completely and utterly invisible to the teacher. The mind of a child is not geared towards vast interest in learning - it's geared towards play. Straight off the top of my head, we've got: A few kids being able to provide the answers in the background to others, completely invisible to the teacher; the teacher believes the class all understand the subject and moves on. Kids find it a great trick, and only a few need to understand. Granted, that exists in some form in the classroom at the moment - mouthing answers, etc. But computers make it completely and utterly opaque; unless you want to go to the lengths of installing VNC on each computer to watch them to the same level as at school. You'll get the "invasion of privacy omg" crowd at you right away on that. Any lesser solution that only monitors a part of the screen doesn't solve the problem at all.

      I know I'm being overdramatic to illustrate my point, but my experience of kids on the web is by and large hugely negative. Perhaps that'll be lessened by keeping them in a controlled environment and not letting them interact with the rest of us until they can prove they have the right social skills; perhaps it won't. And I know there's also fuckwards of all ages around; it's just disproportionately biased towards younger users.

      --
      Browsing with +2 to insightful posts and a higher threshold makes the average post seen seem a lot more ingenious
    4. Re:The Union opposes it? by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      Maybe the problem is that I envision these online classrooms differently. Without streaming audio (and probably video) they would be the problems everyone states.

      But it is relatively easy these days to use that. I talk to friends in Norway and the UK (I'm in the US) all the time. We play online games, including the ones without built-in support, as if we are right there.

      Without the instant communication, this is bound to fail.

      However, this is meant fo K-8. Kindergarteners cannot read, for the most part. They will definitely need help getting on the computer to start with, but constant help through the school day as well. This will require some effort on the parents' parts, but the teacher needs to be 'there' too. Only with video can that be done remotely.

      I think this idea is an eventual certainty. We may have to get a little more used to the availability of video communication first, and this project may not succeed, but I think it will happen. (In fact, it may require a tech advance in VR.)

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    5. Re:The Union opposes it? by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      ...fewer teachers and probably lower pay for teachers as well.

      Do you really think it's possible to decrease their pay? You likely don't realize how much public teachers make... it's bordering on poverty. (no, I'm not public school teacher; but I've considered becoming one, and it's simply NOT possible to live well on that salary---barely pay rent + food; unless of course you're a teacher for many many many years, and manage to build up your salary to what computer science majors get on their first job).

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    6. Re:The Union opposes it? by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      You'd be amazed what can be done wrong if the government is in charge of it. If teachers make more than minimum wage, it can be reduced.

      Don't confuse this with 'should be reduced.' I'm firmly in the 'teachers aren't paid enough and don't have enough power' camp.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
  30. not much different than ... by rs232 · · Score: 1

    'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,'

    Not much different than sitting at a desk as some teacher reads a book outloud while simultaneously writing it out on a blackboard. You write what's on the board into a jotter. At the end of the 'lesson' he walks out without ever making eye contact.

    The only skill I ever learned in education was how to stand up or sit down at the sound of a bell.

    --
    davecb5620@gmail.com
  31. subsidized home schooling by fermion · · Score: 2, Insightful
    One big reason to question this is because it sounds like the school district is subsidizing the cost of home schooling. Now, some might say that if a person pays taxes, and their child does not go to a public school, then it is only fair to get a rebate to educate their child. But that assumes taxes are paid in exchange for service, which is largely untrue. For example, with that logic, if I do not have children, then I should receive a rebate of those taxes because I do not use the service. No, taxes are used to put programs into effect that are deemed necessary for the good of the country. This is why we pay taxes used to kill people even if we believe killing people is wrong.

    The quality of education is another big issue. If a parent chooses to homeschool a child, and goes through the hurdles, then as a society we must respect that choice, and given that the parent has shown some responsibility, the chances are good the education will be adequate. But what about the parent that is just told their kid no longer has to go to school? Is that parent going to work for 7 hours to keep the kid on task? Is that parent going to teach organizational skill. Is that parent going to make sure the kid goes to the library once a week, differentiate problem concepts, learns how to eat at a table? One reason homeschooling has become so popular is that schools increasingly have to teach much more than content, and parents would rather teach those other things themselves. The one benefit of this program is that the child will be subject to NCLB, as opposed to if he or she was at a private or home school.

    As this program moves to higher grades, the problems increase. We are already seeing schools setup specifically to manufacture credit for athletes, thus denying them their socially guaranteed education. Todays NYT reported that this practice even has formally infected colleges, as if that is a surprise. There are other kids that the school would want to educate a home, kids that often would do much better with the structure at school. Inevitable this program will be used to move certain students out of the school system.

    Virtual schooling will happen, and this experiment will be widely watched. It is not just about saving teaching jobs. It is about making sure that public education does not become more useless than it is. There are innovation within the school that can reduce costs while still allowing teachers to pay adequate attention to students. Likewise there are kids that might do better or equally well at home. However, history tells us that much of the innovation over the past 40 years has been to reverse Brown.

    --
    "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    1. Re:subsidized home schooling by tddoog · · Score: 1
      Why is it okay to subsidize charter schools and not home schooling? Home schooling is a big responsibility to accept for parents and if the money is spent on teaching supplies and materials what is the problem. The thing is Schools get paid per child. So, if a child does not attend a public school money goes back into the general coffer to do with as the gov't pleases.

      You make it sound like that it is the society's responsibility to ensure a child gets an education. It is the parent's responsibility. Society is only responsible to make sure that the opportunity is available for the family to obtain a good education (which I don't believe they are doing a good job of with the public school system). Now you can argue that some parents are not fit to oversee the education of their child and society should take over responsibility. If that is the case, call social services. Some other (good) reasons home schooling is becoming more popular is because public schools are inadequate, private schools are expensive, and there are a lot more tools available to help home school teachers.

      The idea that it is acceptable to pass on education when someone is a good athlete is an integrity problem. If people in the school system believe this, then they should be fired. The idea that virtual charters could be used for this is a straw man, it is something to keep in mind when implementing the system but it should not be an argument against it.

      However, history tells us that much of the innovation over the past 40 years has been to reverse Brown. Care to explain?

    2. Re:subsidized home schooling by Big_Breaker · · Score: 1

      How is a parent teaching their child at home different from a teacher in a regular school? Shouldn't both receive support? Don't they both accomplish the same thing IE producing a future tax paying worker? I guess what's missing is the fachist socialization.

      Did anyone else notice the teacher's union rep explicitly mentioning socialization as a fundamental reason for public (and government controled) education? That just makes my skin crawl - that losers like that guy want to "mold" my children's character into an obedient citizen.

      Anyway, the reason childless couples and seniors do not get a break on schooling related taxes is that todays children are tomorrow's tax-payers, especially the payroll taxes that fund social security and medicare.

      You see we don't have anywhere close to enough resources for the current (boomer) generation to retire on. If the economy stalled and tax revenues slowed down, we'd be completely screwed. Educating kids is about keeping our ponzi scheme going where the young prepare to work, the middle aged earn taxable income and the old are cared for.

      So school taxes are about developing a generation of earners to pay your social security and medicare benefits. It has nothing to do with a fee for service. So ask yourself if you want to grow old and get free healthcare. Yes? ok well you need to do your part to make new earners. Honestly childless couples should pay more because since they aren't doing the work of raising kids, only providing some modest financial support to help educate others.

    3. Re:subsidized home schooling by tillerman35 · · Score: 1

      Another "problem" (from the school boards' point of view) is that the kids who are in these programs tend to be those who would have been the top students in public schools. Not only do the schools lose funding from having to subsidize the online charters, they lose top test scores.

      In many school districts, teacher and principal bonuses are tied to performance, which is measured by the difference in before and after scores on standardized tests. Potentially, every smart kid that's pulled out represents a loss of earnings to teachers and administrative staff. This is especially true if the top test takers are pulled AFTER the first "before" tests are taken and BEFORE the "after" tests are taken.

      So why are they resisting? Because virtual charter schools cost them money. They cost the district money because of subsidizing, and they cost the teachers and principals money because of lost bonuses. Of course, they never consider the easy solution: Make the schools safe and teach the students well. If they had done that in the first place, there wouldn't be any need for the virtual charter schools.

    4. Re:subsidized home schooling by q2k · · Score: 1
      One big reason to question this is because it sounds like the school district is subsidizing the cost of home schooling.


      Actually, it is the other way around. If a kid if homeschooled totally outside of the system, the school gets zero federal dollars for that student, and maybe nothing from the state either. By tethering him to the school system in this way, they can still count the kid as enrolled and collect on him.

      When dealing with the public school system, IAATM. (It's Always About The Money)
    5. Re:subsidized home schooling by blueZhift · · Score: 1

      When I first heard about this on the news last night, my first reaction was that this was a way to widen the net of home schooling. That is, by more directly connecting a teacher in the classroom with a parent assisting and teaching in the home, it is a way to make homeschooling possible for a wider range of parents. As others have already noted, many home schooled kids are kids who would have been in the top schools anyway and often have better than average educated parents to teach them. But what about those parents who are not as well educated, or perhaps are not well organized? This virtual charter school is a way for them to be more involved in directing the education of their kids with the added bonus of perhaps raising their own level of education.

      So yes, one can certainly look at this as subsidized home schooling, but I'd really like to see them get a shot at this because it has the potential to really get more parents involved in education. And, while the union won't admit it, it could lighten the load on traditional school teachers by reducing class size if enough parents go for this option. Let me tell you, a class of 30 or more kids is a lot of work and definitely not the best learning environment!

  32. What about the future? by JavaNPerl · · Score: 1

    What if telecommuting becomes common place and kids who have learned through virtual schools have an advantage over kids who learned in a more traditional manner? I've worked on a few jobs via telecommuting and I have found that there are some people who just can't handle that type environment. Some people miss the social interaction of the office, get too distracted at home, or need too much hand holding to effectively work outside of the office.

    1. Re:What about the future? by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      One might ask though, is this due to thier innate personality, or due to thier experiences growing up?

      In my experience I was much like those people you describe. Easily distracted, always daydreaming, and needing much hand-holding to get anything meaningful done. It turned out the problem was TOO MUCH assistance. Basically, I needed to just be shoved out the door and told to go do it. I didn't figure this out until into my late twenties. Once I figured it out, I went back to night-school, and got several technical certifications. Now I'm a Nework Admin at a company that makes safety software for Nuclear Power plants. I'm not wealthy, but I'm doing OK, and have plenty of advancement ahead of me. I just wish someone had properly challenged me earlier in life. If I had been forced to study more independantly earlier, I would likely be much further along than I am today.

      The point is, Kids need to be challenged academically more than they need to be socialized at school. Teleschooling can offer that challenge, and kids can get thier socialization from sports, scouting, clubs, etc.

      If telecommuting kids have an advantage, Isn't that a GOOD thing? As a society, we don't have any business denying any advantage our children might gain from technological advances. It's not our place to hold people back. Those that can't adapt to telecommuting jobs need to find other employ that doesn't require it. It isn't right to deny others the pay and benefits they deserve just so a few can have fun socializing at an office.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
  33. homeschooling ignorance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Homeschooled children usually have more interaction with other children, in a more productive manner. (Quality over quantity)

    Homeschool programs and families usually are part of a "homeschool coop". Aka groups of families or churches that work together for homeschooling. People with special skills or education will teach certain courses to a group of "homeschooled" kids in a group setting. The ties are much tighter. These are the same children that are involved in youth groups, ministry work, camps outside of their homeschooling daytime hours.

    Also, with PE, homeschool coops usually cover this as well. I'll be teaching an archery class (3-4 hours a week). Sports and activities homeschoolers partake in are more active than typical school PE since in a public school, if you are not the alpha male or female, you are a benchwarmer. Theres plenty of NON-SCHOOL ran local sports teams to join. (JOAD, CYA, baby ruth, soccerm popwarner, karate, ballet, etc). And most of the local Homeschool COOPs in the northeast I know of do weekly ski trips, and other activities.

    Just remember, just because you were not homeschooled, it does not make your education any better.

    (No, I was not homeschooled, I was socially inept due to moving 30 times between the ages of 3 - 18, and public schools all over the country suck)

  34. Re:A note to moderators by GundamFan · · Score: 1

    Um.. the only sure fire way not to be moderated in a way you don't like is not to post.

    On that note, some of the big things children learn K-8 are scocial skills and respect for other opinions.

    --
    I don't give a damn for a man that can only spell a word one way.
    Mark Twain
  35. American solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The American public school system at certain cities, etc. is simply horrible.
    Not only because it is underfunded, but also, because schools reflects all the tensions, increasing devide between rich and poor.
    Education and school used to be one of the best tool to help mobility in society, the American educational system is now run almost the opposite way: access to the quality of education is now greatly dependent on the parents status in society, it is no longer the place where all kids can start with equal chances.

    In America, where today even wars, natural disasters, prison system etc. are looked at as privatized business opportunities this proposed educational system does not come as a surprize. Education has ben labour intensive, this is a "great" way to eliminate this, some political-party friendly businesses will make huge profit of the teacherless, schooless "education".

    Only the kids will be screwed for life. But maybe that's the bigger goal. Maybe one day the entire low class, poor population of America will be shipped out to Mexico or other developing nations and America will be the country for the rich all over the world.
    This way American elections will guarantee that the US world police status remain intact, truly representing their voter base: the richest from all countries.

    Until then, if you ask any succesful person, chances are, they have been inspired to achieve their goals by an outstanding teacher in a school.

  36. Three Thoughts by harvey_peterson · · Score: 0

    1
    For most students, a virtual/cyber/online school is not going to be a good solution since it takes away the socialization aspect of education (a very, very important part of development).

    However, online schools do offer many advantages; especially for kids with special needs.
    There are many kids who can't attend a physical school because of allergens, skin diseases, etc. Some school from home because school is a dangerous place (like, if you're wearing a hijab). Other kids are super-smart and need a school that runs at their pace.
    For most kids, home-schooling fills this need. But not all parents are teachers and it helps to have the guidance of a professional.

    2
    The real issue is money. In most states the school district where the child lives has to pay the online school most or all of the money for that student. That can be a LOT of cash.

    3
    If the teacher's union were smart, they'd unionize the new teachers.

  37. It's very simple. by LaughingCoder · · Score: 1

    When a union opposes something there is always only 1 reason: self-interest. This is true for any union, and always has been. Likewise when a company opposes something it is also for 1 reason: self-interest. Sure, the teachers union will *claim* it's "about the children", but that is simply not the case. Now don't get me wrong -- I don't have a problem with that. I accept it, and believe, actually, that is the true role of a union. It's all about balance. But please, can we not pretend the teacher's union is really more concerned for the children than they are for protecting their own interests?

    As regards online middle school, I say "why not?". Maybe I've consumed too much of the "diversity koolaid", but my view is, let's try a bunch of things. Different types of school environments are best for different types of children. Let's give parents and children some choices. Why is that such a bad thing?

    --
    The more you regulate a company, the worse its products become.
    1. Re:It's very simple. by HuckleCom · · Score: 0

      Well said! There are many different types of learning; More than just 'cognitive' or not. I'm 18. Have a FT job with the State as a Web Developer making $38k/yr. Not bad for a 'homeschooled idiot' in my opinion. I was never 'taught' how to do my interview; I just knew what needed to happen. I wasn't 'taught' the programming languages I use - I learned them myself. The mind is a powerful thing - School can't, and never will truely be able to teach a person HOW to think. (Sure, maybe a step-by-process for trouble shooting, but actually applying and making your own reasoning). All they can do is merely present us with information and hope we understand it and soak it in. (The scary part is, that kids don't THINK enough to know when a teacher has an obvious bias IE: History teacher is a Democrat/Repub/Green) I'm not say "Question authority in every thing you do" I'm just worried about a generation that doesn't really know if something is right or not.

  38. So? by rspress · · Score: 1

    If the nations test scores are any indication you can't put kids in the classroom and expect them to learn what they need to succeed either.

    Do you think that the teachers are afraid the computer taught kids will do much better than the school taught kids? You bet!

    1. Re:So? by evilviolist · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm rather confident in my abilities as a teacher. My experiences as a teacher tell me that kids learn from each other, for one. I modify how I teach constantly based upon the reactions of the students I see before me. These things aren't possible in this format.

    2. Re:So? by rspress · · Score: 1

      The computer can modify how it is teaching by the answer the kid is giving. In fact it can be better than a teacher in this respect. I have nothing against teachers other than the fact that many of them really don't care if the child passes or not....they are there for the check or to go into the administration which is already too top heavy. Of course there are some great teachers but those were the exception and not the rule.

      Here in California a teacher can get tenure in 2 or 3 years which I consider way too low. I have always said that teachers should be given much more money for what they do but that money should be tied to the kids test scores. Pretty much like the real world, if you excel at your job you get more money. If you don't you are out of here. Here in Cali bad teachers are just passed from school to school because of tenure and because the administration is afraid to fire them. This has trickled down to employees like janitors were murders and sex offenders were hired. If the administration is that bad how can we expect the kids to be any better.

      I recently attended a technical school were I did 95 percent of my work online. I could proceed at my own pace and attend school only when I needed to....a good thing since the campus was 60 miles away and I have a back injury. This also saved the time of the teachers who could use that time to help students who really needed the help. It was win-win and I see nothing wrong with that.

  39. Re:Agree Completely by zolaris · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Not that I want to "kill a dead horse" (yes I am a techie and do like references to things like Dilbert, Star Trek, Star Wars, etc) but I have some issue with what you say. Yes, the 'nerds' as we call ourselves sometimes DO need to step off our soapboxes, but it IS a two way street. I am bothered by your comment :

    I'm going on to so a PhD in socialolgy where I'll be line for tenure where I have a much more rewarding job then beeing a science freak or an engineer.[sic]

    I got an undergraduate degreee in Ocean Engineering and a Masters in Security Informatics. I LOVED the classes I took in both. Designing and building something (submarines, boats, even shorelines) or analyzing computer security 'stuff' is exciting and rewarding to ME. I chose my career and I love it. I do feel bad for all of those individuals in technical AND non-technical fields that hate what they do and don't find their career rewarding. I can also say that I've taught math to countless middle and high school students and I found that to be very rewarding too. I love the look on a child's face when he or she finally understands something that was a mystery before. I probably will, in a few years, go back to teaching or tutoring, possibly on a volunteer basis.

    I will not argue that great things were NOT done in the humanities but the engineering community has brought you innovations you use every day. You typed this message on a computer, where do you think that came from? I'm guessing you use a car or form of public transportation daily other than your feet. Someone had to design and innovate it. Would Willa Cather have built an airplane? No, but I know she DID write some very important works and had some great ideas. You don't HAVE to be a techie to have good ideas, but in the same token you can't dismiss everything technical because you are not.

    Anyways, all I have to do to be a engineer wold be to get my MSCE and how hard couyld that be?[sic]

    Have you ever looked into the Society of Professional Engineers? For those that are not in the engineering field, many do not know this but in order to be considered a professional engineer there are not one, but two tests you must pass. Now this applies mostly to civil, mechanical and the like but computer engineering and other related engineering fields have tests and they are hard. I passed the first of these two tests (the second you actually need to work for four years under a professional engineer) before you can even take the test. The first test is an 8 hour long test that covers four years of what we learned in college. It's not for everyone. I found it easier than many would because I LIKE the material. Just as some people find it easier to write a novel than I would because that is not where my interests lie. Okay I'll get off my soapbox now too and let someone else on.

  40. 200-300$ month? try $2000-6000 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    Most daycares are more than $200 a week. Think way way more

  41. Homeschooling by FJ · · Score: 4, Informative

    First, let me point out that I have a child who is homeschooling. He is in second grade, so we've only been doing this for 3 years. I was very cautious about this, but my wife really wanted to try it. Virtual elementary schools have been around prior to this. We looked at one when my son started first grade but decided against it.

    The most common question we get about it is "what about social skills". A lot of people who homeschool make very conscious efforts to make sure their kids receive social skills. We are involved in co-ops, we do field trips with other homeschool kids, there are sporting activities, and he has other kids in the neighborhood. The best argument I heard about schools & social skills was this: teachers don't want you to be social during classes. When you were growing up were you allowed to talk in class? Of course not. You talked between classes and at lunch. Most of the social skills you received were not tought by a teacher but interaction with other kids. This can be gained outside of school too.

    Yes, my son does behave different than some other kids. Some things are good and some are bad. He doesn't really understand that some questions are very awkward to ask in public, he tends to interrupt, and his patience isn't the best. On the other hand, he can talk to any adult much more easily than I ever could and he naturally asks questions if he doesn't understand something. When interacting with other kids I don't really notice a difference. He interacts with his public school & homeschool friends the same way and they play the same games.

    Virtual schools have advantages & disadvantages except you get some outside support. Some parents really need that extra support because they don't feel comfortable being on their own.

    The biggest benefits to non-traditional learning are the ability to go at your own pace and to change the teaching method if it doesn't work. When we started math with my son we got a really cool math program. It had blocks and videos as well as worksheets. It looked really great to me. He absolutely hated it. We tried for a few weeks and gave up. We switched to another program which had very bright and colorful worksheets but no blocks or videos. He responded much better to it and was able to learn the material much easier. Learning at your own pace is good for him too. There is no being "left behind". Until he understands the subject we don't go to the next.

    That all being said, homeschooling isn't for everyone. Some kids just don't respond and need more structure. Some parents don't want the responsibility or can't be home to be the teacher. Even in virtual schools the idea isn't just "sit them in front of a computer and you are done". There is other non-computer stuff in any program I've ever seen. I can't comment on the quality of the Chicago program, but I'd imagine it is the same way. The majority of time isn't computer related. I'm sure it will be less flexible and less "go at your own pace", but that isn't necessarily bad because some kids really need the structure. It depends on the child.

    Also remember that things change. The parent or the child may decide to go back to traditional schooling. People and situations change. You can always switch. All 50 states have laws permitting homeschooling. Some are more "interesting" than others, but they all allow it.

    There is also one other myth I'd like to dispell. Other than social skills the second most common question is about religion. Not everyone is a religous zelot who homeschools. I'm not even remotely religious. Lots of people do it because they feel it is the best opportunity for their children and not to shelter or block their kids from the outside world.

    By the way, another thing which helped convince me that it isn't a bad idea was the fact that a lot of homeschoolers are ex-teachers. You would be amazed how many ex-teachers there are doing this. Every ex-teacher I talk to says that public schools waste time and they spent the vast majority of their time on a few kids in a class.

    1. Re:Homeschooling by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What software are you using? I'm strongly looking at homeschooling my daughter when she is old enough.

    2. Re:Homeschooling by silverbax · · Score: 1

      I'd be interested in how you feel about the following:

      How does your son deal with people outside of his normal social or intellectual circle? It's one thing to get along with kids of the same socioeconomic status, from the same neighborhood. What about real life, when your son goes to work and will be working with people from all walks of life, cultures and psychological makeup? I'm curious if your observations of your son with his peers has taken into account that you are aware of all of his peers and no doubt keep an eye on who he spends time with. Many children in public schools are forced to learn how to deal with a group of people not specifically culled by their parents. What about when he goes to college? Will he be more likely to accept a scholarship from Columbia if he realizes it's in a rough area of NY, or will he opt for a safer choice?

      Also, as a parent and as a person who moved frequently as a child, I would be extremely concerned about the idea that parents can just 'switch' their child from year to year, from public school to home school. Children need stability, and it's extrememly difficult to fit in when you're always the 'new kid'. That might help you prepare you for grown up life, but it also might make you grow up indifferent and distant.

    3. Re:Homeschooling by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      When you were growing up were you allowed to talk in class? Of course not. You talked between classes and at lunch. Most of the social skills you received were not tought[sic] by a teacher but interaction with other kids. This can be gained outside of school too.

      Here are a few things you might want to consider... I attended public school and the conditions were deplorable. I got in fights. I was beaten up. I beat other people up. There were guns and knives and drugs and booze and lots of crime. I learned a lot that I never would have in the "ideal" learning environment most people would like to create for their own child. I learned by watching my peers the risks of crime and drugs. I learned that almost everyone lies, a lot. I learned that the government shoves propaganda at people and a lot of it is bullshit. (Sure pot is bad for you, but not as bad as tobacco.) A great deal of this turned out to be vital knowledge later in life.

      Valuable socialization is not just meeting people. It is meeting diverse kinds of people and specific kinds of people. Knowing teenage drug dealers and a few drug suppliers and some local gang members and some organized crime people really changes the way you think about society. It changes your understanding of the human animal and makes you aware of just how television and books mislead. Meeting people who have become public school teachers is likewise valuable. The drunk in it for a paycheck, the retired scientist who wants to spend his time molding better people, the old marine who speaks Latin and hates technology were all valuable people to socialize with, more so perhaps, than the average person. Maybe the same is true with parents who are home schooling and interaction with many of them will help, but I don't know.

      What I do know is if I have a child and decide to home school, that child will accompany me to some less than ideal places and meet some less than ideal people. He or she will not just meet them, but will socialize with them and will eventually do so without any supervision. This sort of socialization should happen before a child is too old and their world views are solidified.

      Now I'm not presuming to give you any advice. I'm not a parent. I just though maybe you'd find my view of socialization useful or insightful. Good luck.

    4. Re:Homeschooling by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      I'd be interested to hear your thoughts on the following:

      I grew up in a county with about 5 non-white families. Am I incapable of learning to live with other cultures?

      I went to a school where I was picked on for being smart (or maybe being a smart-ass - I can't remember) - am I any less "indifferent and distant" than I would have been in a more healthy social situation - albeit with less children?

      My parents were aware of all my friends growing up - did that mean that we didn't do whatever the hell we wanted when they weren't looking?

    5. Re:Homeschooling by Corporal+Dan · · Score: 1
      By the way, another thing which helped convince me that it isn't a bad idea was the fact that a lot of homeschoolers are ex-teachers. You would be amazed how many ex-teachers there are doing this. Every ex-teacher I talk to says that public schools waste time and they spent the vast majority of their time on a few kids in a class.
      Bingo. My mother taught in a public school, then homeschooled my sister and I, and now teaches again for the same public school system. Her reasoning for the homeschooling: "public schools waste time and they spent the vast majority of their time on a few kids in a class." DSD
    6. Re:Homeschooling by silverbax · · Score: 1

      "I grew up in a county with about 5 non-white families. Am I incapable of learning to live with other cultures?"

      Incapable? Of course not. But a larger learning curve exists.

      "I went to a school where I was picked on for being smart (or maybe being a smart-ass - I can't remember) - am I any less "indifferent and distant" than I would have been in a more healthy social situation - albeit with less children?"

      I wasn't asking you to defend your views, but did you realize when you wrote this how loaded this statement is? You spent a lot of time explaining that the reason you home-school had nothing to do with protecting your child, then immediately state that you were picked on as a child.

      "My parents were aware of all my friends growing up - did that mean that we didn't do whatever the hell we wanted when they weren't looking?"

      Your parents are always looking, and as a loving parent, you already know that. But a lot of people grow up with parents who don't care and don't pay attention, and those kids grow up to be adults just like everyone else. I know I'm better off knowing how to deal with bullies and idiots on the job because I learned how to handle those people when I was a kid. Not that bullying is ever acceptable; but someday, somewhere a person will run into one, even as an adult. Better learn what to do as a kid, even if that means telling your parents.

      I asked the questions earlier because your original post seemed well thought out and I wanted to get your honest take on these questions. As a parent ( and as a minority), and as a kid who also was extremely smart, I am more than aware of the pitfalls and shortcomings of the public school system. I just don't know if the deft social skills that I acquired while going through school could have been replaced by my parents.

    7. Re:Homeschooling by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      You spent a lot of time explaining that the reason you home-school had nothing to do with protecting your child, then immediately state that you were picked on as a child.

      Nah, I'm not the original poster. I actually believe that children would be better off "protected" from the school system, since the whole setup seems unnatural and unhealthy to me.

      I get the feeling you (and if not you, a lot of other here) view homeschooling as one or both parents sitting with the child for eight hours a day, with some breaks for "recess" or whatever. Homeschooling doesn't have to be like that. As a kid I could have learned what I had to in three or four hours, and spent the rest exploring on my own. If there are other homeschoolers in the area, there's no reason not to learn collaboratively. Basically, I don't agree that homeschooling is "parents replacing school". It's a completely different educational environment replacing school - and one that I believe is far healthier than school.

    8. Re:Homeschooling by FJ · · Score: 1

      Good questions.

      That was actually one of my biggest concerns when my wife approached me with the idea. When he was a few years younger he was much much worse at adapting to new situations than he is now. When he was 5 he was very shy and I was afraid this would make it worse. When he was faced with a conflict or had to deal with something he didn't like he would basically just shut down and not respond. Often he would go to a corner and cry. I was very concerned that homeschooling would make it worse.

      Quite the opposite has happened. He has other activities outside of the home where he is has been confronted by others not "culled" by us. Depending on the situation he stands up for himself better than I would have at his age (he's only 7). When he has team sports or he has co-ops with other homeschooling families he constantly meets different kids. Some of them becomes friends with and others he has to deal with. About the only thing he hasn't had to deal with is long-term conflict (i.e. a school year bully). I don't know how he would deal with that. I'm guessing he would find a way.

      Our neighbor's son tried to bully him around, but he chose not to play with him for a while. Then he started to push back and the bully backed down. Since then the have get along fine and play together often. We didn't interefere on purpose because I wanted him to deal with it himself. That isn't the same as a year-long bully that refuses to back down but he can deal with short term issues.

      Our neighbor's son went to public school and he was constantly bullied on the bus. It got bad enough that he would feel physically ill on Sunday evenings before the week started. They tried to talk to him about it, they talked to the bus driver, they even talked to the other kids parents. Nothing helped. They wound up driving him to school several months of the year. When he started to ride the bus again the problem went away because he found a way to deal with the bully himself. I guess he just wasn't ready to do it the year before.

      We put my younger son in preschool to try and solve the same problem. He has a very shy personality and it is much worse than my older son. We tried for 6 months to "acclimate" him to preschool. If anything, it made the situation worse. There was absolutely nothing wrong with the preschool, there were no conflicts with other kids, and it was only three times a week for 2 hours, but he hated it anyway and would cry every time we took him. We kept thinking "he'll adjust", but he never did. He was still pretty young at the time (not quite 4) so we pulled him out and waited.

      Six months later we enrolled him in a simple sports activity. It was only 1 hour a week but he did better with that because it was much more instructor directed. There was no "just play" but they were being instructed the whole time so he felt much more confident and relaxed. He still has a very long way to go, but he is making progress. He may never be a total extravert but he does need to learn how to cope with crowds of kids.

      I guess my point is that kids can & do adapt. There isn't anything magical about either homeschool or public or private school. It really depends on the kid. As a parent, I also believe that it is impossible NOT to screw up your kids. It is just a matter of keeping the damage to a minimum. :-)

      We haven't decided if we'll homeschool my younger son or not. He still has 2 years until he legally needs to go to school. If it looks like it is a better fit for him then we'll send him. I have my doubts about his willingness to accept homeschool because his personality is so different than my older son. He is a different kind of kid, so it may require a different solution.

      Your point about stability is a good one, but considering the school district I'm in I don't really consider public schools much more stable. Our district is large enough that he would be with a different group of kids each year anyway. They make a co

    9. Re:Homeschooling by FJ · · Score: 1

      The one which stands out in my mind is K-12. There were also the possibility of getting programs from the state where they considered you a "charter school" similar to the Chicago one. My wife did a tremendous amount of work researching everything and talking to other families.

      In the end we decided against computer based training. When he gets older (assuming we're still doing it) look at the program again. I was afraid that he would be too tempted to just click through the screens. I was afraid he'd be done with a school day in 15 minutes and think he could go play.

      We still go to the library and check out some of the educational software like Reader Rabbit or Jump Start and he enjoys them, but they are just a supplement.

      If you don't like computer ones, there are video and satellite based homeschooling programs too. Bob Jones is one, but I know there are others. We tried the Bob Jones video program to use as a supplement. It is nice but watching TV isn't the best way for my son to learn. His mind wanders too easily to concentrate on a TV show. It is a nice supplement, but just a supplement. We tend to use them on days where he is having a bad day.

      If you want to post a message to me directly I'd be glad to help answer any other questions.

  42. not the right solution. by evilviolist · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Yes, Chicago Public Schools can be dangerous and frightening. This isn't the right way, however. What many of the comments seem to be presupposing is that the parents of the students will be able to help out the kids with their video lessons, as the system seems to want. The parents of these students are not there as they're working, and often it's a single family home, which in Chicago means that if you make minimum you're not paying your rent on only one job. The kids this is targeted for are going to be doing this largely on their own. Yes, fix the schools. Don't do it by funneling charter money into the hands of people like this, who care more about lowering overhead costs (video lessons require fewer teachers per student, obviously) than actually teaching kids. Am I the only one who has a problem with video screens becoming the font of all received knowledge?

  43. VCS? Excellent! by XenoPhage · · Score: 1

    During the past 2 years I've had the opportunity to deal directly with K12 and PAVCS. Both of my school age sons were enrolled in PAVCS.

    Overall, the program is excellent. My oldest son was diagnosed ADHD and needs a more hands-on approach to learning, something the local school district refuses to provide, despite the existing legislation to force them. Unfortunately, moving is easier said than done, so we decided to look into PAVCS. From day one, they were incredibly helpful, explaining the entire process and helping us along. There is a teacher assigned to every student who makes weekly phone calls to check on the progress of the student, discuss and problems, etc. The child is provided, free of charge, all of the books and necessary materials to learn, including a computer.

    One of the nicest things about the whole system is that the child does not need to be enrolled in the same grade classes for each subject. So, for instance, if your 5th grade child is deficient in math, but excelling in english, they could take a 4th grade math, but 6th grade english. This is incredibly helpful in keeping the child engaged and on-task.

    They also schedule regular "meets" every 2-3 weeks that are optional. The purpose of these meets is to encourage social interaction between both the parents and the children. They also make sure that all required state and federal testing is completed, which usually turns into a 1/2 day of testing, and a 1/2 day of playing.

    I like PAVCS and I wish they had it back when I was in school.. I see this as such an advantage over traditional schools. The freedom to learn when you want, in the order you want, is very powerful. I'd like to see this type of learning move even further. Personally, I tend to learn faster and better on my own rather than in a classroom setting.

    --
    XenoPhage
    Technological Musings
  44. Why AREN'T we doing this? by zolaris · · Score: 1

    I know this may be seen as flame bait but can I ask why we didn't do this before? It seems we have lost the home school battle somewhat. I am NOT a proponent of home school but is seems to be perfectly legal and still done quite frequently. If we are going to allow home schooling why don't we supplement it with every resource we've got? The Internet can be a wonderful tool. It should not be the ONLY tool but is good one. I mean if you are home schooling a kid he or she is only subject to lessons created and taught by one (maybe two) individuals and not getting social interaction. Well if you home schooled a kid AND supplemented that with internet based learning you would be better of than not supplementing it with internet based learning. Perhaps have a chat room (or net meeting or something) where the home school student (SUPERVISED BY THE PARENT) could engage in a lesson somehow. I know I'm light on details but I think that could possibly be worked out and would be better than the current... oh NOTHING. Just some random thoughts. But we do have to be careful not to let technology be everything. Find a happy medium and we will thrive.

  45. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Today just ain't your day. Sorry man.

  46. Their point being? by JumpingBull · · Score: 1

    This is an old, old arguement, well past it's shelf date.

    As a parent, talking to other parents, the public system has some flaws of it's own. Bullying, which distroys a learning environment is one. Art, as mandated by a curriculum committee, of which no members are working artists is another. Music, again by one of those committees with no working performers, is another. And what passes for Phys. Ed. makes me cringe.

    Any parent that home schools, is talking to other home schooling parents. They, and their kids, get together in social environments, as I recall. As a group, they see real theater, real music, real art. And, they get involved with all sorts of sports, both individual (martial arts) and group (baseball, soccer)

    The fundamental divide is teacher centred learning (pedagogy) or learner centred learning (androgogy). The EducatorSpeak basically dresses up common sense into a maze of polysyllabic gobbledegook. It took me months of research to determine that the emperor has no clothes...

    It is a figure that I fell across somewhere that in Mass. 98% were literate. After they introduced a public school system, that dropped to 92%, never to return.

    This effort combines the best of a teacher/classroom situation, with that of the involved parents. It will be interesting to see how it compares in success to unaided homeschooling.

    --
    This is progress?
    1. Re:Their point being? by vtcodger · · Score: 1
      ***It is a figure that I fell across somewhere that in Mass. 98% were literate. After they introduced a public school system, that dropped to 92%, never to return.***

      In as much the Massachusetts Bay Colony introduced public schools in 1647 and made them free long before the American Revolution, this is really pretty damn improbable. Given that during the 18th and 19th Centuries a substantial percentage of the population of Massachusetts consisted of recent immigrants -- often from countries that were largely illiteriate, it's not very likely that literacy rates approached 98% prior to the end of mass immigration early in the 20th Cnetury.

      --
      You can't see ANYTHING from a car, You've got to get out of the goddamned contraption and walk...Edward Abbey
  47. Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as Jack by MikeRT · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When I read Lord of the Flies in high school, all of my problems with the public school system suddenly made sense. There is so little adult involvement in K-12 that it is almost like having no adult discipline and guidance. Kids actually **need** socialization around adults and they need it much more than they need "socialization" around other kids. Two kids by themselves teaching each other how to behave is like one blind man trying to lead another.

    I don't know if you've forgotten this due to age or a glorified childhood, but little kids are often nasty and cruel toward one another. They need the guiding hand of good adults, not children. There is a difference between letting kids play together and actual socialization.

  48. School = will breaker by Visaris · · Score: 1

    We all know that school has nothing to do with learning math or science or a language. Public elementary and high-schools are designed to break the will of students and turn them into submissive subjects so they will be ready for the rest of their lives. School is a social thing. I learned more math, science, and english from my father than I ever did in school. Academically, school was a fucking joke. Socially, it was a huge challenge.

    --

    I am a viral sig. Please help me spread.
  49. Re:A note to moderators by bensafrickingenius · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    "On that note, some of the big things children learn K-8 are scocial skills and respect for other opinions."

    Yes, this is what schools are for:

    Social skills: pretend that it's ok that Timmy has 2 daddies.

    Respect for others: If Ahmal's father chooses to blow up a building full of innocent children, we have to respect that as his own personal life choice.

    --
    I am not left-handed, either!
  50. Online != good by a_greer2005 · · Score: 1
    I jave had, as a home-schooler in the late 90s, exposure to this sort of thing and let me tell you it is utter CRAP...rype with bugs, quirks and holes. you are essentially guided through a cheasy flach animation then quizzed over it (assuming the quiz doesnt crash Internet Explorer which I was requiered to use) plus if you have a question not covered in the material, you would have call a helpdesk or know how to leave full screen mode to use yahoo.

    it was utter crap that I would never put a kid through...

    1. Re:Online != good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I have had, as a home-schooler in the late 90s, exposure to this sort of thing and let me tell you it is utter CRAP...rife with bugs, quirks and holes. You are essentially guided through a cheesy Fla sh animation then quizzed over it (assuming the quiz doesn't crash Internet Explorer which I was required to use); plus if you have a question not covered in the material, you would have call a helpdesk or know how to leave full screen mode to use yahoo.

      It was utter crap that I would never put a kid through...


      I'd give that little rant a C.

  51. What's the hardest part.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    about microwaving vegetables?

    getting the wheelchair through the door!
  52. It's a bad idea by q2k · · Score: 1

    It's a bad idea, not because it's too much like homeschooling, but because it's too much like school. The school system is still in control of the curriculum. The same teach to the test mentality that drives public school curriculum will drive this. Somewhere in Springfield IL, a room full of middle aged white men that haven't been in a school in 30 years is deciding on exactly what is important for your kid to learn. IMHO, the only knowledge that is universally important is reading, writing, and basic math up to maybe Algebra I. Everything else is an elective.

  53. Many charter schools aren't unionized by georgeha · · Score: 1

    The more charter schools that get chartered and succeed, the less power the Teacher's Union have. It's sick, the Teacher's Union in Buffalo pulled out all the stops to prevent Buffalo charter schools from succeeding. That tells you their concern is less for the kids than their power.

    Disclaimer: My daughter attends a very highly regarded charter school at the Rochester Science Museum ( is that cool or what, school is right next door to the Science Museum).

  54. Video Games by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm all for educating kids via games. Videogames are the most advanced teaching tool right now. Schools need to evolve. Most kids learn more through a 3 hours gaming session than they do via 8 hours of lecturing. Teachers role should be shifted to "videogame chooser" or even game designer. Animals learn by playing, why should human be forced into assimilating data they don't even want in the first place.

    By doing that, kids will have even more time to actively participate in socializing activities.

  55. Re:Agree Completely by laughing_badger · · Score: 1

    Please, someone with points mod the parent up Funny. The mods today don't seem to have a sense of humor.

    --
    Help children born unable to swallow - www.tofs.org.uk
  56. True. Computers won't teach you the important bits by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    Like, how do you avoid working by paying someone else do it for you. How do you bully someone into doing it instead of paying AND get his lunch money while you're at it. And for the other guy, how do you avoid these guys, or how do you avoid their attention altogether.

    Home schooling might be dangerous to society. The smart guys wouldn't learn that they should keep their yap shut and blend into the crowd of morons so they don't get slapped constantly. People might start voicing their opinion, if they don't learn that you shouldn't do that unless your opinion is shared by the majority.

    Or at least those with the biggest fists.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  57. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OMG, I just hit the damn submit button by accident. Goodbye Karma!

  58. Emotional Intelligence by path · · Score: 1

    The problem I see here is that the students will lack in the emotional intelligence area (EQ). I believe this is the term for what other people have been trying to say. I heard someone say that someone's EQ is more important then their IQ in being a success in life. The students need to learn how to interact with other people. I'm sure they could get some of this by doing sports and other clubs. I'm not sure if they would be as prepared as children who go through a good conventional school.

    Maybe if you want your kids to sit at home and fill out web surveys for $10 each when they grow up. :)

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotional_intelligenc e

    1. Re:Emotional Intelligence by Admins+ban+this+twat · · Score: 0

      School did not help me learn to interact with people. School is what gave me many problems to begin with - bullies and even those who were not bullies were just regular people that I really had no desire to be around. I was so way ahead of these people that I become alienated and frustrated at an early age. The computer was a refuge away from this daily torment, for me.

      Forced schooling is no substitute for a healthy society - something we have been lacking for quite a long time. We build up these societies where we live in estrangement from each other, where we live every day to basically deceive each other (impression management, a recent term coined in sociology), and where we are taught a narrow view of life and then build up all this social infrastructure around it and claim that anyone who opposes it is wrong.

      Neither school or computers will be the ticket, but the narrow view of "one or the other" is hardly the answer.

      --
      what the fuck? admins, ban this twat
  59. It may be not by chord.wav · · Score: 1

    You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society
    It may be not, but fatal1ty will piss in his pants against one of these boys when they have left school.

  60. Yeah, so? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

    "You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society"

    The same can be said about many teachers, but the computers are dues-paying union members.

    My only real complaint is that not everybody can afford a computer. But beyond that, it's true that a computer can't compete with a good teacher, but it can easily surpass a bad (read "tenured") one.

  61. Re:Agree Completely by Pzychotix · · Score: 1

    I don't know about you guys, but doesn't it seem odd that someone who claims to have increased their "grammar and spelling" skills TOTALLY maimed the english language in their post? The average slashdotter has a decent rate of spelling correctly, but that was just horrible. Someone mentioned the other day an article which stated that every post or article griping about spelling/grammar will contain at least ONE mistake, but this is just ridiculous.

  62. Anecdotal counterevidence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

    I'm ACing because I don't want what I say to be misconstrued by future students>

    I am a faculty at a relatively large but academically undistinguished Midwestern university. I teach (mainly) American literature and critical theory (philosophy to non-specialists). In the 3 years I have been here, I specifically recall teaching one home-schooled student in my advanced undergraduate introduction to the major. This student, let's call her Lauren, was insanely intelligent, able to internalize and understand high-level philosophical concepts with ease. She had an excellent and, seemingly, intuitive understanding of how to incorporate arguments into her own lines thinking and instead of summarizing ideas she knew how to critique them constructively.

    Her abilities were of the kind that I see in advanced later undergraduates and/or early graduate students at a top university. Two years later, I find out that Lauren dropped out for a few terms because she was having "a rough time" dealing with classroom environments and applying herself to required subjects that do not interest her.

    In other words, Lauren was having a difficult time to the demands of an institution.

    Was it the fault of homeschooling? My guess is yes but partially so. If she had been exposed to institutions more public than her family home she would have more experience excelling at tasks not of her choosing. I don't know that her homeschooling indulged her more than a public institution would have but the possibility is certainly there.

    To round off this anecdote, when Lauren came to my office to ask for advice, she was an absolute nervous wreck, visibly shaken by the challenges of socializing in college, reeking of her compulsive chain-smoking. In my class I always validated her opinions and emphasized the points where she was correct. However, she was so much more capable in terms of raw talent/cognitive preparation than her publicly-schooled peers that she expressed impatience and mild arrogance at times. And, believe me, her peers noticed this.

    While homeschooling can provide excellent results in terms of academics, it is very important that such results are tempered with socialization that, yes, teaches these exceedingly intelligent/capable people how to be patient with their less capable peers and how to make intellectual contributions with grace.

    1. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by Paul+Fernhout · · Score: 1

      No one will deny the value of learning how to get along with other as needed.

      Still, consider any fault that may come from the institution of college itself -- putting together a bunch of poorly socialized kids who have endured twelve years of being in an authoritarian environment that cultivates hate and apathy among children and turns many of them into the monsters who saw sport in taking down your student rather than want to grok her for her unique being.

      Second, even if true, one failure of a home schooler to get along with one college crowd does not make a case. There are lots of counter-cases of home schoolers getting a long with all sorts of people -- including college kids.

      Third, consider the fault in your student and her parents (or guardians) -- perhaps they just made a mistake in thinking there was any value to college for a bright person? Perhaps dropping out was the best answer. Consider, even the Vice Provost of Caltech told Congress that the US educational system was a collapsing pyramid scheme:
          http://www.house.gov/science/goodstein_04-01.htm

      Maybe your student's only problem was having too much faith in an institution that did not have her best interests at heart? Maybe, as is suggested in the essays here:
          http://www.unconventionalideas.com/educatn.html
      college is sometimes the cowardly route to life?

      However, having said all that, yes, she may well have missed out on something in her earlier education. But that happens to kids all the time in K-12 -- as a college prof you only see the "successes" of the K-12 system. Just think about all the ex-High School kids who you don't see (and likely would not want in your classes). :-)

      --
      A 21st century issue: the irony of technologies of abundance in the hands of those still thinking in terms of scarcity.
    2. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by tomjen · · Score: 1

      patient with their less capable peers and how to make intellectual contributions with grace
      That is an nice way of saying shut up.

      I went to public school and yes I learned to keep my mouth shut. The problem with some of the peers is that they are not interested in learning. This could be solved if school started to focus more on those whom they have no or little trouble with.

      If you cannot understand the material then sorry you do not belong in the class - no i am not. If you are not interested in learning the material then leave.

      As for arrogance - was it simply the arrogance of not hidding what she knew? Or did she belive herself to be supperior?

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    3. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Two years later, I find out that Lauren dropped out for a few terms because she was having "a rough time" dealing with classroom environments and applying herself to required subjects that do not interest her."

      Yeah, I've never heard of anything like that happening with public schooled students. Some people just don't have great social skills, regardless of how they were educated.

    4. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm the original AC poster (though I naturally can't prove it) but I will say that it is not a nice way of saying shut up. It's not always what she said but the way she said it. If you're the tomjen I know who was a grad student in Cville, I'm sure you know what I mean.

    5. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My point is not that L. and other homeschooled students are the only people without social skills, and I was trying to allow for the possibility that she might simply be socially impaired. My point is that I am speculating about the degree to which homeschooling may have prevented her from developing adequate social skills.

    6. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by tomjen · · Score: 1

      I am not the tomjen you remember. Sorry.

      --
      Freedom or George Bush
    7. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by Reziac · · Score: 1

      An observant AC says of a student, "Her abilities were of the kind that I see in advanced later undergraduates and/or early graduate students at a top university. Two years later, I find out that Lauren dropped out for a few terms because she was
      having 'a rough time' dealing with classroom environments and applying herself to required subjects that do not interest her."

      That's another really good point -- one of the problems with homeschooling is that it seldom extends to "I don't care if you have no use for history, you are going to learn it anyway". Not only because kids see no value in "boring subjects like history", but oft as not because the *parent* has no interest in the subject either.

      And if you can't deal with public school and being "forced to learn boring stuff", how do you expect to cope with the demands of a university, let alone an employer? After all, degrees where you only had to study FUN subjects, and jobs where you only have to do the work you WANT to do, are both far and few between.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    8. Re:Anecdotal counterevidence by Sage+Gaspar · · Score: 1

      I attended a lecture series once alongside a mathematician who was brighter than I was. He also had the respect (and fear, to some extent :P) of the community. A lot of times during lectures he'd interrupt the lecturer to point out where he was going ahead of time, throwing off the pace of the lecture and additionally circumventing a lot of the exposition for those of us - the large majority of us - who were less skilled.

      I attended a college that was mediocre in a lot of respects, a smaller school but probably similar to the grandparent's. There were required classes I took where I knew most of the material already, but the others in the class did not. I could've answered every question as soon as it was asked and jumped ahead to conclusions as soon as the hypotheses were stated, but I didn't for the large part, because that would've been cheating the rest of the class out of their process of discovery. They signed up to go to a school that matched their talent more closely than it did mine. If I or this other girl couldn't hack it enough to get into a more competitive school, that doesn't give us the right to spoil the classes for the rest of the students in it.

      On the other hand, I went to a summer program where I was a bit behind the curve. A lot of times the lectures would start going over my head about halfway through, but I didn't speak up to slow down the class -- I tried to work harder to catch up later.

      I've also ran into my share of arrogant bastards of all levels of intelligence: the guy who comes up with some interesting stuff and treats it like it's the second coming, the guy who has no idea what the hell he's talking about but manages to sound like a snotty prick while he's saying it, the ones that think they deserve the 24/7 attention of every professor in every class.

      I'm opposed to No Child Left Behind crap and all for teaching to a higher level, but there are some trade-offs that you have to be willing to accept in a group academic situation. The targeted audience of the class should be getting the most out of it; if you fall above or below that targeted range there's office hours for both extra help and higher level discussion, but it doesn't make sense to have the classtime focus on a minority. Additionally, arrogance doesn't carry along an academic penalty. It's a social penalty. And yes, sometimes in social situations you just have to shut up or people are going to be annoyed with you. This girl had a professor in her corner and the academic skills to succeed. She created an unbearable social situation for herself due to her interaction with her classmates.

  63. Flamebait by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Your post is as ignorant as calling a farmer a lazy overpaid bum because he only works during the summer.

    We can't get shop teachers because almost anything they are currently doing pays better than teaching. If you're a plumber or electrician, you get a couple of months off when construction is low during the winter. If you work overtime you get paid time and a half or double time for it. If you're a teacher and you're up to midnight marking, you get nothing extra.

    So, there we have it, farmers, plumbers and electricians are all overpaid bums. If teachers have it so easy, why don't you become a teacher.

    1. Re:Flamebait by roman_mir · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You are a coward and an idiot. I am not against the teachers picking up extra work during the summer as long as they do other non-educational things in the summer as well, such as STRIKES for one (and noone will care, because during the summer they are not actually teaching, but so what, they are still employees during the summer.) They should be doing their Professional Development days DURING THE SUMMER OR on the weekends (when the rest of the people do it.)

    2. Re:Flamebait by tehcyder · · Score: 2, Insightful
      They should be doing their Professional Development days DURING THE SUMMER OR on the weekends (when the rest of the people do it.)
      Bollocks, most professional people (lawyers, accountants, architects, whatever) get plenty of work-time off for professional development/education.

      If you don't count teachers as professional people, that's a different argument.

      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    3. Re:Flamebait by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Do most 'professional people' get entire summers off?

      I see many professional people getting their professional development done on weekends. Maybe some also get it during work days. However none of them get summers off (not as vacations, just off.) All professional development could be done during such breaks.

  64. Home Education by drac0n1z · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I was home schooled for 5 years in a foreign country, where I didn't interact with the locals my age. Very much 3rd world, to the extent where kids my age and even older people never before saw white people. When I got back to my own country @ the age of 15 I was not socially adapted to handle a school environment. Socially I was a mess till around the time I turned 21. Children should socialise with their peers otherwise they will have much larger problems when the peer group has moved into adulthood and they havent.

    --
    This is my sig.
    1. Re:Home Education by macintyred · · Score: 1

      You know your situation was completely different than the homeschooled "norm." Today's homeschoolers have plenty of opportunity to interact with other people - both children AND adults.

      Homeschooled children get the added benefit of having the majority of their social interactions in environments where positive, cooperative and affirming interactions are encouraged - clubs, theatre, homeschooled support groups and even field trips (very common in the homeschool group I participate in).

      This is in part why studies show that homeschoolers are at least as well socialized as their peers.

    2. Re:Home Education by drac0n1z · · Score: 1

      Wouldnt it be great if all interactions were pleasant? How would a 18 year old handle the real world once he is done with school and put in a compeditive back-stabbing type environment, if he never experienced it before? When I was put in a normal government school I was totally taken by surprise how hatefull everyone was, within the first week I was identified as a soft target and it took me a long time to realise they don't matter. Once I stood up for myself it was too late and school was already over. School is the best way to learn go cope with real people. How would those home schooled kids, used to being a club which shares a common interest, where people are forced together, interact in the real world where they dont have a common ground to start and build from? I have to disagree, most kids I've met from home schools were unbalanced.

      --
      This is my sig.
    3. Re:Home Education by stormy_petral · · Score: 1

      My public school social experience exposed me to foul language, substance abuse, and sexual harrassment, and threats of physical abuse...for starters..every day...on the way to home room. I experience none of those things in my work (except the foul language--though there's more of it on slashdot than at work), home or recreational environment as an adult. Why not? Because I have chosen my workplace, home companions and recreational opportunities to avoid that crap.

    4. Re:Home Education by boingo82 · · Score: 1

      I was public schooled and was a mess from 15-21 also. Are you sure it wasn't just the age, and not the schooling?

      --
      As a republican I feel it my responsibity to manufacture criminals. People need punished!
    5. Re:Home Education by drac0n1z · · Score: 1

      your country provides you with the luxuary to chose where you want to work, in south-africa (if you are a white male) you will search for two years to find anything at all.

      --
      This is my sig.
    6. Re:Home Education by drac0n1z · · Score: 1

      you misunderstood, public school is from age 7 to 18, but after i left school @ 18 i still remained a mess till 21. took me around 5 yrs to adapt to society after missing out on 5 yrs.

      --
      This is my sig.
    7. Re:Home Education by boingo82 · · Score: 1

      Right, I understand. I'm saying that it's fairly typical for people to still be pretty deranged until puberty's hormones have normalized. That doesn't necessarily have anything to do with schooling. I think a majority of people are technically insane for several years in their teens. I know I was.

      --
      As a republican I feel it my responsibity to manufacture criminals. People need punished!
    8. Re:Home Education by macintyred · · Score: 1

      That's a problem with South Africa, not Home Education. In South Africa, you will search those two years whether you are publicly educated or not. However, if you are homeschooled and have been given the opportunity to explore more than just a classroom, you may have the advantage of skills and talents developed while living IN the real world. Remember, contrary to what you seem to believe, school is not the real world. everything about it is artificially created and unrealistic.

  65. Hey, it worked before by kalirion · · Score: 1

    If it's good enough for Solaria, it's good enough for us. Now where are my transducer lobes?

  66. What... The "Harvey Milk School for Nerds" ? by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 1

    You want a geek version of this?

    Look, I was a nerd in high school and got shoved into my share of lockers. I suppose I could have gone all goth-and-trenchcoat, or retreated into a bitter, brittle shell, but at the end of the day I was driven to *succeed*, and that meant more than merely getting A's in my classes. I learned that I could always accomplish more as an inspiration to a group than I could by myself; learning how to draw together disparate personalities into something greater than the sum of their wacky parts was wa-a-a-ay more of a challenge to me than Trig or English Lit. I would have gotten the same straight A's online those many years ago as I did offline, and been far, far worse for it.

    Geeks who view non-geeks as "jocks" or "sheeple" or "joe sixpacks" or any other term that linguistically elevates themselves above "the masses" are doomed to fail, simply by virtue of the numbers. Even the Ur-Geek Lex Luthor had his corn-fed, middle-America-valued, high-school-quarterbacking Clark Kent, and we all know how well that worked out for the Geek Side.

    1. Re:What... The "Harvey Milk School for Nerds" ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Geeks fail because, contrarily to the high opinion they have of themselves, they are stupid and mediocre. We jocks do not beat them up and shit on their faces because we envy them (what do they have to envy? Bad breath?) but because they're annoying.

      Geeks are socially immature and devoid of any useful talent. That's why they end up being the garbage man or the floor sweeper, forever dreaming up impossible revenge plans while the rest of us goes on to have full, productive and fulfilling lives.

      Then they gather on Slashdot or some other fora and vent off their frustration. That's about the only satisfaction they have.

  67. Can't believe that they would object by Brix+Braxton · · Score: 1

    The teachers union objecting to anything that will require fewer teachers? I can't believe it.

    Of course they are going to object - why would they want this to ever get popular?

    The way I see it - this is just a good way for more regulated home schooling. It allows a parent who is interested in the home schooling concept to adopt it much more readilly than designing their own course work (although I guess to some extent - that's why certain parents prefer to home school).

    Anyway - this is a great idea to ease conjestion at the schools. It's not for everyone - you have to be even more disciplined to accomplish it but if it works then great. Guess some teachers will have to find another decent paying job with 3 months vacation, lots of sick time and all public holidays off.

    --
    www.wildpad.com
  68. Re:Agree Completely by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    What about astrology, the most rediculious of the sciences! - you go, tell them, man! What about phrenology? What about hypnology? Palmistry, numerology, and gemology anyone? Don't forget about religiology, what a retarded SCIENCE!

  69. power, huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You can expect similar arguments from the Teachers Unions and those who are held in its thrall to any advance in education which leads to a loss of their power and influence."

    God knows no one wants to lose all the power and respect that come with a 20K salary and a job that could be taken away for one or two of the students in the class failing some standardized test because the parents won't do their job and won't let the teacher do theirs.

  70. Learning and socialization should be separated by Sodade · · Score: 1

    "'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society" So what?? There are plenty of other more appropriate arenas for kids to be socialized. Learning and Socialization are two different things - combining them IMO is a bad mistake.

  71. Re:Agree Completely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yore" an idiot

  72. Re:Agree Completely by timster · · Score: 1

    Yeah, it's posts like this one that really cry out for the (+1, Troll) moderation option.

    --
    I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
  73. Absolutely right about homeschooling... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    We've been doing it for 12 years. Our kids are more socially adept then most kids their age partly because they've been exposed to a variety of people with a variety of ages from the start. Compare that to spending every year lock-step with people born no more than 12 months from yourself, and teachers.

    Another advantage, I think, for littler kids is there's no separation anxiety, so they're much more comfortable walking over and talking to someone new, because they know mom or dad isn't going to dissapear and leave them there.

    We aren't home-schooling for religious reasons, but partly because at the begining we realized that the schools weren't that good, and working with a school would take almost as much effort as doing it ourselves. Plus we like the flexibility. Want to take a 2-week vacation in october? No problem, and in fact it becomes another learning experience.

    How has it worked out? So far, pretty well.

    -- ac at work

  74. Re:Agree Completely by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    BTW., as you can see I am an expert in one of the more important sciences: Nameology.

  75. Re:Agree Completely by krell · · Score: 1

    When he said, "What about astrology, the most rediculious of the sciences! But I degress...", I was guessing that he really was thinking of proctology. That would have been par for the course here.

    --
    Where were you when the voynix came?
  76. 8th Grade Final Exam by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What it took to get an 8th grade education in 1895

    Remember when grandparents and great-grandparents stated that they only had an 8th grade education? Well, check this out. Could any of us have passed the 8th grade in 1895?

    This is the eighth-grade final exam from 1895 in Salina, Kansas, USA. It was taken from the original document on file at the Smokey Valley Genealogical Society and Library in Salina, KS, and reprinted by the Salina Journal. 8th Grade Final Exam: Salina, KS -1895

    Grammar (Time, one hour)

    1. Give nine rules for the use of capital letters.
    2. Name the parts of speech and define those that have no modifications.
    3. Define verse, stanza and paragraph
    4. What are the principal parts of a verb? Give principal parts of"lie,""play," and "run."
    5. Define case; Illustrate each case.
    6. What is punctuation? Give rules for principal marks of punctuation.
    7 - 10. Write a composition of about 150 words and show therein that you understand the practical use of the rules of grammar.

    Arithmetic (Time, 1.25 hours)

    1. Name and define the Fundamental Rules of Arithmetic.
    2. A wagon box is 2 ft. deep, 10 feet long, and 3 ft. wide. How many bushels of wheat will it hold?
    3. If a load of wheat weighs 3942 lbs., what is it worth at 50cts/bushel, deducting 1050 lbs. for tare?
    4. District No 33 has a valuation of $35,000. What is the necessary levy to carry on a school seven months at $50 per month, and have $104 for incidentals?
    5. Find the cost of 6720 lbs. coal at $6.00 per ton.
    6. Find the interest of $512.60 for 8 months and 18 days at 7 percent.
    7. What is the cost of 40 boards 12 inches wide and 16 ft. long at $20 per metre?
    8. Find bank discount on $300 for 90 days (no grace) at 10 percent.
    9. What is the cost of a square farm at $15 per acre, the distance of which is 640 rods?
    10. Write a Bank Check, a Promissory Note, and a Receipt.

    U.S. History (Time, 45 minutes)

    1. Give the epochs into which U.S. History is divided.
    2. Give an account of the discovery of America by Columbus.
    3. Relate the causes and results of the Revolutionary War.
    4. Show the territorial growth of the United States.
    5. Tell what you can of the history of Kansas.
    6. Describe three of the most prominent battles of the Rebellion.
    7. Who were the following: Morse, Whitney, Fulton, Bell, Lincoln, Penn, and Howe?
    8. Name events connected with the following dates: 1607, 1620, 1800, 1849, 1865.

    Orthography (Time, one hour)

    1. What is meant by the following: Alphabet, phonetic, orthography, etymology, syllabication.
    2. What are elementary sounds? How classified?
    3. What are the following, and give examples of each: Trigraph, subvocals, diphthong, cognate letters, linguals.
    4. Give four substitutes for caret 'u'.
    5. Give two rules for spelling words with final 'e.' Name two exceptions under each rule.
    6. Give two uses of silent letters in spelling. Illustrate each.
    7. Define the following prefixes and use in connection with a word: bi, dis, mis, pre, semi, post, non, inter, mono, sup.
    8. Mark diacritically and divide into syllables the following, and name the sign that indicates the sound: card, ball, mercy, sir, odd, cell, rise, blood, fare, last.
    9. Use the following correctly in sentences: cite, site, sight, fane, fain, feign, vane, vain, vein, raze, raise, rays.
    10. Write 10 words frequently mispronounced and indicate pronunciation by use of diacritical marks and by syllabication.

    Geography (Time, one hour)
    1. What is climate? Upon what does climate depend?
    2. How do you account for the extremes of climate in Kansas?
    3. Of what use are rivers? Of what use is the ocean?
    4. Describe the mountains of North America.
    5. Name and describe the following: Monrovia, Odessa, Denver, Manitoba, Hecla, Yukon, St. Helena, Juan Fernandez, Aspinwall and Orinoco.
    6. Name and locate the principal trade centers of the U.S.
    7. Name all the republics of Europe and give the capital of

  77. Re:A note to moderators by WilliamSChips · · Score: 4, Funny
    Um.. the only sure fire way not to be moderated in a way you don't like is not to post.
    This is Slashdot, not Global Thermonuclear Warfare...
    --
    Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  78. Re:STFU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a fuckin' pussy.

    When I went to school, we had so much violence and teen pregnancy issues that we had to carry our M60s uphill, both ways, under the snow. Sometimes with a pregnant teen on our shoulders.

  79. NEWS: Teachers union against changing status quo! by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,' said unimpressed Chicago Teachers Union president Marilyn Stewart of the Chicago Virtual Charter School, which will open to Chicago elementary school students this fall if approved by the state board of education."

    It seems that you can't sit a child in the Chicago public schools and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society, either.

  80. A Union Opposing Progress? No.... by Luscious868 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Look the bottom line is that the number one priority of a union is to preserve jobs and benefits for it's members. That means opposing progress if progress might mean eliminating jobs or reducing their sweetheart deals. Look at any industry, progress always means increased productivity which usually means eliminating jobs. Look at all of the industries with unionized labor in this country. Notice a pattern? They are all failing. The days of making $35 dollars an hour with full benefits and with no chance of ever getting fired no matter what are over. It's a shame that union members fail to recognize this. I live in Michigan and I see the effects first hand with the UAM. The harder these people try to hang on to the past, the faster their ships sink. Their refusal to recognize and deal with these new circumstances will be their undoing. You've got to produce and compete in a today's global economy and I just don't think they get it. They'll scream and yell and complain and strike until the cows come home but all they are doing in the end is further hurting the companies they depend on for their livelihoods. A few buddies of mine used to work for GM and I used to be amazed at the stories they'd tell. Guys showing up an hour late, sitting around all day essentially doing nothing and leaving an hour early for golf, all the while laughing about how they couldn't be fired. That's not to say all unionized workers abused the system, but enough of them did and they are paying the piper now.

    Look the bottom line is that the education system in this country will never be fixed until we break up the teachers unions. Liberals will scream and yell but it has to happen. One of the most important functions a government can provide is education. In this globalized economy education is more important than ever and it's impossible to have a good education system if you can't hold teachers accountable for their performance. I had teachers in high school who showed movies just about every day and taught us nothing because they knew they couldn't be fired. They were tenured and that was that. I had friends who in 12th grade were taking the equivalent of an 8th grade math class. That's simply unacceptable and we're paying the price. The USA will continue to decline until we fix our education system. Unfortunately both politicians and corporations have an interest in maintaining the status quo. If the average citizen was educated enough to know know badly they were getting fucked by both Uncle Sam and the upper 1% then most of the politicians would be out of a job.

    1. Re:A Union Opposing Progress? No.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look the bottom line is that the education system in this country will never be fixed until we break up the teachers unions. Liberals will scream and yell but it has to happen.

      Look. The bottom line is that our nations problems will never be fixed until Americans stop labeling people according to false categories. Partisans will scream and yell but it has to happen.

  81. good idea by theaddkid.com · · Score: 0

    I think I might be in the minority here but I think this is a great idea and it will work but only if the students have the right parents because it is the parent's involvement that will make all the difference in this type of program. If the kids get to just sit around all day because this acts as nothing more then a babysitter to the parents the program will fail if the parents sit and work with the kids it will work great.

    --
    TheADDkid.com
  82. Education vs. Socialization by Provos · · Score: 1

    To be fair they're right about sitting a kid in front of a computer and he or she not learning what is needed to succeed in society. Unfortunately, that has nothing to do with them attending school, as the public education system really doesn't do a good job of that either. Socialization and learning social interaction skills has to do with being around people, not with learning in a school. I like the attempt at justification through logical fallacies, though - it makes me excited that teachers especially can't differentiate between education and socialization. And yes, that was sarcasm.

    --
    I toggled a toggle and buttoned a button, but when I got done, I was done doin' nothin'.
  83. It's the English teacher's fault by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they had only continued to use Asimov's 1951 story "The Fun They Had" in class, no one would want to be doing this.
    ----

    The Fun They Had

    Isaac Asimov

    Margie even wrote about it that night in her diary. On the page headed May 17, 2157, she wrote, "Today, Tommy found a real book!"

    It was a very old book. Margie's grandfather once said that when he was a little boy his grandfather told him that there was a time when all stories were printed on paper.

    They turned the pages, which were yellow and crinkly, and it was awfully funny to read words that stood still instead of moving the way they were supposed to--on a screen, you know. And then, when they turned back to the page before, it had the same words on it that it had had when they read it the first time.

    "Gee," said Tommy, "what a waste. When you're through with the book, you just throw it away, I guess. Our television screen must have had a million books on it and it's good for plenty more. I wouldn't throw it away."

    "Same with mine," said Margie. She was eleven and hadn't seen as many telebooks as Tommy had. He was thirteen. She said, "Where did you find it?"

    "In my house." He pointed without looking, because he was busy reading. "In the attic." "What's it about?" "School."

    Margie was scornful. "School? What's there to write about school? I hate school."

    Margie always hated school, but now she hated it more than ever. The mechanical teacher had been giving her test after test in geography and she had been doing worse and worse until her mother had shaken her head sorrowfully and sent for the County Inspector.

    He was a round little man with a red face and a whole box of tools with dials and wires. He smiled at Margie and gave her an apple, then took the teacher apart. Margie had hoped he wouldn't know how to put it together again, but he knew how all right, and, after an hour or so, there it was again, large and black and ugly, with a big screen on which all the lessons were shown and the questions were asked. That wasn't so bad. The part Margie hated most was the slot where she had to put homework and test papers. She always had to write them out in a punch code they made her learn when she was six years old, and the mechanical teacher calculated the mark in no time.

    The Inspector had smiled after he was finished and patted Margie's head. He said to her mother, "It's not the little girl's fault, Mrs. Jones. I think the geography sector was geared a little too quick. Those things happen sometimes. I've slowed it up to an average ten-year level. Actually, the over-all pattern of her progress is quite satisfactory." And he parted Margie's head again.

    Margie was disappointed. She had been hoping they would take the teacher away altogether. They had once taken Tommy's teacher away for nearly a month because the history sector had blanked out completely.

    So she said to Tommy, "Why would anyone write about school?"

    Tommy looked at her with very superior eyes. "Because it's not our kind of school, stupid. This is the old kind of school that they had hundreds and hundreds of years ago." He added loftily, pronouncing the word carefully, "Centuries ago."

    Margie was hurt. "Well, I don't know what kind of school they had all that time ago." She read the book over his shoulder for a while, then said, "Anyway, they had a teacher."

    "Sure they had a teacher, but it wasn't a regular teacher. It was a man." "A man? How could a man be a teacher?" "Well, he just told the boys and girls things and gave them homework and asked them questions." "A man isn't smart enough." "Sure he is. My father knows as much as my teacher." "He can't. A man can't know as much as a teacher." "He knows almost as much, I betcha."

    Margie wasn't prepared to dispute that. She said, "1 wouldn't want a strange man in my house to teach me."

    Tommy screamed with laughter. "You don't know much, Margie. The teachers didn't live in the house. They had a special building and all the kids

  84. I went to publike shcools. by rxrx · · Score: 1

    "'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,'

    Let have a round of applause for our public schools!

  85. "Online Universities" are not Universities by gvc · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The responses to this message are way off track.

    So-called on-line universities are in general not accredited and have no standards at all. They are frauds. All you do is send them a few thousand dollars and they send you a piece of paper (or maybe a pdf that you have to print yourself) that says "Degree" on top of it.

    For years, some universities have offered correspondence courses by mail. A few let you do an entire degree by correspondence. Typically those universities have some mechanism for proctored examinations and they make you do a full course of assignments. Typically the degrees offereed are generalist arts degrees.

    There is no reason why correspondence courses must use snail mail for delivery of materials. On-line is a fine replacement. There is no reason why a university could not offer such degrees exclusively; however, it would be difficult in my opinion to maintain a high level of scholarship without a base established from real-live human interaction.

    While I think it is unlikely that there are any decent specialist degrees offered by correspondence (on-line or snail mail), such programs should not be discounted out of hand. But neither should the mode of delivery be completely ignored. As is mentioned elsewhere, interaction with peers and mentors is an important part of education.

    Bottom line: ignore non-accredited; treat on-line the same as any other "pass" degree -- evidence of the candidate's ability to complete something, not any particular expertise.

  86. Online Degrees vs the College Experience by grapeape · · Score: 1

    I went to college at a state university but ended up completing my degree via online courses with another school. I value what I learned from the online courses much higher than what I recieved from the state school. When I was in college my biggest concerns were getting stoned with my roommate, playing my guitar and watching my girlfriend do keg stands. With the online courses all the time was spent actually learning and studying.

  87. Relax, it was just a joke by Moraelin · · Score: 1

    Relax, it was just a joke. I didn't intend it to be either pro- or anti- online schools. It's just a completely off-topic joke, nothing more.

    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  88. Re:Agree Completely by everphilski · · Score: 4, Funny

    How do you get the liberal arts student off of your doorstep? Pay him for the pizza.

  89. Re:A note to moderators by plague3106 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    Social skills: pretend that it's ok that Timmy has 2 daddies.

    Oddly though, studies show homos make much better parents than straight couples.

    Respect for others: If Ahmal's father chooses to blow up a building full of innocent children, we have to respect that as his own personal life choice.

    Because no white person every molested, murdered, or ate the remains of children.

  90. Teachers Union = Edu Mafia by pjmidnight · · Score: 1

    The only reason the Teachers Union doesn't like this is because charter schools take students and therefore federal money from their schools. Students leave their schools because they are not succeeding. I've never seen an altruistic teachers union. If they are so concerned about the quality of education maybe they should spend some of their lobbying money on schools and teacher education.

  91. Actually... by numbski · · Score: 1

    To be fair, I didn't complete mine, but my degree was a Liberal Arts degree, bachelor of christian science in management information systems (not to be confused with christian scientists).

    Went to Greenville College, which is a small Christian Liberal Arts school near St. Louis. I actually went there to study music originally (Jars of Clay hail from there).

    Wound up running my own IT company. I haven't seen any friends with big red feet around here lately, so I think I'm safe. ;)

    --

    Karma: Chameleon (mostly due to the fact that you come and go).

  92. Individuality is the Problem by eno2001 · · Score: 1

    Everyone learns in different ways. Unfortunately, when it comes to providing school in an affordable way whether it's public or private, the individual needs of each student cannot be addressed. In the case of this charter school, the approach would work with a very narrow group of individuals. It would require discipline that most students lack and the oversight of a parent which most parents can't provide. The students who would thrive in a virtual charter situation would probably thrive even more in a standard environment as they would be dedicated either way. Dedication is one of the hallmarks of a good studen.

    I hated school since I found it boring to work at the level of those around me. I applied my dedication to my own interests on my own time: science, electronics, musical composition, etc... This was a failing of the school system purely based on the fact that they couldn't cater to my needs. While I was busy designing circuits and building digital equipment at home, the kids in my Biology class were having trouble grasping the concept of cells. While I was composing original music even though I couldn't sight read well at all, the kids at school were busy trying to even learn to play a simple instrument.

    Home schooling isn't the answer either and I'll tell you why. While my experiences in school were intellectually underwhelming, the cultural exposure was extermely valuable. I grew up in a very diverse community with plenty of jewish kids, black kids, asian kids, spanish kids and even "waspy" kids. My school experiences were definitely "big city". We had our share of incidents with knives, guns and rape by and against fellow students. We had plenty of drug and alcohol abuse as well among students with less forethought than others. (Keep in mind this was in the mid 80s)

    I value all of that because it prepared me for the real world where these kinds of things happen. I wasn't shocked by any of the school shootings in the 90s because to me it was real life and an inevitable conclusion without some major changes in schools. Home schooling completely removes a student from those experiences and gives them only what their parents want them to think the world is. That's completely wrong.

    A parent has no right to limit the experiences of their child no matter how much they might want to. That child is an individual and has a right to experience whatever they conclude they want to experience. I'm a hardcore Linux user. My daughter will still use Windows if that's what she wants. I despise religion. I plan to expose my daughter to every religion possible excluding obvious cults should she express an interest. It seems tha tmost home schoolers see home schooling as an opportunity to shape their child in their own image. Again, that's completely wrong. The goal, if anything, should be to let your child achieve their view of perfection.

    The virtual chartered school idea will work for some, but is far too fragile because there is no enforcement of the less pleasant aspects of school, most of which are social. I think the teachers are right. A lot of students will see it as an opportunity to goof off or cheat. A lot of parents will see it as yet another way to keep their kids out of their hair (why the fucking hell did you have the kid in the first place if you didn't commit for life?). But, I guess it doesn't matter. America is falling apart and fast becoming irrelevant on the world stage when it comes to anything other than brutality.

    --
    -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
    1. Re:Individuality is the Problem by slashdotwidow · · Score: 1

      You were fortunate enough to attend public school in a diverse area. I am in the South and diversity is one of the many reasons why I homeschool. I would like my children to interact with people from different cultures, religions and economic backgrounds, not just white protestant kids. I would also like my children to learn how to interact with people of all ages - this will help them think outside of themselves. Babies, elderly, children and adults of all ages have different needs and abilities. They won't learn that sitting all day in a room with 30 people their exact same age. I absolutely do not want to limit my children - and neither do any of the other secular homeschoolers I know. The public schools in my area focus on the basics - reading, writing, math. There are no gifted programs, no theater, no music, no logic, no computer science, etc (unless you happen to be lucky enough to win a lottery and get into the ONE magnet school which might offer some of those things). How much of a variety of literature, religion and politics do you actually think most public school kids are exposed to? (I ask in the land where Catholic and Jewish students are pressured to convert, George Bush is loved, books are banned and creationism is touted - heaven forbid anyone be an atheist, homosexual or pagan.) My children are not insulated from the news - far from it. They don't need to attend a violent school to know that there is violence in the world. I could not agree with you more that the goal should be to let my children achieve their own views of perfection. You have just expressed one of the basic tenets of John Holt's deschooling philosophy. And one of the primary reasons I will not send my children to public school. At least, not in this area.

    2. Re:Individuality is the Problem by eno2001 · · Score: 1

      Nice reply. It hadn't occurred to me to even consider the reverse reason for home schooling. Where I live (Metro Cleveland Area) the only people who homeschool are the white, protestants who love Bush and want to keep their kids from being exposed to anything they deem "bad". The public schools in the surrounding suburbs here (not Cleveland Public Schools themselves which are a mess) attempt to provide more diverse education with expanded opportunities for the arts, sciences, athletics, etc... But I can see that in the south things are probably a lot worse and Ohio, is sadly becoming "the south" in its mindset.

      --
      -"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
  93. Boys and men... by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
    Kids actually **need** socialization around adults and they need it much more than they need "socialization" around other kids.

    Furthermore, boys need socialization around men! Men know how to speak to and control boys. Women, especially those ruined by pseudo-psych theories in education programs, simply don't. Which is why teachers are increasingly resorting to stupidity like calling the cops when Chris pulls Katie's hair on the playground.

    -b.

    1. Re:Boys and men... by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I would point out that girls getting socialization from just men would be equally disasterous. And, although it's a bit more subtle, boys from only men and girls from only women is not that great either.

      Boys and girls need men and women in their life to show them how to behave, both within their own gender and when interacting with the other one.

      However, yes, in modern schools, it's almost entirely women until high school, and that's a bit late. It's not sexism, it's more that women like the job better. Schools have tried solutions like male priciples and male gym teachers, but I'm not seeing a lot of solutions.

      But don't go blaming women for the stupidity you mention. Half the time that's the fault of Zero Tolerance policies, which are imposed from above.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    2. Re:Boys and men... by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
      But don't go blaming women for the stupidity you mention. Half the time that's the fault of Zero Tolerance policies, which are imposed from above.

      I'm not *blaming* - I'm stating that they're innately less able to control male children. (As in: a male child is less likely to listen to a female teacher.)

      However, yes, in modern schools, it's almost entirely women until high school, and that's a bit late. It's not sexism, it's more that women like the job better. Schools have tried solutions like male priciples and male gym teachers, but I'm not seeing a lot of solutions.

      Maybe the solution is gender segregated public schools from an early age. Also, after about 4th grade, there should be seperate classes for math/science, English, literature, etc - so that a teacher can teach his/her pupils what he is good at, rather than attempting to be a *generalized* teacher who knows little about the subject matter at hand. I know that hiring preferences can't be gender-based, but I suspect that men would be more likely to want to teach at boys' schools.

      -b.

    3. Re:Boys and men... by AnyoneEB · · Score: 1
      Also, after about 4th grade, there should be seperate classes for math/science, English, literature, etc - so that a teacher can teach his/her pupils what he is good at, rather than attempting to be a *generalized* teacher who knows little about the subject matter at hand.

      My elementry school actually did do that grades 4-6. The students would rotate around to the different general teachers and each one would specialize in science or (different leveled) math. Now that I think of it, I do not think we switched for reading.

      --
      Centralization breaks the internet.
  94. What world do you live in? by Sodade · · Score: 1

    "A basic element of learning-teaching is the teacher, who just can't be replaced, the kids need far more than data, need also affection, support, guidance and motivation" Oh yeah! I got so much of this in public school! I am 100% certain that someone will eventually come up with virtual teacher software that will replace all of k-12 learning and do a much better job than a human teacher dealing with 20-30 kids at once. I'd rather my kids get their fake "affection, support, guidance and motivation" from a computer than someone on salary to provide it.

  95. What a surprise! by A.+Bosch · · Score: 1

    A union is against something that infringes on their hegemony! Let's face it -- there's two parts to this story: 1) Whether or not this is a good idea on the face of it, and 2) A union's fight for power. The primary purpose of the union is not the betterment of students (whatever they may say to the contrary) -- it's the consolidation and expansion of power and the betterment of its members. Betterment of students is an ancillary benefit, or at best a secondary purpose of the union that is used in support of its primary purpose.

    --
    Where there is the necessary technical skill to move mountains, there is no need for the faith that moves mountains.
  96. Re:A note to moderators by b17bmbr · · Score: 5, Interesting

    wish I had mod points. of course around here this gets modded flamebait, but you are 110% correct. I am a high school history teacher and am thoroughly disgusted with the treatment history gets in our textbooks. It is sanitized, whitewashed, and outright rewritten. Dianne Ravitch (hardly a right-wing ideologue) wrote a great piece a while ago titled: PC textbooks full of skewed history which details the way California (where I teach) purposefully uses history for every reason other than to teach about the past.

    Public schools have failed precisely because they are not doing precisely what it is they are required to do. There are many solutions, not the least of which is to eliminate teacher unions (of which I am a member) completely. I can think of no greater conflict of interest than unions lobbying the state on educational issues. There is no concern for educational quality only what is in the teachers' best interests. In fact, I believe that public employees shouldn't be allowed to strike. This is hardly an anti-labor/anti-union position, as public employees (police, fire, teachers) a) chose their profession b) have job security and c) serve vital roles which the market cannot remedy. Unlike say an auto manufacturer who has competitors, is accountable to shareholders, and has to actually market and sell a product, you have no real choice when you dial 911 or send your child to school.

    The unions have been infiltrated with very left-wing ideologues and it has permeated every sector of education. Now, before people get upset, just think about those places where "intelligent design" has been adopted into the cuuriculum. Many want that no more than others want Heather has two mommies but it is exactly the same prinicple. I've always believed that privatization of schools is the ultimate answer. In fact, government should stay out of the schools, marriage, business, the internet, etc.

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
  97. Mod parent UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Consider that if you are living in a slum in Chicago it probably means that you lack the ability to get out of your situation. Do you want people like that teaching their own kids?

  98. Not about education by john82 · · Score: 0

    Keep in mind that Ms Stewart, of the Chicago Teachers Union, doesn't care about the education that kids in Chicago receive. Her only concern is the impact to the union. As president of the union, she will categorically object to any proposal, program, grant, etc that would divert money from union members. Virtual schools serve students who theoretically could be in classrooms featuring union-member teachers. Ergo, this is an untenable situation and must be put down lest people get other screwy non-union ideas (like school vouchers so poor kids might be able to attend non-union private schools).

  99. Re:Agree Completely by prichardson · · Score: 1

    Don't feed the troll please. Please notice the total lack of command that the grand-parent has over the english language. It was clearly not written by anyone who's ever had to write any kind of serious paper (a necessity for a humanities PhD). Also, if he's on his way to a PhD, he is definitely not in line for tenure. Universities don't hire their own doctoral graduates. It's the worst of intellectual incest. Finally, all the extraneous line breaks in the post imply that it was copy and pasted from some shoddy text editor. There are a couple other clues, but they mostly fall under the command-of-the-english-language umbrella.

    --
    Help I'm a rock.
  100. intelligent folks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of the value is in being surrounded by other intelligent folks

    Where did you go to school? At university I was amazed that some of the folks I was with could ite their shoes...

  101. Evil-ution by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
    There is also one other myth I'd like to dispell. Other than social skills the second most common question is about religion. Not everyone is a religous zelot who homeschools.

    ... in fact, with the controversy about teaching evolution a few years ago in some states, it might actually be the other way around :)

    -b.

  102. Re:STFU by RsG · · Score: 2, Funny

    Bah, you kids. In MY day, we didn't have any fancy "automatic weapons", we had to use pointy rocks tied to sticks, called "spears", and we liked it! We had to walk to the school cave uphill both ways! Over glaciers!

    Teen pregnancy? In my day, if you didn't have kids by the time you were 15, you were out of the tribe (either you're sterile, or you don't put out - either way, we don't want you). Science class was learning how to bash rocks together to make fire, shop class was learning how to make our pointy rocks sharper, and sex-ed was a matter of learning the difference between a mammoth and a woman (you mate with one and kill the other - the people who got it wrong were violently beaten and had to marry the mammoth).

    Of course, comp-sci was done in COBOL even back in those days. Now there's something truely primative. I can't tell you what a pain in the ass it is to make a database using only COBOL language and piles of rocks. God help you if the rocks got out of order...

    --
    Erotic is when you use a feather. Exotic is when you use the whole chicken.
  103. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by williamhb · · Score: 1
    Kids actually **need** socialization around adults and they need it much more than they need "socialization" around other kids. Two kids by themselves teaching each other how to behave is like one blind man trying to lead another.
    They need both - you can't learn how to interact with peers (people on the same social standing as you) by mixing only with your elders/betters/superiors. Role models are important; but so is practice.
  104. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have it right.
    Note: The whiner is the Union head. OK: Whats a union head gotta do - defend the union. Are they to defend "right vs wrong school policy" NAAAAAA, defend the union jobs. In 1970 I worked (grad assistant slave) on a project that Harry Strausberg - then supert. of Chicago pub schools promoted. Walla!! a turn-key computer based teaching system for math, reading, language arts (thats writing for those from MonaLinda). All the kids got 15 minutes on each of the curricula during the class day and then went back to class with their individual performance on that subject. On the Iowa Basic tests the kids exploded the mith that black kids can't learn. All -- note ALL the kids were from a project next door. They ALL jumped 2 or more grade years within a year.

    The Unions put up such a fuss that the project was canned.

    The public schools are a mess. They cant be fixed. Abandon them. Let the kids free!

  105. Re:Agree Completely by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
    (the second you actually need to work for four years under a professional engineer)

    Not strictly true. Some states are 2 years. Others are 6 years. And many accept "equivalent work experience" in lieu of working under a professional engineer...

    -b.

  106. Charter school by tehcyder · · Score: 2, Interesting

    For the benefit of us non Americans, what exactly is a charter school?

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  107. Like, they're learning now? by Gonzodoggy · · Score: 1

    when a good number of high school grads can't find north america on a map, you can't possibly tell me that we're getting a quality education for our tax dollars. Get govt. out of the education business, fire the crappy teachers, and give a raise to the ones that are good.

  108. You should be a coward too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You really should be posting anonymously. Someday you will have to explain your posts to a potential employer; or maybe you won't even get the interview.

    1. Re:You should be a coward too by roman_mir · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You really should be posting anonymously. Someday you will have to explain your posts to a potential employer; or maybe you won't even get the interview. - I don't want to work for people, who believe in sensorship of ideas on topics that are unrelated to the employment in question. I know that I live in socialist Canada, where anti-union sentiment is accepted less than child molestation (and the current federal conservative government is fixing that problem,) but I will speak my mind. Being allowed to speak your mind out is the basic principle of democracy, isn't it?

    2. Re:You should be a coward too by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Parent is not a Flamebait, stupid moderators.

  109. SIMadult by digitaldc · · Score: 1

    'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,'

    Unless you provide that child with a high-bandwith connection and a SIMS online character?

    --
    He who knows best knows how little he knows. - Thomas Jefferson
  110. Re:Agree Completely by b0s0z0ku · · Score: 1
    Anyways, all I have to do to be a engineer wold be to get my MSCE and how hard couyld that be?

    Actually, in some states, MSCE's can get sued for false advertising if they call themselves "engineers" - the name "engineer" is restricted to people with engineering degrees or equivalent experience that have passed the Fundamentals of Engineering and Professional Engineer licensure exams...

    -b.

  111. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Because no white person every molested, murdered, or ate the remains of children.

    But WHITE people who do that are Evil.

    Non-white people who do that are misunderstood/fighting back the only way they can/making a personal life choice.

    It's called a double standard because it's twice as good!

  112. Mod UP! +1 coffee out nose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course, comp-sci was done in COBOL even back in those days. Now there's something truely primative. I can't tell you what a pain in the ass it is to make a database using only COBOL language and piles of rocks. God help you if the rocks got out of order...

    That line had me in stitches :) My coworkers are wondering what all the fuss is about.

  113. Virtual schools as an improvement on homeschooling by King_TJ · · Score: 2, Funny

    I've started paying much more attention to these topics in recent years, since I have a kid of my own who is about to start preschool.

    What I've observed here in St. Louis, Missouri, anyway, is that our public schools run the gamut from excellent to horrible, depending on where you happen to live. Our schools in the city itself are largely in the "poor to horrible" category. In the "inner hub" counties closest to the city, they're only 1 step better in most cases. As you move further west of the city, into the more affluent counties, the public schools generally improve.

    Unfortunately, the kids at the highest risk of getting a substandard education are often the same ones with parents who simply can't afford to stay home and homeschool their kids. So what you typically see are kids of well-to-do upper middle-class parents being homeschooled because their parents just believe they "know better" how to teach their kid(s) than the school districts do, or because they're a little overprotective.

    My thinking is, by homeschooling, you're *already* denying your kid(s) a lot of opportunity to build social skills. If they're using a virtual school on the computer while they're at home, vs. only interacting with the same parent(s) they always interact with anyway, how much difference does that really make? What's important is that homeschoolers get their kids involved in extracurricular activities so they're getting to interact with their peers in other settings.

  114. Re:But what about socializing? by Bill+Kilgore · · Score: 1

    Why the hell do so many people assume that kids need to "learn" socialization? Or that it must be learned in a school? Learning that most other kids can be little shits is not something that takes even an average intelligence 12-13 years to grasp.

    --
    Rediculous: A word indicating the writer is ridiculously ignorant.
  115. Re:A note to moderators by elcid73 · · Score: 1

    I'm buying you a pizza. one libertarian to (evidently) another.

  116. Yes, we'd all be better off by Moraelin · · Score: 1
    But to play devil's advocate, would you really prefer it if your kid didn't learn that other people might resent his intelligence, so when he starts work he thinks that everybody is stupid and he's clueless about why people get pissed off with him?


    Yes, I think we'd all be better off and society as a whole would be better off, if so many people didn't learn early that being stupid is cool and being smart is way uncool. I shudder to think how many millions of otherwise intelligent kids learn each year that you fit better in a peer group if you're acting as a thoroughly dumb "jock" or, if you're a girl, as a stereotypical airhead. Kids who otherwise might have made a great scientist or engineer end up learning that their childhood dreams are "uncool" and that to fit in with their peers they have to barely slip through school and never set their sights higher than getting a McDonalds job.

    Look at it from the opposite direction - schools might teach "don't be smart around stupid people", but they also teach "don't look down on people who aren't as smart as you".


    If only. They're two very different problems and acting as if there's any correlation between them doesn't do any good:

    1. "don't be smart around stupid people"

    That's what I'd rate as the biggest problem there, by an order of magnitude. For every single nerd who had the problem of treating everyone else as stupid, there'll be a dozen good kids who didn't, yet nevertheless end up acting stupid because that's what the group appreciates. Or worse yet, they learn "do look down on those who show any sign of intelligence."

    2. "don't look down on people who aren't as smart as you"

    Yes, a ton of nerds have a personality problem and treat other people as idiots... and get treated as idiots in return. That _is_ a personality problem, but it isn't treated in school. Being bullied and ostracized for seemingly no other fault than having a brain will _not_ alleviate the problem, it will just reinforce the impression that everyone around is an idiot.

    It certainly won't teach tollerance and open-mindedness when they don't get any tollerance and open-mindedness in the first place. Chances are the other kids won't even stop to analyze the _real_ problem, much less explain to the "nerd" why he's being bullied. And doubly so those who are just SFVs (Stupid Fashion Victims) and don't even have any actual reason to bully the "nerd" than that it's the popular thing to do.
    --
    A polar bear is a cartesian bear after a coordinate transform.
  117. Research and Education by Roger_Wilco · · Score: 1

    Any attempt at change is to be welcomed; perhaps the new way will accept some well-considered ideas of how to allow learning. Public education systems have a tendency to continue doing the same thing over decades, even when research has shown that better techniques are available.

    This is most clearly shown by Dr. Montessori. Her research is commonly used by the private schools that bear her name, but hardly any of her work has made its way into public education, though it's had as long as a century to gain acceptance.

    The teachers' unions, like any organisation, are interested in maintaining their own importance. Since Montessori's technique has primarily-uninvolved "directresses" instead of domineering "teachers", these unions are threatened by advancement. It's no coincidence that private schools usually don't require teachers to be certified.

    One fascinating experiment is being tried in Edmonton, Alberta, where something resembling free markets are giving parents the ability to choose between public schools: see here.

  118. Err... psycho? by Nursie · · Score: 1

    You sound like a bit of a conspiracy theorist there. I'm not parroting anyone or anything, I genuinely do think that people probably have a better experience of life if they learn to deal with a wide spectrum of different sorts of people when they're young. And don't start me on religion... And what do you mean by "scoring" in society? Happiness is, to me, the only score that counts.

  119. Re:Agree Completely by greg_barton · · Score: 1
    I have to read *3* *books* *a* *week* on average. Not picture
    books either I assue you. It is a lot of work, but the upshot is
    improved grammer and spelling skills that are lacking in the
    technical.

    And yet somehow you cannot spell properly or form complete sentences.

    "Not picture books either I assue you." - That's not a complete sentence.
    grammer - It's spelled grammar

    Curious.
  120. Re:A note to moderators by MindStalker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oddly though, studies show homos make much better parents than straight couples.

    Statistically thats true, simply because statistically ANYBODY straight person can become a parent which drags down the statistic for them. Homo couples generally adopt, and its rare and very hard for them to do so in much states, so that bottom of the barrel gay generally isn't allowed to have/keep a child.

  121. Greed by Sloth503 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Union opposes saving taxpayer money, more news at 11."

    They have a vested interest in keeping the jobs local; nothing wrong with that at all. I wouldn't want to loose my job either. This has nothing to do with quality of education or the kids, it's all about the money.

  122. inside perspective by mattavian · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Being a teacher I think I have a unique perspective on this. I'm sure that the online classes will work. Why? The students that are involved with the project are going to be the same ones that have parents that care and are active in their education. Time and time again I've found that to be the biggest factor in education. They would do better then the standard apathetic student sitting at home with a book and a candle. I feel bad for the teachers however, this may be the thing that takes the few students wanting to learn out of a classroom. Often these kids are the ones that make teaching worth it for many of us.

    1. Re:inside perspective by 99BottlesOfBeerInMyF · · Score: 1

      Being a teacher I think I have a unique perspective on this. I'm sure that the online classes will work. Why? The students that are involved with the project are going to be the same ones that have parents that care and are active in their education.

      If you ever need support for this assertion, see Stephen Dubner and Steven Levitt's statistical analysis of the Chicago school systems in the book "Freakonomics." Heck, read it anyway it is short, insightful, and diverse. They found a strong correlation between future success and students who were entered in the lottery for entrance to the best schools, but not any more so for those who attended. It did not matter if kids went to the schools or not, if their parents tried to get them in, they did just as well. You can also read your students the analysis of how little crack dealers make.

    2. Re:inside perspective by stormy_petral · · Score: 1
      From my experience, while some charter school students are the excellent learners of which you speak, there are also many who struggled in the classroom because of disabilities or inability to cope in the school environment. So, with the good students you enjoy, you also lose students who may otherwise take a disproportionate amount of your attention.

      And yes, by definition a virtual charter school requires an active parent who takes a strong interest in their child's education. Is it fair to that family to insist that they keep their child in traditional public school classroom to give the teacher satisfaction, or uplift the overall learning atmosphere of the classroom? Shall we insist that a child with supportive parents be limited in their access to the supporting parents in order to serve a greater good?

    3. Re:inside perspective by oyenstikker · · Score: 1

      "The students that are involved with the project are going to be the same ones that have parents that care and are active in their education. Time and time again I've found that to be the biggest factor in education."

      What?! I thought the only thing that mattered was how much money is spent on the school? Thats why the government needs us to give them more money, and to a higher level, so they can evenly distribute it, and we can be free from trying to run our own lives.

      If there is a problem, giving more money and power to the government is ALWAYS the answer.

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    4. Re:inside perspective by carpeweb · · Score: 1

      Isn't "cherry picking" one of the problems with all charter schools (virtual or not)? Having said that, I guess it could apply to all good schools (charter, private, the one across town ...); i.e., taking the better/more motivated/etc students out of a school will hurt that school. I hope we have a better long-term solution for those below the median, because otherwise, they're fucked. (Of course, 90% of us think we're above the median, right?)

  123. Re:A note to moderators by IAmTheDave · · Score: 4, Interesting
    There are many solutions, not the least of which is to eliminate teacher unions (of which I am a member) completely. I can think of no greater conflict of interest than unions lobbying the state on educational issues.

    I couldn't agree more. My parents, both members of the NEA and NJEA (New Jersey) are basically extorted into paying fees to an agency that hardly ever help in any way, and seem to spend more time lobbying on issues that have nothing to do with education (or the views of my parents.)

    Please - this is NOT a push to start a flame war, so realize this post is NOT about abortion. However, at least with the NJEA and definatley with the NEA, for some reason, they lobby HEAVILY on pro-choice decisions in local and national arenas. While it not only confuses me (less aborted babies = more kids in school = more teaching jobs) it's totally outside the realm of anything to do with the education of children or what's in the interest of the teachers who are part of the union in the capacity of doing their jobs.

    Teachers unions are so misguided and misdirected that they're almost completely useless. I know that they are certainly there for certain things like arbitration, but I feel that they evey shy away from conflict whenever possible, even discouraging teachers from filing grievances.

    I'm rambilng. Point is, I agree with ya.

    --
    Excuse my speling.
    Making The Bar Project
  124. Trolls are getting wordy by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    I'm going on to so a PhD in socialolgy

    Good luck with that! I always say whe don't have enough socialolgues around.

    Why, just the other day I saw an amateur attempt to socialolgise, and I had to tell him flat out: "You fail it!", he could never go on to so a PhD.

    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  125. Re:A note to moderators by LordEd · · Score: 2, Funny

    Troll 1: Fist post!@!!!@!!
    Troll 2: First!

    Winner: None

    Troll 1: FP!!
    Troll 2: OMG FIRst Post!

    Winner: None

    The ony winning move is not to first post.

  126. You couldn't be more wrong. by Nursie · · Score: 1

    The "socialising" I am referring to is not indoctrination. Whether that goes on or not is a totally seperate issue.

    Kids need to learn to get on with one another, to get by when forced into a situation where they have to deal with people they don't like, learn the subtle social skills.

    Sure you can get that from other places, but school is the best one I can think of.

    And reign in that libertarian rant there, I went to a private school myself, I think it's great that the state both mandates education and provides it. Even better that if you want to do it differently you can.

    1. Re:You couldn't be more wrong. by fish_in_the_c · · Score: 1

      I'm by no means a libertarian.

      still it seems to me that it is IMPOSSIBLE to teach children to 'behave' and 'get along' without violating the religious views of certain sects.

      for instance what is taught to a child who parents ascribe to radical Islam when the teacher insists that he should have respect for the views of others and be kind to the homosexual student in the class?

      The school is teaching something counter to the Childs religion.

      Actually the idea that you should 'get along with people you don't agree with' is if anything a derivative of Christian ideology ( although it is really a toned down one off equivalent that has been robbed of it's moral context depending on who is using the phrase).

      The idea has it's origins in thinking that revolves around things like:
      The unique dignity of the human being
      The existence of free will and it's sovergnty
      The unalienable rights of man.

      Many religions ideologies and philosophies that do not ascribe to any of these ideas and really have little or no interest and or emphasis on 'getting along with people who don't agree with you'.

      consider the Hindu cast system? Does that match the idea taught in schools about getting along?

      consider again Islam in it's radical forms including jihad , how does tolerance fit into that system?

      What about the type and branches of Christianity that have given rise to the KKK?
      Does the state have the right to discourage and regulate those types of religion through the use of public schools?

      I have no doubt there are public schools in this country that tend to support vs diminish the last category by their social environment. I have little doubt you could find schools in other country that do the same for the other categories.

      My point is that the enjoinment in a school and the social interactions of students and teachers ( usually called socialization ) DOES teach something and that something is directly related to morals if not faith specifically.

      So , you can't just make the blanket statement that 'socialization' is good in schools.
      You have to ask which school and what is the nature of the socialization.

      Unfortunately I'd say a large number of schools and have poorly addressed this issue and teach many things that are bad for society at large. Part of the reason is because it is nearly impossible to address the subject in public. Those that do almost always address it in the negative by lawsuits which has the result of forcing the public education system to basically teach a type of egalitarian atheism. It would be much better if there could be a conscious decision of the parents and teaches as to which values can be taught.

      That I doubt will ever happen so long is the federal government remains involved.
      Public schools should be funded and administered on the local level for precisely those reasons.

      My point I guess is just because there is 'socializing' going on at a school you are making a false assumption if you think it is good or useful or positive 'socializing'.

      A person's peer group can just as easily 'socialize' them into accepting drugs abuse and cheating on exams (perhaps a pre-curser to later forging research papers) are good as into thinking critically and evaluating evidence independently.

      Unfortunately because the environment has not been intentionally shaped in most schools it tends to do a great deal of the former and little or none of the latter.

      In the end I find generic arguments that children NEED the socialization that can 'best' be provided by public schools weak, naive , and over simplistic.

      As a parent you have to take into account the school itself and weather or not it's social environment is at least non-hostile to moral values you want to teach your children.
      If you find it inadequate you need to seek alternative.

      All of this is of coarse not addressing the fact that public schools are not very efficient at actually educating because they have to acco

      --
      âoeTolerance applies only to persons, but never to truth. Intolerance applies only to truth, but never to persons.
    2. Re:You couldn't be more wrong. by Nursie · · Score: 1

      You're still ranting. You're still spouting libertarian nonsense.

      YOU DON'T HAVE TO GO TO A STATE SCHOOL.

      Right? I know you don't want your little ones to be indoctrinated contrary to their religion, that's fine, keep 'em home, or send them to a school your sect runs, whatever. The state does not assume some sort of "Right" to indoctrinate your kids, because, let me repeat, they don't have to go to a state school!!

      Now, true, the state mandates that they must receive and education, but neither in the US nor the UK does that mean they have to go to a state institution.

      Oh, and you AGAIN misrepresent my arguments, I'm not talking about the education or teaching or state mandated subject matter when I say socialising. I'm talking about learning to be around groups of other people. People your own age. About having a childhood that doesn't revolve entirely around your own family. That could be at any school. ANY school of the parents choosing. Sorry if you can't find a KKK school of hatred in your area, but they're not too popular so they don't get much in terms of donation. If that's the ideal for you then you get the choice of degenerate state moralising or poor people skills in your offspring.

      We disagree less than you think, I agree parents should exercise whatever control they want over the education of their children. But I also think the state is absolutely right to demand that they get some education.

      (I also think it's right that strict religious types should have it forcibly educated out of them, repressive and retrograding societal force that they are, but that's another argument for another day)

  127. Right on! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    State schools (as opposed to independent schools) were created to fuel the industrialization. Schools aren't there to instil knowledge, they're there to condition their pupils to accept a life of subjugation. Ever notice how groups of students are called classes like the lower, middle and upper socio-economic classes? At the time they were created, the schools supplied what industry needed - automatons who could turn up on time, do what they were told (mostly hours of mindless work everyday until they died) without complaining.

  128. Copy and pasted. (and quick commentary) by TheSpoom · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And he is an obvious troll. I even suspect he cut and pasted it based on the line breaks throughout.

    *Googling, please wait...*

    Ding ding ding! We have a winner!

    But I digress.

    Here's the deal. Do what you love. Don't blame us for doing what we love. To think that your chosen career is somehow "better" than someone else's is pure arrogance.

    --
    It's better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it.
    - E. Debs
  129. Sure.... Send your kid to school on-line.... by scheming+daemons · · Score: 2, Interesting
    ...This country needs more introverted geeks with no social skills and no ability to deal with people.

    School is more than learning the three R's. It's learning how to deal with other individuals. Life involves cultivating relationships and learning what works and what doesn't when dealing with another human being. It's not just knowing the right information to get straight A's.

    The social aspect of actually GOING to school is too-often downplayed. Your kid needs to learn how to deal with other people... both good people and bad people. Those people-skills are something you can't get in a home school setting, no matter how you try. And those skills are a better indicator of success later in life than any report card with straight A's.

    --
    "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
    don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

    1. Re:Sure.... Send your kid to school on-line.... by moosebreath · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I agree with you, but your argument is more for it than against. School classes form an artificial society with kids all the exact same age. The develop a false set of values based on that very bizarre situation. Outside, they deal with people of all ages and become more rounded. The human interaction of schools is detremental to a well balanced education. It's just that we've done it that way since schools got so large that all the 'grades' were no longer mixed, but now we have a better choice.

  130. Re:VCS? Excellent! by tillerman35 · · Score: 1

    Unfortunately, with them being in a p*ssing contest with Agora, I think the excellence will degrade. For those not from the Great(ly backwards and mostly illiterate) State of Pennsylvania, PAVCS is PennsylvaniA Virtual Charter School. They use an excellent (see poster's description above) curriculum developed by a company called K12. Until recently, K12 had significant control over the operation of PAVCS, but not long ago they lost some of that. To muddy the waters, K12 now has Agora, its own virtual charter school. Competition being at the heart of capitalism, we now have choice, and the big dog in this market is Agora. I think PAVCS will suffer unless the two can come to some mutually beneficial agreement.
    -two kids in PAVCS
    --love the program
    ---make dashies, not slashies!

  131. Blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > "You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society," said unimpressed Chicago Teachers Union president Marilyn Stewart

    You can't sit a child in front of a teacher and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society.

    Heck, most things important in life I did NOT learn in school.

    In other news, DMV workers insist that DMV workers are critical, postal workers instist that postal workers are critical, backet weavers insist that basket weavers are critical.

  132. Re:But what about socializing? by scheming+daemons · · Score: 1
    Why the hell do so many people assume that kids need to "learn" socialization? Or that it must be learned in a school? Learning that most other kids can be little shits is not something that takes even an average intelligence 12-13 years to grasp.

    Learning that the other kids can be little shits is not the issue.

    It's learning how to deal with the little shits that can't be taught in a home-school environment.

    Learning how to deal with people... good people and bad people... is a lesson that can only be taught with practice. Practice that simply cannot occur properly in a home-school setting.... even with lots of brothers and sisters around. Dealing with siblings is COMPLETELY different than dealing with non-family peers. People you can't tell "mom" on.

    --
    "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
    don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

  133. Re:VCS? Excellent! by sambram · · Score: 1

    I have a younger brother (4th or 5th grade) in a virtual charter school currently. It seems to be working out for him even better than I would have thought. My mom has always been pro-homeschooling, and as others have said my observation is that the cyber model really does seem to build on that. They love the flexibility of having a fixed curriculum but also being able to build on it themselves, as well as being able to do the computer-work at any time of day (often at 11PM! sheesh.) Though, it also does seem true that some (not all) kids really need the support of a parent (or just another party) to work with it. There's another component to his school, however. The have a "Center for Performing and Fine Arts" which is an optional program (You can use their cyber program without enrolling in the arts center.) This, I think is the other key to what's really working well for my brother. Having someplace to go (and be creative!) two days a week breaks any monotony. As a completely aside, I would like to recommend to anyone who's interested in "Alternative Education" A. S. Neill's book Summerhill. It's written about a democratic school very much like the one I attend today.

  134. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by egarland · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While I have sadly never read Lord of the Flies I think the point you make is horribly misguided, especially when talking about the lower grades like kindergarten. Much of the goal in most kindergartens is to get the kids to understand how to operate in a classroom environment. You have to teach them not to yell, hit, bite, tattle, and how to use their words to solve their problems. You have to get them used to the world not revolving around them and get them to understand that their desire to do something is often irrelevant and direct their attention to the task at hand. If you do nothing else but get those things across the rest of the stuff will follow. Your argument makes no sense given the constant adult guidance and supervision that exists in a school setting. Schools would be the opposite of the Lord of the Flies scenario. Kids are socializing in the presence of trained experience professionals who, often times, have seen every nasty, cruel, sneaky trick those kids can think of 100 times over and simply won't fall for it.

    Many children grow up without consistency and a clear set of rules within which they can operate without having to fear punishment. Consistency is much harder to provide at home than it is at school where the conditions are well controlled and well suited for the purpose. School provides a physical space and a social environment where little kids brains can relax and explore and learn. By providing a change in location, a change in the authority structure and a change in the people surrounding them, you can quickly switch kids into learning mode where as at home they're still in the place where they sleep and play and where most of life's drama and serious stress happens.

    Providing a school education is hard and expensive but not providing it would cost a whole lot more in the long run. The primary differentiating factors between impoverished societies and developed ones are a flexible monetary system and public education. Without both of these things, society crumbles.

    --
    set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
  135. Re:NEWS: Teachers union against changing status qu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two poor options.

    The questions should be, can we change one of the scenarios so that there is a truly good option?

    It seems to me that we could improve the schools so that it becomes the better option. Or we could allow our school system to deteriorate further, making the on-line school a better choice by attrition.

  136. Not Surprising, Sadly... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is far from a surprise. Members of my immediate family - namely my mother, back when I was in K-12 - dealt with PTA's, school boards and teacher's unions regularly. The teacher's unions DO NOT CARE ABOUT THE STUDENTS AT ALL. Their attitude is that they'll start giving a damn when the students start writing them checks.

    I for one hope the teacher's union gets roasted on this one. Though nobody's willing to say it, there's an awful lot of underqualified teachers out there, and this, if properly implemented, could ease the impact that has on the system.

    Note, however, I say 'if properly implemented'.

  137. Forgot something by Silverstrike · · Score: 1

    I'm not saying that doing the student loan thing is a wise decision or not. My point is simply that the money is there, albeit with a 6% APR string attached.

    1. Re:Forgot something by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can find interest-free student loans if you look hard.

  138. Re:But of course you can - pony tails and stashes! by redletter79 · · Score: 1

    Agree sort of. I know way too many homeschooled kids that have absolutely no concept of how to act properly in any kind of social setting. One guy was forever jumping and then sitting on tables a la The Crow. Another guy refuses to speak more than 30 lines of verbal communication a day so he can focus on the medieval battles going on in his head. My ex boyfriend was also homeschooled and lets just say pony tails and moustaches never mix, even for an artist. sigh.......

  139. An insufficient model by razorfisher · · Score: 1

    In and of itself, this looks at the outset like an insufficient model. There is tremendous value in capturing the technological advances of the virtual world into the education sector, but to merely adopt this, extricating PE and music (there is art, contrary to the teacher union representative and PE is not listed in the curriculum, contrary to the CVCS FAQ page http://www.chicagovcs.org/curriculum/index.html ) is to leave a promising potential open to oppositions, not because of what the model does but what it doesn't do. The worst case scenario is that the technology is dictating the curriculum rather than educators, education specialists and researchers. This looks like a promising model but might it be pushed out too prematurely? Maybe a more conservative adaptation would have better results. If struck down, the unfortunate effect will be that more complete models in the future incorporating the technological advances of virtual classrooms in the public school arena might be similarly regarded, and written off. If successful, there might opportunities to incrementally improve the model over time. One of the challenges (and necessities) of working in a technology firm is that we are constantly driven by the physical dimensions influencing online interactions see our blog http://theworkplaceblog.com/. This story is a good reminder of that necessity.

  140. Re:A note to moderators by utopianfiat · · Score: 1
    There are many solutions, not the least of which is to eliminate teacher unions (of which I am a member) completely. I can think of no greater conflict of interest than unions lobbying the state on educational issues. There is no concern for educational quality only what is in the teachers' best interests. In fact, I believe that public employees shouldn't be allowed to strike. This is hardly an anti-labor/anti-union position, as public employees (police, fire, teachers) a) chose their profession b) have job security and c) serve vital roles which the market cannot remedy. Unlike say an auto manufacturer who has competitors, is accountable to shareholders, and has to actually market and sell a product, you have no real choice when you dial 911 or send your child to school.

    Have you ever experienced the life of a teacher in a right-to-work state like Texas? Your perspective might be changed dramatically.
    The school district I grew up in recently enacted a policy banning teachers from moonlighting by giving one-on-one tutorials or babysitting. I'd like to also note that the average salary of a teacher in Houston is about the same as the salary of a garbage truck operator in the same city.
    I'll agree that lobbies (of all shape and form) are a problem, but that's hardly any justification to throw the baby out with the bathwater. If a union is formed, it should function in its scope: to provide reasonable working conditions for a profession, not lobby to have the science books say "God created the world, some say it was evolution but they're probably wrong."
    Furthermore, I think privatization of schools is another case of getting rid of the bad with the good; okay, assuming you improve quality, you're decreasing quantity. What is more important, Johnny learning quantum mechanics at age 16, or the hundreds of poorer, less intelligent students that could potentially benefit from education? You're socializing a society, not providing a service to an elite few.
    --
    +5, Truth
  141. social engineering? by Descalzo · · Score: 1
    ...with a bunch of social engineering thrown in to convince kids that the government knows whats good for them.
    Here's an interesting story. When I first started teaching 3rd grade, we had an activity where the students came up with all of the purposes of government. As a class, we filled 2 pages with the purposes of government. These were the students' ideas, and they were all but 3 or 4 about welfare.

    "What does the government do for you?"
    "Pays my rent, buys me food, helps with bills, buys lunch,..." and so on. It was kind of depressing.

    But I guess my point is kind of that the government doesn't need the school system to teach the kids what the government does. Kids aren't dumb, and they see what's before their eyes.

    --
    I cried real tears when Li Mu Bai died.
  142. public schools are anti social by argoff · · Score: 1

    When we were considering my daughters education options, it became very clear very quickly that nobody on the planet is going to be more interested in her best interests than we are. While the school system always talked about programs, and money, they never never talked about responsibility and accountability. If a child's parent doesn't care, they are doomed anyhow - and IMHO to aid and abbet that doom by puting them into the state schools is unforgivable.

    Kids don't socialize in public schools. First off, people in the real world must socialize and deal with all age groups, not just the ones in their grade level. Home schools, and homeschool support groups reflect that reality far more than any public school. Second off, 5 seconds at any public school will tell you what most of us already know anyhow. There is nothing sociable or "real world" about the way the kids interact, that is unless they want to grow up to be incarcerated, drug infested, gang-bangers. It would be more accurate to say that public schools hide kids from the real world, and manipulate impressionable minds in a way that favors social control over individualality and success.

    I know this is blasphemy to say this, but even the teacher of the year in NYC 3 times said it. We would be better of if public schools were shut down alltogether. No fixes, no modifications, no new programs, just shut it down and force the responsibility back onto the parents - who would probably turn to private schools, home schools, and community voulnteer schools. Will some kids fall thru the cracks? That's the point. So many already are - when are people going to get it that a public school system isn't about a public education and can guarantee no such thing no matter how desperately people wish otherwise.

  143. Where did you go to school? by MikeRT · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The only time, including Kindergarten, that we were ever controlled was when the teacher brought his or her iron fist down on the class and made us worked on regimented little projects. Parents are by far the "lesser evil" here as they don't need to simulate a minimum security prison to keep their kids under control. The fact that many don't control their kids is another issue in and of itself.

    1. Re:Where did you go to school? by egarland · · Score: 1

      The only time, including Kindergarten, that we were ever controlled was when the teacher brought his or her iron fist down on the class and made us worked on regimented little projects.

      If you truely believe that your memory is very bad.

      --
      set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
  144. This is such bullshit by snowwrestler · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Home-schooled kids end up better educated than public schooled kids because by definition they have extremely low teacher-to-student ratios and are taught by extremely engaged teacher(s). Is it because home schooling in general is better than public schooling? NO. It is an artifact of who is involved--only the most engaged and active parents will make the decision and dedicate the time to teach their own children (who they care deeply about), and to navigate the substantial paperwork and bureaucracy in getting official approval for home schooling. The same is true for private schools and charter schools.

    Educational success is tied most directly to the level of engagement and dedication of the parents and teachers. The cost and bureaucracy selects for such levels of engagement in home schooling, private schools, and to a lesser extent charter schools. The computer teaching system may or may not--remains to be seen.

    Who is left to deal with students who have unengaged, uninterested, poor parents? Public school teachers. Is it any wonder that they burn out so quickly, and hold strong opinions?? They get no support at all for the absolute hardest jobs in teaching--their funding is pulled for roads, corporate subsidies, and charter schools, they have the most challenging students, and they are continuously shit on by people who never attended public school to begin with, or who still hold child-like resentments from what happened one day when they were a student years and years ago (let it go man). If home-schooling parents or private school teachers had to work in public middle schools, most would quit teaching and go find something easier and better paying. It's easy to be dismissive and self-congratulatory when you don't have to see what things are really like.

    The answer to our problem public schools is to recognize that the problem is not with the schools but with the system that sucks all the resources out of them. Instead people just find more creative ways to suck even more good students and even more resources out of them.

    Want to make public schools better? Get rid of charter schools, get rid of computer teachers, make it hard to home-school kids, tax the hell out of private schools. Force the community to care about the public schools, rather than try to find new ways for the best students and families to pull out of them.

    There's so much hand-wringing about how our schools are not as good as they used to be. Well in the old days communities recognized the importance of public schools and most students went there--so there was interest in them as institutions. Teachers received respect from parents on par with doctors, lawyers, engineers, and other professionals. These days so many people scream and shout about how public schools are "broken" that it becomes a self-fulfilling prophecy. Teachers are criticized so much as cheap money-grubbing idiots, is it any wonder that students and families and communities are unengaged??

    The modern approach to "fixing our school system" is the most misguided, stupid strategy ever. It would be like a city trying to revitalize its downtown by continously finding new ways to incent the best businesses and citizens to move out to the suburbs.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:This is such bullshit by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The modern approach to "fixing our school system" is the most misguided, stupid strategy ever. It would be like a city trying to revitalize its downtown by continously finding new ways to incent the best businesses and citizens to move out to the suburbs.

      In many downtowns, there's not much incentive needed for businesses to get out of the downtown since it's filled with drugs, gangs, and violence. Since the government won't do anything about that, the businesses and people with means all leave.

      The same thing is happening in the public schools. Get rid of the problems (meaning the problem kids) and things will be better. But your approach is the opposite: force everyone to go to public school and live with the problems (drugs, metal detectors, violence), and drag everyone down to the lowest common denominator. Doesn't sound like a good solution to me.

      The reason school were better in the "old days" wasn't because anyone recognized the importance of schools, but because problem kids weren't required to attend school at all.

    2. Re:This is such bullshit by Detritus · · Score: 1

      For many urban school systems, the best thing that could be done would be to demolish every public school in the system. When you've been fucking up our children for decades, don't tell me that everthing will be better if we spend more money and reduce student-to-teacher ratios. We tried that and it didn't work. The correlation between funding and results is weak. Some school systems are so dysfunctional that the only realistic solution is to pull the plug.

      --
      Mea navis aericumbens anguillis abundat
    3. Re:This is such bullshit by jdavidb · · Score: 1

      make it hard to home-school kids

      You should think hard before advocating aggression and the violation of people's liberties.

    4. Re:This is such bullshit by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Want to make public schools better? Get rid of charter schools, get rid of computer teachers, make it hard to home-school kids, tax the hell out of private schools. Force the community to care about the public schools, rather than try to find new ways for the best students and families to pull out of them.

      That's a great solution. Remove the parents' right to educate their children as they see fit, all to prop up the current system in an effort to 'improve' it, whatever that means. Gotta love that dictatorial approach to the problem. Really jives with the whole 'freedom' and 'democracy' thing.

      Well in the old days communities recognized the importance of public schools and most students went there--so there was interest in them as institutions.

      In the old days there were no compulsory public schools. The institution is a very new one, historically speaking.

      eachers are criticized so much as cheap money-grubbing idiots, is it any wonder that students and families and communities are unengaged??

      They're unengaged in the public school system. This is not at all the same as saying they aren't interested in educating their children. Hence the explosive growth of homeschooling, and other alternatives.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    5. Re:This is such bullshit by rakkasan · · Score: 1

      I'd say he has a point. The very best public schools in my state of Minnesota are 1. relatively small and 2. Have little or no competition in terms of home schooling or charter schools. The local community also happens to be over 90% white and middle classed. This is said entirely based on my own little view of the universe and I do recognize that its changing every year. Or maybe, I'm just living in an area that still is hanging on to some 1950's values. hmm.

      --
      The problem is choice..
    6. Re:This is such bullshit by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      "Want to make public schools better? Get rid of charter schools, get rid of computer teachers, make it hard to home-school kids, tax the hell out of private schools. Force the community to care about the public schools, rather than try to find new ways for the best students and families to pull out of them." etc etc.

      This has got to be the most disheartening post I've ever read on Slashdot. Surely, you can see that this is **CRAZY**. Please, please tell me you're just a madly skilled troll. If so, you got me, but I'll be grateful.

      What you are saying, restated, is this: Take away competition. Take away choice. Force everyone (particularly, of course, the poor, who don't have the resources to resist) to consign their most precious resource -- their children -- over to the care of a an unaccountable, quasi-governmental bureaucracy, which doesn't have anything invested in them and will institutionalize them in a setting completely different from the world it is "preparing" them for.

      Getting to the more abstract implications, what you want to do is the same thing Marx and Lenin wanted to do: Set up a perfect, centralized mechanism where everything functions perfectly. But the system (education in your case, all of society in Marx's) depends on people, and it only works if people act in perfect, idealized ways. And therein lies the fundamental flaw. People aren't perfect. They're not going to act in ways that you think they should. Any system that depends on that assumption is going to fail. (And, of course, that's after you've applied whatever form of coercion you can (in your words, "forced") to untold numbers to try to get them to comply.

      This is wrong, wrong, dear God so wrong. Please, please tell me you can see that!! I'm dying here!

          - Alaska Jack

    7. Re:This is such bullshit by twosmokes · · Score: 1

      He's right. He didn't say that it was a way to improve education, but it would most certainly improve the public schools. When the top 10% of students who were pulled out of crappy schools by their parents are forced to go back, you can gaurantee that said parents are going to make damned sure that the school is up to snuff and the hooligans who are currently running it are forced out (administration, teachers, and students alike).

      I'm not saying I'd like to see it happen, but it would fix public schools.

      The problem with the current public schools is that rather than influencial citizens trying to improve their local schools, they're just pulling Johnny out and saying goodbye. If the people with money had a vested interest in the improvement of public schooling, you would see positive changes.

      I think a lot of issues with public schooling would be fixed if we all finally admitted that not everyone will go to college. There need to be more VoTech schools and the like. In some schools the graduation rate is abysmal. Children should be given the choice to learn a trade and quit bothering the students who do want to go on to college.

    8. Re:This is such bullshit by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

      That's a great solution. Remove the parents' right to educate their children as they see fit, all to prop up the current system in an effort to 'improve' it, whatever that means. Gotta love that dictatorial approach to the problem. Really jives with the whole 'freedom' and 'democracy' thing.

      I am advocating one solution that will get communities re-engaged with public schools. The whole point is that the current approach is NOT democratic--it's like the government handing the richest and most active citizens vouchers of tax money to move out of town.

      And excuse me for believing in the power of U.S. citizens to come together and solve problems. We've done quite well over the years when challenged as a group. But, you're right that it is easier to just balkanize and disengage.

      In the old days there were no compulsory public schools. The institution is a very new one, historically speaking.

      Dude how old are you? Compulsory education dates to the late 19th century--that's pretty old to me. I guess if you're looking back 1000 years you're right, but there's a lot of shitty stuff in that 1000 years--are you sure you want to argue for the superiority of ignorance?

      During the 20th century America's dramatic growth and success took place on a base of compulsory, public-funded education.

      They're unengaged in the public school system. This is not at all the same as saying they aren't interested in educating their children. Hence the explosive growth of homeschooling, and other alternatives.

      Which is exactly my point--it is self-fulfilling to decry the state of public schools on one hand, while with the other you encourage the most enthusiastic and active families to pull their children and energy out of them. If we actually care about the state of public schools we need to find ways to get families to stay there and work to improve them instead of leaving.

      Of course maybe we don't care about them, but if that's the case why bother lamenting how crappy they are?

      --
      Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    9. Re:This is such bullshit by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      Well, OK, but that's the standard teachers' union line: Improve the schools! It neatly sidesteps the only really relevant point: We need to produce better-educated youth. Aside from that, who gives a flying fig about the schools? Good schools are only a means to an end. The point of an educational system should not be to have "good schools".

      "I think a lot of issues with public schooling would be fixed if we all finally admitted that not everyone will go to college. There need to be more VoTech schools and the like. In some schools the graduation rate is abysmal. Children should be given the choice to learn a trade and quit bothering the students who do want to go on to college"

      This is spot on. Our ed system is currently set up to force into the college prep path students who, -- *at that point in their lives, at least* -- simply are not cut out for it. It is a colossal waste of time and resources. It would also be neatly taken care of by a demand-driven, libertarian educational system, which (if you're interested) I outline in my response to the other guy who commented on my comment.

          - Alaska Jack

    10. Re:This is such bullshit by multimed · · Score: 1
      Want to make public schools better? Get rid of charter schools, get rid of computer teachers, make it hard to home-school kids, tax the hell out of private schools. Force the community to care about the public schools, rather than try to find new ways for the best students and families to pull out of them.
      My first concern as a parent, is to see to it my children are educated in the best way possible. I care greatly about other people's kids, but they will always be a distant second to my own.

      Ultimately though, you're asking the wrong question...trying to solve the wrong problem. Rather than thinking about how to fix the public schools (at any cost) the real question is "How do we best educate the most kids?" One public school system no matter how well funded will never be the answer.

      --
      Vote Quimby.
    11. Re:This is such bullshit by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "Want to make public schools better? "

      Not really, no.

      "Force the community to care about the public schools,"

      Aha! Your true thesis comes out. People should be forced to do it your way, because you know best.

      "rather than try to find new ways for the best students and families to pull out of them."

      My kids are my responsibility. I bear no responsibility whatsoever for yours, or anybody else's. Having said that, I would gladly help to educate any child who demonstrated the desire to learn.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  145. But we can... by accurrent · · Score: 1

    ...expect children to learn these skills in a classroom with 30 students headed by an overworked teacher who cannot focus on any student individually. I bet amazing things would happen if people took time to learn about things before they criticize them.

  146. Equal Opportunity? by MatrixCubed · · Score: 0

    What's to be said for equal opportunity? For those families living on lowered income, single moms who can't afford decent computers and internet connections? Certainly, children should have the opportunity to use computers at a very early age, in order to help them develop their analytical skills, but social skills are equally important.

  147. Re:Yeah right. - I call BS. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh yeah, you are so right. My wife, a kindergarten teacher, just isn't doing her job. She typically doesn't come home till 6-9pm at night and gets in at 6:30am in the morning. She doesn't get paid for that extra time, nor all the prep time she works on the weekends, late evenings, etc. But she sure isn't doing her job. Slacking off in fact....

    You sir, are talking out of your ass.

    Teaching is just like any profession. You've got some very good people, some very poor people, and the majority fall somewhere in between. Your knee-jerk blame-the-teacher generalizations just show you don't know what you are talking about.

  148. It's been proven to work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know how good their model is, although I will look at their website, but most LMS and online learning is not very good right now.

    However, http://www.linkonlearning.com/ has been doing it right for years. Their Pre Kindergarten to 8th grade has been a tremendous success in terms of student development. Children who were having problems in the classroom, enroll in LinkOn's program and often excell 2 or 3 grades within 6 months - I kid you not.

    What I found to be particularly great is the parent portal that LinkOnLearning has. As a parent you can monitor exacly what your child has been working on, and of course this goes without saying the teachers have the same ability.

    Good luck with your program!

  149. Systematic Conditioning of Conventional Thought. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I left public school after the sixth grade to attend an online academy. Their placement tests allowed me to completely skip seventh grade. Sadly, the school didn't have its stuff together sot he year was a pain and I switched to another school the following year. The problem with this school was that EVERYTHING was online, I had a bad internet connection and they had their stuff together so well that they created a little sect of internet totalitarianism through their locked down iMacs. Thus, the following year I switched again. While this third one was the best yet, it still relied to heavily on internet based classrooms and "interactive" learning environments. I had planned to stick with it for my last year of high school as well, but instead made one final switch. This last charter school was by far the best as I had to option of not even doing anything online, instead simply receiving the text and lessons books, being told to read certain areas and then answer certain questions. I submitted all of the lessons online and then sent away for the midterms and finals via snail mail.

    I'm not a stupid kid, I hated spending all day in school watching the teachers help the helpless while I was stuck with hours of homework because they wasted the day. I hated the charter schools that looked down on me and thought that I needed some sort of flashy, graphic, interactive online classroom. All I wanted was the books so that I could do the bare minimum of what was needed and do it quickly. Aside from the VERY basics, I have learned nothing from school. Even then, I had a firm grasp on read and writing before entering kindergarten, and could certainly tell my colors apart and count to one hundred... Unlike so many others. Of course, I'm a reader, which is somewhat of a rarity in America. Maybe if I had watched television other than PBS as a child, perhaps then I'd be a better image of the mold society tried to push me into, huh? Then again, school isn't about learning, is it? It's all about gaining access to a little piece of paper that ensures employers that you went through the proper social conditioning and are now capable of fitting in and rolling over.

  150. An argument against home-schooling by comp.sci · · Score: 2, Funny

    As a response to the numerous posts that basically all say that you can socialize your kids outside of school as well:
    I agree that you can teach them some social skills, but how will they be able to form lasting friendships and relationships? I'm sure some will be able to, but it took me 8 years in school with my friends to get really close to them. Friendships don't just happen on a trip to the zoo for some. If I'd try to homeschool a child, I'd be afraid it'd turn into either a socially reclusive or an overly social person. (you know, the type that is friends to everybody and yet nobody)

    Friends are one of the most important aspects of life and you should give your child every opportunity to find real friends you can!

    1. Re:An argument against home-schooling by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      I don't know if it's been pointed out yet, but if there are other homeschoolers in your area, it makes great sense to pool your resources so that individual parents teach what they're good at. Think of it as a small school where the teachers actually care - and kids can get some real contact with people outside their age group (not that it doesn't happen in schools, but it's far more rare).

  151. WRONG! by Chas · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Look the bottom line is that the number one priority of a union is to preserve jobs and benefits for it's members.

    No. The number one priority of a union is to keep itself in existence. Preserving jobs and benefits is just a necessary evil for them so they can continue collecting dues that keep them existing.

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  152. As a dad... by catdevnull · · Score: 1

    If my kid were going to school on the computer, the first thing I'd do on my home router/firewall is block the following addresses:

        myspace.com
        youtube.com
        slashdot.org

    Maybe not...then I don't know what *I* would. My wife would probably start thinking I had more "free" time or something...

    --

    I might know what I'm talkin' about, but then again, this is Slashdot...
  153. Re:intelligent folks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yale?

  154. Re:A note to moderators by DavidTC · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Erm, how do teachers have more job security than anyone else? And the legal inability to strike in several states has resulted in teacher's wages going to crap, and incidentally, schools having to hire incompetant people because the wages are so low. (No, schools can't just decide to pay their teachers more, that comes down from the top.) Teachers should at least be allowed to strike instead of signing contracts for the next year, i.e, start the strike between the school years. Right now the 'teacher's union', like any union that can't legally strike, is a complete joke.

    And your problem isn't with schools, or teachers unions, or anyone like that. It's with California. Don't go acting like California's gibberish is some sort of 'educational' problem. Did you not even read the article? 'The state's social-content guidelines should be abolished. They put the state Board of Education into the absurd position...' It's not even the Board of Education's fault, much less any teacher's.

    There is no fucking way that 'teachers unions' have a damn thing to do with any of that. You're anti-union, so have decided to conflate teacher lobbying and teacher unions with the government of California deciding to do stupid things.

    And, incidentally:

    So it's not surprising that in recent months gays and lesbians have stepped forward to demand a place at the state's capacious table. They too want their roles to be portrayed positively in textbooks purchased by the state. And frankly, they've got a point. In view of the state's broad inclusion of every other group in its list of those deserving such treatment, the state has no principled reason to exclude any new claimant.

    shows exactly where that author is coming from and where, I suspect, you are too. Damn, it sucks we don't seem to have a good excuse under the law to portray gay people as evil.

    Yes, there is such thing as 'Too much tolerance' or whatever, where no one can can ever be portrayed in a negative light, or just no one except straight WASPs (SWASPs?) can be portrayed in a negative light, and the California school system has managed to reach that point, about 20 years after Hollywood and everyone else did and then passed it. That's a bad point to be at, history needs to tell facts, and even fiction needs realistic villians.(1) OTOH, there are people like your writer, who was involved in writing the textbooks at one time, and who are annoyed that there's no 'principled reason' to exclude the mere existence of gay people from all the textbooks in school system, so maybe there's a fucking point to those rules.

    1) I remember on Angel where there was an inner-city gang in LA, and someone said 'Damn, that's the most multi-racial inner-city gang in LA I've ever seen.', which was interesting because it was a mostly positive portrayal (They were fighting vampires who were preying on them, which mistakenly put them at odds with the protaganist who of course was one, but it was more a classic 'superheroes not trusting each other when they met' instead of 'these are the bad guys'.) and thus it would be hard to see how anyone would be offended with accuracy. In latter episodes when the gang returned, they were more realisticly almost entirely black and hispanic, and at the end got even more interesting when they started killing off completely harmless demons, although they did raise an interesting point about these 'harmless demons' working with horrible ones, and that beings who laugh and joke with murderers are probably 'evil' even if they aren't actually committing evil acts. (Which is an analogy about race and racism in more ways than one.)

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  155. Re:privatization of schools by DrBdan · · Score: 1

    If schools are privatized where does all of the money to run the school come from? If the answer is "the students and their family", how does that work for low-income families? Would there be something in place to ensure that everyone can still access education?

  156. Teacher's Union in Detroit by Doug+Dante · · Score: 1
    In Detroit, when contracts came up, the only reason that the teachers didn't strike is because they knew it would send even more kids to the charter schools even faster. There was a one day black board flu, and that was it.

    Detroit Public Schools

    A good chunk of kids who used to go to private schools now go to charters instead, and in 3 years there will probably be more kids going to charters in Detroit than to the traditional public schools.

    Choice is good.

    --
    The world will not get better through technology. We must seek to be better people.
    1. Re:Teacher's Union in Detroit by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      This is what should happen in this province and in this country as well, but what is happenning here instead is different. People born in Canada have much fewer kids, actually if it wasn't for immigration, this country's population would have been in steep decline for years now. The new immigrants do not understand the situation right away, they tend to side with the current liberal government, because this is the government who is PERCEIVED to be better for the immigrants (while it is not actually the reality.) However this is the government who will not take a stand to the unions. We do have private schools, but with the ridiculous property taxes, lion's share of which are going towards public schools, it is difficult to justify paying seperately for the kids' private education.

      What we do need is to get rid of the unions or at least bring the power back to a balanced situation, and not let the unions have a free ride. We then have to reduce property taxes and allow parents a choice: either pay into public education system and thus pay more taxes for education OR take your kids to private schools and pay fees.

      It would be perfect for me, because I don't have kids and don't want them either, so I would prefer not to pay educations taxes at all.

    2. Re:Teacher's Union in Detroit by Doug+Dante · · Score: 1

      If your goal is tax reduction, then don't support charter schools. In our state, charters are displacing both private schools, which get no state funding, with public charter schools, which are 100% state funded, as well as other 100% funded public schools. This means more state dollars for educating children, as schools are paid by the state on a per pupil basis.

      --
      The world will not get better through technology. We must seek to be better people.
  157. Re:Agree Completely by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    Shouldn't that be Nomology?

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  158. An analogy: Microsoft vs. Others by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    "said unimpressed Chicago Teachers Union president Marilyn Stewart"

    Ok, I could say a lot more, but think of this in computer terms . . .

    The public school system is like Microsoft. Big, bloated, inneficient, tons of bugs, workable but poor products, etc.

    The other options are like Apple, Linux, etc. Not widely accepted, of varying quality, mostly misunderstood, slandered, etc.

    Marilyn Stewart is like Bill Gates, trying to overwhelm the competition and keep the $ flowing into the teachers union coffers. What else would you expect from the head of a large profitable company? When a new product comes out to compete with yours, are you going to praise it to the hilt and tell everyone to go try it?!?!? Course not. Would you expect Billy boy to go out and tell eveyone to go buy the latest macbook? Does anyone really think that the head of the teacher's union is going to praise a new school that might undermine her power base? That would be like asking Ballmer his opinion of a new distro of linux.

    Disclaimer: I'm not saying all teachers are this narrow minded, but when is the last time you heard the head of a teacher's union in a large metropolitan area praise anything but the status quo?

    (Posted as a coward cause I just burnt every one of my mod points on this thread)

    1. Re:An analogy: Microsoft vs. Others by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      You forgot about that they also get your money even if you home school or use Linux.

  159. The value of online education by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    I have just embarked on getting my Masters in Mechanical Engineering through distance learning. I already have a BS in Computer Science.

    I am required, obviously, to take some undergraduate pre-requisite work before I can start the Masters program.

    I am currently taking Thermodynamics through the University of Alabama's distance learning program. I get a DVD of the class in the mail every day. My tests are proctored here at my location, and I have to turn in assignments via email.

    While it does require more discipline than an in-class arrangment, the coursework is every bit as vigorous as what the people in-class are getting - it's identical.

    In fact, I'd say I have to work harder because I don't have the opportunity to ask questions real-time. I spend more time having to look at the text and figure out how to work the problems than if I could just ask the professor how to work the problems.

    So given that you have to work harder, and have more discipline, but get the same educational value, why would you disregard degrees from online universities?

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  160. And the best teacher of these lessons by blueZ3 · · Score: 1

    is the parent.

    None of the "lessons" you've pointed out as worth teaching is something that a child gets through some magic incantation that's only learned through "socialization" with their peers. The lessons that you are contrasting (don't be smart, avoid gatherings) are the natural lessons to be drawn from these situations unless there's an adult around to point out the longer view (don't be arrogant, don't be a victim). These lessons help children interact with their peers, but the lessons aren't taught by that interaction.

    As a former teacher, I can say with confidence that if you rely on teachers in the current system to teach these types of lessons to your children, you'll be visiting them in Juvenile Detention in a couple of years. The things that teachers are required to do and say and the things that they are prohibited from doing and saying almost completely rule out the ability to teach these types of lessons, especially at the secondary level. As a new (only been parenting for eight-weeks) parent, I can say that I would never rely on someone whose whole outlook is structured by tenure and not rocking the boat to teach my child these important lessons.

    In any event, I don't know any homeschoolers who spend their days "sitting at home." Most belong to co-ops where they spend time with peers, interact with younger and older kids, and get "hard" subject teaching (usually math and science) from a qualified teacher. My sister's kids had a college Biology professor teaching them science one year, and an astronomer teaching it the next. Home schooling is like almost everything else: you're going to get good and bad home schooling experiences and a whole range across that spectrum. Funny thing--that's just what you get in public schools.

    --
    Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
    1. Re:And the best teacher of these lessons by hey! · · Score: 1

      is the parent.

      What would make you think I disagree? That was my point: the most important teachers aren't necessarily "teachers".

      None of the "lessons" you've pointed out as worth teaching is something that a child gets through some magic incantation that's only learned through "socialization" with their peers. The lessons that you are contrasting (don't be smart, avoid gatherings) are the natural lessons to be drawn from these situations unless there's an adult around to point out the longer view (don't be arrogant, don't be a victim). These lessons help children interact with their peers, but the lessons aren't taught by that interaction.

      You are making my point. Children don't automatically draw the best possible lesson from experience, because they don't have the perspctive that maturity brings. That is naturally the role of the parent.

      Somehow, there seems to be an attitude that if you don't home school your child, you abandon them, handing over raising them to a government official. To be sure, it's a milestone when the child goes to school. They now have a whole universe which you are not a daily part of. However it doesn't mean parenting stops. It's when parenting steps up.

      As a former teacher, I can say with confidence that if you rely on teachers in the current system to teach these types of lessons to your children, you'll be visiting them in Juvenile Detention in a couple of years.

      Again, this is black and white thinking: Either you directly participate every aspect of your child's education, or you get out completely. Surely, you don't mean to say that teachers can offer nothing to students?

      In any event, I don't know any homeschoolers who spend their days "sitting at home." Most belong to co-ops where they spend time with peers, interact with younger and older kids, and get "hard" subject teaching (usually math and science) from a qualified teacher.

      So -- what you are advocating is a high level of parental involvement in the child's education, augmented with plenty of peer interaction and professional instruction. Sounds good to me. Only I don't think there's only one way to get it.

      Home schooling is like almost everything else: you're going to get good and bad home schooling experiences and a whole range across that spectrum. Funny thing--that's just what you get in public schools.

      Precisely my point.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  161. Re:privatization of schools by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    I'd also like to know how all these other school systems, to which the one in the US is often compared unfavorably, manage to be so great.

    99% of them are public, after all. France, Germany, England, Norway, Iceland. Japan, I think, though theirs is so different from the US/Europe that it's hard to compare.

    Yet here, the only solution anyone can come up with is "PRIVATIZE IT! ONLY THE FREE MARKET CAN FIX THIS PROBLEM!" Dumbasses. If public schools are so inherently awful, then how does everyone else manage to make it work so well?

    ALL that has to be done for our schools is for politicians stop fucking around with them. If we still have horrible performance, maybe just copy one of those great European systems. Still have problems? OK, then ya know what? It's the parents and the society who suck, not the schools.

    I suspect that that final statement gets at the heart of the problem, but if we want to find out, just follow that set of steps. "Problem" solved.

  162. Teachers Unions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am not very concerned about what a teachers union says about an alternative form of education. Any such form of eductaion is in direct competition with the teachers union. This competition means that the union workers will actually have too teach or loose out students (tax dollars) to the charter school. You will notice a trend where most teaching unions oppose any kind of alternative education. Do you really think they are the only ones who can teach in our society?

  163. The Unions by oyenstikker · · Score: 2, Informative

    My wife is a teacher, and a member of the union. (They force you to pay the dues, so you may as well join.) I read all the magazines and newsletters that the union and its parent organizations send. From what I hear, from the unions themselves, the unions care about two things:

    1) More power for the union.
    2) More money for the union.

    They are against new testing. They are against non-testing based instruction. They are against charter schools. They are against charter schools even if it means no schools. (Charters were willing to set up in New Orleans long before the public schools would have been able to operate. The unions fought against them, in favor of no schools at all.) The unions are against any changes to the tenure system. The unions are against anything proposed by or endorsed by the conservatives. The unions are against Wal-Mart. The unions are against the high cost of living. The unions are against forcing the teachers to get technology traning. The unions are against the schools spending more of their budgets on technology (and less on teachers). They are against home schooling. They are against school funding cuts. They are against property tax increases.

    And they support teachers retiring at 55 with 25 years of service. They expect to work 25 years, only about 1/3 of their lives, and have the rest of us taxpayers who work from 16 to 65+, including summers, to support them. (Earlier retirement means hiring more teachers, which means more union members and more dues paid.)

    --
    The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    1. Re:The Unions by pNutz · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They are against new testing.
      Students take too many progression tests as it is. Excessive progresssion testing means you teach for the test, instead of the student.

      They are against charter schools.
      Their efficacy is questionable, along with every other magic pill in the last 25 years (alternative schools, magnet schools, etc.)

      They are against charter schools even if it means no schools. (Charters were willing to set up in New Orleans long before the public schools would have been able to operate. The unions fought against them, in favor of no schools at all.)
      Liar. The union was scattered and powerless after the storm. The state took over immediately and the N.O. teachers union currently has no power. 20 charter schools have been set up since the storm.

      The unions are against anything proposed by or endorsed by the conservatives.
      Mayhap you should be looking at that one from a different angle. Magic-pill placebos are a little hard to swallow.

      The unions are against Wal-Mart. The unions are against the high cost of living.
      What?

      They are against home schooling.
      Rightly so.

      They are against school funding cuts.
      No shit.

      They are against property tax increases.
      Strange, since that generally means more money for schools.

      And they support teachers retiring at 55 with 25 years of service. They expect to work 25 years, only about 1/3 of their lives, and have the rest of us taxpayers who work from 16 to 65+, including summers, to support them. (Earlier retirement means hiring more teachers, which means more union members and more dues paid.)
      If it's such a bargain, then why aren't you a teacher as well? Is there some sort of downside to this profession? Ask the wife if you can sub for a day or two, just to see if you like it.

      --
      Death and danger are my various breads and various butters.
    2. Re:The Unions by colinrichardday · · Score: 1

      The unions are against anything proposed by or endorsed by the conservatives.

      And that's a bad thing?

    3. Re:The Unions by ediron2 · · Score: 1

      Don't feed the trolls.

      My father worked 29 years for the state. He didn't get profit-sharing, or 401k's, or an income that'd give him money to invest. He got a pension. A meager one. By choosing to retire *EARLY* after 29 years and at the age of 63, he took a HUGE cut in per-month payout. And his paltry little pension came with his reduced salary, which was routinely 20% LOWER than the industry norm. And now, he watches as legislators routinely deny even a 3% cost-of-inflation adustment.

      Ironically, even the 3% increase annually wouldn't keep pace with his insurance premium payments. Each year for the last 10 (he's 73 now), his pension has shrunk, after those premiums. Adjusted for 10 years of inflation, he's hovering above poverty.

      Pretty much everything else you've hit on rate as either disingenuous or trollish or 'DUH!'.

      As for your wife, have her move to a union-buster state like Idaho, even as a gedanken-experiment: I bet HARD cash that she makes a helluva-lot more wherever you live under union-negotiated contracts than she'd see here.

      Unions and management are a tug-of-war. The fact that either side has greedy self-serving bastards in charge cancels out. What is left is overall greatest benefit, and while it might seem easy to shriek 'low prices low prices' as you complain about those lazy union fucks that gave us a 5-day 40-hour work-week, occupational safety laws that make it unthinkable for americans to be cavalierly KILLED by their jobs, and so many other benefits, you're so wrong that words escape me.

      Oh, and I'm not a pro-union troll (my only time in a union job was boxin' groceries when I was 17 or 18), or a nafta-hater. Life's complicated and greatest overall net benefit, in my opinion, comes from people banding together. That's what pro-union people believe in. Commonwealth. As opposed to trickle-down voodoo.

    4. Re:The Unions by geekoid · · Score: 1

      They are against home schooling.
      Rightly so.

      why? home school childrens are better eduated, score higher on standerdized tests, get into better colleges, and are better social adjusted the public school system

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:The Unions by oyenstikker · · Score: 1

      "If it's such a bargain, then why aren't you a teacher as well?"

      Because I suck at teaching. So I got a job doing something I don't suck at.

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
    6. Re:The Unions by oyenstikker · · Score: 1

      I never said that unions were always a bad thing. I think they were a great thing in the early 20th century. I think in many cases they are doing great work now. But I am very skeptical of the teachers' unions, and that is when all the information I get about them is from the unions themselves.

      --
      The masses are the crack whores of religion.
  164. Re:A note to moderators by Garrett+Fox · · Score: 1

    I agree. As much as I oppose the Creationists and the "Heather" curriculum, I'd rather have some schools teach things that I think are stupid than have a central authority design a one-size-fits-all curriculum that appeals to the lowest common denominator. I'm skeptical also of this heavily Web-based school -- look at this "day in the life" description -- but would like to see it, and a variety of other approaches, allowed to continue.

    --
    Revive the Constitution.
  165. Poor Baby! by toiletsalmon · · Score: 1

    "no one except straight WASPs (SWASPs?) can be portrayed in a negative light"

    Is everyone picking on the white man again? It's a hard-knock life isn't it? White-man's burden and all that? You seem to be implying the existence of a history book that is being used in the public shcool system today that TOTALLY demonizes "the white man". Please, direct me to this mythological book. I'd pay a pretty penny for that tome. I was under the impression that the WASP hasn't done anything bad. That's what MY history books told me in school. Slavery just happened on it's own. All that Jim Crow nonsense afterwards just happened. The same thing with the tragedy of the Native Americans and the raping of our environment.

    It's a cold and dangerous world out there. Fortunately, the WASP has been fortunate enough to make it thus far unharmed. By the very grace of God I'm sure. I'm certain that someday, they'll have the place of prominence in that world that they deserve. The meek inheriting the earth and all that.

    Or maybe I misunderstood what you were trying to say.

    1. Re:Poor Baby! by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Um, what?

      Did you read like every fifteenth word I wrote or something?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  166. Re:A note to moderators by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

    if you privatized the schools and they were actually, you know, accountable, then there wouldn't be a "need" for unions. The "right to work" teachers suffer from the worst of two evils: socialism and monopolies. The state runs the schools and has a monopoly on them. So, yes, they're screwed. I'm not anti-union at all. As for the CTA (California), for instance, they are ever working for increasing taxes and lowering the bond threshhold. I'm a home owner, when you lower the bond threshhold, it simply raises my property taxes. Hell, it's hard enough to buy a home in Cali without assessing even more property taxes. And, as for the unions, they work to define the standards, the curriculum, and infest (right word) the teacher colleges. Their reach is far and wide. And it's not just in California.

    As for portrayal of gays, it doesn't matter at all of a "portryal". Here's two examples: Charles I and John Maynard Keyens. The former was influenced by his gay lover and made bad decisions from raising excessive taxes on the nobility and even the poor, to sending his troops overseas to help his brother-in-law (or cousin, it might be) regain the Palatinate. This eventually led to the English Civil War and his beheading. The latter was perhaps the most influential economist of the 20th century, and gay. The former it matters only as much as history is concerned, but it would certainly cast a negative light on gays. The latter it matters not one iota, but might cast a positive light on gays. So, do we exclude Chuck (where it matters) and include JMK where it doesn't? If it matters to Chuck and we exclude, we rewrite history, include and offend. If we include for JMK, it is trivialized, paternalizing, and egregious, if we exclude, we can concentrate on what is truly important. You decide...

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
  167. Privatized school - by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    only the well off will get decent education.

    This is already somewhat the case due to disparate quality of neighborhood schools.
    It would be much worse if the schools were all private.

    It would be wholesale Disinvestment into our future human capital.
    A very bad idea indeed.

    1. Re:Privatized school - by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have to disagree slightly. Children who come from families with several generations of above average income have a better chance for top honors at college. I think this might mean families with a predisposition to birth and rear smarter than average kids generally produce more wealth too.

      Also rural schools seem to buck the assumption that poor districts produce poor SAT scores. Its the inner city schools that are struggling (mostly with dropout rates and the SAT).

      Also about 60% of all public high school grads are accepted into college programs. The percentage is about the same for homeschooling. And Drum roll please.... it is the same for private schools. Magnet schools seemed to have a much higher rate than this but I don't think there are enough of them to really make a statistical impact (unless your kids go to one).

      Please go to the department of education website(state and federal) if you want to read the studies on eduction performance by income, race, location, etc.

  168. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by Shajenko42 · · Score: 1

    Reminds me of John Taylor Gatto's book.

  169. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by shallow+monkey · · Score: 1

    Amen, Amen, Amen!

  170. Re:A note to moderators by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

    it's a lonely world we're living in!!! In my government classes I confess to being a hypocritical libertarian. See, I have three small children, and sometimes, as much as I don't care if or what someone wants to snort, smoke, shoot, or screw, I fear for my kids health, safety, and well being. Libertarianism works best in an educated society, one where people are willing to accept responsibility for the consequences of their actions. We don't. So it pains me my hypocrisy. But at least I'm honest about it!!

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
  171. Teachers Union Advocating for Students? by Smarty2120 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This may be flame-bait, but I don't care because I'm dating a teacher and I've already had to dodge a flying vase or two over this issue:

    TEACHERS UNIONS ARE NOT GOOD AUTHORITIES ON WHAT IS BEST FOR STUDENTS

    I agree that this virtual classroom idea is a questionable way to teach students, but the Chicago Teacher's Union opposition to it really has nothing to do with its effect on students. Teachers unions exist for one reason alone: to advocate for for teachers as workers. Higher wages, better benefits, shorter working hours, better working conditions, more job security, etc. Sometimes these aims go hand-in-hand with what's best for students, but often they do not, and it is the job of the union to further these aims anyway. Why don't we provide the incentive of better pay for better teaching, instead of just years of work? Why can't lousy teachers be fired (look up "rubber rooms" in NY)? Why don't students have a longer day and learn through the summer when their math and science skills are way behind other developed countries? Why is the same government that runs the post office running every taxpayer funded school (because vouchers are "evil")? Why are performance testing mechanisms "stifling creativity" even when they test objective skills like math and science? Because these question touch upon the conflict between what's best for teachers and what's best for students.

    Let's not confuse teacher unions with professional associations like the AMA and IEEE. When it comes to what is best for students, any teacher union input needs to be viewed in context. Virtual classrooms have the potential to reduce the number of traditional, secure teaching positions. Of course the union opposes it.

    1. Re:Teachers Union Advocating for Students? by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Let's also not confuse TEACHERS, with teachers' UNIONS.

      No one becomes a teacher because they wanted to belong to the union.

      Unions presently exist primarily to suck the maximum money out of employers -- and remember, the union gets a large cut of each member's paycheck, in the form of "union dues" (the first teachers' union dues figure I found was $763/year).

      So the union, and more importantly the union bosses, have a vested interest in maximizing the number of employees that belong to the union.

      But the union couldn't care less whether their members are good *teachers* or not.

      http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q =%22teachers+union%22+%2Bdues results in an assload of complaints about teachers' unions... largely from teachers.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  172. A teacher's union... by ArchAbaddon · · Score: 1

    ... in a red state afraid of change? Why does this not suprise me? Holy underwear! They've got to protect our phony baloney jobs, gentlemen. They must do something about this, immediately, immediately, immediately! Harrumph! Harrumph! Harrumph! Harrumph! Harrumph!

  173. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What is more important, Johnny learning quantum mechanics at age 16, or the hundreds of poorer, less intelligent students that could potentially benefit from education?

    I don't know. Who really won WWII for us... Albert Einstein, or some random collection of a few hundred completely-replaceable grunts?

    There will always be more cannon fodder, but you don't want to sell the next Einstein short. Ever. At any cost. That's where Germany screwed the pooch.

  174. Ah the big "socialization" thing by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    >object to this in the same way as I object a bit to homeschooling - sure the kid will learn stuff, but
    >they won't learn to be around other people their own age, how to work with others, or how to be a
    >member of society in general. Some may consider that a blessing, but I certainly wouldn't. I think
    >it'll lead to some serious problems when they finally are turned out into the world.

    I've never understood why it is perceived to be of such value to have your children exposed to the habits and social mores of other children. When most of them behave as boorish animals, just what "socialization" traits is it you want your children to pick up from the rest of the general population?

    I agree with the other poster - I think kids would get far better socialization by being around adults, not kids.

    I've known probably 8 homeschooled kids. One just started on Wall Street as an analyist making $160K/year. One "went rebel" and got married young to get out of her parents' control. I've lost track of the rest. All were socially a little "odd" from most kids you'd meet. But, like the previous poster said - once these kids get out of THAT damn social environment get get to places like college, or the workplace, they are as adjusted, or better, than most.

    I think the reason that homeschooled kids seem "odd" is because they are. They've been sheltered from anamalistic behavior and they tend to behave in a more mature manner.

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  175. You can't shelter your kid forever.... by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    I agree that our kids should not be exposed to dangerous violence
    in the school. However, there are all sorts of people in this world.
    Some good, some bad, and some just weird. I'd much rather my kids
    learn to deal with the varieties of people in school, than later
    on when they're trying to make their way in life.

    Secondly, they would be exposed to the views and life experiences of
    a much greater variety of people in school than just sitting at home.
    This may be be considered a detriment by some, but I consider it
    an essential part of reaching maturity as long as we can maintain
    communication and keep them from straying too far.

    1. Re:You can't shelter your kid forever.... by slashdotwidow · · Score: 1
      OK, for the billionth time, homeschooled kids do not just sit at home. Unlike public school kids who just sit in a classroom with the same people of generally the same age all day. Homeschooled kids have the liberty to be involved in a larger amount of actual real world community activities, clubs, church, sports, scouts, etc. And there are homeschool co-ops and groups which meet regularly for study halls, proms, field trips, art lessons, science experiments, and more. I don't homeschool because I want to shelter my children, quite the opposite (see my earlier comment in this thread at http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=191184&cid=157 19077 ).

      And how in the world do you KNOW that they would be exposed to more at school? Public schools in my area offer very little in the way of political, ethnic, cultural, religious, economic, literary or scientific diversity.

      I cannot understand how anyone would think that junior high or high school were anything remotely resembling the real world, or prepared us for it. Is this sort of like how the prison environment "rehabilitates" people?

    2. Re:You can't shelter your kid forever.... by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

      I think the moral of this story is that there are as many home-schooling parents as there are teachers, and some are going to be good whereas others...

      A good homeschool education requires external interaction through clubs, sports, or home-school organizations. Some parents know and provide this, others do not. It often depends upon the reasoning for the homeschooling in the first place, as well as how socially well-adapted the parents were to begin with.

      Where I grew up, most parents homeschooled their children for religious reasons. They were generally some of the most strictly religious members of the community, and their children were not allowed televisions, video games, etc. Moreover, any social interactions their children had were through church. While I am sure they feel that their children benefitted from not being exposed to the "evils" of the modern world, their children of course had difficulty socializing with those outside of their church-centric world. The ones I knew who began attending the last years of high school at a public school had few friends and were generally unhappy because they were poorly socialized - they were nerds, but nerds in a way that made it hard for them to interact even with the other nerds (which included me) at school. One of them dropped out of college to smoke weed, I'm not sure what happened to the others - all in all, not the result his parents were going for.

      This is compared to where I live now, where most people home-schooling are relatively secularist people in tech jobs who felt that public school was a waste of time/too violent/ too sports-centered, what have you. I know of several communities of home schooling parents that meet together to help give their kids social experience. Friends who have mentored with these groups say that the kids are nice, if a little different sometimes (it IS a robotics group, so of course they're going to be kind of nerdy). They also say that the parents tend to be a little overbearing and incredibly nerdy themselves, which I think possibly contributes to the stereotypes of home-schooled kids. But the kids still spend their time with activities that most kids do, so they are more "normal" than the home schooled kids that I grew up with.

      And then you have my cousin, who was home schooled for several years between her divorced parents, and I'm not sure she was made to open a book the entire time.

      The fact is that in general, parents are making a specific choice against the societal norm to homeschool their kids. That says something about the parents, which means the kids will probably be a little different anyway, for good or for ill. It also means that more of a concerted effort must be made to give the children social activities that in our culture are generally all lumped into school. Personally, while I went to a public school, it was a very small one, and I know that for a few things (such as dating, heh) the small circle of people to know and meet were limitting. I can only imagine what it would have been like if I spent a larger amount of time at home with my family and the few social groups we frequented. For others who adapt less readily to outside competition a smaller school or home school could have been beneficial. Finally, a public education will provide you with a wide range of teachers, some very good, some incredibly bad. A homeschooled child will spend most of his time with his parents - and just because they've volunteered to teach doesn't mean they're any good at it :) Being a good teacher takes a lot more than just knowledge of the subject - I'm not sure I would have wanted to have to study with my dad all day.

      All in all, there is a wide variance in home schooling just as there is in public education. Anyone making cracks about home schooled children is likely only repeating their anecdotal experience, as is someone who defends it. Its very likely that the people who want to home school had a very unhappy education themselves, and those who don't knew some very strange homeschool kids.

      Personally, I'll probably send my kids to school but tell them that if they want to learn anything they're going to have to study it on their own. I'll see how it works out :(

    3. Re:You can't shelter your kid forever.... by Tungbo · · Score: 1

      Not knowing anything about your school area, I certainly cannot say
      whethere it's homogenized or not. What I DO know is that even if
      a parent joins a 'homeschool co-ops and groups", it would be one that
      the parent CHOSE. Whereas in the public school, the parent does not
      get to choose WHO attends except for choosing where their residence.
      Your average school is also certainly bigger than these "homeschool co-ops and groups".
      Thus it is clear that the child would have a greater chance to meet more
      diverse types of people at a larger unselected public school vs
      a smaller "homeschool co-ops and groups" chosen by her/his parent on average.

  176. tests and paychecks. by evilviolist · · Score: 1

    There's a big difference between you, as a responsible, intelligent adult, taking online classes at a tech school and doing kindergarten by video. While I'm not going to dispute what you're saying, in my district I find precious few teachers showing up for the paycheck. It's a rather low paycheck given the requirement of a college degree. I do it because I wouldn't be happy doing much else, and you'll find most teachers to be of a similar mind. Of course, it's the bad teachers that stay in memory sometimes. Test scores, eh? What that will do is pull highly qualified teachers out of urban areas (test scores, by and large, can be lined up side-by-side with socioeconomic indicators). It will also limit curriculum to only that which is on the test, as teachers will have strong economic incentives to reinforce that material. Is this the educational system you want?

    1. Re:tests and paychecks. by rspress · · Score: 1

      It would not really pull teachers away for lower income communities. For testing you can grade on a curve.....much as my teachers did so many years ago. You could also tie in more money per point rise for lower incomes schools. This would actually draw teachers to those communities. We all know that there are some schools were the students just learning what was on the test would be an improvement. Many high school grads with decent grades would have a hard time passing the 1880 8th graduation test. Despite what Hollywood shows we were more literate then than we are now.

      Even back in the 70's when I went to high school I had classes were I did absolutely nothing in the class....zero and got an A+. The teacher did not care and neither did we. I had many good ones as well. I was unluck or luck depending on how you view it, to attend 5 high schools in my high school years. In fact I was rarely at a school for more than 1 year in a row. In my 12 years of regular school I attended 15 schools. We moved quite a bit so I had many teachers. Despite this I was IQ tested and passed into the mentally gifted program. I do think we are doing a disservice to our kids by have these everyone wins events and giving kids numbers so they are not embarrassed by low tests scores being posted. These really does not help them to cope with what life is like out of school.

      I recently heard that they want to teach English Phonetically to all students. They made this mistake before here in California. My sister was in a test group at our school for one year when they tried this before. It set her back about 2 years in spelling. When we moved to another town she was still in phonetic mode while everyone else was in normal mode.

      Mine might not be the best way but the the lowering of test scores over the past decades shows that the current way is not working either.

  177. Offtopic; personal by wurp · · Score: 1

    Do you mind sending me an email at bobbymartin at hotmail dot com? My wife and I are preparing to home school our children and I would love to get a list of resources from a techie who has apparently been successful at home schooling.

    Just a ping email is all I'm looking for. Then I can give you more detail, and ask for a list of resources.

    Thanks a million!
    Bobby

  178. Taking a Look at the CVCS Materials by Dr.+Faustroll · · Score: 2, Informative

    After RTFA (I know, this is Slashdot, but...), and going over the Chicago Virtual Charter School materials, I can't say I'm terribly impressed with either one. For starters:

    • The school _will_ have programs in the arts and P.E. - any good reporter would have pointed that out, and challenged the statement by the union president.
    • The school _does_ explicitly address the issue of socialization - but see some comments on this below.

    However:

    • As designed, the CVCS is less of a charter school, and more of a "guided homeschool" materials provider;
    • In fact, the CVCS appears to be (mostly) a repackager for a subset of K12 Inc. materials;
    • These materials are singularly unimpressive - the curriculum, described activities, etc. fail to demonstrate any particularly innovative thought, serious research, or indeed much examination of what the best schools - not just in the USA, but worldwide - are doing;
    • While the curriculum is delivered via computer, it might as well be delivered via workbooks - there is little to no use of the unique visualization, exploratory, or social interaction aspects of the computer;
    • The socialization approaches mentioned are superficial at best - they seem to have been designed by the marketing department, rather than by educators, psychologists, and sociologists;
    • In fact, the entire CVCS website appears to have been designed by marketers, with little to no input from educators - the primary thrust is to provide parents and legislators with "well, that sounds OK" soundbites, rather than any serious educational content.

    Overall, it looks like the CVCS might be a tolerable interim solution for parents who only have access to desperately bad public schools, but certainly not a replacement for even middle-of-the-road traditional public education, let alone a serious attempt to explore the potential of virtual schools.

  179. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

    Schools would be the opposite of the Lord of the Flies scenario. Kids are socializing in the presence of trained experience professionals who, often times, have seen every nasty, cruel, sneaky trick those kids can think of 100 times over and simply won't fall for it.

    Many children grow up without consistency and a clear set of rules within which they can operate without having to fear punishment. Consistency is much harder to provide at home than it is at school where the conditions are well controlled and well suited for the purpose. School provides a physical space and a social environment where little kids brains can relax and explore and learn. By providing a change in location, a change in the authority structure and a change in the people surrounding them, you can quickly switch kids into learning mode where as at home they're still in the place where they sleep and play and where most of life's drama and serious stress happens.


    You don't live in the USA, do you? This all sounds like a nice theory about how schools should operate, but here in the USA, they most certainly don't.

    The primary differentiating factors between impoverished societies and developed ones are a flexible monetary system and public education. Without both of these things, society crumbles.

    Yep, I think we're headed for that. In some ways, it's already happened.

  180. Somebody mod this up by BoberFett · · Score: 1

    I only wish I had mod points for you.

  181. Obviously, you were never there... by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    Instead of "Don't be smart around stupid people - they'll come and beat you up for it.", "If you're smarter than somebody, don't be arrogant about it. Just because you are smart doesn't mean you're always right. And in the end it's not what you can do, it's what you accomplish that matters."

    Do you really think the reason smart kids get beat up in school is because they are arrogant? You are absolutely clueless and obviously have never experienced what we are talking about. Smart kids learn REALLY FAST to be INVISIBLE - NOT arrogant. Smart kids get picked on because they are A) different and B) make people feel bad about themselves because they know inside they don't measure up.

    Instead of "Avoid gatherings of other people - they'll beat you up because you 'looked funny at them'.", "People are stronger as a group than as individuals. So cultivate your friends so you'll never be isolated and vulnerable."

    Because the smart kids have learned it's safer to be invisible (see first point above) it is often very difficult to cultivate friends at all.

    Instead of "Don't speak to classmates - they'll chase you around the school yard for using 'funny words'.", "Talking to people is an exchange, not an opportunity to rub their noses in how much smarter you are than them. Learn first to understand the person you're talking to. Then learn to listen to how what you say is going to sound to them before you say it."

    Again - if you think most nerds are out to rub other people's noses in how much smarter they are, you could not be more wrong. While there may be nerds with strong enough self-esteem and self-confidence to attempt such banter, most have been, or quickly will be, beaten down to where they would never CONSIDER such a confrontation.

    Instead of "Hate - it's difficult to learn to love people who chase you all the way home.", "Don't be a passive victim. Use your brain: there is a way to to become the master of your situation. There is no quick fix, but intelligence, determination and effort will succeed in the end."

    Most are passive victims, lacking the stamina or confidence to do anything physically to resolve the situation (and would be punished by authorities if they did anyway) and unless you can conform to the tribe and hide what makes you different, you are doomed. Sadly, some kids break under the pressure, and don't become passive victims - they either turn on themselves (suicide) or on others (Columbine).

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
    1. Re:Obviously, you were never there... by hey! · · Score: 1

      Do you really think the reason smart kids get beat up in school is because they are arrogant?

      I don't think there's anything that can be called the reason. Call it an aggravating factor. What you get when you combine self-centeredness with superiority is arrogance; it's the natural state of an intelligent but immature person. Yes, I've been there; the only reason I didn't get beat up is that there weren't many kids who could.

      You are absolutely clueless and obviously have never experienced what we are talking about. Smart kids learn REALLY FAST to be INVISIBLE - NOT arrogant.

      If that were true, then smart kids would really fast start not getting beat up.

      Look, we all think our personal burdens are the ultimate. And by extension, it's tempting to see them as something outside your power to affect. But when you get older, you realize that most of your problems are nothing special. And eventually you learn that, while you may not be exactly at fault for your problems, your own behavior usually contributes in some way to it. It doesn't make the bad things that happen to you right. It just means that it is usually in your power to rise above them, if you can see the way.

      Again - if you think most nerds are out to rub other people's noses in how much smarter they are, you could not be more wrong.

      You don't have to set out to rub somebody's nose in your superiority to do it. We're constantly telling the world who we think we are and what our place in it is. Naturally, if our self image includes intellectual superiority, there is a potential for that to come across in an irritating way. Maturity is knowing how and when to tell the world who you are. But immaturity is the natural state of children: consequently I think you will find that irritating behavior is not uncommon among bright children. Have some of your own and you'll see.

      Most are passive victims, lacking the stamina or confidence to do anything physically to resolve the situation (and would be punished by authorities if they did anyway) and unless you can conform to the tribe and hide what makes you different, you are doomed.

      Learning that you are not doomed and don't have to be the biggest meanest person in the room to take control of your destiny is part of becoming a competent adult who can make his way in the world without trampling on other people.

      Sadly, some kids break under the pressure, and don't become passive victims - they either turn on themselves (suicide) or on others (Columbine).

      My own take on this is that both of these phenomena come from a combination of black and white thinking (e.g., the world is divided into predators and victims) and an overly dramatic self-image. Sadly, suicide and violence are possible outcome of immaturity. Happily, most of us do not kill ourselves, we just make ourselves miserable. And most of us don't kill others, we just make ourselves obnoxious.

      Then we get over it. Some of the time.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
  182. Re:privatization of schools by Ironsides · · Score: 2, Informative

    If public schools are so inherently awful, then how does everyone else manage to make it work so well?

    Because in the other countries the school systems are not required to take every single student all the way through 12th grade, no matter the school. Students are tested periodically to even get into the schools. Highschools have entrance tests and they only accept the top X students. Don't get a high enough scoore? You can't go to that school. Try one of the less prestigious ones. Get low enough? You're going to one that only has blue collar tracks for study.

    Oh, and these ARE the public schools. Also, most countries in Europe only provide test scores to the more prestigious schools. Where as in the US the numbers are from a cross section of all the schools.

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
  183. Where are your 'facts' ? by Tungbo · · Score: 1


    I'm talking about controlled studies that compare the effectiveness of these schooling environments - With all variables controlled for.

    In fact, such a study is NOT POSSIBLE, because the student/parent populations
    are SELF SELECTED. Many people agree that parental involvement is the primary
    factor for the success of the children. There is NO way to control for this.
    Home schooling is even worse because you can't even get complete measurement of
    outcome.

    With out such studies, you can belive what you will. But all you have
    are anecdotes and inconclusive indications.

    1. Re:Where are your 'facts' ? by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      The plural of "anecdote" is not "data", but you can still glean some information.

      Look at this thread, and any other thread involving home-schooling you've seen on /. in the past. In general, the people with direct experience with homeschooling have nothing bad to say about it. The people complaining about "socializing" or any other complaints have never actually tried it, and don't mention any specific people they know who have. The only exception are the religious-nut homeschoolers, and even then it's usually "but aside from believing the world is 6000 years old, he was remarkably well-adjusted and intelligent".

      Of course, maybe there's another explanation - maybe poorly-schooled homeschoolers are so stupid that they can't even work a computer to post here. But I'm surprised no one here has heard of such people.

    2. Re:Where are your 'facts' ? by Rikardon · · Score: 1

      If such studies are indeed not possible, then your (apparent) support of public schooling is just as groundless as the parent poster's support for home/charter/private schools. According to your own opinion, you can be no better armed than he.

  184. Re:A note to moderators by markana · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It's very simple. The NEA and local teacher's unions are the equivalent of the RIAA/MPAA. They're frantically trying to protect their mostly-obsolete delivery system, while compromising the quality of the product. The government school systems are failing their students, yet the educational bureauracy seems to be mostly concerned with maintaining the status quo. I somewhat expect a media campaign linking alternative education (homeschool, charter school, etc.) to child abuse, in the same way that media sharing is called piracy.

    It's not about education - it's about maintaining power.

  185. you apparently missed K-8 by m874t232 · · Score: 1

    Social skills: pretend that it's ok that Timmy has 2 daddies.

    There's nothing to "pretend"; that's the family Timmy has got. Even if you disapprove of homosexuality, that's certainly nothing you should hold against Timmy.

    No, "social skills" is to pretend that you didn't say what you just said should you have the bad taste to display your lack of decency and propriety in an actual social setting.

    Respect for others: If Ahmal's father chooses to blow up a building full of innocent children, we have to respect that as his own personal life choice.

    You evidently missed out on some of the important lessons of K-8, so let me spell it out for you: you are not supposed to respect the choice of people who blow up buildings with innocent children, no matter whether they are part of a terrorist organization or of some military.

    I recommend you try to get some remedial education; the K-8 lessons you obviously missed are important, and you will never grow up to be a decent human being if you don't learn them.

  186. Dead-on by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    >When they come to beat you up, kick one of them in the face. You might *still* get beaten up, but next time they'll pick an easier target.

    Sadly, I have to agree this is 100% correct. When i was a kid, I was taught by my parents never to fight. I would get in trouble even if I didn't start it. My parents told me that if I was getting picked on to just ignore the bully, that they would get bored and pick on someone that they got more of a reaction from.

    This could not have been worse advise. Ignoring the bully just shows you are weak, which invites more attacks.

    My kids will fight. Take your licks, do your detention, but earn the respect.

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  187. Re:Why not? Virtual Classrooms and Pr0n by FractalZone · · Score: 1

    Hey, where can I find the best Virtual Tutor for WoW? I'm a newbie at it and have only 8.5 days left on my free trial subscription. Note Essential Skills Used: disrupting the class (posting off topic), disrespect for authority (flaunting it), CYA (trying to make this post somehow related to the topic of the original article), and amusing one's self in public (don't ask).

    --
    "You're young, you're drunk, you're in bed, you have knives; shit happens." -- Angelina Jolie
  188. Re:A note to moderators by Ironsides · · Score: 1

    Richard Feynman wrote about this in one of his autobiographies. I sugest you read them. Of the things that happened while he was on a textbook selection commitee:
    1) He was the only one who actually read through all the submitted booksR 2) What was supposed to be a well balanced curriculum, was evicerated by either the board or the local government because some books cost too much.

    One other thing I read recently is that history books have been watered down so as to be able to be sold to as wide a market as possible. People in New York and Georgia are going to have two very different views over the Civil War. As such, they would normally purchase two books with two different portrayals of what the reasons were behind it. Personally, I think this is a good thing.

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
  189. Re:A note to moderators by nsmike · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't you rather play a nice game of chess?

  190. Home Educating My Kids Online by GlobalSas · · Score: 1

    I pulled my children out of public school for the following reasons (in order of diminishing importance.) 1. Terribly treatment from professional educators (I am an engineer and professional math/science/computing educator.) My sources are the firsthand reports of other students and character assessments made of those educators by their colleagues. 2. Sex, drugs and violence. I've seen it all firsthand; these hazards are ubiquitous in the United States. 3. Incompetence. On no less than 20 occassions my children returned home with teacher-produced (or worse, district approved) materials that were substantively incorrect. My various research supporting these claims was presented to the teachers and administrators in 4 of these cases. It resulted in no changes. I have definitively established the cause to be broad incompetence. My conclusion is that many teachers have no business in a classroom and know less than my 7th grade daughter about many fundemental subjects. 4. Religious intollerance. This comes on the heals of item 1. My children were singled out by both their teachers for their religious beliefs. They never spoke about them except to identify themselves. 5. Social programming and Propagandizing. I was regularly required to present information with which I disagreed. This ranged from idiotic policies to politicized curriculum to questionable interpersonal (sexual/social) advice. There are other, lesser reasons, but I think these five will suffice. I have used the K12 curriculum for the past two years. My children's 2003 Terra Nova test results averaged at the 63rd percentile. In order to baseline their progress against their past (and their age peers') performance, I have arranged for this testing to continue annually. In the spring of their first year they averaged at the 87th percentile! Even more amazing, their last tests averaged at the 93rd percentile (with numerous asterisks indicating that they had achieved the maximum score beside various "99" annotations on their subcategories. My children also manage our home in every respect. They do volunteer work. Each earns in excess of $200 per month through his or her own industry. They now interact with people of all ages. They also willingly interact with people of the opposite sex (for other than sexual reasons.) I am confident in saying that they have learned more in the last two years than they learned in the prvious 4-7 years at school. Furthermore, they are better socialized than their traditionally schooled peers. The only exception is this: they do not know as much about deceiving authorities, organizing harrassment or institutionalizing irrationality as their peers at brick-and-mortar schools. If congress really had some guts, they'd finance everyone to do the same thing. As for teachers unions, they are especially good at that final exceptional skill peculiar to brick-and-mortar schools: institutionalizing irrationality. The sooner we learn to ignore them, the happier and more prosperous our nation will become!

  191. Re:A note to moderators by m874t232 · · Score: 1

    but you are 110% correct. I am a high school history teacher and am thoroughly disgusted with the treatment history gets in our textbooks.

    The posting you're responding to is a cynical slur at homosexuals and people of Arab descent, and you're using that to express your disgust with the "treatment of history [...] in our textbooks"? I hope you were simply confused about the posting you responded to, because otherwise you have no business teaching kids.

    just think about those places where "intelligent design" has been adopted into the cuuriculum. Many want that no more than others want Heather has two mommies but it is exactly the same prinicple

    Well, if the democratic process in a state leads to the adoption of "intelligent design" into the curriculum, then that's the way it should be. I'd rather have that sort of thing being debated in public at the state level, than to let every K-12 teacher make up their own curriculum.

    wrote a great piece a while ago titled: PC textbooks full of skewed history [latimes.com] which details the way California (where I teach) purposefully uses history for every reason other than to teach about the past.

    As a society, we need standards for public education at the K-12 level to ensure that there is some social cohesion and understanding. If the standards we have are bad (and the California standards may be bad), then the standards need to be changed through the democratic process; abolishing them is not the answer.

    No, your problem is that you don't like the current standards, you know that it's politically hard to change them, so you take the easy way out and say that they should be abolished altogether.

  192. Re:A note to moderators by Ironsides · · Score: 1

    Furthermore, I think privatization of schools is another case of getting rid of the bad with the good; okay, assuming you improve quality, you're decreasing quantity. What is more important, Johnny learning quantum mechanics at age 16, or the hundreds of poorer, less intelligent students that could potentially benefit from education? You're socializing a society, not providing a service to an elite few.

    How about we take a middle road? Allow school vouchers. Most school districts spend $7k-$10k on average per student. Instead, give them a voucher for the ammount that the school system would otherwise spend on the student that is usable at ANY school the parents choose to place their child in. Give the public school system some equal competition for once.

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
  193. Adartse.Liminality, one word fits you perfectly by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Baaaaaaaaa

  194. Re:A note to moderators by foamrotreturns · · Score: 1

    Libertarians unite! Seriously, if you want two pizzas, I'll buy you one as well. That was a very well-written paragraph, and I couldn't have said it any better myself.

  195. What is this, a Klan rally? by sirrobert · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First of all, there are two categories here interacting to produce elements of a third category (as the idea is being structured):
    1. Home-school kids vs. Public(/Private?)-school kids
    2. Religious vs. Nonreligious upbringing.

    These two are mixing to produce the category of behavior we're interested in:

    • Socially well-adjusted vs. Socially ill-adjusted

    I went to public schools my whole life (except for one year in a private school in 6th grade). In college and after, I have known several dozen people (between my age -- now 29 -- and younger -- 21-ish) who were home-schooled. Some of them were Christians, some were not. There were plenty of ill-adjusted homeschool people of both the religious and non-religious variety, and plenty of ill-adjusted people of the home-schooled and public-schooled varieties.

    There are two types of disconnect among these groups that are being perceived as identical but are not. On the one hand, there is a social ill-adjustment by which a person is unable to interface with others in social situations due to a lack of exposure and a lack of instruction about social graces. On the other hand, there is a social disjunct arising from a desire to be separate from certain behaviours or experiences viewed as undesireable (profanity, pornography, lude speech, self-righteousness, judgementalness, prudishness, or whatever else they may perceive to be objectionable). In this latter case, the disjunct is often complementary; that is, those who would like to distance themselves from lude speech, for example, may not interact freely around those who use such speech, whereas those who do speak in a way they consider lude may not interact freely around those they consider prudish. In such cases, each tends to perceive the difficulty as coming from the other exclusively.

    This is categorically different than the former sort of difficulty, in which there is no reason for the separation -- that is, it is not by choice on any level -- but it is for reason of inability.

    Having said this, the cause of the former sort of person -- people who are unable to interact socially -- is parents who do not know how to socialize their kids or instruct them in social matters. There are lots of people who homeschool who don't know how to socialize or instruct their children, and there are lots of people who farm schooling out to the state who don't know how to socialize or instruct their children. There are lots of Christians who don't know how to socialize or instruct there children, and there are lots of non-Christians who don't know how to socialize or instruct their children.

    The other difficulty is one of choice. It stems from Christians not wanting to be certain behaviors (whether from weakness or strength or whatever), as well as from non-Christians not wanting to be around certain behaviours (whether from weakness or strength or whatever). It stems from Christians not wanting to accomodate people (Christian or otherwise) who engage in certain behaviors, and non-Christians not wanting to accomodate people (non-Christian or otherwise) who engage in certain behaviors. Some parents -- Chrisitan and non-Christian -- pass on these preferences to their children, often passively, but sometimes actively.

    The "loony" behavior to which you have alluded is the latter sort -- choosing things you consider ridiculous to choose (I know you do because you ridicule them by calling them "loony"). Going far down any branch of choice makes the decisions of those on other branches seem ever more peculiar (and I'm not one who is for "moderation at all costs" -- it seems to me we should do something all the way if it's worth it to us). I have a relative who always talks about "those damn Republicans" in such a manner as that he sounds as though he believes they are these impish wretches rubbing their hands together and plotting how best to destroy other people. I have a friend who seem

    1. Re:What is this, a Klan rally? by Fallingcow · · Score: 0

      Perhaps I need to put the fact that I both live in and grew up in Kansas in my sig.

      In the midwest, the homeschooling movement first became popular with the religious loonies--especially in the early- and mid-90s, when I had most of my contact with it. By "loonies", I mean Creationists and young-earthers, who would teach this to their children as the unquestionable truth.

      I chose my words flippantly, but I stand by the basic idea. Many people have a bad impression of home-schooling because it has, in their minds, been strongly associated with the most anti-science elements and movements in American Christianity.

      On an unrelated note: congratulations for being able to write coherently and thoughtfully. That is one of the most well-constructed posts I've seen on Slashdot.

  196. Re:privatization of schools by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 2, Informative
    If schools are privatized where does all of the money to run the school come from?

    From the school district. You've heard of school vouchers right? The idea is families decide where their child can get the best education and the government pays for it (up to what it would have otherwise cost them in a public school). And before you start saying that some schools wouldn't teach anything, the laws can be written in such a way that the schools would still have to be accredited by the state to be eligible to accept vouchers.

  197. Re:A note to moderators by Savatte · · Score: 2, Insightful

    While it not only confuses me (less aborted babies = more kids in school = more teaching jobs)

    Try thinking of it this way, though
    (less aborted babies = more kids in school = larger class sizes = less attention paid to individual students = decreased teaching efficiency)

    or

    (less aborted babies = more unwanted kids = more neglected kids = more kids with learning problems = more disruptive kids = worse conditions in the classroom)

  198. counter by Cryptnotic · · Score: 0, Redundant

    You can't sit a child in a classroom and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society.

    --
    My other first post is car post.
  199. Do some reasearch, relieve your ignorance. by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Most home schoolers are more social adapted then people think.
    They don't just stay at home and read books. The get together with other home schoolers most days, different parents may teach diffferent subjects.
    Sitting at a desk watching a teacher try and control 30 kids does not teach social skills. In fact, in public shools social skills aren't taught. Kids are left to figure it out for themselves.

    As far as field trips go, home schoolers typically go when the place is slow, so they can spend more time talking about the subject.
    Homeschoolers can get through a days curriculum work in 3-4 hours and ahve more time to socialize witht here peers. They can also participate in the extra-curricular activities at the local school.

    Of course, there will be some kids locked in their house do to poor parenting, but that happens with or without home schools.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  200. Re:Virtual schools as an improvement on homeschool by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "My thinking is, by homeschooling, you're *already* denying your kid(s) a lot of opportunity to build social skills."
    wrong wrong wrong.
    Home schooled kids have MORE time to develop social skills.
    Home schooling is a community of people that get together nearly every day.

    tell me exactly what social skills are taught be sitting in a class watching a teacher spend 50 minutes try to get out 15 minutes worth of information?

    Schools don't teach good social skills.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  201. Re:A note to moderators by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1
    Well, if the democratic process in a state leads to the adoption of "intelligent design" into the curriculum, then that's the way it should be. I'd rather have that sort of thing being debated in public at the state level, than to let every K-12 teacher make up their own curriculum.

    This was already debated in federal court and found to be unconstitutional. And that's the way it should be.

    --

    kurzweil_freak

    5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

    Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  202. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by Stinky+Cheese+Man · · Score: 1
    Kids are socializing in the presence of trained experience professionals who, often times, have seen every nasty, cruel, sneaky trick those kids can think of 100 times over and simply won't fall for it.

    What planet did you go to school on?

  203. Re:privatization of schools by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Informative

    If public schools are so inherently awful, then how does everyone else manage to make it work so well?

    They don't, which you'd realize if you did any actual research on the topic. Traditional school systems are failing *everywhere*; it just so happens that the U.S. school system shortfalls are more widely publicized, and U.S. citizens tend to be far more critical than their counterparts in Europe and Asia.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  204. And public schools are sooo good at socialization! by Roadkills-R-Us · · Score: 1

    Kids can get socialized anywhere. We homeschooled, and our kids are plenty social. There are certainly people who lock their kids away, but that's just one end of what should be a bell curve. Unfortunately, the fat part of the bell curve is growing weirder and weirder WRT socialization. The public schools have less and less discipline, and more each day become problematic.

    There *are* good public schools, both in terms of education per se, and socilaization, but not nearly enough.

    Furthermore, school is not the best place to learn socialization. As others have noted, putting kids in with a group of other kids their age all day is not a good idea for broad socialization skills. Having a couple of adults in the mix doesn't change it that much.

    Beyond that, school shouldn't *be* about socialization. It should be about teh more classical education aspects. Quit consuming all the kids' time with insane amounts of homework and extracurricular activities (sports here in my beloved Texas being a classic, over the top example) and let them *have* time to socialize. Quit making the planet off limits to kids, too. No skating, no bikes, no this, no that, no the other. Bleah.

    That said, yeah, a lot of today's parents won't do any better at this than the public schools. Parents are at least as much to blame as the schools. Parents, teachers and administrators do all have the excuse that they are products of the predecessors to today's silly programs. But excuses don't matter.

  205. Success? by jaypifer · · Score: 1
    "'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,' said unimpressed Chicago Teachers Union president Marilyn Stewart of the Chicago Virtual Charter School..."

    What I would like to know is what you need to learn in order to succeed in society? What exactly *is* success in society? And does the Chicago Teachers Union have a monopoly on the secret?!
    --
    Never go to sea with two chronometers; take one or three.
  206. homeschooling is the way by theCat · · Score: 1

    I am a California credentialed teacher in Life Science. I also hold the MS degree in Biology, and have conducted field research within the UC system. My wife and I homeschool both our children from birth, now ages 10 and 5.

    The reason I homeschool is not because I'm a religious wing-nut. The reason is because from my personal and profession experience public schools are much less about education and much more about crowd control. And as to socialization: the kids we meet who attend public school tend to be hyper, violent, obsessed with winning, and can't be around another child for more than 5 minutes without either hitting them or verbally abusing them. It's become such an obvious pattern that even my kids notice it. I believe (from having seen it) that the way schools are operated, and the values they install, are creating these children.

    I don't care particularly why the schools are b0rk3n. Blame who you like. It doesn't really matter, does it? My job as a parent is to steer my children clear of dangers such as that, and I do. Thus I would never allow my kids to attend k-8, though I might allow them to attend 9-12 if they really want to and can prove to me that they are ready to face the battlefield that is public education.

    --
    =^..^= all your rodent are belong to us
  207. Re:Agree Completely by zolaris · · Score: 1

    I stand corrected that was just what my professor said. Good to know. :)

  208. Let's find out. by AnotherBlackHat · · Score: 2, Insightful
    'You can't sit a child in front of a computer and expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society,'


    Maybe, but the real question isn't "Does it work?", but rather, "Does it work better?".

    There's a straight forward way to test it.
    Allow some number of children to be educated this way, and compare them with standard school kids.
    (Of course, there's probably many less destructive ways to test it too.)
    I'd say it's strange that they haven't proposed this, but then,
    I don't hear much talk about comparing results for any other schooling method either.
    The U.S. seems to stress conformity above all else.

    -- Should you believe authority without question?
  209. Homeschool ignorance relieved here! by geekoid · · Score: 2, Informative
    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  210. Re:A note to moderators by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    Stupid mods; can't reply to something blatatly ignorant.

    At any rate, the logical conclusion of your line of thought is that any two people that wish to have kids, naturally or adopt, must meet certain guidelines. Personally I'm all in favor of that; people should be sterlized at birth, until they prove that they can take care of a child.

  211. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by maxpublic · · Score: 2, Insightful

    You have to teach them not to yell, hit, bite, tattle, and how to use their words to solve their problems. You have to get them used to the world not revolving around them and get them to understand that their desire to do something is often irrelevant and direct their attention to the task at hand.

    That's called "parenting", an apparently lost art in many parts of the First World. So lost, in fact, that some people actually think it's impossible to teach a child these things outside the context of the school system.

    Consistency is much harder to provide at home than it is at school where the conditions are well controlled and well suited for the purpose.

    The fantasy land you live in is amusing, to say the least. As a teacher I commend you on the development of your imagination!

    By providing a change in location, a change in the authority structure and a change in the people surrounding them, you can quickly switch kids into learning mode where as at home they're still in the place where they sleep and play and where most of life's drama and serious stress happens.

    Oh, and what did the poor human race do before the advent of that shining light known as compulsory public education? Barbarians, they were; rabid animals, even. Thank the gods that self-proclaimed intellectuals have saved us from those dark days!

    Without both of these things, society crumbles.

    I guess that's why the Roman Empire only lasted a thousand years. No compulsory public education!

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  212. Re:A note to moderators by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

    Let's hope that the NEA never starts advertising that logic.

    --
    Excuse my speling.
    Making The Bar Project
  213. Lord of the Flies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm surprised that, as far as I can see, no one has mentioned The Chocolate War by Robert Cormier. This book offers an even better picture of how bad things can get in school (and I've been told that it isn't as fictional as I'd like to believe), as far as how terrible kids can be to one another.

  214. Re:A note to moderators by jcr · · Score: 1

    Umm... I really wouldn't cite Keynes as an example of a positive contributor to society. Try Turing instead.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  215. Re:Agree Completely by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1
    It is a lot of work, but the upshot is improved grammer and spelling skills that are lacking in the technical..... I'm going on to so a PhD in socialolgy where I'll be line for tenure where I have a much more rewarding job then beeing a science freak or an engineer.

    I guess "improved spelling skills" means inventing words like "socialology" and "beeing". I'm sure if I had the education, I could point out exactly where else you're wrong. In any case, no offense, but your writing seems somewhat worse than my brother's, and he's fifteen. Same problem he used to have, though -- ridiculously long run-on sentences. Maybe it's perfectly grammatically sound but it also makes you feel out of breath by the time you get to the end of it even if you're reading silently like in your head.

    Seriously, I've had one year of college, you've had how many? And I failed English 105 both times, not because it was hard, but because it was boring as hell.

    Can you really blame me for "beeing" elitist, when I can build a computer from parts, program for a living, figure out most people's computer problems in less than a minute, but still type at sixty words per minute with better spelling, grammar, and punctuation than you, without even trying?

    I try not to be arrogant about it, but you really asked for that. And I won't bring up the rest of your post about science, because other people have already humiliated you there -- astrology? Seriously? Ok, smart guy, if science is 95% opinion, then why do 95% of the opinions among real scientists agree? Because they're based on repeatable experiments. It's very hard to find a single song that 95% of people agree sounds good, because tastes vary so much -- certainly 95% of people will not find that their own iTunes library is 95% the same stuff.

    Oh, sorry, you don't like numbers. Well, you brought it up. You really did ask for that.

    --
    Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
  216. Re:A note to moderators by jcr · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The problem isn't merely that there are left-wingers in the unions and administration, it's that as long as there is a near-monopoly on schooling (not education, mind you), someone is going to demand that the schooling aparatus push their agenda.

    -jcr

    --
    The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
  217. Re:But what about socializing? by maxpublic · · Score: 1

    It's learning how to deal with the little shits that can't be taught in a home-school environment.

    Horseshit. You, like many of the other ignoramuses here, seem to think that homeschooled kids are kept in dark basements, away from every other human being, until they turn 18. You couldn't be further from the truth.

    Our kids tend to get involved in a hell of a lot more 'extracurricular' activities than yours do, as many others have pointed out. Music lessons, martial arts, sports, clubs, etc. Furthermore, most of us homeschoolers form associations so that our kids can socialize with each other, with other adults, and so forth. We even (gasp!) sometimes swap teaching when it turns out one of us is better at a subject than another (e.g., one parent is a computer programmer, the other a biologist). Call it a 'trade of services'.

    You don't have a clue what you're talking about here. Even a cursory googling would show you just how wrong you are, and just how organized WE are. We're a school system, a voluntary one, done right.

    Max

    --
    My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  218. Live in the real world by robertjw · · Score: 1

    I grew up with MANY homeschooled kids and if there is one thing I can say about all of them is that they were ALL socially awkward. My best friend was homeschooled and it's taken him the last 16 years to get over the social impact he suffered. I agree completely that homeschooling can give you a much better education, especially at the elementary level. Social skills OTOH evolve from being in a social situation. A field trip once a month, or weekly sports activity is no substitute for spending many hours in a crowded classroom EVERY DAY. My sister went to one of the most prestigious undergrad business programs in the country. You know what they taugh? Social skills. No, not directly, but nearly every class revolved around group project work. Why? Because social skills are the number one most valuable commodity in the world we live in. I know people that are dumber than a post but excel in their professional and personal lives specifically because of their ability to communicat and interact with other people. Personally, I would not be so cavalier as to threaten my child's future by exposing them to a homeschool environment. Besides, if you live in an area where your child has so many peers that they can play with them after 3-4 hours of schoolwork (while normal kids are at school), why not get together and start your own private school?

    1. Re:Live in the real world by Reziac · · Score: 1

      See my post above about how home schooling is almost never about the kid's problems in school, but rather nearly always about the problems the *parent* is afraid of, and that the parent often *generates* the problems for the kid. It's part of a syndrome of schizophrenic overprotectiveness.

      Is it any wonder that when such parents homeschool, the kids turn out as socially inept as their parents already are?? yeah, kids of such parents may already be in the hole genetically, but why make it worse by denying the kid a chance to learn to better adapt??

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    2. Re:Live in the real world by boingo82 · · Score: 1
      I posted elsewhere in this thread, that I was somewhat homeschooled (4 years) and have twin brothers who were homeschooled different amounts (4 years and 2 years) and 3 other siblings who weren't homeschooled at all.

      We're ALL socially inept. My sister and I being a bit more competent than any of the boys.

      Do you think that homeschooling causes social ineptitude, or is it more attractive to people who tend to be socially inept anyway?

      --
      As a republican I feel it my responsibity to manufacture criminals. People need punished!
    3. Re:Live in the real world by robertjw · · Score: 1

      Do you think that homeschooling causes social ineptitude, or is it more attractive to people who tend to be socially inept anyway?

      I wouldn't say homeschooling causes social ineptitude, more that it amplifies it. Putting a child in a classroom of 30+ other kids he doesn't know is going to be a learning experience no matter what. Sometimes it's a bad experience, and that's where parents need to help their kids work through it. Homeschooling just shelters a child from these experiences. Some say this is a good thing, personally I'm of the opinion that most experiences cause growth, especially for a kid.

      Obviously homeschooling is going to be more attractive for people who have difficulties socially to start with, but catering to the desire for isolation only exacerbates the problem.

      Being in a public school forces a child to associate with people who are not from the same socio-economic background they are from. One of the biggest problems I see with homeschooling is that when you are interacting socially outside the home it's generally with people from the same religious/ideological background as you. Kids rarely have much opportunity to meet new people from different backgrounds or exercise much in the way of conflict resolution skills.

    4. Re:Live in the real world by robertjw · · Score: 1

      See my post above about how home schooling is almost never about the kid's problems in school, but rather nearly always about the problems the *parent* is afraid of...

      Looked at your post, and your other point is better. Even if it IS about the kid's problems in school, a parent that pulls them out is just reinforcing the idea that the kid can't cut it.

    5. Re:Live in the real world by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Yep... and usually part of a chronic behaviour pattern on the part of the parent, unwittingly grinding down their kid's sense of being a real person.

      BTW parental overprotectiveness is on the list of official symptoms for one type of schizophrenia.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    6. Re:Live in the real world by geekoid · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for the home schooled kids you grew up with, but homeshooling today involves a lot of social activities.

      1) Good programs have a variety of kids and teachers. For example, If one parent is an astronmer, he might give astronom,y lessons to a bunch of the local home schoolers. Someone else a car mechanic he may tech a bunch of older homeschoolers basic car repair. ANother might be an accountant, another a software designers.

      2) Homeschoolers usually learn things faster because there is more attention to go around.

      3)Home shoolers can participate in the after school activities at the local school, lke theater, sports, and a variety of clubs.

      4) homeschoolers often go out to places and take more tiume to learn. Instaed of going to the Zoo with 500 other kids on 'school tuesdat' they gor with 10-15 other kids and take there time at each exibit and actually learn things. As opposed to someone try to teach something in the 3-5 minutes they have before having to go onto the next exibit.

      4)there is scouts, baseball,football 4H, and many other social opportunities.

      If a homeschool is not socially adept, it's the parents fault, not the home school program.

      As I have said in another post, I have yet to see any study the shows homeschoolers are less socially prepared. I have found studies that show homeschooler are more social adjusted.

      Parents that keeop there children at home in a 'box' of isolation are a problem, but that would happen even without a home school plan.

      "Personally, I would not be so cavalier as to threaten my child's future by exposing them to a homeschool environment. "

      Sine home schooler do better with tests, and are more lily to get into a good college, you are threatening there future by not homeschooling.

      But hey, you want your kids to go to sub par educational facilities thats up to you.

      I have done quite a bit of research because of the inadequacies going on in public school I may home school. I am tired of my children not getting the challenges they need becasue other children whose parents didn't have the deciency to teach them the local languages can get perferred treatment*.
      I am tired of 4th graders getting away with tormenting 1st and 2nd graders and no ione is willing to punish them.
      I am tired of teachers who can not control there class not being dealt with appropriatly.(like training, or more help)

      The school system is failing. Get back to 15 kids to a class, and class broken up into the childs skill sets.

      I am not against people coming to this country, and I am not a biggot, it is a practical issue. It is also an issue the baffles me to know end. If I found my self in Russia, and then had kids, I would make damn sure they sould speak Russian when they enter the school system.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    7. Re:Live in the real world by robertjw · · Score: 1

      Since home schooler do better with tests, and are more likely to get into a good college, you are threatening their future by not homeschooling.

      I have no doubt that a home schooled child is better educated. They most likely do have more book knowledge than a public school educated child... of course if a parent has an active role in their child's education there is no reason they can't excel in any environment. Thing is social skills are the number one thing that gets a person ahead in this world. Being able to interact with others will go much further unless you want to be a research scientist. As far as a 'good college', I think that's a myth. It's not difficult to find undergrad programs at most local state schools that are very good. Again, unless your kid wants to go into a specialized field where the prestige of the college name will matter undergrad work doesn't matter that much. Grad school is much more important.

      I am tired of 4th graders getting away with tormenting 1st and 2nd graders and no one is willing to punish them.

      That's exactly the kind of situation I'm talking about. If a child can learn to deal with the tormenters in a positive constructive way it's a great learning experience. Throughout life there is always somebody bigger, stronger, smarter or wealthier than you that will want to bully you around. Teaching kids to avoid difficult situations is not an answer.

      I am tired of my children not getting the challenges they need...

      I think that is the one argument that I really agree with against public schools. They educate to the least common denominator (no child left behind). Any kid that has any more than the minimum intelligence isn't challenged in the least, but I think there are other ways to do this rather than keeping the child at home.

  219. I was homeschooled by computer by Malakusen · · Score: 1

    My parents homeschooled us using computer-based curriculum. I learned more than I needed to know, scoring at or above the 95th percentile in every category of the Iowa Achievement tests when I took those, and scoring nearly as high on the SAT and the ASVAB. Of course, I also got a whole lot of religious indoctrination, but then, that's why I was homeschooled.

    --
    Never give in--never, never, never, never, in nothing great or small, large or petty, never give in except to conviction
  220. Public School is a service, not a sacrament. by stormy_petral · · Score: 1

    The first public schools were essentially a group of parents in the community who hired a teacher. They chose the teacher, supervised the teacher, supported the teacher, fired the teacher when necessary. All schools, public or private or even a one-on-one tutor are version of this model. We pay our money, we hire a teacher. There is nothing sacred about the traditional public school that should trump all other formats. No advocate of the public school will claim they are perfect, nor would the advocate of any other format. In the end, if the tax payers want a charter school, then they should have them. It's their money, their kids.

  221. Re:privatization of schools by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    OK, if that's true, then it's an acceptable alternative explanation. It's just that it seems like every time there's a story run about how bad US schools are, the fear isn't that we're falling behind some objective mark, but rather that we're falling behind (all of the) other major nations.

    Also, if traditional school systems are failing, then what has changed to cause that? Saying that they are both traditional and that they are now failing implies that an identical or strongly similar system was, at some time in the past, not failing.

  222. Re:A note to moderators by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

    influential in no ways implies positive. I'm of the Friedman/Hayek/Marshall school (my BA was in Econ) by the way. I don't agree with the Keynesian school at all, and in fact, Keynes got everything wrong about the depression as historical research has shown. It was a failure of the banking system, the gold standard, monetary policy, price deflation, and trade protection that sent us into depression. But, again, he's as influential as any economist in the 20th century.

    p.s. MV really does equal PQ

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
  223. parents oppose too much innovation? by peter303 · · Score: 1

    I remember reading about the debate in Disney's engineered town of Celebration, Forida. (Celebration was a partial implementation of Walt's Futureland: "Experimental Prototype Community of Tomorrow".) Initially the schools made heavy use of electronic technology, experitmental teaching and grading. But the parents, who paid a premium to live in Celebration, screamed bloody murder, that non-traditional education would keep their kids out of Harvard, and changed the school system into a more traditional format.

  224. Re:A note to moderators by mfrank · · Score: 1

    Um, about half of all children of heteros are accidents. Not a lot of gay couples have unplanned children.

  225. Re:A note to moderators by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    if you privatized the schools and they were actually, you know, accountable, then there wouldn't be a "need" for unions.

    Holding school 'accountable' has resulting in the horrible 'No Child Left Behind' where test scores become more important than actual learning.

    The "right to work" teachers suffer from the worst of two evils: socialism and monopolies. The state runs the schools and has a monopoly on them.

    How the fuck is a union 'socialism'? If you're talking about forced dues, you're backwards...right-to-work means unions can't require union membership as a condition for working. My state, GA, has right-to-work...and also no right to strike, half the teachers are in the 'alternative union' PAGE that doesn't do a damn thing ever, not even 'collective bargaining' which I thought was the defination of a union, and consequently teachers have almost power at all and get paid crap. And, surely coincidentally, Georgia is in the lowest ten states, educationally.

    As for the CTA (California), for instance, they are ever working for increasing taxes and lowering the bond threshhold. I'm a home owner, when you lower the bond threshhold, it simply raises my property taxes. Hell, it's hard enough to buy a home in Cali without assessing even more property taxes.

    You let the teacher's union write the state budget in California? Wait, no you don't. You can blame the state for wasting money, you can even blame the school system and the teachers, but blaming the teacher's union is idiotic. The teacher's union isn't spending too much money in schools.

    And, as for the unions, they work to define the standards, the curriculum, and infest (right word) the teacher colleges. Their reach is far and wide. And it's not just in California.

    Dear god, a union that works to define the standards of their industry. Ho-ly crap. No, wait, all unions do that.

    Look, the union may be too strong in the California, I don't know. I suspect you're just living in the wrong damn state. What I do know is what happen when it goes away. Wages plummet, ability to keep teachers plummets, and teaching plummets.

    As for portrayal of gays, it doesn't matter at all of a "portryal". Here's two examples: Charles I and John Maynard Keyens. The former was influenced by his gay lover and made bad decisions from raising excessive taxes on the nobility and even the poor, to sending his troops overseas to help his brother-in-law (or cousin, it might be) regain the Palatinate. This eventually led to the English Civil War and his beheading. The latter was perhaps the most influential economist of the 20th century, and gay. The former it matters only as much as history is concerned, but it would certainly cast a negative light on gays. The latter it matters not one iota, but might cast a positive light on gays. So, do we exclude Chuck (where it matters) and include JMK where it doesn't? If it matters to Chuck and we exclude, we rewrite history, include and offend. If we include for JMK, it is trivialized, paternalizing, and egregious, if we exclude, we can concentrate on what is truly important. You decide...

    You can write the portrayal of Charles I in three ways. (Incidentally, the English Civil War wasn't really considered important enough to cover in my schools. In their universe, the history of England started about their politics with the US about 1770 and ended at 1812 or so, until it started back up 1914, thus leaving students with no clue what, for example, 'The Victorian Era' is referring to.)

    Anyway, you can write about without mentioning the gay thing at all, which is basically what every grade school textbook I've ever seen that mentioned him has done. This is the old, stupid way.

    You can write about how he was corrupted and seduced into evil and gayitude. This would be the new, stupid way.

    Or, you can talk about him exactly how every other ruler who's had stupid relat

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  226. Re:A note to moderators by greg_barton · · Score: 1

    (less aborted babies = more kids in school = more teaching jobs)

    nah, it's more like "more aborted babies == less unwanted children in school == less discipline problems"

    Or, as it applies to crime, see this

  227. Re:A note to moderators by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

    You write: "the educational bureauracy seems to be mostly concerned with maintaining the status quo."

    This is just plain wrong.

    The educational bureauracy is *purely* concerned with maintaining the status quo.

    Otherwise, right on.

        - jc

  228. Re:A note to moderators by pNutz · · Score: 1

    Teacher's unions don't lobby the state on educational issues. As a union, they are concerned with job security, pay raises, benefits, and better working conditions. They strike when it gets bad enough or when the state feels like firing 10% of them. As you are a teacher and a union member, you know this. The state and local education boards are responsible for the quality of education: they create the curriculum, the teaching guidelines, and the requirements for progression/graduation.

    Also, these particular public employees do not have great job security, especially without the unions. If they serve vital roles which the market cannot remedy, then why are you advocating privatized schools?

    I'll also commend the choice of post you chose to defend:

    Yes, this is what schools are for:

    Social skills: pretend that it's ok that Timmy has 2 daddies.

    Respect for others: If Ahmal's father chooses to blow up a building full of innocent children, we have to respect that as his own personal life choice.


    What a rousing and insightful jab at those PC thugs. They not disgusted by gay people adopting. And they love making out with terrorists.

    Your truthiness is showing, libertarian.

    --
    Death and danger are my various breads and various butters.
  229. Re:A note to moderators by pNutz · · Score: 1

    Let's play inflammitory libertarian madlib!!

    ____unions are the equivalent of____their mostly-obsolete____government failing_____bureaucracy_____status quo_____child abuse_____it's about maintaining power.

    Insert a jab at political correctness or advocate privatizing something and you get double points!
    If you fill in the blanks with anything constructive, you lose!

    --
    Death and danger are my various breads and various butters.
  230. Re:A note to moderators by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    Stupid mods; can't reply to something blatatly ignorant.

    What is ignorant about the fact that hetros have many unplanned children and homos don't? This obviously leads to the statistic of homos being better parents. (I'm NOT saying they are worse parents, though that argument could be made, I'm simply saying that all things being equal the fact of unplanned parenthood will create said senerio).

  231. Surprise by YetAnotherBob · · Score: 0, Redundant

    So, the story is that a union is upset because an online school may need fewer of thier product (teachers) than the traditional ones. So, why is this news? Every union in history has opposed automation of 'thier' turf. This is nothing new, just a diferent territory.

    --
    Everybody knows 3 people with my name.
  232. Not disagreeing with your points... by ElboRuum · · Score: 1

    But I believe that your social skills argument neglects something very important.

    You said:

    The most common question we get about it is "what about social skills". A lot of people who homeschool make very conscious efforts to make sure their kids receive social skills.

    Now I apologize if I'm making an erroneous assumption, but I would assume that the social skills you are talking about are acquired voluntarily, i.e. with children more likely to be friends with your children than not.

    Social skills in a traditional school environment is a double-edged sword. Sure your kids will make friends, but it is more than that. The development of social skills is not just about how to interact with people who are incipiently friendly to you, but also how to deal with the unfriendlies, such as bullies or manipulators. In fact, there are some who would argue that the latter lessons are by and large the most useful to the development of a child socially, myself included. In the same way a debater learns nothing more than what he/she already knows about debate from someone who always agrees with them, a child attempting to develop social skills learn more about social skill from dealing with people who are antagonists rather than friends.

    My concern would be that in the interest of protecting the child as parents are wont to do by nature that perhaps these extracurriculars are too much by choice. The traditional school system forces diversely behaved children into a common space where these skills must be developed, whereas the home school social environment is more 'hand-picked' as to the interactions that take place.

    Like I said, I don't disagree with your points, and even if I were so inclined to do so, I wouldn't be able to do so except in a conceptual sense, having no direct experience with home schooling. But the lack of choice in who sits next to you in homeroom or who is on your team in gym forces you to deal with that person, whether as friend, foe, or otherwise, which I believe is an argument for, rather than against, the traditional school system.

    1. Re:Not disagreeing with your points... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Social skills in a traditional school environment is a double-edged sword. Sure your kids will make friends, but it is more than that. The development of social skills is not just about how to interact with people who are incipiently friendly to you, but also how to deal with the unfriendlies, such as bullies or manipulators. In fact, there are some who would argue that the latter lessons are by and large the most useful to the development of a child socially, myself included. In the same way a debater learns nothing more than what he/she already knows about debate from someone who always agrees with them, a child attempting to develop social skills learn more about social skill from dealing with people who are antagonists rather than friends.

      Isn't that kind of like throwing them in a pool with the hope they'll learn to swim? If they can figure it out, great, but if they can't, they drown.

  233. Re:A note to moderators by Rakarra · · Score: 1
    I couldn't agree more. My parents, both members of the NEA and NJEA (New Jersey) are basically extorted into paying fees to an agency that hardly ever help in any way, and seem to spend more time lobbying on issues that have nothing to do with education (or the views of my parents.)

    I lost my sympathy for the monetary issues of the California Teachers' Union when they started buying commercials asking Californians to support the Safeway union workers' strike. Union workers at a grocery store. Yes, that's where education money goes -- lobbying for non-educational causes that are aligned with the political philosophies of the union. After that travesty I became a little deafer to their "we need more money for education! Raise taxes again" cries.

  234. Re:A note to moderators by mdarksbane · · Score: 1

    Of course, without the union lobby, my mother (a teacher) would have lost all health care options for her spouse and her pension plan would have been transfered out of their currently decent system into one that completely blows. While I agree that the unions are generally crap and don't care at all about education, they do at least work to some degree in favor of the teachers, which is more than can be said for the current state board of education, which cares about neither.

  235. Re:A note to moderators by Rakarra · · Score: 1
    You let the teacher's union write the state budget in California? Wait, no you don't. You can blame the state for wasting money, you can even blame the school system and the teachers, but blaming the teacher's union is idiotic. The teacher's union isn't spending too much money in schools.

    The teacher's union in California is absurdly powerful. They basically get what they want. The only person who has actually stood up to them in the past several years is the governor (oh, I wish he would have chosen a better approach), and they're ensuring that this is his last term. Now they use all that teachers' union money to fund attack ads against him (when they aren't running ads for non-educational issues).

  236. NEA, [your state here]EA by Blink+Tag · · Score: 1

    Here in Utah some of the lawmakers felt similarly about the teachers' union. They passed the "Voluntary Contributions Act" -- a law banning government employees' payroll deductions for PACs (it's tied up in the courts). It took the balance of the UEA lobby from more than $600,000 to just under $300,000 in three years.

    A few years ago as I was entering the state's political/education scene, I would ask teachers at the schools I was visiting what they though of the UEA, whether they were members, etc. More often than not, those who were members joined for a single reason: malpractice insurance and a team of lawyers on their side if they were ever sued. For many of these teachers, the actions of the NEA (which sap a significant portion of dues), was an unfortunate but unavoidale side effect.

  237. You've got it backwards by Reziac · · Score: 1

    Actually, historically it is more normal for kids being educated to be fostered and/or apprenticed out to another family or business. "Home schooling" was actively avoided because it was well understood that it kept the kids too insular, and more importantly that when cast as formal educators, parents put too much pressure on their own kids.

    The concept of a "public school" grew directly from the apprenticeship tradition.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  238. Re:A note to moderators by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

    NCLB is a disaster because you have the federal government running what it is a state function. Where does the federal gov't have any right to do anything about education? Not in the Constitution.

    Socialism = state run. Our public schools are. Monopoly = one firm. Our public schools are. (Yes, private schools are competition, but taxpayers still pay for them.) Unions have nothing to do with either. Although they have leaned for some reason towards socialist policies, but that's another issue...

    Perhaps you are not familiar with the California political system. No unions don't directly write the budget, but they give millions to pols who do, and they wield enormous, did I say enormous, did I say enormous, influence over the budget process and the people who do. That's as close as you can get.

    I don't know that the auto workers' unions argue about car models, MPG, or air bags. The teacher unions wield influence, did I say enormous, ditto, over that as well. Sure my perspective is only California, but California is unique in that it sets the standards, so to speak, and leads the agenda for the rest of public educaiton in the country. It's not law, just de facto the way things are. Most textbooks are written for California first, as we're the largest market. Then they're adapted, er modified, to meet other states' needs. That's one example. There are many others.

    Teacher wages and quality are tied directly to the lack of any free market structure.

    Too bad you missed out on English history. Not only is it terribly interesting and exciting, (better than any novel that's for sure) but it's really hard to explain how a bunch of crazed colonists thought it okay to remove a potentate and limit his power if you don't know about the English Civil War or Glorious Revolution. Just another notch on the failure of our schools post.

    as for mentioning one's sexuality, seriously, what role does it have unless it has a role? As I mentioned with Chuck I, it did. But it could easily have been his wife, as in Marie Antionette, an Austrian who influenced her childish husband Louis XVI. And history should never about helping people "feel pride" in themselves. Nothing more clearly illustrates that than the complete hijacking of the mythical Aztlan. The Aztecs were a racist, sexist, enslaving, hegemonic, imperialistic, violent, theocratic regime, no different than the Spanish. Except...except that doesn't make some groups "feel good", so we lie about them. Did you nkow Cortez had help from the local populations? Did you know Cortez was wanted for treason by the Spanish? Did you know he was pursued by the Governor of Cuba, Narvaez?

    Nothing of his "accomplishments" are ever discussed. Not that he was a "good guy", but he, nor the Spanish, did anything the Aztecs didn't also do. And, imagine this: Cortez sent word back to Spain about the riches. Spanish merchants set up a trade outpost in Veracruz. They risked capital on the venture. Cortez organized and led one fo the most seuccessful expeditions in military history. He built new boats out of materials he found. And he did all this in a hostile and foreign environment. What one should compare is the contrasting cultures.

    While in the 1500's, European ships would land repeatedly on the coasts of the New World, there was never a possibility that New World ships would ever land on Iberia. Why? Difference in cultures. The conquest of the New World was a triumph of culture as much as anything. While a politically incorrect statement, it is an accurate historical analysis. Sad but true. Capitalism, rational inquiry, and individualism, the products of western culture were triumphant. Note, this is not a judgement about which one is "better", but rather which one is more successful in achieving progress, success, and domination. It is as true today. What societies are more prosperous today? The free, tolerant, liberal democratic, capitalist, individualistic ones. Which ones do people flock t

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
  239. Re:A note to moderators by Rakarra · · Score: 1
    Well, if the democratic process in a state leads to the adoption of "intelligent design" into the curriculum, then that's the way it should be.

    No, the people who decide the scientific curriculum should be scientists and science teachers. They, not popular opinion, define what is the truth in science. "Intelligent design" is nothing more than trying to shoehorn in a religious curriculum into an institution that is not allowed to give a religious curriculum.

  240. Re:A note to moderators by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    How is that relevent? I'd say having a child 'accidently' is a strong indicator that you won't be a good parent.

  241. Re:A note to moderators by plague3106 · · Score: 1

    What is ignorant about the fact that hetros have many unplanned children and homos don't?

    I was refering to my previous post, which was modded offtopic.

    This obviously leads to the statistic of homos being better parents.

    No, not necessarly. Hetros can (and do) adopt too you know. FWIW, the statictics I was refering to was only looking at adoptive parents with no children of their own.

  242. Re:A note to moderators by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

    Your truthiness is showing, libertarian.

    I'll take that as a compliment. There is nothing wrong with being libertarian. In fact, it is far better than those around here who cry about freedom and lost privacy and liberty, than support statist policies which deprive one of all sense of liberty and privacy. You want state-run health care: fine. I've no problem with that position, except don't complain when the gov't asks you about (and perhaps penalizes you for) smloking, drugs, sex, etc. And want to save the trees: fine. I've no problem with that either. Except be ready to accept higher costs of housing, gas, living, etc. Want to enforce your social values on schools: fine. I've no problem with that either, just don't complain when people who don't think like you try to do the same exact thing. You're not right, and they're not wrong. You both want the same things. You want to use the gov't to enact your particualr agenda, it's not right vs. left, it's the same just with different outcomes. I prefer something else altogether. I prefer not having the government intervene, period. That's where you and I differ. Personally, I'd vote againt same-sex marriage, but I'd much prefer a ballot measure or a law that approves it than a judge that denies it. And no, there is nothing inconsistent in being libertarian and exacting some control over what contracts a society chooses to hold as legal and binding. I at least don't want to enforce my particular values on history, but rather would examine the past and not worry about feelings. The truth, they say, is a bitch. Am I proud of slavery. Absolutely not. It was the greatest crime in our history, and ending it our greatest moral triumph. But, we sent half a million to die to do so, and doesnt't that deserve some accolade? We sent half a million men to die so that Europe and Asia could breathe free, spent billions in reconstruction, and asked for nothing in return. Doesn't that merit the moral high ground when you compare to the post WW2 Soviet Union in Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Hungary?

    It is not fair to impose one's views of homosexuality on society at large, and certainly schools are not the place to do so. As for the terrorist comment, are we seriously to acknowledge that the mysoginistic, anti-semetic, theorcratic regimes and those with the desires are somehow equivalent to our free, open, tolerant, and liberal cultures and societies. A true multi-culturalist would have to accept when a _____________ (take your pick) student from a land where women are property says that "I can't have a female/Jewish/Christian/etc. teacher" because it conflicts with my "culture". Umm...I'll take the alternative: "we don't do that here. Here, we respect all peoples and you will do it our way. Thank you very much." but then again, I'm just a white male, so I am evil!!!

    --
    My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
  243. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by egarland · · Score: 1
    Consistency is much harder to provide at home than it is at school where the conditions are well controlled and well suited for the purpose.

    The fantasy land you live in is amusing, to say the least. As a teacher I commend you on the development of your imagination!
    I pitty your students for the horrible twist of fate that put them in that situation?

    But seriously... parents have a much more varied conditions to deal with when providing boundaries to kids. They have early mornings and late nights when they are tired and unprepared to deal with things diplomatically. Parents have to accomplish tasks, (cooking, driving, shopping, cleaning, working.. etc.) while parenting. They have unpredictable situations that its hard to prepare themselves and/or the kids for. They have situations where discipline is awkward, difficult or simply impossible. Students are often so convinced that all rules are negotiable and that they can get their way as long as they fight long and hard enough for it that they are completely unformillar with the concept of things being otherwise.

    Teachers, on the other hand, are focused primarily on the kids and spend most of the time in a confined consistent environment with support always available if needed. The children in a classroom constantly have examples set for them as to what the boundaries are as they observe their piers testing them. The rules become associated with the location and the teacher so strongly that after little time they automatically start following them when they show up. This creates an environment where kids can focus on learning and play instead of contantly testing boundries.

    --
    set softtabstop=4 shiftwidth=4 expandtab nocp worlddomination
  244. As a DAD... this is NOT a Good Thing(tm)... by mistergin.net · · Score: 1

    Not only does online schooling require TONS of self-discipline, part of the bond forged early on between an instructor and a student is vital. There is an underlying, yet HEALTHY level of stress involved with keeping up with the others, observing and being a part of other's educations regarding social norms, and modeling your 'early life' behavoirs in general.

    K-8 graders require the basics, but also, require personal attention. How many attention disorders, or learning disabilities are diagnosed by observation early in life? The social aspects of learning and fitting in are so important because they model our behavoir in the more important secondary schooling we receive.

    Having taken many college courses online and also having been "bored" at HS, normally this is AGAINST my stance on online learning. However, after 8th grade, I'm cool with it. By then the children have an idea of how to fit in, start realizing what their ambitions are, etc. While HS is very important in my opinion, some excel here and can use the more direct attention (to learning, not the person learning) to succeed faster online - I know I would have and would have loved to have moved on to college even a year sooner.

    My children are in the first stages of K-8 and after fathering carefully for several years now, I can honestly say that in school, they learn MUCH more in the group environment than they would on their own. While I have taught them how to read, write, and do simple maths, there are so many other things that only other peers their age can teach. Things that will grow parts of their personality NO online software could.

    At this stage in life, it's almost not too profound to expect them to learn LITTLE about advanced topics. Hell, they're still learning how to LEARN!

    I believe in home schooling and online classes, but not for K-8. Even homeschooling does more than plop them in front of a monitor and expect them to learn. The successful people in a company, and in LIFE, are the networkers who know how to take intelligence, form it with social skills, and fuse the two into a mastery of social psychology and the topic they immerse their life in. Be it real estate, technology, health, etc.

    --
    Less Talk. More Stab.
  245. Public Education in the US-problems and solution by jeffsenter · · Score: 1

    Reading the other comments I don't think posters have a good understanding of the failings of public education in the US.

    I went to the public school in a smaller college town and I have taught in an inner-city public school.

    As a policy matter the US politically treats the failings of public education in isolation without addressing root causes. This is very foolish and has not worked well for at least two decades of reform of public education efforts.

    The biggest problem in US public education is poverty of the parents and students because poverty causes other problems such as lack of health care and instability in children's lives.

    Children really, really need stability in their lives to develop well. Children also need a lot of steady stable individual attention from caring adults. If parents are moving frequently (lack of affordable housing), getting divorced, losing their jobs, working three jobs, or going to jail the impact on their children is horrible.

    Poor people in the US lose their jobs frequently, and have to move due to lack of affordable housing frequently. Poor people also are more likely to get convicted and go to jail for their crimes (steal a pizza go to jail, embezzle $20,000 from the company get probation if ever prosecuted at all). Poor people also often have all of the adult family members working sometimes multiple jobs leaving little time for child care/attention.

    Children also need health care. Lack of health care is still a huge problem for many lower income families. It is not atypical for a poor kid to stay home from school for a week because s/he has pink eye and the parents cannot afford prescription eye drops. Also, the general level of health care and healthiness of a family is important. Nagging health problems anywhere in the family are very disruptive to children's lives.

    The problem of children moving frequently is particularly pronounced in poor urban areas. In rural and some suburban areas there is more lower class homeownership and housing is much less expensive. One of the worst possible things for a child's education is to move the kid during the school year. Children need stable environments and it is hard to describe the dire psychological toll that leaving in the middle of the school year has on kids. Even moving a child from school to school every few years is very bad.

    The American criminal justice system does not help education at all. The goal of the system is to lock people up and hence the US has about the highest incarceration rate in the industrialized world. Locking people up, especially for minor offenses such as drug possession, breaks up families. (It also creates a pool in which more serious criminals teach minor criminals how to be worse.) Taking a parent away and sending them to jail is generally horrible for children. Over a million children presently have an incarcerated parent in the US, I believe.

    The violence in public schools is often a reflection of the violence in children's lives. It does not happen in isolation. There are a lot of sources of violence in children's lives from the society. Domestic violence is a big one. Drug crime is another factor. The mass media's (RIAA, MPAA) use of violence instead of substance in their content is probably a factor, although not as big as say domestic violence.

    The present US solution to failing schools is testing. Lots of testing will measure things and then we'll really know the children are doing poorly and maybe we can hold some more of them back and fiddle with the curriculum. Obviously testing does not address any root causes of the difficulties that children have.

    THE SOLUTION IS TO ADDRESS THE ROOT CAUSES OF CHILDREN'S PROBLEMS. Universal health care would substantially improve public education in the US. It wouldn't have much impact on private education though as almost all of those who can afford private education can afford health care. Increasing wages for low income workers an

  246. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by jrbrtsn · · Score: 1, Informative

    Then please explain why homeschooled kids do much better on their SAT scores than their peers in public school. It would seem that, on average, parents are better teachers than the professional teachers employed by the public schools here in the USA.

  247. Re:A note to moderators by geekoid · · Score: 1

    "wish I had mod points. of course around here this gets modded flamebait, but you are 110% correct. I am a high school history teacher and am thoroughly disgusted with the treatment history gets in our textbooks."

    clearly math wasn't going to be a good fit for you.

    " I've always believed that privatization of schools is the ultimate answer."

    haha, if your goal is only to tech the rich, then thats a good goal.

    At best, privitization of the system will end up being like McDonalds.
    If there was a market for privatization of the school syste, it would ahve happened.
    AS it turns out, decent education is expansive.

    I think unions can be a good thing, but the teachers unions have gotten out of control. The need a strong pupil education union as couter to a teachers union.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  248. Re:A note to moderators by boingo82 · · Score: 1

    I wish I had a link, but months ago we had outraged parents writing letters to the editor because the middle school history teacher said that Columbus raped and pillaged. This was not the history that they wanted their kids taught. Columbus was a HERO, who discovered America! He was not a bad man!

    --
    As a republican I feel it my responsibity to manufacture criminals. People need punished!
  249. more skills to teach... by vinn01 · · Score: 1


    Science: pretend that the world was created by magic (either scientific magic or religious magic).

    History: pretend that the versions written by the winners are always correct.

    Civics: pretend that embarrassing episodes in US history never happened.

    Sociology: pretend that racial problems no longer exist.

    Philosophy: pretend that either religion does not exit or there in only one.

    Political Science: pretend that students have rights.

    We need more flamebait like the parent comment. I'm agreeing with you.

    I hate the way that our schools have become laboratory experiments. Whatever happened to teaching kids to think for themselves?

  250. Re:A note to moderators by m874t232 · · Score: 1

    This was already debated in federal court and found to be unconstitutional. And that's the way it should be.

    What that ruling is about is that a particular schoolboard strayed outside the bounds of federal law in defining a particular curriculum. The court (correctly) struck that down. The school board may well be able to come up with another way of getting "intelligent design" into the curriculum. I think they're being stupid teaching their kids that stuff, but that's their choice.

    Nevertheless, the ruling doesn't invalidate the principle that I stated: the curriculum for K-12 is determined by democratic institutions in the states, not by individual parents, teachers, or anybody else. You don't get to choose what your children learn in K-12 public schools, and that's a good thing.

  251. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > Give the public school system some equal competition for once.

    You think that handing private schools money with no strings attached is "equal comeptition"? I'd consider supporting vouchers if and only if any private school receiving tax money had to meet every federal and state standard applying to the public schools - including admissions policies and services for special needs students. After all, we don't want to waste taxpayer money by throwing it to *completely unaccountable* schools, do we?

  252. Re:A note to moderators by m874t232 · · Score: 1

    No, the people who decide the scientific curriculum should be scientists and science teachers. They, not popular opinion, define what is the truth in science.

    That's how it works in most states: the public gives power to elected representatives, who give power to scientific experts, who then design the school curriculum. So, scientists are, in most cases, designing the curriculum.

    But it's ultimately still the public's choice how to design science curricula or whether to teach science at all or how to choose scientific experts. A state may simply decide to cut all funding for science education, or they may define religious nuts to be the most qualified scientists. Or we, as a people, might even repeal the separation of church and state at the federal level.

    The point is, there is no magic shield you or anybody else has against your fellow citizens. If they want to be unscientific or do anything else silly, it's not sufficient merely to be right, you have to convince them of that. World history is littered with democracies that disappeared because their citizens simply decided collectively that theocracy, monarchy, or anarchy were better choices, and the fact that they were obviously wrong and caused millions of deaths didn't make any difference.

  253. Re:A note to moderators by kurzweilfreak · · Score: 1

    I seemed to have missed the point of your original post by focusing on that one point and missing your overall general point and I apologize because I agree. I wasn't necessarily disagreeing with you before, I just thought that particular fact should be made a little more clear. :)

    --

    kurzweil_freak

    5th Kyu Genbukan Ninpo/KJJR student

    Be the darkness that allows the light to shine.

  254. I failed by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

    The only thing I learned from bullies was that I should avoid them, since I don't know how to deal with them and they only make my life worse.

    I'm glad that you were able to take something away from your experiences, but my education suffered because of the very people you credit with helping yours. Homeschooling couldn't possibly have left me any more anti-social than I am now.

  255. Poppycock!!! by linguae · · Score: 1

    Want to make public schools better? Get rid of charter schools, get rid of computer teachers, make it hard to home-school kids, tax the hell out of private schools. Force the community to care about the public schools, rather than try to find new ways for the best students and families to pull out of them.

    Poppycock! So we "improve" failing public schools by forcing the best and brightest to attend failing schools? That reeks of the evils of socialism and communism, where you have no choice. You must have taken that from the Marxist phrasebook. Imagine if the government dictated which grocery store you go to, which department store you go to, which malls you go to, just because you want to "force the community to care about their businesses, rather than try to find new ways for customers to go outside of their neighborhood." If you don't like this analogy, then let me tell you a story about my life.

    Throughout my childhood, I always lived in the ghetto. My parents worked hard to give us a good education. They used the addresses of family friends and relatives who lived in better neighborhoods so that way we can attend those schools. Throught elementary school, I attended very high quality, suburban public schools. I did very well throught school, got straight As, and was in gifted programs. However, the rules changed once I reached middle school. We weren't allowed to use an address for day care purposes; you were pretty much restricted to the public school in your neighborhood. Intra- and inter-district transfers are very hard to get where I am from, and the good schools were always overcrowded. My parents continuously fought the public school system, but continued to lose. My parents were also unable to afford private school tuition.

    Luckily, we found out about a local charter school. It was an independent-study charter school and was of very high quality. I attended that school and stayed there until I graduated from high school. I also simultaneously attended community college courses. After finishing high school, I was admitted to 5 universities and I am currently a student at a highly ranked public university in California (I won't disclose the exact one so I won't unclose my identity).

    Charter schools saved my parents from sending their children to failing public schools. But you want to get rid of the only viable option that low-income families like my parents have. Well, my parents attended failing public schools a generation ago, and they also keep up with the latest documentaries and news on the public school system. They know, with experience, that the teachers at those schools frankly have low expectations for their students. They come to work unenthusiastic about their jobs, and just want to get through the day. The other students come in with boatloads of problems, and some of them want to take it out on other students. The quality of education is very low. Gifted programs and accelerated programs (such as AP courses and the International Baccalaureate program) are limited to non-existant in poorer schools. It isn't a conducive environment to learning.

    What is the solution? I am still struggling between public school choice, school vouchers, and full privatization (but with some mechanism of funding for the poor and middle class, so that way nobody is "left behind"). I would like to see a market place solution to schools (using the grocery store analogy again). But closing down all charter and magnet schools, and forcing all people in private schools to return to their neighborhood public school is NOT the answer. It is the antithesis to freedom, and it also reinforces the public school monopoly, which has been failing more kids than it has helped. I would rather see the public school system die than to continue doing a poor job at educating our kids. Do you honestly think that more money is going to solve the problem? Since the federal government got involved in education and transfe

  256. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by kalaf · · Score: 1

    I think this is one of the reasons the home schooled children I know are better socialized than the ones who go to school. The home schooled kids spend a lot more time with their parents, their parent's friends, etc. Most of the kids I know I meet through the community theatre group. The home schooled kids are consistantly more mature, better behaved, and appear outwardly to be more intelligent and intependent. I blame it on them being exposed to the real world, and working with and as adults at real tasks. You can hardly compare some makework group exercise in school to volunteer work with good quality adult role models.

  257. Re:A note to moderators by MindStalker · · Score: 1

    FWIW, the statistics I was referring to was only looking at adoptive parents with no children of their own.

    Well then thats interesting. Probably still mostly related to the toughness of adopting as a homo as many agencies even when its legal in that state will be more careful with a homo couple. But its not impossible to believe that you would have less cases of abuse as the tendency is towards effeminisation. Though its shown that overly effeminate people generally have more trouble setting and keeping boundaries for their children.

  258. Re:Better to end up as Ralph, even Piggy than as J by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Teachers, on the other hand, are focused primarily on the kids..."

    Dude it is their job. It is work. It is a way to pay the bills. someof them even enjoy the work. teachinging is a different kind of factory job with the purpose of outputing children which can function within establish parameters. Unfortunately there really is very poor quality control on the output (and given so many parents today, the raw materials are rather lacking preparation as well).

    one of the school union mantra's is that they don't want johnny to realize he is an idiot because he has to do 11th grade over again. And we certainly don't want Johnny to feel bad about himself, because children shoudl feel good inside and we need to help him undersatnd the glass is half full, not half empty and that his glass can be anythign it wants to be. A load of crap that does disservice to the child by imposing a false reality to him that the teacher never connects with their act of misguided teaching even after Johnny goes to prison for some stupid crime.

    As far as the rest of that paragraph goes, get that idea out of your head that only teachers can teach children to act consistently and understand boundaries. Many parents spend near 24x7 acting directly with or very closely to their children from birth to age 5. Why is it that some people think that once the child reaches age 5, that a paid prefessional is the only person qualified to continue teaching the child? That is part of why some people homeschool;it makes logical sense to continue teaching them the life skills they need not just from a book, but in real life.

    Many parents can do just as good, if not a better job of educating children on the sciences, communication skills, history, etc... than a teacher who must ensure that "no child is left behind" whether that be by having to ensure the material is present at a level comfortable with the average capability of the 30 some odd students in a classroom.

    #!#!#

  259. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Troll 1: Fist post!@!!!@!!
    Troll 2: First!

    Winner: None

    Troll 1: FP!!
    Troll 2: OMG FIRst Post!

    Winner: None

    The ony winning move is not to first post.


    A Beautiful Mind, right?
  260. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you are 110% correct. I am a high school history teacher

    Thank god you're not a math teacher.

  261. Write sentences with spelling words... by Dareth · · Score: 1

    My teacher would make us write sentences with our spelling words. She really hated it when I would write something like, "My teacher made me write a sentence with the word ."

    Stupid solution to a stupid requirement.

    --

    I only look human.
    My mother is a halfling and my dad is an ogre, so that makes me an Ogreling
    1. Re:Write sentences with spelling words... by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      Ah, but it wasn't sentences I had to write. It was stories. There's quite a bit more brainwork goes into making a story than simply a sentence.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
  262. You're not going to get it by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    So I won't try expounding. You won't get it because you see the government as something "other" than you. When in fact in the U.S. the government IS you--ESPECIALLY at the local levels at which school district decisions are made. If you think the government is a bunch of big bad people who want to crush your spirit, I guess I can see why you would not want this.

    But if you see the government as the tool of your friends and neighbors you would probably think differently. What if I said that we should abolish all public schools, so that local communities could set up their own schools as they see fit? You would probably be FOR that, right? Freedom to do what they want.

    My point is that already happened. They are called public schools. They are controlled, guided, and funded at the state and lcoal levels. (You live in a state and a local community, right?) But when we're constantly sold an anti-government, anti-community, anti-civic responsibility message by the political industry, it's no wonder the people see them as these terrible things foisted upon them.

    The problem you and everyone else responding to me have is that you cannot see beyond the status quo. Yes, if all kids were forced into shitty schools that would suck. My point is that they suck because all the people most likely to care are being encouraged to disengage. If they were encouraged to engage, the schools would improve--they would have to. To the last sentence of my GP post, this way of thinking is no different from offering targetted tax credits, programs, and regulatory exemptions to attract citizens and businesses to revitalize a neighborhood. That's not particularly Marxist in my opinion.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:You're not going to get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ESPECIALLY at the local levels at which school district decisions are made.

      And you explain the existance of a federal "Department of Education"... how, exactly? What about that monstrosity called, "No Child Left Behind"? How does that fit into your pretty little world view?

      You, good sir, are confused. Very confused. Probably, no, certainly because you went to a government school.

      Pick up a Gatto book, or find a copy of his "Seven Lesson Schoolteacher" essay. Confusion is, iirc, lesson #1. :) Then you can move on to his Underground History of American Education. Or, alternatively, John Holt's How Children Fail.

  263. What?? by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    But your approach is the opposite: force everyone to go to public school and live with the problems (drugs, metal detectors, violence), and drag everyone down to the lowest common denominator. Doesn't sound like a good solution to me.

    No, you totally missed it. My approach is to encourage parents to keep their kids in public school, so they'll care about the schools and work and then the schools will get better. I did not say force. Please quote me if you think I did.

    The whole idea is that some parents fight harder for their kids than others. Right now they are being encouraged to "fight hard" by pulling their kids out of public schools as fast as they can. I'd rather they keep the kids there and "fight hard" to make the schools better.

    When people care about something, the lowest denominator is brought up to an acceptable level. Look at some environmental laws for one example. We can't all move out of the country, so in response to citizen demand, the since the 1950s the government has taken action to improve and protect the quality of our air and water. What we're doing with schools now is akin to just spending a ton of money to buy Canada so everyone can go move there. What we should be doing is improving the ones we've already got.

    The reason school were better in the "old days" wasn't because anyone recognized the importance of schools, but because problem kids weren't required to attend school at all.

    Let me be more specific: since the beginning of the 20th century the U.S. has grown from a quiet protectionist country to the most powerful and prosperous nation on earth. A big part of that was our well-educated and productive population--mostly educated by public schools, which originated in the mid-19th century in the U.S. Since 1918 every state has had a compulsory education law. The WWII generation, the so-called "greatest generation," was primarily the product of compulsory public education. So I'm not sure what you're referring to.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:What?? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      The whole idea is that some parents fight harder for their kids than others. Right now they are being encouraged to "fight hard" by pulling their kids out of public schools as fast as they can. I'd rather they keep the kids there and "fight hard" to make the schools better.

      When people care about something, the lowest denominator is brought up to an acceptable level. Look at some environmental laws for one example. We can't all move out of the country, so in response to citizen demand, the since the 1950s the government has taken action to improve and protect the quality of our air and water. What we're doing with schools now is akin to just spending a ton of money to buy Canada so everyone can go move there. What we should be doing is improving the ones we've already got.


      The problem is the fight isn't worth it. Why bother trying to change the whole public education system, when you (assuming you have money, which upper middle class people usually do) can just send your kid to a better school? Your kid will only be in school a limited number of years, and those few years will greatly affect his entire life. Why screw it up? The system won't change that quickly.

      Same goes for leaving the country. If I'm an individual, and my country sucks (let's just suppose for the sake of argument), should I stay in the country and try to change it from within, or should I pack up and move to greener pastures? If a better country is readily accessible to you, it makes far more sense to just go there. A real example of this is Mexico: Mexico's government is thoroughly corrupt, and it sucks to live there. So millions of Mexicans see that our border is wide open, and while it's not wonderful sharing an 1-bedroom apartment with 40 other people, it's better than what they have at home, so they come up here. They could stay in Mexico and try to change things, but the only realistic way of doing this is to violently overthrow the government and assassinate all the police (since they're all corrupt). If you're just some poor shmuck without an entire resistance army to work with, this isn't exactly realistic.

      People only stay and try to improve things from within when there's no simple and viable alternative.

      Worse, anyone trying to change things in the public education system will be fighting directly against other, powerful interests who want exactly the opposite.

      Let me be more specific: since the beginning of the 20th century the U.S. has grown from a quiet protectionist country to the most powerful and prosperous nation on earth. A big part of that was our well-educated and productive population--mostly educated by public schools, which originated in the mid-19th century in the U.S. Since 1918 every state has had a compulsory education law. The WWII generation, the so-called "greatest generation," was primarily the product of compulsory public education. So I'm not sure what you're referring to.

      I guess my knowledge of when compulsory education started is a little rusty, but if you look at things now and things back in 1940, back then there were no gangs, drugs in school, kids bringing guns to school, kids assaulting teachers, etc. Of course, if kids even tried to assault a teacher back then, they would have been beaten: now that's illegal thanks to a bunch of people who think corporal punishment is "bad". I'm not exactly sure why, back then, there weren't so many child criminals like there are now, but there are, and the public education system does nothing to fix this. So with this kind of situation on our hands, why should anyone try to keep their kids in public schools with all these problems when they can just send them to safe private or religious schools?

    2. Re:What?? by Moofie · · Score: 1

      "I did not say force. Please quote me if you think I did."

      OK, you ARE an idiot. You said: "Force the community to care about the public schools"

      I sure hope you're not a teacher.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
  264. You're reading too much into this by snowwrestler · · Score: 1

    First, I am not advocating forcing kids to attend public school, but rather setting policies that encourage them to. One way to do that is to stop publicly funding ways to pull bright kids out of public schools.

    Second, your problem was not with public schools in general but with YOUR local public school, which like many problem schools is in a poor area and short on resources and energy. I'd say that your story proves that when a community does care, and the proper resources are allocated, public schools work well. You really did want to go to a public school--just not yours.

    Furthermore you're saying that the problem with the problem schools is that the students, families, teachers, and administrators don't care. They are unengaged. But what about the few who DO care? They are being led away. Your local public school was worse off without you and your family being involved there. I totally understand how leaving worked out much better for you. But if the debate is about how to fix the public schools, I don't see how siphoning off the best citizens HELPS them. These are the people most likely to hold teachers and administrators accountable. But instead we are helping them just walk away.

    Too many responses to the question of how to help our public schools revolve on personal stories such as yours. Yes, you got out and got a great education. I would argue that by doing so your local public school was made that much worse.

    Finally I just have to say something about the current fetishization of "the marketplace" as the way to fix public schooling. It's bullshit, an artifact of electing business leaders to government. Our system of government is not an economic marketplace. It is a structured social agreement. It has accountability pre-baked-in, through elections and lobbying. Creating more types of schools does not actually improve accountability one tiny bit, all it does is splinter the existing accountability, allowing greater stratification between the social and economic classes. It simply makes it easier and more convenient to identify the "least desirable" elements and marginalize them.

    --
    Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
    1. Re:You're reading too much into this by linguae · · Score: 1
      Too many responses to the question of how to help our public schools revolve on personal stories such as yours. Yes, you got out and got a great education. I would argue that by doing so your local public school was made that much worse.

      Yeah, the public school would have been made worse with high achieving students leaving. However, I would also argue that high achieving students should go to a school that is conducive to their needs.

      Finally I just have to say something about the current fetishization of "the marketplace" as the way to fix public schooling. It's bullshit, an artifact of electing business leaders to government. Our system of government is not an economic marketplace. It is a structured social agreement. It has accountability pre-baked-in, through elections and lobbying. Creating more types of schools does not actually improve accountability one tiny bit, all it does is splinter the existing accountability, allowing greater stratification between the social and economic classes. It simply makes it easier and more convenient to identify the "least desirable" elements and marginalize them.

      There are fundamental differences between a democratic government and the marketplace. In the government system, you needs are always at the election poll. If you have a complaint or want something changed, you must go through the bureaucracy. Lobbying is slow and occassionally corrupt. When it is voting time, if you don't get the majority of the vote, then it's just tough for you; you must wait until the next election. In a free market, sellers would do whatever it takes in order for you to buy their product/service/etc. There is a lot of variety on the market. You have a choice. You have freedom. Democracy is two wolves and a sheep deciding who is for lunch (but it works better than all other forms of government).

      The marketplace isn't perfect and it shouldn't be applied to everything (I'm not a fan of road privatization, for example), but it is still better than government bureaucracy. However, I still believe that local and state governments should fund education for all school-aged children. I don't care if it is private, public, a private-public partnership, homeschool, whatever. I just want all children to get a quality education. Let the state and local government pay the way (but don't expect them to fully fund a rich private boarding school tuition), and let children attend schools that fit their needs. This is even more important on the middle- and high-school level, where there should be a combination of vocational high schools and rigorous college-prep high schools, and options in between.

      There are so many other problems with education these days that I'll have to write a full-fledged book to describe them all, but public school choice and competition for students between public schools will help improve the quality of all public schools. (If failing public schools had to compete for tax dollars, they would definately improve their programs or face being shut down. I've seen some failing schools nationwide become transformed into top magnet schools that attract everybody.) There are no easy answers to this problem, but the answer isn't more bureaucracy and more control.

    2. Re:You're reading too much into this by krell · · Score: 1

      "Our system of government is not an economic marketplace. It is a structured social agreement. It has accountability pre-baked-in,"

      How much of an agreement is it when, if you refuse to participate in it, they might kill you for it? Government is much less accountable than the free market, also.

      "allowing greater stratification between the social and economic classes."

      So? Since when is this a problem? There is no need to create class warfare, and no need to structure government policy just to cut people down for being too successful.

      --
      Where were you when the voynix came?
  265. Wrong solution by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

    I admit there is a problem, but your solution just makes the problem worse.

    What you are proposing stunts national education. First of all, you are taking the people that need the education the most out of the classroom. The people that act out don't just do it because "they are bad people": they do it because the have bad home lives, or bad social interaction, or just suffer from bad parenting. These are the people that need to be taught the wisdom that education can bring the most, not to mention the power it brings to fix the situation, either now or when they reach 18. And why do you think we would be able to teach these kids better in your system? It would be a lot like prison; stick the abusers with each other so they can best learn how to abuse.

    Oh, and the last thing we need to do is take kids out of school. We have one of the worst education systems of any modern nation. And education isn't just about teaching our workforce; it is also about teaching our voters. We have some people who believe in creationism just because they haven't been taught the evidence for evolution. There are people deciding the leaders of our nation when they don't understand the mistakes when we have in the past. I do not want idiots to ALWAYS be leading the country.

    The problem with education is that it doesn't have the funding to get enough quality teachers to fix the problem. All of your problems would be solved with more teachers. More teachers means that you can give each child more attention, and make smaller classes with more targeted curriculum. Education is a problem that you can just throw money at, because, trust me, teachers WANT to teach you all that you can handle. They just don't have the resources.

    --
    I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
    I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
  266. Underground History of American Education by misanthrope101 · · Score: 1
    ...purposefully uses history for every reason other than to teach about the past.
    Whether or not this is objectionable hinges on what you think the purpose of school really is. I read part of Gatto's The Underground History of American Education, (which was terrifying) and apparently the purpose of schools has come to be largely brainwashing. I know that's a loaded, pejorative term, but it fits. They were intended to mold children to be obedient, easily managed workers and citizens who would go to work on time and fight in wars when told they should. Hence all the rosy public myths we're basted in as children. Granted, I think all countries do this to their kids to one extent or another, but ugly is still ugly, even if everyone is doing it.

    And to tell the truth, we didn't invent this approach. Plutarch, for example, suborns the teaching of history to the teaching of character, and this approach will always get out of hand eventually. People, like it or not, mainly study history with an eye to learning more about the present, so there is usually an agenda present somewhere. But I agree that school textbooks are exceptionally bad. That is true in both history and in much of science--biology has been gutted to appease Creationists, and I'd wager even geology is watered down a bit for the same purpose. Math is the only subject that, as far as I know, can be left alone and taught without controversy.

    1. Re:Underground History of American Education by alphamugwump · · Score: 1
      Math is the only subject that, as far as I know, can be left alone and taught without controversy.

      Unless you're one of those greek nutters who thought rational numbers were sacred. Or one of those Christian nutters who thought that calculus was the work of the devil.

  267. Re:A note to moderators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree. The NEA and the AFT have done more permanent damage to education than anything else on this planet. When any kind of reform comes around, yup - there they are...the NEA and AFT with their massive smear ad campaigns on TV and radio. I don't know how those people can sleep at night. On a list of 100 things they worry about, education for kids comes 101. they worry more about their wallets than anything else. Shameful idiots.

  268. It already works in Australia by Jetson · · Score: 1
    There is an entire support structure built around virtualizing the important aspects of their learning experience.

    All you really have to do is look at the Australian "School of the Air". For 54 years they've been teaching kids remotely, originally using HF radio and more recently using sat-phone internet technology. Most of those kids don't have a non-family member living within 100km because they are all living on vast cattle ranches, etc.

    Distance education doesn't have to be the same as "computer based education". In Australia's case, the kids are enrolled in "classrooms" and have real teachers and real classmates. They simply don't sit in the same room.

    BTW, to help with socialization, the kids get together for one week each year to play sports and have fun while their parents meet with the teachers.

  269. Re:A note to moderators by jackspenn · · Score: 1

    There is no study that says homosexual parents are better then straight couples.

    I know this because I watched the NY trial where the justices asked the gay plantiffs lawyers for to produce any scientific study that showed homosexuals were at least equal to heterosexual couples when it came to child upbring.

    The best the gay marriage lawyers could produce was a study that said "there is not enough evidence at this time to suggest homosexuals are not as good parents as hetersexuals". This falls far short of what the justices requested and falls far short of the supposed fact this thread debates.

    I meantion this becuase it means the debate of why homosexuals are better parents is pointless and invalid since there is nothing to prove such a statement is true.

    You are speculating on the cause of something that may not even be true. Sort of like trying to explain to people the cause of global warming, when you cannot explain what the correct mean temporatures should be without the presence of "green house gases".

    I am an open person, I look at everything as objectively as possible and come to the logical conclusion.

    It is not that I are unwilling to accept global warming exists or that homosexuals are on average better parents, it is simply that I do not see any evidence that adheres to scientific principals in either one of these debates, what I do see is a lot of "feeling" based arguements.

    Where is the control group? What was the sample size? How was the experiment conducted? How do the recorded results support the written conclusion, etc.

    Maybe if we had quality computers software and websites that could adapt their teaching style to the user in place of lazy union teachers using outdated technics, then future /.ers would better understand the principals behind good science.

    If somebody has the time to conduct such a study please hop to it and post your results for us to critique.

    - Eric

    Don't bust my balls about my grammar and spelling; I when to one of the finest public schools in New Jersey and I didn't have a chance.

    --
    Respect the Constitution
  270. not exactly right by r00t · · Score: 1

    You need to have an appropriate threshold for
    fighting back or ignoring. The one thing you
    can't do is whine about your treatment, letting
    the bully get you upset.

    Person you can permenantly escape from: ignore
    Minor offense, unlikely to be repeated: ignore
    Something that truly could be unintentional: ignore
    A few rude words: cheerfully tell them to go to Hell
    Other: fight

    Then there is the matter of how to fight. Not every
    situation calls for the same response.

    You can fight to make an escape, or you can fight
    to teach someone a lesson, or you can fight to
    teach EVERYBODY a lesson. Sometimes you need to
    pound a face against the corner of a brick building.
    Sometimes a simple kick to the shin will do enough.

    I didn't do my detention. After earning respect, the
    bully offered a deal to skip it together. He never
    bothered me again.

    1. Re:not exactly right by Lord+Kano · · Score: 0, Redundant

      For the most part, I agree with you. I do have a couple of other situations that make a fight necessary.

      Anything that jeopardizes your physical safety or anything that will encourage other people to make you their mark as well.

      As we both know, you can lose a fight and still win respect.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  271. you missed it by r00t · · Score: 1

    Do not equate "Teachers Unions" with "educators".

    A decent number of teachers even hate the unions, yet the unions claim to represent all. The unions do what is best for the union, much of which is vaguely aligned with the career interests of existing teachers.

  272. John Edwards and Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That sounds just like John Edwards solution to the problem with the garbage software Microsoft produces. He suggested forcing by law every government agency and every individual to buy only Microsoft software. He claimed that by giving Microsoft more money and outlawing their competition Microsoft could then afford to make better software. In other words, he would reward them for being so incompetent. Microsoft would also be able to take advantage of all of the out of work programmers and engineers by being able to have their pick of employees at a lower rate.

    It's the same damn argument. Outlawing Linux and Apple won't make Microsoft's software better despite the claims of someone as powerful and influential as Edwards, and putting nuns in prison for teaching in Catholic schools won't mean a better education for students. Please tell me you're trolling. I've never seen anything this stupid since I spent time with John Edwards when my wife worked for him.

  273. so true that I know you by daemonenwind · · Score: 1

    You must be a teacher.

    I don't believe that from the decidedly pro-public-school stance you take, or the insulting tone you take about the relationship between a child and its parents.

    No, I can tell you're a teacher because your punctuation and capitalization are atrocious, because your argument consists of a string of sentence fragments and run-on sentences, and because your entire post has the distinct air of an idiot who was given a shiny button and told he can use it to bend small children to his will.

    And, because at the end of the post I describe above, you dare to lament the "lack of arts, music and p.e.". And you make this lament as though the reason we need to focus on basics in the modern school wasn't made disgustingly obvious by your preceding butchering of the English language.

    And to forestall the comments, I learned how to write English by learning from my parents, by studying German, and by reading the works of professional writers. Public school teachers had precious little to do with it.

  274. relative educational value by caldodge · · Score: 1

    Chicago's education system has a fairly lousy reputation, stemming from a very strong teacher's union (Google "Marva Collins", for example).

    I think it's more accurate to say "you can't sit a child in front of a Chicago public school teacher expect him to learn things he needs to succeed in society".

  275. A very good post by symbolset · · Score: 1
    I don't agree with you much, but your post was well thought out and written.

    The teacher's union in my state opposes standards based testing. Specifically they oppose mandated testing of all students for the knowlege and skills expected of a student who has spent twelve years in public school, and required for graduation from high school. The reason for their objection is clear. In the first round of testing, with several years to prepare, half of the students failed each of the three components of the test, so the vast majority of the students failed at least one of the three mandatory components.

    Teacher pay needs reforms. If a person goes $250,000 into debt to get an advanced degree and teaching certificate in the hope of securing a job that pays $40,000 a year in an economy where the tiniest shack costs $500,000, it is unreasonable to expect them to be proficient in math. If you hire such people as math instructors, you should not be surprised their students fail to learn. That said, teachers' unions need to stop fighting real reforms like testing, teacher certification, background checks and required curricula.

    Parents also need to be more realistic. The most I hope for my kids in public school is that they learn how not to get caught. I've already taught them to question the motivations of the teachers and the school board on some subjects. At home they can learn useful things like history and chemistry and civics in an environment that's less likely to get them killed or arrested. It is a pleasant surprise when their public school delivers above expectations, but not a frequent one.

    Even math can be perverted to promote social issues in the phrasing of sample problems and I've seen this done in the math books the kids bring home. It's sick, really, that even math can't be left without banging a social drum.

    I do agree that all their textbooks have only poor content. That's why I select carefully the extra books to give them a broader view.

    --
    Help stamp out iliturcy.
  276. mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lucky I read at 0 ... and weight trolls high. That was really funny.

  277. Re:NEWS: Teachers union against changing status qu by Dcnjoe60 · · Score: 1

    The online school is because, at least so far, the millions of dollars spent on improving the schools doesn't seem to be working. Are they pushing the online school for everyone? No, of course not. It's just another option available for those struggling with the traditional (failing) model and for those who home schooling is not an option.

    What is interesting in Chicago, is that the Catholic school system seems to be doing quite well. While it is true that they can be selective about who they take, etc. That usually applies to the independent private schools. The local parish schools take parishoner's kids. The Catholic school system in Chicago has higher test scores, higher graduation rates and does all of this on a lower per pupil cost than the public school. So, assuming that Catholics aren't somehow intellectually superior to the rest of us, it must be attributed to something they are doing that public schools in Chicago aren't. Most likely it's because they have fewer administrative staff per student and concentrate more on core academic courses.

    Public schools in Chicago (and many large cities) are in trouble. Things like this distance learning are band-aid attempts to attack the symptoms of the real underlying problems. However, unless there is real educational reform, things will only get worse until the reform is forced by the public. Chicago already has a working model to base reform on. They only have to choose to impliment it or wait for their system to continue to go downhill and have a referendum impliment something for them instead.

  278. Lol.... I think it is you who is retarded. by Nursie · · Score: 1

    My IQ comes out between 145 and 160 depending on the test, usually mid 150s.

    School teaches you to deal with people. And to cope and get on with your life whatever the retards across the hall think. I don't think life is like middle school, but I think middle school probably teaches you something important - people are cruel, stupid and small minded.
    Much like you actually, who took a dislike to my post and so accuse me of being "stupidest".

    FYI, "Stupidest" is not even a word.

  279. Do you ever hear a friend boast of losing ... by Tungbo · · Score: 1

    money in the stock market?
    Doubtful.

    Those who had a bad experience may not be motivated to
    post.

    1. Re:Do you ever hear a friend boast of losing ... by DahGhostfacedFiddlah · · Score: 1

      Good point, but with all of the other anti-homeschooling pressures out there, I wouldn't expect homeschooling to survive if it also didn't work.

  280. No it isn't by ElboRuum · · Score: 1

    If we must analogize, it's a public pool with lifeguards and swim instructors... and if you're still drowning then... you're TRYING to. Life isn't a game of patty-cake. Never was. And to survive in the water you'd better be able to deal with the sharks.

  281. It's not funding - it's MOTIVATION! by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    >What part of PUBLICLY FUNDED in PUBLIC school do you not understand?
    >Schools don't have the resources to fix the problems because the public does not give
    >them the funding or the authority to do so. It is our own damn fault.

    I had an interesting discussion with a high school teacher once. It totally changed my mind about what is wrong with public education. I always assumed that private schools were so much better than public schools because the teachers and the learning environment were better. But as my teacher friend pointed out, you can have the most excellent teacher in the world and the best school environment in the world, but if you have an unmotivated student, they will not learn!

    Motivation is they key to learning. Not money. True, a good environment is more /conducive/ to learning, but it is not the deciding factor - motivation is. An unmotivated child will not learn regardless of the quality of the teacher or the environment. And a motivated child will learn in spite of the quality of the teacher or the environment.

    Some children are naturally motivated to learn. Others are not and require external motivation. I know I was the latter - without my parents' demands and punishments I would not have been motivated to do well at school. I suspect it is the same for most children - most children lack the discipline for self-motivation and require external motivation to stick with academic work.

    Seen in this light, it is easy to understand why home-schooled or privately-schooled children do better in school that publically-schooled children. It's all about motivation. Parents who pay large sums of money to put their children in private schools are obviously interested enough in their child's education to take an active role in it. And of course by having invested money in it they have a financial stake in it as well. Parents who home school are arguably even more interested as they take /personal/ responsibility for their child's education despite the many hardships and compromises this requires. Unfortunately, many many parents now wash their hands of their child's education and view the public school as a place to send their children TO BE EDUCATED as if the entire responsibility lay with the school.

    The problem here is that public schools have very, very little they can do to motivate unmotivated children. Only parents have that power. A teacher can try to be supportive and encouraging, but the only people who have real punitive means of motivation are parents. The days of the teacher slapping hands with rulers are gone with these days of litigation. It is far, far easier, and thus far, far more likely that teachers will simply ignore or only go through the motions of teaching with unmotivated children and consequently, they will fail.

    In short, most children require a boot in the ass to learn. Because public schools are no longer allowed to wield such boots, the only people left who /can/ put a boot in the child's ass is the parents. When parents unplug themselves from the process, believing it is the school's responsibility to "teach my child", unmotivated children just fail.

    Motivation, not funding, is what determines the success of a student in school.

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  282. The benefits of socializing with scum... by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    >Valuable socialization is not just meeting people. It is meeting
    >diverse kinds of people and specific kinds of people. Knowing teenage
    >drug dealers and a few drug suppliers and some local gang members and
    >some organized crime people really changes the way you think about society.

    The argument seems to be that homeschooled kids will only socialize with elements of society that the parents approve of, and that kids are somehow better off if they are allowed to socialize with the less savory elements of society.

    I don't think I agree.

    I would rather my child grow up ignorant of the scum of the earth. Odds are good that if I do a good job educating my child that when they go out into the world they will not have to deal with them anyway. They can always listedn to NPR if they want to hear the sob stories of all of societies failures.

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  283. No sharks in real life... by maillemaker · · Score: 1

    The thing is, as has been pointed out, the kinds of "sharks" you deal with in secondary education just aren't normally present in "real life".

    I don't think you miss anything by missing out on being picked on in school. That kind of behavior just isn't present in college or work force.

    Steve

    --
    A work that expires before its copyright never enters the public domain and thus enjoys eternal copyright protection.
  284. Sure they are... by ElboRuum · · Score: 1

    If you can't see them, they're below the water line. I'm actually kind of surprised you don't see it, even though outright bullying and scamming has been replaced with subtlety. Duplicitous manipulators at your job? Plenty. 'Friends' who only seem to want things from you and conveniently disappear from view when you're in need? Most assuredly. Belligerent people at social gatherings? Of course. Knowing how to deal with antagonistic people is absolutely a necessary skill. True that most people outgrow such behavior, but still a goodly many do not. Maybe you're just lucky and are fortunate to know few, if any, of those people, or you're not looking in the right places, I don't know. But they are there.