Here is another good reason to keep your kids out of the government school system.
A four year old little pre-school boy nuzzles his face into the bosom of a 37 year old teacher's assistant during a hug and school officials suspended him for a week.
A six year old boy smacks a girl on the bum, so the school made a record of the incident and called the police.
"In the state of Maryland last year, 16 kindergartners were suspended for sexual harassment, as were three preschoolers."
Read the entire record of insanity in Mark Steyn's "Attack of the Preschool Perverts" (OCRegister, April 12, 2008).
It's your world. What are you going to do about it?
Of course it is also a school system dominated by ideologues and fanatical reactionaries. Eighty to ninety percent of Americans (okay, perhaps eighty per cent; things are bad) would recognize this as lunacy, as entirely unreasonable and even horrifying. But these people not only control the system that educates most of your children (not mine, let me tell you), but through the NEA (National Education Association) they also control the Democratic Party. Perhaps you were wondering why the Democrats have given themselves a choice between a megalomaniacal pathological liar and an America-hating socialist as Presidential nominees.
Showing posts with label public schools. Show all posts
Showing posts with label public schools. Show all posts
Friday, May 2, 2008
Public School Horror Stories
Posted by
David C. Innes
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Labels: public schools
Saturday, September 1, 2007
Accountability a One Way Street in NYC Schools
Here is an interesting insight into how public school teachers think...perhaps just in New York City. "Schools Wait, Teeth Gritted: Their Grades are Coming," by Julie Bosman (New York Times, Sept. 1, 2007). It seems that New York's Mayor Bloomberg is holding schools accountable for their job performance.
Making good on a promise to hold educators more accountable for student performance, Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg will oversee the distribution of report cards for each of the city’s schools next month. Each school (and by extension its principal) will receive a letter grade in the mail, and the grade and the data that led to it will be posted on the Web, where parents can see and possibly stew over them.Of course, you cannot expect a complacent, inefficient and ineffective bureaucracy to cooperate supportively. If teachers and administrators were doing all that they could to provide the best public service, these measures would never have crossed anyone's mind (as in earlier times they didn't).
Judith Menken, the outspoken principal of the small Muscota New School in Inwood, Manhattan, is bracing for the moment when she will receive a stark appraisal of her school’s performance, a letter grade of A through F. She is still debating whether or not she will read the report.Why would she not read the report? She's a school principal. Assessing and grading people is what her own institution does. Does she see no value in it for herself? Perhaps she sees no value in it for her students. Is that the problem?
“I guess I’ll probably look at it,” said Ms. Menken. She expects a B, at best, she added. “I’m sure I’ll feel bad. People are going to be very hurt and demoralized. It’s like a public embarrassment.”Yes, that's an aspect of accountability. Public schools are a public trust. They should be publicly accountable. When they fail, they fail publicly. When held to account, they should be held to account publicly. Furthermore, public humiliation is a good incentive for avoiding it in the future by improving performance.
Back at the Muscota school, Ms. Menken, who has seen countless changes and reorganizations over the years, is holding out hope that Mr. Klein will eventually abandon the grading system. “It’ll be like everything else,” said Ms. Menken, who has worked in the New York City public schools for 36 years. “It won’t work, and they’ll chuck it.”Principal Menken appears to believe that nothing can improve the public school system in New York. And she's comfortable with that. On the theory that if something does not work you chuck it, perhaps that is the only practical and publicly responsible thing to do with the New York public schools. I have no doubt that private initiatives would far outperform what we have now. As a businessman, the mayor must secretly know this. (My children are thriving at a classical Christian school.)
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David C. Innes
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Labels: New York City, public schools
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