Awesome. Wish more individuals in the public education system thought like you. Its refreshing to see. Thank you! Gives me some hope!
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Your point could be expanded; The Government has PLENTY of money, honestly! It is just not used wisely.
Is that school district here in the springs still charging for bus rides? Can't fix everything with money.
Well working for a school in one of the districts here in Colo Springs I see that MORE MONEY would do little for the kids because a large majority DON'T CARE about learning! They only want cell phones and cool clothes. Most think lunch is free and that A's are supposed to be given to them for showing up! They don't care if they are late and the parents blame the schools for all the trouble they get themselves into. The teachers are trying to teach and it does not take more computers and more Nachos for lunch if the kids could care less if there is welfare and food stamps out there for free? They all have dreams of "Getting a Job" and buying flashy toys to be cool. They need a swift kick in the ass instead of the ability to blame others for their problems.
More parent envolvment is whats needed but when they show up you see exactly where they get it from!!!!
There are so many things like this in our government that are failing for the same reasons. I am a big fan of privatization and open market competition with only regulations being on ethical standards. Why hasn't there been a push to privatize schools and have them compete? My wife and I are going to be having kids soon and I think that it would be awesome to be able to sit down and look at schools based on their cost vs. performance of graduating students instead of gang violence and drug use statistics.
The public school system in my opinion does have enough money to continue on the path that it is on, however, I think that teachers are the most overlooked and under appreciated group of professionals in our society today. Being a teacher should be a competitive position where performance is measured by ability to educate. Public schools are mismanaged on every level and as a result the inefficiencies of the system will continue to grow with time. Being an educator should be a fairly high paid position to encourage the best in the field to become teachers thereby producing smarter students, creating a self fulfilling positive gain for society.
I think that you should only have to pay taxes for schools if you currently have a student enrolled in them. This would show people what they are investing in them and would encourage private schools. If public schools had to compete for students, the quality of education would rise and money would be managed much more effectively. Or they would go under.
I vote no every time for these same measures, but being that I live in Libtard Boulder county, I will most certainly see another increase to pay for a flawed ever expanding system even though I will never use a dime of their funding.
My mother is a teacher and she is quitting this year. She feels like they are setting their school district up for failure by taking away the teachers ability to solve any problems in class. For example, if a student is attacking another student in class, the teacher is not to interfere, the police must be called. The other student can not fight back or will suffer the same disciplinary actions as the attacking student. She is afraid to work because one of the teachers at her school tried to comfort an upset child when he/she had gotten injured playing and now that teacher is being charged with sexual assault. I agree with her decision to quit, it is not worth the risk.
The children coming in from all of these dysfunctional homes can not even be shown what is socially acceptable behavior. They disrupt learning with no fear of consequences, because there are none. Teachers are backed into a worse and worse corner every year and it is our children that are suffering for it.
I listen to Caplis and Silverman in the afternoons and Dan Caplis is always arguing this point. Privatization means competition means better schools. Okay, I can agree to that. However, he fails to acknowledge two points, one of which you mention. Parents do have the option to put their kids into any school they want to. Its called open enrollment. You live in Boulder and want your kids to go to school in Cherry Creek, you can. You just have to figure out how to get them there. You want them to go to a private school, you can. You just have to pay for it.
The second point Dan Caplis doesn't mention in his privatization argument is, he wants the state to give the parents the state and federal money allocated for the individual student and have them spend it where they want to. I have issue with this. If you want to send your kids to a secular school, have at it, go forth and conquer, but don't expect taxpayer money to support it. Same with home schooling.
Your point about not paying for the school district unless you have kids is interesting and one I've thought about. I, as a homeowner pay taxes directly to the school district as part of my property taxes, and as a consumer, a very, very small amount of my income and sales taxes are allocated to school funding. However, a large amount of people live in apartments or rented homes and do not pay property taxes. One would argue they pay indirectly as their payments probably cover the actual owner's property taxes, but that isn't a certainty.
The argument has been made for decades that society benefits as a whole if the population is educated and paying for that education is a societal requirement. I, owning a home directly pay into the school district and the mother with 5 kids living in an apartment does not.
Honest answer? From the community that the school serves.... Now, is that realistic in today's world? Most likely no, as there are far greater problems in relation to community and support... However, you asked for my opinion, there it is.
Education is NOT reliant on the amount of money you throw at a problem in ANY situation or academic discipline. Now, would I like a bigger salary and more money to take care of my family, etc? Of course, who wouldn't (I've been saving for a specific AR15 build for about 7 years now, but the money always seem to have to go to car repairs, rent, etc). But I definitely don't teach for the money. As a matter of fact, I've spent (A LOT) of my own money just buying stuff for the classroom because the schools does not have what it needs in the first place and it's such a pain to have to go through the principal, then a board, and then personnel office, and then blah blah blah to buy a $10 music book because the kids parent would rather smoke a pack of cigarettes than buy their kid a book that will increase their level of learning... and from here I can go into the stats of how music education actually improves test scores in all academic disciplines and teaches life skills and blah, blah, blah... I love my field and I do believe that music is important to a society.
You can see that on the small scale in the small towns around Colorado, the direct involvement of the community with their schools. However, those school districts still get money from the state to support the districts and the community doesn't pay the entire bill for their school system.
How should the schools be funded? Entirely by the community it serves? What if that community is poor and cannot fund at the same level as, say Cherry Creek where their funding comes from Cherry Hills, Greenwood Village and the like? Do we say too bad? Level the playing field some?
I'm really not arguing with anyone here; I am trying to see if someone has an idea, a solution for a complex problem that escapes our legislators.