So, what is the point of all of this? We must listen to teachers no matter what? And judging from the protests in my beautiful state of Wisconsin, a lot of teachers are f*%$king nuts.
Distorting my words, refusing to stop and listen to what I have to say, and blindly taking the conservative position. Geez, man, you haven't changed a bit!
Hi Skwim,
One example was a school choice program that was going on in Washington DC which primarily serviced poor black families. Well, liberals didn't like it because a lot of these families were not choosing traditional public schools but either private schools or charter schools. This was shortly after Obama was elected in 2008 and Pelosi was adamant in cutting the program (with the help of the very rich and powerful teachers union, unless you still want to play dumb on their influence in fighting education reform). Little blacks kids had to resort to running ads imploring Obama to not close their school.
Or do I have to also show you the quote from Albert Shanker (former president of the American Federation of Teachers) who said, "When school children start paying union dues, that's when I'll start representing the interests of school children."
Over the past 30 years, enrollment in public schools has remained steady yet districts have hired a boatload of teachers, the union's (and until very recently, also the districts) priority is to protect the employment (which also means the benefits and pension) of the teachers and not the quality of the education.
I love the bifurcation fallacy here. It's our current public education system with its billion dollar bloated bureaucracy (and its consistent achievement of failing millions upon millions of kids everyday) or no school. Such a silly straw man. One: close the Department of Education. Two: to wean us off of the public school monopoly attach the money per student and let the family choose what school they want to attend. This would be a disaster for the teachers unions and Democrats almost everywhere.
1. Getting rid of the federal government's authority to regulate schools is exactly what the pro-segregation crowd was calling for. It's rather coincidental that in an age of aggressive conservatism, we are hearing this line again.
2. Michelle Rhee, the former chancellor of the DC school system, has been suspected of creating a culture of test cheating, in addition to her terroristic methods of bossing around schools.
Detroit is the most impoverished city in the US. Let's be a little more objective next time. Blaming the failure of capitalism on the education system is absurd.
In all professions we rely on the professionals to carry out a job. Law is led by lawyers, medicine by doctors, engineering by engineers. Only is education do businessmen and politician think "they" know better. History shows us they don't.
Dissent Magazine - Online Features - "Firing Line: The Grand Coalition Against Teachers"
"Most crucially, out-of-school factorsfamily characteristics such as income and parents education, neighborhood environment, health care, housing stability, and so oncount for twice as much as all in-school factors. In 1966, a groundbreaking government studythe Coleman Reportfirst identified a one-third in-school factors, two-thirds family characteristics ratio to explain variations in student achievement. Since then researchers have endlessly tried to refine or refute the findings. Education scholar Richard Rothstein described their results: No analyst has been able to attribute less than two-thirds of the variation in achievement among schools to the family characteristics of their students (Class and Schools, 2004). Factors such as neighborhood environment give still more weight to what goes on outside school."
If we really wanted to improve our schools, we would improve living conditions for impoverished Americans. But people such as Joe Stocks refuse to accept this, instead beating the drum that the evul librul soshalist fashist teachers unions are the cause of all the trouble.