Donn Esmonde's column today..
Parent Need to be accountable...
He has a point....
Parents need to be accountable
That is a lot of school to miss. You can't hold that against the teachers
Donn Esmonde's column today..
Parent Need to be accountable...
He has a point....
Parents need to be accountable
That is a lot of school to miss. You can't hold that against the teachers
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That's a cop-out.
The truth is that the Buffalo schools have a large population of students without parents who care about their education. Jumping up and down, hollering and screaming that those parents 'must care" isn't going to get those kids educated. All it will do is create another generation of poorly educated parents who won't care about their kids getting an education.
We need to find a way to educate the kids with parents who don't care. Either that or we need to take those children from their existing parents and find them parents that do care about their education.
But insisting that the existing non-caring parents start caring about their children's education is worthless lip flapping.
And you can't hold that against the teachers...But insisting that the existing non-caring parents start caring about their children's education is worthless lip flapping.
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Yes, I'd agree about the lip-flapping. Making teachers the ones solely accountable is not a solution. Yes, the nut that nobody has really cracked is how to educate kids who don't care from parents who themselves are poorly educated. If someone has done that successfully (and charters have not accomplished this either, they just punt the bad scorers back to BPS), I'd love to see how they did it and on what scale and what measure of improvement at what cost.
Is there a solution? Or could it be past that point. If the parents themselves won't take interest with their own kids what are you supposed to do.
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Honestly, I have thought about this issue at some length. Certainly dumping more money in won't fix the problem. Taking money out will not likely make the problem substantially worse. So here's the question. Suppose you cut that budget in half to 400M. If the money were going to go to the community to create growth, incentives and etc., I would not entirely be against this. But if the money is going to get funneled out via charter schools and not return to the community then that is a tragedy of epic proportions. Kids respond to adult interest, regardless of whether it is parental. So at least there is some possibility to mentor in the existing system. However, don't expect under current guidelines for grad rates to skyrocket. We have to set realistic expectations of what people can achieve with support at home. Based on this we may be able to examine what is effective teaching.
Possible solutions include,
1) getting kids to care by linking schools with internship programs before degree granting and possible employment after degree granting
2) boarding schools
3) returning the local diploma
There are probably more that I can't think of at the moment.
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That's right, Carl did mention a boarding school concept and people jumped on him.
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