No pass no play is basically a joke these days
Tanya 93 said:I did not say practiceFore Left! said:
Who says they can't be at practice when scheduled?
We got it, yiu like to repurpose classroom time to practice your extracurricular (kind of ignoring the point of "extra" in extracurricular, but whatever). But set your practice time and the kids that want to participate bad enough will be there
We scheduled that class because they were also in multiple sports.
If my theatre class was not good enough to attend, we were not in need of you behind stage.
Catag94 said:Cassius said:
There is no logical point to be made against this, thus the reason it's liberals opposing it, and teachers trying to protect the brotherhood.
This^
Fore Left! said:
The ones we know are doing it for religious reasons, which I have zero issue with people exercising that choice and freedom, and I do not look for nonexistent reasons to tit-for-tat exclude them. I've coached some of these kids in softball. Should I exclude them because they chose not to go to school with my kids when they otherwise live where they would have?
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Fore Left! said:
The ones we know are doing it for religious reasons, which I have zero issue with people exercising that choice and freedom, and I do not look for nonexistent reasons to tit-for-tat exclude them. I've coached some of these kids in softball. Should I exclude them because they chose not to go to school with my kids when they otherwise live where they would have?
Just because you choose to ignore our reasons doesn't mean they aren't reasons. The public school isn't good enough to meet their needs, so go meet your extra needs elsewhere as well.
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Fore Left! said:
The ones we know are doing it for religious reasons, which I have zero issue with people exercising that choice and freedom, and I do not look for nonexistent reasons to tit-for-tat exclude them. I've coached some of these kids in softball. Should I exclude them because they chose not to go to school with my kids when they otherwise live where they would have?
Just because you choose to ignore our reasons doesn't mean they aren't reasons. The public school isn't good enough to meet their needs, so go meet your extra needs elsewhere as well.
Catag94 said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Fore Left! said:
The ones we know are doing it for religious reasons, which I have zero issue with people exercising that choice and freedom, and I do not look for nonexistent reasons to tit-for-tat exclude them. I've coached some of these kids in softball. Should I exclude them because they chose not to go to school with my kids when they otherwise live where they would have?
Just because you choose to ignore our reasons doesn't mean they aren't reasons. The public school isn't good enough to meet their needs, so go meet your extra needs elsewhere as well.
Would you be in support of us taking our tax dollars with us?
I think HB 547 is a better solution perhaps than school choice for now.
Tanya 93 said:NoBMX Bandit said:
Yes
It is a much needed change.
I had practice during class periods
If my teaching is not good enough for classes, then I am not good enough to be their coach.
Get over it and find something else
Bighunter43 said:Catag94 said:Cassius said:
There is no logical point to be made against this, thus the reason it's liberals opposing it, and teachers trying to protect the brotherhood.
This^
I'm as about as far right conservative and old school as you can get....raised by public school conservative educators with an appreciation for small public school education. My school is mostly conservative, with strict discipline, strict dress code and high expectations! It has always been a success, and thus might explain my bias towards public school. Growing up and being a part of that "whole" education experience, athletics and classroom, with school pride has been a huge part of my life. I have witnessed thousands of kids use the opportunities of public school and go on to be a great success. I am aware that all public schools are not alike, and if some were extremely liberal or totally undisciplined I'd probably move my family to one that fits what I would want for my kids. I have said that I am personally for having kids attend the school they will play for, and believe that is best for the kids and the community as a whole, especially on a small school level. I don't believe that makes me "wrong" in my thinking, and I believe kids will miss out on being a whole part of a school....no disrespect to those that don't view public school as I do.
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:wargograw said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:wargograw said:Tanya 93 said:Or if you are going to be in my activity, you need to be in my classCassius said:
There is no logical point to be made against this, thus the reason it's liberals opposing it, and teachers trying to protect the brotherhood.
What's with all the "my"? It's a little strange. You don't own the school. You don't own the classroom. You don't own the athletic field. Lose the arrogance about it.
In most cases teachers don't even live in the district so it's even LESS "theirs" than it is the parents'.
Any evidence that most teachers don't live in the district they teach in?
I'm from Westlake and it was obvious?
If it makes you feel better you can ignore that point. Referring to everything at a public setting as yours is obnoxious.
So if I use my experience it's obnoxious and then you use your experience. Did I read that right?
Tanya 93 said:I never lived in the districts where I taught, outside of student teachingGhost of Andrew Eaton said:wargograw said:Tanya 93 said:Or if you are going to be in my activity, you need to be in my classCassius said:
There is no logical point to be made against this, thus the reason it's liberals opposing it, and teachers trying to protect the brotherhood.
What's with all the "my"? It's a little strange. You don't own the school. You don't own the classroom. You don't own the athletic field. Lose the arrogance about it.
In most cases teachers don't even live in the district so it's even LESS "theirs" than it is the parents'.
Any evidence that most teachers don't live in the district they teach in?
But those were my classes. They were mine and those kids were mine
My former students today will tell you they loved my classes and what they learned.
It is just more trying to bait so I get banned for a few days
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Cassius said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:
If public schools suck so bad, homeschooling extras should be better as well. Create your own teams and move on.
Are you bitter?
Not in the least. I'm for parents doing what they think is best but there are consequences to actions. If the same person isn't good enough to teach your child, why are they good enough to coach them?
Tanya 93 said:Because they are not the students in the school of the coaches.Muy said:
Why is Tanya against kids being able to get the social and health benefits of participating in extracurricular activities of the school their parents pay for?
Coaches should know how they participate among others, what their grades are, and be able to work with them in the school day, every day
wargograw said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Cassius said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:
If public schools suck so bad, homeschooling extras should be better as well. Create your own teams and move on.
Are you bitter?
Not in the least. I'm for parents doing what they think is best but there are consequences to actions. If the same person isn't good enough to teach your child, why are they good enough to coach them?
Because they're completely different functions? One guy is "good enough" to make a pizza. The other is "good enough" to roll sushi. When sushi guy makes pizza I choose not to use him. This is an absurd argument on your part.
cjg89 said:Tanya 93 said:Because they are not the students in the school of the coaches.Muy said:
Why is Tanya against kids being able to get the social and health benefits of participating in extracurricular activities of the school their parents pay for?
Coaches should know how they participate among others, what their grades are, and be able to work with them in the school day, every day
I never interacted with my coaches outside of practice, so this is a laughable argument
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Catag94 said:Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:Fore Left! said:
The ones we know are doing it for religious reasons, which I have zero issue with people exercising that choice and freedom, and I do not look for nonexistent reasons to tit-for-tat exclude them. I've coached some of these kids in softball. Should I exclude them because they chose not to go to school with my kids when they otherwise live where they would have?
Just because you choose to ignore our reasons doesn't mean they aren't reasons. The public school isn't good enough to meet their needs, so go meet your extra needs elsewhere as well.
Would you be in support of us taking our tax dollars with us?
I think HB 547 is a better solution perhaps than school choice for now.
I've always been pro-choice when it comes to the money. My only stipulation is that all actors will need to prove the money was used appropriately.
Cassius said:tysker said:Cassius said:
There is no logical point to be made against this, thus the reason it's liberals opposing it, and teachers trying to protect the brotherhood.
Well many homeschool advocates are against it because of no pass/no play. Homeschool advocates are fearful that UIL and ISDs will start to stick their noses into curriculums and testing of homeschoolers to verify results and programs. This 'checkup' by the government could be easily counterproductive to the autonomy of homeschool curriculums.
That's not logical either. The kids of homeschoolers are not being forced to participate. If your kids are not involved, you have nothing to worry about. The ISD would have no ground to verify results for those who are not participating.
c-jags said:cjg89 said:Tanya 93 said:Because they are not the students in the school of the coaches.Muy said:
Why is Tanya against kids being able to get the social and health benefits of participating in extracurricular activities of the school their parents pay for?
Coaches should know how they participate among others, what their grades are, and be able to work with them in the school day, every day
I never interacted with my coaches outside of practice, so this is a laughable argument
I went to a small school but there is not a single coach I had that I didn't have in class at least once or see every single day of school.
My head FB coach had a masters in biology and was an absolutely brilliant science teacher.
So you realize that those same teachers will be coaching your kids, right?MediAg13 said:
It's not that I think the other kids aren't good enough to be around my kids. I don't trust what the teachers are trying to teach my kids anymore.
If they teach those things, they clearly aren't smart enough to coach your child well.MediAg13 said:
Coaching a sport and teaching CRT or some *******ized version of American history are not the same thing.
Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:If they teach those things, they clearly aren't smart enough to coach your child well.MediAg13 said:
Coaching a sport and teaching CRT or some *******ized version of American history are not the same thing.
BMX Bandit said:
Tanya & Ghost of Eaton:
So what about those kids talented/smart enough to get into Houston School for Performing and Visual Arts, etc? They have no sports, so they play for school they are zoned to.
Should they not be allowed to play sports? Quite a punishment for being talented.