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HISD certification scheme

5,211 Views | 72 Replies | Last: 23 days ago by Jack Cheese
AustinCountyAg
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Serotonin said:

Booma94 said:

Serotonin said:

Booma94 said:

Not sure why it even matters. Once vouchers are instituted, no teacher certification will be needed. Private schools can already hire anyone to teach with no requirement for degree or certification, and when all of education is privatized it will only get easier to hire non-certified teachers.

I blue starred this post as a hopeful description of the future of education. Now I realize that you might be saying this like it's a bad thing.
So you want people teaching to be LESS qualified. Got it.
I am against unnecessary bureaucracy and administrative process.

My wife went through the teacher certification program here in Texas and it is every bit the joke one would imagine.

Do these certifications correlate with actual teacher effectiveness 5 or 10 years down the line? Holding other variables equal do schools with fully certified staff perform better than those without?

I will admit the certification is good at two things: keeping motivated new competition out of the teaching pool and creating a cottage industry of grift where companies make thousands off of prospective teachers.
I would argue it does the opposite. People always want to ***** how anyone can teach, blah blah blah. Well if passing a teacher cert test wasn't a requirement I bet the schools would be filled with people who are even bigger idiots who think teaching is simple and an easy buck with summers off. It would be even worse for the kids. Granted, there would always be outliers but my guess would be that it would do more harm than good.

At least now a teacher is required to pass the cert test you know that they ARE motivated to teach because they are jumping through all the hoops in order to do so. It isn't like becoming a teacher is the only job in the world where an additional certification is required in addition to a college degree.
Al Bula
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Only ONE comment on redditard mentions there was something nefarious going on, and not even that one is condemning these grifters and fixers. All the others bicker about whether or not the tests are too tough and too expensive.

I didn't expect any outrage over there regarding 5 senior officials taking bribes to certify terrible people can be around students, but the similarities in the arguments on texags and on reddit are comparable.

Paraphrasing...
Texags: STFU wussy, u don't know wut vouchers do
Reddit: Bro, chill. Dey tests be expensive and tuff and sheeeeeeeeet

https://www.reddit.com/r/houston/comments/1gebe8y/5_arrested_in_1m_teacher_certification_cheating/
Booma94
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schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.
Serotonin
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Quote:

At least now a teacher is required to pass the cert test you know that they ARE motivated to teach because they are jumping through all the hoops in order to do so. It isn't like becoming a teacher is the only job in the world where an additional certification is required in addition to a college degree.
True, but I wish we could leave it up to individual schools and districts to figure out how to handle that problem.
Jack Cheese
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Booma94 said:

AgLA06 said:

Booma94 said:

Not sure why it even matters. Once vouchers are instituted, no teacher certification will be needed. Private schools can already hire anyone to teach with no requirement for degree or certification, and when all of education is privatized it will only get easier to hire non-certified teachers.
That's not how any of this works.

Most schools are certified and belong to various certifying institutions. Many more than 1 at the same time. Each institution requires a very thorough vetting process that takes place every 3-5 years with multiple representatives on site that put together action plans that have to be completed.

There's always varying degrees in every situation. But having been on the board of a parochial school on the value cost end of the spectrum in Houston, the quality of the administration, staff, and curriculum was leaps and bounds from anything the State can enforce. And that was reinforced any time an HISD student that was supposedly top of their class tested and joined our school when their parents finally faced reality.
Ah, the argument of anecdotal information. Because your school does it this way, they all must do it this way.

The fact is once vouchers are approved, fly-by-night, for-profit, pop-up schools will not be uncommon- look around Los Angeles in California. There are 'academies' in many strip malls- and not the kind that sell sporting goods. They are glorified daycare facilities that are paid for with vouchers scholarships. There's little accountability, no guidelines, and no state input into curriculum. These grifters will be as common as parochial schools and will only serve to get free government money.

So all of the voucher proponents that think that things will improve when the state forfeits control are in for a rude awakening. There will be as many grifters as legitimate school. There will be some schools set up by foreign influence that teach their own beliefs but paid for with our tax dollars and because there's no guidelines nothing can be done about it. Ahmed's Death to America Academy paid for with American tax dollars would not be outside the realm of possibility.

Now who's the one using anecdotal evidence?

Okay, bad for profit schools in LA. As opposed to what?? The excellent public schools in LA? In HISD? And are these for profit schools adhering to the rules of accountability for receiving public funds? Are they accredited? If not, why not? Who is not enforcing the rules? The same people who are supposed to be running the ****ty schools in LA?

So many questions. So much fear of the free enterprise system... the same one that allows for grocery stores to operate, cars to be sold, and yes, private schools and universities to flourish. No central planning needed. What a world we live in!
Jack Cheese
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Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.

So you are in favor of removing Pell Grant access from any college student who doesn't attend a state university? Okay, got it. Rational.
schmellba99
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Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.
There.Is.No.Such.Thing.

Read that again. And again.

You may not have anything against private schools, you just think they should all be small and only reserved for those that can afford to pay both school taxes and private school tuition and costs.

Keep those serfs where they belong!
rhoswen
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I'm altcert with a double major in entomology & agronomy, and I'm certified science 8-12 composite. I teach chemistry & I'm good at it. None of my coworkers have degrees in education, they're all content in something sciencey at least. There aren't any history majors teaching physics, for example. That being said, neither the content exam nor the pedagogy exam (which is basically making sure you know the rules) was particularly difficult & I couldn't imagine paying someone $2500 to cheat on it for me.

One of the issues we're having is that the students are coming in wholly unprepared for high school level science. It's evident that the education majors in the lower grades are not effective in science. Which, to us, is weird & horrifying because it's... 4th grade science. How hard can it be? My district has started implementing trainings where we secondary teachers will actually be tutoring the elementary teachers in at least the basics, like using units consistently & effectively so a sophomore can visualize what a liter is, for example.
schmellba99
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AustinCountyAg said:

Serotonin said:

Booma94 said:

Serotonin said:

Booma94 said:

Not sure why it even matters. Once vouchers are instituted, no teacher certification will be needed. Private schools can already hire anyone to teach with no requirement for degree or certification, and when all of education is privatized it will only get easier to hire non-certified teachers.

I blue starred this post as a hopeful description of the future of education. Now I realize that you might be saying this like it's a bad thing.
So you want people teaching to be LESS qualified. Got it.
I am against unnecessary bureaucracy and administrative process.

My wife went through the teacher certification program here in Texas and it is every bit the joke one would imagine.

Do these certifications correlate with actual teacher effectiveness 5 or 10 years down the line? Holding other variables equal do schools with fully certified staff perform better than those without?

I will admit the certification is good at two things: keeping motivated new competition out of the teaching pool and creating a cottage industry of grift where companies make thousands off of prospective teachers.
I would argue it does the opposite. People always want to ***** how anyone can teach, blah blah blah. Well if passing a teacher cert test wasn't a requirement I bet the schools would be filled with people who are even bigger idiots who think teaching is simple and an easy buck with summers off. It would be even worse for the kids. Granted, there would always be outliers but my guess would be that it would do more harm than good.

At least now a teacher is required to pass the cert test you know that they ARE motivated to teach because they are jumping through all the hoops in order to do so. It isn't like becoming a teacher is the only job in the world where an additional certification is required in addition to a college degree.
Disagree.

Because the cert isn't some super hard thing - it's a headache to deal with at best until it's done. Nobody is staying away from teaching as a profession because of the cert; they are staying away because the pay is low, kids are *******s, parents are *******s, administration in most districts are *******s and teachers are largely left hanging in the wind when it comes to dealing with the 5% problem students.
BBRex
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The kids in my district come from poor households. Their parents likely don't read (or at least in English). They don't know their ABC's. They don't get help with homework. So the kids need extra help in English/Language Arts to catch up. And because STAAR doesn't cover science or social studies until fifth grade or so, those classes get sacrificed to shore up ELA or math.
valvemonkey91
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One would think that the current state of public education in Texas would make every public school teacher the most rabid Trump supporter based on his deportation plans alone. Every teacher I've ever talked to decries how hard it is now. Could it be that maybe a large problem is the 3rd world having to join your classroom?
rhoswen
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BBRex said:

The kids in my district come from poor households. Their parents likely don't read (or at least in English). They don't know their ABC's. They don't get help with homework. So the kids need extra help in English/Language Arts to catch up. And because STAAR doesn't cover science or social studies until fifth grade or so, those classes get sacrificed to shore up ELA or math.


Absolutely. I'm also what they call a "newcomer" teacher. They have been in the country two years or less & are usually some of my strongest students because they *try*.
EclipseAg
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valvemonkey91 said:

Could it be that maybe a large problem is the 3rd world having to join your classroom?
It certainly doesn't help when your students -- and their parents -- only speak Spanish, Mandarin, Hindi and who knows what else.
WES2006AG
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valvemonkey91 said:

One would think that the current state of public education in Texas would make every public school teacher the most rabid Trump supporter based on his deportation plans alone. Every teacher I've ever talked to decries how hard it is now. Could it be that maybe a large problem is the 3rd world having to join your classroom?
Yea, public school teachers should clamoring to vote for someone who degrades them by saying that all we teach is CRT and we are currently transing all of your kids. Don has said MANY times this election cycle that kids go to school, have a surgery, and come back home trans.

We don't have enough money to transport our kids or give teachers a raise but we do have the facilities and expertise to perform surgery on your children without your permission.
AustinCountyAg
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schmellba99 said:

AustinCountyAg said:

Serotonin said:

Booma94 said:

Serotonin said:

Booma94 said:

Not sure why it even matters. Once vouchers are instituted, no teacher certification will be needed. Private schools can already hire anyone to teach with no requirement for degree or certification, and when all of education is privatized it will only get easier to hire non-certified teachers.

I blue starred this post as a hopeful description of the future of education. Now I realize that you might be saying this like it's a bad thing.
So you want people teaching to be LESS qualified. Got it.
I am against unnecessary bureaucracy and administrative process.

My wife went through the teacher certification program here in Texas and it is every bit the joke one would imagine.

Do these certifications correlate with actual teacher effectiveness 5 or 10 years down the line? Holding other variables equal do schools with fully certified staff perform better than those without?

I will admit the certification is good at two things: keeping motivated new competition out of the teaching pool and creating a cottage industry of grift where companies make thousands off of prospective teachers.
I would argue it does the opposite. People always want to ***** how anyone can teach, blah blah blah. Well if passing a teacher cert test wasn't a requirement I bet the schools would be filled with people who are even bigger idiots who think teaching is simple and an easy buck with summers off. It would be even worse for the kids. Granted, there would always be outliers but my guess would be that it would do more harm than good.

At least now a teacher is required to pass the cert test you know that they ARE motivated to teach because they are jumping through all the hoops in order to do so. It isn't like becoming a teacher is the only job in the world where an additional certification is required in addition to a college degree.
Disagree.

Because the cert isn't some super hard thing - it's a headache to deal with at best until it's done. Nobody is staying away from teaching as a profession because of the cert; they are staying away because the pay is low, kids are *******s, parents are *******s, administration in most districts are *******s and teachers are largely left hanging in the wind when it comes to dealing with the 5% problem students.
I agree 100% with this for sure. Thats why the majority of teachers these days are fresh out of college who only last a year or so, and then those who are stuck in it because of retirement.
schmellba99
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WES2006AG said:

valvemonkey91 said:

One would think that the current state of public education in Texas would make every public school teacher the most rabid Trump supporter based on his deportation plans alone. Every teacher I've ever talked to decries how hard it is now. Could it be that maybe a large problem is the 3rd world having to join your classroom?
Yea, public school teachers should clamoring to vote for someone who degrades them by saying that all we teach is CRT and we are currently transing all of your kids. Don has said MANY times this election cycle that kids go to school, have a surgery, and come back home trans.

We don't have enough money to transport our kids or give teachers a raise but we do have the facilities and expertise to perform surgery on your children without your permission.
Nothing like taking what was said and twisting it into something that wasn't actually said or implied, all the while ignoring actual issues that he and many others are talking about.

But it's you, nobody is really surprised. If Trump said the sky is blue you'd find some way to argue that you think he's wrong.
WES2006AG
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schmellba99 said:

WES2006AG said:

valvemonkey91 said:

One would think that the current state of public education in Texas would make every public school teacher the most rabid Trump supporter based on his deportation plans alone. Every teacher I've ever talked to decries how hard it is now. Could it be that maybe a large problem is the 3rd world having to join your classroom?
Yea, public school teachers should clamoring to vote for someone who degrades them by saying that all we teach is CRT and we are currently transing all of your kids. Don has said MANY times this election cycle that kids go to school, have a surgery, and come back home trans.

We don't have enough money to transport our kids or give teachers a raise but we do have the facilities and expertise to perform surgery on your children without your permission.
Nothing like taking what was said and twisting it into something that wasn't actually said or implied, all the while ignoring actual issues that he and many others are talking about.

But it's you, nobody is really surprised. If Trump said the sky is blue you'd find some way to argue that you think he's wrong.
Quote:

"Can you imagine you're a parent and your son leaves the house and you say, 'Jimmy, I love you so much, go have a good day in school,' and your son comes back with a brutal operation? Can you even imagine this? What the hell is wrong with our country?" Trump said Saturday at a campaign rally in Wisconsin, a vital swing state.
You are right Don would never say something like that...

https://www.nbcnews.com/nbc-out/out-politics-and-policy/trump-false-claims-schools-transgender-surgeries-rcna170217
Jack Cheese
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schmellba99 said:

Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.
There.Is.No.Such.Thing.

Read that again. And again.

You may not have anything against private schools, you just think they should all be small and only reserved for those that can afford to pay both school taxes and private school tuition and costs.

Keep those serfs where they belong!

And he clearly doesn't really believe what he's saying. K-12 schooling is one of the very few things that are both funded and directly provided by the government.

Food stamps? They are used to buy groceries at non-government grocery stores.

Medicare? Pays for health care at (thank God) private hospitals and doctors offices. Also, it pays for medications that were (thank God) researched and developed in non-government labs.

Remember government housing projects? Weren't those awesome?? Um, no.

I have no idea why people have these supposedly principled positions about "my taxpayer money shouldn't go to any private enterprise, ever, period." They only ever really mean it about schools, and when pressed they can't explain why schools have to be provided directly by the government. Not can they explain why federal Pell grants are okay to be spent at private universities but vouchers (even if they're means-tested) are evil.

Most of the time, I think these folks are either in the public education establishment or they have loved ones who are. They can be conservative in every way, except they drink the socialist kool-aid from the public school lobby.
Booma94
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Jack Cheese said:



And he clearly doesn't really believe what he's saying. K-12 schooling is one of the very few things that are both funded and directly provided by the government.

Food stamps? They are used to buy groceries at non-government grocery stores.

Medicare? Pays for health care at (thank God) private hospitals and doctors offices. Also, it pays for medications that were (thank God) researched and developed in non-government labs.

Remember government housing projects? Weren't those awesome?? Um, no.

I have no idea why people have these supposedly principled positions about "my taxpayer money shouldn't go to any private enterprise, ever, period." They only ever really mean it about schools, and when pressed they can't explain why schools have to be provided directly by the government. Not can they explain why federal Pell grants are okay to be spent at private universities but vouchers (even if they're means-tested) are evil.

Most of the time, I think these folks are either in the public education establishment or they have loved ones who are. They can be conservative in every way, except they drink the socialist kool-aid from the public school lobby.
You read words that are not there. I didn't say anything about groceries, or health care, or higher education. I did not say that public funds should never go to private entities, and to imply such is a straw man argument. I specifically limited it to public k-12 education and other public services (roads, police) that the state constitution says are to be funded by the state.
AustinCountyAg
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Jack Cheese said:

schmellba99 said:

Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.
There.Is.No.Such.Thing.

Read that again. And again.

You may not have anything against private schools, you just think they should all be small and only reserved for those that can afford to pay both school taxes and private school tuition and costs.

Keep those serfs where they belong!

And he clearly doesn't really believe what he's saying. K-12 schooling is one of the very few things that are both funded and directly provided by the government.

Food stamps? They are used to buy groceries at non-government grocery stores.

Medicare? Pays for health care at (thank God) private hospitals and doctors offices. Also, it pays for medications that were (thank God) researched and developed in non-government labs.

Remember government housing projects? Weren't those awesome?? Um, no.

I have no idea why people have these supposedly principled positions about "my taxpayer money shouldn't go to any private enterprise, ever, period." They only ever really mean it about schools, and when pressed they can't explain why schools have to be provided directly by the government. Not can they explain why federal Pell grants are okay to be spent at private universities but vouchers (even if they're means-tested) are evil.

Most of the time, I think these folks are either in the public education establishment or they have loved ones who are. They can be conservative in every way, except they drink the socialist kool-aid from the public school lobby.
AgLA06
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Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.


Funny though, you have no problem doing exactly that the other direction.
Bert315
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AgLA06 said:

Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.


Funny though, you have no problem doing exactly that the other direction.


Exactly. I'm opposed to my tax dollars going to a broken public education system that is producing sub par results that would result in any normal company going bankrupt.

Thats not an attack on teachers, it is reality. Any other company that did the crap schools do would be severely punished in the market, schools have a semi-monopoly due to cost of most private schools.
Ghost of Andrew Eaton
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Bert315 said:

AgLA06 said:

Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.


Funny though, you have no problem doing exactly that the other direction.


Exactly. I'm opposed to my tax dollars going to a broken public education system that is producing sub par results that would result in any normal company going bankrupt.

Thats not an attack on teachers, it is reality. Any other company that did the crap schools do would be severely punished in the market, schools have a semi-monopoly due to cost of most private schools.
Markets don't really describe what schools do since they can't control their inputs. They have to make due with what walks through their doors instead of finding better students. Chik-fil-a does far less business with McDonald's chicken nuggets.
If you say you hate the state of politics in this nation and you don't get involved in it, you obviously don't hate the state of politics in this nation.
schmellba99
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WES2006AG said:

schmellba99 said:

WES2006AG said:

valvemonkey91 said:

One would think that the current state of public education in Texas would make every public school teacher the most rabid Trump supporter based on his deportation plans alone. Every teacher I've ever talked to decries how hard it is now. Could it be that maybe a large problem is the 3rd world having to join your classroom?
Yea, public school teachers should clamoring to vote for someone who degrades them by saying that all we teach is CRT and we are currently transing all of your kids. Don has said MANY times this election cycle that kids go to school, have a surgery, and come back home trans.

We don't have enough money to transport our kids or give teachers a raise but we do have the facilities and expertise to perform surgery on your children without your permission.
Nothing like taking what was said and twisting it into something that wasn't actually said or implied, all the while ignoring actual issues that he and many others are talking about.

But it's you, nobody is really surprised. If Trump said the sky is blue you'd find some way to argue that you think he's wrong.
Quote:

"Can you imagine you're a parent and your son leaves the house and you say, 'Jimmy, I love you so much, go have a good day in school,' and your son comes back with a brutal operation? Can you even imagine this? What the hell is wrong with our country?" Trump said Saturday at a campaign rally in Wisconsin, a vital swing state.
You are right Don would never say something like that...

https://www.nbcnews.com/nbc-out/out-politics-and-policy/trump-false-claims-schools-transgender-surgeries-rcna170217
Funny, our state AG is investigating 2 doctors that are accused of prescribing transition therapies to minors without parental consent, and altering paperwork to hide the fact that they were doing so.

But yeah, it's just another right wing lunatic conspiracy.
schmellba99
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Booma94 said:

Jack Cheese said:



And he clearly doesn't really believe what he's saying. K-12 schooling is one of the very few things that are both funded and directly provided by the government.

Food stamps? They are used to buy groceries at non-government grocery stores.

Medicare? Pays for health care at (thank God) private hospitals and doctors offices. Also, it pays for medications that were (thank God) researched and developed in non-government labs.

Remember government housing projects? Weren't those awesome?? Um, no.

I have no idea why people have these supposedly principled positions about "my taxpayer money shouldn't go to any private enterprise, ever, period." They only ever really mean it about schools, and when pressed they can't explain why schools have to be provided directly by the government. Not can they explain why federal Pell grants are okay to be spent at private universities but vouchers (even if they're means-tested) are evil.

Most of the time, I think these folks are either in the public education establishment or they have loved ones who are. They can be conservative in every way, except they drink the socialist kool-aid from the public school lobby.
You read words that are not there. I didn't say anything about groceries, or health care, or higher education. I did not say that public funds should never go to private entities, and to imply such is a straw man argument. I specifically limited it to public k-12 education and other public services (roads, police) that the state constitution says are to be funded by the state.
Psssstttttt!!

Roads and police are not solely funded by the state either.

Tell me - what is it about competition in the education system that scares you so much? I'm genuinely curious.
Booma94
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Bert315 said:


Exactly. I'm opposed to my tax dollars going to a broken public education system that is producing sub par results that would result in any normal company going bankrupt.

Thats not an attack on teachers, it is reality. Any other company that did the crap schools do would be severely punished in the market, schools have a semi-monopoly due to cost of most private schools.
Just out of curiosity, what's "broken" about the system?

Last time I looked, every college in Texas was filled with public school graduates. And most parents with students in public schools feel that their kids are getting a quality education.

I am not saying public schools are perfect or that there is not room to improve. I'm also not saying there are not some schools and a handful of districts that are struggling to produce acceptable outcomes. But the blanket statement that the "system is broken" is a myth pushed by voucher proponents.
WES2006AG
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schmellba99 said:

WES2006AG said:

schmellba99 said:

WES2006AG said:

valvemonkey91 said:

One would think that the current state of public education in Texas would make every public school teacher the most rabid Trump supporter based on his deportation plans alone. Every teacher I've ever talked to decries how hard it is now. Could it be that maybe a large problem is the 3rd world having to join your classroom?
Yea, public school teachers should clamoring to vote for someone who degrades them by saying that all we teach is CRT and we are currently transing all of your kids. Don has said MANY times this election cycle that kids go to school, have a surgery, and come back home trans.

We don't have enough money to transport our kids or give teachers a raise but we do have the facilities and expertise to perform surgery on your children without your permission.
Nothing like taking what was said and twisting it into something that wasn't actually said or implied, all the while ignoring actual issues that he and many others are talking about.

But it's you, nobody is really surprised. If Trump said the sky is blue you'd find some way to argue that you think he's wrong.
Quote:

"Can you imagine you're a parent and your son leaves the house and you say, 'Jimmy, I love you so much, go have a good day in school,' and your son comes back with a brutal operation? Can you even imagine this? What the hell is wrong with our country?" Trump said Saturday at a campaign rally in Wisconsin, a vital swing state.
You are right Don would never say something like that...

https://www.nbcnews.com/nbc-out/out-politics-and-policy/trump-false-claims-schools-transgender-surgeries-rcna170217
Funny, our state AG is investigating 2 doctors that are accused of prescribing transition therapies to minors without parental consent, and altering paperwork to hide the fact that they were doing so.

But yeah, it's just another right wing lunatic conspiracy.
Gotcha, and which school are you accusing of being a part of this? Are you saying that these kids showed up at school and then came home after having a sex change operation?

Or are you just bringing in unrelated things to take try and take away from the fact that Don said and implied exactly what I originally posted?
schmellba99
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Ghost of Andrew Eaton said:

Bert315 said:

AgLA06 said:

Booma94 said:

schmellba99 said:



I'll take "things that won't actually happen for $1000, Alex".

The flip side, which you are also forgetting to discuss (like in your other nonsensical post) is this - tell me what about the current setup of our education system makes you think it is super duper awesome, efficient, productive and why a pure monopolistic system is somehow good in education, but illegal in any other sector?

There is only one reason any school system is scared of the prospect of competiton. I'll let you guess what it is.
I have never said there is no place for private schools. What I have said is that there is no place for private schools to receive public funds. Big difference.

I'm all in favor of parents having the option of private school, home school, or whatever school they choose to meet the educational needs of their children. What I'm opposed to is tax dollars being used to fund anything but public education. Just like I'm opposed to public funds paying for private roads, private security, and other private services.


Funny though, you have no problem doing exactly that the other direction.


Exactly. I'm opposed to my tax dollars going to a broken public education system that is producing sub par results that would result in any normal company going bankrupt.

Thats not an attack on teachers, it is reality. Any other company that did the crap schools do would be severely punished in the market, schools have a semi-monopoly due to cost of most private schools.
Markets don't really describe what schools do since they can't control their inputs. They have to make due with what walks through their doors instead of finding better students. Chik-fil-a does far less business with McDonald's chicken nuggets.
Nobody can control the inputs, either in a free market or a captive socialist system. A company cannot, to any real degree anyway, control customers outside of marketing to specific demographics, etc. A school is limited to who lives in the district and how much capacity there is to bring students in outside the district.

What both can control, is the systems and quality of product. In a market environment those systems and products are constantly tweaked and analyzed and streamlined to provide whatever product they are looking to provide at the lowest cost in order to maximize profits.

A school can absolutely control the overwhelming majority of how it operates. The problem is that most have zero incentive to do so, and most simply refuse to do so. The result is a stagnated environment where overhed becomes severely bloated, there is little to no real oversite and the product is an afterthought because the customer has little choice but to simply accept what that product is, good or bad.

In the capitalist market, the threat of competition is the single biggest driving factor to keep your edge sharp so that you can stay competitive and draw those customers in. You provide a better product, a cheaper product, better service, more convenience, etc. In a monopoly, which is what the school systems are, none of that is present. It's the proverbial "you get what you get" mentality because there is no competition, there is no incentive to do better and instead of standards going up as they typically do in a free market, they are continually lowered in order to pull the wool over the public eye to make those footing the bill think they are paying for something much better than they really are.
Booma94
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schmellba99 said:


Psssstttttt!!

Roads and police are not solely funded by the state either.

Tell me - what is it about competition in the education system that scares you so much? I'm genuinely curious.
Talk about missing the forest for the trees.

I'm all for competition. But when there are 2 sets of rules is it really a competition? One group can choose their clientele, the other has to take anyone that walks through the doors. One group has no requirements for what and how they teach, the other is told by the state exactly what they are required to teach. Ironically the group that the state tells what to teach is the one that some in the state want to stop funding. One group has free reign to do as they choose, the other has accountability in just about every aspect- financially and academically provided by both the state and a locally elected board.

You have consistently wanted to make this about privatization without understanding that providing a basic education is a public service. You seem to get some sort of perverse joy from bashing anyone associated with public education.

Education is not and should not be a for-profit endeavor. The state is obligated to provide a basic education- it benefits everyone. If you want more than what the state provides, you are more than welcome to pursue that for your children, but should not expect tax dollars to fund it.
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Booma94 said:

Bert315 said:


Exactly. I'm opposed to my tax dollars going to a broken public education system that is producing sub par results that would result in any normal company going bankrupt.

Thats not an attack on teachers, it is reality. Any other company that did the crap schools do would be severely punished in the market, schools have a semi-monopoly due to cost of most private schools.
Just out of curiosity, what's "broken" about the system?

Last time I looked, every college in Texas was filled with public school graduates. And most parents with students in public schools feel that their kids are getting a quality education.

I am not saying public schools are perfect or that there is not room to improve. I'm also not saying there are not some schools and a handful of districts that are struggling to produce acceptable outcomes. But the blanket statement that the "system is broken" is a myth pushed by voucher proponents.
Apparently you live under a rock, or are intentionally obtuse.

What's broken is that we consistently spend more and more money on the education system with less and less return. Overall American public school test numbers have fallen over the last several decades while costs have increased exponentially. Most ISD's are severely bloated in the overhead, most are running massive deficits because they don't know how to manage money and because of things like Recapture, discipline is rarely enforced in most schools, teachers often do not have the backing of admin when it comes to managing students or parents, etc, etc, etc.

Hell, look at Cypress ISD just outside of Houston this year as an example. Something like $50MM budget shortfall, couldn't even coordinate bus routes properly and it was an absolute sht show. But the superintendent makes $500k a year and there are at least 20 "associate superintendents", all of whom make well into the 6 figures. That doesn't even get to the actual school admin or other support admin either. HISD - the state had to take it over because of the fact that it was so poorly managed over a period of years/decades that it was on the verge of losing certification.

Not too long ago one of the bigger metro districs was looked at and it was discovered that something like half or more of the high school incoming class couldn't read above a 4th or 5th grade level and math was around a 3rd grade level. Yet the kids were continually pushed to the next grade even though they were being failed by the education system.

These are not new stories, nor are they isolated incidents. This is across the state for the most part as well.

How many stories have there been of DEI, common core, drag queens, etc. as well?

As far as public universities - that's a dumb comment. They are provided what they are provided, and even with across the board poor results in education there will always be the handful that truly are smar and truly do learn. Those are the ones that are at the universities, outside of those that are accepted for quotas and other metrics anyway.
Booma94
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schmellba99 said:



Apparently you live under a rock, or are intentionally obtuse.

What's broken is that we consistently spend more and more money on the education system with less and less return. Overall American public school test numbers have fallen over the last several decades while costs have increased exponentially. Most ISD's are severely bloated in the overhead, most are running massive deficits because they don't know how to manage money and because of things like Recapture, discipline is rarely enforced in most schools, teachers often do not have the backing of admin when it comes to managing students or parents, etc, etc, etc.

Hell, look at Cypress ISD just outside of Houston this year as an example. Something like $50MM budget shortfall, couldn't even coordinate bus routes properly and it was an absolute sht show. But the superintendent makes $500k a year and there are at least 20 "associate superintendents", all of whom make well into the 6 figures. That doesn't even get to the actual school admin or other support admin either. HISD - the state had to take it over because of the fact that it was so poorly managed over a period of years/decades that it was on the verge of losing certification.

Not too long ago one of the bigger metro districs was looked at and it was discovered that something like half or more of the high school incoming class couldn't read above a 4th or 5th grade level and math was around a 3rd grade level. Yet the kids were continually pushed to the next grade even though they were being failed by the education system.

These are not new stories, nor are they isolated incidents. This is across the state for the most part as well.

How many stories have there been of DEI, common core, drag queens, etc. as well?

As far as public universities - that's a dumb comment. They are provided what they are provided, and even with across the board poor results in education there will always be the handful that truly are smar and truly do learn. Those are the ones that are at the universities, outside of those that are accepted for quotas and other metrics anyway.
Actually the amount of funding per student is equal or less now to what it was in 2019.

I agree that there are some poorly run districts, but there are just over 1200 school districts in Texas, and the overwhelming majority of those are run well and produce good outcomes. You hear about the bad ones because that is newsworthy- you can't generate hate of a system by telling everyone that most of the system is doing what it should.

Common core is not taught in Texas public schools and there are not drag queens roaming the halls of any schools looking for kids to transition. But if you want to buy all of those talking points that you hear and don't verify, then knock yourself out.
TRIDENT
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Texas ranks 46th in spending on its public schools, and finished 29th in rankings based on thirty two metrics in this study:
https://houston.innovationmap.com/texas-school-system-ranking-wallethub-2668852876.html
Private schools typically don't tolerate behavioral problems and only accommodate a limited number of special education students (12% of student population and increasing), both of which are heavy financial and resource drains.
If private institutions are to be given state funds, they should be following the same extensive procurement laws and regulations that all other state funded organizations must follow. This compliance comes at a considerable cost but does serve to reduce the number of self dealing and "brother-in-law" contracts being funded by the taxpayers.
AustinCountyAg
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TRIDENT said:

Texas ranks 46th in spending on its public schools, and finished 29th in rankings based on thirty two metrics in this study:
https://houston.innovationmap.com/texas-school-system-ranking-wallethub-2668852876.html
Private schools typically don't tolerate behavioral problems and only accommodate a limited number of special education students (12% of student population and increasing), both of which are heavy financial and resource drains.
If private institutions are to be given state funds, they should be following the same extensive procurement laws and regulations that all other state funded organizations must follow. This compliance comes at a considerable cost but does serve to reduce the number of self dealing and "brother-in-law" contracts being funded by the taxpayers.
hence the problem with vouchers
WES2006AG
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These private schools that want taxpayer money should also have no problem with their kids being subjected to the same standardized testing and school ranking systems as well.
Sea Speed
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My kids went to a great public school but when we switched to a private school I realized that bragging about going to a good public school was really just bragging about being the taller midget. Night and day difference between quality of education and quality of community.
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