Xan wrote: ↑Fri Oct 30, 2020 11:07 am
Tom's the one in fantasyland, about getting people to actually stop supporting paying for kids' educations.
Yes, I think he is so myopically fixated on himself that he forgets how the quality of his life is closely intertwined with the society around him. I think he'd benefit from a bit of study into the concept of dependent origination to temper his fantasyland ideas.
Xan wrote: ↑Fri Oct 30, 2020 11:07 am
I think my proposal is perfectly realistic, and avoids another fantasyland of public schools working particularly well.
And then the idea of parents not being in charge of their kids' education is a really outlandish fantasyland which I hope would find zero support anywhere.
I think if you delve into charter schools you will find that on the whole they don't perform much better than public schools and in some cases are far worse...the same goes for private school. In the cases they perform better those gains can largely be attributed to students being drawn from specific socioeconomic classes or having more engaged parents.
As far as parents, I'm not saying that they shouldn't play a role in their child's education. Parents are of key importance to a child's learning. Parents are of key importance to their child's health as well but they don't chart the course of action to treat their child's cancer...they defer to medical experts. Of course they have room for input, but why have any experts at all if we are just going to allow lay people to decide how many milligrams of medicine should be dosed out or what treatment regimen should be followed?
I also believe there is a danger in parents indoctrinating their children and exerting control over them that is even scarier in some ways than the big bad boogeyman government that you fear....think scientologists and other religious cults. In public schools teachers are actively prohibited from indoctrinating students into a particular way of thinking. I'm not allowed to express my personal opinions or attempt to persuade students to think a certain way. I'm there to try to open up pathways of critical thinking and to challenge students to question things. As a public school teacher I would have felt extremely uncomfortable trying to persuade students to think about the world in a particular manner....that's indoctrination, not education. When Trump talks about the need for patriotic education it sounds like he wants to create public centers of indoctrination.