Malcolm Kirkpatrick
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2006
- Messages
- 4,046
1.Gandhi opposed the caste system. In the US, the coefficient of correlation (district size, d) is positive, where "d" is the difference between the mean NAEP 8th grade Math score of white students and black students. The coefficient of correlation (district size, d) is positive if "d" is the difference between the mean score of college-educated parents and high-school-educated parents. Herman Brutsaert found higher mean scores AND a lower coefficient of correlation (parent SES, score) in parochial schools in Belgium than in State schools. Public schools exacerbate economic inequality.Here is the main reason: Parents are a variable commodity. Some may be excellent, others not so much. We'd like to give students the opportunity to rise above the station they were born into. We do not hold with Gandhi's idea of a caste system.1Because we care about our citizens.2I did look it up. Sounds pretty much like the correct rationale.3If education is a public good, in a democracy, the 'we' is the body politic. In pretty much the same way we pass laws on other public goods for the welfare of the nation. I am missing the parallel with shoe size and eating though.4
The problem with relying on parents is that parents are limited by not only what they think important to teach, but also by their ability to teach other things. My daughter tutors home-schoolers. She has several client families who recognize they need an outside expert to teach their children English (her subject).5...
Before we dismiss public education as past its prime or harmful, we ought to take a good look at what we intend to replace it with. And why.6
2. Does "we care" imply collective farms? State-operated shoe stores? Why the education industry?
3. Really? The "whereas" part does not maintain that parents were not teaching their children to read or to learn a trade, it complains that parents were not indoctrinating their children into the State religion. The US "public" school system originated in Congregationalist indoctrination (c. 1650) and, later, anti-Catholic bigotry (c. 1830).
4. The public goods argument implies subsidy and regulation, at most, not State (government, generally) operation of an industry.
5. Two issues here. a) The substitution of a political process for parent control means that some body determines what children will learn. This guarantees a poor match between individual children's interests and abilities, on the one hand, and the pace and method of instruction, on the other. Parents are flawed, but so are teachers, curriculum planners, and democratic processes. b) The point about tutors favors homeschoolers. Through tutors, books, apprenticeships, and other methods, homeschooling parents can provide instruction beyond their individual knowledge.
6. What do you mean "we", paleface?
