pgwenthold
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Sep 19, 2001
- Messages
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- Public schools have to take everyone, and therefore have to spend more on things like special programs.
There is also the fact that wealthier people are more educated on average, and therefore, the kids come from more educated parents. Do you think it is a coincidence that college towns tend to have pretty good high schools? It's because they're loaded with professors' kids.
I understand why parents would want that sort of economic segregation. I just can't understand why the government ought to perpetuate it.
I can think of a couple of possibilties that may come into play here:
- The public system may be using unionized staff, whereas the private (or christian) school may get by with non-unionized staff
- Did the private school have a wide range of after school activites (such as sports teams)? If its a small school, it may not have had enough students to bother with such luxaries
- Its also possible that tuition at the private school only covers part of the cost of education, and that money is obtained in different ways (for example, if its a christian school, is it affiliated with a church that might be providing some resources?)
- Public schools have to take everyone, and therefore have to spend more on things like special programs.
But what percentage of students in public school are in special programs? Lets say 10% (which I would think would be very high number). Do special programs for that 10% cost as much as the other 90%?
1. I am in South Carolina, unions are not involved.
2. The private school doesn't have a football team but competes in all other sports.
3. It is a baptist church but gets no subsidy from SBC.
Special programs are far more costly than regular programs. For example, the teacher/student ratio has to be much, much higher. Whereas a teacher in a good class could easily handle 25 - 30, in special programs that might go to 5 or even less of highly specialized teachers. They could easily be making twice the pay of a regular teacher at a private school.
Good students don't need a lot to learn.
Does it get money from the local church at all?
When I went to catholic school, the school was supported I assume some by the dioscese but a lot by the church (through church donations). Then again, I don't think church members paid tuition (none that I knew of). I just know that "school expenditures" were part of the church budget.
This I don't know, but the tuition is for a student who is not a member of the church.
My problem with voucher programs is that they seem to be a plot to undermine the public school system by pulling funding from it one kid at a time. The backers seem to be predominantly religious conservatives who want their kids out of the public school system for religious reasons.
The local church may still be giving money to the school, even if its not allocated on a per student (or per church member) basis.
Just wondering, does this church belong to any sort of 'school board'? Not sure how your budget is calculated, but some public school money does get spent on head office administration. (Not that administation costs aren't excessive in some cases.)
I know the school itself will need administrative staff (principal, secretaries, school nurse or leaches to bleed the student's wounds, etc.) I'm talking about central administration. (For example, I assume the public school is controlled by some sort of elected trustees, in which case the cost of their meetings must be factored in.) Does the religious school have similar administration outside of the school.The church school is acredited by the state. The budget numbers I am showing do include administration and all costs, but the private school has administration also. It is a fairly large school, the high school is a 2A school for competing in state sports which is not big put not the smallest either.
I know the school itself will need administrative staff (principal, secretaries, school nurse or leaches to bleed the student's wounds, etc.) I'm talking about central administration. (For example, I assume the public school is controlled by some sort of elected trustees, in which case the cost of their meetings must be factored in.) Does the religious school have similar administration outside of the school.
Trustees were only one example of the cost of administering a group of schools. You also need secretaries at the head office, infrastructure (e.g. computers) to handle recordkeeping and to handle things like transfers within the board, etc. If the private school is stand-alone, it won't have any of those types of expenses. Those types of costs could account for the extra expenses. (Especially if the board itself is wasteful.)I don't know about the private school, but the school district's budget for Trustee expense is less than $15,000 or 0.019% of the budget.
Trustees were only one example of the cost of administering a group of schools. You also need secretaries at the head office, infrastructure (e.g. computers) to handle recordkeeping and to handle things like transfers within the board, etc. If the private school is stand-alone, it won't have any of those types of expenses. Those types of costs could account for the extra expenses. (Especially if the board itself is wasteful.)
I will be the first to admit a large school district has more overhead than a small private school. I don't question why they have more stuff in total, but why does it cost more per student. The small private school still has to keep records, handle the transfer of new students in/old students out, and computers and such.I t is the porpotionality of the situation. Also, there should be at least some economies of scale somewhere to help mitigate the additional requirements at least to some extent.
Although the private schools may have to worry about things like recordkeeping (as well as individual public schools under a board), there are things that the board schools would have to worry about
Not that I'm saying its correct, or that thre isn't waste, just that the waste may not be at the school level; it may be with the board administration.
I would agree with that. I am saying that vouchers/more school choice is a better way to go than throwing more money at the current system.