Whatis6times9 wrote:
Kipp also gets about 13 grand a year per student in taxpayer and another 6 from donors. Thats over a grand more than public schools get in tax money and over 3 grand more than other charter schools.
Well as I said before, studies have shown that there is no correlation between spending on education and test scores, so perhaps there's some reason other than money to believe the schools are doing better?
Whatis6times9 wrote:
Also Kipp fudges their numbers because they lose 15% of students a year in middle school and guess which kids "leave" the school that's right the underperformers.
sourceWell even if that's true, isn't 85% a significantly HIGHER graduation rate than the inner-city schools that politicians have been trying to fix for years but that remain stagnant? In 2010, Mathematics Policy Research stated the following:
Quote:
Using a matched comparison group design, results show that for the vast majority of KIPP schools in the evaluation, impacts on students’ state assessment scores in math and reading are positive, statistically significant, and educationally substantial.
I think this proves that, at the very least, they are doing something right.
Whatis6times9 wrote:
How about maybe the underperforming schools can only hire the worst teachers because they have no other choice when the best teachers can pick to go to better schools in the district or even go to schools in the suburbs that pay better and have students who aren't carrying the same baggage.
The KIPP schools started in the worst-performing districts in Houston, TX and South Bronx, NY. Those schools started with your standard budget and systematically outperformed every school in the district. Maybe it's because they found teachers in that district who cared and separated them from schools that, as a whole, didn't. If you look in any inner-city school, you'll find teachers that care. However, you'll also find teachers who don't, or don't care enough. A few gems in a pile of turds isn't going to look pretty.
Whatis6times9 wrote:
And again you are acting as if teachers enjoy having their kids fail, you're acting as if the districts enjoy struggling compared to other districts.
Under no circumstances. I merely made a simple observation. Bad schooling leads to bad neighborhoods and bad neighborhoods worsen the overall problem. I'd like to know what I said that makes you think I think that.
Whatis6times9 wrote:
No one gets into teaching for the money, there is no money in it especially in city districts.
Well if that's true, then why are so many districts failing? If that were true, wouldn't more teachers put more of an effort into helping their kids succeed? As it stands, the vast majority of public school teachers only do what is required of them and hardly ever even talk to the students outside of class. In my high school, I could only name about 10% of the faculty that seemed to put in any extra effort, and one of those teachers was blind. Like, literally
blind, and he still managed to do his job very well.
Whatis6times9 wrote:
Also, way to blow past all of Jay's points.
Because I agreed with most of them, and didn't see any reason to argue.
@Jay: At Whatis' insistence, I agree with most of what you are saying and see no reason to argue.