we have tiered classes over here according to ability. slow kid? they drop down a tier. fast kid? they go to a faster tier. simple system and avoids handing over the most formative years of a person's life to an untrained amateur that has to keep punctuating grammar classes with breast-feeding and hoovering. no thanks. yeah sure kids are "property", but my parents were prudent enough to exercise some of that yankee-doodle freedom and place me in a private education system, at the mercy of the market and those ruthless professionals in suits. freedom to the point of retardation, if you ask me.Jay wrote:
I disagree. One on one time is vastly more important to child development than sitting in a classroom. It's why tutors exist and why private schools emphasize smaller class sizes as selling points. Classroom education is forced to move at the pace of the slowest child to the detriment of the quicker kids. School systems are ass backwards and do more harm than good.Uzique wrote:
well, logic would suggest that unless your parents are former teachers or at least degree-level in the core subjects, they're not going to be as well educated or prepared as an actual teacher. actual teachers, in state-education, are also free and plentiful. i'm guessing some stay-at-home-mom or former business woman isn't going to be as capable of doing a good job of teaching as... uh... the professional teacher. all the self-help books and home-textbooks in the world aren't going to change that fundamental disadvantage in skills.
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/