regression to the mean
skewed figures, ive seen the wire.
thats a lot of sex abuseKimmmmmmmmmmmm wrote:
Tracking decades of allegations in the Boy Scouts http://spreadsheets.latimes.com/boyscouts-cases/
And the Wisconsin Senate debate is on by the sounds of it, I don't think I'm interested.
The irony of guns, is that they can save lives.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
You are both predictable mouth breathers.
The U.S. spends 5.5% of its GDP on education. Same amount as the U.K. Less than France. Less than Finland. Less than Norway.
Spending is in line with other developed nations. But of course you were trying to make a point about teachers unions and small government. I.e. being predictable.
The U.S. spends 5.5% of its GDP on education. Same amount as the U.K. Less than France. Less than Finland. Less than Norway.
Spending is in line with other developed nations. But of course you were trying to make a point about teachers unions and small government. I.e. being predictable.
One would imagine the spending out on education would increase as the price of textbooks, electronic resources, modern facilities, and indeed, schooling itself increases... making out you are throwing more and more money at education with 'no result' is a bit stupid. the quality of education has gone up hugely, even if the actual levels of literacy and numeracy are still averaging out with the human IQ bell-curve. i guess galt would rather he had to take all his classes in wooden shacks, using technology from the 1900's, just to keep the unions off his libertarian dime.
The chart takes inflation into account. The point was that spending more money hiring teachers to improve student-teacher ratios, and increased spending on teachers salaries, have had no impact on the quality of students produced. It is saying that throwing more money at the education system will not improve results, just make teachers and administrators wealthier.aynrandroolz wrote:
One would imagine the spending out on education would increase as the price of textbooks, electronic resources, modern facilities, and indeed, schooling itself increases... making out you are throwing more and more money at education with 'no result' is a bit stupid. the quality of education has gone up hugely, even if the actual levels of literacy and numeracy are still averaging out with the human IQ bell-curve. i guess galt would rather he had to take all his classes in wooden shacks, using technology from the 1900's, just to keep the unions off his libertarian dime.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
I don't see a line showing the progression of teachers salaries adjusted for inflation. I think its important to show the spending by catagories. Admins, teachers, materials, increased police presence, whatever. Without having more data, that graph really serves no purpose other than to provoke knee jerk-reactions and generalizations.
what does inflation have to do with anything? schools nowadays as actual facilities and concrete buildings cost far more money. classrooms are far better furnished and every student has access to resources that come at a cost unheard of in comparison to the 'sheet of paper and fountain pen' education of yore. most american high-schools have large ICT resources and pc suites, offering a favourable pc-to-student-head ratio, no? of course spending has increased on education, paperwise. it has nothing to do with grossly overpaying teachers and hoping that the higher-salaries will make them better at overcoming the fundamental levels of literacy/numeracy. there is nothing on that chart that attributes the sharp rise in education spending to the 'lining the coffers' of teachers and administrators. your automatic assumption of this reveals quite a bizarre bias and assumption. what do you have against school-teachers, exactly? why does a working-class kid hate (teachers) unions so much?Jay wrote:
The chart takes inflation into account. The point was that spending more money hiring teachers to improve student-teacher ratios, and increased spending on teachers salaries, have had no impact on the quality of students produced. It is saying that throwing more money at the education system will not improve results, just make teachers and administrators wealthier.aynrandroolz wrote:
One would imagine the spending out on education would increase as the price of textbooks, electronic resources, modern facilities, and indeed, schooling itself increases... making out you are throwing more and more money at education with 'no result' is a bit stupid. the quality of education has gone up hugely, even if the actual levels of literacy and numeracy are still averaging out with the human IQ bell-curve. i guess galt would rather he had to take all his classes in wooden shacks, using technology from the 1900's, just to keep the unions off his libertarian dime.
also literacy/numeracy etc. are base-line statistics. they don't say anything about how much an improved teacher:student ratio can propel successful students, qualitatively as well as quantitatively (i.e. percentage of students from high-school x that go onto college education). smaller class sizes are almost always a good thing: a small tutorial-model is the ideal model, really. you are reading that graph in a very blinkered way.
Graph is quite simple, I don't know why you're both having such a difficult time with it. Maybe you just don't like what it means?KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
I don't see a line showing the progression of teachers salaries adjusted for inflation. I think its important to show the spending by catagories. Admins, teachers, materials, increased police presence, whatever. Without having more data, that graph really serves no purpose other than to provoke knee jerk-reactions and generalizations.
Here is an example from Ohio:
http://www.lsc.state.oh.us/fiscal/ohiof … chools.pdf
So if you think the money is going for school supplies, ok.
edit - uzi corrected me via pm
Last edited by Jay (2012-10-19 11:32:12)
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
okay, so break this down... you are trying to draw a relationship between the allocation of funding/budgets in schools, which unsurprisingly is mostly focussed on human resources/staffing (i.e. the top cost in almost every single services/tertiary/education based workplace)... and your previous argument, which is that teachers are cash-hungry sloths that are bankrupting the public coffers with no positive result. i don't get it? the gist of your argument is that, over a historical timeframe (which is why you included the first graph), teachers have come to soak up more and more money, becoming unionised (the bastards), overpaid, overcompensated, useless and inefficient. the first graph didn't support that statement statistically in any way. nor does the second. what you are trying to present, if i may exaggerate a little, is your personal bias version of events, whereby teachers have gone from modestly-paid, low-income professionals, to overpaid and entitled millionaires. i don't see any financial information that really shows that teachers today are paid/rewarded dramatically (and in your view, undeservedly) more than they were 50 years ago. increased spending per student and school budgets are not supporting figures in this line of argument.
Last edited by aynrandroolz (2012-10-19 11:48:02)
I don't have a horse in this race. I'm not the one making suppositions based on a graph that doesn't show any type of allocations for spend dollars. The first graph you provided did not show that. The second graph shows a very narrow focus. As a math/science/self-described stats guy you should know better than to use a graph of ohio spend dollars (that still only lists general salaries ie doesn't show how much is spent on teacher salaries vs admin salaries) to back up your weak argument from the first graph which encompasses national data.Jay wrote:
Graph is quite simple, I don't know why you're both having such a difficult time with it. Maybe you just don't like what it means?KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
I don't see a line showing the progression of teachers salaries adjusted for inflation. I think its important to show the spending by catagories. Admins, teachers, materials, increased police presence, whatever. Without having more data, that graph really serves no purpose other than to provoke knee jerk-reactions and generalizations.
Here is an example from Ohio:
http://www.lsc.state.oh.us/fiscal/ohiof … chools.pdf
So if you think the money is going for school supplies, ok.
edit - uzi corrected me via pm
I'd like to see more comprehensive data before I jump to conclusions. Apparently your analytical skills are lacking.
Try again
Your argument is essentially-
See this graph of national data? It proves increasing teacher salaries doesn't result in better education.
It didn't show allocation of spend dollars for teacher salaries adjusted for inflation.
Then you provide a pie chart of allocations of spend dollars for ohio, and say this backs up your original argument.
The pie chart doesn't encompass national data. I'm not sure what salaries are included in the 'salaries' bucket. Is it all school employee salaries, including teachers, janitors, administration, etc? Your link doesn't provide what it counts as 'salaries'. So while you think I am nonsensically arguing for increased teacher salaries (something I haven't stated at all), you're the one making a baseless claim.
You may very well be right, however nothing you've provided backs up your argument and you made yourself look like an idiot in the process (in my opinion).
See this graph of national data? It proves increasing teacher salaries doesn't result in better education.
It didn't show allocation of spend dollars for teacher salaries adjusted for inflation.
Then you provide a pie chart of allocations of spend dollars for ohio, and say this backs up your original argument.
The pie chart doesn't encompass national data. I'm not sure what salaries are included in the 'salaries' bucket. Is it all school employee salaries, including teachers, janitors, administration, etc? Your link doesn't provide what it counts as 'salaries'. So while you think I am nonsensically arguing for increased teacher salaries (something I haven't stated at all), you're the one making a baseless claim.
You may very well be right, however nothing you've provided backs up your argument and you made yourself look like an idiot in the process (in my opinion).
Jay wrote:
Graph is quite simple, I don't know why you're both having such a difficult time with it. Maybe you just don't like what it means?KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
I don't see a line showing the progression of teachers salaries adjusted for inflation. I think its important to show the spending by catagories. Admins, teachers, materials, increased police presence, whatever. Without having more data, that graph really serves no purpose other than to provoke knee jerk-reactions and generalizations.
Here is an example from Ohio:
http://www.lsc.state.oh.us/fiscal/ohiof … chools.pdf
So if you think the money is going for school supplies, ok.
edit - uzi corrected me via pm
ThisMacbeth wrote:
Spending is in line with other developed nations. But of course you were trying to make a point about teachers unions and small government. i.e. being predictable.
However paying teachers more doesn't necessarily mean they'll suddenly be better educators.
Probably they'll be lazier in fact.
Just as spending trillions on the 'defence' budget and supplying all the latest whizz-bang hypersonic stealth fighters etc won't make military dudes smart enough to solve the problems of a tiny backward, landlocked third-world nation.
Fuck Israel
Paying teachers more may make teaching a more attractive profession to smart people. That's kind of the point.
The paradox is only a conflict between reality and your feeling what reality ought to be.
~ Richard Feynman
~ Richard Feynman
In the long term ....... I'd still say probably not.
In the short term it just makes teachers lazier.
Not that I'm saying there are no good teachers, its just that pay is just one factor.
I know a good number of teachers who have had it because the system is now dominated by Trotskyist lesbians.
In the short term it just makes teachers lazier.
Not that I'm saying there are no good teachers, its just that pay is just one factor.
I know a good number of teachers who have had it because the system is now dominated by Trotskyist lesbians.
Fuck Israel
There are already thousands of applicants for every teaching job around here, higher pay attracting yet more applicants doesn't seem very effective. The problem is that once a teacher receives tenure there is basically no way to get rid of them. They might have sixty five-star applicants but only one position to fill because of a retirement. Because they're flooded with applicants, getting those jobs becomes all about who you know rather than your qualifications, since they're all basically equally qualified after grad school.Spark wrote:
Paying teachers more may make teaching a more attractive profession to smart people. That's kind of the point.
But let's face it, teaching is pretty fucking cake. You work eight months out of the year, you have a job for life, decent to great pay, you don't get drug tested etc. I have a few friends that are teachers just so they can smoke weed every day and chill on the beach all summer If it was so hard to attract good applicants I would agree that pay needs to be raised as an incentive for new hires, but the opposite is true, yet pay keeps rising.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
-Frederick Bastiat
Smarter people teach at universities, not high schools.
inane little opines
Teaching isn't cake. It's an honorable career.
Or maybe by the time someone finishes their masters in education they are too tired or too broke to go for a PhD. There are also hundreds of thousands more positions teaching high school than there are positions at universities.Shocking wrote:
Smarter people teach at universities, not high schools.
Don't be stupid.