Wednesday, December 27, 2006

Fix it, please


▲ THIS JUST IN: State's community college fees to drop $6 per unit. Starts Jan. 1. An attempt to ameliorate low enrollments. Free cash prizes would be more effective still. Perpetual boozy-sexy parties in the Quad would be good, too.

▲ Today, the Associated Press reported the perceived urgent need to overhaul California’s incorrigible public schools: Education overhaul urged. Check it out.

Obviously, the preparedness of students attending CA's community colleges is determined by the preparedness of graduates (and non-graduates!) of CA's public schools.

(Hey, if things get much worse in my IVC classes student-preparedness-wise, I'm gonna have to start teaching the ABC's!)

The article discusses the obvious: bureaucratic inefficiency, funding, and teacher quality. It notes likely proposals and suggestions.

It ends with:
Some suggestions, particularly ideas about measuring teachers' effectiveness, are likely to meet resistance from powerful interests such as the California Teachers Association…The politically powerful union has resisted previous efforts to monitor teachers….
▲ Raghu P. Mathur is still the Chancellor of the South Orange County Community College District. No relief in sight.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

first step - eliminate faculty unions. second step - eliminate tenure.

Roy Bauer said...

Dear 8:35

You offer talking points? Certainly not "thinking" points.

The problems with Public Ed are more complex than you imply, and though I'm no fan of CTA, taking them out won't solve anything. Other major obstacles to intelligent reform and oversight exist--mostly, I think, an unwillingness to get to root causes (e.g., lousy parenting, the poverty of prevailing educationism, etc.).

And how on earth will the elimination of tenure help? That would certainly make teaching a less attractive profession. As it is, we are not attracting enough talented people. Your sledgehammer approach would shrink and impoverish the pool further.

I do hope the Gov's group is willing to delve deep. Don't hold your breath, though.

Anonymous said...

Well, Chunk, eliminating unions and tenure simply allows for immediate change when change is needed. Public education as it exists now is an anachronistic bureaucracy incapable of keeping up with an ever changing world that is now dependent on information and technology. I agree, the problems with public education are complex, so let's reduce the complexity the unions and tenure present. Simply stated, let's focus on learning rather than teaching.

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...