Abbey Marie
03-08-2011, 06:25 PM
Has anyone else seen this documentary? I thought it was fairly well done, but missed the boat on the real reasons why one inner city school succeeds, while another fails.
My reasons:
1. The school has a large percentage of students from dysfunctional, often fatherless homes.
2. It is extremely difficult to get rid of kids who don't do the work/are troublemakers.
3. Teachers' Unions/tenure make it nearly impossible to get rid of bad teachers.
The special schools that succeed are, I'll bet, usually the ones who can get rid of any kid who fits one or both of those descriptions.
The documentary did not address the first two points at all; in fact it only showed very concerned parents and nice kids who want to do well. It did shed light on the problem with the unions, though.
Any thoughts?
My reasons:
1. The school has a large percentage of students from dysfunctional, often fatherless homes.
2. It is extremely difficult to get rid of kids who don't do the work/are troublemakers.
3. Teachers' Unions/tenure make it nearly impossible to get rid of bad teachers.
The special schools that succeed are, I'll bet, usually the ones who can get rid of any kid who fits one or both of those descriptions.
The documentary did not address the first two points at all; in fact it only showed very concerned parents and nice kids who want to do well. It did shed light on the problem with the unions, though.
Any thoughts?