<p>“Isn’t public education, and the entire liberal system, based on the principle of offering a service to citizens who could not do it by themselves, or at least not so well? Shouldn’t the REAL yardstick of the success by public schools -or better said the lack thereof- of educating people who do not have an extensive family support?”</p>
<p>No!
And that’s one of the major points I made on other threads pertaining to CA education, including the earlier ‘Steve Jobs’ one.</p>
<p>No, not at all, xiggi. Public schools in this country assumed at their inception (& were modeled on the basis of) 2 things: an overwhelmingly English-speaking population, and family support. That is much of the problem. ucla_dad is exactly correct, and he would know, as he lives in the heart of it: most of the severely challenged in our public schools (the schools performing poorly, the students not passing the pathetic CAHSEE) are ESL and ELL learners. Period. This is the immense elephant in the room too un-PC to discuss among CA power-brokers.</p>
<p>Just last Friday I once again ran into the same problem I’ve been dealing with over & over in schools: the majority population of many of them are Hispanic. The minority population (usually varies between 1 and 8 in one classroom) is African-American. My fifth-grader left his site school because it was one such school. The learning was proceeding painfully slowly. Why? Because most of the class understood very little English, and (surprise!), the texts are written in English. (Hmmm.) This is <em>March</em>. My student has been at the school since September. They’re studying early US History and are STILL ON NATIVE AMERICANS. (That would be early Native Americans. It’s not a course, no, in Native Americans.) I laughed with the parents & suggested that an entire course on Native Americans would be suitable for a college course, esp. graduate level. Obviously, the teacher had covered very little of the curriculum, because the students were not understanding the vocabulary. Period. He is one of the 6 or 7 black students in the class. He is not being taught. The Latinos are being taught. So now at least I’m teaching him.</p>
<p>Early immigrants were able to transition to our public schools because of rigorous self-study and no options but immersion, and because of a high level of motivation that assumed the necessity of assimilating within an overwhelmingly English-speaking population, & conducting business in English. That is no longer the assumption of immigrants who come here, particularly from south of the border. Depending on the region of settlement, they may be conducting business comfortably in Spanish, conversing with a wide community in Spanish, etc.</p>
<p>And xiggi, I do not see the overwhelming emphasis on the report you cite as being the teacher pay issue. (I completely agree with sac.) The structural & governance issues were highlighted, issues which I similarly profiled on earlier threads regarding CA education. The major issue is the system. Great teachers, however paid, cannot function effectively within the current system without a radical change in assumptions, expectations, requirements, & priorities.</p>
<p>I also want people to understand just how radically the public school population has changed. (the demographics) My new student whom I mentioned above (new to me) lives in a community which was overwhelmingly (almost 100%) black about 10 yrs. ago, and had been similarly so for many, many years before that, too.</p>