Couldn't really disagree any more. I think that public school systems are exactly where money ought to go. Especially the mental health areas. There are millions of children who suffer from bi-polar disorder (among many other diseases) that go undiagnosed. This money can only help.
Millions? Are you kidding?
How can yet more money help? There is almost a universal linear negative correlation with the amount of money thrown at public schools and the results academically.
Artest is essentially throwing mud at a teflon wall and hoping it will stick.
How can more money help? You don't think that public schools need more funding? Ridiculous
Really? Walk around a typical public school administrative office and you'll constantly hear two words...."Excuse me".
Then walk around a typical private or parochial school administrative office.
Bloated redundancy vs efficiency. Who gets better results? With a much lower dollar-to-student ratio.
Like I said, kudos to Artest for trying. It sounds like he's blindingly going to throw money away. His money so bless his heart.
Might be a discussion for another thread, but the US already spends as much, or more, per student than just about any country
in the world yet our academic achievement slacks behind a good chunk of developed countries' in most key areas. How the money is spent is a lot more important than the amount.
That said, I live in a fairly affluent area, but our school budgets are being slashed left and right. Programs are being cut. The bottom line is, kids are having opportunities taken away from them here, and that's a shame.
The shame is that public schools dabble in mental health, social engineering, etc when as a rule, the system is a collossal failure at literacy.
Self-esteem is not a job skill.
I'm not surprised by the fact that there's a negative association, but it has nothing to do with squandered money. The real issue here is that academic performance is judged based on the flawed state testing system, and in order to "teach to the test", actual learning has been put on the back burner. Too many kids fail the tests anyway, and their school is then deemed underperforming and its extra funding is shelved. It's an absolute catch-22 for education: either you ignore actual critical thinking in favor of test-taking methods, or you lose your funding for special school programsThat's the explanation for a collossal drop-out rate in schools which spend substanitally more per student than more successful schools?