Thursday, 14 February 2008

nyt online schooling grows setting off



Virtual Charter School article and unhappy crabby people

NYT: Oneline Schooling Grows, Setting Off a Debate

Half a million American children take classes online, with a

significant group, like the Weldies, getting all their schooling

from virtual public schools. The rapid growth of these schools has

provoked debates in courtrooms and legislatures over money, as the

schools compete with local districts for millions in public

dollars, and over issues like whether online learning is

appropriate for young children.

One of the sharpest debates has concerned the Weldies' school in

Wisconsin, where last week the backers of online education

persuaded state lawmakers to keep it and 11 other virtual schools

open despite a court ruling against them and the opposition of the

teachers union. John Watson, a consultant in Colorado who does an

annual survey of education that is based on the Internet, said

events in Wisconsin followed the pattern in other states where

online schools have proliferated fast.

"Somebody says, `What's going on, does this make sense?' " Mr.

Watson said. "And after some inquiry most states have said, `Yes,

we like online learning, but these are such new ways of teaching

children that we'll need to change some regulations and get some

more oversight.' "

Which is indeed what is happening. Hurrah for the democratic process.

But the comments .. oh those comments ..

The answer is more likely to be yes if books were the only thing

children learned from in school. School teaches socialization and

(we hope) tolerance which is vital for anyone to survive in the

real world. It also teaches them that there are other opinions and

choices than the ones they are presented with at home. School can

be tough, but the life lessons that are learned there are just as

important as the classroom curriculum.

-- Lady Apollonia, Louisiana

Life lessons like blend in with the herd, conform and stand in lines.

Learning how to interact with other children is as much a part of a

child's education as learning how to read.

Sequestering children in basements and teaching them academic

fundamentals away from others is harmful. For one day, little

Johnny will have to leave the basement and operate in a much bigger

world.

-- Liz, NY

I don't know any home school or virtual school parents who do this.

Liz, you're ignorant. Get out of your house and go meet some kids who

learn from home.

Electronic schooling is a destructive force, both for society in

general and for individual students. As a college teacher for 40

years, I'd assert that most of the learning experience in a

pedagogical setting is based on actual live exchange and

interaction between student and student and instructor and

students. Internet learning reinforces a distorted model of the

world, insures that students are unprepared to succeed in later

life, and interferes with the development of healthy rounded

personalities.

-- Fred Waage, Johnson City, TN

Fred, you're flat out wrong, or at least so the early returns say. Let

the experiment run for a few decades and then we'll know one way or

the other.

I'd bet on the home schoolers.

The public school system is being undermined in the United States

by charter schools, etc. A strong and healthy public school system

is absolutely NECESSARY to democracy and economic health for the

United States.

-- ShowMe - Missouri, Missouri

I sort of agree with the fellow from Missouri about public schools; if

we're going to have a representative democracy then we should provide

schooling so that people don't grow up to be serfs but free citizens

aware of their rights and responsibilities.

Charter schools are public schools done different. Once upon a time a

public school was a one-room school house funded by the township.

Later we consolidated the one room school houses into county-wide

districts. Charter schools are just change, is all.

Life is about change. Embrace it.

I sympathize with parents who don't want to put their kids through

some of the really crappy-quality public schools that are out

there, run by petty credentialist bureaucrats. But the move to

quasi-home schooling for everyone who can afford it is only going

to make the situation worse, and leave out the kids whose parents

don't have the money or time to home-school them.

-- csdiego, Washington, DC

Time is something no one ever has enough of. Money .. hey guess what?

Charter schools enable parents with smaller incomes to attend better

schools. Ditto charter virtual schools.

Yes, you have to have 'a' parent at home, which will leave some

parents out in the cold. Others ... my wife was teaching school and

her take-home was just enough to pay for the car to drive to work and

day-care to watch the kids.

Home schooling (virtual charters were not an option back when) was a

fiscal gain for us.

Note that it's Saturday and I'm schooling the monkeys right now (we're

breaking for lunch). Why? My wife is the primary educator here - she's

got gobs and gobs more patience than I do. But the monkeys took a

break on Tuesday, her part time job requires that she spend today

driving all to heck and gone across the state .. so today is catch-up

and Dad is tagged with proctoring.

The point is we have 'a' parent dedicated to this but you can

time-share.

Absolutely Stupid, Dumb, etc.. How can a child possibly learn ina

structured mananer at home ? There are too many opportunities to

play the wii, nintendo, etc. aand skip the Math book or reading.

The child also misses the social learning opportunities associated

with a public school. What kind of parent would do this to their

Children ? We should have laws that forbid these kind of decisions

by irresponsible parents. These parents should be charged with

Endangering the welfare of a Child !!

-- Len, Connecticut

Len, you're an idiot. Step a little closer and say that to my face.

A large percentage of children are home schooled by materials that

are religious in nature, which is not permissible for public school

support. These children may be isolated socially, and may be cut

off from

supervision in case they are being neglected or abused

at home.

-- EMBondar, Grand Island, NY

Were you reading the article? The material is provided by the public


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