Flake wrote:That is in part a cultural problem - we have hammered it into kids that they cannot fail and that they are special snow flakes. Teachers at lower levels have no advocacy from their schools if they fail the little fuckers - who can honestly be surprised when they get to college and continue to pull that shit?
In Alabama, things are a little different. Poor teachers are protected by an extremely powerful teacher's union known as the Alabama Education Association, an organization that is in some areas mandatory for school employees to join. Any attempt in the last three decades to overhaul Alabama's education system or how it is funded has been killed by these guys, despite that we've been in the grip of proration for years. Firing a poor teacher is nearly impossible in this state,such as the case of one woman convicted of pedophilia who continued to be paid for three years while she was in prison because that school system simply couldn't get rid of her.
Part of the issue is that the AEA is used as a funding juggernaut for one of the two major political parties. The dues that educators (and in some cases school janitors, lunch ladies, bus drivers, and administration staff) regularly pay are then funneled into reelection campaigns or ad campaigns through our draconian PAC system to bolster or thwart candidates. The reason we have Governor Robert Bentley instead of the original gubernatorial Republican frontrunner Bradley Byrne? Byrne openly criticized the AEA's practices, so they spent tens of thousands of dollars to blast him with negative ads that were completely unrelated to education. And because this money was filtered through a handful of PACs, the AEA didn't have to say they were paying for it. It only came to light on expense reports released several months after Byrne lost the primary.
Look, I was lucky where I went to school. Auburn pays a lot of money to make sure its public school system is better than the majority of the state, and the high school I attended is proof of that:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auburn_Hig ... Alabama%29. But the population here is also very dedicated to education, especially considering the university. There's a joke that AHS students get a seat saved for them at AU, but it's largely true due to the quality of the school.
Alabama has other issues though. We've become so heavily focused on having a college degree, so many people in recent decades have been shooting for them, but it's killed our trade schools. The state is currently in the middle of a big push to get more high school graduates into trade schools to learn working skills because our craftsmen population is much older, and large portions will be retiring soon. Money is a big issue though: a lot of folks think a college degree is worth more, but there are some places that will pay large salaries if you know how to weld properly.
Meanwhile in other places education isn't well funded, and kids don't want to stay in school, so in some of the more rural counties here we have graduation rates as low as 50%. And then there are some of our inner city schools....I don't suggest anyone go to one of those.