I wasn't saying that schools shouldn't educate the kids who don't care, but it's something that does need to be taken into consideration. You can lead a horse to water, but you can't force it to drink - that saying applies in this situation. Instead of just blaming the teachers, I think that the entire picture needs to be examined...however since only the teachers can be fired, that is what ended up happening in this situation.
I don't think the entire picture
ISN'T being looked at, nor that
all the blame is being put on the teachers. The city is well aware of the problems there...high percentage of minorities, poverty, drugs, absentee parents. It's just that this particular portion of it...the teachers...is what's making the news now, because the teachers' union chose not to accept what was offered.
But to suggest, even vaguely kidding around, to "fire" the kids that don't care...that situation already exists in the "dropout rate". And just having the kids get out of the school is part of the problem, not the solution.
When I was talking about kids out of college, I wasn't referring to education majors, I was speaking about kids in general. Since teacher's salaries are public knowledge, the prospective teachers will know approximately how much they will be getting paid. It's the kids who are fresh out of college going into what some people call 'the real world' who expect much more. I believe the person I was referring to in my previous post was a business/marketing major. I remembered being shocked when she told me how much she expected to make when she graduated.
If the college grads now, who majored in education, don't have a clue that they're not going to make as much as maybe an engineer, then they haven't been paying attention. To make a blanket statement that college grads in general expect to make more than these teachers make, just doesn't fit the situation.
I think this statement is exactly what I find upsetting about the firings. There is no plan. We have got to stop with this "magic bullet/one size fits all" mentality of fixing problems. So what, They make the school day longer and get 80 new teachers who will have lunch with the kids and whammo graduation rates just jump to 90%. Kids see they are getting new teachers and say "ooh let's all go to school now, it's sooo much better"?
Has anyone heard of what will happen next year to these kids? What's that plan? I've been looking and I sure can't find one mention of it? Have they looked into why these kids are not showing up, why they are coming into h.s. so absymally prepared?
You're right 50% of the kids starting freshmen year not finishing is pathetic so did some one even bother to find out what's happening to these kids? Or was it, humm we have to get our test scores up nothing else matters?
Like I said, I was born and raised in the "hood" (Harlem, NY) I thank god daily that I had a mom and dad who lived by the creed of "you will get a good education". I'm old so my parents had no problem choking the life out of me and my siblings if they even thought for a nanosecond we cut school.
If you don't think there should be "a plan", then what should happen??? I mean...whatever they do is "a plan", so I'm not sure what you mean.

Having "a plan" is not synonymous with
anyone thinking it's a magic solution.
I don't think there's a single solitary person involved in this, directly or indirectly, who thinks that the changes they are trying to implement is a magic bullet/one size fits/whammo anything, nor are the kids going to suddenly and excitedly think school is so much better now. I mean...seriously. Just because THIS is what is being discussed, here and on the news...the teachers' firing...doesn't mean they are ignoring all the other problems and how to fix them.
I named the reasons why, it would seem to make sense, kids aren't going to school, or why they're doing poorly. Lots of immigrants. ESL. Poverty. Drugs. Parents who don't speak English. Absentee fathers. And teen pregnancy too, I'm sure. Obviously, in any city/town with those and other problems, issues need to be addressed that affect youth and education, and no, I don't know to what extent it is. None of that is going to change overnight either. Perhaps teachers eating lunch with the kids and developing a rapport with them would HELP. And I'll pipe in before you do...NO, I don't think it's THE cure-all for the situation. Nor the only action that should be taken. Helpful tho? I think it could be.
And I seriously doubt anyone said "humm we have to get our test scores up nothing else matters" either. Please.
That's wonderful you had two parents at home who cared about you and your education, despite where you grew up. There seems to be a lot of that missing in CF.