Subject: Going to try reposting this about charter schools
Message:
I do get part of the problem but to say get rid of all charter schools (which the federal government doesn't even have the power to do, and you could expect a lot of backlash if they even tried) is really extreme. I myself have Asperger's Syndrome, so I know how ****ed up (pardon my French) public schools can be and (from experience working with other "disabled" kids) frequently are. For many parents this leaves a few options, keep in the horrible endless cycle that is public schools (I can offer a few examples there if you wish, check out
http://autismonthego.com / for starters), pay huge dollars for special education (can go all the way up to $30,000 or more in some areas) assuming its avaible, homeschool them in areas which thats possible (so not incredibly liberal states like CA) and you have the time and resources to devote to it, or go to one of a few charter schools in America that are starting to pop up (I think theres like 10 outside of CA in all the United States) where he can get a decent education and not have to sell the house or give up your career to get it. Is that not the ideal solution and shouldn't schools like those be encouraged?
Beyond that as someone who was incredibly gifted in the areas of mathmatics (and advanced in the areas of English) I have seen how schools also fail gifted kids. There seems to much of a movement in America that 'everyones special' (which to quote Dash, "thats's just another way of saying no one is") that encouraging true giftedness is something that we don't really want to put too many resources in. Because of my giftedness, school quickly became a place for boredom. I was ready for geometry instruction by... lets just say the end of 4th grade (probably a bit behind but lets go with it), do you think I got it? No of course not instead I got to learn long division which I knew how to do since the beginning of 2nd grade. Yeah teaching classmates can help with some things, but not everything, especially in the area of math (no amount of teaching your classmates how to do multiplication can help you learn geometry)
If school is a place of learning, I think seperate schools that encourage giftedness and accept differences are also neccessary, and something normal public schools don't and frequently can't do. If schools are a place of boredom and torture, by all means go along with the current system.