Fogdog
Well-Known Member
Don't take me wrong, I'm not pointing my finger at you, I'm just riffing on what you just said.Unfortunately not everyone can afford for their kids to stay home. If you can’t afford or don’t have someone who can take care of them what do you do? The only way closing schools down will work is if you hand out money for people to stay home from work as well. Otherwise who's helping kids learn?
my kids are doing virtual. I have one in each level of school. High, middle, grade school. Luckily we’re already a one income family otherwise it would have been a WAY harder decision.
You proposed just one solution: handing out money for everybody. That seems to me to be a static and stale solution. I don't even think it can work, given how few people in this country are able to teach kids well, much less have the education to do so. For example, although my parents cared, they were pretty much unable to help me with math. My mom was a lover of reading and she gave me that gift but she sure as hell couldn't teach me much about geometry, biology or chemistry. My dad was a wonderful artist but he topped off at 9th grade education. I could learn some creative arts from him and did so. History, sociology, civics, math, sciences, sports were all outside of their skill set, much less patience with an obnoxious little shit like me. I was physically and verbally abused, so there is that too. They were not good at teaching and flew off the handle sometimes. I don't blame them very much, they were who they were and not all that different from other parents of the day.
Are there other alternatives to pouring money on the problem and turning the solution over to parents? For example, we could fund an army of tutors who treat each student as an individual case. Some kids might require personal attention and others can work in an online classroom. Clearly we can't open schools where there are high rates of infection, so any solution would rely on remote learning. So, we have to build out the internet to the last mile everywhere. $$$ That brings us to another value from public education: socializing kids. I don't know how we do that but the solution where we just pay parents to home school doesn't address that.