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Are 99%ers poking fingers at a failure of capitalism?

Started by November 03, 2011 11:36 AM
151 comments, last by JustChris 12 years, 11 months ago

We spend more money per person in our health care system as well and we are constantly outranked internationally too. And those health care services are privately-owned companies. So who do we want to blame? The person providing the service? The person receiving the service? Or some mix of the two?


That depends by which metric you measure. We have by far the best quality health care in the world. The difference being that that quality of health care is not available to everyone, which is why we are outranked.

I don't know about the unemployment rate for college grads, but in the technical sector the unemployment rate is around 3.3%. This is the fastest growing job sector in the USA, and we do not have enough qualified Americans to fill these positions. Not all degrees are created equal. I don't think the figures exist showing the breakdown of the various degrees that OWS protesters have, but I'd be willing to bet there is a disproportionally low number of computer science or engineering degrees represented.


The portion of computer science or engineering degrees is quite low compared to others in the general population. That's not good, but it's also not going to be unique to OWS as compared with the general population.



[quote name='Khaiy' timestamp='1320423033' post='4880502']
Plus, as maligned as teachers' unions are (and sometimes rightly), educating kids is difficult. Union-free charter schools haven't posted compelling results that unions are the key factors in holding kids back.


There is the option, dare I say, of Union-free non-charter public schools, or at least the option of schools where superintendents and principles are allowed to fire their employees the same as any other employer can.

edit: there should also be a more realistic option to opt out of being in a teachers union. Right now if teachers opt out it pretty much dooms your career until you decide to join the union.
[/quote]

And...? My point in bringing up the charter schools is that a clear difference between them and public schools is a lack of unionization in the former. And yet as a whole they haven't posted dramatically better results, or even results that are better on the whole. So whatever they're doing differently, whether it works or not, the unions would not appear to be the factor in holding students back. A couple have done very impressive work (though they also do some careful selection of students, like Harlem Success Academy), but as a whole charter schools are not really better than public. While we're at it, we could compare public schools in the Southern US, where unionization is much weaker, with schools in the Northern US, where unions are stronger. Guess which region posts better results?




In some cases they settle and agree to pay a bad teacher tens of thousands of dollars to find another job.

Charter schools perform no better than public schools when you disaggregate student populations and compare similar demographics (apples to apples). They are a magic pill designed to shift education of students to private enterprise. The truth is, they are no better.. and in some cases can be worse.


Similar demographics?! http://www.huffingto...f_n_824286.html
[font="Arial,"]For the second year in a row, an all-male charter school with students from the city's worst neighborhoods is sending its entire senior class to college.[/font][font="Arial,"]Urban Prep Charter Academy was founded in 2006, and its goal from the start was for every one of its graduates to be attending college when they left. It was an unlikely mission, given that only four percent of the school's first freshman class was reading at grade level when they entered.[/font]

[font="Arial,"]Last year, the school, founded by educator andnonprofit leader Tim King, did just that -- all 107 graduating seniors were accepted at the end of the year. And this year, Urban Prep has repeated its success[font="arial, verdana, tahoma, sans-serif"][/quote][/font][/font]

This is an inner-city school who took students that were failing in the public education system and got 100% of them into college. How is that not apples to apples? Charter schools cannot pick and choose their students. If there are more students who want in than they can accommodate, they have a lottery system to admittance. Obviously not all charter schools can achieve this sort of success, but this should be the model that other schools adopt and failing charter schools have to get better or close. It is idiotic to dismiss charter schools just because some of them are not working.

[/quote]

Charter schools can absolutely cherry-pick their students; see my link above. When they select for performance, is there any surprise that the students who remain perform well? While the link you posted is indeed impressive, this quote from the second one takes a bit of the luster off of it.

[font="Arial,"]Of the 150 teens who started in 2006, 95 lasted four years. (Another dozen were transfers.)[/quote][/font]
[font="Arial,"]
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[font="Arial,"]It's still a huge accomplishment, and this is in no way meant to detract from the work that King has done. But at the same time, your position doesn't allow us to ignore the fact that for 55 of the initial students (37% of them!) even this program didn't work and they left the school. So the school had 100% of its graduates go on to college, but had a 63% graduation rate. And where did those 55 students go? Private school? Another charter? Or back into the public school system, where they diluted those schools' numbers rather than Urban Prep's-- and those public schools now had 107 fewer students who were capable of those excellent results to offset them.[/font][font="Arial,"]
[/font]
[font="Arial,"]As for secondary education, not all classes are created equal. Some kids load up on AP Biology and AP Calculus; others fill their schedules with cooking electives and math for graduation standards (that is, math that doesn't even go too far into algebra). Placing kids from the second group into more rigorous classes that they would otherwise have flat out chosen never to take isn't going to automatically turn them into academic superstars. To do that would require reform of the education system, but also require those students to be willing to do more than prepare an edible meal to pass a class. Those students choosing to take on a decidedly non-taxing schedule has nothing to do with unions.[/font][font="Arial,"]
[/font]
[font="Arial,"]And I know that my own experience != data, but in my high school experience (largely honors and AP classes at a public school with all or nearly all teachers unionized) I would be shocked to find that any of my teachers worked under 60 hours per week. In fact, I'd be surprised to find that any of them worked only 60 hours per week. And I never saw any of them hesitate for even a moment to provide extra help above and beyond this baseline (which included regular extracurricular reviews, optional extra assignments, detailed grading and feedback) to any student who requested it, or parents who expressed concerns that their child wasn't getting the most out of the class.[/font]

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[quote name='Alpha_ProgDes' timestamp='1320467522' post='4880698']
We spend more money per person in our health care system as well and we are constantly outranked internationally too. And those health care services are privately-owned companies. So who do we want to blame? The person providing the service? The person receiving the service? Or some mix of the two?


That depends by which metric you measure. We have by far the best quality health care in the world. The difference being that that quality of health care is not available to everyone, which is why we are outranked.
[/quote]
I'm sure you can say the same about our education. Seeing as there are people (from overseas) that still want to bring their children here to receive an education.

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However, to try to get back ontopic, it seems that the OWS is asking a question (well one of many) that many corporations can't answer. "Where are the jobs?" We know that the corporations can create them. There's been several reports saying that regulations aren't affecting job growth or profit. We know that the tax cuts for businesses and the rich have had a stellar effect on their profits and overall wealth. We know that a number of corporations and financial firms would not be in business if not for the bailouts. I dare say that hiring more people now would quickly create demand and therefore more profit than businesses are getting currently.

And, IMO, if businesses were bailed out by the taxpayer, then the taxpayer has a right to say that the businesses owe them a job.

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[quote name='Alpha_ProgDes' timestamp='1320467522' post='4880698']
We spend more money per person in our health care system as well and we are constantly outranked internationally too. And those health care services are privately-owned companies. So who do we want to blame? The person providing the service? The person receiving the service? Or some mix of the two?


That depends by which metric you measure. We have by far the best quality health care in the world. The difference being that that quality of health care is not available to everyone, which is why we are outranked.
[/quote]

You can have the best health care system in the world but if the vast majority of the population can't get access to it then it has failed and you might as well not have it. So, yes, you get 'out ranked' for a very good reason because the rank is what the majority see.
Education system, same deal. If your whole population isn't getting access to 'the best' then it doesn't matter how much you spend.
I have to take issue with the claim of us in the USA having "by far the best healthcare system in the world." I have been to a lot of doctors in the last couple of years, and one thing that I've found that they're good at is keeping you waiting and packing their schedule so full of patients that they have about five minutes of time to spend with you before they just prescribe you some random drug that probably won't help then shuffle you out the door. Capitalism in medicine, while great for producing new treatments, is a real detriment to service. Doctors' primary objective is to see as many patients as possible in a day in order to maximize their profits.
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And...? My point in bringing up the charter schools is that a clear difference between them and public schools is a lack of unionization in the former. And yet as a whole they haven't posted dramatically better results, or even results that are better on the whole. So whatever they're doing differently, whether it works or not, the unions would not appear to be the factor in holding students back. A couple have done very impressive work (though they also do some careful selection of students, like Harlem Success Academy), but as a whole charter schools are not really better than public. While we're at it, we could compare public schools in the Southern US, where unionization is much weaker, with schools in the Northern US, where unions are stronger. Guess which region posts better results?


The main difference between charter schools and public schools is that charter schools have more control over how and what they teach and how they operate.


You can have the best health care system in the world but if the vast majority of the population can't get access to it then it has failed and you might as well not have it. So, yes, you get 'out ranked' for a very good reason because the rank is what the majority see.
Education system, same deal. If your whole population isn't getting access to 'the best' then it doesn't matter how much you spend.


I don't want to debate health care, but when you make the statement, "We are constantly outranked internationally [on healthcare]" it needs clarification when the picture painted by that statement implies that our health care in general is of bad quality, which is not true.

I think that's a big part of it. It's the student's responsibility to want to learn. I've seen students go through my class with no drive to learn and educate themselves and they failed (1 out of 7 students. Might be more this semester?). You might have a basic idea of what a bell curve is and how well it applies to students. You'll get overachievers who are amazing at assignments and assume everyone else is trying to do as well as they are. Then you have the average students just doing work. Then the people that don't care at all.


Congratulations, your students are normal humans. Subject to Bell curve, Gaussian distribution, or Normal distribution. Some are good, most are average, some are bad.

Mistakes commonly made come from failing to acknowledge this absolute fact, or from trying to twist it. No child left behind is one example. It tries to shift left bound of the graph to zero, so that nobody is below average. The other extreme made by wannabe overachievers is to filter out everyone but top 5%.


An effective system is one that starts from normal distribution, then adjusts towards that.


Then when you try to intervene to help them they have no interest in getting better (trust me I've tried with hit and miss success since it would be cool to have a class where everyone does well).[/quote]

Every person has buttons that can be pressed and things that make them tick. If you want to address this issue, figure those out. Why are these students there? Perhaps all they want is a degree that they were promised and they paid to get it. Perhaps they are in that class because their girl goes there. Perhaps they want to stay warm. Perhaps....

The easiest cop out is to put a label on them: lazy, stupid, incompetent, disinterested. Those are symptoms. Figure out the cause.


Of course, given limited time and effort, it might be only viable to simply write them off. Sooner or later you need to realized that your time is limited and day has only 24 hours.



Exceptional teachers were mentioned. It wasn't money that made them as such. It was their inability to give up on those "failures" and they walked an extra mile to get them to learn and succeed. That is how exceptional people are made. Where everyone else goes 80%, they go 100%. But nobody would bear even a hint of a grudge if you were to be the 80%. Going beyond that would likely cause more problems.

[quote name='phantom' timestamp='1320505597' post='4880792']
You can have the best health care system in the world but if the vast majority of the population can't get access to it then it has failed and you might as well not have it. So, yes, you get 'out ranked' for a very good reason because the rank is what the majority see.
Education system, same deal. If your whole population isn't getting access to 'the best' then it doesn't matter how much you spend.


I don't want to debate health care, but when you make the statement, "We are constantly outranked internationally [on healthcare]" it needs clarification when the picture painted by that statement implies that our health care in general is of bad quality, which is not true.
[/quote]

Well, no.. it doesn't. If the health care was, in general, good quality then it would rank higher... the fact it ranks lower suggest that in general the quality isn't good. The fact that "high quality" exists for the minority who can afford it doesn't change the case of the majority/general case.

But if you want to believe otherwise go for it, I'm not here to shatter your 'USA IS BEST!!!' dillusion, no matter how wrong it might be...
[quote name='phantom' timestamp='1320505597' post='4880792']
You can have the best health care system in the world but if the vast majority of the population can't get access to it then it has failed and you might as well not have it. So, yes, you get 'out ranked' for a very good reason because the rank is what the majority see.
Education system, same deal. If your whole population isn't getting access to 'the best' then it doesn't matter how much you spend.


I don't want to debate health care, but when you make the statement, "We are constantly outranked internationally [on healthcare]" it needs clarification when the picture painted by that statement implies that our health care in general is of bad quality, which is not true.
[/quote]
Painting our education system in the same manner is also not true. The point being is that the same claims about the education system (a public system) can be made about the healthcare system (a private system). And there's plenty of evidence to argue one side or the other for either system.


@phantom: The USA IS GREAT! :P

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