thisnewday: (Default)
thisnewday ([personal profile] thisnewday) wrote2011-02-01 01:29 pm

A Comment on the Current Dilemma in Public Education

[This is my response to a recent article in the Syracuse Post-Standard concerning Governor Cuomo's anticipated cuts in state aid to public education. To provide additional context, most municipalities in NY State finance their public schools through a combination of state aid and local property taxes. At the same time that he proposes to cut state aid, the governor is also supporting a state-wide cap on property taxes. Which means that public schools in NY State may soon find themselves between the proverbial rock and hard place.]

Perhaps it's time to consider a new instructional model for public education, one that includes the use of trained volunteers in the classroom. Otherwise, how can we possibly meet the latest state and federal mandates for higher student achievement at a time when budgetary constraints require us to reduce the number of teachers, programs, and other resources needed to accomplish these goals? While some have suggested an expanded role for the computer technologies already in use as an adjunct to the educational process, there's clearly no effective substitute for the face-to-face, daily interaction between students and teachers.

As a retiree and volunteer in one of Syracuse's K-8 schools, I know there's a lot to be considered on the way to implementing such a plan. I've been working for about three months with an excellent young teacher whose classroom management skills are absolutely topnotch and we continue to find new ways, virtually every day, to maximize the effectiveness of this approach. But we're also rewarded, every day, as we notice the benefits to our students.

As this article makes clear, the financial and educational challenges facing us are daunting and the solutions we've relied on in the past, with their tax-based financial components, will only compound our difficulties. Maybe it's indeed time to consider a formalized system of volunteers in public education.

LPK
LiveJournal
1.1.2011

[identity profile] amandagayle.livejournal.com 2011-03-05 11:56 am (UTC)(link)
Oh no! I forgot you were upstate NY! I was just IN Syracuse at the end of February! I should've waved.

[identity profile] olbuksings.livejournal.com 2011-03-06 02:39 am (UTC)(link)
Ha! You definitely should have. But what was a nice girl like you doing in a place like Central New York? Just kidding. About Central New York...

[identity profile] amandagayle.livejournal.com 2011-03-07 01:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Well... my *cough*boyfriend*cough* lives at (oh lord) *sputter*cough*fort drum*hack*cough*...
Yes, there are little pink pigs flying gaily over the frozen depths of hell as I type...

[identity profile] olbuksings.livejournal.com 2011-03-07 07:09 pm (UTC)(link)
Ya know, I wondered if it was something like that but didn't want to be the cause of so much helpless laughter if I said it and was wrong. Next question, though, is he deploying with the 3rd Brigade combat team or coming in as part of a replacement unit? If the latter, welcome to the region; if the former, Godspeed...

[identity profile] amandagayle.livejournal.com 2011-03-08 04:28 am (UTC)(link)
That's been his home base (? sounds like capture the flag) for a couple years now. He got back from Afghanistan (every time I say that word I just can't help of little old ladies and blankets. Afghan wars, you've got to see, is even worse. They're stabbing each other with knitting needles arguing about dropped stitches...) in, oh, Decemberish last. So to answer your question, no, they're not making him go back any time soon.
I knew him only vaguely before he went over there. He's my favorite gal-pal's high school boyfriend. And this whole thing's a bunch of weirdness. I swear to you, I've lost my fucking mind: boyfriend, boyfriend in uniform, uniformed boyfriend living all the way across the effing country?
You're the one who's allowed to collapse into helpless laughter.

[identity profile] olbuksings.livejournal.com 2011-03-09 01:23 am (UTC)(link)
Yeah, well, as much as I love a good laugh at someone else's expense, you MUST have noticed that intense flash of light as you flew over Syracuse. That would be the reflection off the large glass house we're living in these days. The one we probably won't be moving out of anytime soon.

What I'm saying is that I'm totally prepared to be respectful of whatever weirdness you choose to embrace in your own life. (I did laugh at your "litle pink pigs," etc. But I did so respectfully. And only because your description was so vivid and I've seen them myself.)

Anyway, glad to hear that your guy is safely back and that he'll hopefully be on the home turf for a while. And, definitely, next time you fly over, wave. But wear your sunglasses...