We're drifting WAY off the original topic, aren't we? /forums/images/graemlins/grin.gif
It's been a great discussion, though...
<font color="blue"> Andy, I didn't mention schools because it is not the governmrnt's job to educate children.
When the government made itself involved in education, everything went to pot: </font>
There are WAY too many levels of administration involved in education. Each city school district, each county, each region of the state. Then there's the state board of education and department of education, and the U.S. Department of Education.
While I'm on the subject of that, what exactly does the U.S. Department of Education do that the lower levels of bureaucrats don't already do? There's no duplication of jobs in the levels of administration??? They have 4800 employees and a $54.4 BILLION budget! The U.S. Department of Education wasn't created until 1980. My goodness, how did we ever survive before that time???
<font color="blue"> Sports seems to be the key class in gummit schools. Funding for music and arts are being cut at alarming rates nationwide. </font>
My wife was a loyal empoyee of a local school district for three years. We lived in the community and we were involved with the programs in the school and community, even though we have no children. Heck, before she graduated, she even did her student teaching there. After stringing her along every time there was a full-time opening, they hired people from outside the district who could also double as coaches. Doesn't loyalty to your employer and community matter at all? /forums/images/graemlins/mad.gif
Speaking of home schooling, Gary, I'll send you an email later telling you about what my wife is doing for a living right now. She's still involved in education, but works in a cubicle in an office building downtown. She loves children, and didn't go into teaching for the money. She wanted to be someone who could shape the lives of children. It seems the priorities in education are all wrong, and it breaks her beautiful heart not to be doing what she has wanted to do since being a small child. /forums/images/graemlins/frown.gif
I know it's not about the money, but we really can't afford to have her go back to teaching at a Christian school for $15,000 per year with no benefits. That's the going rate at all the ones in this area. You spend six years in college, build up tens of thousands of dollars in student loans, and you could make more working at Wally World. That's messed up!