Bill Call wrote:Are we at $15,000 per year per student yet? You know, $345,000 per classroom?
Betsy if I gave you $345,000 per year and 23 students picked at random could you teach them to read?
Perhaps its time to consider converting the Lakewood Schools into a Board run charter school system.
Betsy Voinovich wrote:Wow Bill, when you put it that way.. yes I could. What is this $15,000 figure about? I know our teachers don't get $345,000 to teach a class. How does this 15K break down, and where did you get that number?
stephen davis wrote:Betsy,
Did you really fall for that? Really?
Betsy Voinovich wrote:Hi Steve,
Well.. I guess if people were getting 345 thousand dollars to teach I would have heard about it...
My questions remain however. There is a figure per kid, is there not? I remember the first school board meeting I ever attended. Estrop was the Superintendent and the remarkably straightforward discussion was about retaining students in order not to lose money per student.
I am asking where does Bill's figure come from? What is the amount per kid in Lakewood? How is that calculated? I think it's assumed that we all know this, but I do not.
So Steve and Bill, please enlighten me in your unique ways.
Thanks.
Betsy Voinovich
Betsy,
...and then there's statistics.
I'm not even going to argue the veracity of Bill or Ryan's numbers. Even though they differ, they may be in the correct range. I don't know. I have no numbers in front of me.
Pay attention to the argument you have been drawn into.
Read Bill's quote.
Bill Call wrote:You know, $345,000 per classroom?
Betsy if I gave you $345,000 per year and 23 students picked at random could you teach them to read?
Bill challenges you by asking if you could teach 23 children to read for $345,000, like you could pocket all that cash. You may be able to do that. Maybe not. I don't know.
Remember, Bill says that it's "$345,000 per classroom". This first assumes that there is a classroom. That means that there is a classroom within some sort of structure that must be built and maintained to some standard of health, safety, accessibility, and utility.
Right away, your cut of the money, if you are the "teacher", has been reduced by the cost of the physical classroom structure.
Are you going to go beyond just reading? Would the curriculum, be broader than that? Art? Science? Cooking? What else might be important to properly educate this group of 23 students, or many groups of 23 students, as in our Lakewood schools?
If your "classroom" is in a school, in a district of many schools with many grade levels and sufficient educational offerings, just think of the costs of heating and air conditioning, lawn mowing, light bulbs, toilet paper, athletic facilities, ovens for family and consumer sciences, textbooks, food service, transportation, water, maintenance equipment, soap, signage, science lab equipment, overhead projectors, computers, security, playground equipment, electricity, desks, chairs, parking lot sealing, paint, floor cleaning, library book shelves, and fire alarms. I have only scratched the surface.
All those expenses, and you still haven't taught a kid, but they are all needed to create an environment for learning.
To teach thousands of students, either publicly or privately, you need to coordinate all the things that go into it. You need management, human resources, accounting, lawyers, etc.. More costs.
After that, you still need qualified and certified teachers that have worked hard and paid for their education, certification, and professional development to actually teach. The teachers are going to earn a portion of the cost per student.
I really don't want to argue this further, but I'll ask a few questions based on Bill's question. Are you qualified to teach children to read at an expected level? Can you do so in a "classroom" without walls, windows, and bathrooms? Will the children be safe in that environment? Will you be able to enrich them without chairs, textbooks, and teaching materials? Will you be a accountable to whomever pays for these children's educations? Will any of the students "picked at random" have disabilities (Managing students with disabilities could really cut into your cash.)? Okay, if you've got all that covered, how much of the $345,000 do you expect to keep after you pay your accountant and income taxes?
Bill Call wrote:Betsy if I gave you $345,000 per year and 23 students picked at random could you teach them to read?
Well?
Steve
P.S.
Bill Call wrote:Perhaps its time to consider converting the Lakewood Schools into a Board run charter school system.
Huh?
.