I know what you’re saying, but does that really add significantly to the cost? I have a daughter with autism. The public school did not have adequately trained people, but it did throw some people at her. As I recall, there were no more than four students in the program out of a total student body of over a thousand. There is no possibility at all that those additional people accounted for the difference in costs between public and private schools.
I can’t speak to your daughter’s experience, but generally SPED students are far and away the most expensive group of students on a school campus. Between their teachers, aides, therapists, nurses, physical accommodations (like adapted playground equipment), adapted learning equipment (audio-taped textbooks, large print textbooks, Braille textbooks, etc.), speech and language therapists, and psychologists, their education comes with a price tag unmatched by any other population.
And SPED parents tend to be very vocal when it comes to ensuring their students get every single accommodation and modification they’re legally entitled to. There is subgroup of lawyers who specialize in SPED law who work with parents to ensure this happens.
In my opinion, whatever it might be worth, the teachers’ unions are a big part of the cost problem. The unions fight for smaller class sizes (they prefer numbers over the size of salaries) and aides to do all kinds of things. When I was in Catholic grade school, there were 50 or more in a single classroom. My wife went to a Catholic high school in which it was not unusual to have 60 in a single classroom at a time. But it worked.
I went to Catholic school, too. My classmates and I went to school every day except if we were sick or school was cancelled because of the weather. We knew if we disrespected our teachers our parents would have killed us. We and our parents knew how to stay in a chair for more than 10 minutes at a time. Our and our parents’ attention spans were longer than three minutes. We and our parents could read silently for more than five minutes without needing to be re-directed. We and our parents had at least a modicum of self-control. We did homework, and we and our parents understood its importance. We and our parents understood the importance of academic knowledge. We and our parents had goals for the future. We and our parents could imagine the future. We and our parents understood cause-effect relationships (e.g., “If I fail this class I might not graduate. If I don’t graduate I might not get to college.”). We and our parents were literate. We and our parents were numerate. We knew we weren’t going to school every day to socialize with our friends for eight hours.
Few at-risk students and their parents understand any of this at a meaningful level. Plenty of them can play lip service to it, but when asked to demonstrate what it means can’t.
Our parents didn’t send us to school for eight hours to get us out from underfoot, and they didn’t pull us out of school on a whim to babysit younger siblings, help grandma move to a new apartment, or help an uncle move some merchandise he’s selling from another state. They knew how to be parents and didn’t honestly believe they were our “friends.” They set boundaries and had behavior expectations for us. They were more than 13 or 14 years older than we were.
Put 50 of my Catholic school classmates in a room, and a teacher could get something done. Put 50 of today’s at-risk kids in a room and you might as well install an armed guard with a first aide kit at the door and call it a day because nothing is going to happen except fights and vandalism and socializing. This is why urban public school teachers push for smaller class sizes.
And this is why the washout rate for first-year teachers hovers right around 50%.
About the technology…
Do you know what would happen if public schools pulled out their Smartboards from classrooms and went back to a paper grading system?
For one thing, the business community would come down like a ton of bricks and accuse schools of - once again - failing to prepare students for a technology-driven future. The vocal, more affluent parents would lose their minds because they wouldn’t be able to check their student’s grades and attendance in real time. NCAA would go batty because they’ve come to depend on being able to check an athlete’s eligibility online, 24/7.
And - done right - there’s nothing wrong with a kids making a mobile about themselves. It requires imagination and planning on the kid’s part. It’s a way of recognizing kids as being a part of a larger group, which is very important socially and emotionally. It can be a language-development tool. Kids love seeing something they’ve done on display, and finishing a project holds them accountable for their use of time. And it can be fun. I know f-u-n is a dirty word in many circle, but kids need time to enjoy and play, even the teenagers. Especially the teenagers, I think. One can’t do fun craft projects all day, every day, but done right they can be some of the most meaningful and memorable experience kids have in school. I can still remember the huge Declaration of Independence mural I did in 11th grade US history class at my Catholic high school, and this was in the late 1970s. I remember the time of year I worked on it (spring) as well the the sister’s name who taught the class. If I close my eyes I can still see what it looked like. Most importantly, that creative, crafty mural is one of the reasons that today I love reading and learning about history.
Luna