Skillo
is in a theatre near you
- Joined
- Dec 19, 2003
- Messages
- 947
- Gender
- Female
- HSC
- 2004
Oh please. Aspirations of sending a child to a private school?!? As if it's some kind of social statement or 'quality' that is desirable?!?
I've tried the public and private systems...however, Public schooling has dominated my life. I go to a public school and if I have kids, I'll be sending them to a public school. The differences I have found is that public education exposes you to greater share of society, it teaches me about life as from day to day I meet people that have all come from different backgrounds. I'm not saying that Private schools don't have diversity, they do. I'm saying that public schools have a greater scope and are less 'exclusive'. I am not sheltered from the truths of society, I see and learn with the people behind the figures.
We are taught with relatively substandard facilities and resources yet our school, Albury High School, achieves results that challenge Albury's largest private school 'The Scots School'. I have friends that attend boarding schools and Scots and as a generalisation...they are spoon fed the work.
At least with my results and other public educated children I'm able to say that I achieved them through staff empowering me to use my mind creatively, to think beyond the square, to challenge, to debate and to learn through experience. I doubt that many privately educated students would be able to state that if they have experienced public education in their junior years. And if they say they can, I suggest they are strongly disillusioned
Big_Ticket, have you looked at the rate of students dropping out in the first year of university? You'll find that privately educated kids have a lot more difficulty because they've been thrown into a situation where they have to think independently...something they rarely did at school.
Big_Ticket, to help my arguements of the qualities of public schooling I'm going to quote Shane Maloney in this arguement. These following are extracts from a speech he gave students at Scotch College Melbourne in 1999 (I think...not sure about the date). Maloney was asked by the school to be a presenter...and obviously got more than they bargained for...
"I think of your old boy, David Kemp (who was education minister back in the late 1990s), the (then) federal education minister, giving millions of dollars of public money to enhance the marketbility of schools like this one - justifying his actions with statistics and arguements that he refuses to apply to the needs of the 70% of Australian families who choose to educate their children in the democratic and equitable environment of government schools.
Students, it is not your fault, after all, that your families have chosen to institutionalise you. It is not your fault that your parents lacked sufficient confidence in your personal maturity and ability to respond to the opportunities offered by government school education - and Australia has one of the best systems in the world by the way, despite the relentless propaganda to the contrary by the vested Private school lobby. Right now, you are the victims. Later of course, society will be your victim, and will suffer from the attitudes with which you are indoctrinated here.
But who knows? Just as a prison does not always break the spirit of all who are incarcerated there, perhaps you will not turn out to be a burden to society. Perhaps when you leave here, some of you will even manage to contribute to the wellbeing of this country.
I certainly hope so.
But just to hedge my bets, I will be donating part of my fee today to the campaign of public education..."
And with that, I raise my glass to Mr Maloney, Ziff, and Public Education.
(Don't worry Asqui, you're still my hero too... )
I've tried the public and private systems...however, Public schooling has dominated my life. I go to a public school and if I have kids, I'll be sending them to a public school. The differences I have found is that public education exposes you to greater share of society, it teaches me about life as from day to day I meet people that have all come from different backgrounds. I'm not saying that Private schools don't have diversity, they do. I'm saying that public schools have a greater scope and are less 'exclusive'. I am not sheltered from the truths of society, I see and learn with the people behind the figures.
We are taught with relatively substandard facilities and resources yet our school, Albury High School, achieves results that challenge Albury's largest private school 'The Scots School'. I have friends that attend boarding schools and Scots and as a generalisation...they are spoon fed the work.
At least with my results and other public educated children I'm able to say that I achieved them through staff empowering me to use my mind creatively, to think beyond the square, to challenge, to debate and to learn through experience. I doubt that many privately educated students would be able to state that if they have experienced public education in their junior years. And if they say they can, I suggest they are strongly disillusioned
Big_Ticket, have you looked at the rate of students dropping out in the first year of university? You'll find that privately educated kids have a lot more difficulty because they've been thrown into a situation where they have to think independently...something they rarely did at school.
Big_Ticket, to help my arguements of the qualities of public schooling I'm going to quote Shane Maloney in this arguement. These following are extracts from a speech he gave students at Scotch College Melbourne in 1999 (I think...not sure about the date). Maloney was asked by the school to be a presenter...and obviously got more than they bargained for...
"I think of your old boy, David Kemp (who was education minister back in the late 1990s), the (then) federal education minister, giving millions of dollars of public money to enhance the marketbility of schools like this one - justifying his actions with statistics and arguements that he refuses to apply to the needs of the 70% of Australian families who choose to educate their children in the democratic and equitable environment of government schools.
Students, it is not your fault, after all, that your families have chosen to institutionalise you. It is not your fault that your parents lacked sufficient confidence in your personal maturity and ability to respond to the opportunities offered by government school education - and Australia has one of the best systems in the world by the way, despite the relentless propaganda to the contrary by the vested Private school lobby. Right now, you are the victims. Later of course, society will be your victim, and will suffer from the attitudes with which you are indoctrinated here.
But who knows? Just as a prison does not always break the spirit of all who are incarcerated there, perhaps you will not turn out to be a burden to society. Perhaps when you leave here, some of you will even manage to contribute to the wellbeing of this country.
I certainly hope so.
But just to hedge my bets, I will be donating part of my fee today to the campaign of public education..."
And with that, I raise my glass to Mr Maloney, Ziff, and Public Education.
(Don't worry Asqui, you're still my hero too... )
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