Nebuchanezzar said:
Probably because those in the public sector more often than not make such a contribution to society that would inadequately be measured by "customers" without knowledge, such as biased parents or students.
I don’t see a good enough reason to have this much government control over education. It’s really hard to say that “the government knows better than us stupid people” when they’re really only voted in by ‘us stupid people’ in the first place. The best solution imo is to just privatise/deregulate the entire education industry. But failing that, I’d settle for some type of voucher system(funded by taxation) where schools have to actually compete for students (and therefore also compete for funds).
It’s not wrong of students to chase the higher paid jobs in a society where jobs are indexed by price, jobs that pay better just represent the fact that society needs them more.
Exphate said:
What I was saying is that for it to be standardised across the board, EVERY school in EVERY STATE would have to commit to and participate in these standardised tests, in order for everyone to be on a "similar level", making it easier to discriminate teacher performance from mixed ability. Basically it would be putting everyone "on a level playing field" I suppose.
Ah I see, well I don’t really like the idea of just doing it ‘across the board’ based on standardised marks, I’d much prefer a smaller scale system that allows more for individual differences between schools/pupils/teachers.
Exphate said:
I just don't get what is wrong with the system now?
I think it’s that it’s too hard to fire (which also means less inclined to hire in the first place), and union efforts that just derail productivity.
Exphate said:
My fear is that the performance based pay-rises will force alot of people into a career change. We are already coming to a stage where a large chunk of the Teachers in NSW are nearing retirement (Baby-boomers ftl) which will through some chaos into the mix. Just think what this change will do on top of that. Young teachers will contemplate resigning and alot of people training to may reconsider.
Not a problem as far as I’m concerned:
- Career change: Nobody can expect to continue doing their job for an indefinite period of time, you only have a job as long as somebody else needs your services. Anything otherwise would be arguing for your right to someone else’s property (this right doesn't exist).
- Teachers retiring: Shouldn’t this push teacher’s pay upwards? More people will consider teaching as a profession. I don’t like all the talk of shortages that the government has to go around ‘fixing’, an example of a govt failure is how in America there’s this perpetual desire to “train scientists/mathematicians”. Guess who now has lower grad salaries as a result of the push? The simple economics behind it is irrefutable; increasing the supply of a good merely reduces the price. The government’s allocative efficiency doesn’t beat market efficiency.