1 – Public schools can cripple your child’s ability to read. The schools use a special reading-instruction method to do this called whole-language (or balanced literacy). But that’s a good thing. Why do kids need to read anyhow? It only gives them ambitions to go to college. Parents have to shell out tens of thousands of dollars for college tuition these days, so if your child can’t read, you end up saving a lot of money.
Continue reading about Ten Good Reasons To Keep Your Child In Public School
The problem with public schools is that they are “public” and run by government. The problem is that these government-run public schools exist in the first place. Government is the PROBLEM, not the solution to our children’s education. Get government out of the education business, and the problem is solved quickly and permanently.
Continue reading about Cut Out The “We” — How To Solve The Public-School Disaster Problem
Here you will find many kinds of online Internet private schools. Some are full virtual schools. Others are Internet divisions of brick-and-mortar private schools. Some offer only accredited high school programs, others have junior high and high school programs, and some offer a full 1st -12th grade education. Many are state-accredited schools that offer fully [...]
Look for these 11 danger signals from your child that tell you they are having trouble with their public school studies.
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The book Public Schools, Public Menace is the resource that you need. If you are a parent looking for a private school and want to know about costs, location, curricula, and teacher qualifications, this is where you will find all of that–and more. You don’t have to limit yourself to brick and mortar private schools. If you include internet private schools, your options increase and costs decrease significantly.
Continue reading about Private-School List — A Public School Alternative
A good internet private school can cost less than $950 per year. Break that down monthly and then weekly. It’s $85 per month for the ten months of the school year, or $25 per week. A small adjustment in your grocery bill or eating out budget, and your children can get a top quality education.
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Also, parents can now give their kids a low-cost, quality education, no matter where they live. There are no geographic limitations with Internet private schools. For example, parents living in Virginia can enroll their children in an Internet private school based in California because instruction is done over the Internet. No more having to drive your children back and forth from school. No more time wasted in travel. Parents or their children simply log onto the Internet private school’s website in the safety of their own home, and school begins for the day.
Continue reading about Private Schools For Less Than $1000 a Year Tuition
The proof is in the pudding. Aspen Learning Systems, a subsidiary of Knowledge Universe company, recently opened Colorado’s first privately-run reading center in Denver. Yes, that’s right, a school that concentrates on teaching kids to read. Aspen’s reading center gives kids a nine-week reading course that emphasizes heavy phonics. The result? In the first quarter of 1999, students gained an average of two years and four months in reading ability after they completed the course. Only nine weeks. Compare that to the twelve years your kids have to suffer through in public school, and still graduate with poor reading skills.
Continue reading about Free Market Reading Center Puts Public Schools To Shame
So what do angry or frightened local school districts do in response? School authorities often harass charter schools by reducing their funding, denying them access to school equipment or facilities, putting new restrictions on existing charter schools, limiting the number of new schools, or weakening charter-school laws.
Continue reading about The Charter School Wars — Why Public Schools Hate Charter Schools
As we might expect, teacher quality is far more important than class size in determining how children do in school. William Sanders at the University of Tennessee studied this issue. He found that teacher quality is almost twenty times more important than class size in determining students’ academic achievement in class. As a result, reducing class sizes can lead to the contrary effect of hurting students’ education, rather than helping.
Continue reading about Surprise — Public School Class Size Doesn’t Matter Very Much