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Money = better education?

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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 311 ✭✭xha1r


    cson wrote:
    And more or less abandon any friends you had or semblence of normality? ;)

    Semblance*


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    And more or less abandon any friends you had or semblence of normality?

    Ha!:D


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,469 ✭✭✭✭cson


    "Freedom? Its just a word. If I had to die for a word it'd be poontang"


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,469 ✭✭✭✭cson


    xha1r wrote:
    Semblance*

    Ah yes the petty spelling and grammar corrections.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 311 ✭✭xha1r


    cson wrote:
    Ah yes the petty spelling and grammar corrections.

    You've done it before, no? If not, I apologise.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 102 ✭✭jaydigity


    Here's ,my perspective:
    I was in a public school, changed for 6th year to a grind school.Mainly because I was having some problems not related to school and thought it could help sort it out (don't ask!).
    1)I completely disagree with the concept of a two tier education system (yes I'm a hypocrite).It's absolutely appalling that's accepted as a norm for people to pay in the hope of getting better leaving results
    2)As for getting "spoonfed notes" and as a result being unable to handle college, I wouldn't agree.The LC system is geared towards uncritical, mindless learning, irrespective of which school you go to.
    3)Facilities?What facilities.Going to an all girl school (the public one),PE was a joke,pointless computer classes,and directionless religion classes.So,I really don't miss this aspect of my old school.(but i think extra cirricular stuff is really important before senior cycle)
    4)Bizarrely,in my grind school,in a year bigger than my last school ( 120ish), only THREE people do both honors maths,english and Irish.Virtually every1 did in the public school
    5)I found teachers a lot better in the grind school, though I'd say that 3 teachers in my old school were Absolutely brilliant.However, this makes very little difference, with the exception of a few subjects.Ultimately,it's up to the student to do the work.
    6)Results wise,the grind school is not more succesful than my last school

    By the way, does anyone else think that theres some, intangible thingmajig that allows students in a particular school to get good results.My old school does not,in my opinion, have good teachers.Yet,we have extremely high exam results.(We played host to one of the 900 pointers!)But a school, literally 20 minutes walk away (also a public school) has a poor reputation for results,even though its class sizes etc are smaller.Anyone know how to explain a disparity like that?


  • Registered Users Posts: 14,469 ✭✭✭✭cson


    xha1r wrote:
    You've done it before, no? If not, I apologise.

    No, as a matter of fact, I haven't. I don't need to resort to such tactics.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    By the way, does anyone else think that theres some, intangible thingmajig that allows students in a particular school to get good results.

    The students?
    I got to an okay school. Nothing fancy, not a great choice of subjects but a great atmosphere. That's probably it. I can talk to 3 of my teachers like friends and there's only one teacher that I wouldn't approach with a problem. What does that have to do with exams? I suppose you have more confidence in your ability. And confidence is everything - especially for maths. I think the only reason I've been able to do maths is because I go in with a big head thinking that there's nothing I can't do. This confidence is promoted by good relationships between students and teachers (and other students).
    Ah yes the petty spelling and grammar corrections.

    As a sidenote, please don't get started on the whole "you spelt a word wrong therefore you're below me" thing and grow up. This behaviour makes people seem pathetic.


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,671 ✭✭✭genericgoon


    I got to an okay school

    What is this? ;) Only slaggin' :P


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    I got to an okay school
    What is this? Only joking with you. :P

    Know you are joking but I might as well answer, I'm so bored. Have agscience left but I refuse to do any study.

    Most students in my school are average, i.e. they get between 300 and 350. there are some exceptions - quite a few get less than 300 and a few get 500 each year.

    There's not a great choice of subjects - metalwork or home ec, art/woodwork/business, agscience/biology and they're all the choices.

    2/3's of the class don't want to be there.

    BUT if a student wants to do well, he is given the opportunity to do so. I got all A's in the JC for example and going to my school didn't hinder me at all.

    Very little extra-cur. activities. Football or walks. That's about it.

    Can't think of anything else right now. But that's a normal school I think.


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  • Registered Users Posts: 1,671 ✭✭✭genericgoon


    i was referring to the use of got rather than go but an interesting piece in any case.


  • Registered Users Posts: 699 ✭✭✭ashyle


    I don't go to a fee-paying school. It's been good enough I think. It's not the prettiest school to look at but we have a very high standard when it comes to lc results. I hate those snobby kids who change school in 5th year and go to grinds schools. they miss out on debs and graduation etc..


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,794 ✭✭✭JC 2K3


    xha1r wrote:
    Yes, they do. There's a big difference between teacher's in the Institute compared to some of those in your average public school, i.e., the proportion of quality teacher's in private schools is greater than that in public school's.
    No, not at all.

    Maybe grind schools, but not your average private school.
    xha1r wrote:
    That last part is idiotic; they send them to private schools because they want them to receive the best education. I would say the majority of students in private school's come from middle-class families with parents who have above-average paying jobs and a house with a mortgage. Not all, in fact, not many parents are rich enough to "have nothing else to spend their money on".
    I'd be willing to bet that were there the option of an equally good public school and fee paying school in close proximity that most of these parents would still send them to the private school. It IS abouyt prestige in a LOT of cases.

    Of course, grind schools like the institute are completely different to normal private schools.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    i was referring to the use of got rather than go but an interesting piece in any case.

    Oh, whoops! I could say that that was done deliberately considering the rest of my post but that would be a lie and "lying makes baby Jesus cry.":D


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    I'd be willing to bet that were there the option of an equally good public school and fee paying school in close proximity that most of these parents would still send them to the private school. It IS abouyt prestige in a LOT of cases.

    I disagree. They'd send them to the private school in the belief that it's better. Arguably, there would be more prestige in saying "My Jonathan managed to get 600 points in a public school. Yes Cherie, can one imagine that? He is an absolute genius darling" than in him going to a private school and getting 600 points.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,794 ✭✭✭JC 2K3


    Exactly, the belief that it's better due to the prestige associated with paying money to get your child educated.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    the belief that it's better due to the prestige associated with paying money to get your child educated.

    Did you read my post? That's not what I said.
    They'd send them to the private school in the belief that it's better

    That's what I said. It has nothing to do with prestige. Usually you get what you pay for. If you buy a pair of runners in Dunnes they'll last about a month. Nike runners will last at least three months. Parents just assume that, because they're paying for it, it must be better. They don't do it to say that their child is going to a great school, they do it because they believe their children are getting a better education.


  • Registered Users Posts: 786 ✭✭✭spudington16


    Well, you can bring a horse to water but you can't make it drink: my experience in the Institute over the past 2 years was that many parents saw it as a babysitting service.

    That is, they assumed the teachers would lead their darling children to 6+ A1s, with little to no work on the student's part, and that it was the teacher's failing if the student didn't make the grade. It became apparent that whenever people weren't good at a subject (either through lack of work, or not being up to it) the teacher would be blamed.

    Admittedly, this was more the case in 5th Form than 6th, but it was still there. I think you only get out of something what you put into it; a good student could arguably get 600 points in a "bad" school, just as a lazy person in the Institute or another grind school is not guaranteed success.

    But there are other issues to education than academic success, in my opinion: there was little or no sense of camaraderie in the Institute in 6th Form, as most people forgot that it was simply another year of school, and took themselves far too seriously, with little or no socialising between classes etc.

    So, it's hard to pin down whether a private education is a better one, because there are so many sides to it, and it's based on the student as much as the institution in question...


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,794 ✭✭✭JC 2K3


    Usually you get what you pay for. If you buy a pair of runners in Dunnes they'll last about a month. Nike runners will last at least three months.
    That's not empirically true and only assumed due to the status or "prestige" associated with the Nike brand.
    Parents just assume that, because they're paying for it, it must be better. They don't do it to say that their child is going to a great school, they do it because they believe their children are getting a better education.
    And why do they believe their children will get a better education there? Prestige associated with paying for it.


  • Registered Users Posts: 4,194 ✭✭✭Corruptedmorals


    ashyle wrote:
    they miss out on debs and graduation etc..


    Not in my school, they were all allowed tickets for grads and debs.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    And why do they believe their children will get a better education there? Prestige associated with paying for it.

    No. I had a feeling you were going to answer with this. I don't understand what kind of connotation of "prestige" you are using.

    The higher the cost, the better the quality. This is the attitude that the parents sending their children to fee-paying schools believe.
    the prestige associated with paying money to get your child educated

    I really don't understand what you mean by this. This suggests to me that you are saying the parents feel that they are better than others because they are paying to educate their children.

    If this is the case then their children's education is not what they have in mind and that
    they (do not) believe their children will get a better education
    they believe they will be regarded as well off or whatever.

    Please clarify what you mean.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,794 ✭✭✭JC 2K3


    They feel their children will get a better education based soley on the fact that they are paying money for it and without looking at what they're paying for.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    They feel their children will get a better education based soley on the fact that they are paying money for it and without looking at what they're paying for

    That's what I was saying. I think you used prestige incorrectly. Prestige is usually linked with reputation above anything else but correct me if I'm wrong. Actually, don't even bother, it's not important.

    But yeah, and it's the same in all walks of life. If it has a high price tag it must be better than the thing with the lower price tag. This isn't alays true however but this topic is multifaceted. We'd have to ask what education is. What a good education is.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,026 ✭✭✭Killaqueen!!!


    If people think there is no sense of prestige associated with private schools you need to open your eyes. I go to a private school and I hate it. People are nice but they're so stuck up. I grow up in what I'd call a normal area, it's not too rough but you wouldn't want to be alone after dark. I am not slagging people who go to private schools because of their neighbourhood but most of the people who go to my school are rich, spoilt, stuck-up poshies from the d4 invaded areas of south dublin - and those are my friends! They would look down on people who wear tracksuits that aren't cantos, and if you look like you're not a d4.

    But you can't doubt that the education is better than public schools. At the very worst it is only slightly better than the very best public schools (if that makes sense). You get what you pay for, and (in my school at least) the extra curricular activities is there too. However, subject choice is limited and I would say that there are less extra curricular activities available than in public schools. I don't think that private schools are necessary for a good education though - it depends what public school you go to and it depends on the student.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,794 ✭✭✭JC 2K3


    If people think there is no sense of prestige associated with private schools you need to open your eyes. I go to a private school and I hate it. People are nice but they're so stuck up. I grow up in what I'd call a normal area, it's not too rough but you wouldn't want to be alone after dark. I am not slagging people who go to private schools because of their neighbourhood but most of the people who go to my school are rich, spoilt, stuck-up poshies from the d4 invaded areas of south dublin - and those are my friends! They would look down on people who wear tracksuits that aren't cantos, and if you look like you're not a d4.
    I feel for you.
    But you can't doubt that the education is better than public schools. At the very worst it is only slightly better than the very best public schools (if that makes sense). You get what you pay for
    What are you basing that on?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    If people think there is no sense of prestige associated with private schools you need to open your eyes

    I'm not questioning that there is a sense of prestige associated with private schools. Of course there is. Private school's have reputation and distinction. What I didn't understand was this:
    Prestige associated with paying for it

    ?

    the prestige associated with paying for it? Prestige suggests respect resulting from achievements or high quality.

    But whatever, I'm a word nerd and I apologize.
    most of the people who go to my school are rich, spoilt, stuck-up poshies from the d4 invaded areas of south dublin - and those are my friends! They would look down on people who wear tracksuits that aren't cantos, and if you look like you're not a d4.

    They may be rich but they're not proper human beings if they "look down on people who wear tracksuits." Plus, they tend to be so materialistic that it makes me ill. They are immensely superficial. A generalisation I know but hey, shoot me.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 7,794 ✭✭✭JC 2K3


    the prestige associated with paying for it? Prestige suggests respect resulting from achievements or high quality.
    Prestige just implies a good reputation arising from something. Private schools tend to get this automatically simply due to the fact that they charge fees, which normal schools don't do.

    It's a ridiculous mindset IMO. All this "you get what you pay for" bullshít písses me off. It's totally untrue. All you're paying for in an average private school(not a grind school) is for your children to be seperated from those who can't afford it. It's all about class.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    All you're paying for in an average private school(not a grind school) is for your children to be seperated from those who can't afford it. It's all about class.

    Any suggestions on how to fix this?:)

    Perhaps a number of bonfires which might, for some unfathomable reason, burn out of control and destroy certain schools?:D
    It's a ridiculous mindset IMO. All this "you get what you pay for" bullshít písses me off. It's totally untrue. All you're paying for in an average private school(not a grind school) is for your children to be seperated from those who can't afford it. It's all about class

    If it's all about class then who cares? If the education you get in a private school is the same in a public school, which you are suggesting it is, then what's the problem? Anyone worrying about whether or not they are keeping up with the Jones' is worrying about nothing if that's the case.

    That's not the case though. Private schools offer more than public schools and that's undisputable.
    Whether this is more subject options, better libraries (or even a library, we don't have one!:o ), better sports equipment, computers etc. there are better facilities in private schools so it's not "all about class".


  • Registered Users Posts: 1,671 ✭✭✭genericgoon


    If you wanna stop it start a communist revolution or something.


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 280 ✭✭SamHamilton


    It's strange how easy-going we are. If this was France we'd be having riots right now!


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