usmbguest5318
Gold Member
How do you see the financial impact of your proposals?
That's a hard question for me to answer with any real rigor because financial impact necessarily means measuring costs and gains. There are too many dimensions that I've not carefully researched enough to offer a reasonably accurate and quantitative answer.
- Costs:
- Cost of direct schooling in terms of facilities, equipment, wages, and so on: higher than it is now. How much so? I don't know. Could be a lot (as an order of magnitude), but it might also not be a lot.
- Where would the funding come from? There are many ways to do that: tax increases or tax revenue reallocation are the primary ones; however, creative financing and/or level setting could also be used.
- Gains:
- Quite simply, better educated kids are able to perform jobs that pay better. Given that the U.S. has a shortage of sufficiently trained/skilled workers, having better qualified high school grads would go a long way to putting more people to work, and that would have the corresponding boost to the economy. It may be that boost in personal incomes and the economy could ameliorate the blow of the higher overall costs, or it could fully offset them.
- Holding students back while also not keeping them past 18 years old, may help in fact lower costs as kids who don't matriculate remain in lower cost grades for longer periods of time.
- Keeping kids in schools longer each day and all year reduces the mischief young people have the opportunity to wreak on society. That is surely a cost savings, but I can't say how much it is. To the extent it keeps kids from becoming full on delinquents, it may be a huge savings as we know the cost of putting a kid in juvenile detention is far higher than schooling them.
- Keeping kids in schools ensures more of their day is supervised by adults, thus providing the structure they need to grow up with "better" values and sensibilities. That almost certainly will translate into overall lower adult crime rates, but I can't quantify that.
- Most, maybe all, the proposals I suggested contribute to making the task of educating children more effective and more efficient. This may not actually lower costs, but it will help increase the return on the sums spent.
- Other: There are other factors, but the ones noted above should make clear the scope of what must be considered to answer your question.
I'm sorry I can't give a better answer. I hope you understand that it's got nothing to do with not wanting to; I just don't have the data I'd need to do it. (And, if I may be frank, it's more data than I'm willing right now to look for.

I also noticed a reference to "worship", etc.(specifically, the seventh graders schedule model). Was that because it was in the model you were citing, or are you actually proposing generic/specific religious teaching?
"Worship" appeared because it is part of the curriculum at the school from which I copied the schedule.
FWIW, I'm fine with religion being taught, although in public schools, it needs to be comparative religion and/or philosophy, not theology (no matter the faith system). (See page 28 here. The school is Episcopal, and it offers a variety of dogmatic and secular religion classes.)
Further, I did not see any reference to "trade" classes - typing, computers, woodworking, etc. Would you find a 'dual track' approach, dependent on student's interest/capabilities, or do you feel strongly about teaching everybody the same thru graduation?
I think there's room for trades as well. The thing for me with trades being taught in school is that they are often taught as, and thought of, though they need not have intellectual rigor comparable to that of academic courses. I'll offer a few brief analogies to explain what I mean by that.
In higher education, one can take a degree in a trade/profession or in an academic pursuit. (Note: "Theory" is below used in the scientific sense.)
- Engineering degrees are merely applications of physics, chemistry, biology and math theory, depending on what type of engineering one studies.
- Accounting and finance are applications of economics and math theory.
- Marketing is an application of psychology, sociology, anthropology, and economic theory.
- Acting is little but communication and psychological theory.
- Computer science, despite the name, is an application of math and language theory.
- Kinesiology is an application of biology, chemistry and a bit of physics theory.
- Architecture is applied physics, geometry, psychology and art theory.
- Law is applied philosophy.
What I would find unacceptable about teaching trades is doing so without including the theoretical underpinnings of the techniques being taught. I have no desire to see schools cranking out students who are good for very little beyond putting square pegs in square holes. I want to see schools churn out dynamic thinkers, no matter their area of proficiency.
You probably saw my comment about allowing adept students specialize early. Students beginning to learn trades/professions far earlier than "normal" is part of what I had in mind with that. (I had professions in mind, but trades would be fine too.) The reason I put the "high achieving" requirement on allowing that avenue is that students that want, say, to be mechanics and who performed highly in algebra and geometry have about all the math they really have to have unless they want to go on to materials/mechanical/chemical engineering. The "early specialization" route, however, need not preclude them from taking calculus, which they'd need for engineering, but they wouldn't have to take, say, European history or other liberal arts/humanities that aren't crucial to their desired field.
(Of course, I realize that one can call everything an application of natural sciences and math. It still makes the point, but it's a huge oversimplification to broach it that way in this context.)