A deeper look shows a really odd metric set being used(hope I'm not going over your head here, Pud). They weigh stuff like reported bullying rate(huh?), teacher to student ratios, without regard to other staffing levels nor minimum education requirements for teachers . I could go on, but now understand why all the respondants to the article were going 'Huh?'. At any rate, I took the time to look at a lot of other rankings for the past decade, and it seems that Texas and Delaware, despite size differentials, run pretty much even, at the middle of the pack. I saw Texas ranked from 12th to 36th, Delaware from 16th to 35th. Do you have a point, or were you simply desperate to dispel the notion your words foster that the average Texan is a moron, no smarter than a magnolia and way ugiier?
Are you feeling insecure that your state insists on teaching creationism in Science textbooks? What is the real importance of this thread?
bottom line with education is the socioeconomic status of the children in the system. Always has been, always will be the only accurate determiner of success.
Pudfark wrote: Mon May 29, 2017 11:15 am
I live in Texas....you live in America.
callmeslick wrote:A deeper look shows a really odd metric set being used(hope I'm not going over your head here, Pud). They weigh stuff like reported bullying rate(huh?), teacher to student ratios, without regard to other staffing levels nor minimum education requirements for teachers . I could go on, but now understand why all the respondants to the article were going 'Huh?'. At any rate, I took the time to look at a lot of other rankings for the past decade, and it seems that Texas and Delaware, despite size differentials, run pretty much even, at the middle of the pack. I saw Texas ranked from 12th to 36th, Delaware from 16th to 35th. Do you have a point, or were you simply desperate to dispel the notion your words foster that the average Texan is a moron, no smarter than a magnolia and way ugiier?
Are you feeling insecure that your state insists on teaching creationism in Science textbooks? What is the real importance of this thread?
bottom line with education is the socioeconomic status of the children in the system. Always has been, always will be the only accurate determiner of success.
"bottom line with education is the socioeconomic status of the children in the system. Always has been, always will be the only accurate determiner of success."
Factor in another...so far...this year...60000 illegal kids...homeless, no education, parent less, job less....and yer feckless statement.
first off, please provide evidence as to how many of those kids are going to enter the Texas system, and second, what percentage of all kids that number you locate will make.
Next, bear in mind that Delaware has a ton of private schools, which definitely alters the demographics of the public schools to a lower economic average. In my neighborhood, I'd guess that about 1/3 of all the children go to public school(which is well regarded), 1/3 go to Catholic, Protestant or Jewish religious schools and the rest go to private(prep)schools, which pull a tuition around $30,000 per year or upwards.
Pudfark wrote: Mon May 29, 2017 11:15 am
I live in Texas....you live in America.
callmeslick wrote:first off, please provide evidence as to how many of those kids are going to enter the Texas system, and second, what percentage of all kids that number you locate will make.
Next, bear in mind that Delaware has a ton of private schools, which definitely alters the demographics of the public schools to a lower economic average. In my neighborhood, I'd guess that about 1/3 of all the children go to public school(which is well regarded), 1/3 go to Catholic, Protestant or Jewish religious schools and the rest go to private(prep)schools, which pull a tuition around $30,000 per year or upwards.