Reddit mentions: The best charter schools books
We found 5 Reddit comments discussing the best charter schools books. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 2 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the top 20.
1. Market Education: The Unknown History (Studies in Social Philosophy and Policy)
- Used Book in Good Condition
Features:
Specs:
Height | 9.5 Inches |
Length | 6.5 Inches |
Number of items | 1 |
Weight | 1.9 Pounds |
Width | 1.5 Inches |
2. I Got Schooled: The Unlikely Story of How a Moonlighting Movie Maker Learned the Five Keys to Closing America's Education Gap
- PVC bird feeder specifically made to rest inside your window
- Platform base holds 1 quart of seed, mealworms, or suet nuggets
- Semicircular base rests inside your home so you can watch birds up close
- Top section lifts for refilling
- PVC construction lasts for many seasons without warping or rotting
Features:
Specs:
Release date | September 2013 |
🎓 Reddit experts on charter schools books
The comments and opinions expressed on this page are written exclusively by redditors. To provide you with the most relevant data, we sourced opinions from the most knowledgeable Reddit users based the total number of upvotes and downvotes received across comments on subreddits where charter schools books are discussed. For your reference and for the sake of transparency, here are the specialists whose opinions mattered the most in our ranking.
Jesus, ever hear of a paragraph?
>This is similar to the voucher debate where good schools get better and bad schools get worse only now smart kids get better teachers and under-performing students get little and less.
Why shouldn't smart, high achieving kids get the best teachers? Do you deny that all kids learn at different rates?
>The second flaw in the classical capitalistic economic model as it applies to teachers is that Education is a fundamentally Socialist.
No Comrade, it isn't. First, education is a private good, not a public good. Second, the overwhelming majority of what we learn is done on our own. Consider the incredible success of the Khan Academy, for an example of individuals doing it for themselves. There is absolutely nothing "fundamentally socialist" about education.
Oh, and read this book.
E: added links
>but it's not like our government controls the means for food production and I hope they never do.
My main point is that government bureaucrats are faced with the same backwards incentives regardless if they are producing food or providing the service of education. Removing competition means no accountability and no pressure to increase quality or reduce costs.
>What is your stance, how would you like our educational system to operate?
I'd like it to operate with zero state involvement.
I'm reading Market Education right now, might be of interest to you
http://www.amazon.com/Market-Education-Unknown-Frontier-Economic/dp/1560004088
https://www.amazon.com/Got-Schooled-Unlikely-Moonlighting-Education-ebook/dp/B00A287N8C