There seems to be this misconception that private schools just kick out anyone who doesn't fit their role of a model student. I simply don't see this happening as often as popular belief. The private school where my mom works has children with disabilities, special needs, behavioral problems, whiny parents, lazy parents, etc., just like others schools. Yes, it's a very small fraction of them, but they exist, seemingly in about the same proportion as many public schools. Yet, their students are more creative, insightful, and better prepared for the world.
Maybe it's time we really stop and think about our teaching style. I believe we students are being done a disservice with public education. It's not inherently bad, but it crushes creativity, free thought, and inquiry-based learning.
I got a kick out of that too. I thought it was opposite day for a moment.
When I was in high school I ran with a rough crowd. Some of my acquaintances were "invited" to leave public school. Metro Christian, Holland Hall, and Casa were where most of them landed. In fact Metro was known as a place that took problem students from public schools and really turned them around. Not one of those kids grew up to be an adult criminal, though that was the path they were certainly on in the public system!
Private schools have a "vested" interest in the performance of each student that is measured in tuition
money. Basically each student represents
money, and to get that
money improvement must be measurable. Teachers are bonused based on that improvement because it is tied directly to
money. Well performing students are every bit as important as poor performers, disabled, and disruptive students because they all equal the same amount of
money. No student represents risk, because the focus is on individual
improvement rather than some imposed group minimum.
To the public schools, each student represents
risk. Fewer students represent smaller class sizes and therefore less
risk. A teacher with 12 students faces far less
risk than a teacher with 27. A teacher in a school in South Tulsa with one Hispanic student learning English as a second language faces less
risk than one in East Tulsa with 13. A child with remarkable potential who exhibits free and creative thought represents
risk because he/she threatens to require more attention from the teacher to cultivate that potential, therefore putting others at
risk. A new teacher who works miracles and builds a foundation for her students that impacts their education in a positive way for the rest of their lives presents a bigger
risk than the teacher who gets her students passed with the minimum requirements, but has 23 years tenure.
To the Public school administration the world is different. They also focus on minimums but they also focus on maintaining maximum occupancy. Their district's future and funding is based on heads. As long as those heads can meet minimum performance standards they are golden! They are also top-heavy with massive administrative bureaucracy to manage a spectrum of regulations and requirements that are, in many cases, meaningless to the teachers and the students they serve.
Private schools are focused on individuals. To a private school the performance of every individual student is tied to $$$. The performance of every individual teacher is tied to $$$. The pedigree of being able to show interested parents statistics illustrating that 98.8% of all students went to college, and 45% to graduate school, and the wall of photos of doctors, and lawyers, and such is important, as well as references from other parents and students. The individual product and service is,
as in any other business, important. The lines between administration and teaching are blurred and in many cases non-existant.
The funny thing is that many of the private schools are comparable in price to what we spend on public school educations. If this state offered vouchers, most parents could send their kids to the best private schools with little or no additional investment, and new educational offerings would spread like wild-fire to fill the gaps and compete for the chance to serve our greatest resource, our kids.