aikmann4 wrote on Aug 18
th, 2010 at 1:33pm:
Mellie, making the teaching profession more accessible to everybody is a good thing. However, a short course qualification is not the way to go about it. We should just get rid of degree requirements for teachers altogether and replace them with comprehensive, gruelling skills tests (specialized for the type of teacher). A few of my friends, including myself, never went to college nor completed high school and yet are certainly more than capable of teaching. Certification and degree whoring is unfair and punishes independent learners and disciplined autodidacts. A qualification test can be constructed in such a way that it will produce a high predictive validity for teacher performance (higher than degrees and work experience put together, easily) and will open up job opportunities to everybody with the talent and knowledge to be a teacher; not just those that a scrap of paper saying that they "can".
Or we could pay teachers what they are worth for a change.
This and supply schools with adequate funding and support, this opposed to rolling it all out on a NBN?
The trouble is, we have not appropriated adequate 'available' funding towards infrastructure, health and education, in accordance with population growth, preferring to semi-privatise (band-aid effect) and squander funds on useless projects such as Lap-tops, pink-bats, and wasteful school building projects to create the illusion we have invested in the future, when clearly we have not.
We had a surplus, were in a position to stay in good shape, this and could have done so had Gillard not squandered it needlessly.
Imagine if Rudd have had handed out free- teaching scholarships to thousands of bright "AUSTRALIAN" HSC students back in 2007?
No, he took the US-backed opportunistic model, to work towards turning us into a republic.
"HENCE THE BIG AUSTRALIA"
.....Which Gillard denies wanting anything to do with, though has yet to show us her population and immigration policies.And this is why the Greens and Labor writhe for the same republic ideal, this and have become one big
-
coalition party?
Ok, be a coalition, but at least be honest about it and tell the Australian people what they're voting for.Because back dooring Australians is rather impolite.
i