Rebuttal -- Jane Altman-Dwan
JANE ALTMAN-DWAN is a resident of Newport Beach.
Something that was never done before usually does leave us a little
frightened or uneasy. However, there are ways to face fears that Gay
Geiser Sandoval has brought up in her column and the unknown straight in
the face.
Two of the strongest weapons are fact-finding knowledge and just plain
old common sense.
Proposition 38 (regarding school vouchers) fears are easy for me to
face. I’ve sent my kids to private school and public school. There is
good and bad on each side.
FACT: Any private school that does not do achievement scoring does not
get [student] enrollments.
FACT: After three years in private education, my son’s Stanford 9 test
scoring was post-high school in three subjects. Upon returning to public
school one year, his scores sunk dramatically.
FACT: He did not achieve these lofty scores at a fabulous lush campus
the likes of Sage or Mater Dei. These scores were achieved at a more
typical small, austere private campus. Definitely not the lush rolling
campuses like Harbor High or Ensign.
Will they accept a struggling child who has learning disabilities that
costs more to educate?
Actually, frankly, that describes my son. They not only accepted him,
they taught him that he can succeed.
I appreciate the time that teachers in public schools use to teach my
child, especially those who dare to challenge him.
But it is disappointing to me to hear that a child bellyaching over
first day homework can set the year’s precedence.
My son came home with no homework that day! To be honest, the private
schools would not be as sympathetic. The teachers of private schools know
that their paycheck depends on their amount of determination to teach,
which includes perseverance.
And that’s it in a nutshell!
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