Quote:
Originally posted by baltassoc
Think of it this way: you have a school that's doing badly. Its scores are going down, not up. So you slash its funding. Now it's going to get better?
In private enterprise, underperformers wither and die and are replaced by more efficient market entrants. That doesn't quite work with public schools.
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You're trying to convince Spanky that (his concept of) free market economics is not applicable to solve any problem?
Good luck with that.