Mail
Magazine 24…
Gallup:
Americans Rate Public Schools the Worst
Place to Educate Children
by Bright Knight
To be honest: that doesn't surprise me at all. Say "Thank You" to the
Liberals - they have almost accomplished their mission: keep the people
uneducated and poor and stay in power. Uneducated and poor people are
reliable
voters for the Liberals, so, after they took over the education (from
the
Department of Education over the Teacher Unions), they wrecked the
education system
and started to "produce" sheeples. After school/college the leftist
medias continue dumbing down the already uneducated and indoctrinated
students.
Terence
P. Jeffrey writes at CNCnews.com:
A
new Gallup
poll released today indicates that
Americans rate
public schools the worst place to educate children.
In the
national survey conducted Aug. 9-12,
private
independent schools, parochial and church-related schools, charter
schools and
home-schooling all rated higher than public schools.
Gallup
interviewers asked respondents:
"I’m going to read a list of ways in which children are educated in the
U.S. today. As I read each one, please indicate--based on what you know
or have
read and heard--how good an education each provides
children--excellent, good,
only fair, or poor. How about: public schools, parochial or
church-related
schools, independent private schools, charter schools, or
home-schooling?"
Only
5 percent said they believe public schools
give children an excellent education.
Another
32 percent said they believe public
schools give children a good education. But this combined 37 percent
who said
public schools give children an excellent or good education was the
lowest
among the different types of schools Gallup included in its survey.
Americans
ranked independent private schools
highest, with 31 percent saying they provide an excellent education and
47
percent saying they provide a good education--for a combined 78 percent
who say
they provide an excellent or good education.
Parochial
and church-related schools ranked
second, with 21 percent saying they provide an excellent education and
48
percent saying they provide a good education--for a combined 69 percent
who say
they provide an excellent or good education.
Charter
schools came in third, with 17 percent
saying they provide an excellent education and 43 percent saying the
provide a
good education--for combined 60 percent positive rating.
Home-schooling
came in fourth, with 13 percent
saying it provides an excellent education and 33 percent saying it
provides a
good education--for a combined 46 percent who give it a positive rating.
Public
schools finished fifth--or last place.
Nineteen
percent of Americans said they believe
public schools give students a "poor" education. Only 2 percent said
that about independent private schools, and only 5 percent said that
about
parochial and church-related schools and charter schools. Fourteen
percent said
they thought home-schooling provided students with a poor education.
The
Gallup survey was based on a random sample
of 1,012 American adults and had a margin of error of +/- 4 percentage
point.
Of the 1,012 surveyed, 236 said they were parents of a child who will
be
attending school in grades K through 12 this school year. (This small
sub-sample had a margin of error of +/- 8 percentage points.)
Among
the parents sending their children to
school in grades K through 12 this year, 83 percent said they were
sending
their child to a public school, 9 percent to an independent private
school, and
2 percent to a parochial or church-related school.
Read
this and other articles at Mail Magazine
24
|