EDUCATION Minister Ruairi Quinn is considering cutbacks to the €100m subsidy given to fee-paying schools in the forthcoming Budget.
davet82 wrote: » http://www.independent.ie/lifestyle/education/latest-news/quinn-reviews-cash-to-feepaying-schools-3252444.html EDUCATION Minister Ruairi Quinn is considering cutbacks to the €100m subsidy given to fee-paying schools in the forthcoming Budget. Should the state be paying the salaries of teachers in fee paying schools at all? If they are private schools should they not be solely privately funded? or By people part funding their childrens education they are infact saving the tax payer some of the cost in the long run?
Sir Digby Chicken Caesar wrote: » look why dont we just kill the rich and have done with it
RoyalMarine wrote: » Why should tax payers money pay salaries of teachers in private schools when the majority of tax payers children don't go to these schools? I went to a private school. I am no better educated than my friends who went to public schools. Private schools should pay teachers 100% of their wages.
RoyalMarine wrote: » Private schools should pay teachers 100% of their wages.
seamus wrote: » Two major issues with this: - Remove teacher pay from private schools and the tuition fees will have to increase. Back-of-napkin figures, if a school has 60 teachers paid on average €50k + pensions & allowances, then the private school will need to raise at least an extra €400k per year to keep going. With 1,000 pupils, that'll be €400 extra per pupil. Minimum - it'll probably work out far more than that when other expenses (tax & admin) are taken into account.That will force a big chunk of parents to put their kids into the public system, putting more pressure on it and inadvertently raising costs.
seamus wrote: » Two major issues with this: - Remove teacher pay from private schools and the tuition fees will have to increase. Back-of-napkin figures, if a school has 60 teachers paid on average €50k + pensions & allowances, then the private school will need to raise at least an extra €400k per year to keep going. With 1,000 pupils, that'll be €400 extra per pupil. Minimum - it'll probably work out far more than that when other expenses (tax & admin) are taken into account. That will force a big chunk of parents to put their kids into the public system, putting more pressure on it and inadvertently raising costs. - Teachers will have freedom to pick and choose based on salary. The private schools will be able to offer greater incentives to better teachers - hoovering up all of the best teachers by offering them more money, leaving the poorer teachers in the public system. Parents will pay big money if a school has exceptionally good staff. Schools in poorer areas will invariably get worse as teachers chase better wages even in mid-level private schools.
davet82 wrote: » By people part funding their childrens education they are infact saving the tax payer some of the cost in the long run?
Zamboni wrote: » Bit dramatic. Private enterprise is private enterprise. If the business model has become overly dependent on state support and is not viable on an independant basis then blame the management not the tax payer.
Jogathon wrote: » I think that the state should pay all teacher's wages, every child is entitled to an education from the state. If the parents then choose to subsidise their child's education by sending them to a fee-paying school, with all the extra frills that entails then that is their right. If they have the money then they can spend it anyway that they want.
TwoTokeTommy wrote: » Parents paying for "extras" saves the state nothing. Ah, shur let's have a go! They're killing us with a two tier health system. And don't forget "being better off" increases your life expectancy. Yes!! It's not the role of the State to support every failed business venture. The key word above being choice. They can choose to send the kids to public school, or choose to opt out of the system and pay full whack. You can have your choices and pay for it or else STFU.
Internet Hero wrote: » Parents of children in private schools pay alot of tax so they are entitlede to getting the money back as teachers wages. if they want to pay extra on top of that its up to them. why should there taxes not work for them too?
TwoTokeTommy wrote: » Reason: They chose to OPT-OUT of the public system.
ted1 wrote: » Actually, a child in a private school does cost the state less. So your points are mute.
Stark wrote: » In many cases because the public schools in their area gave preferential enrollment to Catholic children.
Micky Dolenz wrote: » You don't need to be rich to go to private school.However if they cut funding, you will need to be.
TwoTokeTommy wrote: » It could cost the State nothing.
Deleted User wrote: » Boo-hoo to them. Why cant they just slum it in a Public school like the rest of us then? The country is broke so everyone has to make sacrifices.
mike65 wrote: » If the contention is that Private Schools should have funding removed to save money can anyone demonstrate how that money will be saved, bearing in mind teachers need paying for regardless of the status of the school.
Internet Hero wrote: » nonsense and very silly. your creating standards are rules that dont exist. they choose to go to private schools under the understanding that they can add to there tax payments with additional money in order to get a better service. they opt for private schools which are given added funding by parents on top of the public funding, never did they decide to abandon public funding by going to private, it is part of the deal.