I didn't attend public schools in Oklahoma, so I'm hoping to get some insight from those that have navigated this topic already.
We recently started our kids in a fantastic public school district in Oklahoma, and initially felt really good about that decision. We wanted to do our part to support our local public school, and wanted to believe in public education as a whole. My wife and I are both public school kids, and we have many family members that are past or current public educators.
For the most part, our public school experience has been positive. However, even with a 10/10 public school rating, our oldest one is finishing each year by the end of the first semester, and is bored af because the curriculum is so watered down and slow paced. While I would like to think our child is very intelligent, I can't help but think that the standards for public school are just incredibly low based on the little we've seen so far. There's almost zero academic challenges, even though our child is in the "gifted/talented" program.
The only data I have to make objective decisions are national academic rankings (Oklahoma is low) and my own personal experience growing up in a more academically challenging public school system (on the East coast). My siblings told me when we moved to Oklahoma that it felt like going back two grades (across 3 different siblings who were in school at the time we moved).
So... It would seem Oklahoma public education is really, really bad.
My questions are,
1. Is this a normal experience for halfway intelligent people in Oklahoma? Are other people having the same problem?
2. If so, any advice on how to resolve the immediate challenge with our current kids? Are some schools actually more robust than others? Are we just in a bad district?
3. Are we doomed to simply seek a private school option in order to get a halfway decent education in this state?
Maybe my wife and I have simply been too naïve. We wanted to believe that public schools still worked. Based on our experience, I'd say that they are closer to a glorified daycare with some basic academic standards.
We really like all the teachers and administrators that we have at their current school. They seem like great, hard-working people. But the system seems mostly focused on securing funding, not teaching.
We want to do what's best for society, but we also don't want our kids to suffer a terrible educational existence. Oklahoma appears to force that conundrum, and it's really discouraging.
TL;DR - Are Oklahoma public schools really this bad?
We recently started our kids in a fantastic public school district in Oklahoma, and initially felt really good about that decision. We wanted to do our part to support our local public school, and wanted to believe in public education as a whole. My wife and I are both public school kids, and we have many family members that are past or current public educators.
For the most part, our public school experience has been positive. However, even with a 10/10 public school rating, our oldest one is finishing each year by the end of the first semester, and is bored af because the curriculum is so watered down and slow paced. While I would like to think our child is very intelligent, I can't help but think that the standards for public school are just incredibly low based on the little we've seen so far. There's almost zero academic challenges, even though our child is in the "gifted/talented" program.
The only data I have to make objective decisions are national academic rankings (Oklahoma is low) and my own personal experience growing up in a more academically challenging public school system (on the East coast). My siblings told me when we moved to Oklahoma that it felt like going back two grades (across 3 different siblings who were in school at the time we moved).
So... It would seem Oklahoma public education is really, really bad.
My questions are,
1. Is this a normal experience for halfway intelligent people in Oklahoma? Are other people having the same problem?
2. If so, any advice on how to resolve the immediate challenge with our current kids? Are some schools actually more robust than others? Are we just in a bad district?
3. Are we doomed to simply seek a private school option in order to get a halfway decent education in this state?
Maybe my wife and I have simply been too naïve. We wanted to believe that public schools still worked. Based on our experience, I'd say that they are closer to a glorified daycare with some basic academic standards.
We really like all the teachers and administrators that we have at their current school. They seem like great, hard-working people. But the system seems mostly focused on securing funding, not teaching.
We want to do what's best for society, but we also don't want our kids to suffer a terrible educational existence. Oklahoma appears to force that conundrum, and it's really discouraging.
TL;DR - Are Oklahoma public schools really this bad?