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I have moved to newlyancient.com and will be writing regularly there! Content on this domain is no longer updated, but will be maintained as an archive in its original form.


A + $

As I have pointed out before, paying for good grades is not an acceptable method of encouraging education. It makes the idea of learning become something akin to a job… that you are providing the system with a service which you receive compensation for. In reality, the opposite is true. The system provides you with knowledge, and you (often) return it with work or (outside of public school) payment. What will these students think when they reach higher grades where they are expected to do work for its own sake? Well, Stephen Colbert certainly didn’t miss this opportunity for a laugh. He certainly makes Chancellor Klein’s payment plan seem rather ridiculous:

Everything done in school should be done for the sake of furthering a student’s learning. Anything that doesn’t do so, should be eliminated - not compensated for. Money is the wrong solution to this. It teaches students to rely upon the gift of the government and does not foster a sense of life long (or even year long) learning.

School is not a job. In a job, you provide a service and are compensated for it. Instead, school is more like the local health club - you pay your dues (taxes) and go there to work (school work). The eventual gain is a healthier body, just as in schools the eventual gain is an education. It would seem incredibly ridiculous for the health club to pay you to better yourself, so why should it be accepted in schools? Leave rewarding to parents…

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2 Responses to “A + $”


  1. 1 Paul Hillsdon

    Completely agree that school districts or governments should not be handing out money for good grades. That’s not to say that if student’s work was actually valuable, they should be denied payment for some third-party… But, no, paying kids for good grades should not occur, and if it does, should stay in the realm of parenting. It’s plain and simple bribery. Don’t even get me started on how bad grading is to determine at what level of learning a student has accomplished…

  2. 2 arthus

    Glad to see you agree that this practice is flat out bribery.