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Mindia wrote:I was wrong obviously.
Donnel wrote:16,000 x 50 is not millions, it's not even 1 million.
I think you don't give enough credit to private and homeschooled kids though. There's alot more then most think, and I'm not just talking about private parochial (sp?) schools. (too busy to look up spelling)
Mindia wrote:I was wrong obviously.
Arlos wrote: As an aside, I hate the idea of home schooling overall. Talk about crippling a kid for life when it comes to interaction with the real world. Such a kid will in no way have the same development of interpersonal social skills as someone who has to interact with 10s or 100s of kids a day. Simply impossible to have happen. Not to mention, what happens when they go off to college, and are suddenly thrust into a radically different environment than they have been used to, dealing not only with the normal separation issues, but absolute culture shock as well. They're completely set up to fail. No, home schooling is a big mistake.
Arlos wrote:YRBS, a component of CDC's Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System, measures the self-reported prevalence of health risk behaviors among adolescents through representative national, state, and local surveys. The six biennial national surveys conducted during 1991--2001 used independent, three-stage cluster samples to obtain cross-sectional data representative of students in grades 9--12 in all 50 states and the District of Columbia. During 1991--2001, sample sizes ranged from 10,904 to 16,296 students, school response rates ranged from 70% to 79%, student response rates ranged from 83% to 90%, and overall response rates ranged from 60% to 70%.
Sounds like all high-school age persons attending school, regardless of other factors to me. If you want more detail, read the article link I posted, not going to reprint it in its entirety here.
-Arlos
During 1991--2001, sample sizes ranged from 10,904 to 16,296 students, school response rates ranged from 70% to 79%, student response rates ranged from 83% to 90%, and overall response rates ranged from 60% to 70%.
Zanchief wrote:So people who go to church have a better work ethic?
lyion wrote:During 1991--2001, sample sizes ranged from 10,904 to 16,296 students, school response rates ranged from 70% to 79%, student response rates ranged from 83% to 90%, and overall response rates ranged from 60% to 70%.
The different sample sizes were from the different years.
Donnel wrote:Zanchief wrote:So people who go to church have a better work ethic?
Not better to the extent that others who don't go to church have worse, though that is kinda what it sounded like I was saying.
Better within the subset of homeschooled children. Like I said I don't have the figures, but children who are raised in a conservative religious environment show more signs of the discipline required to really invest themselves in their homeschool education then those who are homeschooled outside of those types of homes.
Mindia wrote:I was wrong obviously.
Zanchief wrote:Donnel wrote:Zanchief wrote:So people who go to church have a better work ethic?
Not better to the extent that others who don't go to church have worse, though that is kinda what it sounded like I was saying.
Better within the subset of homeschooled children. Like I said I don't have the figures, but children who are raised in a conservative religious environment show more signs of the discipline required to really invest themselves in their homeschool education then those who are homeschooled outside of those types of homes.
um? So killing dear and yelling at Clintons help raise a productive child?
Donnel wrote:Zanchief wrote:Donnel wrote:Zanchief wrote:So people who go to church have a better work ethic?
Not better to the extent that others who don't go to church have worse, though that is kinda what it sounded like I was saying.
Better within the subset of homeschooled children. Like I said I don't have the figures, but children who are raised in a conservative religious environment show more signs of the discipline required to really invest themselves in their homeschool education then those who are homeschooled outside of those types of homes.
um? So killing dear and yelling at Clintons help raise a productive child?
Nice stereotypes there
Donnel wrote:Never said I'd done a study on it. Said I'd read some findings that I will have to locate before I can post them.
We were comparing stereotypes though, that's a different discussion. If the MTV generation shows us anything it's that people want to do only the bare minimum.
If it's acceptable to say that 50% of high school students have sex before they graduate, then it's perfectly acceptable to say that "most people" do just enough not to get fired (50% is almost a majority)
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