Tag Archive for 'for-profit'

A Teacher’s Utopia: Unregulated, For-Profit International Schools

The following account is purely anecdotal and details the personal encounters of my wife and I as we researched and interacted with the most exciting opportunity for teachers we could imagine.

My wife has been dissatisfied with the public school system almost since she entered it upon selecting her major in college. Much of the school work was pointless, and more about tolerance, diversity and political correctness than actually educating children. The cost (fortunately she had scholarships and grants) would have equaled about two years salary - and very little of it, aside from the classroom experiences and behavior management instruction, was helpful.

By the first six weeks, she was discouraged with the obvious failings of the system. After the first year, she was heart-broken at the monolithic mediocrity which kept struggling students behind and smarter students from reaching their potential. By the start of this, her third year, she was completely drained and depressed about her career, feeling powerless to help, and ashamed that she was slipping into the mold of, in her words, “the typical teacher who no longer cares.”

The Utopia Revealed
On our last trip to Europe one year ago, we were at a concert dinner in Salzburg and met a women who told us about “international schools” in countries all over the world. This woman was genuinely excited about the experience she had (and if she were not raising kids, would still be teaching) in Taiwan. We looked it up and were amazed what we found. In the last year, we have been researching these schools, which culminated in a three day conference last week in Seattle.

These aren’t just any schools - they have a special benefit from the government: to be left alone. The degree, of course, varies considerably, but whether it was only in part or in totality - the defining characteristic of these schools was that they were more unregulated than their public and private counterparts. The other feature common to all of them: no teacher’s unions whatsoever.

What this meant to us, when we had a chance to meet with dozens of these schools last week, was this:

  • The level of education, and particularly innovation and dynamic instruction, was the highest we’ve ever seen.
  • The success of the students was unparalleled, with almost all of them going to the best universities in the world.
  • the parents were active and involved in the education, while respecting the teacher’s specialized skills.
  • the facilities were top-notch, and constantly updated to reflect the best the market could offer.
  • the pay was outrageously high, competitive and negotiated on merit, with bonuses for skills and performance.
  • little or no taxation (in almost all cases except Europe), with 30-70% of a paycheck able to go into savings.
  • housing and transportation were often included.
  • private health care and retirement were also included.

These actions aren’t happening because of benevolence on the part of anyone, but because “greed” and selfishness are allowed to operate. Parents are “greedy” for the best education for their kids. School owners are “greedy” for money and success. Teachers are “greedy” for using their skills to benefit children, and earning acceptable pay. These things happen because the market is allowed to operate and individual people can create, organize and distribute goods and services in the most fair, effective and efficient way possible.

Costs and Benefits
This must cost a fortune, right? A lot of money is clearly required to bridge the gap between the crumbling schools, outdated textbooks, lack of media and low teacher pay in American public schools, correct? Actually, these schools cost much less per-pupil than American public schools. This is true even of heavily regulated American private schools. But without almost any regulation - the international schools have been able to provide high quality instruction at a fraction of the cost. Even with less money coming in, a director of a for-profit International School in Kuwait assured me it was, “very profitable” (his emphasis).

Teachers in the US are accustomed to union - and some feel that the union is providing them a wage that they couldn’t otherwise get on the market. They think the union is protecting them from being run over by the size and power of their employer. While this may be the case for teachers unworthy of even the low pay currently offered - the philosophy of wages: “equal pay for work of equal value,” is a detriment to more qualified teachers who are stuck in a pay schedule that values them almost purely based on their time in the system, not quantifiable results or success.

Remember, the benefits listed above were achieved without unions. Education is a tremendously valuable skill on the market. However, I suspect it is no coincidence that as the primary, secondary and post-secondary system becomes more controlled by government, the value of education continues to drop (hence a college degree now is worth the same as a high school diploma from 1960, etc…). These salaries and benefits are being offered to qualified teachers because they can demand it with their skills and merits. For example, my wife received three job offers and turned down several second interviews that may have led to more. If she wanted to make a career out of it (which she doesn’t because she wants to raise our children first) she could literally retire at about 45 with enough money to travel the world, buy a small estate or live on a yacht.

In fact, the demand was so high that these schools actually interviewed me (not a teacher) and collected my resume so they could get me a job with a company near the school, or on the school’s support staff. Many of the schools achieved their unregulated status by being company-sponsored schools in “free-trade zones.” One school which offered my wife a position, would shop me out to Intel, IBM and HP and assured me I would likely make even more money than her. Some schools were so unregulated that they said they would train me and I could substitute teach in their secondary school. No special license, no years of education and debt - but the same qualifications as any job: on-the-job training, specialized instruction and gradual increasing responsibility.

We Don’t Need The Regulators
All parties involved in this country are dissatisfied with public education: the teachers, the administrators, the parents and the politicians - wringing their hands in frustration as government interventions with the best of intentions fail to stop the downward slide of public education. But education, like all other goods and services, does not need to be centrally planned. The selfish interests of all parties can find common ground (and common profit) if the government would stop trying to help, and instead would get out of the way and allow these people to meet each other’s needs.


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