Property management is a service a landlord could pay to handle maintenance, and they have an incentive to keep costs low because the landlord could always pick another management firm. Some are good, but I just can’t get over that conflict of interest.
I was more referring to mom and pop landlords, who actually care about the property and don’t want to deal with vacancies, so they’ll sometimes actually lose money to keep tenants happy to just not deal with it.
And I really don’t have a problem with private schools, as long as they don’t receive public funding. Vouchers are dumb.
Charter schools are another beast entirely. They need to post good test scores to keep the charter, they often can’t pick their students (ours uses a lottery), they often can’t charge any fees or tuition (so 100% publicly funded), etc. So they end up being like public schools without bus service where the school has a little more choice on how they approach curriculum (though they need to cover the same material).
Public schools do too, but for public schools it just impacts their funding, whereas charter schools could go out of business. So there’s absolutely a concern of teaching to the test in both scenarios, the stakes are just higher for charter schools.
So charter schools need to simultaneously differentiate themselves to attract parents, while also doing as well or better then public schools. Ours:
teaches Latin - a bit of a gimmick, but my kid loves it
teaches math a year ahead
has two full-time teachers in every class - my guess is it’s because they don’t have the substitute system
It’s annoying dropping off and picking up every day, but the teachers seem happy, unlike the local public school that has a ton of turnover.
Property management is a service a landlord could pay to handle maintenance, and they have an incentive to keep costs low because the landlord could always pick another management firm. Some are good, but I just can’t get over that conflict of interest.
I was more referring to mom and pop landlords, who actually care about the property and don’t want to deal with vacancies, so they’ll sometimes actually lose money to keep tenants happy to just not deal with it.
And I really don’t have a problem with private schools, as long as they don’t receive public funding. Vouchers are dumb.
Charter schools are another beast entirely. They need to post good test scores to keep the charter, they often can’t pick their students (ours uses a lottery), they often can’t charge any fees or tuition (so 100% publicly funded), etc. So they end up being like public schools without bus service where the school has a little more choice on how they approach curriculum (though they need to cover the same material).
This is a scenario where the landlord (owner) is also the property manager.
I don’t know a lot about the details of charter schools, but “they need to post good test scores” sounds like fertile ground for perverse incentives.
Public schools do too, but for public schools it just impacts their funding, whereas charter schools could go out of business. So there’s absolutely a concern of teaching to the test in both scenarios, the stakes are just higher for charter schools.
So charter schools need to simultaneously differentiate themselves to attract parents, while also doing as well or better then public schools. Ours:
It’s annoying dropping off and picking up every day, but the teachers seem happy, unlike the local public school that has a ton of turnover.