If that were addressed, teachers would probably try harder and maybe we wouldn't have to argue about politics.
Try
harder? Seriously?
In my opinion, teachers can't win, because the game is rigged against them. If a school district does well on mandatory standardized testing, they're slated for budget cuts, because those class sizes are obviously too small and they can obviously replicate such stellar results at a lower cost, packing students in fewer classes with fewer teachers.
If a school district does poorly in the mandatory testing Olympics, they're slated for budget cuts, because obviously they're not prioritizing their budgets appropriately, so cutting budgets will provide incentive to focus on the core STEM skills (or whatever the buzzword du jour is this time).
Meanwhile, the county/state/Federal legislators in charge of setting (translation: cutting) educational budgets send their kids to private school.
It's enough to make a guy cynical about the real reasons motivating all this slashing of school budgets. Union busting? More tax cuts for the wealthy? Reducing government payrolls because people who work for the government are evil?
Ideology always trumps idealism.
.................................................
And to Spamray's point; yes, all kids should be winners. If you want your kid to learn victory uber alles, pay for private lessons and sign them up for junior Olympics. If it's recreational league play, which all the parents are paying for, then making sure losers are sent off the field in a humiliating defeat only ensures the league will shed parents and money, and eventually fold altogether.
I was having this exact "all kids should be winners" conversation with another hockey dad last Sunday, he was telling me about a new coach who hadn't got the message we were a recreational league. The coach in question only put his strongest players in the game, for the entire game. The other four kids just sat on the bench. That's not right, the unspoken rule in Mites Hockey is that all kids get equal ice time, not just the hot shots.
Kids with natural ability or lots of private lessons are encouraged to try out for the Selects team, they're the ones that travel to other rinks for inter-league play. The rest of the 16 teams play every other team once, then we split into A group and B group, then each group plays the other 8 teams for end of season rankings. Next season the kids are shuffled and assigned to new teams so each team has a mix of birth years/skill levels. The focus is on building skills, playing fair, and having fun.
Because kids should be allowed to just be kids.