Matters of Principle
After having ranted for the last five-plus years about the more or less complete lack of editorial oversight in the modern publishing industry, including online publishing, I guess my heart just isn't in it any more: I have come across dozens of examples in the last few weeks, and couldn't even be bothered to think about them any further, let alone mention them. But this Slate article about the firing of teachers shouldn't go uncommented-upon.
Some principles should blame themselves for their problems. Among schools that maintain binary evaluation systems—rating a teacher as either satisfactory or unsatisfactory—more than 99 percent of teachers receive the positive rating. Surveys have suggested that principles give good reviews to bad employees in the hope that they will find another job and leave voluntarily.
A writer who doesn't know the difference between "principle" and "principal". A writer who is writing an article about education. Excellent.
Some principles should blame themselves for their problems. Among schools that maintain binary evaluation systems—rating a teacher as either satisfactory or unsatisfactory—more than 99 percent of teachers receive the positive rating. Surveys have suggested that principles give good reviews to bad employees in the hope that they will find another job and leave voluntarily.
A writer who doesn't know the difference between "principle" and "principal". A writer who is writing an article about education. Excellent.
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