| Also the high influx of low SES families contribute less in property taxes which is what pays for schools. |
Too much work, parents too demanding, and the kids will be "fine." |
Another factor - W pyramid is last bastion of segregation in MCPS. You have fewer distractions in the classes there than in other parts of the county. |
This. It's not about race. (Yes, we need a good ESOL program for non-English speaking students wherever they come from - they don't all speak Spanish.) It's about SES. Provide a content rich curriculum. Kids should be able to get an education without hiring private tutors or having their parents turn into tutors. A really good place to start would be textbooks. |
Saying this about SES and not race is exactly why segregation still exists. |
|
How does saying race doesn't matter sustain segregation? It seems to me it does the opposite. Yes, there is an achievement gap and a correlation between race and achievement. Correlation, however, is not the same as causation. I don't believe that race makes one any more or less capable of achieving academically, they just need to be given the chance.
Saying it's race maintains segregation because people obviously can't (and shouldn't need to) change their race to succeed. It also dismisses the abilities and accomplishments of the brilliant people of all races. While we obviously can't change the SES of everybody and make them instant millionaires, we can address the specific problems and make progress. For example, poor kids may be hungry, hungry kids can't learn, therefore, provide free meals at school. This addresses the actual problem. Similarly, I think we need to say that poor families can't afford tutors and may not have the capabilities to do it at home, or even recognize the need, and they shouldn't have to. That's the point of public education, to make sure that all kids have a chance to obtain an education. Yes, the racial distribution in this predicament may be uneven, but their kids all deserve to receive a solid education. |
| It's not SES. It's the race, family support, and simple hard work. Just look at the Asians just arrived here with nothing (i.e., the bottom of SES chart). In 10 years, they are firmly on their way - building wealth, kids performing at high levels, and achieving American dream...etc. |
I agree that SES plays a huge factor along with the culture one grew up in. If a parent is an ignoramus, the kid is not off to a good start and proabably will walk in the parent's footsteps. If the school system could come up with a way of getting the kids of these ignoramuses to reject the ignorant ways of their parents, then some progress might be made. Another problem is stupid people, and I am not trying to be mean or make light of this. There are also some very stupid people in this world who have kids with other idiots and their progeny is stupid as well. I don't see much hope for these people. Stupidity has absolutely nothing to do with race, by the way. Stupider people tend to be poorer than smart people. This is a cycle in some poor communities that I know of-- stupid parents have stupid kids, the kids get pregnant at 13 and have more stupid kids, etc., etc. |
|
Achievement gap is never going away. Just google the studies showing noone has closed it
But Blue areas like MCPS will continue to take funds away from certain schools and give it to other schools In summary if you believe as I do hat the number one indicator of student success is what you do at home (highly correlated to SES) Then we should all be cramming into a Title I school bonus is you get to be a big fish in a small pond for college admissions and your kid has a normal childhood unlike those stressful W places |
|
Blaming SES seems like a polite way of being racist. High SES likely has a correlation to academic success, but don't believe it's the cause.
Like the PP, I'm more inclined to believe what parents do at home has the greatest impact. As another person wrote earlier, an example of asian immigrants with few resources manage to do well by their kids. Pouring resources into title 1 schools is going to have the greatest impact. Perhaps, the county would be better off incenting parents in low SES areas to take classes on how help them help their children succeed at home. The current approach although admirable hasn't worked and seems to be a bottomless money pit. |
| What we should do is strengthen the education given through MCPS so that they provide a solid education without requiring outside tutoring. |
What do you mean by, "Blaming SES seems like a polite way of being racist." How is that racist? |
I am wondering who feels that outside tutoring is required (outside of special needs situations). I know plenty of kids in AP classes headed to or attending good colleges that never did any tutoring aside from maybe some SAT prep. |
You don't see the correlation between race and SES? |
|
I don't believe it's the SES or the race that causes some students to fail.
It's the weak school system that let stupid parents run over that ruins the opportunities of the students. Parents who don't have the resource or the ability should urge the schools to increase the homework, not decrease, extend the school hours or days, not shorten. Stop saying "let kids be kids" and ask your kids to work harder because life is not easy nor fair. |