My kids go to a school with these same GS ratings and FARMS levels. The schools are fine. We don’t need to subsidize your snobbery. The school is fine and your privilege is showing. It’s quite obvious you wouldn’t send YOUR snowflake to school with the “poors.” |
That’s right , because I was the poors once and I know exactly what the poor schools are like. Also, my “snobbery” is simply reality in Canada and just about every other developed country. |
Yeah we bought our first house when our combined HHI was about that, and $550k would have been more than we were comfortable with, even when interest rates were lower. But, we were pregnant with our first and childcare is expensive. |
So move back there. We have a high income and no issue with our high achieving kids attending this school. You have personal baggage here that is clouding you. |
It’s you who seems to be sensitive about your choices. The school can’t help a majority of its students meet basic educational standards. It’s objectively a poor school, has nothing to do with my baggage. Glad to hear that your kids are not affected. |
Nobody is stopping you from helping these people. Our poor people in the us do quite well compared to poor people in developing countries.But life isn't fair. Traveling will help you put things in perspective. |
You sound so out of touch and I’m someone from a developing country with worse off poors. ![]() |
UMC families pulling their kids from these schools will only make it worse. Right now the schools offer the full breadth of AP's, Honors, and DE options, and students are around other students who take academics seriously and are college bound. Its NOT a bad school. Great Schools is a farce. |
DP: Depends--UMC families sometimes create a "school within a school" where hardly any of the low-income students get to experience those academic advantages and are rarely in the same social circle/classes. The UMC families then experience a boon in college admissions because it's easier to be the top 5% of your class. That kind of "help" isn't help. FRMs kids who would be at the top of their class end up not being there because they are competing with kids whose parents are making enough to enroll in a lot of supplementary programs, hire tutors etc. It's a great deal for UMC families of course--their kids who would be top 1/4 elsewhere are top 1/20. So you have to look at how many of the FRMs kids actually benefit. Some schools they really do, others they are worse off. |
I'm a teacher and followed all of those "rules." I have two degrees (BA and MA). My kids qualified for free preschool, free lunch, free before/aftercare, etc. We were considered low income for a long time (maybe we still are). |
Through machinery and technology, there have been so many productivity gains in America over the last 60 years that there is enough profit to pay every worker $20/hour plus. Seriously, worker productivity has tripled in the last few decades, but basic wage has not even kept pace with inflation.
Where did all that extra money go? Right to the top- CEOs, Board or Directors and stockholders. Productivity gain profits need to be allocated to every worker in the company, not just to the top. America is an extraordinarily rich country- it just doesn't share it with everyone. |
+1 And I don’t know why some people think poor people should basically have to live on the street. It’s nicer for everyone when all people have decent living conditions. |
They somehow manage it in Western Europe. |
A full time public school teacher? With a full time employed spouse? |
+1 |