Anonymous wrote:China and Russia aren't going to hold back their best and brightest. If we want to remain globally competitive, neither should we.
Plus, unless you intend to force all kids to attend public schools that will teach everyone the exact same thing, you're just going to encourage wealthier people to put their kids in private school or to homeschool. This will increase the achievement gap.
Anonymous wrote:Our society is already so lopsided as far as the top 1% owning practically everything.
And I’m sorry but no kid needs advanced calculus in high school.
Why not narrow the achievement gap by finding ways to lower the test results for the top performers?
Anonymous wrote:If you study the achievement gap, you’ll know that high school isn’t the issue. Neither is calculus. Neither is TJ (although whether we should have public, selective high schools and what their admission process should be is a separate and valid issue). The problem is in the early grades.
Plus nobody believes advanced calculus is the ticket to great wealth.
Anonymous wrote:China and Russia aren't going to hold back their best and brightest. If we want to remain globally competitive, neither should we.
Plus, unless you intend to force all kids to attend public schools that will teach everyone the exact same thing, you're just going to encourage wealthier people to put their kids in private school or to homeschool. This will increase the achievement gap.
Anonymous wrote:Our society is already so lopsided as far as the top 1% owning practically everything.
And I’m sorry but no kid needs advanced calculus in high school.
Why not narrow the achievement gap by finding ways to lower the test results for the top performers?