Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Numbering is popular in our jails and prisons. What was the NY educational leadership thinking (real or subliminal)? Apartheid.
We realize it's all about you, PP, but New York's school numbering system pre-dates "Apartheid" by quite a long time. It predates the presence of African Americans in meaningful numbers in NY, for that matter.
PS- many of those numbered schools are among the most sought after PS 1 is even still called PS 1 though it is now an art institution run by MoMa.
PS 150, PS 41
PS 6, etc. are all VERY GOOD.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Numbering is popular in our jails and prisons. What was the NY educational leadership thinking (real or subliminal)? Apartheid.
We realize it's all about you, PP, but New York's school numbering system pre-dates "Apartheid" by quite a long time. It predates the presence of African Americans in meaningful numbers in NY, for that matter.
Anonymous wrote:Numbering is popular in our jails and prisons. What was the NY educational leadership thinking (real or subliminal)? Apartheid.
We realize it's all about you, PP, but New York's school numbering system pre-dates "Apartheid" by quite a long time. It predates the presence of African Americans in meaningful numbers in NY, for that matter.
Anonymous wrote:Numbering is popular in our jails and prisons. What was the NY educational leadership thinking (real or subliminal)? Apartheid.
Anonymous wrote:In NYC many/most of them are numbered, and it is no reflection on their quality.
Don't know any DC schools that are numbered.
Anonymous wrote:And instead are called PS 45 etc.
Is this typical of "bad" areas? Why are some only numbers and other are named?
I went to a private school so this is all new to me.