Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
DC also has plenty of well-educated, high SES black folks. For some reason, they tend to get left out of the conversation frequently.
I was just thinking the same thing. We actually have a much larger middle class African-American population than many other cities.
+1. We are high HHI black family in Shepherd Park. Unfortunately, many high HHI blacks do go private. It is sad to see so many white WOTP residents fight tooth and nail to get us booted from Deal so Deal would become 100% white.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
DC also has plenty of well-educated, high SES black folks. For some reason, they tend to get left out of the conversation frequently.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
DC also has plenty of well-educated, high SES black folks. For some reason, they tend to get left out of the conversation frequently.
I was just thinking the same thing. We actually have a much larger middle class African-American population than many other cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
DC also has plenty of well-educated, high SES black folks. For some reason, they tend to get left out of the conversation frequently.
Not sure about this, percentage-wise. We are a black PhD/MD couple living in Shepherd Park, where there are lots of this ilk here. However, many of our neighbors put their kids in privates, so not sure how well this demographic is represented in public schools? It may well be that public schools are more split along white & affluent vs. black/Latino & poor lines--I don't have the statistic in front of me though.
Your own neighborhood school (though primarily OOB) is 79% black yet only 33% FARMS. Not all black students in this city are poor.
Anonymous wrote:jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
DC also has plenty of well-educated, high SES black folks. For some reason, they tend to get left out of the conversation frequently.
Not sure about this, percentage-wise. We are a black PhD/MD couple living in Shepherd Park, where there are lots of this ilk here. However, many of our neighbors put their kids in privates, so not sure how well this demographic is represented in public schools? It may well be that public schools are more split along white & affluent vs. black/Latino & poor lines--I don't have the statistic in front of me though.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
DC also has plenty of well-educated, high SES black folks. For some reason, they tend to get left out of the conversation frequently.
jsteele wrote:Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
DC also has plenty of well-educated, high SES black folks. For some reason, they tend to get left out of the conversation frequently.
Anonymous wrote:The real problem is income segregation. In DC it is all rich white people, all poor brown/black people. It's not like that everywhere. I think here we correlate success to race, but instead it's really success to SES.
Anonymous wrote:Continuing, while relatively more is spent on kids in lower ses areas, it is not enough to level the playing field.
What would it cost to raise up a child from a single parent home living on govt assistancd in a rough neighborhood to the same grade level as a child with 2 PhD/MD/JD parents?