Anonymous wrote:
The liberal elites of Palo Alto don't want my brown children in their school.
#BrownforTrump
Anonymous wrote:
The liberal elites of Palo Alto don't want my brown children in their school.
#BrownforTrump
Anonymous wrote:
The liberal elites of Palo Alto don't want my brown children in their school.
#BrownforTrump
Anonymous wrote:
The liberal elites of Palo Alto don't want my brown children in their school.
#BrownforTrump
Anonymous wrote:All school assignments by lottery.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.theatlantic.com/magazine/archive/2018/06/the-birth-of-a-new-american-aristocracy/559130/
This is kind of a fluff piece, but it rings true to me (while being admittedly light on statistics).
Sample:
Nowhere are the mechanics of the growing geographic divide more evident than in the system of primary and secondary education. Public schools were born amid hopes of opportunity for all; the best of them have now been effectively reprivatized to better serve the upper classes. According to a widely used school-ranking service, out of more than 5,000 public elementary schools in California, the top 11 are located in Palo Alto. They’re free and open to the public. All you have to do is move into a town where the median home value is $3,211,100. Scarsdale, New York, looks like a steal in comparison: The public high schools in that area funnel dozens of graduates to Ivy League colleges every year, and yet the median home value is a mere $1,403,600.
I'm a part of the new aristocracy. But I don't see any way to help others.
Nowhere are the mechanics of the growing geographic divide more evident than in the system of primary and secondary education. Public schools were born amid hopes of opportunity for all; the best of them have now been effectively reprivatized to better serve the upper classes. According to a widely used school-ranking service, out of more than 5,000 public elementary schools in California, the top 11 are located in Palo Alto. They’re free and open to the public. All you have to do is move into a town where the median home value is $3,211,100. Scarsdale, New York, looks like a steal in comparison: The public high schools in that area funnel dozens of graduates to Ivy League colleges every year, and yet the median home value is a mere $1,403,600.