Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I believe that the BOE should be providing the backbone of stabllity to the county, not be the source of anxiety.
They should be targeting the gap while also striving to preserve the achievement.
They should be fixing what is broken, not messing with what works.
They should be respecting that families chose where they live, not make families question ever investing a red cent into this county.
They should be motivating the community to come together, not repeating the experiment of forced demographic integration that failed time and time again nationwide.
They should make us proud to be in MCPS instead of questioning daily wherher we made a mistake trusting the MCPS to educate our children.
So don't be anxious. Nobody is making you move. Nobody is ruining your child's school. Nobody is forcing you to argue with your neighbors. Nobody forced you to buy lots for your residence based on the assumption that school boundaries would never change. If you choose to do any of those things, that's your choice.
Anonymous wrote:
If you live in a highly segregated neighborhood near an integrated neighborhood, your child is ALREADY a social experiement. Just an experiment that began
They should also be changed because segregated schools are indefensible. They were indefensible in 1954, and in 1971, and they are indefensible now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?
My child is not a social experiment.
My child is not a full-time tutor.
My child is not a stairstep as the education politicians look for a promotion.
My family will not play your game.
If you live in a highly segregated neighborhood near an integrated neighborhood, your child is ALREADY a social experiement. Just an experiment that began before you bought your house, and one based ondecades of housing and education policy.
No. The majority of families along boundaries of highly achieving schools sacrificed to prioritize the education of their children. These are first generation immigrant families, single mothers, and families hit by adversity. All are doing the best they can.
You may the power to take their savings and their dreams, but do not for a minute think that you have the moral high ground.
You don't.
Whether people sacrificed to live in a highly segregated neighborhood or not - the point remains that these school boundaries were not handed down by G-d. They were created by human beings, at some point in the past, and can and should be changed to reflect new realities in terms of overcrowding and underutilization of school facilities.
They should also be changed because segregated schools are indefensible. They were indefensible in 1954, and in 1971, and they are indefensible now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
I believe that the BOE should be providing the backbone of stabllity to the county, not be the source of anxiety.
They should be targeting the gap while also striving to preserve the achievement.
They should be fixing what is broken, not messing with what works.
They should be respecting that families chose where they live, not make families question ever investing a red cent into this county.
They should be motivating the community to come together, not repeating the experiment of forced demographic integration that failed time and time again nationwide.
They should make us proud to be in MCPS instead of questioning daily wherher we made a mistake trusting the MCPS to educate our children.
So don't be anxious. Nobody is making you move. Nobody is ruining your child's school. Nobody is forcing you to argue with your neighbors. Nobody forced you to buy lots for your residence based on the assumption that school boundaries would never change. If you choose to do any of those things, that's your choice.
Anonymous wrote:
I believe that the BOE should be providing the backbone of stabllity to the county, not be the source of anxiety.
They should be targeting the gap while also striving to preserve the achievement.
They should be fixing what is broken, not messing with what works.
They should be respecting that families chose where they live, not make families question ever investing a red cent into this county.
They should be motivating the community to come together, not repeating the experiment of forced demographic integration that failed time and time again nationwide.
They should make us proud to be in MCPS instead of questioning daily wherher we made a mistake trusting the MCPS to educate our children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?
My child is not a social experiment.
My child is not a full-time tutor.
My child is not a stairstep as the education politicians look for a promotion.
My family will not play your game.
If you live in a highly segregated neighborhood near an integrated neighborhood, your child is ALREADY a social experiement. Just an experiment that began before you bought your house, and one based ondecades of housing and education policy.
No. The majority of families along boundaries of highly achieving schools sacrificed to prioritize the education of their children. These are first generation immigrant families, single mothers, and families hit by adversity. All are doing the best they can.
You may the power to take their savings and their dreams, but do not for a minute think that you have the moral high ground.
You don't.
Anonymous wrote:
No. The majority of families along boundaries of highly achieving schools sacrificed to prioritize the education of their children. These are first generation immigrant families, single mothers, and families hit by adversity. All are doing the best they can.
You may the power to take their savings and their dreams, but do not for a minute think that you have the moral high ground.
You don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?
My child is not a social experiment.
My child is not a full-time tutor.
My child is not a stairstep as the education politicians look for a promotion.
My family will not play your game.
If you live in a highly segregated neighborhood near an integrated neighborhood, your child is ALREADY a social experiement. Just an experiment that began before you bought your house, and one based ondecades of housing and education policy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?
My child is not a social experiment.
My child is not a full-time tutor.
My child is not a stairstep as the education politicians look for a promotion.
My family will not play your game.
Um. Ok, I guess? My kids aren't either, and i don't understand the panic about the boundary analysis.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?
My child is not a social experiment.
My child is not a full-time tutor.
My child is not a stairstep as the education politicians look for a promotion.
My family will not play your game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?
My child is not a social experiment.
My child is not a full-time tutor.
My child is not a stairstep as the education politicians look for a promotion.
My family will not play your game.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For most sane parents, this is an entirely financial debate because none of us would ever consider actually sending our children to failing schools if rezoned. It would just be expensive to move, that's all.
I hope the BOE understands that it can change boundaries, but it will never get our kids.
You keep saying that. Who's we, and how will the BoE get whoever-we-are's kids?