Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Already stated in the PP. And isn't that obvious? Any other rules that you think would work better than this (other than merit based schools)? Schools with racial quota? Remember, we are talking about rules, that is something that can be followed with very little personal choices from the administrators. Things like "we should make the school diverse" are not rules. They are slogans.
No, it's not obvious. That's why I'm asking.
So do you have any other obvious rules can be used instead? Again, RULES, not something that different school administrators can easily do differently by just following the "spirit".
If not, it becomes obvious that we should just keep using the current rules.
Under the current rules, right here in MCPS, plenty of students already do not go to their "neighborhood schools".
Please elaborate - other than merit based schools/programs.
Exceptions always exist - as long as there are good reasons and as long as they are limited to "exceptions" (that is, statistically insignificant, which is clearly not something useful to achieve "diversity").
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:What the busing crowd doesn't get is that forced busing leads to MORE segregation -- families of means, mostly white and Asian, just move to the suburbs or to private.
That has happened in every single instance.
Actually it doesn't. Schools were less segregated during desegregation in the 1970s. When the desegregation efforts stopped, schools became more segregated again.
Anonymous wrote:I found this article that talks about the history of neighborhood and school segregation, how existing school boundaries often maintain and even increase segregation in schools, and how gerrymandered boundaries can lead to more integration.
They also address the notion that there will just be white flight if school boundaries are changed, and use terms like "geospatial bias" to refer to how we think of our neighborhoods, and who gets to attend what schools.
Long, but lots of interactive features (you can plug in MoCo and look at segregation in your area) and graphics makes it an easy read.
https://www.vox.com/2018/1/8/16822374/school-segregation-gerrymander-map
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Already stated in the PP. And isn't that obvious? Any other rules that you think would work better than this (other than merit based schools)? Schools with racial quota? Remember, we are talking about rules, that is something that can be followed with very little personal choices from the administrators. Things like "we should make the school diverse" are not rules. They are slogans.
No, it's not obvious. That's why I'm asking.
So do you have any other obvious rules can be used instead? Again, RULES, not something that different school administrators can easily do differently by just following the "spirit".
If not, it becomes obvious that we should just keep using the current rules.
Under the current rules, right here in MCPS, plenty of students already do not go to their "neighborhood schools".
Please elaborate - other than merit based schools/programs.
Exceptions always exist - as long as there are good reasons and as long as they are limited to "exceptions" (that is, statistically insignificant, which is clearly not something useful to achieve "diversity").
There are many MCPS schools located fairly close to their own boundary lines. The effect is that kids living just across the line are zoned to a different school than the one that may be closest to their house.
There are also MCPS school zones which have components which are not contiguous to each other, such that kids from the further away zones are bussed to their school, sometimes passing other schools along the way.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Already stated in the PP. And isn't that obvious? Any other rules that you think would work better than this (other than merit based schools)? Schools with racial quota? Remember, we are talking about rules, that is something that can be followed with very little personal choices from the administrators. Things like "we should make the school diverse" are not rules. They are slogans.
No, it's not obvious. That's why I'm asking.
So do you have any other obvious rules can be used instead? Again, RULES, not something that different school administrators can easily do differently by just following the "spirit".
If not, it becomes obvious that we should just keep using the current rules.
Under the current rules, right here in MCPS, plenty of students already do not go to their "neighborhood schools".
Please elaborate - other than merit based schools/programs.
Exceptions always exist - as long as there are good reasons and as long as they are limited to "exceptions" (that is, statistically insignificant, which is clearly not something useful to achieve "diversity").
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Already stated in the PP. And isn't that obvious? Any other rules that you think would work better than this (other than merit based schools)? Schools with racial quota? Remember, we are talking about rules, that is something that can be followed with very little personal choices from the administrators. Things like "we should make the school diverse" are not rules. They are slogans.
No, it's not obvious. That's why I'm asking.
So do you have any other obvious rules can be used instead? Again, RULES, not something that different school administrators can easily do differently by just following the "spirit".
If not, it becomes obvious that we should just keep using the current rules.
Under the current rules, right here in MCPS, plenty of students already do not go to their "neighborhood schools".
Please elaborate - other than merit based schools/programs.
Exceptions always exist - as long as there are good reasons and as long as they are limited to "exceptions" (that is, statistically insignificant, which is clearly not something useful to achieve "diversity").
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Already stated in the PP. And isn't that obvious? Any other rules that you think would work better than this (other than merit based schools)? Schools with racial quota? Remember, we are talking about rules, that is something that can be followed with very little personal choices from the administrators. Things like "we should make the school diverse" are not rules. They are slogans.
No, it's not obvious. That's why I'm asking.
So do you have any other obvious rules can be used instead? Again, RULES, not something that different school administrators can easily do differently by just following the "spirit".
If not, it becomes obvious that we should just keep using the current rules.
Under the current rules, right here in MCPS, plenty of students already do not go to their "neighborhood schools".
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Do you feel that busing, as a social/educational policy, is detrimental to students at more affluent schools?
You know, my kid has a long bus ride to her zoned school. We don't live in the neighborhood. But those are the rules. I wonder what the "schools should be for kids in the neighborhood" PP thinks about that. Maybe the PP thinks my kid shouldn't be at that school.
There can certainly be exceptions - and also some of the zoning could have issues too. I am not saying that this can be easily corrected because many people purchased their homes based on knowing the zoning.
But in general the current practice is "students go to neighboring" schools.
Anonymous wrote:What the busing crowd doesn't get is that forced busing leads to MORE segregation -- families of means, mostly white and Asian, just move to the suburbs or to private.
That has happened in every single instance.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Already stated in the PP. And isn't that obvious? Any other rules that you think would work better than this (other than merit based schools)? Schools with racial quota? Remember, we are talking about rules, that is something that can be followed with very little personal choices from the administrators. Things like "we should make the school diverse" are not rules. They are slogans.
No, it's not obvious. That's why I'm asking.
So do you have any other obvious rules can be used instead? Again, RULES, not something that different school administrators can easily do differently by just following the "spirit".
If not, it becomes obvious that we should just keep using the current rules.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Do you feel that busing, as a social/educational policy, is detrimental to students at more affluent schools?
You know, my kid has a long bus ride to her zoned school. We don't live in the neighborhood. But those are the rules. I wonder what the "schools should be for kids in the neighborhood" PP thinks about that. Maybe the PP thinks my kid shouldn't be at that school.