Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still like this article:
Does it pay to obsess on where your kid goes to school?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/25/does-it-pay-to-obsess-on-where-your-kid-goes-to-college/%3foutputType=amp
Great article and I agree.
“ Whatever the rhetoric about a decline in public education, most schools are actually pretty good. How do we know? Just ask their clients. As polling data reveal, the vast majority of parents are very satisfied with the schools their children attend.”
Oh, OK, the measurement of school performance now is some poll where parents said they were satisfied.
Better than relying solely on test scores, which tell you little more than the socio-economic status of the students who attend..
They also measure mastery of an academic subject, but that's largely irrelevant to people like you, apparently.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still like this article:
Does it pay to obsess on where your kid goes to school?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/25/does-it-pay-to-obsess-on-where-your-kid-goes-to-college/%3foutputType=amp
Great article and I agree.
“ Whatever the rhetoric about a decline in public education, most schools are actually pretty good. How do we know? Just ask their clients. As polling data reveal, the vast majority of parents are very satisfied with the schools their children attend.”
Oh, OK, the measurement of school performance now is some poll where parents said they were satisfied.
Better than relying solely on test scores, which tell you little more than the socio-economic status of the students who attend..
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still like this article:
Does it pay to obsess on where your kid goes to school?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/25/does-it-pay-to-obsess-on-where-your-kid-goes-to-college/%3foutputType=amp
Great article and I agree.
“ Whatever the rhetoric about a decline in public education, most schools are actually pretty good. How do we know? Just ask their clients. As polling data reveal, the vast majority of parents are very satisfied with the schools their children attend.”
Oh, OK, the measurement of school performance now is some poll where parents said they were satisfied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you plan to send your kids to public schools, you buy in the best school pyramid you can afford, taking into account commute and housing needs.
That is how people operate because, on balance, it provides kids with the best education available under those circumstances and is the best investment.
People who want to share their personal stories are always welcome, but the subtext is actually that they made it despite having attended inferior lower schools, not because they did.
The subtext is that it didn’t matter - because it still doesn’t matter at their places of work.
They prove the opposite point when they emphasize that they are surrounded by people at work who attended better schools, not people who attended the schools they attended.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still like this article:
Does it pay to obsess on where your kid goes to school?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/25/does-it-pay-to-obsess-on-where-your-kid-goes-to-college/%3foutputType=amp
Great article and I agree.
“ Whatever the rhetoric about a decline in public education, most schools are actually pretty good. How do we know? Just ask their clients. As polling data reveal, the vast majority of parents are very satisfied with the schools their children attend.”
Oh, OK, the measurement of school performance now is some poll where parents said they were satisfied.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you plan to send your kids to public schools, you buy in the best school pyramid you can afford, taking into account commute and housing needs.
That is how people operate because, on balance, it provides kids with the best education available under those circumstances and is the best investment.
People who want to share their personal stories are always welcome, but the subtext is actually that they made it despite having attended inferior lower schools, not because they did.
The subtext is that it didn’t matter - because it still doesn’t matter at their places of work.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still like this article:
Does it pay to obsess on where your kid goes to school?
https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.washingtonpost.com/news/answer-sheet/wp/2014/04/25/does-it-pay-to-obsess-on-where-your-kid-goes-to-college/%3foutputType=amp
Great article and I agree.
Anonymous wrote:If you plan to send your kids to public schools, you buy in the best school pyramid you can afford, taking into account commute and housing needs.
That is how people operate because, on balance, it provides kids with the best education available under those circumstances and is the best investment.
People who want to share their personal stories are always welcome, but the subtext is actually that they made it despite having attended inferior lower schools, not because they did.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not really. A student at one of the worst high schools in our county got accepted to Columbia.
It's more about the student than the schools.
+1
It also is more advantageous for a student to be applying to top colleges from "bad" schools - your chances of getting in are higher.
Your chances of getting good sat/Ap scores certainly aren’t higher. Nor will the bad school have as many outstanding extracurriculars.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not really. A student at one of the worst high schools in our county got accepted to Columbia.
It's more about the student than the schools.
+1
It also is more advantageous for a student to be applying to top colleges from "bad" schools - your chances of getting in are higher.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Not really. A student at one of the worst high schools in our county got accepted to Columbia.
It's more about the student than the schools.
+1
It also is more advantageous for a student to be applying to top colleges from "bad" schools - your chances of getting in are higher.
Anonymous wrote:Not really. A student at one of the worst high schools in our county got accepted to Columbia.
It's more about the student than the schools.