Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The top 10% already have an advantage over the other 90%. Would not make sense to put further funds to a group that is already at an advantage.
DP. Do you not see that our society benefits when we raise the proficiency of the smartest people in our country?
Do you not see society benefits exponentially more when we raise the proficiency of the lowest performing people in our country?
Anonymous wrote:I hope the parents of the gifted kids in the other threads are looking at the responses here. It's good to know that a significant number of parents don't think it's worth any effort at all to improve smart kids' performance, even if it comes at no cost to anyone else. Your kid's job is to sit down, shut up, and not be a bother while they do more test prep for the kids who aren't passing yet.
You're on your own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The top 10% already have an advantage over the other 90%. Would not make sense to put further funds to a group that is already at an advantage.
DP. Do you not see that our society benefits when we raise the proficiency of the smartest people in our country?
Do you not see society benefits exponentially more when we raise the proficiency of the lowest performing people in our country?
You're refusing to engage the hypothetical, which shows you either don't understand it, or you're pretending not to. The hypothetical was that this button represented a non-zero-sum intervention and it can't be redirected to someone you deem more deserving. The only choice is to use it or not, and it has no impact on your ability to direct other resources towards students you think are more deserving. Hit the button and some people are better off but no one is worse off. Don't hit the button and no one is better off. Would you still refuse to hit the button?
I understand the proposal.
The discussion that ensues in answering the "why" or "why not" in a hypothetical by nature goes broader.
No, I don't see the need to increase the disparities and advantages for the top 10% just because you can without any impact whatsoever on anything but the top 10%, notably when that top 10% is quite capable of pursuing more on their own.
This means your answer to the question is “no.”
Anonymous wrote:Hell yes - press the button!
There is a benefit to improving the education levels of the gifted students. Often these are the people who later make electric cars, cancer meds, iPhones, etc. Society needs this, and the way to get kids to that level is to educate them appropriately from an early age.
The unfortunate reality is we spend lots and lots of money trying to close the gap. And we do not have enough money left to provide an appropriate education to the top one percent of children.
While the children will be fine without the higher education in the long run, society loses the benefit of their genius.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The top 10% already have an advantage over the other 90%. Would not make sense to put further funds to a group that is already at an advantage.
DP. Do you not see that our society benefits when we raise the proficiency of the smartest people in our country?
Do you not see society benefits exponentially more when we raise the proficiency of the lowest performing people in our country?
You're refusing to engage the hypothetical, which shows you either don't understand it, or you're pretending not to. The hypothetical was that this button represented a non-zero-sum intervention and it can't be redirected to someone you deem more deserving. The only choice is to use it or not, and it has no impact on your ability to direct other resources towards students you think are more deserving. Hit the button and some people are better off but no one is worse off. Don't hit the button and no one is better off. Would you still refuse to hit the button?
I understand the proposal.
The discussion that ensues in answering the "why" or "why not" in a hypothetical by nature goes broader.
No, I don't see the need to increase the disparities and advantages for the top 10% just because you can without any impact whatsoever on anything but the top 10%, notably when that top 10% is quite capable of pursuing more on their own.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, of course. In the hypothetical, there is no cost to anyone else, so why not?
Because it isn't necessary. The top 10% don't NEED the boost.
Just like the top 1% don't need a tax break.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The top 10% already have an advantage over the other 90%. Would not make sense to put further funds to a group that is already at an advantage.
DP. Do you not see that our society benefits when we raise the proficiency of the smartest people in our country?
Do you not see society benefits exponentially more when we raise the proficiency of the lowest performing people in our country?
You're refusing to engage the hypothetical, which shows you either don't understand it, or you're pretending not to. The hypothetical was that this button represented a non-zero-sum intervention and it can't be redirected to someone you deem more deserving. The only choice is to use it or not, and it has no impact on your ability to direct other resources towards students you think are more deserving. Hit the button and some people are better off but no one is worse off. Don't hit the button and no one is better off. Would you still refuse to hit the button?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The top 10% already have an advantage over the other 90%. Would not make sense to put further funds to a group that is already at an advantage.
DP. Do you not see that our society benefits when we raise the proficiency of the smartest people in our country?
Do you not see society benefits exponentially more when we raise the proficiency of the lowest performing people in our country?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The top 10% already have an advantage over the other 90%. Would not make sense to put further funds to a group that is already at an advantage.
Read the first post. Assume it costs nothing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. The top 10% already have an advantage over the other 90%. Would not make sense to put further funds to a group that is already at an advantage.
DP. Do you not see that our society benefits when we raise the proficiency of the smartest people in our country?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The discussion of the APS gifted program (or lack thereof) got me wondering about a hypothetical question regarding education.
Let's say you had a button. If pressed, this magic button would, at no cost to the school system or anyone else, increase the academic achievements of the current top 10% of students by a significant amount (say one-half to a full standard deviation). This would show up in grades and test scores, but it would represent real increases in skill and ability as well. Pressing the button would have no impact on anyone other than the top 10%.
Would you press the button?
No.
How about we press a similar button for the bottom 10% instead?
What a perfect example of why the stark disparities are perpetuated - focusing on what the top is missing rather than actually providing what the bottom requires.
Don't fight the hypothetical, as they say in law school. I'd gladly press the button for the bottom 10%. But in the original question the button does nothing to anyone outside the top 10%. It doesn't stop anyone from directing existing resources towards students achieving less.
Basically it's a solution that improves overall outcomes without narrowing the distribution of outcomes. To put it another way, if you had a tool which cost nothing, improved lives, but wouldn't actually close the disparities you're concerned about, would you deny those people the chance to improve their lives?