Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why universal preK is needed in this country.
If you read and understood the article then you would know that just universal preK will not solve the problem.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I imagine that almost all of those who are reading this and thinking of themselves as "middle class" in this analysis are in fact not what he means by middle class. If you put the top 10% of income or certainly if you include even the top 25% as the high income and everyone else as middle class until you reach the working poor most of DCUM are in that high income group. If your family makes $150K or more, you are not the middle class families that are being addressed here.
20:59. I agree. I'm in the top 10% income-wise, but grew up lower middle class/working class. I feel I got as good an education as did my wealthy classmates. But I did most of my schooling before 1980, as mentioned in the article. Educational opportunities were more equal back then. Now that I have a much higher income, I don't feel I'm doing anything significantly different with my kids. I do feel I can provide more networking opportunities that enable my kids to have experiences I never could. And they definitely learn from that. But that's now that they are older. Not before kindergarten.
My brother, on the other hand, is solidly middle class, divorced and making $60,000 a year. His kids do pretty much everything mine do, but they are not performing as well in school. This is anecdotal only, of course, but I don't understand why the disparity occurs. Is it peer group?
This is interesting PP. According to the article, much of the disparity would relate to how you and your brother parented the kids when they were small. Would you say that all the cousins entered kindergarten at the same level?
Yes. I'd say they were all very similar in kindergarten and the disparities became more apparent around 4th grade. All went to high quality day cares in their respective towns. We only live 1/2 hour from each other, so things aren't that much different.
Anonymous wrote:How do the dirt poor, uneducated, non-English speaking Asian immigrants factor into this? Somehow, they still kick butt in the US.
Anonymous wrote:This is why universal preK is needed in this country.
Anonymous wrote:How do the dirt poor, uneducated, non-English speaking Asian immigrants factor into this? Somehow, they still kick butt in the US.
Anonymous wrote:"I think it's a combination of peer group and expectations. One relative graduated from a 2nd tier state university, and her husband has a similar background. They are middle class. Compared to kids of the double grad degree homes here in DC, there are a lot of differences. The parents work long hours and have long commutes. They couldn't really afford household help, and their kids are involved in few activities, as their parents have little time to drive them. My relative isn't that well-organized and often was scrambling for summer care, and they were reluctant to push their kids to try new activities. Their kids also tended to quit things after a year or two, so they never achieved mastery of anything. The kids are allowed to watch huge amounts of tv and play video games for hours. The kids also had some learning issues, and my relative and her husband were in recession-vulnerable sectors of the economy, so these last few years have been hard."
OMG, you need to take English Writing for Dummies 101 .
"Master of Anything." What a putz.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I imagine that almost all of those who are reading this and thinking of themselves as "middle class" in this analysis are in fact not what he means by middle class. If you put the top 10% of income or certainly if you include even the top 25% as the high income and everyone else as middle class until you reach the working poor most of DCUM are in that high income group. If your family makes $150K or more, you are not the middle class families that are being addressed here.
20:59. I agree. I'm in the top 10% income-wise, but grew up lower middle class/working class. I feel I got as good an education as did my wealthy classmates. But I did most of my schooling before 1980, as mentioned in the article. Educational opportunities were more equal back then. Now that I have a much higher income, I don't feel I'm doing anything significantly different with my kids. I do feel I can provide more networking opportunities that enable my kids to have experiences I never could. And they definitely learn from that. But that's now that they are older. Not before kindergarten.
My brother, on the other hand, is solidly middle class, divorced and making $60,000 a year. His kids do pretty much everything mine do, but they are not performing as well in school. This is anecdotal only, of course, but I don't understand why the disparity occurs. Is it peer group?