Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally agree with what you are saying and have said the same thing myself “Good is defined by the socioeconomic status of the students.” That said my son does attend a school with a high FARMS rate and while I think it is a good school in terms of the education and quality of teachers he has, I also see the drawbacks. Some things I do not like about his school and the high FARMS rates- lack of parental involvement- seems to be the same small group of higher SES parents who do everything, it is impossible to communicate with parents in the class and organize things like gifts for teachers, lack of relationships with kids outside of the classroom (good luck getting any of his school friends to do things like attend a b-day party). Overall I know my son will succeed no matter where he goes because he comes from a home with 2 well educated parents who will supplement his education and push him to succeed, but the social aspect of a high FARMS school does make me a little sad and makes me think more about moving.
This gets repeated at the middle and high school level. Have been in both types of schools. At higher SES schools there will be more activities, more trips, and more parents who will chaperone and lend their time and efforts to things like fundraisers and teacher appreciation days. All around just a more positive environment than at schools where the teachers and administrators have to do everything and then some. Don't get me wrong, some of the people at the high FARMS schools are DEDICATED and PHENOMENAL, but they are expected to do so much.
So why not change the boundaries around within a school district, so that every school has a more evenly mixed group? Many of the schools here are either very high FARMS rate or very low.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I totally agree with what you are saying and have said the same thing myself “Good is defined by the socioeconomic status of the students.” That said my son does attend a school with a high FARMS rate and while I think it is a good school in terms of the education and quality of teachers he has, I also see the drawbacks. Some things I do not like about his school and the high FARMS rates- lack of parental involvement- seems to be the same small group of higher SES parents who do everything, it is impossible to communicate with parents in the class and organize things like gifts for teachers, lack of relationships with kids outside of the classroom (good luck getting any of his school friends to do things like attend a b-day party). Overall I know my son will succeed no matter where he goes because he comes from a home with 2 well educated parents who will supplement his education and push him to succeed, but the social aspect of a high FARMS school does make me a little sad and makes me think more about moving.
This gets repeated at the middle and high school level. Have been in both types of schools. At higher SES schools there will be more activities, more trips, and more parents who will chaperone and lend their time and efforts to things like fundraisers and teacher appreciation days. All around just a more positive environment than at schools where the teachers and administrators have to do everything and then some. Don't get me wrong, some of the people at the high FARMS schools are DEDICATED and PHENOMENAL, but they are expected to do so much.
Anonymous wrote:cont. They will know how to follow directions and, in most cases, will respect the teacher.
Anonymous wrote:I totally agree with what you are saying and have said the same thing myself “Good is defined by the socioeconomic status of the students.” That said my son does attend a school with a high FARMS rate and while I think it is a good school in terms of the education and quality of teachers he has, I also see the drawbacks. Some things I do not like about his school and the high FARMS rates- lack of parental involvement- seems to be the same small group of higher SES parents who do everything, it is impossible to communicate with parents in the class and organize things like gifts for teachers, lack of relationships with kids outside of the classroom (good luck getting any of his school friends to do things like attend a b-day party). Overall I know my son will succeed no matter where he goes because he comes from a home with 2 well educated parents who will supplement his education and push him to succeed, but the social aspect of a high FARMS school does make me a little sad and makes me think more about moving.
It may be mutually reinforcing. At schools with "good families and students with high SES," you may find less teacher burnout and more experienced teachers. The curriculum may be the same on paper, but students may process information more quickly, allowing teachers to explore topics in more depth. The principal may not have to spend as much or his or her time worrying about SOL results and able to focus on other initiatives.
So be "irked" if you want to, but people will continue to search out "good schools," looking at objective measures of performance as one proxy for schools with families that care about education.
Anonymous wrote:Yep. That's why the "good schools?" question kind of irks me. You're not looking for good schools, you're looking for good families and students with high SES that pull the test scores up. Which is fine, but don't act like the school is "good" because of anything the teachers/curriculum/principal/etc do.
Anonymous wrote:Yep. That's why the "good schools?" question kind of irks me. You're not looking for good schools, you're looking for good families and students with high SES that pull the test scores up. Which is fine, but don't act like the school is "good" because of anything the teachers/curriculum/principal/etc do.