Anonymous wrote:The only thing I don't like about county systems is that they try to be so efficient that they end up making their schools overly large.
Anonymous wrote:Glad I grew up out west where school districts are separate entities from city and county governments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, from new England and some towns had great schools because that's what the residents focused in, some had crappy schools. Fwiw the facilities and staff where I grew up (Newton MA) put ffx and MoCo to shame. Yes even at Whitman.
Newton is like Chevy Chase wealthy, not surprising
Yes, so the schools are like those Chevy Chase and McLean would have if the parents there weren't also subsiding the education for the kids in Wheaton and Annandale.
It's kind of bizarre how the liberals from New England seem to think that system is admirable.
Yes, I second this. The town system seems fantastic if you're in a rich town, but many more kids live in middling or poor towns. With a county system, the rich subsidize the poor so you get less of a vicious circle where the poor stay poor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, from new England and some towns had great schools because that's what the residents focused in, some had crappy schools. Fwiw the facilities and staff where I grew up (Newton MA) put ffx and MoCo to shame. Yes even at Whitman.
+1 wrt my Massachusetts town.
I miss having a voice in local government, including the local school system.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, from new England and some towns had great schools because that's what the residents focused in, some had crappy schools. Fwiw the facilities and staff where I grew up (Newton MA) put ffx and MoCo to shame. Yes even at Whitman.
Newton is like Chevy Chase wealthy, not surprising
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, from new England and some towns had great schools because that's what the residents focused in, some had crappy schools. Fwiw the facilities and staff where I grew up (Newton MA) put ffx and MoCo to shame. Yes even at Whitman.
Newton is like Chevy Chase wealthy, not surprising
Yes, so the schools are like those Chevy Chase and McLean would have if the parents there weren't also subsiding the education for the kids in Wheaton and Annandale.
It's kind of bizarre how the liberals from New England seem to think that system is admirable.
Yes, I second this. The town system seems fantastic if you're in a rich town, but many more kids live in middling or poor towns. With a county system, the rich subsidize the poor so you get less of a vicious circle where the poor stay poor.
Yes and no. The town I grew up in had affluent residents, less-affluent residents, and residents who live in public housing. All of the kids attended the same high school.
MCPS on the other hand is extremely stratified from a SES perspective. Whitman, e.g., has <5% FARMS population whereas many of the schools in eastern MoCo have >70% FARMS population. The effect is the same as if e.g. Bethesda were a different town from Wheaton.
IMO the culprit is housing policy, but that is a different conversation, I suppose.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, from new England and some towns had great schools because that's what the residents focused in, some had crappy schools. Fwiw the facilities and staff where I grew up (Newton MA) put ffx and MoCo to shame. Yes even at Whitman.
Newton is like Chevy Chase wealthy, not surprising
Yes, so the schools are like those Chevy Chase and McLean would have if the parents there weren't also subsiding the education for the kids in Wheaton and Annandale.
It's kind of bizarre how the liberals from New England seem to think that system is admirable.
Yes, I second this. The town system seems fantastic if you're in a rich town, but many more kids live in middling or poor towns. With a county system, the rich subsidize the poor so you get less of a vicious circle where the poor stay poor.
Anonymous wrote:Yup, from new England and some towns had great schools because that's what the residents focused in, some had crappy schools. Fwiw the facilities and staff where I grew up (Newton MA) put ffx and MoCo to shame. Yes even at Whitman.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yup, from new England and some towns had great schools because that's what the residents focused in, some had crappy schools. Fwiw the facilities and staff where I grew up (Newton MA) put ffx and MoCo to shame. Yes even at Whitman.
Newton is like Chevy Chase wealthy, not surprising
Yes, so the schools are like those Chevy Chase and McLean would have if the parents there weren't also subsiding the education for the kids in Wheaton and Annandale.
It's kind of bizarre how the liberals from New England seem to think that system is admirable.
Yes, I second this. The town system seems fantastic if you're in a rich town, but many more kids live in middling or poor towns. With a county system, the rich subsidize the poor so you get less of a vicious circle where the poor stay poor.