Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's laughable that someone would think the magnet program should reflect the demographics of the county. If that's what mcps is after, then those programs should be removed indeed.
I'll translate - we don't need to spend resources outside of what benefits my child.
Or more to the point -I don't care about brown kids. If the program is 100 % white and Asian all the better.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why have Special Ed programs? Why have ESOL programs? Why have sports in school?
All of this costs money and if we remove ESOL and Sp Ed programs then we will have more money for general education.
Of course they do and money is always tight and people have to fight for special programs in every budget cycle. But ESOL and Special Ed have mandates and federal money behind them. Anyone who wants to maintain or expand magnets needs to have a better argument than money is spent other places why not here. Anyway, the costs and justifications are spelled out in the Choice Study.
If it's because the funding is so tight that MCPS have to decide between special education programs and gift programs. I support SE wholeheartedly. If there is funding allocated for gifted program, I want it be a fair game by that I mean the county can decide whatever criteria to use for admission, or allocate more funding to support the preparation of the URM group, but the criteria must be objective, and skin-color be out of the picture completely. My 5 grader Asian boy thinks he is "black" in summer and "white" in winter, call him dumb but the fact is kids are not born with race consciousness. It's the adults who keep reminding and reinforcing they each belongs to a specific group. One of my friends of mixed Asian/Black always fills "black" for their kids race because a simple thing as to check a different box will instantly broaden the opportunities of their kids. Some may think it's fair and is as the compensation to the black/latino's suffering in the past. I just think it's absurd.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why have Special Ed programs? Why have ESOL programs? Why have sports in school?
All of this costs money and if we remove ESOL and Sp Ed programs then we will have more money for general education.
Of course they do and money is always tight and people have to fight for special programs in every budget cycle. But ESOL and Special Ed have mandates and federal money behind them. Anyone who wants to maintain or expand magnets needs to have a better argument than money is spent other places why not here. Anyway, the costs and justifications are spelled out in the Choice Study.
I think having special programs is great. It really makes a school district attractive to parents that want more than just a standard education for their kids. It's one of the reasons we moved here. I like that we have different options, whether we use them or not. I hope they don't gut it. Our previous school district has very little in the way of magnet, gifted, special programs, yet it's a pretty wealthy area.
So far, nothing about the Choice Study has been about eliminating the programs. Still similar programs have been slashed across the country and the privates and the expensive summer camps are expanding into gifted education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why have Special Ed programs? Why have ESOL programs? Why have sports in school?
All of this costs money and if we remove ESOL and Sp Ed programs then we will have more money for general education.
Of course they do and money is always tight and people have to fight for special programs in every budget cycle. But ESOL and Special Ed have mandates and federal money behind them. Anyone who wants to maintain or expand magnets needs to have a better argument than money is spent other places why not here. Anyway, the costs and justifications are spelled out in the Choice Study.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why have Special Ed programs? Why have ESOL programs? Why have sports in school?
All of this costs money and if we remove ESOL and Sp Ed programs then we will have more money for general education.
Of course they do and money is always tight and people have to fight for special programs in every budget cycle. But ESOL and Special Ed have mandates and federal money behind them. Anyone who wants to maintain or expand magnets needs to have a better argument than money is spent other places why not here. Anyway, the costs and justifications are spelled out in the Choice Study.
I think having special programs is great. It really makes a school district attractive to parents that want more than just a standard education for their kids. It's one of the reasons we moved here. I like that we have different options, whether we use them or not. I hope they don't gut it. Our previous school district has very little in the way of magnet, gifted, special programs, yet it's a pretty wealthy area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why have Special Ed programs? Why have ESOL programs? Why have sports in school?
All of this costs money and if we remove ESOL and Sp Ed programs then we will have more money for general education.
Of course they do and money is always tight and people have to fight for special programs in every budget cycle. But ESOL and Special Ed have mandates and federal money behind them. Anyone who wants to maintain or expand magnets needs to have a better argument than money is spent other places why not here. Anyway, the costs and justifications are spelled out in the Choice Study.
Anonymous wrote:Why have Special Ed programs? Why have ESOL programs? Why have sports in school?
All of this costs money and if we remove ESOL and Sp Ed programs then we will have more money for general education.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes but virtually the group called Hispanics is multiracial, a large chunk of AA are multiracial even though they don't identify as such. What is it about identifying as multiracial changes the outcome.
My guess is that there's a good correlation between higher SES and identifying as multiracial.
Interesting
Anonymous wrote:the report group URM into black/latino/ELL/low SEC/
I wonder where to put poor white or ELL Asian?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:the report group URM into black/latino/ELL/low SEC/
I wonder where to put poor white or ELL Asian?
No, not SES. MCPS has no data on socioeconomic status. MCPS only has data on qualifying for free or reduced meals (FARMS).
Poor people are poor people, even when they are white non-Hispanic poor people. Likewise, English-language learners are English-language learners, even when they are Asian non-Hispanic English-language learners.
Anonymous wrote:the report group URM into black/latino/ELL/low SEC/
I wonder where to put poor white or ELL Asian?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes but virtually the group called Hispanics is multiracial, a large chunk of AA are multiracial even though they don't identify as such. What is it about identifying as multiracial changes the outcome.
My guess is that there's a good correlation between higher SES and identifying as multiracial.