Anonymous wrote:I have taught at both title 1 schools and wealthy schools. Far and away the better instruction was at the title 1 schools. It was out of necessity—if teaching wasn’t good, those kids would literally climb out the window and leave, or go to the bathroom and get high, or punch their neighbor to entertain themselves, or start stabbing things with scissors out of boredom. We had to have engaging lessons every single day to keep kids in class.
At the rich school? Teachers were pulling the same worksheets they’d used since 1991 out of a file cabinet, even though they no longer matched standards. They taught things the way they always taught and kids either got it, or parents paid $$$ to tutors so they got it. Staff bragged about their 100% pass rate on state tests when they could have done absolutely nothing and those kids would have passed.
Don’t get me wrong, there were some good teachers at the rich school too, as well as kids getting high in the bathrooms. And the poor school had a few dud teachers and plenty of kids who truly wanted to learn and did all they could to take advantage of opportunities.
All schools I’ve taught at have been very diverse—the difference is $$$$.
I’m now at a middle of the road school and I think this is my happy medium. Kids know the value of education (they aren’t going to inherit millions and be independently wealthy), but also don’t have to worry about not having money for bills, so they can focus on grades instead of stress about being evicted.
Lol. If this was true progressives wouldn't want busing so badly like they do in MoCo and already did in HoCo.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yes, yes, 1,000x yes! I wish I'd realized this when my kids were little, and I bragged about how great the schools in Arlington are. They're just rich and white; there's nothing else special about them.
x100 Yes, these measures are misleading since they reward a lack of economic diversity. The irony is a kid can get a great education at almost any school provided they have the same curriculum. Sure one school may have 4 sections of AP English while another only has 2 but AP English is the same everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, yes, 1,000x yes! I wish I'd realized this when my kids were little, and I bragged about how great the schools in Arlington are. They're just rich and white; there's nothing else special about them.
Lol. Thank you. I needed a good laugh this evening.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an important question. We need massive investment and reparations in poor non-white communities, to separate poverty from race, so we can get an answer.
Along the same lines but different…
Wards 7 & 8 should get bulldozed and replaced with market rate housing to create more tax revenue. The families receiving assistance should continue receiving assistance but be disbursed and moved around to better neighborhoods.
Exposure to healthier habits and families, better schools/social opportunities, and positive social behavior will rise the tides.
Side note: Parsing out need-based assistance by race is…wait for it…**racist**.
Yes, it is. That's why we need reparations for centuries of racist oppression.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught at both title 1 schools and wealthy schools. Far and away the better instruction was at the title 1 schools. It was out of necessity—if teaching wasn’t good, those kids would literally climb out the window and leave, or go to the bathroom and get high, or punch their neighbor to entertain themselves, or start stabbing things with scissors out of boredom. We had to have engaging lessons every single day to keep kids in class.
At the rich school? Teachers were pulling the same worksheets they’d used since 1991 out of a file cabinet, even though they no longer matched standards. They taught things the way they always taught and kids either got it, or parents paid $$$ to tutors so they got it. Staff bragged about their 100% pass rate on state tests when they could have done absolutely nothing and those kids would have passed.
Don’t get me wrong, there were some good teachers at the rich school too, as well as kids getting high in the bathrooms. And the poor school had a few dud teachers and plenty of kids who truly wanted to learn and did all they could to take advantage of opportunities.
All schools I’ve taught at have been very diverse—the difference is $$$$.
I’m now at a middle of the road school and I think this is my happy medium. Kids know the value of education (they aren’t going to inherit millions and be independently wealthy), but also don’t have to worry about not having money for bills, so they can focus on grades instead of stress about being evicted.
Most title 1 schools have terrible test scores and majority of students are chronically absent. It doesn’t matter how good the teaching is. It isn’t about the teaching, it is about the parenting going on at home. My kids go to a title 1 diverse school. The teaching if fine, though the standards are super low. We pretty much have to homeschool. Kids that have involved parents that put in time with them at home and value their education will do fine at any school. The common denominator of successful and smart students are parents that work with them at home and prioritise their enducatipn from an early age. While having money makes that easier to do this, it isn’t a must. My DH’s immigrant single mother who made minimum wage sent three kids to medical school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is an important question. We need massive investment and reparations in poor non-white communities, to separate poverty from race, so we can get an answer.
Along the same lines but different…
Wards 7 & 8 should get bulldozed and replaced with market rate housing to create more tax revenue. The families receiving assistance should continue receiving assistance but be disbursed and moved around to better neighborhoods.
Exposure to healthier habits and families, better schools/social opportunities, and positive social behavior will rise the tides.
Side note: Parsing out need-based assistance by race is…wait for it…**racist**.
Anonymous wrote:This is an important question. We need massive investment and reparations in poor non-white communities, to separate poverty from race, so we can get an answer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have taught at both title 1 schools and wealthy schools. Far and away the better instruction was at the title 1 schools. It was out of necessity—if teaching wasn’t good, those kids would literally climb out the window and leave, or go to the bathroom and get high, or punch their neighbor to entertain themselves, or start stabbing things with scissors out of boredom. We had to have engaging lessons every single day to keep kids in class.
At the rich school? Teachers were pulling the same worksheets they’d used since 1991 out of a file cabinet, even though they no longer matched standards. They taught things the way they always taught and kids either got it, or parents paid $$$ to tutors so they got it. Staff bragged about their 100% pass rate on state tests when they could have done absolutely nothing and those kids would have passed.
Don’t get me wrong, there were some good teachers at the rich school too, as well as kids getting high in the bathrooms. And the poor school had a few dud teachers and plenty of kids who truly wanted to learn and did all they could to take advantage of opportunities.
All schools I’ve taught at have been very diverse—the difference is $$$$.
I’m now at a middle of the road school and I think this is my happy medium. Kids know the value of education (they aren’t going to inherit millions and be independently wealthy), but also don’t have to worry about not having money for bills, so they can focus on grades instead of stress about being evicted.
Most title 1 schools have terrible test scores and majority of students are chronically absent. It doesn’t matter how good the teaching is. It isn’t about the teaching, it is about the parenting going on at home. My kids go to a title 1 diverse school. The teaching if fine, though the standards are super low. We pretty much have to homeschool. Kids that have involved parents that put in time with them at home and value their education will do fine at any school. The common denominator of successful and smart students are parents that work with them at home and prioritise their enducatipn from an early age. While having money makes that easier to do this, it isn’t a must. My DH’s immigrant single mother who made minimum wage sent three kids to medical school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Which is a dog whistle for how white a school is?
Just what the world needs right now: another opportunity to reinforce division & hatred. Almost everybody I know who works in a diverse group has no trouble. But that doesn’t fit in with your expectations, so you have to generate friction.
Anonymous wrote:I have taught at both title 1 schools and wealthy schools. Far and away the better instruction was at the title 1 schools. It was out of necessity—if teaching wasn’t good, those kids would literally climb out the window and leave, or go to the bathroom and get high, or punch their neighbor to entertain themselves, or start stabbing things with scissors out of boredom. We had to have engaging lessons every single day to keep kids in class.
At the rich school? Teachers were pulling the same worksheets they’d used since 1991 out of a file cabinet, even though they no longer matched standards. They taught things the way they always taught and kids either got it, or parents paid $$$ to tutors so they got it. Staff bragged about their 100% pass rate on state tests when they could have done absolutely nothing and those kids would have passed.
Don’t get me wrong, there were some good teachers at the rich school too, as well as kids getting high in the bathrooms. And the poor school had a few dud teachers and plenty of kids who truly wanted to learn and did all they could to take advantage of opportunities.
All schools I’ve taught at have been very diverse—the difference is $$$$.
I’m now at a middle of the road school and I think this is my happy medium. Kids know the value of education (they aren’t going to inherit millions and be independently wealthy), but also don’t have to worry about not having money for bills, so they can focus on grades instead of stress about being evicted.