Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.
There is actual data on this. Years and decades of it. Income is the number one predictor of childhood health and academic outcomes.
(Relatively) poor kids of academics and high level feds/foreign service/military do just fine too. It’s not only income.
Income correlates in that students in poverty (not “relatively poor kids of high level feds etc” have poorer academic outcomes. If you equate the two you’ve never stood in a school that is predominantly free lunch.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.
There is actual data on this. Years and decades of it. Income is the number one predictor of childhood health and academic outcomes.
(Relatively) poor kids of academics and high level feds/foreign service/military do just fine too. It’s not only income.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.
Low income kids do well when they are in a good well run school. Best example of this is ATS elementary school in Arlington.
Maybe that is the case in elementary. By the time they get to high school, it is a different story. Attendance starts to decline because they have to take care of younger siblings or work to help support the family. If students aren't in school, they can't learn. Parents are busy with 2-3 jobs and cannot support homework. After school jobs take the place of homework. It's about survival. Grades are no longer a priority.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.
There is actual data on this. Years and decades of it. Income is the number one predictor of childhood health and academic outcomes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.
Anonymous wrote:We have been here 5 years now and I wanted to summarize my thoughts for those who may also consider moving from a major metropolitan city to this area. For the urban mindset, maybe FCPS offers a better alternative? I haven’t experienced it so others can chime in.
I find this school district LCPS to be insular and unsophisticated, offering an uninspired and mechanistic education that teaches a very narrow world view with little exposure to broader intellectual currents. Certainly, global critical thinkers are not developed here. Yet paradoxically, there is also this very strange and performative progressive social posturing that feels vapid and dogmatic. It doesn’t seem to be driven by authentic core values, nor is it centered around student learning and development. It’s like an insulated small-town culture wrapped in some kind of robotic ideological shroud or script - devoid of substance. All in all, it’s really the worst of both worlds here. Provincial in perspective and performative in culture and inclusion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Okay but what about the academics? That mostly seems to be missing from your post.
OP said “offering an uninspired and mechanistic education that teaches a very narrow world view with little exposure to broader intellectual currents. Certainly, global critical thinkers are not developed here.”
Yeah, but most of K-12 is not about developing a world view or being exposed to broader intellectual currents. And I don’t need the schools to turn my kids into global critical thinkers; I can do that. I need math, science, ELA.
And therein lies the deep cultural chasm. I could not disagree more with every aspect of your statement.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP put your kid in private school.
Moms4liberty religious private would be better for you and your family.
We see the racist, garbage you are.
That’s funny since I’m a person of color talking about the performative progressive posturing that lacks substance, and an education that lacks intellectual rigor or sophistication. Close-minded, small-minded, not at all inclusive, and unable to engage in complex and nuanced conversation. Thank you, NP for so effectively illustrating my point.
Anonymous wrote:We have been here 5 years now and I wanted to summarize my thoughts for those who may also consider moving from a major metropolitan city to this area. For the urban mindset, maybe FCPS offers a better alternative? I haven’t experienced it so others can chime in.
I find this school district LCPS to be insular and unsophisticated, offering an uninspired and mechanistic education that teaches a very narrow world view with little exposure to broader intellectual currents. Certainly, global critical thinkers are not developed here. Yet paradoxically, there is also this very strange and performative progressive social posturing that feels vapid and dogmatic. It doesn’t seem to be driven by authentic core values, nor is it centered around student learning and development. It’s like an insulated small-town culture wrapped in some kind of robotic ideological shroud or script - devoid of substance. All in all, it’s really the worst of both worlds here. Provincial in perspective and performative in culture and inclusion.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP put your kid in private school.
Moms4liberty religious private would be better for you and your family.
We see the racist, garbage you are.
That’s funny since I’m a person of color talking about the performative progressive posturing that lacks substance, and an education that lacks intellectual rigor or sophistication. Close-minded, small-minded, not at all inclusive, and unable to engage in complex and nuanced conversation. Thank you, NP for so effectively illustrating my point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.
Low income kids do well when they are in a good well run school. Best example of this is ATS elementary school in Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of posters in this thread come off Agent Smith. Passionately defending a system that isn’t genuinely concerned with their child’s wellbeing as much as their own paychecks lol
Notwithstanding most likely because of how little they actually invest with their own flesh and blood and are hoping that “teachers” and “admin” pick up the slack from home. Pathetic to say the least and albeit one of the most obvious reasons this country as a whole and its education system in particular is a laughing stock.
Huh??
It’s bizarre to see a bunch of anonymous folks defending LCPS because they’re rich. LCPS isn’t all of that. $25K per student/year is crazy for the continued drops in testing scores. Your kid is another number in a 25-30 class roster. You’re not getting top-notch education only because that’s what you want to believe. Been In lcps almost 15 years. Leaving this June and can’t wait.
I don’t think it’s “top notch” but my kids all did well on AP’s and SATs so they must have learned something.
Lmao your bar is low. And you sound like an average American parent “must’ve learned something” my god
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Yes. Income is the number one determiner of all life outcomes for all children , in all areas. Children with wealthy parents being more successful than children of lower income parents is not unique to LCPS . The many disadvantages that students of lower incomes face cannot single handedly addressed or fixed by LCPS. Admin is a mixed bag everywhere with some being excellent and some being paper pushers the county is hiding. None of this is special or unique to LCPS nor does it back up any of the OP’s silly little claims.
BS. It's not income, it's the IQ of the parents, which manifests in their income. Smart parents tend to both have smart kids, and dumb parents tend to both have dumb kids. These differences are accentuated, but not caused by, differences in income. Which is why all efforts to "fix" bad outcomes among lower-income kids fails spectacularly no matter how much money is thrown at them.
Need evidence? Look at what happens to the (almost exclusively) low-income people who have won the lottery.