Anonymous wrote:If you look at the schools like Water Johnson, Richard Montgomary, or Qince Orchard, the Bl/Hisp dont do well as their wh/as counter parts Almost in every school, except ivy leagues, the gap persist. Integration or segragation.
I have met a few very bright bl students and they are all highly desired by the best colleges and professional schools, better than the Asian kids.
Many of the bl high achievers are immegrants from africa!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem is how American schools want to "close the achievement gap".
They never think they should increase the length of the school year, or increase the hours in the school day or make underachieving students (of all races) get intensive tutoring or mentoring. No. Their solution is to create a quota system and have different criteria of selection for different groups, or dumb down the curriculum or make the reporting of grades so general as to be useless.
You know what's been proven to close the achievement gap? Integrated schools.
https://www.propublica.org/article/segregation-now-full-text
Nothing has closed the achievement gap. There are a few things that slightly narrow the achievement gap in some places on a small scale and they often aren't reproducible. I think it's amusing that people in MoCo think that the schools here will be able to do something about the gap when hundreds of billions have been spent all over the country to no avail. These gaps are mirrored everywhere in the world.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem is how American schools want to "close the achievement gap".
They never think they should increase the length of the school year, or increase the hours in the school day or make underachieving students (of all races) get intensive tutoring or mentoring. No. Their solution is to create a quota system and have different criteria of selection for different groups, or dumb down the curriculum or make the reporting of grades so general as to be useless.
You know what's been proven to close the achievement gap? Integrated schools.
https://www.propublica.org/article/segregation-now-full-text
Anonymous wrote:The problem is how American schools want to "close the achievement gap".
They never think they should increase the length of the school year, or increase the hours in the school day or make underachieving students (of all races) get intensive tutoring or mentoring. No. Their solution is to create a quota system and have different criteria of selection for different groups, or dumb down the curriculum or make the reporting of grades so general as to be useless.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Washington Post acts like magnet acceptance is some kind of "perk".
The purpose of the magnet programs is to serve those students whose needs would not be met by the standard curriculum.
Is there any study or data indicating that the magnet programs have excluded students who are now in regular curricula and frustrated that their schoolwork is too easy?
And does that set of wrongly excluded students disproportionately include some particular demographic? Where's that data?
Collect that data, then we can discuss whether the magnet acceptance procedures are flawed.
Well when you identify a whole slew of kids as gifted in 2nd grade many who are at the top of their class and the majority don't make it to the magnet its understandable that many feel like they are getting slighted and that they would be better served in a more challenging environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The problem is how American schools want to "close the achievement gap".
They never think they should increase the length of the school year, or increase the hours in the school day or make underachieving students (of all races) get intensive tutoring or mentoring. No. Their solution is to create a quota system and have different criteria of selection for different groups, or dumb down the curriculum or make the reporting of grades so general as to be useless.
Kids in the US are already in school for more hours per year than kids in a lot of other countries.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is not about HOW they want to close the achievement gap. The problem is that closing the achievement gap is not an appropriate goal.
I will gladly pay twice what I now pay in MC taxes to IMPROVE THE EDUCATION of kids on the lower side of the achievement gap. However, I would then be forced (also gladly) to pay 4X more than the new figure (my back of the envelop calculations suggest that is the rest of what I earn) to private schools/tutors or to where ever I have to to make sure that my children get a top 10% education and therefore that the achievement gap NEVER closes.
Anonymous wrote:The problem is how American schools want to "close the achievement gap".
They never think they should increase the length of the school year, or increase the hours in the school day or make underachieving students (of all races) get intensive tutoring or mentoring. No. Their solution is to create a quota system and have different criteria of selection for different groups, or dumb down the curriculum or make the reporting of grades so general as to be useless.
Anonymous wrote:I have not heard my kid, who did not get into the middle-school magnet and feels generally academically unchallenged at school, express a desire for harder tests and more homework.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The Washington Post acts like magnet acceptance is some kind of "perk".
The purpose of the magnet programs is to serve those students whose needs would not be met by the standard curriculum.
Is there any study or data indicating that the magnet programs have excluded students who are now in regular curricula and frustrated that their schoolwork is too easy?
And does that set of wrongly excluded students disproportionately include some particular demographic? Where's that data?
Collect that data, then we can discuss whether the magnet acceptance procedures are flawed.
Well when you identify a whole slew of kids as gifted in 2nd grade many who are at the top of their class and the majority don't make it to the magnet its understandable that many feel like they are getting slighted and that they would be better served in a more challenging environment.