Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in New York and benefited from some of these programs as a white child of a very poor immigrant family. I was a minority at the school I attended back in the day.
Anecdotally, my friends who have the means to do so are leaving NYC. We all want the best education for our kids, and NYC is just not it any more. As someone up thread said - it's the non-wealthy motivated parents who lose, because they can't afford private school and will now lack access to G&T. Yay NYC.
The fact that they could expect access to something designed for a small portion of kids with innate abilities is a great demonstration of how flawed the system was.
Exactly.
Given that NYers say that the G&T program is just to "keep white people in the city" (they do say that BTW) then you know it's fcked up.
Anonymous wrote:I imagine that Mayor-to-Be Adams will modify this in some form. But Mayor Bill de Blasio will no doubt be elected governor, thus enabling him to work towards implanting his sometimes brilliant and sometimes meh policy goals on a state level. It’s a great time to be a New Yorker!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in New York and benefited from some of these programs as a white child of a very poor immigrant family. I was a minority at the school I attended back in the day.
Anecdotally, my friends who have the means to do so are leaving NYC. We all want the best education for our kids, and NYC is just not it any more. As someone up thread said - it's the non-wealthy motivated parents who lose, because they can't afford private school and will now lack access to G&T. Yay NYC.
The fact that they could expect access to something designed for a small portion of kids with innate abilities is a great demonstration of how flawed the system was.
Anonymous wrote:wow there is a lot of just straight up classic racism in this thread. incredible.
Anonymous wrote:wow there is a lot of just straight up classic racism in this thread. incredible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The war on things Asians like escalates.
tell me about it- the tax system already mines asians while leaving wealthy whites untouched, now they want take away a route to a better education b/c "equity"![]()
And yes a tax system that relies primarily on 150k to 1M W-2 salary earners to fund the government is racist towards asians b/c Asians make up a disproportionate percentage of that population.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in New York and benefited from some of these programs as a white child of a very poor immigrant family. I was a minority at the school I attended back in the day.
Anecdotally, my friends who have the means to do so are leaving NYC. We all want the best education for our kids, and NYC is just not it any more. As someone up thread said - it's the non-wealthy motivated parents who lose, because they can't afford private school and will now lack access to G&T. Yay NYC.
The fact that they could expect access to something designed for a small portion of kids with innate abilities is a great demonstration of how flawed the system was.
well, a lot of parents with innate ability are exactly the type to want to live in NYC without money for private schools - academics, artists, legal aid types … that’s the slice of families NYC may lose.
Anonymous wrote:Public school parents once again rudely awakened by political reality.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up in New York and benefited from some of these programs as a white child of a very poor immigrant family. I was a minority at the school I attended back in the day.
Anecdotally, my friends who have the means to do so are leaving NYC. We all want the best education for our kids, and NYC is just not it any more. As someone up thread said - it's the non-wealthy motivated parents who lose, because they can't afford private school and will now lack access to G&T. Yay NYC.
The fact that they could expect access to something designed for a small portion of kids with innate abilities is a great demonstration of how flawed the system was.