Anonymous wrote:Private schools catering to the rich is against everything they supposedly stand for. Old money is seeing this (hence private alums going public with their kids).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids from low income low education level families would be better off in separate schools, where they would have their needs met (lots of basic enrichment, year round schooling, enough time for learning the basics in reading and math, free meals, outside time, character building).
Kids from UMC and MC home would be better off in more experiential schools with less time for direct instruction and more time for more advanced (possibly few based) enrichment and less strict attendance policies.
This is the way it is now. It works well for the UMC kids so that's all that matters, right?[/quote
You are referring to school pyramids that have only rich people?
Those are pretty rare. But yes there are a good amount of schools with only poor people.
But for everyone else, it's everyone all mixed together.
Well, which one is it?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Kids from low income low education level families would be better off in separate schools, where they would have their needs met (lots of basic enrichment, year round schooling, enough time for learning the basics in reading and math, free meals, outside time, character building).
Kids from UMC and MC home would be better off in more experiential schools with less time for direct instruction and more time for more advanced (possibly few based) enrichment and less strict attendance policies.
This is the way it is now. It works well for the UMC kids so that's all that matters, right?[/quote
You are referring to school pyramids that have only rich people?
Those are pretty rare. But yes there are a good amount of schools with only poor people.
But for everyone else, it's everyone all mixed together.
Anonymous wrote:Kids from low income low education level families would be better off in separate schools, where they would have their needs met (lots of basic enrichment, year round schooling, enough time for learning the basics in reading and math, free meals, outside time, character building).
Kids from UMC and MC home would be better off in more experiential schools with less time for direct instruction and more time for more advanced (possibly few based) enrichment and less strict attendance policies.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. It had much more challenging STEM and smarter, more driven kids.
Class size wasn't smaller, I'll give you that.
We don't believe that STEM is the be all and end all or that elementary school children should be "driven" or that there are children (or people) who are not smart.
That is the exact attitude that I am glad to be away from.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No. It had much more challenging STEM and smarter, more driven kids.
Class size wasn't smaller, I'll give you that.
We don't believe that STEM is the be all and end all or that elementary school children should be "driven" or that there are children (or people) who are not smart.
That is the exact attitude that I am glad to be away from.
Anonymous wrote:No. It had much more challenging STEM and smarter, more driven kids.
Class size wasn't smaller, I'll give you that.