Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people think it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and to still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students in a school---on everyone in that school. So far many posters don't seem able to think to that level of subtlety.
The point is, public school systems have a responsibility to effectively educate (to the best of their ability) the "disadvantaged" students too, as well as everyone else. Yes, I think most people understand the impact of a high number of kids whose disadvantage is known because of behavioral or academic struggles. But now what? Posts like yours seem to somehow indicate that impact on other students somehow means disadvantaged students cannot be integrated for exactly that reason.
So what is supposed to happen to them? Speaking plainly, most of you just don't f'in care what happens to them, you just don't want them in your school with your kids. But for those tasked with actually educating all kids in the DC public school system, the fact that you don't care doesn't let anyone off the hook (nor should it) for the disadvantaged kids you are trying to keep in low % in your school.
So to answer your question PP, yes, it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students. So NOW WHAT? DC has high numbers of disadvantaged students. They need to have the best shot DCPS and PCSB can give them to educate them. That may mean long term plans to spread them out more across the district as students. Or, maybe there are other solutions. But "Don't you know what impact that will have on other students" all by itself is NOT an answer. Disadvantaged students and their educational needs don't just disappear because you feel their presence in much bigger numbers will bring your student down. What's your alternative proposal that still actually educates disadvantaged students?
Your post is going to get crickets, so let me just say +1 and THANK YOU.
Why on earth is it parents responsibility to come up with solutions to educating the poor and disadvantaged in DC. Let our well-informed, public officials with access to experts and consultants and law firms come up with some ideas and we can support.
Anonymous wrote:Is it possible that disadvantaged children can be successfully educated without a widespread plan for Socio-economic integration? I think many charter schools have answered that it IS possible.
If DC had the necessary demographics to create schools where disadvantaged students were the minority in every school I would be al for that kind of redistribution. But we don't have those numbers and we have a hard enough time as it is keeping middle class and educationally focused families in the system.
Posters insistence that people don't give a **** about the poor because they want to avoid high-poverty schools for their own kids is tiresome and non-sensical. Reserving a number of slots in non-poverty schools is fine. I am all for it. But given the numbers in DC it is a feel-good measure that will benefit a tiny number of students whose parents have it together enough to enter a lottery. The charter movement has done a much better job of offering alternatives to failing neighborhood schools and on a much larger scale.
Anonymous wrote:Might as well do it right:
George Wallace:
I say segregation now, segregation tomorrow, segregation forever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people think it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and to still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students in a school---on everyone in that school. So far many posters don't seem able to think to that level of subtlety.
The point is, public school systems have a responsibility to effectively educate (to the best of their ability) the "disadvantaged" students too, as well as everyone else. Yes, I think most people understand the impact of a high number of kids whose disadvantage is known because of behavioral or academic struggles. But now what? Posts like yours seem to somehow indicate that impact on other students somehow means disadvantaged students cannot be integrated for exactly that reason.
So what is supposed to happen to them? Speaking plainly, most of you just don't f'in care what happens to them, you just don't want them in your school with your kids. But for those tasked with actually educating all kids in the DC public school system, the fact that you don't care doesn't let anyone off the hook (nor should it) for the disadvantaged kids you are trying to keep in low % in your school.
So to answer your question PP, yes, it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students. So NOW WHAT? DC has high numbers of disadvantaged students. They need to have the best shot DCPS and PCSB can give them to educate them. That may mean long term plans to spread them out more across the district as students. Or, maybe there are other solutions. But "Don't you know what impact that will have on other students" all by itself is NOT an answer. Disadvantaged students and their educational needs don't just disappear because you feel their presence in much bigger numbers will bring your student down. What's your alternative proposal that still actually educates disadvantaged students?
Your post is going to get crickets, so let me just say +1 and THANK YOU.
Anonymous wrote:Is it possible that disadvantaged children can be successfully educated without a widespread plan for Socio-economic integration? I think many charter schools have answered that it IS possible.
If DC had the necessary demographics to create schools where disadvantaged students were the minority in every school I would be al for that kind of redistribution. But we don't have those numbers and we have a hard enough time as it is keeping middle class and educationally focused families in the system.
Posters insistence that people don't give a **** about the poor because they want to avoid high-poverty schools for their own kids is tiresome and non-sensical. Reserving a number of slots in non-poverty schools is fine. I am all for it. But given the numbers in DC it is a feel-good measure that will benefit a tiny number of students whose parents have it together enough to enter a lottery. The charter movement has done a much better job of offering alternatives to failing neighborhood schools and on a much larger scale.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do people think it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and to still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students in a school---on everyone in that school. So far many posters don't seem able to think to that level of subtlety.
The point is, public school systems have a responsibility to effectively educate (to the best of their ability) the "disadvantaged" students too, as well as everyone else. Yes, I think most people understand the impact of a high number of kids whose disadvantage is known because of behavioral or academic struggles. But now what? Posts like yours seem to somehow indicate that impact on other students somehow means disadvantaged students cannot be integrated for exactly that reason.
So what is supposed to happen to them? Speaking plainly, most of you just don't f'in care what happens to them, you just don't want them in your school with your kids. But for those tasked with actually educating all kids in the DC public school system, the fact that you don't care doesn't let anyone off the hook (nor should it) for the disadvantaged kids you are trying to keep in low % in your school.
So to answer your question PP, yes, it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students. So NOW WHAT? DC has high numbers of disadvantaged students. They need to have the best shot DCPS and PCSB can give them to educate them. That may mean long term plans to spread them out more across the district as students. Or, maybe there are other solutions. But "Don't you know what impact that will have on other students" all by itself is NOT an answer. Disadvantaged students and their educational needs don't just disappear because you feel their presence in much bigger numbers will bring your student down. What's your alternative proposal that still actually educates disadvantaged students?
Anonymous wrote:Do people think it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and to still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students in a school---on everyone in that school. So far many posters don't seem able to think to that level of subtlety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This post is interesting because it seems to have drawn anxious posts from parents in MoCo AND in DC. Both sets of parents seem to think the study applies to their situation. What say you, angry VA parents???
Why would I be angry? My snowflake DD attends a high FARMS, high minority population school. We just don't have the social dysfunction you find in the ghetto schools in DC. The immigrant kids populating our school all come from stable, if poor, families that want their kids to have a good education. I see it in the PTA meetings and I see it in the respect and discipline of the kids for their teachers and each other,
Powell? Are you one of the handful of white PS3 families who bought in Brightwood and chose Powell for the next 24 months, at most? Felicitaciones!
Anonymous wrote:Actually, you are making incorrect assumptions. I believe that what is best in the big picture for the disadvantaged children in DCPS is a robust, healthy and well-run school system. I believe a large part of creating that is having large numbers of middle and upper class families engaged in the school system. When I make an argument against a student assignment policy that is predicated solely on the redistribution of middle class families throughout the system, I do so not for the benefit of those middle class families or my own kids, but for the outcome such a hamfisted policy would have on the entire system which would end up with a worse outcome for the disadvantaged kids.
Just because people don't agree with the way you think things should be doesn't mean that their core motivations are different from yours. An open mind would help you enormously.
Anonymous wrote:Do people think it is possible to not be "anti-poor" and to still understand the impact of high numbers of disadvantaged students in a school---on everyone in that school. So far many posters don't seem able to think to that level of subtlety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This post is interesting because it seems to have drawn anxious posts from parents in MoCo AND in DC. Both sets of parents seem to think the study applies to their situation. What say you, angry VA parents???
Why would I be angry? My snowflake DD attends a high FARMS, high minority population school. We just don't have the social dysfunction you find in the ghetto schools in DC. The immigrant kids populating our school all come from stable, if poor, families that want their kids to have a good education. I see it in the PTA meetings and I see it in the respect and discipline of the kids for their teachers and each other,
Powell? Are you one of the handful of white PS3 families who bought in Brightwood and chose Powell for the next 24 months, at most? Felicitaciones!