Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
Many immigrants do not do better, those that leave and risk a lot to come here often do, there is a difference. Second generation and third generation youth of immigrants do not fare as well because they do not have the same reason for leaving. Newly arrived immigrants know that their parents risked a lot to bring them to the USA and value education, after they've been in the US a while the affect has worn off!!!
I am sorry if your culture values talking and talking while ignoring all available data, but may I ask, what research can you cite that supports that "Second generation and third generation youth of immigrants do not fare as well"?
Yet, people everywhere seem able to improve generation after generation...except, for some reason, AAs?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
We now have entire generations that have grown up without being under policies of segregation and Jim Crow laws. The policy issues are gone. Now what remain are the cultural issues.
Well now this is the problem. To many people assume time passing changes the effects without outside forces of some kind intervening. If you like to state it differently, the "culture" developed under Jim Crow and Slavery is what we are dealing with.
To the other poster comparing blacks affected by Jim Crow to immigrants - That is mixing situations. A key effect of the racist past in America is that many blacks learned that the normal relationship between working hard and benefiting did not apply to them. Most immigrants come to the US expecting that here they will find a relationship between hard work and positive benefits. If I come here as a refugee suffering brutality and death of relatives I have come from a situation harder than some poor blacks (ignoring the violence in many inner city communities). However, that hard situation doesn't strip my cultural expectations. Which I believe is the case for many poorer blacks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
Many immigrants do not do better, those that leave and risk a lot to come here often do, there is a difference. Second generation and third generation youth of immigrants do not fare as well because they do not have the same reason for leaving. Newly arrived immigrants know that their parents risked a lot to bring them to the USA and value education, after they've been in the US a while the affect has worn off!!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
We now have entire generations that have grown up without being under policies of segregation and Jim Crow laws. The policy issues are gone. Now what remain are the cultural issues.
Well now this is the problem. To many people assume time passing changes the effects without outside forces of some kind intervening. If you like to state it differently, the "culture" developed under Jim Crow and Slavery is what we are dealing with.
To the other poster comparing blacks affected by Jim Crow to immigrants - That is mixing situations. A key effect of the racist past in America is that many blacks learned that the normal relationship between working hard and benefiting did not apply to them. Most immigrants come to the US expecting that here they will find a relationship between hard work and positive benefits. If I come here as a refugee suffering brutality and death of relatives I have come from a situation harder than some poor blacks (ignoring the violence in many inner city communities). However, that hard situation doesn't strip my cultural expectations. Which I believe is the case for many poorer blacks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:47 - G&T programs aren't about "coddling" students - in fact, it's about accelerating them and challenging them with harder material.
But if you are so opposed to "coddling" students, then consider this: Isn't it "coddling" the less-proficient students to have them coast along, be assigned student tutors, and so on - when their peers are having to work harder than they do?
How is the less proficient student working less hard? If two students, one that excels in math and the other that doesn't, are given the same worksheet, student A breezes through it without much effort and the student B spends more time and has more difficulty with the sheet, did student A work harder than student B? Are they coasting along? Now student A explains the problem to student B, student B re works the problem, student A cemented the knowledge in his brain.
I always signed up for tutoring students or working as a TA in med school. You know why? Teaching the concepts I learned to other students always cemented the knowledge into my brain.
Oh, for crying out loud. Snap out of the land of rosy-colored glasses already. This is not med school. This is DCPS. DCPS does social promotion. You get a passing grade even if you don't do the worksheet at all. You get a passing grade just for showing up. There is no such thing as failure, unless you really try at failing. There are no consequences and zero accountability. Passing and graduation can be taken for granted. Given all that, there's no need for many of these students to even try. So, yes, absolutely they are coasting along. That is a situation that does not exist in Finland or most other parts of the world - and certainly not in med school.
+1. And, as someone who works in brain science, let me suggest to previous PP he learns a bit more about neuroplasticity and cognition before becoming self-deluded by empty statements such as "X cemented the knowledge in his brain."
To the other poster comparing blacks affected by Jim Crow to immigrants - That is mixing situations. A key effect of the racist past in America is that many blacks learned that the normal relationship between working hard and benefiting did not apply to them. Most immigrants come to the US expecting that here they will find a relationship between hard work and positive benefits. If I come here as a refugee suffering brutality and death of relatives I have come from a situation harder than some poor blacks (ignoring the violence in many inner city communities). However, that hard situation doesn't strip my cultural expectations. Which I believe is the case for many poorer blacks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
We now have entire generations that have grown up without being under policies of segregation and Jim Crow laws. The policy issues are gone. Now what remain are the cultural issues.
Well now this is the problem. To many people assume time passing changes the effects without outside forces of some kind intervening. If you like to state it differently, the "culture" developed under Jim Crow and Slavery is what we are dealing with.
To the other poster comparing blacks affected by Jim Crow to immigrants - That is mixing situations. A key effect of the racist past in America is that many blacks learned that the normal relationship between working hard and benefiting did not apply to them. Most immigrants come to the US expecting that here they will find a relationship between hard work and positive benefits. If I come here as a refugee suffering brutality and death of relatives I have come from a situation harder than some poor blacks (ignoring the violence in many inner city communities). However, that hard situation doesn't strip my cultural expectations. Which I believe is the case for many poorer blacks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
We now have entire generations that have grown up without being under policies of segregation and Jim Crow laws. The policy issues are gone. Now what remain are the cultural issues.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Unless you can point to studies that show educational attainment to be largely genetic, most of this is bull. As evidenced by the fact that many immigrants come from much worse circumstances yet they make significant progress in one or two generations.
Anonymous wrote:I'll add a reminder of what slavery and recent discrimination laws did to the education system.
My mom, an AA teacher, went to a segregated HIGH school where she had to use outdated books from the white MIDDLE school. She was not prepared in the least for college, started behind and had to work very hard to catch up (which she regrets she wasn't able to do).
All of my 6 aunts were also teachers (the only professional career for most AAs at the time).
They all talk about how terrible their education was, but at least they had a chance (even though they were behind).
However, there were plenty of folks caught up in the Jim Crow laws and other horrible policies to ensure AAs were not able to get a good education. This was fairly recent folks.
The children today are descendants of many of these folks.
Yes... poverty, a culture of "getting by," consumerism, etc. all came from a time when politicians worked hard to prevent AAs from getting a good educations.
Let's face it, the policies put in place to correct the effects of this have not worked.
Finland and other countries are not dealing with these deep rooted psychological issues.
In DC in particular, you have lots of social problems that were engineered as such. They need to be addressed before we're able to move forward.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:12:47 - G&T programs aren't about "coddling" students - in fact, it's about accelerating them and challenging them with harder material.
But if you are so opposed to "coddling" students, then consider this: Isn't it "coddling" the less-proficient students to have them coast along, be assigned student tutors, and so on - when their peers are having to work harder than they do?
How is the less proficient student working less hard? If two students, one that excels in math and the other that doesn't, are given the same worksheet, student A breezes through it without much effort and the student B spends more time and has more difficulty with the sheet, did student A work harder than student B? Are they coasting along? Now student A explains the problem to student B, student B re works the problem, student A cemented the knowledge in his brain.
I always signed up for tutoring students or working as a TA in med school. You know why? Teaching the concepts I learned to other students always cemented the knowledge into my brain.
Oh, for crying out loud. Snap out of the land of rosy-colored glasses already. This is not med school. This is DCPS. DCPS does social promotion. You get a passing grade even if you don't do the worksheet at all. You get a passing grade just for showing up. There is no such thing as failure, unless you really try at failing. There are no consequences and zero accountability. Passing and graduation can be taken for granted. Given all that, there's no need for many of these students to even try. So, yes, absolutely they are coasting along. That is a situation that does not exist in Finland or most other parts of the world - and certainly not in med school.
Anonymous wrote:Swede here. It is crazy and reflective of the myth that europe is race blind, but swedes consider themselves to be virtually a different race than finns.