Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds great. Part of the firm belief in equity — not just equality of opportunity — that so many in Arlington have.
That ... isn't what equity means.
Sure it is. Equity in this context means trying to get equal funding. Getting people at the same starting point. Is it easy? Heck no. The privileged rich white kids from the great white north have unequal advantages.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sounds great. Part of the firm belief in equity — not just equality of opportunity — that so many in Arlington have.
That ... isn't what equity means.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Title I schools get hundreds of thousands of dollars extra sometimes close to a million to fund things for the schools.
To fund teachers
Not whatever they want
The cost per pupil at many low performing Arlington schools are way higher than the cost per pupil in other Arlington schools. No kid in Arlington ever missed any field trip because he/she can't afford it, no school has a limited supply of pencils, please stop making up fake stories.
My home country has lots of schools with no field trip at all, not enough pencils, leaking roof in classrooms, kids with no shes, maybe those earth-loving Arlington crazy parents can donate some money to those schools instead, why limit equity to Arlington county? There are REAL poor people out there whose schools can't even afford chalks and chalk boards.
Happy to donate. Is someone organizing donations? Link?
God bless you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Title I schools get hundreds of thousands of dollars extra sometimes close to a million to fund things for the schools.
To fund teachers
Not whatever they want
The cost per pupil at many low performing Arlington schools are way higher than the cost per pupil in other Arlington schools. No kid in Arlington ever missed any field trip because he/she can't afford it, no school has a limited supply of pencils, please stop making up fake stories.
My home country has lots of schools with no field trip at all, not enough pencils, leaking roof in classrooms, kids with no shes, maybe those earth-loving Arlington crazy parents can donate some money to those schools instead, why limit equity to Arlington county? There are REAL poor people out there whose schools can't even afford chalks and chalk boards.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find this concerning:
Some PTA leaders tell ARLnow that they know the money their organizations raise can exacerbate existing inequities among Arlington’s schools, and are trying to raise awareness and effect change.
“We already have schools that are unequal and on top of that — like really thick icing on a cake — it’s making disparities bigger,” said Emily Vincent, a member of the Arlington County Council of PTAs.
So Emily Vincent asserts that Arlington schools are unequal. I don't see any supporting APS budget numbers to support that but isn't that the bigger issue to address? Is Arlington spending more per pupil at some schools and less at others?
That's a pretty awful thing to assert and pretty lazy of the reporter not to find out more.
Shouldn't there be lawsuits? Why isn't Arlington County Council of PTAs suing APS on behalf of these kids that APS isn't funding in the same way as at the other schools?
All the kids in some schools can afford the field trip to Jamestown in fourth grade during Virginia Studies. Lots of kids can’t manage the cost of the bus at some other schools, so they have to fundraiser to make sure all the kids can go. See the inequity?
Can they be allocated more money for field trips?
By whom? APS doesn’t allocate money for out of town field trips. That’s the point. Some schools can raise the money for kids to have these experiences, and some can’t. Some PTAs can raise a lot of money for “teacher appreciation” and some can’t, and even teachers have an opportunity to transfer within APS guess what happens? For a while, some schools had PTA funded smart boards and others didn’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Title I schools get hundreds of thousands of dollars extra sometimes close to a million to fund things for the schools.
To fund teachers
Not whatever they want
The cost per pupil at many low performing Arlington schools are way higher than the cost per pupil in other Arlington schools. No kid in Arlington ever missed any field trip because he/she can't afford it, no school has a limited supply of pencils, please stop making up fake stories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Title I schools get hundreds of thousands of dollars extra sometimes close to a million to fund things for the schools.
To fund teachers
Not whatever they want
The cost per pupil at many low performing Arlington schools are way higher than the cost per pupil in other Arlington schools. No kid in Arlington ever missed any field trip because he/she can't afford it, no school has a limited supply of pencils, please stop making up fake stories.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Title I schools get hundreds of thousands of dollars extra sometimes close to a million to fund things for the schools.
To fund teachers
Not whatever they want
Anonymous wrote:Sounds great. Part of the firm belief in equity — not just equality of opportunity — that so many in Arlington have.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find this concerning:
Some PTA leaders tell ARLnow that they know the money their organizations raise can exacerbate existing inequities among Arlington’s schools, and are trying to raise awareness and effect change.
“We already have schools that are unequal and on top of that — like really thick icing on a cake — it’s making disparities bigger,” said Emily Vincent, a member of the Arlington County Council of PTAs.
So Emily Vincent asserts that Arlington schools are unequal. I don't see any supporting APS budget numbers to support that but isn't that the bigger issue to address? Is Arlington spending more per pupil at some schools and less at others?
That's a pretty awful thing to assert and pretty lazy of the reporter not to find out more.
Shouldn't there be lawsuits? Why isn't Arlington County Council of PTAs suing APS on behalf of these kids that APS isn't funding in the same way as at the other schools?
All the kids in some schools can afford the field trip to Jamestown in fourth grade during Virginia Studies. Lots of kids can’t manage the cost of the bus at some other schools, so they have to fundraiser to make sure all the kids can go. See the inequity?
Can they be allocated more money for field trips?
Anonymous wrote:Title I schools get hundreds of thousands of dollars extra sometimes close to a million to fund things for the schools.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I find this concerning:
Some PTA leaders tell ARLnow that they know the money their organizations raise can exacerbate existing inequities among Arlington’s schools, and are trying to raise awareness and effect change.
“We already have schools that are unequal and on top of that — like really thick icing on a cake — it’s making disparities bigger,” said Emily Vincent, a member of the Arlington County Council of PTAs.
So Emily Vincent asserts that Arlington schools are unequal. I don't see any supporting APS budget numbers to support that but isn't that the bigger issue to address? Is Arlington spending more per pupil at some schools and less at others?
That's a pretty awful thing to assert and pretty lazy of the reporter not to find out more.
Shouldn't there be lawsuits? Why isn't Arlington County Council of PTAs suing APS on behalf of these kids that APS isn't funding in the same way as at the other schools?
All the kids in some schools can afford the field trip to Jamestown in fourth grade during Virginia Studies. Lots of kids can’t manage the cost of the bus at some other schools, so they have to fundraiser to make sure all the kids can go. See the inequity?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nah, won’t happen. People can donate to any school. There’s nothing stopping anyone from writing a check to Randolph or Carlin Springs. If people really cared they would already be doing it.
Equity isn't about voluntary action. It's about forcing people to do what progressives.