Knuckles Red
<3<3<3
Cool...when are we going to talk about how much Asian students cheat?
You are oversimplifying to blame parents.It continues to perplex me that you think fukking gifted and talented programs are getting in the way of changing our asanine culture values.
Not the neglect and incompetent parents and broken families, not the street culture we valorize, not the ignorant music we listen to religiously, not the shifting of responsibility to "society", not all the coddling you so called progressives do for the neglect and incompetent parents, no, none of that is getting in the way.
It's those goddamn honors classes.
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One of the excuses educators have long offered to explain America's poor reading performance is poverty. There is plenty of poverty in Bethlehem, a small city in eastern Pennsylvania that was once a booming steel town. But there are fancy homes here, too, and when Silva examined the reading scores he saw that many kids at the wealthier schools weren't reading very well either. This was not just poverty. In fact, by some estimates, one-third of America's struggling readers are from college-educated families.
I’m not saying shytty parents don’t make the work harder. But ultimately, you could have even the most gifted child in your classroom and if you are teaching them to memorize sight words instead of building phonemic awareness…lol…yo baby ain’t gon read.This dude @Rhakim writing dissertations on why we gotta dumb education down so dumb/uninterested kids can keep up with the high achievers. fukking goofy as hell.
Calling African immigrant kids who do well and labeling them 'model minorities' to insult the fact our kids care about education. Man stfu. Plenty of black American kids do well because they have solid families. Are they model minorities too?
Why don't you look for solutions why these other kids are uninterested in school so they can get into honors and AP classes? Instead of removing these classes that provide the environment for kids who are highly motivated.
1. It is not false. The students in the school as far as demographics go match that of the public schools by major metrics
The charters have to use a lottery system because they don't have the buildings or space required to take on every child in the community or the cash which you keep ignoring.
The point is that as a whole the charter school children of NYC are vastly outperforming the public school children of NYC especially in the same neighborhoods in which they operate
3. They can't implement these things because of politicians, unions, and ideological wars.
One thing schools like Success do is ax incompetent teachers, these same teachers could potentially cost six figures in litigation to fire from the public school system. Good luck implementing as you say a standard in teaching when shyt like that is the norm.
I'm a firm believer in data > anecdote.
Also, my anecdote would support @Rhakim's stance. I did not attend high school in the US. Where I attended high school, I would say the rigor was higher (especially in science subjects). There was no tracking of gifted students but it didn't prevent talented students from going on to excel in university. And the less knowledgeable kids were uplifted by being in contact with gifted students who could break down hard subjects. The knuckleheads didn't bother no one else and eventually had to repeat classes or they got expelled.
I don't necessarily disagree with the arguments in favor of banning gifted tracks. I also abhor the idea of charter schools being funded with public money, siphoning resources from desperate public schools.
That said, the strategy of the CA public school system is backwards and will do more harm than good in the short to medium run.
Look, parents are selfish. It's easy to talk that talk until your child has to enter that system and you start looking up district test scores or how many students graduated to Ivy league... And parents want their children to be placed in challenging programs that will put them ahead of the curve. Some of this is unhealthy, i know. But it's just the reality of things.
Gifted tracks in public schools give parents some level of assurance that even in a public school, their smart kids are not learning at the "average" rate. That they are being kept engaged relative to their demonstrated ability. And aren't being distracted by "knuckleheads" who "would most likely impact them negatively" (that rarely happens but people have an irrational fear about this)
What happens when you remove these gifted tracks?
shyt, why do I enroll my child in a public school then? Let me find a charter school where "standards are higher" (in reality, the population is the upper quartile of the area population). The result is counterproductive to policy.
Why not aim at raising standards of education across the board first? Eliminate standardized testing evaluations. Put more money into teaching talent and training those teachers well. And in that training, include the ability to identify gifted students within a classroom, and keep them engaged both in learning and interaction with other students who may be less talented, without having to yank them from that environment.
Once you do that, THEN and only then, eliminate gifted tracks. At least give the parents the assurance their kids will be all right in public school. Oh yeah, ban charters that self select too
Anecdote: i loved calculus in high school (it was like a neurosis for me). We had a "Further Mathematics" class for those who were planning to study Engineering in University. We also had to take a basic "Mathematics" class that everyone took. I would have been livid if they banned the advanced class on the basis of equity without providing a means for those of us interested to learn math at that level within the basic class. But the advantage of both classes being held was that in the Math class, i could help fellow students who were struggling, as the material was so easy for me. And I still had the advanced class to keep me engaged.
I agree with the theory, don't agree with the approach.
I agree with everything you're saying. The problem is that most of the solutions you offer are difficult to enact at the school level. The standardized testing is all federal or state requirements that they have to obey, the funding for teachers is out of their hands. They're trying to do the things which are within their power.
Interesting thing about the Finnish system that I didn't mention - private schools are banned. You cannot charge a child for their education. Charter schools are okay and are fully funded by the government, but ONLY if your school is open to every student in your area and ONLY if you offer the national minimum requirements for curriculum. Since the regular public schools work so well, charter schools are thus rare and mostly are a few religious schools which want to offer their own religious electives in addition to the standard fare.

Yeah that makes sense. Got me considering a move to Finland
I'd say that given the constraints on schools in terms of budget (basing school district budgets on tax base is disgusting) available teacher talent and national/state standards, removing gifted tracks is kind of like rearranging chairs on the Titanic deck. Unless there is some belief that this will work in the long run, supported by data...
This is one of the hardest things about being a black parent you want your kid to get a quality education but you don't want them to be the only black kid in the class. That's why when you go house hopping or apartment hunting you have to look at the schools the diversity and the academics as well.
www.forbes.com
The whole damn system is wrong.
I can't even begin to tackle this subject, because I think the folks arguing pro-honors and anti-honors really think our system of schooling is good at all.
Lemme just say this. For what schools are "supposed to do" - take dumb kids and put them into elite universities
American schools don't even work for rich white people.
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Hollywood Celebrities Charged In Major College Admissions Scandal
This is the largest college admissions scandal ever prosecuted in U.S. history.www.forbes.com
Little Bethany is surrounded by rich white peers in lily white rich suburbs with all the access to tutors and other forms of educational supplementation. In tact, 2 parent family, lights on at home, safe neighborhoods, food on the table, clothes on their back, no disruptive kids, on and on and on - and the parents still gotta pony up a few milli to put their dumb ass kids in schools. Knowing full well, little Jamie Lee Curtis is just gonna coast into the entertainment business based on family connections.
As Black people, focused on Black Children, Black Boys in particular - we need to rethink what we want from these schools, from education.
Is the real goal for lil Malik to be nice with differential equations by the time he's a Senior? Is that what we're really trying to do?
Keisha got a great grasp on Hobbes and Locke, now she can start thinking more deeply about Middle Eastern politics? Is that the goal?
Are we just trying to be better fitting cogs for White America?
And let's be clear, creating millions of Malcolm's and Fannie Lou Hamer's (or Baracks and Michelle's) is also not a good answer either.
What vision do we have for Black America (or Blacks in America working with other people)?
Our schools, and our approach to "they schools" (c) dead prez - needs to take into account our long term goals. Goals that a lot of people in this debate have not contemplated, much less agreed on.
Honors classes or not, Black kids that go to elite schools do better lifetime/career wise than their black peers that didn't. I'll google for the studies if that's important.
But we know from other studies, that Black students do not not nearly as well as their white peers with those same elite degrees.
Is this the world you guys are fighting about?
I agree with everything you said there, and trust me it's a subject i think about a lot. One of my shortcomings in discussions is that i tend to focus quite narrowly on the issue at hand and don't always address the bigger picture.
I know very well what I'm talking about.I can't argue with someone who knows nothing about the subject and refuses to educate themselves. Go to ANY educational theorist, any research professor, heck even try a science professor in any field. Ask them, "Is it a valuable comparison to do a study where one group selects themselves for an intervention and the other is in their category just by default?" Your listing of the "major metrics" is irrelevant if one group is self-selected, because the self-selected group is going to differ from the default group in significant ways regardless of the metics.
There's no reason to engage with you further on the topic if you refuse to accept that. It's like arguing with someone why data matters more than anecdotes, if we can't agree on that much then it's a non-starter.
Let's try an analogy with a different subject.
Imagine there was a city-wide NYC basketball tournament. Not just for basketball players, but ALL students have to participate. Every coach is required to only use the students from his block, and he must play every kid. Except for one special coach. That coach can have any student for his team, even if they're not from his block, but they have to apply via lottery.
Who is going to get the best players, on average? EVERYONE knows the coach with the lottery is going to get the best players. The other coaches are stuck with random people who don't know anything about basketball, whose fathers never taught them the sport, who don't even know that there's this other coach out there they can apply for. While that coach is going to know right off the top that every single player on his team was engaged enough in basketball to make the effort to apply for his team. On top of that, he has the extra buy-in that they selected his team, that they want to be there, not just by default. As a result, he's going to have massive advantages over every other squad even if the lottery was random and even if the demographics are the same.
Do you see it now? If you don't, then please speak to any professor of education in the world and ask them to help you understand. Ask them if a lottery-selected student body is equivalent to an area-selected student body and see what they say.
I already pointed out - they could either default enroll every child in the lottery (so that it's not only the self-selected ones who apply) and then take the # they can handle, or they can shrink their geographical area until it's small enough that they can take every kid. I didn't ignore anything, I promise you I've been dealing with these questions in real life and thought them through longer than you have.
Can you cite these scores you keep referring to? What is the "whole" performance of charters in NYC compared to the public schools? How big is the gap? I'd love for you to substantiate the exact claim you just made.
I think there are many cases in which charter school children do better, and many others where they do worse. If you compare all charters, rather than just cherry-picking the outliers, the difference is much smaller than you suggest. And it can partially be explained by the self-selection factor.
But I have nothing against the idea that good charter schools can be better. My only issue is that charter schools should take the full distribution of students from an area, not the self-selected ones. Self-selection fukks over all the other kids by making the gap between haves and have-nots even worse.
There are already charter schools that implement these things, even in California that has one of the most powerful teacher's unions in the country. I already gave you an exact example of a charter school that does it. So I call bullshyt. They WANT a self-selected student population.
No one who has spent any extensive time in American schools thinks that "ability to fire incompetent teachers" is the fundamental issue with the school system. Give every inner city school in the nation the power to fire every teacher they don't like...and where the fukk would they get the replacements? These schools already have massive teacher shortages, these schools already have some positions that aren't even filled and many more that are filled by people who aren't qualified. A public school is free to fire any non-credential or non-tenured teacher, and yet they don't....because they have no one to replace them with.
Like @booksrain said, I don't know why some of y'all don't at least try to take other people's ideas seriously and get the perspective of those who actually work within and study the system. When it comes to school, suddenly everyone is an expert, regardless of how little time they've actually spent studying comparative education.