> This gutted California’s education funding so severely that the state’s public schools, which had been ranked best in the nation in the 1950s, fell to among the worst in a few decades. (They now hover around 35th.)
Stopped reading here. This statistic is useless without adjusting for change in demographics (the time period coincided with a massive increase in percentage of students from ESL backgrounds).
You can put a math prodigy in a room with me and I will have a harder time teaching them (anything) if their Spanish is good and their English is weak, because my English is good and my Spanish nonexistent. "Stupid" has nothing to do with it.
He's not "blaming" anything on immigrants; he's saying the simplistic statistic presented is confounded, and is unlikely to show the direct correlation between funding and student outcomes that it purports to show.
You're required to be charitable here; it's in the site guidelines. Yours is not just an uncharitable interpretation, but a deliberately inflammatory one.
Prop 13, mentioned in the article, correlates with the sharp turn of California's public schools from the among the best to among the worst.
I'm sure there's numerous factors that contribute, but this is core. And repealing this bad law would have numerous other positive effects on crucial issues like affordable housing and sprawl, because it would cut down on idle land speculation which drives up real estate prices in prime locations.
>San Francisco has been trying, and mostly failing, for half a century to give African American and Latino students an education comparable to that provided to white and Asian students in the city.
At what point will it become appropriate to admit that there is a cultural problem among certain low income minorities that leads to poor outcomes in education?
Regardless of whether it is fair, is it really reasonable to force middle class minorities and whites to be exposed to drugs and violence in middle school, in a clearly failed attempt to bring up worst performers?
These policies are a net loss to society. Instead of boosting performance of the lower tail, we are only hampering the middle and, especially, upper reaches of achievement. Some problems can't be solved by money, or even celebrity apparently, according to this article.
I even quoted it...and I'm speaking toward a trend across the U.S.
Even where I went to school, after Katrina, our peaceful hallways were suddenly breaking out in racial brawls between Hispanic and African American children. How was that good for anyone? The kids who didn't give a shit about school continued to not give a shit about school, meanwhile the rest of us had to suffer a reduction in the quality of our education.
There is a problem, but what we've been attempting to do to solve it for decades clearly isn't working.
The only reasonable part of that question was in specifying low income, which seems the main influencer on students across the spectrum. I'm not saying those cultures don't have unique negatives (even though we Americans pretend as if there's no such thing as diversity of weaknesses), but keeping "us" from "them", whether that's racial or economic terms, seems truly unamerican in terms of ideals and what we try to sell to the world.
It's not as if the poor white are blowing away their contemporaries with over achievement.
It's a pretty consistent pattern, and one we can have some influence on both through the state and personally.
Also, maybe instead of looking at other cultures and only pinpointing any negatives we see, we can look at our own.
What does it say about us culturally that we are totally fine with exploiting the poor by preying on their weaker position, but the second someone mentions preventing it, half of our country throws a fit?
I'm not stating that it always needs a governmental solution, but your response indicates a general disdain for the poor, especially those who have very little control (the kids) over their previous experiences, and don't always get the opportunity to learn how to make better choices in the future.
I think as a society we function better when we address poverty as a "we" problem, not just a "you" problem.
>I'm not stating that it always needs a governmental solution, but your response indicates a federal disdain for the poor, especially those who have very little control (the kids) over their previous experiences, and don't always get the opportunity to learn how to make better choices in the future.
My point has nothing to do with disdain. I am alluding to a greater good. Is society better off from the averaging effect that comes from mixing high and low performers? The fact that performance is segregated racially is incidental to my point. Does a rising tide lift all boats?
Can we remain competitive as a nation if we improve our low performers at the expense of our best and brightest?
And this issue is correlated to more than just income. This isn't a dog whistle, this a fact, and it has been an unchanging fact for decades. African America children are fatherless, live in broken homes, are not taught to value education, and simply throwing them into a nice school amounts to nothing more than a failed policy which drags down our best without improving our worst.
Alot of what you said I can agree with, but I don't agree it's endemic to either African American or Hispanic cultures, even if there are specific weaknesses culturally that we can identify (such as broken homes).
But isolating the African American experience from issues such as poverty is going to be really tough, both because of our cultural history and the sample size to contrast it with is relatively tiny. Everyone still debates what the full causes are (whether that's poverty, institutional bias, or some combination), but I do think for many cultures there is something uniquely broken and I'm not against discussing the question. But it would be highly presumptuous of me to assume that I do have the answers, or that I'm some kind of White Savior who can rescue "those people" (I'm not implying that's anywhere near what you're saying, but just an admission of both seeing the issues, and not knowing the right way to solve them. But all cultures have a long list of social ills).
To answer your questions though,
> Is society better off from the averaging effect that comes from mixing high and low performers? The fact that performance is segregated racially is incidental to my point. Does a rising tide lift all boats?
Yes, a rising tide lifts all boats and sometimes drowns someone as well, but I think on the whole, even if the spoils are disproportionally distributed, our general societal success has raised quality of life for most people.
But your questions are fair, so I'll try to address the point.
An example I think about is with the Department of Education specifically.
I think we all agree that it's generally a good thing that we enforce kids school attendance, even if we hear upsetting statistics about a high illiteracy rate among high school graduates.
But what I do know is that even with that illiteracy level, on the average, more kids have a higher level of general literacy than many if not most of their historical counterparts that were kept home to tend the farm, and could get by without needing to read or write with any fluency.
Literacy seems like something that has degenerated in our society, but literacy was often a privilege of the wealthy, and I think it's averaged itself out better than if we were to replace it with nothing.
> Can we remain competitive as a nation if we improve our low performers at the expense of our best and brightest?
Honestly, can we be competitive without trying to help as many people as possible contribute to that success?
What would competitive as a nation even be considered if it were only limited to a small percentage?
Also, you're assuming that the cost to the "best and brightest" is one they can't shoulder.
By definition, they're more capable of addressing the issues than those who are merely caught in the cycle of perpetuating them.
Where I do agree with you is that education or a nicer school aren't panaceas to solving deep issues, but they do play a role (if they didn't, we wouldn't be having the discussion... if it's so important that the best and brightest need "good" schools, then I think we can agree that it would benefit not just them).
I also don't think this is something that just throwing money at is going to solve (it's actually played out where its the opposite now).
But IMO what you're describing is an amputation of sorts. And while we can believe that amputation is the proper remedy for certain cases, I don't think that should be the one we assume is the right one or one we have as the go-to, especially when there are many cases where things have been improved without that need.
I don't have a pet agenda to preach as the one right way to fix the issues that plague schools, but for good and bad, I believe we've generally been harmed when we isolate improperly, and generally benefited by being more inclusive, even if some of those kids choose to throw it away.
Alot of this will prob...
I'd just like to be clear, I'm not advocating for segregation, I just think that the current quota based forced desegregation isn't quite working. Perhaps that is because, as you allude to, there are other fronts to work on.
But I believe the rest of our disagreements stem from your optimism to my pessimism.
I appreciate your thoughtful response regarding this taboo subject.
18 comments
[ 2.6 ms ] story [ 49.8 ms ] threadStopped reading here. This statistic is useless without adjusting for change in demographics (the time period coincided with a massive increase in percentage of students from ESL backgrounds).
You're required to be charitable here; it's in the site guidelines. Yours is not just an uncharitable interpretation, but a deliberately inflammatory one.
I'm sure there's numerous factors that contribute, but this is core. And repealing this bad law would have numerous other positive effects on crucial issues like affordable housing and sprawl, because it would cut down on idle land speculation which drives up real estate prices in prime locations.
At what point will it become appropriate to admit that there is a cultural problem among certain low income minorities that leads to poor outcomes in education?
Regardless of whether it is fair, is it really reasonable to force middle class minorities and whites to be exposed to drugs and violence in middle school, in a clearly failed attempt to bring up worst performers?
These policies are a net loss to society. Instead of boosting performance of the lower tail, we are only hampering the middle and, especially, upper reaches of achievement. Some problems can't be solved by money, or even celebrity apparently, according to this article.
Even where I went to school, after Katrina, our peaceful hallways were suddenly breaking out in racial brawls between Hispanic and African American children. How was that good for anyone? The kids who didn't give a shit about school continued to not give a shit about school, meanwhile the rest of us had to suffer a reduction in the quality of our education.
There is a problem, but what we've been attempting to do to solve it for decades clearly isn't working.
I'd appreciate a more substantiative rebuttal.
It's not as if the poor white are blowing away their contemporaries with over achievement. It's a pretty consistent pattern, and one we can have some influence on both through the state and personally.
Also, maybe instead of looking at other cultures and only pinpointing any negatives we see, we can look at our own. What does it say about us culturally that we are totally fine with exploiting the poor by preying on their weaker position, but the second someone mentions preventing it, half of our country throws a fit?
I'm not stating that it always needs a governmental solution, but your response indicates a general disdain for the poor, especially those who have very little control (the kids) over their previous experiences, and don't always get the opportunity to learn how to make better choices in the future.
I think as a society we function better when we address poverty as a "we" problem, not just a "you" problem.
Edit: Spelling. Thanks Gboard :P
My point has nothing to do with disdain. I am alluding to a greater good. Is society better off from the averaging effect that comes from mixing high and low performers? The fact that performance is segregated racially is incidental to my point. Does a rising tide lift all boats?
Can we remain competitive as a nation if we improve our low performers at the expense of our best and brightest?
And this issue is correlated to more than just income. This isn't a dog whistle, this a fact, and it has been an unchanging fact for decades. African America children are fatherless, live in broken homes, are not taught to value education, and simply throwing them into a nice school amounts to nothing more than a failed policy which drags down our best without improving our worst.
To answer your questions though,
> Is society better off from the averaging effect that comes from mixing high and low performers? The fact that performance is segregated racially is incidental to my point. Does a rising tide lift all boats?
Yes, a rising tide lifts all boats and sometimes drowns someone as well, but I think on the whole, even if the spoils are disproportionally distributed, our general societal success has raised quality of life for most people.
But your questions are fair, so I'll try to address the point. An example I think about is with the Department of Education specifically. I think we all agree that it's generally a good thing that we enforce kids school attendance, even if we hear upsetting statistics about a high illiteracy rate among high school graduates. But what I do know is that even with that illiteracy level, on the average, more kids have a higher level of general literacy than many if not most of their historical counterparts that were kept home to tend the farm, and could get by without needing to read or write with any fluency. Literacy seems like something that has degenerated in our society, but literacy was often a privilege of the wealthy, and I think it's averaged itself out better than if we were to replace it with nothing.
> Can we remain competitive as a nation if we improve our low performers at the expense of our best and brightest?
Honestly, can we be competitive without trying to help as many people as possible contribute to that success? What would competitive as a nation even be considered if it were only limited to a small percentage? Also, you're assuming that the cost to the "best and brightest" is one they can't shoulder. By definition, they're more capable of addressing the issues than those who are merely caught in the cycle of perpetuating them.
Where I do agree with you is that education or a nicer school aren't panaceas to solving deep issues, but they do play a role (if they didn't, we wouldn't be having the discussion... if it's so important that the best and brightest need "good" schools, then I think we can agree that it would benefit not just them). I also don't think this is something that just throwing money at is going to solve (it's actually played out where its the opposite now).
But IMO what you're describing is an amputation of sorts. And while we can believe that amputation is the proper remedy for certain cases, I don't think that should be the one we assume is the right one or one we have as the go-to, especially when there are many cases where things have been improved without that need.
I don't have a pet agenda to preach as the one right way to fix the issues that plague schools, but for good and bad, I believe we've generally been harmed when we isolate improperly, and generally benefited by being more inclusive, even if some of those kids choose to throw it away. Alot of this will prob...
But I believe the rest of our disagreements stem from your optimism to my pessimism.
I appreciate your thoughtful response regarding this taboo subject.