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The New Coffee Room

  1. TNCR
  2. General Discussion
  3. Near the top half of his class.

Near the top half of his class.

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  • CopperC Copper

    No

    This problem has nothing to do with money

    Nothing

    The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

    The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

    Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

    X Offline
    X Offline
    xenon
    wrote on last edited by xenon
    #15

    @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

    No

    This problem has nothing to do with money

    Nothing

    The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

    The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

    Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

    I never said it had anything to do with money. It's probably difficult family/social problems manifesting themselves in school.

    If these kids parents don't care about school, there is no amount of strict standards that will change that.

    Question is - what do you do to change that?

    JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
    • X xenon

      @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

      No

      This problem has nothing to do with money

      Nothing

      The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

      The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

      Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

      I never said it had anything to do with money. It's probably difficult family/social problems manifesting themselves in school.

      If these kids parents don't care about school, there is no amount of strict standards that will change that.

      Question is - what do you do to change that?

      JollyJ Offline
      JollyJ Offline
      Jolly
      wrote on last edited by
      #16

      @xenon said in Near the top half of his class.:

      @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

      No

      This problem has nothing to do with money

      Nothing

      The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

      The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

      Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

      I never said it had anything to do with money. It's probably difficult family/social problems manifesting themselves in school.

      If these kids parents don't care about school, there is no amount of strict standards that will change that.

      Question is - what do you do to change that?

      Boarding school.

      “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

      Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

      X 1 Reply Last reply
      • CopperC Copper

        No

        This problem has nothing to do with money

        Nothing

        The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

        The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

        Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

        X Offline
        X Offline
        xenon
        wrote on last edited by xenon
        #17

        @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

        The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

        On this specific point - isn't learning to read by age 3 very early? I think you're saying they should begin to learn by then. (agreed - that'd be best)

        The English part is a bit debatable. My parents didn't know how to speak English. My English was probably poor at age 4 (though I did have cousins in the same house who spoke English).

        CopperC 1 Reply Last reply
        • CopperC Offline
          CopperC Offline
          Copper
          wrote on last edited by
          #18

          It's not the strict standard that matters, it's holding the student to the strict standard.

          If they don't meet the standard - too bad. They don't get the all expense paid trip to college.

          X 1 Reply Last reply
          • JollyJ Jolly

            @xenon said in Near the top half of his class.:

            @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

            No

            This problem has nothing to do with money

            Nothing

            The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

            The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

            Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

            I never said it had anything to do with money. It's probably difficult family/social problems manifesting themselves in school.

            If these kids parents don't care about school, there is no amount of strict standards that will change that.

            Question is - what do you do to change that?

            Boarding school.

            X Offline
            X Offline
            xenon
            wrote on last edited by
            #19

            @jolly said in Near the top half of his class.:

            @xenon said in Near the top half of his class.:

            @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

            No

            This problem has nothing to do with money

            Nothing

            The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

            The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

            Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

            I never said it had anything to do with money. It's probably difficult family/social problems manifesting themselves in school.

            If these kids parents don't care about school, there is no amount of strict standards that will change that.

            Question is - what do you do to change that?

            Boarding school.

            That would work. Basically parent replacement.

            Is it palatable on a large scale? The program would have to be voluntary.

            JollyJ 1 Reply Last reply
            • CopperC Copper

              It's not the strict standard that matters, it's holding the student to the strict standard.

              If they don't meet the standard - too bad. They don't get the all expense paid trip to college.

              X Offline
              X Offline
              xenon
              wrote on last edited by
              #20

              @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

              It's not the strict standard that matters, it's holding the student to the strict standard.

              If they don't meet the standard - too bad. They don't get the all expense paid trip to college.

              I think we're talking about 2 different problems though. I don't think many kids are headed to any sort of college where the top half GPA is 0.13

              That's a whole other level of messed up.

              You're talking about the "everyone can go to college with government student loans" problem. Which should be pulled back. But, I'm guessing people with 0.13 GPAs are not ending up in college. I'd be floored if that were the case.

              1 Reply Last reply
              • X xenon

                @jolly said in Near the top half of his class.:

                @xenon said in Near the top half of his class.:

                @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

                No

                This problem has nothing to do with money

                Nothing

                The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

                The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

                Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

                I never said it had anything to do with money. It's probably difficult family/social problems manifesting themselves in school.

                If these kids parents don't care about school, there is no amount of strict standards that will change that.

                Question is - what do you do to change that?

                Boarding school.

                That would work. Basically parent replacement.

                Is it palatable on a large scale? The program would have to be voluntary.

                JollyJ Offline
                JollyJ Offline
                Jolly
                wrote on last edited by
                #21

                @xenon said in Near the top half of his class.:

                @jolly said in Near the top half of his class.:

                @xenon said in Near the top half of his class.:

                @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

                No

                This problem has nothing to do with money

                Nothing

                The worst performing school systems now get the most money - by a lot

                The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

                Then they have to be held to a strict standard.

                I never said it had anything to do with money. It's probably difficult family/social problems manifesting themselves in school.

                If these kids parents don't care about school, there is no amount of strict standards that will change that.

                Question is - what do you do to change that?

                Boarding school.

                That would work. Basically parent replacement.

                Is it palatable on a large scale? The program would have to be voluntary.

                Solutions are not always palatable.

                “Cry havoc and let slip the DOGE of war!”

                Those who cheered as J-6 American prisoners were locked in solitary for 18 months without trial, now suddenly fight tooth and nail for foreign terrorists’ "due process". — Buck Sexton

                1 Reply Last reply
                • X xenon

                  @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

                  The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

                  On this specific point - isn't learning to read by age 3 very early? I think you're saying they should begin to learn by then. (agreed - that'd be best)

                  The English part is a bit debatable. My parents didn't know how to speak English. My English was probably poor at age 4 (though I did have cousins in the same house who spoke English).

                  CopperC Offline
                  CopperC Offline
                  Copper
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #22

                  @xenon said in Near the top half of his class.:

                  @copper said in Near the top half of his class.:

                  The children have to be taught to read and speak English at the latest before age 3 or 4.

                  On this specific point - isn't learning to read by age 3 very early? I think you're saying they should begin to learn by then. (agreed - that'd be best)

                  The English part is a bit debatable. My parents didn't know how to speak English. My English was probably poor at age 4 (though I did have cousins in the same house who spoke English).

                  That's why I didn't say just 3, I said 3 or 4.

                  No, 3 is not too early for many students.

                  Spoken English matters especially for those born in this country.

                  A ghetto vocabulary is not going to help anyone.

                  1 Reply Last reply
                  • Doctor PhibesD Doctor Phibes

                    His mother didn't realise he wasn't going to graduate until his senior year, if you believe the article.

                    It might not be the school that's the problem.

                    taiwan_girlT Offline
                    taiwan_girlT Offline
                    taiwan_girl
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #23

                    @doctor-phibes said in Near the top half of his class.:

                    His mother didn't realise he wasn't going to graduate until his senior year, if you believe the article.

                    It might not be the school that's the problem.

                    Agree with this.

                    From the article
                    "She thought her oldest son was doing well because even though he failed most of his classes, he was being promoted. "

                    Why did not she take the responsibility to contact the school? Schools cannot (and should not) be the baby sitter for parents.

                    Sad story all around. It is probably that he has no good future. His mother is obviously not real aware of things.

                    And so the circle continues. 😢

                    L 1 Reply Last reply
                    • taiwan_girlT taiwan_girl

                      @doctor-phibes said in Near the top half of his class.:

                      His mother didn't realise he wasn't going to graduate until his senior year, if you believe the article.

                      It might not be the school that's the problem.

                      Agree with this.

                      From the article
                      "She thought her oldest son was doing well because even though he failed most of his classes, he was being promoted. "

                      Why did not she take the responsibility to contact the school? Schools cannot (and should not) be the baby sitter for parents.

                      Sad story all around. It is probably that he has no good future. His mother is obviously not real aware of things.

                      And so the circle continues. 😢

                      L Offline
                      L Offline
                      Loki
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #24

                      @taiwan_girl said in Near the top half of his class.:

                      @doctor-phibes said in Near the top half of his class.:

                      His mother didn't realise he wasn't going to graduate until his senior year, if you believe the article.

                      It might not be the school that's the problem.

                      Agree with this.

                      From the article
                      "She thought her oldest son was doing well because even though he failed most of his classes, he was being promoted. "

                      Why did not she take the responsibility to contact the school? Schools cannot (and should not) be the baby sitter for parents.

                      Sad story all around. It is probably that he has no good future. His mother is obviously not real aware of things.

                      And so the circle continues. 😢

                      Many of these children do not have a stable home and shuttled from relative to relative. They come to school hungry, tired and scared.

                      taiwan_girlT 1 Reply Last reply
                      • L Loki

                        @taiwan_girl said in Near the top half of his class.:

                        @doctor-phibes said in Near the top half of his class.:

                        His mother didn't realise he wasn't going to graduate until his senior year, if you believe the article.

                        It might not be the school that's the problem.

                        Agree with this.

                        From the article
                        "She thought her oldest son was doing well because even though he failed most of his classes, he was being promoted. "

                        Why did not she take the responsibility to contact the school? Schools cannot (and should not) be the baby sitter for parents.

                        Sad story all around. It is probably that he has no good future. His mother is obviously not real aware of things.

                        And so the circle continues. 😢

                        Many of these children do not have a stable home and shuttled from relative to relative. They come to school hungry, tired and scared.

                        taiwan_girlT Offline
                        taiwan_girlT Offline
                        taiwan_girl
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #25

                        @loki said in Near the top half of his class.:

                        @taiwan_girl said in Near the top half of his class.:

                        @doctor-phibes said in Near the top half of his class.:

                        His mother didn't realise he wasn't going to graduate until his senior year, if you believe the article.

                        It might not be the school that's the problem.

                        Agree with this.

                        From the article
                        "She thought her oldest son was doing well because even though he failed most of his classes, he was being promoted. "

                        Why did not she take the responsibility to contact the school? Schools cannot (and should not) be the baby sitter for parents.

                        Sad story all around. It is probably that he has no good future. His mother is obviously not real aware of things.

                        And so the circle continues. 😢

                        Many of these children do not have a stable home and shuttled from relative to relative. They come to school hungry, tired and scared.

                        Yep, and as they grow up, they think it is normal and do not know any different. So they repeat the same mistakes, probably not even knowing they are mistakes until it is too late.

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