Give 'em Hell, Condi!
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Problem with schools in the ghetto or poor parts of town, is lack of expectations and parental support.
I would love to see a study, where we took 1000 volunteers - 500 boys and 500 girls - and placed them on an empty college campus (we've got those you know) with good teachers and military-style discipline.
Career path them into vocational or prep training by 10th grade with apprenticeships and internships. I'd like to see what we could do...
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Problem with schools in the ghetto or poor parts of town, is lack of expectations and parental support.
I would love to see a study, where we took 1000 volunteers - 500 boys and 500 girls - and placed them on an empty college campus (we've got those you know) with good teachers and military-style discipline.
Career path them into vocational or prep training by 10th grade with apprenticeships and internships. I'd like to see what we could do...
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@Jolly said in Give 'em Hell, Condi!:
parental support
According to D1, that's the #1 issue. Parents don't care.
@George-K said in Give 'em Hell, Condi!:
@Jolly said in Give 'em Hell, Condi!:
parental support
According to D1, that's the #1 issue. Parents don't care.
My daughter taught in poor neighborhoods for 14 years. The number one indicator of student success?
If two parents showed up for parent-teacher conference.
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I think I’ve mentioned this before but in my first naive steps in the original coffee room at piano forum, there was a sock named Condi, and me, unfamiliar with the wily ways of the internet thought, that’s the real condi, how cool is that, since we all knew she was a pianist. What an idiot I was.
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Generally school vouchers (where a student could get a voucher from the state to be used at a private school) is right-coded with opposition being left-coded.
Related background issues with partisan valence are (1) public funding for religious schools (one driver behind the desire for vouchers historically) and (2) teachers unions.
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What is the context of that statement? Is there some ongoing discussion about school choice? Who is for it and who is against it?
@Klaus, one argument goes that if you give public funds in the form of "vouchers" to individuals to choose their own schools, you can help them "escape" from "bad public schools" to go to "good private schools." But then a counter argument goes that the more public funds you give out in "vouchers," the less remain to fund the public schools, creating a viscous cycle that makes the public schools worse and worse in the process.