I find offense to this statement I have several friends who work in low poverty schools in Philadelphia. They are great teachers - as good or not better than any you'd find in suburban districts. And their districts spend much more per dollar per student than any school in our area, so again proving that government throwing money at problems does NOT work. The problem starts in the home - my one friend said that in her one class 80% of the students don't have fathers living in the home and all the students get free breakfast and lunch! Then when you mix drugs and alcohol into the mix you have a recipe for disaster. Responsibility has to start somewhere. I was the first child in our family to go to college, we had alcoholism, violence and family members in jail. I worked full-time, went to school at night and got my degree. Of course back then I didn't have the government to pay my housing, healthcare, phone, food etc. Who would want to work nowadays???
Suckers that we are - someone has to pay for all the handouts!
More anecdotes in place of data.
Teachers are great...but with class sizes bordering on the insane, their effectiveness is diminished. And teachers do not entirely define the quality of an education.
Ask those same teachers how many section of ap classes their schools offer? Ask what their graduation rate is? Ask what the focus of their guidance program is? Ask what their curriculum is focused on? And ask what their absentee rate is? If they are remotely close to their peer schools around the country, their answers will be interesting...
More money...much of it spent on security, and other programs...not educational aids or material, has marginal effect on quality of education according to most studies. In fact, cost per student in just about any setting has proven to be a bad predictor of success. Witness the work done in NJ and Washington, DC.
Certainly, the lack of focus on education in the home...for a variety of reasons...is a contributing factor, too. But chalking that up entirely to bad parenting isn't entirely accurate. It is tough when you have 2 parents working 60 hours a week at minimum wage jobs to find time to help the kids with their homework...
Language is also a potential contributing factor.
And nowhere did I say, or imply, that throwing money at the schools will solve their problems. Only that they do not have similar access or focus on secondary education.
The facts are the facts. And the data tells a much more accurate story.
And reality..as in, reality today, as it stands...and now how we would like to theory craft how it should be, is reality.
There is no period of adjustment to reset the problems that exist. No do over button.
So, we pay for their care, somehow...or we let them die. That simple.
Debate that obamacare isn't the right way to do it, and I bow out of the conversation.
Try to argue that we can ignore the problem, and we part company....