cammac wrote:stilldropin20 wrote:dckingsfan wrote:Interesting collaboration between traditional and charter schools in Houston, it is called United for College Success. The Charter Schools had been measuring which colleges actually graduated their students within 6 years. KIPP, one of the Charters in Houston has their college graduation rate up at 50% for minorities vs. 9% nationally. Why? They have figured out how to match students with colleges.
That is a pretty phenomenal success rate. So what did they do? They made it available to the public school districts. Maybe this will be a step forward and the NTA will stop their revenge campaigns against charter schools and start collaborating.
It would be wise for the DNC to jump on board - okay, I won't hold my breath.
excellent point. and interesting concept.
Might be a better idea to properly fund public schools to eliminate the huge discrepancy between funding in the inner city and the burbs. I applaud any school that can achieve academic success either a charter school or a public school but for every great result from a charter school there are numerous bad results.
it's way more complex than you imply. waaaaaaaaay more.
1. school district funding in the US is and has been driven by local real estate taxes.
2. So people have payed "big time" money to live in the best school districts.
3. If you take that school district advantage away from the people that payed for it you have deprived them of their wealth.
4. over 90% of american wealth is tied up into the real estate they own.
5. we are not talking about the 1% here. working class folks wealth is almost solely tied into their real estate (personal house).
6. the 1% has wealth way beyond their own personal real estate.
7. so you are in essence talking about stealing from the middle class (again) that worked their butts off to move into a good school district to give their kids a chance to not be part of the middle class anymore.
8. that just aint gonna fly. its not fair. it's not even logical. and these are indeed public schools im talking about.
9. and thats how it works in chicago, both inner cities and burbs. the highest real estate markets have the best schools.
10. the lowest real estate markets have the worst schools.
11. whats more is the lowest re markets also have the highest rates and the most children per parent and the most single parent families, are the most dense, and pay the least in income taxes too as they have the lowest incomes.
12. so in essence you are once again talking about just another avenue taking money out of the working-middle class and redistributing it to the poor. dont we already have enough avenue of wealth redistribution?
13. Now if you find a way to soley take money from the elite wealthy ruling class top .5% and fund poor school districts, then I'm all for it. but even then that money should go to everyone no tjust the poor. I have to ask. why are we continually talking about ways in which we end up taking money from people that tried to be a productive member of society and show up to work each day and make 60-120K per year, have less children, stay together as dual parent dual income families, and therefore more able to teach their children how to "learn" better before school even starts so the school district benefits more as a whole. why are we taking their money and their equity to educate children who's parents totally blew it? and let me state this again, my parents totally blew it!! they sucked. i didn't deserve a better school system because because your parents didn't suck. Now i was lucky in that my grandparents didn't suck and helped a bit and paid for a decent H.S for a year. but i still mostly went to below average schools.
look. if you suck in life, and you suck as a parent, your kids will not and should not have as good of a "shot" attempt in life as those parents that actually try to move the basket closer and give their children a better shot. I'm about to turn 46 years old and I still dont have children. and i dont need a public school system to help me anymore. because I wanted to wait until I could afford anything they might need. And they will now get the best I can possibly afford and more. and I will make then earn those things along the way. but wtf, should I pay for some dumbshxt (that I happen to grow up with on the southside) down the street from me that had children at 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 years old without a pot to piss in? why!!?? why would they have children and expect everyone else to pay to raise and that child???? and then on top of want equal school districts for their children? is the free housing not enough? is the free food stamps, the free check, free schools(dont pay real estate taxes either), the free medical and dentla benefits!! is that all not enough!!!!! should I give them the keys to my car too??? where do you guys come up with this crap?? when does it end???? at what point does one get off their azzes and educate yourselves, fight for gainful employment and pay your own damn billz!!!?? I'm from the streets. ben carson is from the streets. and many many many many people I know did what i did. did what ben carson did. fought for themselves. educated themselves. worked hard. sacrificed. played the long game. kept their eye on the prize. those are the only people that "get out" of the ghettos. Everyone else, that accept the hadnouts, still accepts those handhouts. Everyone I knew then and know now, HAS NOT CHANGED. Their is no magic $100 dollar bill that you can hand someone that will magically turn into wealth and knowledge and wisdom. You either take the personal time to educate yourself and you put in the personal sweat equity, and you stay the course OR YOU DONT.
so stop fooling yourselves into thinking you can help, you cant. and stop letting liberal political trolls fools you into thinking you can help. you cant. people help themselves or they dont. and what motivates people more than handhouts is desperation.
I never felt for one single second that someone would be there for me to pay my bills for me. i never wanted them to. thats the mind set i had. thats what kept me on the grind. there are some foolz on here that think I'm not a dentist, nor a realtor, nor a former collage athlete, nor couldn't treat thousands upon thousands of patients per year. what they dont understand is that I actually am from the toughest and meanest and poorest streets in chicago. I'm come from a world of complete desperation. and I got myself out from under it. so much so that I will out maneuver you in real estate transaction and flip a switch and eat your lunch on the job site. I'll chew through cast iron if I have to. thats my personal mindset. and anybody that has come from a place that i come from will tell you the exact same. and mean it. and can do it. its tough as shxt to get out from under true poverty. tough as shxt!!! true poverty. true desperation. no where to go. no one to turn to. dont even no where you are going or how far you have to go. but you just keep going until you get some traction. no entitlement will give anyone that kind of juice. people who accept handouts will just about always accept handouts. I accepted no personal handouts in my entire life. never filed for Unemployment, food stamps, section 8, nothing accept financial aid which i have paid back plus interest. never. . and because i never accepted those things besides financial aid I just dont believe that any of them help. You cant have a healthy and productive society with generation after generation growing up then growing old on entitlements. it doesn't work. it just doesn't work. kids like me that "get out" do so because we despise the system. we thrive to be free of the traps of entitlements. your entitlements didn't/dont help us. believe that. ask ben carson, he'll tell you the same. ask any kid that truly escaped. he/she will tell you the same. if you dont understand this concept, let's just say you never will and leave it to experts like me and Ben Carson who actually made the journey.
Furthermore, (with another hat i wear) as a mom and pop real estate broker I can tell you that people essentially buy homes based on school districts. school district drive the markets.
keep in mind that here in chicagoland the local school districts usually receive 90% or more of the local real estate taxes collected. sometimes up to 100% now if the school district is fully funded and their is money left over it will go to other things in the district.
due to many socio-economic factors the best school districts have the highest property values but also the lowest RE tax rates. I'll explain that if anyone wants to know.






















