10/2/2009 10:08:51 PM
10/2/2009 10:37:09 PM
^^No, we bus based on socioeconomic status. The race of the school really isn't as important as the incomes of the families. A high-poverty, white school struggles too.^Those four candidates are neighborhood school advocates, not necessarily voucher advocates. You keep bringing up vouchers, but the debate really isn't about that. The school board isn't going to privatize the system with vouchers...they're just going to make neighborhood schools, cause certain housing values to skyrocket, certain business to go under, and ensure that only affluent kids have access to good schools.But let's take your vouchers-for-all bit to the end. Everybody gets $7500/year. The poorest students will go to private schools that cost $7,500/year, and these schools will be like the "shitty" public schools we hear about in other counties. Everybody else will supplement their vouchers as best they can and get progressively better schooling based on how much they can pay...these schools will mirror the good public schools we see today.So the only difference between the current fucked up public systems and your system is that people will have to pay more than just taxes to go to a good school (the poor still won't have access), and schools will be making profits.Plus, the economic concepts you apply to toilet paper cannot be applied to education. It's not that simple. If you think it is that simple, then you either don't know shit about economics or you don't know shit about education.[Edited on October 3, 2009 at 1:23 AM. Reason : ]
10/3/2009 1:22:58 AM
10/3/2009 4:36:16 AM
10/3/2009 10:49:53 AM
10/3/2009 12:05:24 PM
10/3/2009 8:34:42 PM
This is semantics. Retarded semantics.They bus based on SES.Yes-- SES correlates with race. SES correlates with a lot of things. SES probably correlates with amount of ice cream consumed. But we don't bus based on ice cream consumption.
10/3/2009 9:02:24 PM
they choose SES because it correlates with race, though. That's why they bus on race
10/3/2009 9:10:40 PM
They chose SES because it's the best indicator of success/failure in school.
10/3/2009 9:13:36 PM
They say they chose SES because it's the best indicator of success/failure in school.
10/3/2009 9:21:44 PM
aaronburro says he isn't a birther.
10/3/2009 9:26:06 PM
I'm glad to see you admit they bus on race. Otherwise, why would people denounce the neighborhood school people as being against integration?
10/3/2009 9:27:24 PM
10/3/2009 9:36:00 PM
you assume I am against busing... And, again, why denounce them as being against integration? If it's NOT about race, why use a term related to race? They argue that the end of busing would lead to de-integration. it sounds as if busing is directly tied to race in that case, since the argument is that de-integration is bad. durrrr. I love how you live in a fantasy world, though
10/3/2009 9:56:16 PM
10/3/2009 10:19:05 PM
so, it's easy to say it's about race when it's not?
10/3/2009 10:28:58 PM
It is about race...For stupid people.For the people actually making policy, it's about SES
10/3/2009 10:54:22 PM
10/4/2009 10:26:41 AM
Just keep dropping that buzzword.
10/4/2009 12:31:42 PM
^^ What exactly is it about the current system that isn't working well for them?
10/4/2009 3:05:27 PM
^^^^ no, it's only about race. Even for the policy makers.
10/4/2009 4:12:29 PM
That would make sense if it were only one race of kids getting bussed around but it's not.
10/4/2009 6:01:24 PM
Pardon the interruption, but the N&O posted their Voter's Guide the other day. It's just a quick rundown of the candidates in each race:http://www.newsobserver.com/politics/local/story/117786.htmlNow back on topic, the N&O also ran their 8012th story about the Wake School Board, which doesn't mention anything new, features lots of the above-described dancing around admitting that it's done with race in mind, and what I see as an important opinion in a study that SAS did of Wake's schools.http://www.newsobserver.com/politics/story/125674.htmlThe important bit:
10/4/2009 8:13:12 PM
10/4/2009 9:21:47 PM
^^For Tuesday's vote, the important bit:
10/4/2009 9:36:16 PM
10/4/2009 10:28:05 PM
Ok so where do the candidates line up on this issue, then...
10/4/2009 10:31:49 PM
10/4/2009 11:17:33 PM
I think part of the problem is some parents assume that if they get rid of busing for integration, all busing will stop.That simply isn't true since most reassignments and busing in Wake County happen because of overcrowding. When I was in the WCPSS I changed elementary schools two times and narrowly missed being reassigned a third time. It had nothing to do with integration. I was living in a middle income neighborhood going to middle income schools. They just liked to shuffle the neighborhoods around every few years to try and limit overcrowding. Some of the busing might stop but I have a feeling these same parents currently bitching about busing will bitch twice as hard when little Timmy gets reassigned again even without the integration policy in place.
10/5/2009 1:23:53 AM
10/5/2009 10:24:20 AM
^^Excellent point. Growth patterns and overcrowding are a huge part of perceived instability in the system.^^^Yeah, you seem to get the main point of the argument.The problem with the magnet system is that it doesn't actually achieve balance. Charlotte uses the magnet approach to attempt socioeconomic balance, and take a quick look at their "learning communities" and scores:http://apps.cms.k12.nc.us/departments/instrAccountability/schlProfile05/profiles.aspThey simply haven't been able to achieve socioeconomic diversity with only magnets.And, again, parents who want their kids to go to the closest schools will not necessarily get that. The closest schools aren't big enough to accommodate all the closets students.[Edited on October 5, 2009 at 10:48 AM. Reason : ]
10/5/2009 10:47:41 AM
District 1: Chris MaloneDistrict 2: John TedescoDistrict 7: Deborah PrickettDistrict 9: Debra GoldmanFrom my understanding, most of these candidates are only against busing if it's to create "economic diversity". They are OK with temporary busing or re-assignments until a local school can be built in that particular area.
10/5/2009 10:50:15 AM
are they in favor of zoning requirements to induce economic diversity?[Edited on October 5, 2009 at 10:57 AM. Reason : not that that is the school board's job or anything.]
10/5/2009 10:56:51 AM
this is some what on topic but where do I find info on the other candidates whose positions are up for vote including, Raleigh Mayor, City Council at Large and City Council District E. I can't find a platform on any of these people.
10/5/2009 11:42:27 AM
^http://www.newsobserver.com/politics/local/story/124483.htmlThe N/O has been releasing voter guides since as long as I can remember.Actually, that link doesn't look good. But try the paper version.And here's the Indy's voting guide (without their endorsements):http://www.indyweek.com/gyrobase/Content?oid=oid%3A398249[Edited on October 5, 2009 at 11:55 AM. Reason : ]
10/5/2009 11:44:17 AM
cool thanks!!
10/5/2009 11:59:03 AM
damn...no good choices for raleigh mayor. its depressing!!
10/5/2009 12:17:36 PM
http://www.newsobserver.com/politics/story/127605.htmlAnother N&O article, 2nd for today. I'm apparently one of the few that subscribes to and reads the paper, but they've been basically running the same article every day for a month now.At any rate, it's fairly relevant to the recent discussion about the diversity policy being a wink towards race.[Edited on October 5, 2009 at 2:23 PM. Reason : []
10/5/2009 2:23:04 PM
That really hasn't been a discussion.It's just aaronburro insisting it's about race when it isn't.Even back when we bused on race, it was still understood that a big part of that had to do with socioeconomic status. The courts came in and busted up the race-based busing so we switched to SES.I'm still unclear why you guys think this point is meaningful at all.
10/5/2009 2:37:07 PM
Form the article I just linked:
10/5/2009 3:18:53 PM
the point is meaningful because we are still busing on race, just calling it something different.
10/5/2009 6:51:50 PM
OK, that's enough posts about race vs. socioeconomic status. if you have something to back up your claim, let's hear it. if not, shut the fuck up.
10/5/2009 7:19:04 PM
^ Uh, I did. Fairly conclusively, in fact. Proponents of the integration measure were quoted by the N&O as specifically being concerned about racial re-segregation. A policy analysis posted by one of the proponents of the measure specifically makes use of race as a metric. The fact that the policy change was instigated was due to courts ruling against a race metric, and proponents have heretofore identified SES as a legally defensible substitute. Their argument has been that race is a crude marker for SES, however this does not answer the question of why we did not simply begin in 1976 with using free/reduced lunch or some other measure of SES instead of race for integration purposes, or why many of our metrics toward the level of "integration" within schools have been explicitly race-based, or why race is even a relevant criteria for measuring integration based upon SES grounds.So, uh, yeah. It's not a discussion emerging from nowhere.[Edited on October 5, 2009 at 7:41 PM. Reason : .]
10/5/2009 7:40:02 PM
I was referring to aaronburro's irritating, incessant, and stupid responses.
10/5/2009 7:42:30 PM
10/5/2009 8:09:30 PM
10/5/2009 10:07:22 PM
It is wrong to bus one child around in order to promote some other child's chances of getting better grades. One child should not be used to enhance another child.
10/6/2009 12:08:16 AM
10/6/2009 12:36:38 AM
^Yeah, I'm still not clear what Chaos is getting at.He just seems to be ignoring basic history and more specific (but still widely understood) legal history.I think he has a point for doing so, but I don't get it.
10/6/2009 1:16:50 AM