10/24/2012 8:50:01 AM
well i got fed up and tried to get the conclusion, but the discussion goes pages 14-19. I mean, is the conclusion really so complicated that no less than 6 pages will suffice?Table 3. blah blah blah blahlast measure: No. of Days Per SuspensiontotalBlack: 2.38 days, n=1715White: 2.33 days, n=823I saw this figure. Ok I say, so the data that sits there clear-as-day is inconclusive. What does the paper say? The paper says a whole lot of stuff, almost none of it useful. To the extent that I read, it got to the point that it recognized that the punishment isn't greater for black kids when they're referred.After 3 more paragraphs of doubting the quality of the data, I was pretty sure it wasn't getting to a point where it reverses the observation it just made convincingly. This data doesn't show anything.
10/24/2012 8:58:02 AM
10/24/2012 9:14:01 AM
Do you think I didn't read it either? I'm a bit insulted now. Page 15, starting with the last paragraph, to the end of page 16, specifically deals with the proposition that "They get punished more because they misbehave more." Not only do they write "We are unaware of any empirical findings that support this position, although there appear to be some that contradict it." but they go on to cite those contradicting papers. Then go on to explicitly state that the discrimination emerges not in the days of suspension given, but in the rate of referrals, with the office acting as a pass-along.
10/24/2012 9:19:10 AM
If you're too lazy to do research on race issues, you're too lazy to comment on it. At least, if this is going to be a thread filled with "Well one time I saw a thugged out black kid do X in class and..." then I'm not gonna waste time and effort actually digging up data for you guys.edit: Urrg sorry Lumex I'm a bit fired up right now and conflating my frustration with mrfrog's laziness with you. I'm just a data-driven guy, and when you're talking about racial discrimination, which is necessarily due to subjective biases, the subjective observations of individuals simply aren't a reliable thing to go by.Like if I say "White people tend to more readily interpret blacks as threatening and defiant." then a white person responding with "Well I don't know about you, but my anecdotal experience is that black people ARE more threatening and defiant!" doesn't really advance the conversation much. [Edited on October 24, 2012 at 9:36 AM. Reason : .]
10/24/2012 9:33:26 AM
That has a particular compounding effect inelementary school when a student can get labeled as having a behavioral disorder which will affect then for the rest of their school career.It should almost be illegal to have behavioral things from 1-3rd grade put on your permanent record.If you accept that the system has racial disparities, isn't affirmative action the lazy solution? Part of the intention is to get people to think about racial bias, but it seems to also serve the purpose of preventing moregranular anti discrimination policies.
10/24/2012 9:35:26 AM
10/24/2012 9:39:59 AM
10/24/2012 12:39:09 PM
Going back to the spirit of this thread, I think AA really needs to end.I understood its need back in the 70s, 80s and 90s, but I don't think it's worthwhile today. I think race-based discrimination is nearly gone, and today's racial disparity statistics are showing us cultural discrimination which is 1) simply inherent in our species and can only be mitigated to a reasonable lower threshold; and 2) can be justified in certain rare circumstances (when there is a functional conflict between an applicant's culture and job duties). AA works against the goal of mitigating discrimination by aggravating racial biases (sentiments). Even if it does improve racial employment parity, is that still a justified end if race-based discrimination is effectively gone? What if all it is doing is giving minorities an advantage in overcoming their socioeconomic starting points or lack of connections?Note: everything I said is based on my own perceptions and experience. I've read a lot on this subject too, but I don't keep reference at hand. I welcome contradicting evidence, and I wish I could thoroughly prove my opinions, but that would probably take up all my free time. I'm also lazy.[Edited on October 24, 2012 at 1:28 PM. Reason : .]
10/24/2012 1:22:12 PM
So what is it that magically harms black SAT scores without affecting classroom order and behavior?With whatever you choose, why does that thing (expectations, tracking, media portrayals, whatever) leave behavior intact while killing academic performance?
10/24/2012 1:29:01 PM
^ a quick google search revealed this interesting information:http://nces.ed.gov/pubs2009/2009324/tables/sass0708_2009324_t12n_02.asprace of teachers, white, black, ..., ..., ..., LatinoAll schools 3,898,420 83.5 6.7 0.5 1.3 0.2 6.9 0.9So maybe the fact that proportionally so few of the teachers are black hurts black students. Seems funny when you consider that minorities are represented most strongly in education majors. Maybe they get the degree and don't teach. I'm just making stuff up now.[Edited on October 24, 2012 at 2:34 PM. Reason : ]
10/24/2012 2:34:27 PM
^I shouldn't have left that one off my list. It's just that this whole thing doesn't make any sense at all to me. Anything that broadly reduces SAT scores by nearly 100 points per section (vs. others with the same low income) has to carry with it behavioral issues. Whatever kills self-esteem, self-image, expectations, or changes cultures or hopes, or anything else somehow brings down scores but doesn't affect classroom order. He's immune to data, so I'm trying simple logic.
10/24/2012 2:50:34 PM
10/24/2012 3:09:53 PM
10/24/2012 4:36:25 PM
An interesting systemic issue I read about a couple months ago...government-subsidized pre-k programs are often required to include a certain percentage of children with disabilities (10% in the article) in order to get funding. But the students don't have to have identified disabilities when they're enrolled...the programs get to enroll the students and identify the disabilities after they've worked with them, which makes sense...except that they have to identify the disabilities.
10/24/2012 5:03:55 PM
10/24/2012 5:14:47 PM
10/24/2012 5:25:25 PM
I should have qualified the fact that I'm just talking about economic and educational areas of public life. I think law enforcement and criminal justice are a separate matter with unique challenges that definitely justify examination and reform.
10/24/2012 7:25:50 PM
you don't think that justice issues affect economic and educational attainment?
10/24/2012 10:43:27 PM
They might become more intertwined as many of our urban middle schools become progressively more militarized. I think the existence of a metal detector and police at the gate will likely affect the performance of the students, not to mention that we don't even try to claim that those police don't racially profile.Recently, I've been seeing more stories about how school discipline is being elevated to law enforcement at the drop of a hat. They find a butter knife in your stuff and then you're facing a trial. Plus, teachers don't want to take personal risks. Toward middle school and high school you're big enough to be seen as a physical risk, and when assessing that risk everyone profiles whether they admit it or not.
10/25/2012 2:27:03 PM
^^I never implied that. I was talking about AA.
10/25/2012 9:32:45 PM
I'd like to take this moment to point out that you don't have "bad"/dangerous schools when you mix everybody up instead of sending all the poor kids to the same schools.In fact, bussing would reduce or eliminate so many of the concerns mentioned in this thread. Of course, it wouldn't guarantee equal outcomes, but it would go a long way to promoting equal opportunity.Race-based or SES-based bussing and reforming the criminal justice system would be da bomb for equality.
10/26/2012 1:29:16 AM
BUT AH DONT WANT THEM NIGGERS THAT THUG ELEMENT IN MAH SKOOLZ ITS WHY AH MOVED HURR
10/26/2012 2:20:16 AM
^^ That seems like a weak solution compared to mixed housing development on a national scale.But people love to dismiss that off-hand because the Carys of the world throw up whatever building regulation they want - infinitely precluding high density housing, which is the only type of housing poor people could hope to afford there. That goes back to the basic reality that people are selfish. As long as a parents are able to cluster so that property tax gives their kids a better education there's no reason for them not to do so. Other people's kids aren't their problem.The real solution is to just move a large fraction of SE Raleigh into low cost housing in Cary, whether Cary wants it or not.
10/26/2012 8:24:51 AM
^^^Redistribution/redistricting creates another dilemma in regards to property values. School districts have a dramatic effect on the price of housing. Will you compensate those families who have paid a premium to buy/rent in a location that originally offered access to a certain district? What if the housing costs of low-income families in certain areas increase once its known the city will ship them to the better schools in the suburbs?
10/26/2012 10:57:01 AM
doubly posted[Edited on October 26, 2012 at 10:57 AM. Reason : .]
Wealth distribution is bad. Poor kids should only get as good of an education as their parents can afford. See: living within one's means.[Edited on October 26, 2012 at 11:13 AM. Reason : ]
10/26/2012 11:12:49 AM
Lewis said the N-word again.
10/26/2012 11:17:54 AM
And you said "the N-Word" again. I'm more offended by your post than his.
10/26/2012 11:19:32 AM
Are there similarly offensive words for Whites or Native Americans?Surely honky, cracker, or chief aren't as good as it gets.I want to really be offended here.
10/26/2012 11:51:14 AM
^ "I'm a white man, you can't even hurt my feelings"
10/27/2012 11:08:06 AM
This is what mrfrog sounds like: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rYqF_BtIwAU
10/27/2012 12:51:38 PM