BOO HOO HOO the poor schools wahh wahh wahh Cry me a River. Neighborhood schools are the only things that make rationale sense. If purely by geographic location some schools have higher proportions of rich or "needy" student then so be it.
5/4/2010 11:49:02 AM
5/4/2010 11:59:15 AM
5/4/2010 12:01:00 PM
5/4/2010 12:11:38 PM
i'm just baffled as to how you've come to feel that a child who can't "keep his grades up" should not be allowed to attend a magnet school. no child who is struggling should ever be made to feel as if they weren't meant to succeed. you are a heartless bastard.
5/4/2010 5:52:13 PM
Is this the actual map?^^^ that perspective is only logical if there wasn't a clear achievement gap specifically due to the pre-civil rights racial discrimination.What do you think caused these lines to start where they have? There has been improvement, but specific actions need to be taken to compensate for the past wrongs that are still prevalent today.Bussing may not the the best solution, but doing nothing + no bussing is clearly a worse solution (which is what you seem to be advocating).[Edited on May 4, 2010 at 5:59 PM. Reason : ]
5/4/2010 5:58:14 PM
5/4/2010 6:14:57 PM
5/4/2010 6:22:38 PM
Hey, but it's all good as long as they think they can succeed, right? Heaven forbid we tell them early on when it matters that not doing well in school has consequences.[Edited on May 4, 2010 at 6:26 PM. Reason : .]
5/4/2010 6:26:19 PM
there's a difference bw teaching children that poor school performance can have negative consequences and writing them off as failures.
5/4/2010 6:30:37 PM
Who said you are writing them off as failures? Being placed back into their own neighborhood school isnt some recipe for failure. Its ultimately the kids decision if he/she excels. However, there are limited spots. Is it right for someone else to be stuck in a school that could really soar in a different environment, while someone else is squandering the opportunity they have been given?
5/4/2010 6:56:06 PM
5/4/2010 7:17:24 PM
No, I expect the parents to do that.And I was actually reading your mind. Elementary/middle and high schools are really two seperate issues. I agree that in early development, there needs to be more hand holding. I dont know how that shakes out in the community versus busing plans. High school, everything I said stands. And thats mainly where I have been focusing my comments.[Edited on May 4, 2010 at 7:25 PM. Reason : .]
5/4/2010 7:23:51 PM
i don't believe in punishing children for having idiot parentsyes, there comes a point when that child has reached an age where they should be held responsible for taking their education seriously, but a lot of young children are at a disadvantage when they are attending poor "neighborhood" schools. personally i find this problem most troubling because neighborhood schools should be consistently high performing across the country, but as we've all said at some point this is not the case. [Edited on May 4, 2010 at 7:25 PM. Reason : ]
5/4/2010 7:24:54 PM
See my edit. I honestly understand the issues are different pre high school.
5/4/2010 7:26:34 PM
i'm mostly focused on elementary schools as i work in one and i know a lot of the issues regarding districting in this county are mostly effecting elementary schools right now. but i see your points. [Edited on May 4, 2010 at 7:31 PM. Reason : ]
5/4/2010 7:29:49 PM
5/4/2010 7:44:36 PM
5/8/2010 2:58:01 AM
Dear Wake County School Board:Monster.com 60 day listing: $395Monster.com 3 month National Resume Search: $5,200TriangleHelpWanted.com 60 day listing: $6503x people to filter ad results and just cold call around the country to potential candidates full time for 3 months at $15 / hour: 21,600Saving the tax payers $72,155 ..... priceless
5/8/2010 7:50:09 AM
5/9/2010 1:53:17 AM
5/11/2010 9:47:14 PM
5/12/2010 7:05:46 AM
Parents with control over the quality of their child's education!!!! OH NOES!!!!!!
5/12/2010 7:49:27 AM
5/12/2010 9:38:24 AM
why do they want to become durham public schools?
5/12/2010 11:38:43 AM
^^ I'm sorry, I must have missed where the new policies say if your household income is < 100k, you can't switch schools.
5/12/2010 1:26:03 PM
I hate Hui!Lack of access to magnet schools among some families is probably the only legitimate complaint that parents had, and of course, Hui writes a freakin' front page article about it. Everything else he writes for the news has been technical and newsy (the way it should be), and this article is like, "Yay! Parents finally get what they deserve!"His blogs are a billion times worse.If you read the numbers in the article, it's like a few hundred families that actually benefit, which is good. But we didn't have to overhaul the whole system to make this happen; furthermore, a few families getting their kids into magnet schools does not justify the overhaul...
5/12/2010 10:15:34 PM
^ Yeah I hate his blogs so much. Half the time I'm not even sure what point he's trying to make.
5/12/2010 10:24:24 PM
Wait wait wait
5/19/2010 2:54:58 AM
No.... early release days are only a few times a year and used for trainings, etc. Early dismissal is what is happening EVERY wednesday and that's what they did away with.
5/19/2010 7:10:19 AM
TRUE STORY: At my job I work an extra two hours every Friday just so we can have a staff meeting outside of regular hours.
5/19/2010 8:14:04 AM
^^Yay, now we get to stay late on Fridays.
5/19/2010 8:22:42 AM
I don't think that means you stay late on fridays, though I didn't read the whole article. The kids leave early and we stay til the usual time.
5/19/2010 12:19:41 PM
The usual time for training days is almost always well after the usual leave time.
5/19/2010 12:34:55 PM
That sucks! Not us though with all the changes I wouldn't be surprised
5/19/2010 1:21:55 PM
neighborhood, year around schools make the most sense to me.maximize space, minimize travel and instill community pride. a community and accountable atmosphere will do more for a underachieving child than going to school in an affluent neighborhood. most of the affluent neighborhoods are pretty damn diverse anyway.
5/19/2010 2:40:01 PM
5/26/2010 9:54:47 PM
from what i've heard, year round schools actually don't save money, they cost more, according to my coworker's wife, who has been a teacher in wake for several decades.i guess the only advantage is that we don't have to have as many buildings, which is clearly an issue in Wake now.
5/27/2010 12:19:40 AM
do you have any statistics to support that? not saying you're wrong but i've heard differently from administrators and i'm interested to see any research done on the topic
5/27/2010 7:26:50 AM
5/28/2010 12:35:25 AM
My neighborhood was diverse but I guess it would be considered squarely in the middle class range. My neighbor was from Korea and would always bring me dumplings on the weekends
5/28/2010 4:49:10 AM
NPR doing a segment about neighborhood schools and Wake County.rich cunt talking about her kid's deserving more than poor kids.[Edited on June 7, 2010 at 12:42 PM. Reason : ]
6/7/2010 12:18:34 PM
Can you post a link to it? (Or I could find it later, but thanks in advance )
6/7/2010 2:31:18 PM
^ http://thestory.org/archive/the_story_1053_Fay_Cobb_Payton_and_Debra_Goldman.mp3you can tell dick gordon wanted to lay in to this woman but held off.the woman says that the school her son was bussed to was a good school. but she wanted to have her son in a community school. meanwhile, she sends her daughter to a magnet school because it's better.[Edited on June 7, 2010 at 5:36 PM. Reason : ]
6/7/2010 5:11:28 PM
6/7/2010 5:16:58 PM
^that's awesome. but not all neighborhoods in wake county are as diverse as cary. those are the ones that need the diversity.[Edited on June 7, 2010 at 5:40 PM. Reason : ]
6/7/2010 5:21:47 PM
I posted those Cary neighborhoods because they are affluent. a lot of people here are assuming that only white people inhabit the wealthier neighborhoods and that isnt the case. most of the housing and neighborhoods in Wake County have been built during the population explosion of the last 30 years and are full of all different types of people. the people crying the segregation tears are crying over neighborhoods that make up less than ~10% of Wake County...and those neighborhoods are either "old" Raleigh or the predominantly black neighborhoods of SE Raleigh (which feed into arguably the nicest school in the county)
6/7/2010 10:54:26 PM
^^^^ That story just made me
6/11/2010 10:38:48 AM
^^^^^http://thestory.org/archive/the_story_1053_Fay_Cobb_Payton_and_Debra_Goldman.mp3/viewIf Debra Goldman's statements are true, it does seem like they weren't operating the system very efficiently. I don't see why it means the bussing system needed to be dismantled though.Likewise, Fay's story is very touching, but it doesn't really mean there must be bussing. Fay's issue was concerns over lower quality textbooks, which is easily fixed compared to the times she grew up in.Goldman's issues seem like they would be fixed if there was a mandate that schools shouldn't be overcrowded if there are under capacity schools around.[Edited on June 12, 2010 at 12:22 PM. Reason : ]
6/12/2010 11:55:05 AM
6/13/2010 10:51:45 AM