Quick question: why aren't we pooling all the property taxes and splitting the loot up evenly?(On a side note, while I applaud the Wake County Public School System for not giving in to this "neighborhood" school bullshit, I don't think Wake County Public school records are that great. RTP attracts smart people with advanced degrees who value education. Those smart people have kids who are naturally going to do better in school. I was diturbed by my seven years at one WCPS complex: too many kids went from "academically gifted" in middle school to barely passing in high school. Shit ain't right.)[Edited on March 21, 2006 at 1:20 PM. Reason : sss]
3/21/2006 12:58:12 PM
"too many kids went from "academically gifted" in middle school to barely passing in high school. Shit ain't right"I saw alot of that in Surry county public schools, but alot of that was from having it easy in middle school translating into laziness during high school. Some of the smartest people at my high school had some of the worst grades.
3/21/2006 1:10:35 PM
Supplanter, I appreciate your response to this thread. But since you didn't respond to my original question, I'm gonna strike out the "side note" because I don't want this to turn into a thread of comments that ignore my original question. It's nothing against you or your response.[Edited on March 21, 2006 at 1:21 PM. Reason : sss]
3/21/2006 1:20:20 PM
I moved down here in 8th grade and I thought NC was far to generous with the "Academically Gifted" tag... honor roll != gifted. I also agree that most of the drop-off occurs because of laziness and lack of prior challenge. School was easy... really easy. You can be top 10% with your eyes closed. NEVER did I have to actually apply myself all the way up through high school (second year of college was when I first felt the pinch). I'm not trying to thump my chest or anything either... pretty much everyone in the high honors didn't have much strain that I could see. The only serious effort I saw was people who had to get 99's and 100 (GPA freaks) but simply being in class and doing most of your homework was pretty much enough to get an A. Oh and 5 out of 7 classes my senior year were AP so its not like I wasn't supposed to be challenged.Why aren't they split up evenly? I dunno.. my guess is it has to do with the way each public school system and local government wants to do things their way... the pooling of resources usually leads to more oversight and less autonomy inmy experience with state government.[Edited on March 21, 2006 at 1:32 PM. Reason : .]
3/21/2006 1:30:27 PM
FUCK! WHY DID I INCLUDE THAT FUCKING SIDE NOTE? Now I feel obligated to respond.
3/21/2006 1:39:05 PM
Sorry that this reply isn't what you want Bridget, but I agree with msb2ncsu. I moved down here from the North when in 9th grade and to me it was a joke how much easier it was.I dunno the answer to your main question
3/21/2006 1:47:10 PM
msb2ncsu and TKE-Teg, I need to know what county you moved in to before I can consider what you're saying.
3/21/2006 1:49:53 PM
I attended Harnett County schools (Middle school and senior year).I had spent 3 years in El Paso (military brat). EL FREAKIN PASO. Tons of Mexicans where English classes would definitely be a challenge for the non-speaking. Where you expect most people to be idiots and end up serving you that Double What-a-burger with cheese a few years down the road.Even their curriculum was tougher than Harnett's. I averaged a 4.5 GPA over the last year. Bumped my GPA from 3.4 to 3.8. If I recall, I didn't even make the top 10% (I was top 3% in EP). The standards are too freakin easy here.And on a side note, to answer the original question... I don't know why they don't do it. It sounds like the logical thing to do. It would keep schools from being segregated on the basis of quality of learning. (School A can afford new textbooks, School B can't). Private schools would probably lose some of its appeal if some of the weaker schools could get a little extra money and pull their weight.
3/21/2006 2:52:37 PM
3/21/2006 4:03:21 PM
3/21/2006 4:47:15 PM
^Maybe the parents should be forced to work equally on all schools in the county. An hour working in their neighborhood = an hour working in the ghetto Did you guys ever stop and think that part of the equation might be that the really good teachers don't exactly want to be the white chick in Dangerous Minds?
3/21/2006 8:49:49 PM
^thats not even the question.We're talking about property taxes and school funding here, not teacher quality.[Edited on March 21, 2006 at 9:17 PM. Reason : 2]
3/21/2006 9:17:13 PM
I moved into Cumberland County from a district in TN, here it was SO damn easy. I went from a C student to an A student overnight. Thanks hooked on North Carolina! That was not entirely due to it being easier here, of course. Some of it was because I went from being just another student to usually being the smartest guy in the room. That boost in self confidence can often be all a kid needs to excel.
3/21/2006 9:32:56 PM
3/21/2006 9:47:38 PM
^No, but I also don't have children about to enter schools. What's your point?
3/21/2006 10:02:06 PM
I thought you meant evenly to individuals, but after you bringing up your lack of kids I guess you meant evenly to all the schools.Do you think that every school would use the money as good as another? Do you think that there are no schools that need more money than another?
3/21/2006 10:26:15 PM
3/21/2006 10:38:32 PM
I have a few thoughts on this. 1) I believe that Principals should be able to permanantly suspend any student who causes disruption. Steve Takas of Athens Drive High did something a couple years ago that was unheard of. He got a list of all students with criminal records and the very next time they broke a rule in school or was arrested they were expelled. He was called before the education commission and said that "I don't mind if these kids go to school, but they won't go to mine". The amount of security issues, and troublemakers went down dramatically. Hell the average GPA went up. I think we are far too tolerant of troublemakers. Three strike rule to me (an no I don't mean lunch detention). I'm talking people who get in 3 or more fights, or have serious arrests on their records. 2) I would like parents to be able to CHOOSE what school their kids go to within a certain area. I like the idea that they give you a default school and you have to put your request in by a certain time. 3) I think that if parents decide to do private school they get to deduct the amount that they pay in taxes for public schools off their taxable income. Private schools are SO much better, lower student to teacher ratio, etc.
3/21/2006 10:55:44 PM
3/21/2006 11:02:12 PM
I'm planning to get my kids a library card and send them to public school.
3/21/2006 11:07:58 PM
3/22/2006 12:03:04 AM
schools have limited capacity, so your "go where you want" idea could never workin durham you submit an application to the magnet center you want and space permitting they typically get approved. if it was an unregulated system hillside would be abandoned and jordan would be grossly overcrowded. if everyone could just go where they want it would make every school equal, but only because they would all be brought to the same substandard level due to overcrowding, etc...
3/22/2006 12:43:09 AM
3/22/2006 12:57:51 AM
AG at my elementary school was play on the computer time. It was seriously just recess but with computers.
3/22/2006 1:00:59 AM
^^^ You skipped the most important part. Did funding follow the students? It doesn't help anything to just let students move, it drains the resources of good schools without replacing them (in effect punishing good schools and rewarding bad schools, which now have more money for fewer students). And maybe the bad schools in your city should close. Maybe after a year or two someone will buy the building and re-open the place as a charter school in hopes of pocketting some education money (operating for profit).[Edited on March 22, 2006 at 1:03 AM. Reason : ^]
3/22/2006 1:03:05 AM
yes, funding is based on the number of studentsbut that doesnt solve overcrowding
3/22/2006 1:04:10 AM
Yo, I left elementary school before we really had computers. I think I spent about an hour on computers in elementary school total.
3/22/2006 1:14:19 AM
i really enjoyed the ag program i was in. the only other people i've talked to who have were in the same program.a friend of mine did a project a while back on this very topic and polled many of her friends from nc to see what they got out of ag, and she said i was the only one who said that the effect of the program was anything substantial and positive.
3/22/2006 1:33:18 AM
I'd probably answer "positive" immediately, but it'd take me a while to describe it as "substantial." I know that I probably went into acting because of it, but that's the only substantial effect I can think of. Otherwise it just sort of alienated us for the purpose of working on puzzles for a couple hours. Hard to really gauge if I'm substantially different because of it, though; it was pretty early in life after all.
3/22/2006 1:45:05 AM
i thought ag was very positive, and some years were substantial but others not really
3/22/2006 1:54:02 AM
3/22/2006 9:34:48 AM