Cant wait til Beer's wife sleeps with a black guy to satiate her white guilt.
“Comfortable conversations” and “real data”.... as if either of these things are universal/culture-free. As if white folks haven’t had their way on both of these issues, continuously.Cant wait til Beer's wife sleeps with a black guy to satiate her white guilt.
I'm not saying they don't have support or their family doesn't care about them. I'm saying it is so so so much harder for a single parent to have the time and energy to dedicate to helping a child with schoolwork than a more traditional family. If you are working 2 jobs, or working nights, its going to be extremely difficult for a single parent to dedicate significant time and energy into homework, testing, outside of class learning, etc ....
And I'm sure the neighborhood cares about each other, but once again, a neighbor isn't going to take an active interest in a neighbors kids schoolwork 99% of the time.
As far as your 2nd point, sure, maybe, possibly. Would like to see anything substantial back that up though.
implicit.harvard.edu
And as far as your last paragraph, yes I am aware of that happening. I do not believe it was a constant though. Maybe not an outlier either but not a majority occurence either.
Lmao at black schools being subpar. Maybe in the South the funding is not there but in NJ and probably much more of the NE that’s laughable. The schools that are “subpar” are subpar because of the parents. That’s it. I’d say the students but that’s not fair to them.
And you’re basing this off of?
Oh my. As a teacher you should know. Schools rely on taxes, in particular property taxes. Due to spatial inequality in US, its easy to the see the link between where you live/school district quality.
I lived in Cambridge, MA and had the opportunity to participate in some projects in disadvantaged neighboorhods. Schools were a big big big problem: look at US Census Data (or other reliable surveys) and you will clealy notice a trend in black neighboorhods : lower school funding; lower school enrollment; lower educational attainment; higher school dropouts; higher teenager incarceration rates; higher teenage pregnancy rates, etc. All of these issues are correlated.
I did. We were looking at some urban interventions around the Malcolm X, Washington St area. Went to several planning meetings with the community and oh lord, wounds were very open.I lived in Roxbury for a few months back in 2002. It sounds like you probably visited.
Oh my. As a teacher you should know. Schools rely on taxes, in particular property taxes. Due to spatial inequality in US, its easy to the see the link between where you live/school district quality.
I lived in Cambridge, MA and had the opportunity to participate in some projects in disadvantaged neighboorhods in the Boston area. Schools were a big big big problem: look at US Census Data (or other reliable surveys) and you will clealy notice a trend in black neighboorhods : lower school funding; lower school enrollment; lower educational attainment; higher school dropouts; higher teenager incarceration rates; higher teenage pregnancy rates, etc. All of these issues are correlated.
But what about mah freedumbs?I just saw a graph with state spending per pupil. NJ is 4th in the nation. Utah is dead last. Maybe raise those property taxes which are ridiculously low.
I'm not sure why two married parents have more time for this than, say, a mother and a grandmother. Please explain that to me in more detail.
My personal observations the black community says otherwise, at least for the kids doing well in school.
Project Implicit
implicit.harvard.edu
Even if it only occurred to, say, 5% of black businesses, don't you think just knowing it could happen would act as a damper on the desire to expand a moderately successful business?
Obviously I know it. Despite teaching in a poor district the property taxes are high. Absurdly so. Like $10,000 on a $400,000 home. And we get a **** ton of funding from the state. Money has nothing to do with it. Should we be remote, every single student grades K-12 will have a laptop. The district will shell out money should Zoom or Screencastify not extend their free trials.
Now so far as poverty level goes, yes. But that has nothing to do with the quality of education. Kids flourish in all areas. We have some brilliant kids. But most of them have an infrastructure in place at home to succeed. Hence my original statement of it all come back to the parents.
May I ask. What were you doing in Roxbury at the time? Were you working?I lived in Roxbury for a few months back in 2002. It sounds like you probably visited.