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![]() NOYB wrote: "basskisser" wrote in message ups.com... Butch Davis wrote: Many school attendance zones are based upon proximity to the school. Newer developed areas often have newer schools and a certain income level is required to afford to live in those areas. Older, less popular areas often require less income for housing, eh? Perhaps this will result in another Supreme Court decision and new busing requirements to level the playing field? After all, we can't have economic segregation, can we? A lot of older home areas here in these parts are selling for higher prices than new. Yes, but you're comparing older double-wides to the newer single-wides. Well, it is a sort of self sorting process. The quality of a school drives the prices of nearby homes here and that drives the quality of the schools. There is actually an inverse corellation between funding levels at a school and the standardized test scores. In other words, poor schools have substantially more spent per student. It is generally the income level that determines parental involvement which determines student achievement. The local school board tries to mix things up by making the worst high school into a mixed normal high school and a special advanced school with limitesd success. They also have tried the 'magnet school' concept with little success. My wife has been a teacher in 5 different states and many different schools so she has a very good perspective on this issue. When I was a kid here, my family home was just above "double wide" level (and there were 9 kids) and most of my classmates were the poorest rednecks and the poorest blacks, a great combination. My high school was basically a babysitting service for poor kids until they went into the army,the guidance department had no notion of college. Today, we live on the affluent side of town, are solidly middle class and my kids attend one of the top 100 public high schools in the country where 90% of the kids go to college. My kids classmates normally own their own cars that are always nicer than what I drive. Exposure to the extreme redneck element was a culture shock to my sheltered kids but part of my past. |
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