▲ | mystraline 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||
> We aren't going to fix problems we can't acknowledge. Urban public school districts are among the most impacted by bad public schools. That problem is because school district funding is directly related to tax revenue in said district. Tax revenue has to go to capital maintenance and repair, and also scholastic budgets (teachers, aides, equipment, books). Due to 'White Flight' ( https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/White_flight) and historical segregation of black people, left primarily poverty in urban city cores. People who later move into empty residences do so with reduced rents, and general poverty problems like food insecurity, bad transportation, and higher crime. (Poverty is a disease and can be modelled as such.) The poverty is directly related to low scholastic district funding, therefore poor schools. And to further harm poor (monetary and educational outcome) schools, is Bush's plan in the 2000's to pull funding from underperforming schools. Better funded schools have better educational outcomes, so those schools were less affected, or not at all. Even a local school in my area had federal funding reduced. I'm in a community with roughly 97% white people, so its not a legacy race thing. But it does turn out that it is a poverty thing. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | moduspol 4 days ago | parent [-] | ||||||||||||||||
If the problem could be solved by throwing more money at it, it would have been solved long ago. Some poorly performing inner-city school districts are among the highest of per-pupil spenders in the country. Some problems can't be solved by money, or even by the public school system. | |||||||||||||||||
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