by Divinity11 » Thu Nov 19, 2015 11:48 am
My wife is a counselor at a Title One elementary school (read: high minority, high poverty).
In her first year there, she learned there were several students who were not eating on the weekends. So, she partnered with a local church, and started a backpack program. Then, winter time came (she works the bus lot and parent drop-off mornings/afternoons) and noticed many children not wearing warm coats. When she'd ask them where their warm coats were, they'd say they didn't have one. Elementary kids. So, she partnered with a local business, and now she gets clothing donated, and secretly provides for these kids. Let me tell you something...if it weren't for her, some of these kids wouldn't eat and they would freeze to death.
It's easy to say, "put it back on the parents...." Yeah, NO SHIT, SHERLOCK. But, when the biggest failure IS the f**k parent, then what???? The trend that has been forming for the past few decades is that parents are no longer the solution, they are part of the problem. Many reasons, sometimes it's not even the "fault" of the parent, but regardless...problem. In fact, the reason my wife started that backpack program was because two of her students were going home to "methhead" parents. Another student who she found out wasn't eating on the weekends...come to find out, this nine year-old was getting up on his own, getting ready on his own (dressed, shoes, etc...), and had to step over his mother who was passed out on the living room floor from partying too hard the night before (or morning?), along with some random guy. Think she packed her son a lunch that morning? Trust me, a school lunch is the only guaranteed meal of the day for far too many of our children. That's just a f**k fact, like it or not. That's just two, out of a dozen stories I can tell you right now off the top of my head.
Sorry fstar, you sound like someone who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth. You haven't a clue, and I'm happy for you that you don't have a clue. And I disagree wholeheartedly about not having sports in school. I can go on for days about the values and how the pro's outweigh the con's. I agree with you about the absurdity in spending ridiculous amounts of money on sports complexes at high schools and such, but you are in Texas. They love their high school football there.
And Menson...still gonna disagree. Unless your goal is segregation and non-uniform standards, I predict your plan of unlimited, customized charters to be counter-productive to what should be the goal of our nation, unless you follow a universal set of educational standards. We already have a problem with charter school accountability, and that's WITH oversight from each state's Department of Public Instruction. Your idea of free-market capitalism will create the perfect storm for fly-by-night charter chains to set up shop for a couple years, fleece local taxpayers, close down, and move to another state and do the same thing. It's already happening.
Until I hear one better, I still think my solution is the best one out there.
Thankless, and proooouuuud of it!