- Oct 2024
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In terms of average wages, a college degree was worth 50 percent more than a regular high school degree in 1980, but by 2008 the college degree was worth 95 percent more.73 In that sense, the edu-cational gains of kids from poor backgrounds have been doubly illusory. They've been struggling to catch up on a down escalator.
More and more people are getting college degrees, which that high school degrees are less valuable or the college degree will worth more. Thinking about jobs such as "secretary" that we read about in Tuesday's reading. The job description and responsibilities can also change so that it requires a higher degree. Now, so many people are getting bachelor's degrees that further education or a lot of experience is needed to be competitive.
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Suppose that you were a bright, optimistic young teacher showing up each day to work in this war zone. Idealism might carry you through a year or two, but if you had an opportunity to move to a school with less mayhem and more students eager to learn, you'd jump at the chance. So faculty turnover would be higher, with more rookie teach-ers every year. Moreover, many of the teachers who remained would be timeservers: inured to turmoil, content to baby-sit, "paid to be there," cynical even about helping well-meaning students, dismissing them as "pathetic," lazily assuming that all Latinos speak Spanish.
This is a sad reality for many schools such as Santa Ana. Constant faculty turnover would result in less experienced teachers and rookie teachers taking their place. Teachers can also be discouraged because they want to teach and help the students, but instead have to "baby-sit" or grow to have an apathetic attitude because nothing seems to work.
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Although school quality and resources are unequal between top and bottom socioeconomic schools, once we account for nonschool factors (such as family structure, economic insecurity, pa-rental engagement, and even TV watching), school quality and school resources themselves seem to contribute relatively little to class gaps in test scores and other measures of cognitive and socioemotional skills.
This is interesting. There is definitely a difference in top and bottom socioeconomic schools, but what makes more of a difference in gaps are nonschool factors. We've been reading about this in previous readings. Where you live matters and overlaps with SES which also afffects where you go to school and the opportunities you are exposed to. Cognitive stimulation can be affected by family structure and how much support and attention a child recieves.
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Recently, after the 2007 wildfires,rangers at Irvine Canyon Ranch were surprised to notice that the fires exposed a plaque identifying one oaktree as a “Hangman’s Tree” used on “bandits” from Juan Flores’s “gang” in 1857. The plaque was proudlyerected in 1967 by equestrians, but then later forgotten until the fires exposed it. It is remarkable: there is alynching tree in Irvine, a lynching tree that was once memorialized but then forgotten.There is much that is forgotten here, in this semi-amnesiac, often contradictory space. In 1936, when 3,000Latino orange-pickers went on strike, the Orange County sheriff deputized 400 private guards, armed withguns and tear-gas, in a show of force that journalist Carey McWilliams named “fascism in practice.” WhenMcWilliams visited Orange County, he observed, “It is astonishing how quickly social power could crystallizeinto an expression of arrogant brutality in these lovely, seemingly placid, outwardly Christian communities.”That is a particularly ominous foreshadowing of the hyper-militarization and racialized policing that we haveseen more recently in Ferguson
There is so much racism, inequality, and atrocities that have happened in Orange County's past, yet there is little conversation about it now to recognize it. It is privilege to be able to commit all of these acts, and then forget them, yet the people who they've affected will forever remember and be affected by their actions. It also shows that there's a lot of history to unpack that many of us are probably unaware about.
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Lampra Jones, a recent graduate of a chiropractic program who has struggled to find work, called herself “a loner” and said she wished she knew more people to help with her job search. “If you don’t know the right people,” said Ms. Jones, 28, “you’re not going to get anywhere.” Michael Novajovsky, a father of three in Gwinnett County with a temporary job as a network engineer, said in an interview that the struggle to build a better life often felt similar to “a lottery.” His job pays $27 an hour but comes with no health insurance for him, his wife and his three children.
This just shows how difficult it is to climb the income ladder. Lampra, who went to school for a specific practice, still struggles to find work, despite the work, time, and money she put into gaining skills and knowledge about her practice. Having connections is important, but difficult when you may not have access to resources and opportunities to build those connections. For Michael, "network engineer" sounds like a job that also requires education and that he has to be equipped with the right skills to do well. However, it does not come with health insurance which makes it a lot more difficult to support him and his family.
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Climbing the income ladder occurs less often in the Southeast and industrial Midwest, the data shows, with the odds notably low in Atlanta, Charlotte, Memphis, Raleigh, Indianapolis, Cincinnati and Columbus. By contrast, some of the highest rates occur in the Northeast, Great Plains and West, including in New York, Boston, Salt Lake City, Pittsburgh, Seattle and large swaths of California and Minnesota. “Where you grow up matters,” said Nathaniel Hendren, a Harvard economist and one of the study’s authors. “There is tremendous variation across the U.S. in the extent to which kids can rise out of poverty.”
When thinking back to Week 1 when we discussed the purpose of schools, a majority of the class voted for "social mobility" as the main purpose of schools now, and I agree with this. However, reading about the effects of where you live and seeing the map of different districts on Tuesday, makes me wonder if this can be possible for students and families who live in poverty.
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Fiscal neutrality would thus respect the wishes of local taxpayers, but it would not necessarily meet the needs of local students. Indeed, fiscal neutrality really promised equity for tax-payers, who could be assured that the same tax rates would result in the same amount of funding for schools. It did not guarantee equity for students.
Honestly, I am a bit lost reading about fiscal neutrality and what it means for the amount of funding schools will get. Mostly about the taxing part of the it, I'm a bit confused on how this changes funding in rich and poor districts. It also says here that fiscal neutrality would "respect the wishes of local taxpayers", so is it more about "getting their money's worth", but not necessarily looking at students' needs and basing funding off of that?
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In the past, most states simply provided a flat grant to school districts based on the number of students in the district. Each student received an equal amount of funding, which obviously did nothing to offset the inequalities in local funding
Giving an equal amount of funding to each student is an example of equality but schools should instead meet needs based on equity. Instead of treating everyone the same and giving the same amount of resources and funding for each student, giving based on the individual needs of students would instead help a lot more. Some students may live in poverty, while others may not. Some students may have disabilities that require more resources.
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schools were seen as both academic and socializing institutions, where students would learn not only how to read and write but also how to become good citizens. Integration was consistent with this tradition insofar as it held out the hope that white and black students would learn from one another. When Justice I Marshall lamented in his dissenting opinion in Milliken that "unless our chil-dren begin to learn together, there is little hope that our people will ever learn to live together;' he captured the belief that integration could help prepare stu-I dents to live in a diverse, pluralistic society.7
The intended purpose of schools was for students to learn and gain knowledge through academics, but also learn how to socialize with one another. With segregated schools, students would only socialize with others who look like them, most likely come from the same background, and live similar lives. With integration, there's opportunity for students to socialize with those who may not look like them or have the same background. Schools where students of different races can interact and learn together, can prepare them to live in a diverse society.
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Formany adolescents of color, dropping out of school was the only way to avoid“psychological and cultural demoralization.” By World War II, most studentsof color had come to accept the futility of seeking an education in the hostileand indifferent environment of the Los Angeles educational system.
Teachers have a lot of influence on their students. When teachers act upon their biases and treat students differently because of them, students can definitely see through them and it can great impact the way they see themselves and their ability to achieve. Knowing your teacher thinks of you as lazy, rebellious, or considers you not high achieving because of your race (something that cannot be changed), is extremely discouraging when trying to pursue an educaiton. Where you are supposed to learn and feel safe interacting with others, students of color are instead experiencing hostility.
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The board asked districts to give “serious and thought-ful consideration” to the problem of racial imbalances in schools, and inOctober required districts to “exert all effort to avoid and eliminate segrega-tion.”12These directives, however, particularly given their vague nature, weremet mostly with inaction. Consequently, California schools at this time, partic-ularly in Los Angeles, were more segregated than those in Louisiana, Alabama,North Carolina, Virginia, and South Carolina.1
This shows that without intentional steps, plans, or even policies, little can come out of a call to action. I also found it suprising that California schools were more segregated than a number of other states in the southeast, even if it was during the 60s. This is opposite from what I would have thought. Los Angeles is known for being filled with a variety of different cultures and people now, and a there are people that come from different parts of the world to live here.
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A critical mass of white families left the dis-trict, and in doing so changed the way future parents with school-agechildren would view Los Angeles public schools. Many who were alreadyconsidering leaving the city decided to leave. Many who might otherwisehave chosen to put down roots in Los Angeles saw a school system inupheaval and joined the throngs of new commuters transforming formerorange groves into suburban refuges.
It's interesting to that white families would just leave and move away because of desegregation. It also shows the money and privledge they had to be able to make this big of a change as a result. I'm sure many of the white families leave bcause they didn't agree with schools being desegregated, but I wonder how many families left because they saw that the school system was struggling and in conflict, which would affect their children's education.
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