this_is_praxis ([info]this_is_praxis) wrote,
@ 2007-08-08 22:14:00
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Current mood: excited
Current music:Vashti Bunyan

School Spirit
There is not a competent American who does not realize that our public school system is miserably fucked. The real debate is over whether the schools are irreparably fucked.

Some hold out  hope that we can jolt the system back to life with some competition from voucher programs -call that the defibrillator: no big rescue attempted, but maybe worth a shot before one shuffles off the ol' mortal coil. In that analogy, a solution involving a more robust income tax would be the equivalent of, I dunno, stem cell research: probably the best chance at reversing the real damage, but the very notion seems to offend conservatives to the core. Basically, convincing Americans that the public school system needs reform is easy. Now get them to admit they might need to cowboy up for the bill, and watch the room clear out.

Which is why it is phenomenally inspiring to see that the kids who have to suffer through these inwardly collapsing heaps get it.

A small group of pupils from the Students for an Equitable Education, a new youth organization working to change Illinois' school funding system, joined the "Riding for Reform" bus tour. Pupils went to the state's capital to rally for change in education funding.

"We take our education very seriously, and so should Governor (Rod) Blagojevich and state lawmakers," said Marcus Smith, 18, a founding member of SEE. "When school starts again in the fall, I hope we don't have another year of crowded classrooms and crumbling school buildings."

To hear these pupils' cries, Blagojevich sat down with SEE to discuss alternative routes to cover the costs of public school education. SEE members said they would like to see the state look at increasing income taxes instead of relying heavily on property taxes.

If this were to happen, SEE members said school districts wouldn't be defined by the wealth of the communities they serve. Instead, they said, pupils across the state could receive a fair and equal public education.

The call for more money to balance out the rich and poor school districts is a common one. Illinois has a relatively low income tax, according to the Illinois State Board of Education. As a consequence, the state's share of funding kindergarten through 12th-grade public education is 37 percent, ranking it 48th in the nation. Illinois property taxes, on the other hand, are significantly greater than in other states.

Illinois' scheme-as-described is pretty common, and it's too bad. America's poorest communities should not be anchored to it's poorest schools, nor should the least wealthy members of our society be footing high-proportion property taxes just so their kids can get an education that at least approximates what their wealthier counterparts can comfortably afford. And within those parameters there does not seem to be an alternative to redistributive taxation. But as these cool kids point out, an alternative is not needed. We know what will work. So why aren't we doing it?

By the by, I muddled through Illinois' mess of a public school system until I was 8. So, y'know, represent or whatever. I never thought too highly of my schools there, until I moved to Texas, where I learned that the good folks in the Land of Lincoln were amateurs when it came to devastating poor schools.



(7 comments) - (Post a new comment)


[info]fuck77kids
2007-08-09 03:18 am UTC (link)
Good entry, nice icon, and A+ for Vashti Bunyan.

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[info]lilbrattyteen
2007-08-09 09:52 am UTC (link)
O_O *stares at username and hopes it is not to be taken literally*

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[info]fuck77kids
2007-08-09 01:55 pm UTC (link)
It's a long story, and it's not what you think it is. Don't worry. I am not a paedophile, nor do I condone paedophilia.

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[info]lilbrattyteen
2007-08-09 09:55 am UTC (link)
I think most people agree that the school system needs extra help, but they also agree as to HOW it will be fixed. Also, politicians who know nothing about education like to make educational plans for the country. Come on, does Bush know anything about education?
They should leave it to the teachers. Teachers know that not every student will succeed, and to say that every student CAN succeed is denying reality. In application this just means that the bar will be lowered and lowered until every student succeeds. And that's how NCLB works!

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[info]rubbersun
2007-08-09 07:49 pm UTC (link)
yeah, I know first hand how sucky the public schools are. That's why I hightaled it outta there. I go to a private boarding school now and it's MUUUUCH better. however, It's hella expensive.

I think that part of the problem is the students too(at least in LA). ooorrr just that the system corners the students into acting the way that they do. In LA it's always over crowded and it's almost impossible to lower the number of students. There are so many people wanting to have an education but there are not enough schools or properties to support that. And the whole immagrant thing isn't helping. And I don't oppose the whole mexican thing, but there ought to be a way to sort it all out! unfortunately, even if they did find a way, it would take forever and a day to make it happen.

from my expirience, I also think that the teachers are part of it too. they have gone through so many students with bad behavior, they seem to just give up. AND CORSE MATERIAL IN LA SCHOOLS SUUUUCK!

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Random rant
[info]bgwqlc
2007-08-10 08:17 pm UTC (link)
I live i Louisiana which might have the worst schools in the country ( I am not sure if Mississippi has taken it away from us). I was lucky enough to live in a richer parish and received a pretty decent public school education. Now I live in Baton Rouge and the you can see the effects of a not that great education system. Down here they were stuck in a desegregation case that just ravaged the system. So many people (black and white) with the means put there kids in private school and left the public schools to rot. People would not vote for higher taxes because their kids did not go to those schools so why should they pay for it. Or people just left all together and went to the surrounding parishes (one of them I grew up in).

So many people come into the library who are my age (23) and can not even use a computer. I find this mind boggling because we had two computer labs in my school and everyone took computer science. They have high rates of drop outs and so many people (mainly black) in low wage jobs. I sometimes think people just want to keep this way.

And if you can imagine, New Orleans public schools are worst.

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Re: Random rant
[info]this_is_praxis
2007-08-13 03:39 pm UTC (link)
That sounds so much like Texas' cities. The history of Latinos in the Southwest is different from blacks in the South, but the result is basically the same: schools that a near-segregated and the poorest schools always ending up being the "minority" schools, the schools with the drop-outs, etc.

It seems like this problem really is all over our country.

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