Obviously,
our schools need help. The major thought
that keeps coming to mind from chapter two is how students do not receive the
same amount of funding per student for their education. The book discusses how in “white”
neighborhoods students get X amount of money, while minorities get less even
though they live a few blocks or few miles away. I might not make friends here, but I am tired
of this being a white/minority problem. Yes, “white” schools get more money because their
property taxes are higher. It is not because they are white that they get more money. It is because the value of their home is more. This is 2013, we have a "black" preisident. I am sure his home in Chicago is in a nice neighborhood and they have nice schools. I am sure the students in his neighborhood get more funding for their educations than the students who live is what many would call the "ghetto." We have to stop looking at this a race issues.
I own a house in St. George, Utah and every
year I get a statement telling me how much of my money goes towards the schools
in the county. Yes, the majority of the
people are white, but there are many, many other different races that make up
the population. These people of the community
value education. The people of that community put real value in being
able to provide for themselves. They don’t
want to depend on the government. The schools in this area have beautiful
buildings.
I can see that say you live in
South Central, Los Angeles your property taxes are not going to be the same as
Beverly Hills. Though they are only
miles apart the schools are going to be funded differently. So the real question is how do we mandate
that the schools get even funding? When
do we stop saying this is not a minority/white person problem and look at the
problem as it should be looked at?
This is a huge problem on
Guam. Every day I drop my children off
at school and yes, they do go to a public school and their school is so run down. They don’t have the resources that other
schools have like computers, ELMOS and electronic white boards. I am always asking myself what can be done to
improve the schools. Again, it goes
back to what I mentioned earlier…property taxes. Are we helping our children enough on our own
island?
Giving our children across the
country a quality education is hard! I
believe there are many things that this country needs to look at and face. And sometimes I feel we don’t really want to
change how things are done. For example,
weeding out the teachers who don’t do their jobs, but get to keep a pay check because
they have been in the system for so long.
When talking about money everyone seems to have an opinion, especially
when it deals with our youth.
Your personal experience of how our tax dollars are used inefficiently and ineffectively is chilling. I too used to own a house in Oklahoma and like you would see so much going to education, and like any state, they will put the dollars where the most immediate bandage needs to be made.
ReplyDeleteCan we hope for any better? I again will admit that although I appreciate living in a country that affords me the opportunity to have a right to education, our leaders are not doing what is right by those whom they serve.