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by Wohlf
2945 days ago
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>The fact is, in the upper half of the American class system, educational needs are fantastically well served by redundant layers of investment. And in the lower levels, we attempt to pick up the slack by spending more money. Unfortunately, this is not a problem money can solve. Motivated parents are the only real solution, assisted by more efficient use of resources. https://www.npr.org/sections/ed/2016/04/25/468157856/can-mor... |
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Today's "nonideal" parent is just the kid the system failed yesterday. Any solution has to acknowledge the debt we have built up.
I read the article you linked. It's a great article. But what it doesn't say is "unfortunately, this is not a problem money can solve", and I'm not sure how you reached that conclusion.
Of course there are ways of spending money that don't have good "outcomes". But the article both cites examples where monetary investment has paid off and also challenges the reader to take an expansive view of what the "outcomes" are. Which I 100% agree with, because schools in impoverished carry far more of the load of holding together communities and providing essential services than in well off areas.