A City Tech OpenLab Course Site

Category: Unit 2 (Page 5 of 6)

Why Gay Marriage Is Good For Straight America

https://www.newsweek.com/andrew-sullivan-why-gay-marriage-good-america-68453

While currently legal in all 50 states, thanks to a Supreme Court case in 2015, the future of gay marriage is less than certain given the make up of our current Supreme Court. (trump replaced two justices who supported it.) According to Sullivan’s Op-Ed piece, why is gay marriage good for all Americans? What does he base his opinion on? Does he argue persuasively? Why and/or why not?

Op-Ed On Injustice For American Children In US Public Schools

What are your thoughts after reading this Op-ed? After looking at these charts? What is Ravitch’s topic, main idea, and major supporting details? Is there a connection to the spending charts? What does this say about our priorities?

What’s Your Zip Code? Why Poverty Matters in Public Education

Our society has not taxed itself to make sure that all kids have great schools.

If only it were true that a child raised in an impoverished home had the same life chances as children brought up in affluent homes, where food, medical care, and personal security are never in doubt. (Photo: Ina Fassbender/AFP via Getty Images)

From the earliest days of corporate reform, which is now generally recognized to have been a failed effort to “reform” schools by privatizing them and by making standardized testing the focal point of education, we heard again and again that a child’s zip code should not be his or her destiny. Sometimes, in the evolving debates, I got the sense that some people thought that zip codes themselves were a problem. If only we eliminated zip codes! But the reality is that zip codes are a synonym for poverty. So what the reformers meant was that poverty should not be destiny.

Would it were so! If only it were true that a child raised in an impoverished home had the same life chances as children brought up in affluent homes, where food, medical care, and personal security are never in doubt.

Imagine if all students had small classes in a school with beautiful facilities, healthy play spaces, the best technology, and well-paid teachers.But “reformers” insisted that they could overcome poverty by putting Teach for America inexperienced teachers in classrooms, because they (unlike teachers who had been professionally prepared) “believed” in their students and by opening charter schools staffed by TFA teachers. Some went further and said that vouchers would solve the problem of poverty. All of this was nonsense, and thirty years later, poverty and inequality remain persistent, unaffected by thousands of charter schools and TFA.

In effect, the reformers held out the illusion that testing, competition, and choice would level the playing field and life chances of rich and poor kids. After 30 or more years of corporate reform, it is clear that the reform message diverted our attention from the wealth gap and the income gap, which define the significant differences among children who have everything and children who have very little.

Imagine the cost of assuring that every school in the nation were equitably and adequately funded. Imagine if all students had small classes in a school with beautiful facilities, healthy play spaces, the best technology, and well-paid teachers. That would go a long way towards eliminating the differences between rich schools and poor schools, but our society has not taxed itself to make sure that all kids have great schools.

None of the promises of “reform” have been fulfilled. The cynical among us think that the beneficiaries of reform have been the billionaires, who were never willing to pay the taxes necessary to narrow income and wealth inequality or to fund good schools in every neighborhood. They gladly fund “reforms” that require chicken feed, as compared to the taxes necessary to truly make zip codes irrelevant.

Diane Ravitch is a historian of education at New York University. Her most recent book is “Reign of Error: The Hoax of the Privatization Movement and the Danger to America’s Public Schools.”

These charts are posted by your Prof. Your thoughts?

Obama Budget Request:

Trump Budget Request:

 

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