Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives want to dramatically slash funding for Title I, the long-running federal program that sends money to schools based on the number of children from low-income families that they serve.
A bill advanced by a Republican-controlled House subcommittee on Friday seeks to cut Title I grants by 80% or nearly $15 billion.
Republicans just keep writing the Democrat talking points for the next election.
Interesting, so people that have the ability to send their kids to different schools, like having a school choice, is having more input and the kids are provided better materials and resources than they are in public schools!
first off, not all private schools are for profit. Secondly, that's the point, they need to do well, or they don't make money. That's like saying 'dammit, apple only makes money because they provide a service that billions of people pay for and enjoy!! grrrr, I wish we just had one standard government phone for everyone!"
Really? You're saying the private schools are the issue with this? Public schools it's literally illegal to hold someone back.
And baltimore public schools produce illiterate kids. You think using one example to base your opinion off of all charter schools is okay? I'll do the same but can name hundreds of public schools.
I didn't. I made test scores and success in life a metric for it. Right now, schools are more segregated since they were literally segregated.
Your policy of forcing every kid to go to public school and requiring that parents will need to pay 40k to a private school to get a better education only hurts people. There are plenty of benchmarks we can require to ensure private schools take in students from different demographics. Right now a poor inner city kid is sent to a shitty inner city school, without an option to actually go to a good school. Give parents the option to do that.
How public schools are run aren't making good students. I want to switch it up by offering the choice for schools.
My app is removing everything I type when I scroll up, and I'm not going to work around that. Anyway, you're misrepresenting what I said, whether purposeful or not. People with resources and money will always have better outcomes no matter where they go to school. It just so happens that many (most) private schools have a barrier that prevents people without resources from attending, so private schools appear to do better because they have better outcomes, but it's by design. The design isn't that they're better educators either, it's that their choosing to only accept people who will already likely have better outcomes because of confounding factors.
I have addressed one way to get around that off the top of my head above. I'm sure there are plenty of other ways.