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katatonic
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posted September 12, 2010 09:04 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for katatonic     Edit/Delete Message
while lipservice is paid to the "need for an education in this stressed economy" and how much they care about the kids, this article makes it mighty plain just why these officials are going the extra mile...

Going Door to Door for No-Show Students

North Texas mayors and school officials joined forces Saturday going door to door in search of students who have not returned to school and are at risk of dropping out entirely. A phone bank was set up this week to call students first.

Dallas ISD said about 2,500 students have not re-enrolled for the semester. Fort Worth ISD lost more than 400 students. Arlington ISD is reporting 450 no-show students. The three school districts were dressed in different colors -- Dallas in orange T-shirts, Fort Worth in blue, Arlington in green -- but each went on the same mission.

"Everybody has to have an education, or we all pay," Melody Johnson, FWISD superintendent, said. Hundreds of school employees and volunteers and even a couple of mayors knocked on hundreds of doors. "It's important. We've got to save every kid, make sure that everyone graduates. That's what we want to do for our children," Cherie Washington, Eastern Hills High School principal, said.

"If they don't have an education, they're basically going to put themselves in a hole for the rest of their lives," Dallas Mayor Tom Leppert said. He and Arlington Mayor Robert Cluck have the big picture in mind -- their cities' futures. "When jobs are scarce, and people haven't finished high school, the possibilities of them getting a really good job are slim," Mayor Cluck said.

Teams of people hit a number of homes only to discover the student no longer lived at that address or no one came to the door, so the teams left on the door knob flyers on how to re-enroll. But when they found students who were home, they heard just about every excuse out there for dropping out of school.Some of the more common excuses were "I'm working, got a family. I don't like school," Jerry McCullough said.

Ricardo Reta, 17, cannot find one subject he likes. But the Arlington teen is giving it another shot. His mother took him to school to re-enroll. He'll have to repeat his sophomore year. "I didn't really want to come. I was already bored of school," the Sam Houston High School student said. "My mom tells me to, so I just might as well get it over with."

This month is crucial for schools to get as many students back as possible because state funding and a district's rating depend on it. Arlington ISD got about 20 students to re-enroll in school. Dallas ISD is still compiling its numbers. Fort Worth ISD says its numbers will be available next week.

i am so tired of everyone pretending that a high school diploma is the ticket to a life of prosperity....

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emitres
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Registered: Aug 2010

posted September 13, 2010 05:59 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for emitres     Edit/Delete Message
quote:
i am so tired of everyone pretending that a high school diploma is the ticket to a life of prosperity....

i agree with this... and funding should not be the reason to have bodies in the classroom

that being said, i do believe in education
as a means to produce critical, logical thinking... something which is, sadly, decreasing as we allow others ( who are in no better shape ) to do our thinking for us

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katatonic
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posted September 14, 2010 10:09 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for katatonic     Edit/Delete Message
i believe in education too. but not the public school way, which encourages rote thinking and blind obedience. many of us did survive this but many more did not...

the idea of providing a basic education for all was a great one. it helped unify a country with a high percentage of immigrants and gave everyone the same start. but the idea of MANDATORY education is a crock. and much as jwhop might call it "socialist" it precedes socialism and actually coincides with the CAPITALIST need for assemblyline fodder and people who live by the bell/clock.

i remember a statistic (furnished by john holt, an educator/homeschooling advocate) that the literacy rate has actually FALLEN since mandatory schooling came into effect rather than risen. this is probably partly due to the rising immigrant population from non-english speaking origins, but not entirely!

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emitres
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posted September 14, 2010 11:25 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for emitres     Edit/Delete Message
i will totally agree with you on that...

has turned into more of a baby-sitting service than an actual education

there are issues on so many different levels as well... and it's not just an isolated "american" thing... canada is having the same issues and, from what i understand, so are some european countries

home schooling has become a very popular option but i think that, in some cases, this too can be a problem...

quote:
and much as jwhop might call it "socialist" it precedes socialism and actually coincides with the CAPITALIST need for assemblyline fodder and people who live by the bell/clock

jwhop - i think he likes using the word socialist because of how it "feels" in his mouth.. and a thumbs up to the last part


so the question becomes, how do we get our
brains back?

------------------
...there is no "I"...

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cpn_edgar_winner
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posted September 14, 2010 01:21 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for cpn_edgar_winner     Edit/Delete Message
how amusing.

jwhops, do you like the way the word socialism feels in your mouth? (bonus points to emitres for that one)

door to door recuiting drops outs...our tax dollars at work i suppose.

where i live they cut bus service to outside of a 2 mile radius. i have to imagine that impacted the number of students this year. 2 mile walk, each way, k-12...in a fairly large city...to give the school credit, they "found" 800,000 thousand dollars right before school started in the budget(where oh where was it hiding?) so they could reinstate crossing guards.

crooked f-ers. educating kids is not on their top priorities. sercuring federal funding..... however, might be.

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emitres
Knowflake

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posted September 15, 2010 11:57 AM     Click Here to See the Profile for emitres     Edit/Delete Message
quote:
educating kids is not on their top priorities. sercuring federal funding..... however, might be

frustrating how so much seems to revolve around this very issue...

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katatonic
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Registered: Apr 2009

posted September 15, 2010 03:31 PM     Click Here to See the Profile for katatonic     Edit/Delete Message
cpn when my daughter was 10 and started secondary school because of the system in london she was allowed to go to whatever school she chose (space permitting) within a 3 mile radius. though the one she went to was only 2 miles away that meant a bus AND a train ride every morning and night to get there, and almost an hour's journey...i worried just a little, at first, but the worst thing that happened was that she learned how to make money out of a machine on the train platform that gave refunds for bad tickets (don't remember the specifics)...her "higher education" in beating the system began there, LOL...

and the school being on the edge of hampstead heath (a HUGE largely wild park) she also learned to cut classes. now if i had taken advantage of the socialist system and been a stay at home mom, these lessons would not have occurred, however i always chose to work for my keep so could not escort her as i would have liked.

still 'n all she had a great school ... and when she came to cali she was bored stiff in the local highly regarded middle school. fortunately i was in position to take her out and put her in a tutorial situation where she got better than average state-sponsored education.

it is a strong child/family who makes the most of our public schools, and it does take both i believe. leaving education entirely to the tenured authorities vying for funds is a losing game.

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