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Permalink Reply by sceneless on October 13, 2009 at 6:28pm Yes, the educational system in the U.S. is terrifying. I think it is a systematic effort by the elite in this country to miseducate children from working class communities of color so that their children while be the rulers of the universe. What they fail to understand is that the U.S. will not remain a hegemonic power for long with the state of the disempowerment of masses of people in this country. The U.S. awaits a rude awakening of many sorts.
Permalink Reply by CocoaPuss Zine on October 14, 2009 at 9:39pm Angelica Johnson said:Yes, the educational system in the U.S. is terrifying. I think it is a systematic effort by the elite in this country to miseducate children from working class communities of color so that their children while be the rulers of the universe. What they fail to understand is that the U.S. will not remain a hegemonic power for long with the state of the disempowerment of masses of people in this country. The U.S. awaits a rude awakening of many sorts.
I've noticed that there is a lot of miseducation in this country. I don't understand the purpose of soothing kids with lies. Do any of you think there will be a surge of home school or private school education? Or do you think more parents are going to have to step it up and demand a change?
Permalink Reply by Rage_Proletaire on October 15, 2009 at 10:10am Do any of you think there will be a surge of home school or private school education? Or do you think more parents are going to have to step it up and demand a change?
Permalink Reply by Rage_Proletaire on October 15, 2009 at 10:15am Gullah*Gotham*Glitter said:Do any of you think there will be a surge of home school or private school education? Or do you think more parents are going to have to step it up and demand a change?
I don't think either option would really be viable for parents lacking in significant resources, time being the most basic of them all (i.e. free time not spent making money, or the money to make up for the lack of time to devote to making money). I could totally be wrong, but (based on the crisis at that particular school), I'd assume that community lacks the resources to sustain its school environment in the first place. And bureaucracy being what it is (at its worst), the school board might go out of its way to make it look as if a significant change has been made, rather than just change something.
Why are there not enough teachers available in the first place? There may not be enough incentives involved with teaching (in Detroit) to attract candidates worth their weight. And even if parents got together, made signs, shouted all over local television, it doesn't necessarily mean that those teaching positions will be filled by qualified folk. I was amazed when what little paperwork is involved in becoming a teacher down here (might have certifications in pending, but you can get into a public classroom and treat the job like anybody treats a job they feel they "settled for, momentarily.")
I know nothing of the demographics in Detroit, but based on my personal experience in the public school system, I wouldn't consider it unlikely that the schoolboard just hires folk as expediently as possible, waterlogging the school system with puppet teachers; masqueraders collecting a paycheck with the least amount of effort (and ensuring little more than that the children don't beat each other to death). I don't see the school board doing much else besides the minimum action necessary to shut people up. Then again, they may lack the resources, could be something bigger than just the school board (like the local economy), and screaming parents will find themselves screaming all over the city, up and down the bureaucratic escalators.
Binky B liked Afro-Punk's blog post Spotlight On Funky Lady Andy Allo (Prince Collaborator, Singer, Songwriter, Guitar Player)
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