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- From: idfriedm@hertz.uwaterloo.ca (id friedman)
- Subject: Re: Magnet schools
- Message-ID: <C0M5Av.Au0@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca>
- Sender: news@watserv1.uwaterloo.ca
- Organization: University of Waterloo
- References: <1993Jan07.182300.7993@eng.umd.edu> <1993Jan7.200126.13933@wam.umd.edu> <1993Jan07.210951.11037@eng.umd.edu>
- Date: Sun, 10 Jan 1993 00:56:55 GMT
- Lines: 103
-
- In article <1993Jan07.210951.11037@eng.umd.edu> clin@eng.umd.edu (Charles Lin) writes:
- >
- >In article <1993Jan7.200126.13933@wam.umd.edu>, kckbxr@next16pg2.wam.umd.edu (Robin Hood) writes:
- >>
- >>I didn't read the article, but your letter and the examples taken from the
- >>article indicate magnet schools used in a post-high school setting.
- >>There, I agree. In high schools, in my opinion, it's a different story.
- >>In P.G. County, MD, there are a variety of magnet schools offerred. I
- >>think that this is discriminatory at this age-level. I don't see the need
- >>to concentrate on the magnet school programs on the hs-level when there
- >>aren't enough funds to educate the general public properly. Many high
- >>schools are limited as far as necessities are concerned (terribly old
- >>books, limited amounts of copy paper, resources, teachers, etc.) to the
- >>general public. I don't see how the Dept. of Education can justify
- >>spending the general public's tax dollars on a few select individuals. If
- >>these people want advanced education, then they should look for alternate
- >>means to funding it, but not the PUBLIC education budget!
- >
- > I'm sorry I didn't mention it, but the article referred to high
- >schools. Colleges and universities essentially do admit people based
- >on qualifications, so having an article like that would not be terribly
- >original (unless they suggested that a single test would be the sole
- >basis of admission, which is true in many countries).
- >
- > I'll tell you basically why I support the idea of magnet schools
- >despite elitism and possible discrimination. Under the assumption that
- >not all students can be equally talented, and that only some small percentage
- >of such students can succeed (say 20%), and assuming that not all such
- >students live in one area served by one or two schools, but are distributed
- >in many places, and assuming that there isn't the kind of money and
- >administration to make all schools wonderful institutes of learning, then
- >magnet schools seem like a good idea.
- >
- > Why? First, if we have a small number of students who show
- >evidence of being good in school, but some of these students are
- >located in schools where the local high school has to serve everyone,
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- >then the likelihood is that such students will not have the kind
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- >of education that can challenge them. It seems a waste to force someone
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- >to go to a school where they are not expected to accomplish much when
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
- >there is evidence that they can.
- ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
-
- Right on!!!! The idea is not to breed mediocrity by bringing the excellent
- students to the level of the average, it is to encourage excellence!!
-
-
-
-
- >
- > Now, if we resort to private schools or parochial schools, then that
- >means a student has to have money in order to go, and this would be unfair
- >to the poorer students who can not afford private schooling. In addition,
- >if students in poorer communities have poorer schooling, then there is
- >no alternative but to attend those high schools. Magnet schools would
- >offer a means to go to a higher quality school.
- >
- >>
- >>Now, you may disagree with me and say well, what qualifies me to have an
- >>opinion on the subject. Well, I graduated from one of the high schools in
- >>P.G. County, MD, in 1989 and am currently at the Univ. of Maryland. I've
- >>since visited my high school and have seen how pathetic it looks. I guess
- >>we can all thank his royal highness, Gov. of Baltimore, Willie Shaeffer
- >>for the millions of tax dollars in which the kids will never be able to
- >>have for education now, can't we?
- >>
- >
- > Here's the problem as I see it. If the money were to be evenly distributed
- >across educational systems, the likelihood is that education still may
- >not improve. Concentrate the money in a few schools, then students who
- >fare well can have a chance to do better. Obviously such a solution is
- >not perfect. Just putting money in the such systems in no guarantee of
- >quality, so people in these schools have to perform. It also doesn't address
- >the problem of how to improve the education of everyone, in general. However,
- >by having some magnet schools that are open by testing to all, then this
- >provides a way of having some quality education vs. no quality education.
- >Hopefully, a benefit of having such schools will be that some people want
- >better education and will demand that their local schools provide some
- >of that quality.
- >
- > Another alternative is to run all schools in some sort of hierarchy
- >similar to the California education at the college level. I believe
- >they run some two or three levels of state education. University of
- >California is the top level, California State Univeristy is the next,
- >and there maybe some city colleges below that.
- >
- > Finally, I would say that there needs to be some minimum level of
- >money going to all schools which provides for books, etc. However,
- >I'm not entirely convinced that money equals quality education either.
- >
- >--
- >Charles Lin
- >clin@eng.umd.edu
- >
-
- Ishay
-
- P.S I am interested in knowing exactly what Perot accomplished in the
- Texas educational system reforms.
-