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Jo A.'s avatar

As a resident of a wealthy suburb I think the “secret sauce” is this based on an observation from a good friend who had a kid in kindergarten with mine and had also been a teacher in a school with a very economically disadvantaged population in the city: On the first day of kindergarten here more than half of the kids in our kids’ class could read and many of them were reading several years above grade level. Almost all of the others knew their letters and had some pre-reading skills. In the school in which she taught First grade, none of her students came in reading and less than a quarter knew their alphabet. Wealthy school districts have such a leg up from the start that it’s not the money and the teachers so much as the resources that the students are lucky enough to be provided with at home, that makes a true difference.

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Steve T's avatar

Want to know how people really feel about “school choice”? Note any community’s response to adding subsidized, multi-family housing.

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