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Quote by: CoffeeSaint Catholic schools do better because they have smaller class sizes, fewer bureaucratic restrictions and obligations, and (most important) the support of interested, involved parents who believe in education. Give public schools these things, and the results would be similar. |
So, why do these government indoctrination centers (public schools) have all these "bureaucratic restrictions and obligations"? Is it not at least in part because of the Democrats and Republicans the sheeple keep voting into office? Is it not at least in part because of leftist labor unions? As for parents getting involved in their children's education, what is it about public schools that make parents less inclined to get involved?
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And though it wasn't directed at me, more money is spent in "white" schools. The term is generally used to describe the majority population, not every single student at the school. My high school had 1600 students: 7 of them were Hispanic, and perhaps 20 were black (all but one of the black students were bussed in from inner-city Boston). Would you call that a "mixed-race" school? Or is "white" a reasonable descriptor? And my school was quite well financed.
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So, it really has to do with economic status and not race. It has to do with wealthier school districts vs. poorer school districts. Well, isn't that simply because schools are primarily funded locally through property taxes? Yet, the leftists keep wanting us to believe it's a race issue.