I didn't see the article on the papers website....but an excellent find - and you are right - after reviewing all the recent numbers...it's not true to portray that there has been
I think the answer lies in a couple of points:
First - there is an 'entitlement' in everyone's mind that every kid has the right to a free public education.
Second - most people are ignorant that all that glitters is not gold.
Third - it has been proven time and time again that school districts hold parents hostage when funding is inadequate.
Add all of those up and you have a recipe for disaster.
On the surface - everyone supports new schools. I will admit - the high school is nice - it's overly nice and should have just been built bare-bones----but it is what it is now. We've unnecessarily spent millions, and sadly Vet, you are right. There is no measurable progress.
Middletown schools were once the crown jewel of our city - now they lie in waste at the taxpayers feet - albeit in new facades.
However - who is really at fault? Could it be the importation of poverty into our town reflected in the educational statistics? Could it be that parents just don't care? Could it be the administration? Could it be that we have too much administration? There's lots of things that it could be....
But....looking at the listing of all districts from the last report - its pretty clear to me that there's a direct correlation between household income and educational achievement....with the current state of our city, the results are not surprising.
I noticed that now 4 of our elementary schools (on the 2019-2020 new list that was published last week) are voucher schools now - and that is just going to make things worse.
------------- "Every government intervention [in the marketplace] creates unintended consequences, which lead to calls for further government interventions." -Ludwig van Mises
|