Saturday, January 02, 2021

Words to The Wise and Well-to-Do

Taken from Axios today 5 hours ago:
Private schools pull students away from public
Written by Erica Pander
(Erica Pandey is a business reporter at Axios. She covers the business and technology trends that are shaping the future of work.)
"Private institutions are attracting wealthy families who are frustrated with public schools' flip-flopping on remote and in-person learning.
Why it matters: The trend is weakening public schools, which will lose funding as they lose students, and deepening the divide between how rich and poor kids are educated.
What's happening: In districts across America, public schools have had to follow local and state guidelines and stick with online school, while private schools have offered in-person alternatives.
BLOGGER INSERT: New polling data: COVID-19 taking a big toll on physical and emotional  well-being of Latinos | NC Policy Watch
  • That's appealing to parents who are fed up with virtual learning because it forces them to juggle work and child care or because the schooling is not as high in quality as in-person instruction.

Just 5% of private schools were virtual this fall, according to survey data from the National Association of Independent Schools, cited by CNBC.

Compare that with the 62% of public schoolkids who started the fall on Zoom, per Burbio, which has been tracking public school re-opening plans.

Private schools have a clear advantage in how they've been able to handle the pandemic:

  • They were able to devise and advertise their reopening plans throughout the summer while public schools waited to from officials.
  • They have the money to build tents for outdoor instruction or pay for testing to stay open even as cases rise.

And it's working. . .

The stakes: Not only is this trend separating higher and lower income students, it's also widening the urban-rural divide.

  • While 92% of people in urban areas live within five miles of a private school, only 34% of households in rural areas have a private option within the same radius, according to the Brookings Institution.

What we still don't know is whether parents will keep ditching public schools from private ones in 2021 and beyond.

  • "I think once things get back to normal, most students will be returning," says Larry Ferlazzo, a public high school teacher in Sacramento.  "It's hard for me to imagine that a huge number of families are going to want to take the financial hit required to pay for private schools."
  • Still, we may have already kickstarted a vicious cycle, says Hale. "Funding follows the students," he says. "Public schools are going to lose more money, and this is going to continue, if not get worse."
Johns Hopkins launches new U.S.-focused COVID-19 tracking map | Hub

THE NEXT DISASTER | Part 3 - When Will it Happen?

2020, in 7 minutes

THE MARINES ARE ISSUING SILENCERS TO TROOPS AROUND THE WORLD|2021

This Little Light Of Mine

Bruce Springsteen with the Sessions Band - This Little Light of Mine

Myth 2020: Don't Just Look For "Light at The End of The Tunnel" > Make The World A Better Place

Here's the message from Mike Masnick @ Techdirt: Sure it can always getter, but if might always get worse. Needless to say, it's been an exhausting (and frustrating and stressful) year all around.It's tricky to figure out how to start this post this year, of all years > IMAGINE JUST HOW MUCH WORSE THE PANDEMIC WOULD HAVE BEEN WITHOUT THE MODERN OPEN INTERNET ACCESSIBLE AND USED BY EVERYONE
Don't just look for the light at the end of the tunnel | UnBatch
"As long-time readers are aware, ever since 2008, my final post of the year was a reflection on optimism. It started, in 2008, in the midst of a few fights to create a better internet at the time, in which two separate people had expressed to me what they believed to be a contradiction:
I am unfailingly optimistic about the potential for innovation to make the world better, and yet I often appeared (to them, at least), to be so angry about the state of the world and the efforts various people were involved in to impede the internet.
And thus started the tradition of writing a post about how important it was to stay happy and optimistic, even in the face of so many challenges to that optimism.
Whatever anger or frustration people sense from me has never been in opposition to that optimism, but directed at how that optimistic vision may be delayed or limited by short-sighted thinking.

New Year's Message: Make The World A Better Place

from the it-can-always-get-better dept

If you'd like to look over the history of these posts, here's the full list:
I'm less excited about the fact that heading into the new year we're still going to be spending way too much time fighting back against bad policy ideas.
> Section 230 is still going to be under attack, even after the new administration takes over (Section 230, like copyright, remains an area where there is bipartisan horribleness). Speaking of copyright, that's back on the docket as well, with Senator Tillis's absolutely insane ideas regarding copyright reform. But it will be important that we fight to move things in the right direction.

I know that lots of people have been looking forward to the end of 2020 because, well, just look around.

Of course, I've also seen a few people note that many looked forward to the end of 2016, 2017, 2018, and 2019... and the following year was often, in many ways, even worse.

It is absolutely true that "things can always get worse." And we should be concerned that even with things looking up in some ways, we're still not out of this mess.

light at the end of tunnel Memes & GIFs - Imgflip

Things can get worse. But, the optimism is that they can also get better. And I've dedicated my life to trying to help people understand how it can be better, and to encourage them to help fight to make it better.

So as we move into 2021, I hope that you're all ready to fight to help bring about this better, more optimistic world. We sure could use it.

Finally, my final paragraph of the final post every year is dedicated to again thanking all of you for making this worthwhile. It really is the community of folks here that makes Techdirt what it is. It's the interactions and the discussions and the debates held on Techdirt and across the wider internet that make all this worth doing.

It challenges us, makes us think, and always pushes us to continue to be better ourselves. So thank you, once again, for making Techdirt such a special and wonderful place where we can share and discuss all of these ideas. I look forward to what you'll have to say in 2021.

 

 

Zelensky Calls for a European Army as He Slams EU Leaders’ Response

      Jan 23, 2026 During the EU Summit yesterday, the EU leaders ...