I see, so your personal experience outweighs any other evidence?Stom wrote:As I pointed out...Sandydragon wrote:Partially. We used to take bright children and put them into grammar schools where they would be expected to succeed. Now we keep them in with the less academic and expect far less.canta_brian wrote: Is that last sentence supposed to be sarcastic?
with a good education, plus the expectation and role models, plus the opportunities in the extra-curricular sense, a child from a poor background can do very well.
At the school I was at, they took kids from poor backgrounds. Of those kids, I know one of them has gone on to run a store and be a well thought of graffiti artist, so he's done something. The rest...are working menial jobs, just like they would have if they'd gone to a standard school.
So did that "better education" benefit them? Or did their social status count for much more?
The fact is that grammar school children dominated public officers for many years. That hasnt been replicated by comprehensive school children. Maybe your school was just making a token effort and expected those children to achieve nothing. Maybe they struggled with peer pressure outside of school? Poor children don't need handouts, they need decent schools that not only enforce good discipline to allow them to learn but also provide them with the opportunities that Grammars used to and public schools do today.