Quote from: AYR on July 06, 2017, 02:57:22 PM
Quote from: Kurama on July 06, 2017, 02:28:06 PM
Quote from: AYR on July 06, 2017, 12:42:46 PM
Quote from: Kurama on July 06, 2017, 12:37:34 PM
Quote from: KhoiZan on July 06, 2017, 12:29:21 PM
Gentrification is not a unique issue for Chicago by a long shot. Nor is poor school funding in Black neighborhoods.
I could pull up dozens of articles reflecting the same issues in other inner city neighborhoods around the country.
What I'm addressing is the uniquely higher need for employment there.
And how that makes this new rule somewhat logical.
Hope that makes sense.
Gentrification isn't the topic its a sidebar. Yes, poor funding is something that happens in our communities but like pretty much everything in life, the degree to which it extends or impacts vary.
Well you have your own definition of what is logical. I personally don't see how placing yet another barrier for some of these kids barely making it to their senior year, who are having to survive hiking to some of these "better" neighborhoods, and who come from areas without education, jobs, or overall support is helpful. Not even taking to account familial and cultural barriers.
Everyone is entitled to their own opinions I guess.
how is this a "barrier" for anyone? It's about the diploma
if a kid is eligible to get a diploma they're automatically eligible for the things that the program is forcing them to get (a college acceptance, job, military enrollment, etc.)
I really think you're coming from a personal place rather than looking at context and different lived experiences.
A kid is eligible for a diploma based on their performance in school. Nothing afterward. Some kids do not go to college, its not for everyone. Same for the military.
To force kids to have engagement with either (especially military) just to receive something they already earned is criminal. Especially taking into account that not having a diploma will effectively hinder their gross income potential(may affect their families), they would have to remain in school after completing all courses, they would be forced to engage in something they may not even want to do.
All of this may even push them back to the communities that they were tryna get away from.
Im not viewing this personally at all. 1.Earning a high school diploma automatically places a person in the position for some type of higher education or employment. You can even be employed at certain places before getting a diploma. This is not saying you have to start a career or go to an Ivy League school. 2.It's just asking for proof that the student is at least trying to better themself. Military or college, gap, a job SOMETHING
and for college they just want an acceptance letter you don't even have to go. 3. No one is being forced into any certain place they don't want to be except staying home doing nothing
and life is not always about what everyone "wants" this is teaching these kids that very important lesson. When you're an adult no has to let you just wait until you're "ready". Verizon doesn't "give me a break" because I graduated before they ask for their money for the phone bill
4.why should these kids be allowed to not do anything because they got a diploma which is really nothing in today's work force?
Agreed so why place another obstacle to attain one?
College and the military are the only ways to better yourself? Aren't there people, hell even celebrities who have done immensely well for themselves and their communities without either?
Who decides what lessons are important? The kids? The parents? The government? I don't think having a whole curriculum around geometry, PE, physics, or trig have been helpful in my life or my friends.
That's the assumption I don't agree with. We're conditioned to feel like college and the military are our ONLY options. Considering how people have been graduating with degrees for almost a decade and still not finding jobs while being buried in debt, considering how there are veterans who come back from war homeless without any assistance, and considering how the government has been instrumental in harming these kids, the community, and their education for decades now this is just another policy that asks folks to jump through hoops.
I guarantee yall that these kids who are seniors who do want to strive to make something of themselves (I'd argue that they probably already have) have the drive to do it on their own. REQUIRING them to prove that to you, the institution, and the government that doesn't really give a shit about them is asinine imo.