That doesn't seem to have much to do with choice...
A Deathwatch Guard Send a noteboard - 20/09/2011 11:59:06 PM
And everything to do with the obvious fact that going to a better school makes one more likely to go on to higher education, and at a better university.
The choice part doesn't seem covered in the article at all, except in the hypothetical sense that with the right to choose, kids would go to better schools and therefore be better off. But that's very hypothetical, especially since those schools will quickly stop being good when they're overcrowded far beyond their capacity.
The choice part doesn't seem covered in the article at all, except in the hypothetical sense that with the right to choose, kids would go to better schools and therefore be better off. But that's very hypothetical, especially since those schools will quickly stop being good when they're overcrowded far beyond their capacity.
School choice works
20/09/2011 10:25:16 PM
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The word "duh" comes to mind.
20/09/2011 11:01:26 PM
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Regardless, you don't refuse to save some just because you can't save all. *NM*
20/09/2011 11:43:04 PM
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When saving some comes at the cost of dooming others, you might.
20/09/2011 11:50:05 PM
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I would assume they kids were taking the extra spots the schools hadm.n
21/09/2011 12:41:20 AM
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Yes, well, they might be performing better exactly because they run below maximum capacity.
21/09/2011 08:53:58 PM
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Cool cool. I'm confused, though- won't pretty much everyone try to get into the "better" schools?
20/09/2011 11:47:45 PM
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If you read the aritcle it tells you the good schools were full to capacity
21/09/2011 12:17:15 AM
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That doesn't seem to have much to do with choice...
20/09/2011 11:59:06 PM
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