In my experience, this seems like a typical, known bug in big city and mixed-income (e.g. Cambridge, MA) school systems. Have never heard of such problems from suburban teachers or parents.
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Suburbs are the destination for people with high incomes fleeing the city who while they benefit from the city because they get their incomes there, live and pay taxes elsewhere, which is blighting for city schools but lovely for suburban ones.
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NYC takes it to the extreme, but yeah, it's everywhere. The effect that a "good" school has on house prices is how it shows up most places.
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The insanity of the wokeness and test opt out culture I sense is a special breed of NYC progressivism. Def a killjoy to the idea of moving to NY with our two little boys.
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I think SF pioneered it. We had Carranza first.
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Pretty sure that's everywhere. If your kid is in a bad school and you have the means you move house to a district with better schools, insist on a better school in the same district, send them to a private school, meaning people without the means are stuck with the bad school.
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