Some public schools are great though. I think there is a really tough problem with schools. In general, where there is a good tax base there are good schools. It would be hard to fix that.
Now Gud, you're making it sound like weak Public Schools could be helped by throwing money at them. Everyone knows that isn't true.
You know, even though well-off communities seem to have good public schools with fully supplied and staffed small classes and poor communities seem to have an awful lot of weak public schools that are undersupplied and understaffed and have large classes its still true and everyone knows it.
So what's a polite way to tell him being loud late at night is simply unacceptable? Apparently no one was in my apartment for several years - maybe he doesn't know someone has moved in?
I think a simple "Would you mind keeping it down after 10?" would suffice. And if the problem persists, contact your landlord. Mine issued a memo reminding everyone of the Quiet Hours after he received a bunch of noise complaints about one tenant.
Also, if my new landlord asks me how things are going in my new place, should I tell him about the noise, or is it more polite/fair to ask the guy to be quiet first before telling the landlord?
Something like [link] might be an option for you, aurelia.
Thanks. Really all I want is a VCR that has a hard drive instead of tapes. My needs are simple.
I don't actually use the Mac clone anymore and my laptop is usually at work with me when my shows are on.
I think a simple "Would you mind keeping it down after 10?" would suffice. And if the problem persists, contact your landlord.
Well when you put it like that it sounds so simple.
I guess my college experience has left me fearful of retaliation - you know, that things will get worse instead of better. But my college wingmates were crazy people....
Now Gud, you're making it sound like weak Public Schools could be helped by throwing money at them. Everyone knows that isn't true.
I think it's a complex problem, but yeah, I don't think you can overlook that wealthier communities tend to have a lot better public schools. If you have a mismanaged school district though, money probably won't help much and some places manage to outperform their resources.
I get annoyed when people talk about the public schools being a disaster. They go from awesome to disaster depending where you look.
I went to very good public schools in a healthily middle-class town. They're still solid, but I've watched even them bowing under pressure to teach to the endless tests. You know, for the 'standards'.
That's where my paranoia kicks in... Why are you messing with good schools? Which Bushie is making money off of this?
Well when you put it like that it sounds so simple.
I guess my college experience has left me fearful of retaliation - you know, that things will get worse instead of better. But my college wingmates were crazy people....
Heh. Yes. But now you have a landlord to complain to. I think it's fine to go to the guy downstairs first before mentioning it to the landlord, though.
I'm going to repost this down the thread.
I am not a teacher, but I'd say that along with the money in wealthier districts, you also are more likely to have parents who went to college and have the resources to be actively engaged in their childrens' education.
Yeah, I think under-performing school districts are an onion of a problem.