He retweeted a news story referencing «
wealthy white parents» in regards to an Upper West Side school meeting which featured a heated discussion on school diversity.
Couldn't it be that
wealthy white parents simply have better medical insurance?
Not exact matches
You would want your college sports played the way they were at the turn of the 20th century — by the
white guys whose
parents were
wealthy enough to send them to an elite college.
Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza, who joined the city school system this month, fanned the flames Friday by retweeting a news story on the meeting headlined: «Watch:
Wealthy white Manhattan
parents angrily rant against plan to bring more black kids to their schools.»
Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza ignited the first controversy of his tenure early Friday when he tweeted out a story with the headline «
Wealthy white Manhattan
parents angrily rant against plan to bring more black kids to their schools.»
City schools Chancellor Richard Carranza offered a semi-apology Monday for tweeting a story that cast Upper West Side
parents opposed to a school desegregation plan as little more than
wealthy white racists.
The caller was referring to Carranza's tweeting out a story with the headline, «
Wealthy white Manhattan
parents angrily rant against plan to bring more black kids to their schools.»
The authors suggest that
wealthy black
parents are less able to transfer wealth to their kids than their
white counterparts, perhaps, due in part to having fewer liquid assets such as stocks, bonds and savings, which can be passed down more easily to the next generation.
Wealthy black
parents also have substantially less home equity and only one - half the financial assets of their
white counterparts.
Opening Friday, Get Out stars Daniel Kaluuya as a young black photographer who heads upstate with his
white girlfriend (Allison Williams) to meet her
wealthy parents but encounters increasingly strange behavior.
The study employs 200 in - depth interviews with
white, Chinese American, and Indian American students and
parents in two
wealthy suburban communities — one with a large, growing Asian American population — and ethnographic observations and staff interviews at the local high school in both.
The report, released Nov. 16 by the New York City - based Public Agenda research group, found that low - income
parents and those who are members of racial and ethnic minorities are more interested in an academic focus than are
wealthier and
white parents.
WATCH:
Wealthy white Manhattan
parents angrily rant against plan to bring more black kids to their schools https://t.co/FRjqEsu53v
Now if you're a middle - income or
wealthy,
White parent with a neurotypical, non-disabled student in the public education system, there's probably no reason for you to care about school accountability.
On the other hand, frustrated
parents argue that the focus on integration forces schools to put their resources into attracting students from
whiter,
wealthier towns.
Schools Chancellor Richard Carranza called those
parents out with a tweet linking to the video with the headline: «WATCH:
Wealthy white Manhattan
parents angrily rant against plan to bring more black kids to their schools.»
As, the philosopher John Dewey once admonished, «what the best and wisest
parent wants for his own child, that the community must want for all its children» — not just its
white and
wealthy ones.
The article shames them for doing what every
white and
wealthy parent in America does — selecting the best educational situation for their babies,» said Vesia Wilson - Hawkins, a Nashville, TN
parent and activist.
, a magazine that is tailored towards the
White and
wealthy, privileged
parents are told how to navigate the system in order to be able to find the school that is best for their children.
If students and
parents are to have real choices, shuffling urban students between struggling schools in their city is not a satisfactory answer — they must be able to «choose» the predominately
white and
wealthy schools serving suburban property owners as well.
His statement tells us about who he presumes to be neglectful
parents — that they are Indigenous and / or poor, and should be subject to regulations and controls over daily life in ways that families in
white and
wealthy communities aren't.