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Date: January 25th, 2010
Name: Shavaughn Byrd
Subject: Let's Help Silent Majority
Comment: I totally agree with Ms. Edelman. Most of the poor kids suffer all the way around the board. A lot of them act out their cry for help and become disruptive and fall into the wrong crowd with people who felt like giving up.
But not all poor kids who drop out give up. There are many cases where if you look at the record from the time they started school till the end of high-school, or even have a conversation with them, that they loved to learn and actually wanted something better for their live's even with the lack of support and trouble they faced DAILY at home and throughout their family.
I think that some light should be shed on the discouragement a kid who makes decent grades come into when they have to take a state test and they miss by one or two points repeatedly and they look for help from the only places they know to get it, and they don't receive it.
Everyone does not learn the same way and just because you didn't pass a test does not measure your intelligence or capabilities. It's very humiliating and quite embarrassing to do well for so many years in and out of the class room and want so much, to be given a state test that you miss by a point or two and they deny you
from getting your high-school diploma and being proud with your fellow classmates while walking the aisle of accomplishments. It makes you feel worthless and useless.
And it indirectly says your're not good enough. I really think that "traditional" learning isn't for everyone and there needs to be a better way. So I said all that to say the troubled kids don't always resort to crime and self inflicted wounds. A lot of them struggle to find their place and their voice. There are lots of highly intelligent, creative, passionate, and talented adults who didn't finish school, but
not because they didn't want to, but they just needed someone to pay attention to them and Encourage, Support, Pray and Strengthen them.
So that their journey to build a huge empire like Bill Gates, Oprah Winfrey, Barak Obama, Michelle Obama to name a few, can be realized much early on and they can employ and help others. I would like people to start speaking and making a fuss about those kids. Because the kids/adults who create trouble are easy to spot. The ones who struggle silently are not.
 
Date: January 23rd, 2010
Name: ahma daeus
Subject: Abolish Private for profit prisons
Comment: INCARCERATING PEOPLE FOR PROFIT IS IN A WORD....WRONG!
Even if one does not ask or pretends not to see the rope and the flashing red flag draped around the philosophical question standing solemnly at attention in the middle of the room, it remains apparent that the mere presence of a private “for profit” driven prison business in our country undermines the U.S Constitution and subsequently the credibility of the American criminal justice system. In fact, until all private prisons in America
 

 
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Children Drop Out And Into Prison Industrial Complex

By Marian Wright Edelman

01-22-10

 
 
 
Marian Wright Edelman
     
   
 
4.5 / 5 (15 Votes)
 
 

[Child Watch]

A homeless man talking about how he ended up on the streets said he had wanted to get in with the "cool" crowd in 8th or 9th grade—a crowd that smoked marijuana, got into fights, and skipped school. No adult reached out to help him turn his life around so he continued his decline into a life of chronic joblessness and poverty, and long stretches of incarceration after he dropped out of school.

Youths who drop out of school represent a colossal loss to our communities and nation. And many dropouts are condemned to the social and economic fringes of our society and lives less fulfilled than their peers who graduate from high school. Today, more than half of all young adult dropouts are jobless. And dropouts are at greater risk of being incarcerated and having poorer physical and mental health than those who graduate.

The impact of the enormous dropout problem is not evenly shared among children in America. Poor and minority youths are far less likely to graduate from high school than White children. An October 2009 report released by the National Center for Education Statistics says 59.8 percent of Blacks, 62.2 percent of Hispanics, and 61.2 percent of American Indians graduated from public high school in four years with a regular diploma in the 2006–07 school year compared to 79.8 percent for Whites and 91.2 percent for Asian and Pacific Islanders. Black and Hispanic dropout rates were more than twice those of White youths.

Children don't just wake up one morning and decide to take a path to a dead end life. So how is it possible that more than half a million of them drop out every year? I believe the main reason is that adults have often let our children down and abandoned our responsibilities to prepare them for healthy and productive lives in our homes and communities.

We'd rather punish children after they get into trouble than prevent child problems. The only universally guaranteed child right is a jail or detention cell after they come in conflict with the law. We don't even assure all children prenatal care to be born as healthy as possible. We have deprived our children of fathers by locking up young men and putting them in a pipeline to prison, and we've allowed our community supports to fray, depriving children of safe havens and positive mentors. For most of the week, congregational doors are locked and we've cut back on the hours when community centers and libraries are open. Some have decided that after-school and summer enrichment programs are too expensive. Some states spend more to incarcerate a child for a year than it would cost to send him to Harvard University! Some New York state youth prisons cost $210,000 to house one child for a year. Gangs and drug dealers are open 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, offering apprenticeships in drug dealing and car stealing and other illegal behaviors.

So many of our nation's schools have let our children down and are unwitting accomplices to the pipeline to prison’s destructive work. Academic tracking, social promotion, and out-of-school suspensions and expulsions contribute mightily to the discouragement, low self-esteem, and disengagement of so many poor and minority children.

One-size-fits-all school zero tolerance disciplinary policies are responsible for the growth in the number of school-based arrests of poor and minority children, funneling them into the juvenile and criminal justice systems at younger and younger ages. So many are suspended, expelled, even arrested, for nonviolent infractions such as being "disruptive" or "disrespectful." In the past, many of these problems would have been resolved in the principal's office or referred to a pastor or social worker or by calling the parent (who may no longer be in the house). Too many children today end up with an arrest record and are labeled a troublemaker, increasing the likelihood of dropping out of school.

There are a lot of things we know about preventing children from dropping out. New research has led to a better understanding of how to turn this enormous crisis around and has identified schools where graduation is not the norm. Researchers at Johns Hopkins University have identified 2,000 high schools in the country (12 percent) responsible for nearly half of the nation's dropouts. The children attending these "dropout factories" are overwhelmingly minority.

We can spot students in elementary school who, if adults do intervene, will be less likely to drop out. Potential dropouts can be identified as early as the fourth and sixth grades by looking at attendance, behavior and, of course, failure in math and English. We can focus our resources on these schools and their students with the goal of turning them around and rescuing hundreds of thousands of children from the cradle to prison pipeline. But the community has to care and raise a ruckus for our children's and nation's sakes.

This is a national problem requiring all of our focused attention. The dropout crisis is too costly to our children, communities, and nation to let it persist. We know how to keep children in school. We simply must decide to mix our knowledge and experience with the will to educate every child.


Marian Wright Edelman is President of the Children's Defense Fund whose Leave No Child Behind mission is to ensure every child a Healthy Start, a Head Start, a Fair Start, a Safe Start and a Moral Start in life and successful passage to adulthood with the help of caring families and communities. www.childrensdefense.org.

 


 

 
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