That five dollars could mean the difference between having a lunch or going hungry, especially with some school districts making stupid rules about not bringing in outside lunches. If you're hungry in school it's harder to concentrate. This I know from experience. If there is a test that day it could do worse and get poorer grades.
Not likely. Most of the kids at these schools qualify for Federal free or reduced lunch prices. Nobody is going hungry at Nobel.
Well, I'm upper-middle-class, and I don't even have that kind of spending money.
Really? You don't have 5 dollars in spending money? Remember, the big fines don't kick in until one gets *dozens* of detentions, which is close to 50 demerits over a period of time. Demerits also go away.
You have to be *really bad* to get that many. These schools do not have students racking up those kind of point totals for non-disruptive offenses.
Just because money is involved, doesn't mean it makes it seem more serious, or works like a deterrent. Kids get expensive speeding tickets all the time, yet that doesn't seem to stop them from speeding.
I'd be pretty surprised if that's true actually.
You catch my drift. This kind of tyrannization seems to fit in well with the whole "school is an industry thing." There seems to me to be a kind of prevailing wisdom that kids are so lacking in structure that they rot for want of it, but one seems to wonder how far is too far. Specifically, what are we teaching kids about the world if we punish them for chewing gum? No explanations or anything? No debate, no second-thoughts, no question as to the actual damage that chewing gum can cause - the school's word is law. Damnit, we should be raising critical thinkers, leaders of tomorrow, not a bunch of sheeple that will bend to the whim of the nearest authority figure!
Kids are given explanations for all the rules. Kids are asked not to chew gum because the schools uses a bare-bones janitorial staff to keep costs low, and gum makes the school messy. The school has very strict rules about discipline because they are running a very ambitious curriculum (complete with in-depth critical thinking type assignments), and since students typically enter these schools substantially behind academically, they *cannot* afford to waste any time.
These students typically come from pretty rough neighborhoods in Chicago, and nearly all are on the federal lunch program bubble. If they're coming from CPS (Chicago Public School) middle school programs, they're also likely coming from fairly violent environments. You cannot have the kind of academic freedom you all want without disciplined classroom management. I've taught inner city kids in a system with these strong expectations for discipline, and in systems without them. In Louisiana, I screamed all day and broke up fights. In Chicago, I taught kids punk rock.
Strong structure, when reinforced with a great curriculum and positive reinforcement of good behavior, gives you a lot more freedom.
Really? And I suppose the punitive measures of these schools would be evidence of that?
Well, Nobel Schools graduates more students and sends more students to college than CPS schools. This stuff unquestionably works for them.
It's not a perfect system...teacher turnover at these schools is really high, and a lot of kids end up dropping out because they can't handle the rigors and discipline system....it isn't for everybody. But it has been a great vehicle to get at risk kids back on the right path.