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Tuesday, November 5, 2013

In Public Education, Edge Still Goes to Rich - NYTimes.com

In Public Education, Edge Still Goes to Rich - NYTimes.com:

In Public Education, Edge Still Goes to Rich

Matthew Staver for The New York Times
A second grade art class at a public school in Englewood, Colo. 

“There aren’t many things that are more important to that idea of economic mobility — the idea that you can make it if you try — than a good education,” President Obama told students at the State University of New York in Buffalo in August.
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Economic Scene

Eduardo Porter writes the Economic Scene column for the Wednesday Business section.

It is hardly a partisan belief. About a decade ago, on signing the No Child Left Behind ActPresident George W. Bush argued that the nation’s biggest challenge was to ensure that “every single child, regardless of where they live, how they’re raised, the income level of their family, every child receive a first-class education in America.”
This consensus is comforting. It provides a solution everyone can believe in, whether the problem is income inequality, racial marginalization or the stagnation of the middle class. But it raises a perplexing question, too. If education is a poor child’s best shot at rising up the ladder of prosperity, why do public resources devoted to education