29lyleq

My name is Lyle Quarfordt. I live in Brooklyn, New York and go to LREI. My Citizen Action Project is on "The Inequalities in Public Schools in NYC"

Touring NEST+m high school and interviewing Juliie Longmuir and Ms. Swann-Pye

On January 14th our group traveled to NEST+m High School to find out the differences between NEST and LREI. We interviewed an English teacher named Ms. Swann-Pye and the business manager Julie Longmuir. Over both interviews we learned about a variety of things. For example we learned about where their funds come from and how they are able to make education free since they are a public school.

While interviewing the English teacher, Ms. Swann-Pye we learned about the good and bad of public schooling. For example she told us about how quality differs between different public schools. Public schools in more wealthy zones get more taxes and intern more funding than public schools in less wealthy zones. She also told us about how necessary meal plans are because 30% of Nest students qualify which means that 30% of students are not financially stable.
After that we interviewed NEST’s business manager Julie Longmuir. She gave us some great information about the school and its funding. She told us that the PTA at NEST is very important because most of the families are financially set. 97% of their funding goes to staff salaries. In short, PTA funding is really important to NEST.

Kate Quarfordt’s thoughts on the inequalities in education

On December 19th our group interviewed the co-founder of charter school “city school of the arts”, my mother Kate Quarfordt. We learned that charter schools get 80% as much funding as public schools but aren’t forced to conform to some of the rules other schools have to give them more freedom for their curriculum. We also learned that to get out of the school in your zone, which depending on your income will vary in quality, you have to get into a specialized school which is hard to get into. You need tutors, extracurricular activities, tests and parents that have enough time and money to make this all happen which, for many in charter and public schools, are hard to come by.
All of these facts we learned just support our thought that zoning laws are meant to make public schools in certain zones low quality. And by doing that they make the students who go to that school not get the education of people with the time and money to go to specialized schools. Once they get through school they have less high quality college opportunities. And because of that they go on to most likely live in a zone where the rent is not as high so they don’t have to be stressed with the low paying job they most likely got after college. If they have kids their kids will grow up the same way they did and the cycle goes on.
These laws were made to keep the lower class out of power and the upper class on top. And the worst part is they work, only 62% of public school students in 2023 went to college. This is a real issue and one prominent in today’s society. In future field work we will discuss it more.