Our Kids Quotes
Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
by
Robert D. Putnam4,339 ratings, 4.04 average rating, 528 reviews
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Our Kids Quotes
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“Poor kids, through no fault of their own, are less prepared by their families, their schools, and their communities to develop their God-given talents as fully as rich kids. For economic productivity and growth, our country needs as much talent as we can find, and we certainly can’t afford to waste it. The opportunity gap imposes on all of us both real costs and what economists term “opportunity costs.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Parental wealth is especially important for social mobility, because it can provide informal insurance that allows kids to take more risks in search of more reward.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Schools themselves aren't creating the opportunity gap: the gap is already large by the time children enter kindergarten and does not grow as children progress through school. The gaps in cognitive achievement by level of maternal education that we observe at age 18-powerful predictors of who goes to college and who does not - are mostly present at age 6when children enter school. Schooling plays only a minor role in alleviating or creating test score gaps.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Many people have a stereotype of what it means to be poor. And it may be somebody they see on the street corner with a sign: “Will work for food.” And what they don’t think about is that person who’s struggling every day. Could be the person who waited on us, took our bank deposit, works in retail, but who is barely above the poverty line.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Upper-class parents enable their kids to form weak ties by exposing them more often to organized activities, professionals, and other adults. Working-class children, on the other hand, are more likely to interact regularly only with kin and neighborhood children, which limits their formation of valuable weak ties.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Contemporary discussion of inequality in America often conflates two related but distinct issues: • Equality of income and wealth. The distribution of income and wealth among adults in today’s America—framed by the Occupy movement as the 1 percent versus the 99 percent—has generated much partisan debate during the past several years. Historically, however, most Americans have not been greatly worried about that sort of inequality: we tend not to begrudge others their success or care how high the socioeconomic ladder is, assuming that everyone has an equal chance to climb it, given equal merit and energy. • Equality of opportunity and social mobility. The prospects for the next generation—that is, whether young people from different backgrounds are, in fact, getting onto the ladder at about the same place and, given equal merit and energy, are equally likely to scale it—pose an altogether more momentous problem in our national culture. Beginning with the “all men are created equal” premise of our national independence, Americans of all parties have historically been very concerned about this issue.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“teacher flight from the challenges in such schools—violence and disorder, truancy, lower school readiness and English-language proficiency, less supportive home environments—means that students in these schools get a generally inferior education. Many teachers in poor schools today are doing a heroic job, driven by idealism, but in a market economy the most obvious way to attract more and better teachers to such demanding work is to improve the conditions of their employment.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Caring for kids was once a more widely shared, collective responsibility, but that ethic has faded in recent decades.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“while race-based segregation has been slowly declining, class-based segregation has been increasing.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Stressful conditions from outside school are much more likely to intrude into the classroom in high poverty schools. Every one of ten stressors is two to three times more common in high poverty schools-- Student hunger, unstable housing, lack of medical and dental care, caring for family members, immigration issues, community violence and safety issues.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“More plausible suspects in our mystery are the things that students collectively bring with them to school, ranging from(on the positive side of the ledger) academic encouragement at home and private funding for "extras" to (on the negative side) crime, drugs, and disorder. Whom you go to school with matters a lot.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Most fundamentally, school systems need to put higher quality teachers in poor schools under conditions in which they can actually teach and not just keep order.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Rehabilitate ex-prisoners, keeping in mind that the prison population is comprised of young men with very little education, poor job records, and frequent histories of mental illness and substance abuse.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“High-quality national surveys of high school seniors confirm that kids from less educated homes are less knowledgeable about and interested in politics, less likely to trust the government, less likely to vote, and much less likely to be civically engaged in local affairs than their counterparts from college-educated homes.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Rich kids are more confident that they can influence government, and they are largely right about that.14 Not surprisingly, poor kids are less likely to try.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“inequality of opportunity slows growth by keeping disadvantaged potential workers from developing their full capacity.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“these costs total about $500 billion per year, or the equivalent of nearly 4 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). More specifically, we estimate that childhood poverty each year: (1) reduces productivity and economic output by an amount equal to 1.3 percent of GDP, (2) raises the costs of crime by 1.3 percent of GDP, and (3) raises health expenditures and reduces the value of health by 1.2 percent of GDP.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“The U.S. educational system cannot be the sole cause of the waning educational stature of the U.S.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Our contemporary public debate recognizes this problem but assumes it is largely a “schools problem.” On the contrary, we have seen that most of the challenges facing poor kids are not caused by schools.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“investment in poor kids raises the rate of growth for everyone, at the same time leveling the playing field in favor of poor kids.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“The answer is that the destiny of poor kids in America has broad implications for our economy, our democracy, and our values.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“They grew up in an era when public education and community support for kids from all backgrounds managed to boost a significant number of people up the ladder—in Bend, Beverly Hills, New York, Port Clinton, and even South Central LA. Those supportive institutions, public and private, no longer serve poorer kids so well.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“As inequality has increased,” she writes, “debate about the extent of mobility in American society has heightened. As income gaps have widened, the opportunity that children have to do better than their parents is increasingly important. . . . Whether they do so at a faster or slower rate than they did in the past is not a settled question. But since the rungs of the ladder are further apart than they used to be, the effects of family background on one’s ultimate economic success are larger and may persist for a longer period of time.”2”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Living in poor neighborhoods remains almost always a high-risk factor for disorder, suboptimal parenting, and adverse child development. Similarly, neighborhood poverty is known to have deleterious health effects. For example, obesity is systematically worse in poor neighborhoods.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“parents in poor neighborhoods are more likely to experience depression, stress, and illness, which in turn “are associated with less warm and consistent parenting.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“By contrast, almost all our richer kids said that (with some qualifications) they do trust other people. That comparison reflects not paranoia on the part of poor kids, but the malevolent social realities within which they live and the fact that people and institutions have so often failed them.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Neighborhood affluence and poverty have been shown repeatedly to influence many aspects of child and youth development, even after taking into account the characteristics of kids and their immediate families.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Here the question is whether growing up in a poor neighborhood imposes any additional handicaps. The answer is yes.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“there’s no denying that rich and poor kids in this country attend vastly different schools nowadays, which seems hard to square with the notion that schools are innocent bystanders in the growing youth class gap.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
“Schooling—unequal as it is in America—plays only a minor role in alleviating or creating test score gaps.”
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
― Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
