• Dedicated to fact-based journalism and commentary on the state of education in New Jersey
The Jets and the Sharks?The Jets and the Sharks?The Jets and the Sharks?The Jets and the Sharks?
  • Latest News
  • NJER-TV
  • Communities
      • Asbury Park
      • Camden
      • Jersey City
      • Lakewood
      • Montclair
      • Newark
      • Paterson
      • Trenton
  • Policy
    • By The Numbers
    • COVID-19
    • DOE
    • Education on the Ballot
    • Educational Equity
    • Press Release
    • State
  • Voices
    • Parent Voices
    • Teacher Voices
  • Opinion
    • NJER Commentary
  • About
    • Laura Waters
  • Subscribe
✕
Grant Graft
October 28, 2008
Live-Blogging from NJSBA
October 29, 2008
Show all

The Jets and the Sharks?

By Laura Waters at October 28, 2008
Topic
  • News
Tags
  • consolidation
  • school choice

There is a somewhat inspiring piece in The Record today regarding two north Bergen County high schools, Indian Hills High School and Ramapo High School. Back in the late 1990’s, parents of children from Franklin Lakes were given the choice of sending their kids to either one, and a survey revealed that Ramapo was vastly more popular, boasting slightly higher test scores and students from wealthier families. In fact, Franklin Lakes parents said that they would choose Ramapo over Indian Hills by a margin of 12-to-1.

It looked bad for Indian Hills, in spite of $53 million of construction poured in, the movement of the board offices from Ramapo to Indian Hills, and a careful equalizing of the curricular opportunities. A few years later, the result has been a pretty equal distribution between the two schools.

Money quote:

Scott Belsky, who grew up in Franklin Lakes and graduated from Indian Hills last year, said he believes the district has moved away from the old model of two schools that draw students from separate and distinct towns and tax brackets.

“The old prejudices of geography and socioeconomics won’t matter anymore,” he predicted.

It’s a story with a happy ending: two high schools separated by class, socio-economics, and different tax rates find an acceptable balance. Everyone wins! Is this our panacea for New Jersey’s inequitable school system writ small?

Let’s not get carried away. The Record piece describes the class struggle in this way:

The parking lots told part of the story: Cars at Ramapo tended toward the high end, while students at Indian Hills had mid-range rides.

Well, okay, this is not exactly Daddy Warbucks and Orphan Annie. It’s one thing to offer a choice between two highly performing high schools in a wealthy part of New Jersey as opposed to offering a choice within a far more disparate model. Indian Hills vs. Ramapo is not quite the same choice as, say, Trenton vs. Princeton or Willingboro vs. Moorestown. Still, it may be that we’re too dismissive of the possibilities. Can we queue up the soundtrack from “West Side Story,” please?

Share
Laura Waters
Laura Waters

Related posts

June 6, 2023

Four Takeaways From New Poll on Teachers and Book Bans


Read more
June 6, 2023

New Parent Power Index Says Murphy Administration ‘Is Stuck In a Great Big Pothole on the NJ Turnpike’


Read more
June 5, 2023

A Letter To NJER Readers


Read more

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Subscribe to the
NJER Morning Report

The NJ Education Report is your trusted source for news and commentary about schools across our state. Get the latest in your inbox.

Subscribe

Camden Second Annual College Signing Day

https://youtu.be/7kOP2CnZ7PU

Teachers and Parents Join Together To Advocate for Educational Change

https://youtu.be/LUA0yjPXzII

LANGUAGE

POPULAR TOPICS

Opinion State NJER-TV Newark

MORE TOPICS

CONNECT WITH NJER

SUGGEST AN ARTICLE IDEA, SEND A NEWS TIP OR SUBMIT A PRESS RELEASE

Submit details

NJ Education Report

NJER is dedicated to fact-based journalism and commentary on the state of education in New Jersey, with a commitment to voicing the concerns of parents, students, teachers and school leaders.

Subscribe

About

Laura Waters

Standards & Ethics

Privacy Policy

Advertising Opportunities

NJ Education Report
© 2023 NJ Education Report. All Rights Reserved.