The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

READERS WRITE Malkin right about ‘robotic’ teaching

- EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, STAR-C PROGRAMS

Children will never learn the basics of math and English without the repetitive blackboard drills and homework that doesn’t depend on an electronic device that doesn’t give a damn whether the student learns or not. Conservati­ve columnist Michelle Malkin presents a true picture of the demise of real teaching and of the new dependence on the internet, “Just say no to those liberal Silicon Valley school Santas,” (Opinion, Dec. 27). We’re producing robots that depend on a robotic substituti­on for reality.

Stable housing benefits students

Thank you for your “Digging Deeper” coverage (“Nonprofit has forum on improving schools,” Metro, Dec. 14). This is an exciting time for the Atlanta Public Schools and other school systems in the area, as different combinatio­ns of private-public-philanthro­pic “3P” partnershi­ps are engaging the community around ways to improve educationa­l outcomes. Sometimes overlooked is the critical impact housing has on educationa­l achievemen­t. When housing is not affordable, well-maintained and safe, families move, and students move from school to school.

This transiency greatly diminishes students’ chances for academic success. The successful 3P approach can break that cycle, especially if landlords and developers will invest in apartment communitie­s near high-need schools with transiency concerns, renovate the properties and offer rents affordable for working families.

The model benefits educators, families and landlords interested in low tenant turnover. It also benefits kids.

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