Overlay that with a demographics map.
So where I see big dots are the black neighborhoods?
So where I see big dots are the black neighborhoods?
The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.[/b]
The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.
The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.[/b]
Neighborhoods gentrify and degentrify but institutions oftentimes stay put. I don't know anything about the dynamics of Mater Dei and SJB, but I know this is why some of the nicest privates (lol!) in Memphis are in the hood.
The problem with this is that so many kids get recruited to play at the rich schools, so its hard to get a real correlation between income and talent. You would somehow have to find the neighborhood every kid is actually from to see the fast/slow strategy distribution. Its also weird that rich private schools like Mater Dei and Bosco are actually in lower income neighborhoods, where I assume most of their students do not live.