As I write notes for this blog on my Blackberry to be edited later,I am noting that I am sitting in the #1 high school in the entire nation. The public school was for two years in a row rated #1 in the nation for academic achievement by US News and World Report. Apparently, they slipped a bit in 2008 and came back for the #1 spot in 2009.
My son is here tonight to play basketball. He tells me on the way that the "Nerds" at his school say "TJ" is a dump. "TJ" is the nickname of Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and Techology. You don't go there because you live in the district. Even though it is a public school, you have to pass an exam to enroll. This is no ordinary high school.
My son is right. It is a little worn and looks like it was originally built about the same time as the school I went to Junior High School was built; in the late 50s or early 60s. My sons school often is in the top 100 nationally so it is a good school. His school is more modern even though it is 36 years old and looks a heck of a lot better. "TJ" looks like a prospect for the wrecking ball or at least a major rehab job (except the state and county government are flat broke). If my memory serves me, I think the #1 school in the county, with the exception of this "special" one, is "Langley High School" in McLean. McLean screams money! Its a little worn but in a little better shape than "TJ."
So, what's in a building? some of the local school buildings are dumps but they are the best academically in the nation. Several I have seen look worse than the schools I went to in Florida in the 1960s and 70s. Florida schools, with some exceptions like Cocoa Beach High School, are general somewhere between mediocre to good. Some of the best schools in the South but that is not much to brag about.
The point here is that it is not the building, it's what is in the building that matters. Kids grow up dirt poor in shacks, go to one room schoolhouses with dirt floors and grow up to be successful every single day (Well, they used to). The same could be said for a house. Do you really need a 14 bedroom house, with a bathroom for each one and a few to spare? The latest economic trends, according to the Washington Post, are that Americans are going to come out of the current economic crises with a new austere lifestyle much like our grandparents came out of the depression era. I was at the Wal-mart the other day, the place was standing room only, and it was just another Tuesday night. It's not the building, it's the soul within that matters.