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That's a broad and rather incomplete generalization.

I spent two years in a California high school and two years in a Texas high school. I have seen first hand how terrible schools can be in CA and, conversely, how fantastic they can be in Texas.

For reference, I'm comparing Benicia HS in the North Bay with Seven Lakes HS in suburban Houston.

In California, teachers were restricted to six pieces of copier paper per student per year. One security guard for 1500 students. Ancient textbooks and the most antagonistic administration you can imagine. AP classes? Gone. School buses? Discontinued. Arts and music? Better hope your parents can pay for it.

Between my sophomore and junior years I moved to Texas. Seven Lakes was the most expensive school ever built. We didn't just have a computer science class, we had a computer science department. Our AP US History teacher had more students score 4 or 5 on the AP exam than any other US history teacher in the country.

To Benicia's credit, their band was actually quite a bit better.

And just to underline the difference in affordability, the average home price in Benicia at the time was $629k. Katy's average was $161k.

Safe to say I have no regrets about having left California.




Let's take a look at the data:

"Texas earns C-minus, ranks 39th in nation on education ranking"

* 52 percent of 3- and 4-year-olds in the state are not in school.

* Hispanics had the lowest rate of 4-year-olds enrolled in preschool at 39 percent. Meanwhile about half of black, white and Asian 4-year-olds were enrolled.

* 64 percent of of 3- and 4-year-olds in households earning at least $100,000 or more attend preschool compared to 40 percent of those living in households earning less than $20,000.

* About 44 percent of those enrolled in Texas preschool attended a private school.

http://educationblog.dallasnews.com/2015/01/texas-earns-c-mi...


> "Texas earns C-minus, ranks 39th in nation on education ranking"

California ranked 42nd in the same report with a score of D+. [1]

I'm obviously not arguing that every school in Texas is good. There are some utterly terrible districts in that state.

I don't think anyone would that point.

But there are also some great schools. The existence of some (even many) bad schools shouldn't necessarily deter someone from moving to a community in Texas with good schools.

All of that applies equally to California—there are some horrible schools there too.

[1] http://www.edweek.org/ew/qc/2015/state-highlights/2015/01/08...


I'm not arguing California is better; I'm arguing there are plenty of places to go that are better than Texas.




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