Valarbetarn
Valarbetarn t1_j8qt8ud wrote
Reply to comment by slackmaster2k in Americans are ready to test embryos for future college chances, survey shows by ChickenTeriyakiBoy1
We can predict with reasonable accuracy if your child will go to college from your ZIP code, no needles required.
Valarbetarn t1_iyszqrr wrote
Reply to comment by lughnasadh in Researchers claim a human trial with 90 people has shown a simple laser therapy improves short-term memory by 25%. The treatment, called transcranial photobiomodulation (tPBM), has had claims in previous studies to also improve reaction times, accuracy and attention by lughnasadh
No one knows how it works or how long it lasts? I read this book in school, it's called Flowers for Algernon and it's a real tear-jerker.
Valarbetarn t1_j8vq9qn wrote
Reply to comment by Pobbes in Americans are ready to test embryos for future college chances, survey shows by ChickenTeriyakiBoy1
That kind of thinking is putting the cart before the horse. The upper middle class pays most of the taxes that finance those programs, so you would essentially be giving them their own money back. At that point it makes more sense to simply lower taxes.
In terms of money well spent, giving more money to good students who have good teachers is probably less efficient than using the same funds in poorer neighborhoods. A bad environment can harm the future prospects of students much more easily than a good environment can improve it. In other words: students from well-off neighborhoods are generally already performing at the level that their potential allows, or close enough to it that additional investment in their education likely does not improve outcomes very much.