@ Fire Daemon:
That's kind of my point. If you read the original post, I (nor anyone I've quoted) have said "genetics is the whole reason some people do well and others fail", my only point was that it should be taken into account. If the question of nature vs nurture is unanswerable (though I think with better methods of study, it won't be), we shouldn't cut off possible explanations without evidence.
The outliers were schools (on both sides of the socioeconomic question) who did either far better than they (by the trend) should, or did far worse. There were only a couple, but one school which was at the top of achievement (compared to the other schools) was a good fifteen points above the line, and was also one of the schools with the lowest amount of poverty. There were schools going down the line which strayed pretty far from the trend, so while they're taken into account, and do tend to lower the "r" value, I call them outliers because they don't follow the trend lines.
@ Cheeze Pavilion:
"the class brought up "the usual explanations "they don't get as much funding", "the parents can't be as involved", "they don't have access to technology"" all of which are based on nurture being the answer. Well, if it's actually nature and not nurture, any resources we expend based on those conclusions are wasted because those conclusions follow from a flawed premise.
Which has big implications for Political Science. If intelligence is hereditary and the best funded schools are the schools educating the children of the intelligent, should we be leveling off the funding of all schools when with unequal funding the children that can do more with their education are getting more resources? Or is funding a right like voting, where no matter how more politically astute one person is than another, they both get one vote?"
You've made my point in a way that I only recently (having met with people studying the issue, since I'm now writing a research paper on this very subject) could have. So, I think we have agreement there, which is fantastic.
Back on the church, though:
I agree, and I really do think we're getting hung up on what counts as "knowledge". The fact that someone "considers" something science doesn't make it science anymore than if I consider myself an Adonis-like ubermensch, it doesn't make me one (I was going for the most absurd thing I could think of). But, faith's rejection of temporal, empirical, and "natural" (natural being explanations which deal only with the natural world) evidence when it conflicts with dogma would seem to indicate that at the very least it's anti-scientific.
"Finally, did you ever consider Scolasticism (you are free to keep thinking about the dogma until it convinces you) as an evolutionary step between "you're not free to think about the dogma, just to accept it" and "there should be no dogma, only free thinking"?"
Yes, I have. I would make that very argument. It was a step between them, but in the same way that a 15-week-old fetus is a step between conception and a full-born human, I don't have to be particularly enamored of the step.
@ Werepossum & LisaB1138:
Welcome to the discussion. It's actually kind of fun if you do it without getting angry (as I hope you'll be able to). I don't disagree with any of your points on the nurture side of things, but both of you open with lines that beg the question. By opening with "you can always make the point that there's some genetic component to any behavior or performance. In this case however it's demonstrably vanishingly small" or "The truth is these kids do not do poorly because of genetics", you assume your point to be true (insofar as genetic components involved in academic achievement/intelligence), and go from there". The studies I've seen (done by Yale, UCLA, the EJHG, The University of Bern), have shown a strong genetic component to cognitive ability. If you have an e-mail address I can send these to, I'd be happy to (I promise it won't be spam, viruses, or a RickRoll). So, my question is: what's your evidence that it's either vanishingly small, or completely untrue.
There does tend to be a problem, on both sides of the issue, with the soft racism of low expectations, and expectations are one possibility we discussed in class. My entire point, the entire time, is that there is some evidence to a genetic component, and we should study that. If it's wrong, we now know that. If it's right, we need to retool the system. But, we can't reasonably simply assume it's wrong because we'd like it to be.
@Everyone:
We seem to have gotten back to the original point, which is awesome. If anyone would like to see the studies I'm referencing, I'll send them to you if you give me an e-mail address (I can't post a pdf to a forum)