It is for kids who are 2E and kids whose parents didn’t attend college. And, apparently, anyone who wants to be included and asks their school to include their child. Parents of kids who are 2E and white have posted here. So it is not a race based program. |
OMG. 2E is kids who have IEPs and show giftedness as well. And my DC is Asian with an IEP and was identified for YS. And I think FCPS has been very fair. It's such a sad, bitter way of looking at life when people constantly feel the need to tear down something just because they can't participate. |
Who said anything about tearing down something? I'm reading these posts and feel posters just want all included....I guess you don't want this for everyone? Just your kid? |
Let the participation be equitable, since equity is the guiding force. |
From FCPS's website
It sounds like race is absolutely a factor |
This. The bolded part is laughable. That’s the precise reason affirmative action was created: complaints that URMs were excluded from participating in things. Now it swings the other way. |
Will he be a first Gen college student? |
Or not very smart? |
Don’t complain when the same White poster has no sympathy for. Black/Hispanic/FARMs kid, what goes around, comes around! |
| I teach at a title 1 school. If you knew how some of these kids live, their family life and everything, maybe you wouldn’t feel so annoyed that they can participate in this program. |
Nobody is upset about that. It’s the race aspect that was unnecessary. |
Totally fine to have the program available to all poor kids, but NOT fine to also make it available to well off Black/Hispanic kids, the race aspect is truly concerning. |
Good. FCPS needs to stop discrimination by race. |
True. Although we have a more well off Hispanic family with kids in the program so by default it seems to be title 1 school kids with a disadvantage of some kind. |
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My kid is white and has an IEP for dyslexia. We are both college educated and upper middle class. I requested level 2 services for my daughter. She got level 2 for math and was placed in YS. She is is a 2E. If you want them in the program submit a request to the AART teacher.
OP, this is a great teaching moment for you and your child. If you take the time to learn about why students from these disadvantaged backgrounds need such a program, you can explain it to your kid. After all, people of color are forced to have very serious conversations with their kids about things like police brutality and racial profiling, so your kid will survive. Please do some self-reflection because you may be passing down your unconscious (or conscious) prejudice to your child. Not OP, but the issue is assuming that kids who are Black and Hispanic come from “disadvantaged backgrounds” and assuming that White and Asian kids do not, when there are some very privileged Black and Hispanic kids in this area and some White and Asian kids, particularly Asian, who aren’t advantaged at all. I’d hope a parent of a disadvantaged White or Asian kid would find a way to express their child’s interest in a program like YS, if appropriate, and would not be turned away, but some might simply infer from the background materials that their kids aren’t welcome. The program identifies kids that could benefit, so yes, a white or Asian kid who is economically disadvantaged will likely be identified. I know one of those kids (white). Yes, the program has white and Asian kids in it. Stop making things up. |