Don't you roll your eyes at me. Why the hell would someone actively seek diversity? That is just a really strange criteria. |
|
Why would you actively seek diversity? Seriously? Uh... let's see...
To help your child learn to get along with all kinds of people. To take advantage of the wonderful things that come with a multicultural environment. To give your child an opportunity to make friends that are not all replicas of him or herself. To teach your child that not everyone is white. That's just a short list to get the other posters started. Carry on! |
|
I'm ignoring 18:35. She doesn't get to derail the thread, she's just a troll.
Carry on, please. |
Did you ever stop to think that the DC might not be white or that the parents might be of more than one race? Or that the parents don't - for whatever reason - want such a homogeneous environment? Or even that the parents are a gay or lesbian family and don't want to be THE Diversity in DC's school? |
|
17:56 - we're in Nottingham/Williamsburg and I see the lack of diversity as one of the few downsides of where we live. It was a factor for me, though not enough to keep me from buying our house. Frankly, the world we live in is NOT all white and not all well-off, and I worry about my kid going to a school where nearly every classmate will be white and fairly well-off.
Thanks for the helpful comments about Nottingham, PP's. We'll only be there for a year before we're redistricted, but it's nice to know my daughter is headed somewhere good. |
| This thread has been very helpful for me, as well. My daughter is an ethnic minority and I am concerned that, simply by virtue of there not being many kids in the school that are of other races/ethnicities, she will feel out of place. Think we will focus our search in other neighborhoods that feed into schools with a bit more diversity. |
What if she just learned to treat people as individuals? Would that be so bad? If there were more minorities would her "place" be to associate with them rather than with other children? |
As a transracial adoptive parent, I can tell you that this is a very typical white response (said as a white person myself). It's nice in theory but does not necessarily play out in practice. Step back and think about how many people react here to S Arlington schools (or to the number of Asians at TJ). People in public give off a nice progressive accepting vibe but underneath, things aren't so rosy. I don't think that a non-white or multiracial family should avoid Nottingham and other schools like it, but it's not so simple and it's not so easy being so obvious and visible as a minority. |
I can't tell you about Nottingham, but I can tell you that Long Branch and Barrett are probably the most diverse of the North Arlington schools, which seems to be the focus of your search. You will get more economic diversity in these schools than you will at Nottingham. There are definitely Muslim children at Long Branch and some South Asians (although not many, since there aren't that many in Arlington). |
Both Long Branch and Glebe are only about 60% white, Barrett is about 40% white/40% hispanic. Those are the three most diverse neighborhood elementary schools in terms of ethnicity in N Arlington. The choice schools like Science Focus, ATS, Key, etc. are also fairly diverse. |
Science Focus is not diverse. |
What? You can't live in he district and go to a countywide Arlington public school unless you are committing fraud. Watch out--our countywide school has an investigator currently pursuing false residency claims. |
ahhh-- yes it is. My kids class has so many different nationalities along with socio-economic diversity given some of the apartments that feed into it (yes--not just the high end lofts and million+ condos). Check out the FARMS numbers and demo which is public ally available. |
Science Focus is 55% white. So the racial makeup is about the same as Long Branch and Glebe. |
I think what the poster meant by "the district" is the Nottingham district. |