The time to be concerned about in-school "segregation" is in elementary school (ideally before third grade), when there is still a chance to address the factors that lead so many black children to operating YEARS behind grade level. By HS, it's far too late and any such efforts are more about optics than anything else. And as an African-American parent, the aversion to tracking really bothers me because it's kids like mine that suffer the most when grouped with kids not-on-par academically, but who happen to share the same skin color as my kid. I'm sure that white and Asian parents don't like it either, but it's a really messy situation for my kids, with all sorts of troubling dynamics that might be hard for some to appreciate. If you are a high-performing white or Asian, it may be annoying to be in a class with much lower performers, but no one is going to assume the worst about your abilities. My kid will just be assumed to be "one of them" until they prove otherwise. So, yeah, I'd much rather have strict tracking, even if it means that my kid is one of the few black kids in the class. |
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+100. DCPS deserves to lose the overwhelming majority of UMC Capitol Hill elementary students of all races to charters. Problem is, our ed leaders could care less.
Vote out Bowser, period. |
This makes a lot of sense. |
| Don't hold your breath for more tracking at S-H or its feeders. "Honors" (grade level) English and math arrived on the scene at S-H circa 2009. Parents, admins and teachers have been trying for honors science and social studies ever since. No dice from DCPS. |
This |
Also this |
| Good luck. Wonder if there’s a listserv so you can ask current residents what schools they chose and what they’d recommend. |
I assume this is a joke? Sarcasm is hard online
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What is UMC? |
Upper Middle Class |
| which in DC Mum can be up to 500K yearly salary. |
$1m |