My parents are native speakers and my kid's tones are "perfect". "Avoids YY"?!? Well, good for them that they got their kids in in the first place so they can turn it down ![]() |
No need to brag. Obvi the PP was referring to other immersion charters. No matter how you slice it, YY scores are very impressive. Why do so many wish failure for this school? -Non immersion parent |
Goodness we sure have low standards around here |
I am a new poster and I too wish for YY (and dozens of other charter schools) to thrive. This said ..... I believe I speak for a lot of people IRL and on DCUM when I say that I am sick of repeatedly hearing from -some- (not all) YY parents that YY is - the very best public school in the entire city. - a better education than is offered in any private school in all of Washington DC, and - the obvious 1st choice for any educated professional parent who reads the NYT daily, because don't you know? Learning Mandarin means you'll do better in life than if you don't, given that (blah blah blah blah China blah blah) I hear variations on this in DCUM all the time. And I absolutely get this line from an real-life acquaintance of mine whose child has been attending YY for a few years (who, I think it's relevant, lives IB for a top DCPS and could swing private). No, hon, we all just have different priorities. |
DP, everyone has their own experiences, but after 4 yrs on DCUM and 4 years reading about YY and knowing famines who attend there, I can say I have literally NEVER heard a YY family say *any* of those statements. What I do hear is that they think it's best for them, that they can't believe it exists, and several stories of families who would have otherwise left DC but don't feel like they will find anywhere else like it. (Not that there aren't other bilingual Mandarin schools, they just like a combo of factors YY has that they say seems rare. They also never say it's perfect, and everyone I know there has things they would change about it. But most of them have other choices and none of them are going anywhere. I'd say the fairly low attrition speaks for itself. |
All of my friends with kids at Yu Ying speak Mandarin at home. |
+100. YY boosters, please shut up already. You bore us all to death. |
Lets bring some data to the discussion, yes? I'll present the schools as if they follow a feeder pattern. This is for two reasons: it is a much simpler way to present what is at present a very complicated process; it is in line with the recent boundary proposal. While the presentation below is not exact, you cannot go wrong if you follow it as if it were exact. That is, nothing below is misrepresented. Rather, some additional paths are left out.
NW Elementary Schools School -- Internal DC Rating (higher is better) -- Neighborhood Mann -- 94.75 -- Spring Valley, Wesley Heights Janney -- 94.55 -- Tenleytown, AU Park Ross -- 93 -- Dupont Circle Lafayette -- 92.92 -- Chevy Chase, Barnaby Woods Key -- 92.05 -- Palisades, Berkley Stoddert -- 91.94 -- Glover Park Eaton -- 90.23 -- Cleveland Park Murch -- 89.24 -- Friendship Heights, Van Ness Hyde -- 79.18 -- Georgetown, Burleith Hearst -- 77.1 -- Forest Hills, N. Clevelend Park (Capitol Hill folks will object that I've left them out. It's true. There are a couple of elementary schools in Capitol Hill with scores in the low-80s / high-70s.) Middle School School -- Rating -- Feeder Elementary Schools (get neighborhoods from above) Deal -- 91.89 -- Janney, Lafayette, Murch, Hearst, Eaton (maybe) Hardy -- 71.13 -- Mann, Key, Stoddert, Hyde, Eaton (maybe) High School School -- Rating -- Feeder Middle Schools Wilson -- 72.75 -- Deal, Hardy ----- Generally, the above sets are the schools among which you should feel comfortable choosing. I would have no hesitation sending my children to any of the schools listed above. As for the poster mentioning the DC school system is the worst in the country. They're probably right. That being said, if your child comes from an educated, motivated household that cares about learning, your child should thrive in DCPS. How do we know this? Well, white test scores (which, in DC, is a proxy for high-income and all of its correlates) are the highest in the country. I repeat, in the country. |
wrong thread. sorry. |
Eeew! I don't like you and I am IB. Is this the type of white IB resident we are attracting these days. Shepherd does not need changing demographics, aka white students to achieve. Scores have always been decent in spite of the iffy administrations it has had. |
Don't think it is a foregone conclusion that BASIS students had a direct relation to Latin's scores. My AA DC was high-performing going into BASIS. We would never have gone to Latin; would have tried for Eaton; IB for Deal. Second it is a lottery. Just because you apply doesn't mean you get in. |
You obviously have not ever driven by Ballou and are spouting off. If you saw it and went inside the building, you would commend these students for achieving this proficiency rate. Going inside just once made me sick and want to leave immediately; it is 3rd world and I commend the students for attending. In addition, the students are highly discouraged from wearing coats to school and having a backpack. So much walking to school in the cold, and the impact on homework or supplies. It slows up the metal detector and they have too many students. Never crossed your mind that maybe there was a reason that Ward 8 felt neglected with all the school renovation happening in the more affluent Wards under Fenty and Rhee. Thank God, Gray made renovating Ballou a priority. |
Totally agree. I am an IB parent of an AA boy that is advanced. Posts like these make me nervous to think who my neighbors are. |
Ah, well, so much for a productive thread. Next. |
I remember when white people wanting to send their kids to SEGREGATED schools made them racist (which I think was a fair charecterization - and is still the case in much of America) DC is so odd in that white people wanting to send their kids to an integrated school makes them racist. |