| Do any of the founders work in religious organizations? |
Wrong. That's where the "choice" factor comes in. If you don't want your child to learn Hebrew, you simply don't enrol him. It's sad how many people are aware of "their rights!!" without understanding what the are, and/or, are not. |
| Willingness to learn Hebrew could be a front for eagerness to avoid the type of people who would never dream of learning Hebrew -- most blacks |
HappyThanksgiving my friend. It struck me that someone sat down and typed out what you did at 8:30 on Thanksgiving Eve. |
How about we open a charter school with a creationist theme and if you want you child to learn about evolution, you simply don't enroll him. |
| Problem is that Hebrew would have limited appeal except for those who might want to live and work in Israel, probably mostly folks of Jewish faith. That would make it difficult to get a diverse population of students and to get enough students to even make the charter viable. |
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Many DC charters are not diverse right now -- they are majority or total AA.
I do believe the the Hebrew school would be attractive to non-jewish parents who will put up with a little hebrew to have their kids taught along side smart jewish kids. Like a little inside joke. The hebrew itself is not very valuable to practicing jews, except at bar mitzvah time. Taxpayers should pay for this? The whole concept seems contrived. |
This was my first thought, too. And I didn't even come on DCUM on Thanksgiving Day. Minority politics are big in DC. To get past the charter board, the school is going to have to show how it could attract other racial minorities, not just a handful of whites who are "willing to put up with a little Hebrew." |
| Washington Latin takes a lot of flack - you can see some of it on DCUM - for teaching an "elitist" curriculum. But 2/3 of the school is actually AA, and 90% in some grades. Color me skeptical that this would happen with a Hebrew school. |
| I've never seen Latin take flack for teaching an elitist curriculum on this board. Grief for having 6% FARMS, but never for the curriculum being elitist. |
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I had actually thought that identification with "The Hebrews" was a traditional part of many AAs' culture, no? They certainly did in the 19th century, but even today I'd say it's around in some strains of Protestantism.
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I have seen it take flack for teaching a dead white man's language. |
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as far as I know, only groups such as the african hebrew israelites are of that mindset.... |
I can't tell if this poster is aware or not -- but her whole post reads like code for "charter designed for upper middle class white kids, high-achievers only, please." This school could be a good idea if well-executed. In my mind's eye that would include a lot of emphasis on peace studies, politics, and maybe also arabic offerings. But boosters are going to have to stop talking out of both sides of their mouths (this exclusive-sounding "strong cohort" is designed to appeal to all DC kids, really!). And they will have to convince the Charter Board that it can appeal to AA kids from SE in ways that don't sound totally patronizing and based on wishful thinking ("I had thought AA's identified with 'The Hebrews,' no?"). |