Why do parents have such an issue with DEIB

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful


Easy. Zero schools in the area teach that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful


Easy. Zero schools in the area teach that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”.


https://www.gds.org/about/diversity-equity-an...esources-for-parents

including: "White Supremacy Culture," by Kenneth Jones and Tema Okun, ChangeWork

try harder

is this the part where "it's not happening but it's great that it is?"
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful


WIS does not have DEI. It has IDI: internationalism, diversity and inclusion.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful


WIS does not have DEI. It has IDI: internationalism, diversity and inclusion.


Very similar.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful


WIS does not have DEI. It has IDI: internationalism, diversity and inclusion.


Very similar.


Not at all.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful


WIS does not have DEI. It has IDI: internationalism, diversity and inclusion.


Very similar.


Not at all.


In what says is it different? WIS has a 'white accountability' affinity group.
Anonymous
People usually react negatively when their structural privileges, whether they be racial, sexual, ethnic, etc., are revealed and called into question.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:People usually react negatively when their structural privileges, whether they be racial, sexual, ethnic, etc., are revealed and called into question.


People also react negatively when their kids are not able to learn basic material because their time is spent dividing people instead by their privileges.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:People usually react negatively when their structural privileges, whether they be racial, sexual, ethnic, etc., are revealed and called into question.


this is my favorite response - "stop being defensive!"

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:People usually react negatively when their structural privileges, whether they be racial, sexual, ethnic, etc., are revealed and called into question.


Right, which is why the DEI proponents are so defensive in this thread. The idea that DEI proponents who are sending their kids to a $50,000/year private school actually want to relinquish any of their profound structural privileges is openly laughable.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


it's all over them, has been for years

https://www.city-journal.org/article/the-new-plan

what rock you been under


1) that’s a whiney op-ed

2) it doesn’t give any examples of “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture”


That curriculum was posted pages ago. Do try to keep up.


So like I said, zero evidence that “getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture” is happening in private schools here.


I'm sure plenty of schools around here use materials from Tema Okun, the popularizer of all that stuff

but I guess what you need to see is a poster of it in the principal's office with the principal holding up their driver's license, that's fine

you should Google "Motte-and-Bailey" if you want to better understand your own argument


Those of us with real life kids in real life schools know you’re full of crap. Go push your propaganda somewhere else.


can you tell us which schools DON'T have it? we're actually looking; it would be helpful


BS if you are actually looking you have your list of schools and can go down the list and ask the question to the schools yourself. If you can pay the tuition these schools are demanding you have the time/staff and know how.

what you dear troll are doing is trying to get a public list to slander or praise against


BTW no one is paying $60k a year for their kids not to learn. But try again. How is Siberia this time of year?
Anonymous
Not clicking the links of the trolls and not googling it for myself.

I'm not screwing up my algorithm to suit the far right agenda
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I used to think the same as you OP. I thought DEI pushback was simply racist republicans being racists.

Then I read a proposed curriculum that asserted that Mathematics’ focus on students getting correct answers was indicative of white supremacist culture. I then looked into DEI further and was shocked to discover what is creeping into public school curriculums and lesson plans.


This is utter BS
fear mongering from the rw crowd


trust me, we WISH it was

https://mynorthwest.com/3950467/jason-rantz-s...acy-reading-writing/


So no evidence of this happening in a DC area private school (the topic of this thread)?


I don't like your facts so I'm changing the scope of the thread to some very small corner because I can't refute the claims!


See question and see where you are. This is a DC message board and a question was asked about private schools because it's a DC message board it is about DC private schools.

You are deflecting as you were trained to sew contention and make people second guess.

BTW people have written books about folks like you who do this and make people question things they know to be true.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Not clicking the links of the trolls and not googling it for myself.

I'm not screwing up my algorithm to suit the far right agenda


glad you are shrewd enough to preserve your ability to think freely by preserving the pristine leftiness of your "algorithm"

your one little post says so much
post reply Forum Index » Private & Independent Schools
Message Quick Reply
Go to: