Advice sought for aap appeal

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP- I know there’s been a backlash on this board regarding FCPS’s AAP equity initiatives but I should add that in my parent referral form, I mentioned that my DC reads and writes what I imagine is an under-represented language in AAP and they didn’t get in, so whatever equity initiative is in play didn’t benefit DC, despite what some posters might think. It’s all quite mysterious. It’s possible the scores just didn’t hit the mark for our school? 🤷‍♀️


What does this have to do with an equity initiative?


Did you missed the part about mentioning that DC speaks an underrepresented language? Underrepresentation = equity.


No, I got that part. Let’s say it is Spanish. How is the kid speaking Spanish helpful? Maybe his au pair taught him. Maybe he went to an immersion preschool. What does this have to do with the kid be URM?


Oh, because it’s a language that’s not typically learned by non native speakers or taught by au pairs (lol). Can’t tell if you’re being deliberately dense?


I’m guessing it was transparent that you dropped the information in under a supposed pretext to try and get the ethnicity edge but it didn’t work.


I’m not as calculating as you are, no need to project
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP- I know there’s been a backlash on this board regarding FCPS’s AAP equity initiatives but I should add that in my parent referral form, I mentioned that my DC reads and writes what I imagine is an under-represented language in AAP and they didn’t get in, so whatever equity initiative is in play didn’t benefit DC, despite what some posters might think. It’s all quite mysterious. It’s possible the scores just didn’t hit the mark for our school? 🤷‍♀️


What does this have to do with an equity initiative?


Did you missed the part about mentioning that DC speaks an underrepresented language? Underrepresentation = equity.


No, I got that part. Let’s say it is Spanish. How is the kid speaking Spanish helpful? Maybe his au pair taught him. Maybe he went to an immersion preschool. What does this have to do with the kid be URM?


Oh, because it’s a language that’s not typically learned by non native speakers or taught by au pairs (lol). Can’t tell if you’re being deliberately dense?


I’m guessing it was transparent that you dropped the information in under a supposed pretext to try and get the ethnicity edge but it didn’t work.


I’m not as calculating as you are, no need to project


You are. Based on your own words bolded in a post above.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP- I know there’s been a backlash on this board regarding FCPS’s AAP equity initiatives but I should add that in my parent referral form, I mentioned that my DC reads and writes what I imagine is an under-represented language in AAP and they didn’t get in, so whatever equity initiative is in play didn’t benefit DC, despite what some posters might think. It’s all quite mysterious. It’s possible the scores just didn’t hit the mark for our school? 🤷‍♀️


What does this have to do with an equity initiative?


Did you missed the part about mentioning that DC speaks an underrepresented language? Underrepresentation = equity.


No, I got that part. Let’s say it is Spanish. How is the kid speaking Spanish helpful? Maybe his au pair taught him. Maybe he went to an immersion preschool. What does this have to do with the kid be URM?


Oh, because it’s a language that’s not typically learned by non native speakers or taught by au pairs (lol). Can’t tell if you’re being deliberately dense?


I’m guessing it was transparent that you dropped the information in under a supposed pretext to try and get the ethnicity edge but it didn’t work.


I’m not as calculating as you are, no need to project


You are. Based on your own words bolded in a post above.


Keep up your unhinged crusade to keep out Black and Latino kids. It’s a noble one.
Anonymous
I really want to know what the under-represented language that would be advantageous to AAP is.

Do your kids speak Latin?
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP- I know there’s been a backlash on this board regarding FCPS’s AAP equity initiatives but I should add that in my parent referral form, I mentioned that my DC reads and writes what I imagine is an under-represented language in AAP and they didn’t get in, so whatever equity initiative is in play didn’t benefit DC, despite what some posters might think. It’s all quite mysterious. It’s possible the scores just didn’t hit the mark for our school? 🤷‍♀️


What does this have to do with an equity initiative?


Did you missed the part about mentioning that DC speaks an underrepresented language? Underrepresentation = equity.


No, I got that part. Let’s say it is Spanish. How is the kid speaking Spanish helpful? Maybe his au pair taught him. Maybe he went to an immersion preschool. What does this have to do with the kid be URM?


Oh, because it’s a language that’s not typically learned by non native speakers or taught by au pairs (lol). Can’t tell if you’re being deliberately dense?


I’m guessing it was transparent that you dropped the information in under a supposed pretext to try and get the ethnicity edge but it didn’t work.


I’m not as calculating as you are, no need to project


You are. Based on your own words bolded in a post above.


Keep up your unhinged crusade to keep out Black and Latino kids. It’s a noble one.


We agree. Someone is definitely unhinged. And offensive.
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