Yup. White parents have been paying lot of money for privy tutors to prep their kids behind closed doors for years. |
And some white parents bribe to get their kids into AAP. |
| I consider the sports fanatics paying for extra training, cheaters as well. |
Absolutely. |
Not quite that illogical. It's good for their kids to practice additional math problems, and it's good for them for your kids to practice 3pt shots because that gets them nowhere. Me first mentality. Hypocrisy ok. |
Based on these threads it looks like only Black and Hispanic parents are the only ones who aren't paying private tutors. |
Then your child is not truly gifted. Truly mediocre, maybe but probably not even that. |
There is a White parent in my neighborhood who threatened to bring her lawyer into the conversation if her child did not get into AAP on appeal. The child ended up in AAP. |
Asians are either too poor or too cheap to pay for $300 per hour private tutors. Only white parents do. |
| Honest question, why is regular school time not enough? Clearly, you are doing it to gain an unfair advantage. It’s eye opening and I am glad this has been brought to my attention because it explains a lot. |
Not to gain unfair advantage but to counter racial discrimination like the actions of fcps’s new proposal or blatant discrimination against Asians in college admissions. |
Well that’s clearly an outliers opinion, as no one has yet to come up with the idea of also ‘leveling the playing field’ or ‘equal representation’ in competitive sports. |
Unless Asians dominate then you will see that. |
Yes this. This is not a new thing. It's all good until Asians start moving up in one area, then they need to be checked and put in their place. |
| The enrichment class at my DC’s school is full of many kids who seem downright mediocre and boring. I am thinking the parents have bribed or threatened or something. My DC was recommended for enrichment by his teacher, but failed to get in. This is a kid who could read textbooks at 3 years old and could solve two digit math problems at 4. He could look at a list or map and memorize the entire thing easily at age 3. He could draw an exact map of the US without looking at anything, again at age 3. I never questioned why he failed to get into enrichment, maybe I should become that person? I want to know what special qualities these kids in enrichment possess. |