Anybody listening to NPR?

Anonymous
They are covering MCPS boundaries. Can be boundary changes correct all the inequalities between students? It all sounds great but will it work?
Anonymous
Well this topic has never been discussed before here....
Anonymous
The views are so different then many on DCUM
Anonymous
Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:They are covering MCPS boundaries. Can be boundary changes correct all the inequalities between students? It all sounds great but will it work?


Let me make a prediction: NPR believes that boundary changes would correct all inequalies, promote world peace and also fix climate change.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.


Yes-- she said if she'd known in advance what she knows now about being a student of color at Whitman, she would have transferred to a different school. I thought that was really sad.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They are covering MCPS boundaries. Can be boundary changes correct all the inequalities between students? It all sounds great but will it work?


Let me make a prediction: NPR believes that boundary changes would correct all inequalies, promote world peace and also fix climate change.


How about you listen to the show?

https://thekojonnamdishow.org/shows/2019-02-28/kojo-roadshow-a-town-hall-on-school-diversity-in-montgomery-county
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:They are covering MCPS boundaries. Can be boundary changes correct all the inequalities between students? It all sounds great but will it work?


Let me make a prediction: NPR believes that boundary changes would correct all inequalies, promote world peace and also fix climate change.


How about you listen to the show?

https://thekojonnamdishow.org/shows/2019-02-28/kojo-roadshow-a-town-hall-on-school-diversity-in-montgomery-county


She is not far off...though climate change was not specifically mentioned.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.


Yes-- she said if she'd known in advance what she knows now about being a student of color at Whitman, she would have transferred to a different school. I thought that was really sad.


PP and agree that was really sad. I’m black and have also attended predominantly white schools at times in my life, although it sounds like not as homogenous as Whitman. My own young child attends a fairly diverse private. I felt for this young lady.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.


Yes-- she said if she'd known in advance what she knows now about being a student of color at Whitman, she would have transferred to a different school. I thought that was really sad.


Not sure if MCPS is waking up to this problem and willing to fix the hate in schools. In the past, students who complained were offered COSAs (Change of School Assignments) as if that fixed what was wrong in the school. All those types of tactics did was left more students vulnerable to similar acts of hate.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.

My nieces (nonwhite) who lived in another state when to a school where there were only a handful of kids of their race. They *HATED* it. I vowed never to allow my kids to go through that.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.


Yes-- she said if she'd known in advance what she knows now about being a student of color at Whitman, she would have transferred to a different school. I thought that was really sad.


Keep in mind that this is also true of students of other races who are "in the minority" in schools in other parts of the county. It's often hard for those students to fit in, as well.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.


Yes-- she said if she'd known in advance what she knows now about being a student of color at Whitman, she would have transferred to a different school. I thought that was really sad.


Keep in mind that this is also true of students of other races who are "in the minority" in schools in other parts of the county. It's often hard for those students to fit in, as well.


I'm hard pressed to think of a school anywhere in MCPS where a white child would be in as much of a minority as a Black kid in some of the west county schools. Whitman has so few Black kids that they don't even register statistically. Is there a school in MCPS where white kids are in that much of a minority? Kennedy may be the only one.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.


Yes-- she said if she'd known in advance what she knows now about being a student of color at Whitman, she would have transferred to a different school. I thought that was really sad.


Keep in mind that this is also true of students of other races who are "in the minority" in schools in other parts of the county. It's often hard for those students to fit in, as well.


I'm hard pressed to think of a school anywhere in MCPS where a white child would be in as much of a minority as a Black kid in some of the west county schools. Whitman has so few Black kids that they don't even register statistically. Is there a school in MCPS where white kids are in that much of a minority? Kennedy may be the only one.


My kid goes to one for elementary school. So far she's been fine but is only in kindergarten.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote: Oh wow, listening right now--what a tough account from the young lady who described the loneliness and discrimination she and others experienced being one of the very few visible minority students at Whitman.


Yes-- she said if she'd known in advance what she knows now about being a student of color at Whitman, she would have transferred to a different school. I thought that was really sad.


Keep in mind that this is also true of students of other races who are "in the minority" in schools in other parts of the county. It's often hard for those students to fit in, as well.


I'm hard pressed to think of a school anywhere in MCPS where a white child would be in as much of a minority as a Black kid in some of the west county schools. Whitman has so few Black kids that they don't even register statistically. Is there a school in MCPS where white kids are in that much of a minority? Kennedy may be the only one.


My kid goes to one for elementary school. So far she's been fine but is only in kindergarten.

Here's an ES where white is <5%., but the HS is a different story.

https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/02788.pdf

Where at Whitman HS , there are <5% Blacks

https://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/departments/regulatoryaccountability/glance/currentyear/schools/04427.pdf
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