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| pp, he/she is talking about the fact that people in any neighborhood are more invested in their community because it is, well, their community-I am IB for hardy and have one DC there have 3 kids, one of whom goes to a catholic school that is not in my neighborhood, and I am not catholic-as a result, I do less than I do at Hardy, and less than I do at my JKLM. |
Play the race card, Rev. Al! |
It's breathtaking how folks in DC totally lose sight of the fact that it's not all about blacks and whites. There are Asians, South Asians, Hispanics who live in Ward 2 and Ward 3, too, you know. Not to mention African-Americans. |
Don't try to insult your way out of this one. I'm far from Rev. Al - I'm an old white dude from Ward 3 - but even I can see how racist this "IB kids are not IB kids" nonsense looks. |
I can't know what exactly is still holding those parents back. But I do know that the charter schools they are choosing instead are super mixed by race and include addresses from all over the city. That seems to argue against your simplistic race-based conclusion |
So a black family in Spring Valley who doesn't want their kid to go to Hardy is a racist? LOL. |
My conclusion was neither simplistic nor race based, so don't be so dismissive. My conclusion was that people are ignoring all the money, resources, and improvements that DCPS has made at Hardy while loudly claiming that their main concern is that they want DCPS to make improvements. And it's not that they are assessing them and concluding they are not good enough. They are not even asking about them. They do not even know that they exist - and they do not even seem to care, based on the fact that over and over and over again the question is not "How are the new Hardy honors classes and programs," but "How many IB kids are at Hardy." So how do we overcome the problem of people ignoring everything good that DCPS and rRincipal Pride are doing at Hardy? |
Ha. Ha. Your comment is so witty that it almost made me forgot that we should care about the fact that their are real issues beyond "Hardy needs more honors classes" that are keeping IB families from attending. In the meantime I'm withholding judgement on this mythical family you describe since I do not know what is in their make-believe heart. Now, can we get back to the issue at hand, king of comedy? |
| Maybe Eric Holder can lead a national conversation about why IB parents don't send their kids to Hardy. (He didn't.) |
I would then conclude that DCPS isn't doing it right or else those people are lost causes with their heads up their bums and we should just forget about them entirely. If there one and only metric is how many IB families ( which I doubt it is ) then forget about them. |
The ones who are committed to public don't want to settle for second best in anything, so they'll continue to try for Deal. |
The questions still stand. |
I would choose Hardy, because it is smaller. I also like the arts program; DC is a budding violinist. I trust that Trish Pride is able to to implement an advanced math program. I have heard great things about one of the math teachers at Hardy. If Hardy does not live up to its promise, not sure what I would do. But I would not choose Deal. It's far too large. |