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Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS)
Reply to "Racial make up in honors vs. non-honors classes"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I'm wondering why it matters to you what the racial composition is of his classes? Isn't this a great opportunity to teach him that race doesn't matter? That he's a smart kid and he should learn to work well with the other smart kids in his class?[/quote] It matters because race does not determine your intelligence. So if there are 50% minority in the schools there should be 50% minorities in AP classes. Otherwise there is another reason why kids are not in AP classes. It not just a minority issue -this happens to boys, kids with LDs, and minorities. It does matter to me that my kids are not given the impression in their school experience that blacks and Hispanics are poor, not as smart and trouble. This is a big problem in diverse MoCo schools. So I understand why the poster above who is Caucasian and in private believes her diverse experience is more balanced.[/quote] So you would rather have affirmative action in honors classes than allow students who truly deserve it to be in those classes? Your school is not actively telling minority students they can't join honors classes because they are asian, hispanic, or with a learning disability. For whatever reason (and it could be parental involvement or lack of english skills or whatever), the students who are in honors classes deserve to be there. [/quote] No one is saying that the kids who are there don't deserve to be there, so stop acting so threatened. The question is why more AA are not there. The answer is not to lower the standards just to fill the seats with more color. The answer is to better prepare the capable students, regardless of color, from a younger age. This isn't a 6th grade or a 9th grade issue. It is a k-5 preparation and engagement issue.[/quote]
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