Toggle navigation
Toggle navigation
Home
DCUM Forums
Nanny Forums
Events
About DCUM
Advertising
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics
FAQs and Guidelines
Privacy Policy
Your current identity is: Anonymous
Login
Preview
Subject:
Forum Index
»
DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "WTU/DCPS reach agreement"
Subject:
Emoticons
More smilies
Text Color:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Violet
White
Black
Font:
Very Small
Small
Normal
Big
Giant
Close Marks
[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]While I don’t have exact statistics as PP mentioned the vast majority of teachers in DCPS are black women. WTU is lead by black women. These are the people you are calling lazy, selfish, and entitled. [/quote] Correction: lazy, selfish, entitled “Trumpers”[/quote] I don't think many of us would care if the WTU leadership was composed of purple and magenta striped bearded eunuchs in saffron spacesuits with lime green polka dots. Even still, that wouldn't distract from the fact that [b]their demands have run in direct contradiction to the recommendations of scientists and public health professionals, including one Dr. Fauci. And it certainly wouldn't distract from the accompanying fact that their intransigence has shafted a full 14 grades worth of public school children out of nine irreplaceable months of what would otherwise have passed for an education and destroyed decades of progress in building parental confidence in the city's public school system.[/quote][/b] No, I don't think so. I used to work at a ward 3 (where I live) school but I was too sensitive to the passive aggressive parents. To be fair some parents didn't care that I was black, especially since their children were doing well and loved me. But I couldn't deal with the racism and prejudice. If you notice most (again most, not all) Ward 3 teachers are White, this is not a coincidence. Even at my current school we had a few parents who demanded the principal switch their child's teacher so they could have a teacher who 'looks like them.' (White) So to say magically racial issues have disappeared because of covid-19 is very naïve. I'm not saying this is the only reason, parents certainly would still be angry. But don't say it doesn't play a role because it does.[/quote] But W3 is where the loudest voices to return are and it is where, by your own admission, teachers are the whitest. I really don’t think race is behind this conflict (in either direction).[/quote] Np. Just because you don’t think race is behind it doesn’t mean there’s not racism influencing the way people feel and talk about WTU, even perhaps unconsciously. White Ward 3 parents are aware of the fact that they are racial minorities in DCPS. [/quote] The focus on race here is a sideshow. The core substance of what the poster said — the bolded above — has nothing to do with race. Does anyone have a response to the bolded comments?[/quote] He's talking from a high horse. Tell me how racism, privilege, and the United States general lack of care for public education DOESN'T play a role? How doesn't it. 9 wasted months? How about 4 wasted years of poor presidential leadership. When your response is bad and behind, you'll continue to be behind. I don't want to hear this BS blaming teachers or their unions. Tell me what confidence has the US or even DCPS instilled in it's teachers? Let alone it's Black teachers who have been effected the most. Tell me if this was affecting White people and families the most the narrative wouldn't be different? As a teacher I think the best response would have been to have a better response to the pandemic in general and just change the school year around for a year or two. Get teacher buy in with more pay for the inconvenience, whatever. Write a agreement to protect teachers, invest in the HVAC units SOONER. [/quote] Whataboutism at its finest.[/quote] Ah gaslighting. [/quote] Honestly, your argument bemuses me. You are arguing that its somehow OK for the WTU to short-change the city's school children (who are overwhelmingly minorities by the way and heck a lot less privileged than the DCPS teaching staff) and set them even further behind their peers around the country because of Trump? And that it's OK for the WTU to act this way because you think the whole country hasn't done enough to support teachers. I think you'll find few who think the crisis was handled well by DCPS, Trump, or the US government at large, but WTU's demands are not defensible with or without that.[/quote] +1[/quote] So NOW you all care about the achievement gap. I've been on DCUM for years and have rarely if ever seen any of you worried about students of color in this city, or the inequities that exist in DCPS. You bring it up now to somehow support your case that schools need to reopen. Here is how out of touch you are. While Ward 3 and other non-title 1 schools have up to 80% of parents basically kicking down the doors for schools to reopen, the reality is completely different in Wards 7 & 8. Most parents here do not want their children to return to in-person learning. I know of a school where under 10% were interested. Why? Because they have directly seen the impact of this virus on their communities. While you all fret and think of strategies to secretly travel to Florida to see grandma for Christmas, my students are thinking of the loved ones they have lost due to the virus. You are living in a completely different world and a completely differently reality. Teachers (WTU), the vast majority of whom are Black in this city, see the virus for what it is. We should be focused on making virtual learning better for students. We should be focused on keeping everyone healthy and safe until a vaccine is available for all of us. This is far from ideal but it is the reality we are living in. If you are being negative around your children they will feed off of you! We are all in the struggle together. [/quote] NP. Biden's designated education secretary vehemently disagrees with you. This "you hypocrite don't really care about low-income kids" is a diversion tactic to suit your own ends. It doesn't matter if the PP *really* cares about the achievement gap -- as an educator, YOU should care, and you should heed the expert warnings of how DL, now matter how perfected, is failing these kids. Their parents may be afraid to send them back, but that doesn't change the fact that the learning loss is going to impact these kids for years to come.[/quote]
Options
Disable HTML in this message
Disable BB Code in this message
Disable smilies in this message
Review message
Search
Recent Topics
Hottest Topics