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 "Data indicate worsening early literacy progress and widening achievement gap among District students"
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]I work as a nurse case manager at one of the DC Medicaid MCO health plans. I call and see (in person via home visits) Medicaid members (i.e. their parents) all day and connect them with healthcare providers, resources etc. [b] People, this is a crisis situation for the poor kids in our city. [/b] There are thousands of kids who are not getting any education. They are logging in maybe once every 2 weeks. If that. Many have never logged in once. Their last instruction was in March 2019. The thing is, no one really cares. The kids are poor and most are black and no one cares. Their teachers say they do, but they don't. The mayor says she does but ultimately she doesn't. The upper NW white people (I am one) say they do but they certainly don't [i]really[/i] care. This is a massive tragedy. [/quote] +1000 I am a white parent and I am not worried about my child's literacy. I am unsure if I would send her to in-person school -- we have the resources to not have to if we don't feel it is safe. So no, this isn't about my kid, it's not about childcare, and I'm not using disadvantaged kids to push my personal agenda. I also spent a decade tutoring DCPS students in reading before having my child. I am extremely worried about what is going to happen to literacy rates for poor black students in this city. We already were not serving these students. We already were not serving their families in ways that would help these kids get an education. And now we have abandoned them. If we were serious, really serious, about helping these children, we would not be having endless arguments over in-person schools. We would go into these communities and ask families "What do you need to get your child to school?" We would prioritize in person school for these kids and we would find a way to make it happen safely, whatever it took. Outdoor classes in tents set up on fields. Classes in schools where the windows open. Half days, alternate days, everything on the table. We would work with the charters, with private schools, with every education outlet in this city and say "We have to help these members of our community with this essential need. What can you contribute?" The city has pulled together to feed hungry people, to get money to laid of restaurant staff, to help local businesses and to protect tenants. Well let's do that for the thousands of 4, 5, and 6 year olds who are being robbed of one of the most essential skills needed to function in society. Let's make sure these kids learn to read, that they have access to teachers and books and a safe place to do it. If we don't, many of these kids will never make it back. And it will be our fault. [/quote] Exactly, but this won't work for these posters, because it's not really about the "poor black and brown kids." It's about [b]using[/b] the poor black and brown kids as tools to get their OWN kids into buildings.[/quote] I mean, better I “use” poor black kids as argument to get them adequate schooling in person, then use them to support an argument for not going to school for years, like WTU is. There is one side neglecting and exploiting poor black families here, and it is NOT the side that wants schools to reopen. [/quote] Ah, the old canard: Expressing care about poor kids is evidence you don't care about poor kids.[/quote] I think we can let 'poor black families' decide and not white ones. YOU feel your children should go but not all of use feel the same when we have disproportionately been dying from covid-19. Yes there is a huge issue with distance learning, that cannot be denied. What we need is a solution that helps the neediest children but then is able to segway to all children whose parents want to come in. I think the plan DCPS came up with is innovative and is great to help the teachers who want to teach DL, the issue is this isn't a long term solution. [/quote] It would be cool if we let them decide by actually giving them the chance to decide if they wanted to go in person.[/quote] I fear the well has already been poisoned by WTU convincing black families that school is unsafe. Truly unconscionable. [/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