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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "Middle Schools for Cap Hill"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Everybody doesn't care for the way you IB parents are lending a hand. Boycotts have their uses.[/quote] So we should boycott the school we think has a good chance of working for our kid, because you don’t think it works for your kid? makes a lot of sense. [/quote] DP but no, no one is saying don't send your kid to your IB if that's what you want. People are specifically reacting to the attitude that choosing not to attend the IB is some kind of betrayal. It's not. It's a practical choice to give your kid the education and environment they need. And I think a lot of people are also pointing out the inherent privilege of certain parents insisting that the IB school is good enough because they have resources that will ensure their kid is never really in danger of missing out on opportunities by attending a struggling IB school. That privilege might take the form of being wealthy enough to afford to supplement and support your kid outside of school so they don't fall behind academically, having kids without SNs that might require a different school environment, being white, or being firmly ensconced in the UMC versus maybe being the first generation of your family to attend college or have a professional career and feeling more a more tenuous hold on future opportunities for your child. Criticizing people for going to charters, moving, or attending private schools as being part of the problem often ignores these privileges and assumes that every family IB for SH, EH, or JA is similarly sitauted. We aren't. Some of us rightfully worry more about how going to a MS where many kids test below grade level and behavioral issues are common might impact our child's chances of going to college or getting the education they need to do well as an adult. The refusal to even acknowledge that is really insulting.[/quote] Curious that you’d throw around the accusation of “privilege” when your supposed solution (moving or going private) is even more privileged. Believe it or not I want to send my kid IB because I like the neighborhood, don’t want to move, [b]and would like to keep them with friends[/b]. It is actually a pretty basic and normal thing people do everywhere with no ulterior motive. [/quote] We went to a charter because we wanted to keep our kid with his friends. It was actually sad to see how everyone left our IB for 5th grade. There were only 2 people that he knew in our IB's 5th grade this year, and he'd been at the school since PK4.[/quote]
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