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DC Public and Public Charter Schools
Reply to "What do you think of Janney?"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]What are your experiences there? I have heard from multiple people that it's the best public (by far) in DC. Do you agree? I am debating a move at the moment.[/quote] Definitely not one of the best bay far. It's definitely top 5 in my opinion. Test scores wise it's top 5 but not #1. The thing it has going for it over other schools that score higher is that it feeds to Deal. If you compare subgroups, Hearst does better and also feeds to Deal but smaller and more diverse community. It's a great school. Personally, I wouldn't choose it if I had the choice. It's a little too crowded and not as diverse as I'd like. [/quote] Not "diverse" ??? Janney is very diverse. There are all types and many languages spoken there. White, black, European, Indian, Asian, Hispanic ,and mixed race kids, how much more diverse do you want it ???[/quote] Pp you quoted. I said "not as diverse as I'd like it" note the "I". As an AA parent, I would prefer my kid not be an only. Yes, it's selfish opinion but that's why I said it was for me. I didn't say one negative thing about the school. I think it's a great school. I would prefer Hearst or Eaton who apparently do better in testing and have a diverse student body. People keep saying "well what about DCPS that is 90% black", I'm not talking about those schools, I'm comparing to other WOTP schools. I wouldn't want my kid at a 90% black school either. [/quote] Viewing "diversity" solely in black and white terms is very one-dimensional, sort of a 1970s view of the concept. Moreover, while African-Americans may now be below 50% of DC's population, they are by far still the largest group, so seeing AAs as being the diversity in DC is misplaced. The PP is correct about Janney's diversity from a broad, 21st century meaning of the term. The only aspect where Janney is less diverse is on income. But that's harder to achieve in the US which (like DC) has a strong tradition of local, even neighborhood schools.[/quote] I'm so sick of people saying that a family from India and Spain is diverse. No. Sorry. It's a valid point to say you don't want your kid to be the only kid with dark brown skin in his class. Stop saying it's an old fashion way of looking at things. A white kid from Spain that speaks Spanish is great when being able to offer worldly diversity and cultural diversity, but that kid is not going to have the same plight as a black kid would when dealing with the issues that we deal with on a day to day basis. That white looking kid that speaks Spanish is not going to have to worry about being stereotyped by his teachers, parents of friends, neighbors or cops. Honestly, would you be fine with sending your white kid to a school of all kids with black skin? What if the black kids were from dozens of African countries, Bahamas, Jamaica, Dominican, and Trinidad? That's diverse right? Well guess what, Banneker is filled with various African students as well as Caribbean students and for some reason I don't see any whites applying for it despite its diversity that's not boiled down to black/white. Because they don't see Ethipoian, Nigerian, Trinidad, Jamaican, they see an all black school and they don't want their kid to be an only. Valid reason IMO. Don't contest when the tables are turned.[/quote] Honestly, I don't really give a fig about diversity. It's a distant nice to have, but it pales beside academic quality and good school management. I noticed another DCPS elementary that had diversity as number one in its mission statement, and it's like "what are they thinking?" That's worshipping fluff ahead of substance. And as pointed out earlier, the diversity at Wilson is a mixed blessing: groups of rowdy teenagers unleashing f-bombs and invective on passerby in Tenleytown rather than minding their manners and obeying the rules. [/quote] [b]You are the exact definition of someone I would not want my kid to go to school with[/b]. I pray your kid doesn't have your same thoughts. Btw, if you're worried about academic quality as #1, you should check out Eaton, Hearst, or another school where there's not 30 kids in a class AND your DC's counterparts are doing better.[/quote] Are you sure about that? I think it would be great if school choice wasn't a result of ethnicity. When I am choosing a school I hope to choose based on academics, facilities and teachers. Not the color of one's skin. Why is this a bad thing? Why should the color of one's skin be a primary factor in choosing a school? Should it also be considered when choosing everything else in life? We must have the exact right mix of brown people and white people for a school to meet your standards? see how racist that sounds? Stop judging everyone by the color of their skin. [/quote] There is a big gap between choosing a school only for diversity and "not giving a fig about diversity." [b]When you don't give a fig about diversity, you tend to raise people like Trump[/b].[/quote] Or you raise people who don't make decisions based on skin color?? [/quote]
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