Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: The struggling students need the support and encouragement. Don’t be small.
Exactly, this is what the culture has become - don’t make low performing students feel bad, don’t eclipse them with your achievements, you are making others feel bad if you talk about your accomplishments, keep it to yourself.
It feels like socialism.
Ironically, I’ve just read in Reddit about low income students who had to work 20 hours/week in a restaurant since twelve, yet excelled academically and got into Ivies schools with full scholarships.
That’s a leap. You’re insecure so you’re hearing a message no one is sending. If it’s such a great magnet, no one is “celebrating” DC because every kid is doing similar things.
And because private schools are way better at stoking parents’ ego because they want money. Public doesn’t have to bother.
- private school admin
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow. So just knowing your child is successful isn’t enough for you? You need the bragging rights and for everyone else to know just how great your kid is?
Maybe the school is highlighting things that help the community or highlighting students who may not otherwise receive any recognition. Maybe they’re hoping that these kids will continue to be excited about learning and helping others.
Sounds like your child already knows how to be a strong student and is used to being constantly praised and highlighted. Why do they need the continual public ego boost?
Who cares what parents say to their kids?
My kid sees the school recognizing others for this or that - kindness award, school athletes, but DC is invisible.
To me it feels that American public schools celebrate mediocrity, because I don’t see the outlier being celebrated and I know they are there from all kinds of families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: The struggling students need the support and encouragement. Don’t be small.
Exactly, this is what the culture has become - don’t make low performing students feel bad, don’t eclipse them with your achievements, you are making others feel bad if you talk about your accomplishments, keep it to yourself.
It feels like socialism.
Ironically, I’ve just read in Reddit about low income students who had to work 20 hours/week in a restaurant since twelve, yet excelled academically and got into Ivies schools with full scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: The struggling students need the support and encouragement. Don’t be small.
Exactly, this is what the culture has become - don’t make low performing students feel bad, don’t eclipse them with your achievements, you are making others feel bad if you talk about your accomplishments, keep it to yourself.
It feels like socialism.
Ironically, I’ve just read in Reddit about low income students who had to work 20 hours/week in a restaurant since twelve, yet excelled academically and got into Ivies schools with full scholarships.
Anonymous wrote:Wow. So just knowing your child is successful isn’t enough for you? You need the bragging rights and for everyone else to know just how great your kid is?
Maybe the school is highlighting things that help the community or highlighting students who may not otherwise receive any recognition. Maybe they’re hoping that these kids will continue to be excited about learning and helping others.
Sounds like your child already knows how to be a strong student and is used to being constantly praised and highlighted. Why do they need the continual public ego boost?
Anonymous wrote: The struggling students need the support and encouragement. Don’t be small.