Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We turned down YY as a bilingual Chinese family because there are so few others involved, and no ethnic administrator. The rabid YY supporters brand people like us as "haters," but we were torn because our IB school isn't be best. We were also concerned about the strength of the English program and a hassle-filled commute with no parent-funded bus/van from our neighborhood. Luckily, we got into an appealing nearby non-immersion charter, off the WL this week. We only speak Chinese at home so don't feel like our kid will miss out. Good luck figuring this one out.
umm....didn't the non-yu ying family start it? didn't see anything from yy people on this thread until this person got nasty---and I'm not from yy or a supporter.....
Anonymous wrote:We turned down YY as a bilingual Chinese family because there are so few others involved, and no ethnic administrator. The rabid YY supporters brand people like us as "haters," but we were torn because our IB school isn't be best. We were also concerned about the strength of the English program and a hassle-filled commute with no parent-funded bus/van from our neighborhood. Luckily, we got into an appealing nearby non-immersion charter, off the WL this week. We only speak Chinese at home so don't feel like our kid will miss out. Good luck figuring this one out.
Anonymous wrote:We turned down YY as a bilingual Chinese family because there are so few others involved, and no ethnic administrator. The rabid YY supporters brand people like us as "haters," but we were torn because our IB school isn't be best. We were also concerned about the strength of the English program and a hassle-filled commute with no parent-funded bus/van from our neighborhood. Luckily, we got into an appealing nearby non-immersion charter, off the WL this week. We only speak Chinese at home so don't feel like our kid will miss out. Good luck figuring this one out.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We turned down YY as a bilingual Chinese family because there are so few others involved, and no ethnic administrator. The rabid YY supporters brand people like us as "haters," but we were torn because our IB school isn't be best. We were also concerned about the strength of the English program and a hassle-filled commute with no parent-funded bus/van from our neighborhood. Luckily, we got into an appealing nearby non-immersion charter, off the WL this week. We only speak Chinese at home so don't feel like our kid will miss out. Good luck figuring this one out.
It's great you found an option that works for you! Wonder why, if you're not at an immersion school, you felt the need to trash Yu Ying? Could it be---gasp---that you're a closet "hater"?![]()
Anonymous wrote:We turned down YY as a bilingual Chinese family because there are so few others involved, and no ethnic administrator. The rabid YY supporters brand people like us as "haters," but we were torn because our IB school isn't be best. We were also concerned about the strength of the English program and a hassle-filled commute with no parent-funded bus/van from our neighborhood. Luckily, we got into an appealing nearby non-immersion charter, off the WL this week. We only speak Chinese at home so don't feel like our kid will miss out. Good luck figuring this one out.
Anonymous wrote:Pk3. Lately I have been getting "cold feet" about the decision to attend. We just had to take him out of his daycare situation abruptly last week and are in the midst of bringing on a nanny for 2 months. I'm starting to wonder if this will now be too many transitions for him? Or is there even such a thing?