Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Your English-dominant kid isn't going to graduate Bancroft able to read One Hundred Days of Solitude in Spanish and be able to discuss it with his Bancroft-area peers.
It appears DC adults will not be able to discuss One Hundred Days of Solitude either. Because the book's title is One Hundred YEARS of Solitude. Felicidades!
Anonymous wrote:Your English-dominant kid isn't going to graduate Bancroft able to read One Hundred Days of Solitude in Spanish and be able to discuss it with his Bancroft-area peers.
Anonymous wrote:You should buy a place along the Red Line and be inbounds for Janney, Murch, Eaton, or, possibly, Layfayette. Two of these are diverse in the sense that the pie chart of skin color has a good balance. One is OK.
It boggles my mind that people place iffy defacto Spanish "immersion" above the ***entire rest of the school experience.***
Your English-dominant kid isn't going to graduate Bancroft able to read One Hundred Days of Solitude in Spanish and be able to discuss it with his Bancroft-area peers.
Anonymous wrote:Just another alternative: think about Janney/Murch for elementary school. The languages are not there, but you can supplement after school and in the summer. Then you've got Alice Deal and Wilson--both very strong middle and high schools WITH STRONG LANGUAGE PROGRAMS:
http://alicedeal.org/2012/05/us-school-students-put-language-learning-to-use-in-china/
I throw this out there (in addition to the strong recommendations above) because after elementary school, that's when sophisticated language learning (literature, newspaper reading, travel) can really take place. Be sure to consider middle and upper schools. Good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Word on the street is that Powell and Bancroft are up-and-comers. Try IBs for there.
Anonymous wrote:Takoma, DC. TEC is getting better every year, and several great charters close by.