Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are very committed to dual language, is it a good idea to start in 3rd grade?
I'm not at all committed. I don't want to send her dual language but that's what everyone recommends in the neigjborhood.
It doesn't matter - at third grade they won't LET you into dual language.
Good to know. Thanks. Any idea if the kids in EO are from families who are as driven and interested in learning as the DL families? Like do people choose EO on purpose?
I'm confident that there are many, many families who are "driven and interested in learning" in every school in DC.
I think what you really want to know if people with higher incomes and more education send their kids to Marie Reed English track for 3rd grade. Right?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are very committed to dual language, is it a good idea to start in 3rd grade?
I'm not at all committed. I don't want to send her dual language but that's what everyone recommends in the neigjborhood.
It doesn't matter - at third grade they won't LET you into dual language.
Good to know. Thanks. Any idea if the kids in EO are from families who are as driven and interested in learning as the DL families? Like do people choose EO on purpose?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are very committed to dual language, is it a good idea to start in 3rd grade?
I'm not at all committed. I don't want to send her dual language but that's what everyone recommends in the neigjborhood.
It doesn't matter - at third grade they won't LET you into dual language.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Unless you are very committed to dual language, is it a good idea to start in 3rd grade?
I'm not at all committed. I don't want to send her dual language but that's what everyone recommends in the neigjborhood.
Anonymous wrote:Unless you are very committed to dual language, is it a good idea to start in 3rd grade?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In Early Childhood, there are a total of 6 classes, 4 are Dual Language and 2 are English Only. For students in K-5, 2 classrooms are DL and 1 classroom is EO. While the DL program has more children because across both classrooms, the EO classrooms often have the highest number of students in one class.
Thanks so much for this response. We're moving IB for marie reed and my dd will be in 3rd grade. she has never been dual language before so I don't really want her to start now and feel left behind. But I also don't want her to be the only one....not sure what to do.
Anonymous wrote:In Early Childhood, there are a total of 6 classes, 4 are Dual Language and 2 are English Only. For students in K-5, 2 classrooms are DL and 1 classroom is EO. While the DL program has more children because across both classrooms, the EO classrooms often have the highest number of students in one class.