Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dont know my 'socio-economic status' nor care!
Wtf??
Who here likes declaring their race on every piece of government paperwork??
Im tired of being treated like cattle and branded by race, gender and socio-economic status. My value is to my family, my identity is for me, my societal worth is not for some pseudoscience sociology professor, dimwit politician, nor government bean counter to determine.
Nonetheless, we are not isolated atoms floating around in a near-vacuum. We exist in society. And in society, our race, gender, SES, etc. are relevant.
On the other hand, my answer to the OP's question is, "Yes, duh" -- and that's not polite, so maybe I should exit the thread now.
Anonymous wrote:I dont know my 'socio-economic status' nor care!
Wtf??
Who here likes declaring their race on every piece of government paperwork??
Im tired of being treated like cattle and branded by race, gender and socio-economic status. My value is to my family, my identity is for me, my societal worth is not for some pseudoscience sociology professor, dimwit politician, nor government bean counter to determine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I dont know my 'socio-economic status' nor care!
Wtf??
Who here likes declaring their race on every piece of government paperwork??
Im tired of being treated like cattle and branded by race, gender and socio-economic status. My value is to my family, my identity is for me, my societal worth is not for some pseudoscience sociology professor, dimwit politician, nor government bean counter to determine.
Dramatic much?
Anonymous wrote:I dont know my 'socio-economic status' nor care!
Wtf??
Who here likes declaring their race on every piece of government paperwork??
Im tired of being treated like cattle and branded by race, gender and socio-economic status. My value is to my family, my identity is for me, my societal worth is not for some pseudoscience sociology professor, dimwit politician, nor government bean counter to determine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
$200K HH, Rockville $650K
Robert Frost. Absolute waste of time. Child is not challenged at all.
Not happy. Would go to private in heart bit, but cannot afford good one and will not consider religious ones.
Then try magnet
With 100 spots for the half county?
You should be kidding me...
Plus there is huge difference between magnet load, local school load and private school load.
I do not want children neither wasted nor burned, I want them challenged! But I have no choice...
Anonymous wrote:What is your household income?
$220k
How much are you paying for housing?
$500k house
Where do you live?
Kensington
What do you and your partner do for a living?
Journalist & unemployed
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Einstein cluster
Are you happy with the school and education?
Yes
If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)?
N/a, happy with public
What are your school's pros and cons?
DCC consortium choice, great arts programs (music and performing arts), diversity, great teachers!
Love that kids can choose to enroll in challenging courses (IB, AP). In other places we have lived, enrollment in such courses required teacher recommendation.
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
I wouldn't necessarily change schools, but now that my kids are teenagers they are trapped out here in the unwalkable suburbs. The whole family would prefer to live closer in to DC and near Metro.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
$200K HH, Rockville $650K
Robert Frost. Absolute waste of time. Child is not challenged at all.
Not happy. Would go to private in heart bit, but cannot afford good one and will not consider religious ones.
Then try magnet
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
$200K HH, Rockville $650K
Robert Frost. Absolute waste of time. Child is not challenged at all.
Not happy. Would go to private in heart bit, but cannot afford good one and will not consider religious ones.
Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?
Anonymous wrote:Does your socio-economic status inform how you feel about your child's school/education?
I often see people on DCUM trashing certain school systems or school clusters. Just wondering if income and neighborhood matter when it comes to how happy people are with the school and their child's education.
What is your household income? How much are you paying for housing? Where do you live? What do you and your partner do for a living?
What school/school cluster and in what school system does your child attend?
Are you happy with the school and education? If not, why not private school (or vice versa, why not public)? What are your school's pros and cons?
If you could change schools, where would you go and why?