Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Im not Black. But this forum is toxic about race and education. I’m a Banneker parent and refuse to click on Banneker threads. My kid attends school with many extremely bright students. It’s gross! And it’s all parents who don’t have kids at the school chiming in with racist vitriol. I can’t even imagine how you must feel.
Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Yes! I USUALLY resist engaging. I am hyperaware that many of these posters are fellow parents who smile in our faces and talk trash about Black people on anonymous forums.
Curious. Do you live in NW? If not, are you cool with the middle school status quo in the rest of the city? Do you think it’s racist to offer advanced classes in middle school? I genuinely care about your perspective.
Please note the radio silence when you ask people like PPP whether they support advanced classes in MS. They introduce segregationist and racist tropes to demonize anyone who dares demand academic rigor, but then go silent when the question direct and specific questions about advanced MS classes are asked.
You should pay people like this no mind. They don't have a solution; they like to sit around and complain. They talk about changing demographics without acknowledging that DC schools are hell of better now than they were 30 years ago. Facts are inconvenient. Solutions are not the ultimate aim. The point of their exercise is to be victims in their own minds.
White fragility much? Maybe try again once you have learned the basics about structural racism?
Structural racism is part of the reason there are few classes for advanced learners EOTR.
Haven't you heard? The SJW "new wokism" way to overcome structural racism is to lower standards for all students so that only those with access to additional resources can access them. Is it regressive? Sure. Does it most injure high performing POC? Yes. But helping actual kids succeed isn't the goal. The goal is virtue signaling and being able to tweet meaningless combinations of words that make you sound super woke.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See, for example, Hobson v Hansen, where the court held that tracking was one of several tools used to enforce de facto segregation of DCPS schools.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobson_v._Hansen
That case was 45 years ago, decided on the heels of the Voting Rights Act, when schools were still de facto segregated. The fact that you know the wiki citation does not mean you have read it or understand how it is or is not relevant to the current educational environment. Take a minute and read the actual case, please.
Oh, and before some 28 year old wanna be SJW chimes in to say "Thinks are no better or different today than they were in 1967", please go find a black person who lived in American in the 50s and 60s and ask them about what they experienced before you embarrass yourself.
I’m the PP you are responding to. I attended segregated schools as a child.
I’m not sure what you imagine Hobson v. Hansen has anything to do with the Voting Rights act, given that the case is about whether the mechanisms adopted by an unelected school board to “cynically” (according to the opinion) re-segregate the schools in the wake of Bolling v. Sharpe were illegal.
However, the point that I was making was that the DCUM parents who take to this board every day to demand “equal treatment” - by which they mean the power to reshape DCPS policy to suit the needs of 17% of DCPS students through a variety of mechanisms including eliminating OOB seats, eliminating feeder patterns that allow Black kids to attend NW schools, and re-introducing tracking — are likely unaware of Hobson. Of course, the specific mechanism would be different than Hansen’s “four track curriculum”, and would thus likely be legal, but my point was that lots of people who ARE aware of the history are skeptical of these parents’ motives. Particularly when, like me, they attended schools that were still officially segregated years after Brown v. Board and which — when they were forced to integrate —- immediately adopted gifted programs and/or tracking in which all the white kids magically turned out to be gifted and all the Black kids weren’t.
I referenced the VRA because context matters. You are citing to a case and a set of facts that occurred in America at the same time that the battle for the VRA was occurring. My guess is you understood that but were deploying a cheap rhetorical device?
To suggest that white parents on DCUM who advocate for advanced classes and more academic rigor are somehow unqualified or wrong to so if they aren't aware of a 1967 court case with facts and contextual reality so far removed from 2022 is silly. It strikes me as a disingenuous effort to mute or intimidate people who suffer liberal guilt. Your description of the indefensible facts and actions in Hobson so clearly designed to continue the legacy of segregation are accurate; which makes me wonder how you can so easily mischaracterize the 2022 effort to get academic rigor introduced in MS.
You don't appear to have a solution other than to maintain the status quo. You sit in the corner and make references to cases gone by and worry in the abstract about racism and segregation but you don't have a solution, other than to suggest that any solution proposed by a white person who doesn't first attend an HBCU lecture on 1950 and 1960s segregation ought not have an opinion.
My question to you stands: Are you saying that advanced classes in MS should not be permitted because they somehow perpetuate segregation and racism? I await your reply.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Yes! I USUALLY resist engaging. I am hyperaware that many of these posters are fellow parents who smile in our faces and talk trash about Black people on anonymous forums.
Curious. Do you live in NW? If not, are you cool with the middle school status quo in the rest of the city? Do you think it’s racist to offer advanced classes in middle school? I genuinely care about your perspective.
Please note the radio silence when you ask people like PPP whether they support advanced classes in MS. They introduce segregationist and racist tropes to demonize anyone who dares demand academic rigor, but then go silent when the question direct and specific questions about advanced MS classes are asked.
You should pay people like this no mind. They don't have a solution; they like to sit around and complain. They talk about changing demographics without acknowledging that DC schools are hell of better now than they were 30 years ago. Facts are inconvenient. Solutions are not the ultimate aim. The point of their exercise is to be victims in their own minds.
White fragility much? Maybe try again once you have learned the basics about structural racism?
Structural racism is part of the reason there are few classes for advanced learners EOTR.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Yes! I USUALLY resist engaging. I am hyperaware that many of these posters are fellow parents who smile in our faces and talk trash about Black people on anonymous forums.
Curious. Do you live in NW? If not, are you cool with the middle school status quo in the rest of the city? Do you think it’s racist to offer advanced classes in middle school? I genuinely care about your perspective.
Please note the radio silence when you ask people like PPP whether they support advanced classes in MS. They introduce segregationist and racist tropes to demonize anyone who dares demand academic rigor, but then go silent when the question direct and specific questions about advanced MS classes are asked.
You should pay people like this no mind. They don't have a solution; they like to sit around and complain. They talk about changing demographics without acknowledging that DC schools are hell of better now than they were 30 years ago. Facts are inconvenient. Solutions are not the ultimate aim. The point of their exercise is to be victims in their own minds.
White fragility much? Maybe try again once you have learned the basics about structural racism?
Anonymous wrote:
I’m the PP you are responding to. I attended segregated schools as a child.
I’m not sure what you imagine Hobson v. Hansen has anything to do with the Voting Rights act, given that the case is about whether the mechanisms adopted by an unelected school board to “cynically” (according to the opinion) re-segregate the schools in the wake of Bolling v. Sharpe were illegal.
However, the point that I was making was that the DCUM parents who take to this board every day to demand “equal treatment” - by which they mean the power to reshape DCPS policy to suit the needs of 17% of DCPS students through a variety of mechanisms including eliminating OOB seats, eliminating feeder patterns that allow Black kids to attend NW schools, and re-introducing tracking — are likely unaware of Hobson. Of course, the specific mechanism would be different than Hansen’s “four track curriculum”, and would thus likely be legal, but my point was that lots of people who ARE aware of the history are skeptical of these parents’ motives. Particularly when, like me, they attended schools that were still officially segregated years after Brown v. Board and which — when they were forced to integrate —- immediately adopted gifted programs and/or tracking in which all the white kids magically turned out to be gifted and all the Black kids weren’t.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Yes! I USUALLY resist engaging. I am hyperaware that many of these posters are fellow parents who smile in our faces and talk trash about Black people on anonymous forums.
Curious. Do you live in NW? If not, are you cool with the middle school status quo in the rest of the city? Do you think it’s racist to offer advanced classes in middle school? I genuinely care about your perspective.
Please note the radio silence when you ask people like PPP whether they support advanced classes in MS. They introduce segregationist and racist tropes to demonize anyone who dares demand academic rigor, but then go silent when the question direct and specific questions about advanced MS classes are asked.
You should pay people like this no mind. They don't have a solution; they like to sit around and complain. They talk about changing demographics without acknowledging that DC schools are hell of better now than they were 30 years ago. Facts are inconvenient. Solutions are not the ultimate aim. The point of their exercise is to be victims in their own minds.
White fragility much? Maybe try again once you have learned the basics about structural racism?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Yes! I USUALLY resist engaging. I am hyperaware that many of these posters are fellow parents who smile in our faces and talk trash about Black people on anonymous forums.
And vice versa, of course. It’s called the civilized veneer vs. the anonymous forum. I am perfectly aware I am being called a Karen behind my back or at least in people’s heads. Now you will say I probably am a Karen even though you don’t know me. And others would say you are (insert stereotype about Black women here) even though they don’t know you.
I'm not sure what you mean by vice versa...unless you believe in reverse racism?
If you think you are being called a Karen behind your back, it's likely because you are generally an insufferable person who likes to race bait people online. You blow that dog whistle...
No, I am not a racist or blowing a dog whistle but not surprised you would say that on this anonymous forum. Case rested.
The point is that people say things behind other people’s backs and not to their faces. Wow. Surprise.
I really hope you are part of this white flight! lmao
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Yes! I USUALLY resist engaging. I am hyperaware that many of these posters are fellow parents who smile in our faces and talk trash about Black people on anonymous forums.
Curious. Do you live in NW? If not, are you cool with the middle school status quo in the rest of the city? Do you think it’s racist to offer advanced classes in middle school? I genuinely care about your perspective.
Please note the radio silence when you ask people like PPP whether they support advanced classes in MS. They introduce segregationist and racist tropes to demonize anyone who dares demand academic rigor, but then go silent when the question direct and specific questions about advanced MS classes are asked.
You should pay people like this no mind. They don't have a solution; they like to sit around and complain. They talk about changing demographics without acknowledging that DC schools are hell of better now than they were 30 years ago. Facts are inconvenient. Solutions are not the ultimate aim. The point of their exercise is to be victims in their own minds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP. As a Black middle class parent, I cringe when I read DCUM posts about race and schools. I have never had any conversations with my white friends about these matters but I imagine they happen, just not when I’m around. It then makes it awkward when I’m in a group and wonder what they are really thinking. Can anyone else relate?
Yes! I USUALLY resist engaging. I am hyperaware that many of these posters are fellow parents who smile in our faces and talk trash about Black people on anonymous forums.
Curious. Do you live in NW? If not, are you cool with the middle school status quo in the rest of the city? Do you think it’s racist to offer advanced classes in middle school? I genuinely care about your perspective.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:See, for example, Hobson v Hansen, where the court held that tracking was one of several tools used to enforce de facto segregation of DCPS schools.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hobson_v._Hansen
That case was 45 years ago, decided on the heels of the Voting Rights Act, when schools were still de facto segregated. The fact that you know the wiki citation does not mean you have read it or understand how it is or is not relevant to the current educational environment. Take a minute and read the actual case, please.
Oh, and before some 28 year old wanna be SJW chimes in to say "Thinks are no better or different today than they were in 1967", please go find a black person who lived in American in the 50s and 60s and ask them about what they experienced before you embarrass yourself.
I’m the PP you are responding to. I attended segregated schools as a child.
I’m not sure what you imagine Hobson v. Hansen has anything to do with the Voting Rights act, given that the case is about whether the mechanisms adopted by an unelected school board to “cynically” (according to the opinion) re-segregate the schools in the wake of Bolling v. Sharpe were illegal.
However, the point that I was making was that the DCUM parents who take to this board every day to demand “equal treatment” - by which they mean the power to reshape DCPS policy to suit the needs of 17% of DCPS students through a variety of mechanisms including eliminating OOB seats, eliminating feeder patterns that allow Black kids to attend NW schools, and re-introducing tracking — are likely unaware of Hobson. Of course, the specific mechanism would be different than Hansen’s “four track curriculum”, and would thus likely be legal, but my point was that lots of people who ARE aware of the history are skeptical of these parents’ motives. Particularly when, like me, they attended schools that were still officially segregated years after Brown v. Board and which — when they were forced to integrate —- immediately adopted gifted programs and/or tracking in which all the white kids magically turned out to be gifted and all the Black kids weren’t.