Anonymous wrote:This should happen. OP, ever tried convincing a neighborhood school in ward 7 or 8 to do this?
Anonymous wrote:OP here..
The purpose of this thread should not serve as a launching pad for language politics. Every child should have the opportunity to acquire a second language. It is common for children in other countries to naturally acquire two or three languages at a early age. An example that comes to mind is the African context. From my observation, a person from the African continent learns their tribal language, their country's official language, and what other language acquired in school. Same observation from my European counterparts.
On the subject of the taxpayer's dollars issue, my taxes are supporting schools (traditional or public charter) that my children do not attend. I have no problem with tax dollars going to toward language immersion programs that I personally have no interest. I do have a problem with my tax money going toward wasteful projects.
And finally, 15:03, your implications of "the founder does not even speak or has expressed that they've even got a passion for Japanese language and culture - this is just something plucked from the air" is so totally clueless and laughable. I am not going to reveal who I am and what my capabilities are to an anonymous forum. I will say that Japanese may sound like a "nice to have language" or "exotic" but there were 12 DCPS high school students that were selected to participate in the U.S. Japan Youth Exchange Program, a two-way exchange involving high school students from DC public schools and from Japan. Keep in mind that these twelve students do not speak Japanese when they participated in this program. However, their Japanese counterparts DID have an English language requirement. These 12 students had the opportunity to travel to Japan for two weeks, however, with no Japanese language. Some food for thought.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a coincidence that the Immersion topic is being raised for ward 7 or even ward 8. In 10 years, ward 7 and 8 will not be the same. Big stuff is happening. Real Estate and renting is less expensive, Saint Elizabeth Campus project, Skyland Towne Center, projects popping up all over Benning Road. I think that Immersion is one way to attract new families into the District. You have all these thing. Affordable homes for new families, real shopping and entertainment centers, and finally schools that have a wonderful immersion program. The city is setting the stage for new folks to move right in. I don't think Spanish is a good option. If you want to attract new people, you need something to hook them in. Japanese and Korean are good options to me.
If this is a charter school, the fact that it's located in Ward 7 will do absolutely nothing to make it accessible to Ward 7 residents. They'd be competing in the lottery with everyone else. You're making it sound like a neighborhood school and it just isn't.
If I was looking for a house in the city, I'd be looking for actual quality schools, not something that's offering a token exotic language with no real use.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It's not a coincidence that the Immersion topic is being raised for ward 7 or even ward 8. In 10 years, ward 7 and 8 will not be the same. Big stuff is happening. Real Estate and renting is less expensive, Saint Elizabeth Campus project, Skyland Towne Center, projects popping up all over Benning Road. I think that Immersion is one way to attract new families into the District. You have all these thing. Affordable homes for new families, real shopping and entertainment centers, and finally schools that have a wonderful immersion program. The city is setting the stage for new folks to move right in. I don't think Spanish is a good option. If you want to attract new people, you need something to hook them in. Japanese and Korean are good options to me.
If this is a charter school, the fact that it's located in Ward 7 will do absolutely nothing to make it accessible to Ward 7 residents. They'd be competing in the lottery with everyone else. You're making it sound like a neighborhood school and it just isn't.
If I was looking for a house in the city, I'd be looking for actual quality schools, not something that's offering a token exotic language with no real use.
Anonymous wrote:It's not a coincidence that the Immersion topic is being raised for ward 7 or even ward 8. In 10 years, ward 7 and 8 will not be the same. Big stuff is happening. Real Estate and renting is less expensive, Saint Elizabeth Campus project, Skyland Towne Center, projects popping up all over Benning Road. I think that Immersion is one way to attract new families into the District. You have all these thing. Affordable homes for new families, real shopping and entertainment centers, and finally schools that have a wonderful immersion program. The city is setting the stage for new folks to move right in. I don't think Spanish is a good option. If you want to attract new people, you need something to hook them in. Japanese and Korean are good options to me.
Anonymous wrote:It's not a coincidence that the Immersion topic is being raised for ward 7 or even ward 8. In 10 years, ward 7 and 8 will not be the same. Big stuff is happening. Real Estate and renting is less expensive, Saint Elizabeth Campus project, Skyland Towne Center, projects popping up all over Benning Road. I think that Immersion is one way to attract new families into the District. You have all these thing. Affordable homes for new families, real shopping and entertainment centers, and finally schools that have a wonderful immersion program. The city is setting the stage for new folks to move right in. I don't think Spanish is a good option. If you want to attract new people, you need something to hook them in. Japanese and Korean are good options to me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Second Arabic over Japanese. Huge need.
True. The country needs analysts, linguists and agents in the war against Islamic terror.