Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a newly matched YY family and completely overwhelmed by these threads :/
I am too... but we are still going to send our kid to YY in the fall.
More than anything, these threads have been a good intro to the unique & absurd politics surrounding the school. Better to find out early and online than late and in person, I guess.
But compared to the problems we've witnessed in other area schools, none of these complaints comes even close to being serious enough to deter us. Clearly some people feel super passionately about these issues, but to us they are small potatoes. Sorry.
I'm newly matched also for prek4. But I'm not listening to any of these YY haters who just wish their kids got in. Take their advice with a grain of salt...or less.
Anonymous wrote:Agree, the idiocy never ends on these YuYing threads, but not for the reasons above. Some of us want better than "exposure" to a language in DC public schols. Some of us want the best shot of our kids actually SPEAKING the language, and knowing the culture. Duh. We went with Oyster. Dingalings the more you fight having the particular needs of native speakers "prioritized" in your program, the tougher it's gonna to be for your own learners to speak well. It seems that you guys will cut off your noses to spite your faces every time. You deserve your kids lame Chinese. Of course it's not FREE. The crappy Chinese is coming at the expense of their other subjects, 50% of the time. If I were a YY parent, I'd be dashing, no sprinting, to MoCo on my weekends to make sure my kids interacted with peers who really speak CHinese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a newly matched YY family and completely overwhelmed by these threads :/
I am too... but we are still going to send our kid to YY in the fall.
More than anything, these threads have been a good intro to the unique & absurd politics surrounding the school. Better to find out early and online than late and in person, I guess.
But compared to the problems we've witnessed in other area schools, none of these complaints comes even close to being serious enough to deter us. Clearly some people feel super passionately about these issues, but to us they are small potatoes. Sorry.
I'm newly matched also for prek4. But I'm not listening to any of these YY haters who just wish their kids got in. Take their advice with a grain of salt...or less.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a newly matched YY family and completely overwhelmed by these threads :/
I am too... but we are still going to send our kid to YY in the fall.
More than anything, these threads have been a good intro to the unique & absurd politics surrounding the school. Better to find out early and online than late and in person, I guess.
But compared to the problems we've witnessed in other area schools, none of these complaints comes even close to being serious enough to deter us. Clearly some people feel super passionately about these issues, but to us they are small potatoes. Sorry.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a newly matched YY family and completely overwhelmed by these threads :/
Anonymous wrote:Agree, the idiocy never ends on these YuYing threads, but not for the reasons above. Some of us want better than "exposure" to a language in DC public schols. Some of us want the best shot of our kids actually SPEAKING the language, and knowing the culture. Duh. We went with Oyster. Dingalings the more you fight having the particular needs of native speakers "prioritized" in your program, the tougher it's gonna to be for your own learners to speak well. It seems that you guys will cut off your noses to spite your faces every time. You deserve your kids lame Chinese. Of course it's not FREE. The crappy Chinese is coming at the expense of their other subjects, 50% of the time. If I were a YY parent, I'd be dashing, no sprinting, to MoCo on my weekends to make sure my kids interacted with peers who really speak CHinese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We got in to Yu Ying and I am nervous - never actually thought we would get in. I am bad at languages. If my kid struggles what happens? What if your kid is at an immersion school and ends up sucking at learning a foreign language? You either continue through with bad grades or go back to general lottery? I could really use some advice.
My best advice is stay out of DCUM forums centering on Washington Yu Ying.
For whatever reason it instigates some kind of Montagues vs Capulets reaction in people.
Like in the Shakespearean play the opponents in these threads can be described as "two households, both alike in dignity"...
And like in the Shakespearean play they wage war based on some unknown "ancient grudge"...
Stay out of it if you know what's best.
Focus on your little Romeo or your little Juliet and leave the bickering to the "experts"
Anonymous wrote:Hello, there's more than one native speaker who's down on YY on these threads.
Sorry, not buying that there are several fully bilingual families behind your kid's class at YY.
What we observed is that there are far more bilingual Chinese-speaking parents involved than kids. When we were enrolled in 2015, admins told us that there were at least two dozen fully bilingual kids in the school. No way, almost all of these kids only spoke a little of the family's dialect, and maybe some Mandarin. The Chinese taught was a joke to our children.
Over the years, I've observed that DC parents whose kids speak Chinese almost never go for YY. Not that the situation is of concern to the parents they get.
Anonymous wrote:We got in to Yu Ying and I am nervous - never actually thought we would get in. I am bad at languages. If my kid struggles what happens? What if your kid is at an immersion school and ends up sucking at learning a foreign language? You either continue through with bad grades or go back to general lottery? I could really use some advice.