Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is not racist to want your child to not be the only child with a particular attribute (race, religion, etc). If your goal in life is for you not to be able to tell people that you are not racist because you are friends with black people and gay people and jewish people, not sending your kid to a 1% white school is fine.
If you want to be anti-racist, well, that does not cut it. To be anti-racist, you need to value the unique experience that your child would gain from being in a minority majority school.
Arguments about test scores and the learning environment are mostly bogus and can be offset by tutoring and engaging with your child at home.
Hahaha, the antiracists have spoken.
Anonymous wrote:There are ZERO schools that are more than 80% white.
The idea that sending your kid to a school of 70% white kids is somehow racist makes me chortle. Meanwhile, good luck finding a school with a decent cohort of Asian students. But of course, Asians don’t count.
Anonymous wrote:I'm the above (white) poster who was one of 2 white people in a 200-250 person black company. I now work in a another predominantly black company but it's it's probably 10% white. This has been a much easier social dynamic to be in as a "minority". It was really hard being the only person (or one of two). A Handful of coworkers said racially-based stuff to my face all.the.time "as a white girl you,..." It could get mean. I went home crying on more than one occasion and I have pretty thick skin. I think anytime you are the ONLY minority, a small faction of the majority may feel like they don't have to filter things because you are on their turf. the vast majority will remain respectful but there is a percentage who will lose their filter(s).
So regarding my kids--I'd probably put them in an majority (90, even 95%) black school but would hesitate to make them the ONLY white kids -- or the only Non-Asians or non Hispanics or whatever. As it stands my kids are in school that is close to 50-50 black-white with a majority black teaching staff.
Anonymous wrote:here are better questions: are you overlooking/opting out of your closest neighborhood school or otherwise making school choices for reasons that when you really take a hard look at them are fundamentally demographic in nature?
what is the threshold that personally makes you uncomfortable and are there options that make sense for you and your child (e.g., geographic proximity etc.) where you can get maybe a little bit more uncomfortable?
the nice white parents podcast etc. basically found on average white parents are uncomfortable with middle schools that are less than 26% white. it is not entirely lost on me that maps entirely to deal, hardy, latin, basis (the same set of middle schools that a lot of dc urban moms posters repeatedly claim are the "acceptable" ones that they would be willing to consider).
Anonymous wrote:As Black person, my opinion is that being a minority in a particular part of your life (even just one of a few) would be a great experience for a white person. They will likely be a more empathetic human being. I find white people's concern with being one of few or one of one interesting, as that has been the lived experience for many POC. Its like you all are admitting that you think being a minority must suck or have some inherit disadvantages or something.. hmm.
Anonymous wrote:I truly value a diverse environment for my children. I want them to interact with and befriend people from all walks of life - economically, perspective, experience, racially and ethnically. Diversity isn't a buzzword for me - I truly see the value in it, across a variety of contexts.
My children are white. I would never send them to a school that was 95% white. I'm upper middle class, closer to upper class than middle class, I think (HHI - $200k). I would never send them to a school that was 95% UMC or wealthy.
However there is a flip side - there are many schools in DC that are <1% white. Is it racist for me to be uncomfortable sending my kid there? It feels like a lot to ask of a 14 year old to be one of two white kids in his whole grade. No one wants their kid to stand out, or to feel like they don't belong.
Is that a bad thing? I'm honestly wondering. Particularly interested in the opinion of people of color - I know it's not your job to educate me on matters of race, but I really struggle with this one, so any help would be appreciated.
I know that schools on both ends of this (95% white, and <1% white) are the result of policies of racism and discrimination that continue to this day, and I want to be a good citizen and a good neighbor and help to dismantle this. But there are much bigger societal forces at play. I'd love to hear people's thoughts on this matter.
Anonymous wrote:It is not racist to want your child to not be the only child with a particular attribute (race, religion, etc). If your goal in life is for you not to be able to tell people that you are not racist because you are friends with black people and gay people and jewish people, not sending your kid to a 1% white school is fine.
If you want to be anti-racist, well, that does not cut it. To be anti-racist, you need to value the unique experience that your child would gain from being in a minority majority school.
Arguments about test scores and the learning environment are mostly bogus and can be offset by tutoring and engaging with your child at home.
Anonymous wrote:I truly value a diverse environment for my children. I want them to interact with and befriend people from all walks of life - economically, perspective, experience, racially and ethnically. Diversity isn't a buzzword for me - I truly see the value in it, across a variety of contexts.
My children are white. I would never send them to a school that was 95% white. I'm upper middle class, closer to upper class than middle class, I think (HHI - $200k). I would never send them to a school that was 95% UMC or wealthy.
However there is a flip side - there are many schools in DC that are <1% white. Is it racist for me to be uncomfortable sending my kid there? It feels like a lot to ask of a 14 year old to be one of two white kids in his whole grade. No one wants their kid to stand out, or to feel like they don't belong.
Is that a bad thing? I'm honestly wondering. Particularly interested in the opinion of people of color - I know it's not your job to educate me on matters of race, but I really struggle with this one, so any help would be appreciated.
I know that schools on both ends of this (95% white, and <1% white) are the result of policies of racism and discrimination that continue to this day, and I want to be a good citizen and a good neighbor and help to dismantle this. But there are much bigger societal forces at play. I'd love to hear people's thoughts on this matter.