Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Let's shift gears, then. What, if anything, would Epstein favor to strengthen the elementary school educations of black and Hispanic students? I assume it's not smaller class sizes, since she wants class sizes in the schools that most black and Hispanic students attend to be larger, so that class sizes in primarily white/Asian schools in Dranesville can be smaller.
When has anyone advocated for larger class sizes?Please site your source. Otherwise, your preposterous claim is mere spin.
Anonymous wrote:
Let's shift gears, then. What, if anything, would Epstein favor to strengthen the elementary school educations of black and Hispanic students? I assume it's not smaller class sizes, since she wants class sizes in the schools that most black and Hispanic students attend to be larger, so that class sizes in primarily white/Asian schools in Dranesville can be smaller.
Please site your source. Otherwise, your preposterous claim is mere spin.Anonymous wrote:8:28 here/wanted to add: Why should it even matter what color the TJ students' skins are, or with what ancestral background they identify? Why do these numbers matter? Admittance should be based on academic level alone--not on race/skin color or excessive padding of activity resumes. I would love to see more talented black students at TJ, and so would the TJ students. No one thinks black kids aren't capable. It's more a problem of getting students on the path to higher learning when they are young. By the time they're in middle school, it's usually too late to try to help them be ready for TJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Abraham Lerner a student or an adult?
No diversity committee will fix the problem of attracting more qualified black and hispanic American citizen applicants to TJ. The disparity in achievement is largely due to family/home environment factors and it usually starts in the early childhood years.
I believe Lerner lives in Herndon and is in his early 50s.
He didn't say he was in favor of enrolling random Black and Hispanic students in TJ. He apparently thinks TJ should do more to enroll qualified minorities other than Asians, and found Epstein strenuously opposed to any such initiatives.
The Ivies and other top universities don't simply accept the students with the top GPAs and SATs, but perhaps they aren't in the same league as TJ.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Abraham Lerner a student or an adult?
No diversity committee will fix the problem of attracting more qualified black and hispanic American citizen applicants to TJ. The disparity in achievement is largely due to family/home environment factors and it usually starts in the early childhood years.
I believe Lerner lives in Herndon and is in his early 50s.
He didn't say he was in favor of enrolling random Black and Hispanic students in TJ. He apparently thinks TJ should do more to enroll qualified minorities other than Asians, and found Epstein strenuously opposed to any such initiatives.
The Ivies and other top universities don't simply accept the students with the top GPAs and SATs, but perhaps they aren't in the same league as TJ.
Anonymous wrote:Is Abraham Lerner a student or an adult?
No diversity committee will fix the problem of attracting more qualified black and hispanic American citizen applicants to TJ. The disparity in achievement is largely due to family/home environment factors and it usually starts in the early childhood years.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is Abraham Lerner a student or an adult?
I assumed he was a parent but maybe these other posters know that not to be the case?
Anonymous wrote:Is Abraham Lerner a student or an adult?
Anonymous wrote:For a student at TJ, I thought that was a poorly written editorial.