Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lately I've heard negative things about the Middle School in TP-- like there's a "bad crop" of kids right now that the administration doesn't quite know how to handle. Not sure? But my understanding is that Blair is a very good, solid HS.
Not sure where you're hearing this. My kid graduated from TPMS last year, and it was a good crop of kids. It's possible the incoming 6th graders are trouble, but I hadn't heard that.
I heard this from several former TPMS teachers, who fled their school to come and work at the one I work at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lately I've heard negative things about the Middle School in TP-- like there's a "bad crop" of kids right now that the administration doesn't quite know how to handle. Not sure? But my understanding is that Blair is a very good, solid HS.
Not sure where you're hearing this. My kid graduated from TPMS last year, and it was a good crop of kids. It's possible the incoming 6th graders are trouble, but I hadn't heard that.
I heard this from several former TPMS teachers, who fled their school to come and work at the one I work at.
Teachers fleeing TPMS? Are you the poster who thinks TPMS is segregated?
TPMS did change principals maybe 2 years ago. But during our time there, which ended last year, we definitely didn't see a massive exodus of teachers. I'm not sure what you're talking about.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lately I've heard negative things about the Middle School in TP-- like there's a "bad crop" of kids right now that the administration doesn't quite know how to handle. Not sure? But my understanding is that Blair is a very good, solid HS.
Not sure where you're hearing this. My kid graduated from TPMS last year, and it was a good crop of kids. It's possible the incoming 6th graders are trouble, but I hadn't heard that.
I heard this from several former TPMS teachers, who fled their school to come and work at the one I work at.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Lately I've heard negative things about the Middle School in TP-- like there's a "bad crop" of kids right now that the administration doesn't quite know how to handle. Not sure? But my understanding is that Blair is a very good, solid HS.
Not sure where you're hearing this. My kid graduated from TPMS last year, and it was a good crop of kids. It's possible the incoming 6th graders are trouble, but I hadn't heard that.
Anonymous wrote:Lately I've heard negative things about the Middle School in TP-- like there's a "bad crop" of kids right now that the administration doesn't quite know how to handle. Not sure? But my understanding is that Blair is a very good, solid HS.
Anonymous wrote:
I won't stoop to your base language. I assume it strikes a nerve because it's true. Takoma Park is one of the most segregated communities going. Not a crime unto it self, but a little laughable that it holds itself out as some sort of racial paradise.
Anonymous wrote:More tiresome Takoma Park hype -- and self congratulation -- about how their kids "are thriving in this diverse environment."
Truth is, what little racial interaction there is -- and there's not all that much -- for the most part is all done and dusted by middle school.
Take a walk around Takoma Park Middle School or Blair High School on a typical day, and peer into the classrooms. You'll find one classroom of kids who are predominantly (as in almost 100 percent save one or two) kids of color, and another next door that's nearly all white. And yes, I'm a member of the community, and know whereof I speak.
Just walk along the streets in downtown Takoma, Old Town Takoma -- for that matter, anywhere except the outer fringes of Takoma, and you'll see block after block where no people of color reside. The pattern is duplicated in the schools, where kids of color and kids who are white are educated separately for the most part.
Whether it's sports teams, recreation league activities, housing patterns within Takoma Park, social interaction within the school or after school, it's hard to imagine a more segregated set-up.
Yet, parents in Takoma Park continue to talk as if they're part of some sort of Rainbow Nation. The fact is their kids are educated in classrooms that are very nearly as homogeneous as those in Potomac or Bethesda.
Not that I begrudge them that. I suspect that had there been true diversity -- with people of color living as their next door neighbors and not in Langley Park or the apartment complexes of Maple Avenue -- many would never have been tempted to buy homes in Takoma Park.
My guess is that its the same with the schools: Create true integration of the classroom and see how long it takes for white flight to commence.
I tire of the readiness of folks in Takoma Park to try to have it both ways, giving lip service to the virtues of diversity, even while most -- with the exception of people they hire to watch their kids and clean their homes -- seem to have precious little interaction with people who don't look just like them.
So folks who have chosen to send their kids to private schools or to public ones in McLean -- don't let the TP folks guilt-trip you. They've made very much the same choices about whom their kids will be educated alongside. They've just disguised it in such a way as to be able to hang on to their "diversity" bragging rights.
Anonymous wrote:
I'm wondering about the great schools as well. I like the vibe of Takoma Park. However, there must be a reason as to why many people choose elementary schools that feed into BCC, Walter Johnson, Whitman, Churchill, and Wootton. It seems like those are the only schools that people on DC Urban Mom Forum talk about. Why are those schools so popular?