Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GO SELA!!! As much as we love some aspects of YY, we are going to take a chance on Sela. We like the vibe of what they are trying to do, the organization, the energy, the free before and after care, etc. I have already found a Mandarin tutor for my daughter so she can continue her Chinese.
Soooo... are you already at YY and leaving for Sela? Or you are optimistic about your shot at getting in? If you're already at YY and leaving, what grade?
Just wondering... (YY hopeful who is thrilled every time I hear someone say they're leaving YY, which so far has been... no one!)
People do leave actually, it's not that infrequent, particularly in the older grades. I have applied to Sela for first grade, if we get in, we will leave. If we don't get in we will stay at YY and give it another year. YY is great, but it's not for everyone. Also, the commute is not great for me.

Anonymous wrote:Nobody would send their kid there unless they are jewish or the other school option is bad academically. hebrew is almost useless unless you are jewish. I've never met a non-jewish child who studied hebrew. Maybe some theologians do, but that would be in their college years I am guessing or even later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GO SELA!!! As much as we love some aspects of YY, we are going to take a chance on Sela. We like the vibe of what they are trying to do, the organization, the energy, the free before and after care, etc. I have already found a Mandarin tutor for my daughter so she can continue her Chinese.
Soooo... are you already at YY and leaving for Sela? Or you are optimistic about your shot at getting in? If you're already at YY and leaving, what grade?
Just wondering... (YY hopeful who is thrilled every time I hear someone say they're leaving YY, which so far has been... no one!)
The PP may be telling the truth. I have heard that 85 members of Congress just filled SELA applications. Given Sidwell's recent problems, I wouldn't be surprised to see a Sidwell to Sela stampede next year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very excited about Sela and glad they are joining our community. Have found Inspired Teaching less than inspired and am willing to try my luck on a new bilingual option. No connection to Hebrew, and not worried that our multi-racial family will be a "minority" at Sela. I have been really impressed with them thus far (getting such a great space so early, their leadership at the expo were very articulate, etc.) Do think there is a strange preoccupation with trashing Sela at every opportunity - that makes me very uncomfortable and feels more than a little discriminatory (not as crazy as the post about where you can get a school filled with white children, but a close second, for sure).
NP here. What have you found uninspiring about Inspired Teaching that would make you consider a new school for your child? Outside of the location, I have heard great things about the school.
The location is part of it. I love Zoe, but I don't love my child's teacher that much (I'm not going to call her out by name), and I really believe more and more in bilingual education, so if we have a shot for Sela, we will take it. Of course, since there's a lottery, I have no way of knowing if we'll get into to Sela, so we might be back at IT again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GO SELA!!! As much as we love some aspects of YY, we are going to take a chance on Sela. We like the vibe of what they are trying to do, the organization, the energy, the free before and after care, etc. I have already found a Mandarin tutor for my daughter so she can continue her Chinese.
Soooo... are you already at YY and leaving for Sela? Or you are optimistic about your shot at getting in? If you're already at YY and leaving, what grade?
Just wondering... (YY hopeful who is thrilled every time I hear someone say they're leaving YY, which so far has been... no one!)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Very excited about Sela and glad they are joining our community. Have found Inspired Teaching less than inspired and am willing to try my luck on a new bilingual option. No connection to Hebrew, and not worried that our multi-racial family will be a "minority" at Sela. I have been really impressed with them thus far (getting such a great space so early, their leadership at the expo were very articulate, etc.) Do think there is a strange preoccupation with trashing Sela at every opportunity - that makes me very uncomfortable and feels more than a little discriminatory (not as crazy as the post about where you can get a school filled with white children, but a close second, for sure).
NP here. What have you found uninspiring about Inspired Teaching that would make you consider a new school for your child? Outside of the location, I have heard great things about the school.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:GO SELA!!! As much as we love some aspects of YY, we are going to take a chance on Sela. We like the vibe of what they are trying to do, the organization, the energy, the free before and after care, etc. I have already found a Mandarin tutor for my daughter so she can continue her Chinese.
Soooo... are you already at YY and leaving for Sela? Or you are optimistic about your shot at getting in? If you're already at YY and leaving, what grade?
Just wondering... (YY hopeful who is thrilled every time I hear someone say they're leaving YY, which so far has been... no one!)
Anonymous wrote:Certainly have noticed the "strange preoccupation" and find it troubling. Rise above, Sela! Even those who are happy at our current charters want you to succeed.
Anonymous wrote:GO SELA!!! As much as we love some aspects of YY, we are going to take a chance on Sela. We like the vibe of what they are trying to do, the organization, the energy, the free before and after care, etc. I have already found a Mandarin tutor for my daughter so she can continue her Chinese.
Anonymous wrote:Very excited about Sela and glad they are joining our community. Have found Inspired Teaching less than inspired and am willing to try my luck on a new bilingual option. No connection to Hebrew, and not worried that our multi-racial family will be a "minority" at Sela. I have been really impressed with them thus far (getting such a great space so early, their leadership at the expo were very articulate, etc.) Do think there is a strange preoccupation with trashing Sela at every opportunity - that makes me very uncomfortable and feels more than a little discriminatory (not as crazy as the post about where you can get a school filled with white children, but a close second, for sure).
Anonymous wrote:Very excited about Sela and glad they are joining our community. Have found Inspired Teaching less than inspired and am willing to try my luck on a new bilingual option. No connection to Hebrew, and not worried that our multi-racial family will be a "minority" at Sela. I have been really impressed with them thus far (getting such a great space so early, their leadership at the expo were very articulate, etc.) Do think there is a strange preoccupation with trashing Sela at every opportunity - that makes me very uncomfortable and feels more than a little discriminatory (not as crazy as the post about where you can get a school filled with white children, but a close second, for sure).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I like the idea of language immersion schools in general, but Hebrew doesn't seem like a great choice for a public charter given the low economic value of Hebrew in the global workforce. I am not Jewish, but I would send my kid there if it was my best academic option and the school was strict about no religious content. I would worry about not being Jewish only if more than 50% of the students were Jewish and then only if I felt my kid would feel like an outsider. In DC, I doubt that a high performing charter will get such a religious imbalance because of the strict lottery system. Seats at good schools are just too competitive. If it turns out to be a low performing school, maybe it will become religiously unbalanced, but then I imagine that even Jewish parents will eschew it.
By the way, most Jews in this country go to school where the majority of the school population is Christian-- just some perspective. Do you think Jewish children feel like outsiders?
Pinhead.
That tends to happen with minorities.![]()