Anonymous wrote:So as long as the school is "good", the immersion language part does not matter? There are families that send their kids to language charters when they have no affinity to the language but make it work. Not everyone's cup of tea but if it'll work for your family, good luck!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:NP here but I am also really curious why parents are choosing Sela. Im really not trying to be snarky, just genuinally curious. If you aren't jewish, hebrew is probably one of the least useful languages to teach these days. Or is it that any immersion school is good? or parents just want any new charter option if they have been shut out of other options? The cynic in me is thinking that a lot of parents are assuming Sela will be the only charter in the City to be majority white (due to the hebrew focus) and thats the real draw.
Outside of Jews the only other group of people who might be interested are fundamentalist Christians and religion majors.
I think parents are desperate for good charters.
Anonymous wrote:NP here but I am also really curious why parents are choosing Sela. Im really not trying to be snarky, just genuinally curious. If you aren't jewish, hebrew is probably one of the least useful languages to teach these days. Or is it that any immersion school is good? or parents just want any new charter option if they have been shut out of other options? The cynic in me is thinking that a lot of parents are assuming Sela will be the only charter in the City to be majority white (due to the hebrew focus) and thats the real draw.
Anonymous wrote:NP here but I am also really curious why parents are choosing Sela. Im really not trying to be snarky, just genuinally curious. If you aren't jewish, hebrew is probably one of the least useful languages to teach these days. Or is it that any immersion school is good? or parents just want any new charter option if they have been shut out of other options? The cynic in me is thinking that a lot of parents are assuming Sela will be the only charter in the City to be majority white (due to the hebrew focus) and thats the real draw.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How long did they say they would offer free aftercare?
I ask becasue another start up school (a few years ago) offered free, then lowcost, then a more expensive aftercare as the years went on.
They seemed to be confident that before/after school care would be concrete in years to come. Bc when asked about a shuttle from the metro, the director stated the researched it would cost them $90,000 for the year. And that they were unsure if that would be something they could fit in their present budget or in the years to come. The director mentioned they wanted to be consistent with what they offered.
Anonymous wrote:Well goyem if you want your kids to learn a language that will not be especially useful to them that's your choice.
Anonymous wrote:One thing I thought was interesting is that their principal is African-American female, their Executive Director is a Catholic white male, and their board seems to be (judging from names and Linkedin) racially diverse. They said they will have at least 50% of their staff being native Israelis (for the sake of argument, I will call them white in terms of how Americans use constructs of race and whiteness). I hope they make a commitment to having a diverse teaching force as well. I do wonder how American Jews view having a school lead by non-Jews, and non-Hebrew speakers (though the principal and the ED said they were studying). YY has certainly had a lot of criticism about their leadership.
Anonymous wrote:Seriously do they have big donors or something? Free meals and aftercare is certainly a drain on finances, even if not huge. I am also wondering how long it will last. That said, I'm interested!
Anonymous wrote:How long did they say they would offer free aftercare?
I ask becasue another start up school (a few years ago) offered free, then lowcost, then a more expensive aftercare as the years went on.