Anonymous wrote:Surely FCPS releases demographic data on AAP program, doesn't it? Does anyone have the numbers?
Anonymous wrote:14:32 here. I was just curious because reading the AAP threads there seems to be some contradiction. Quotas were out years ago, but FCPS Young Scholars is focused on these populations which might lead one to believe FCPS is interested in increasing these populations in this program. It would seem that this might be a factor for 'borderline' applications/scores. Then there's anecdotal information on the board about no AA children at certain AAP centers. I'm not for or against anything, just curious.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The program is very diverse.
really? my white kid is a minority. Overwhelmingly Asian. Not a shot at them; just a fact.
but is he a German, Italian, Irish, British, Australian, Polish, Czech, Serbian, Greek, Slovakian, Scottish, Russian etc. native or any of those ethnicities and American?
Similarly Asians can be Chinese, Korean, Thai, Japanese, Indian, Malaysian, Singaporean, Vietnamese, Laotian, Indian, Sri Lankan, Cambodian, Indonesian, Burmese etc. or any of those backgrounds and American. To lump all Asians together is silly.
There's plenty of diversity in these schools.
those are nationalities, not races.
And don't be naive. The Asians that dominate AAP are from ony a small handful of those nationalities. [/quote
Americans interpret "nationality" as an ethnicity, when it fact it should be country of citizenship. That's what is says in my passport anyway.
Anonymous wrote:Do children of underrepresented populations (Hispanics and African-Americans in particular) receive preference in the process?
Anonymous wrote:Do children of underrepresented populations (Hispanics and African-Americans in particular) receive preference in the process?
Anonymous wrote:At AAP meeting at Churchill Road ES this year, there was not a single AA or Hispanic.
Anonymous wrote:
To be fair, the OP asked specifically about racial diversity, the nationality of the child was not mentioned.
Anonymous wrote:My adopted child is half-Hispanic and has brown skin. In choosing a school, I have been careful to find an environment where DC would be surrounded by children from a diverse racial background, even while I've been looking for positive role models across the board.
With the AAP program starting next year, I'm worried that the children accepted will end up being all white or asian, leaving DC as an outsider. Are there any experiences folks would care to share about diversity in the AAP program? Ours would be a new program starting next year, so I have no previous experience to base a decision on. Looking for comments across all programs...