Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Deal in DC.
+1.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We'd really like our kids to attend a diverse middle and then high school, but ones where kids of different races actually become friends and learn to respect each other. All the videos and online slideshows I see of schools in MoCo, Arlington, etc., indicate there's segregation, and I think that's almost worse than attending a more homogeneous school since it teaches kids to discriminate from an early age. Anyone got any ideas?
My idea is to stop seeing everything in terms of race.
What about diversity in SES, political views, language at home, geographic origin...
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so you are looking for the magic school filled with magic negros? so your kids will grow to understand diversity in all its richness and grow up to be compassionate and caring just by association? .
OP here: Not sure what your angle is but why would I not want my children to have friends of different ethnicities (and nationalities and religions)? I am in a mixed race/religion/nationality family, and I grew up with kids from a wide range of backgrounds. Mixing with people who are not exactly like you is a far more interesting and rewarding way to go through life. You should try it.
Oh, bless your heart. You do realize these kids self-segretate at school, right?
Np. Kids do self-segregate based on culture, which is based on race. I didn't realize the big difference in culture based on race in this country until I had kids. My DC has friends of different races and he does things with them outside of school separately. I always ask why they don't all do things together and his response is "they are just different and like different things." I really think the only thing you can do is to teach your kids to respect differences and to judge people as individuals rather than based on stereotypes. Model tolerance at home, and your kids will be fine.
+1 to both of the posters above
Schools can look diverse statistically but that doesn't really have any bearing on who your kid will be friends with.
There are several good options in the county. Takoma schools seem terrific. They're also diverse and inclusive which at a time of rampant hate crime at many other schools is to its credit.
The elementary schools is a focus school that is they have reduced class sizes. The STEM magnet program provides additional enrichment. Because of the size of the grades of roughly 200 children they are able to provide differentiated and enriched math and reading above and beyond most other schools.
The middle school has a GS rating of 10. It also houses one of the county's STEM middle school magnets. Presently, in boundary students have a slight advantage since a few seats are reserved.
The high-school, Blair, as someone stated in another thread, has many of the county's top performers but also has its share of low performers. This impacts its GS rating, but it also has more students admitted to top universities than any other high-school in the county according to the data published in Bethesda magazine. Blair also has about 3X the number of national merit kids than any W.
http://www.montgomeryschoolsmd.org/press/index.aspx?page=showrelease&id=4964
http://www.bethesdamagazine.com/Bethesda-Magazine/...cparticle=3&siarticle=2#artanc
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so you are looking for the magic school filled with magic negros? so your kids will grow to understand diversity in all its richness and grow up to be compassionate and caring just by association? .
OP here: Not sure what your angle is but why would I not want my children to have friends of different ethnicities (and nationalities and religions)? I am in a mixed race/religion/nationality family, and I grew up with kids from a wide range of backgrounds. Mixing with people who are not exactly like you is a far more interesting and rewarding way to go through life. You should try it.
Oh, bless your heart. You do realize these kids self-segretate at school, right?
Np. Kids do self-segregate based on culture, which is based on race. I didn't realize the big difference in culture based on race in this country until I had kids. My DC has friends of different races and he does things with them outside of school separately. I always ask why they don't all do things together and his response is "they are just different and like different things." I really think the only thing you can do is to teach your kids to respect differences and to judge people as individuals rather than based on stereotypes. Model tolerance at home, and your kids will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so you are looking for the magic school filled with magic negros? so your kids will grow to understand diversity in all its richness and grow up to be compassionate and caring just by association? .
OP here: Not sure what your angle is but why would I not want my children to have friends of different ethnicities (and nationalities and religions)? I am in a mixed race/religion/nationality family, and I grew up with kids from a wide range of backgrounds. Mixing with people who are not exactly like you is a far more interesting and rewarding way to go through life. You should try it.
Oh, bless your heart. You do realize these kids self-segretate at school, right?
Np. Kids do self-segregate based on culture, which is based on race. I didn't realize the big difference in culture based on race in this country until I had kids. My DC has friends of different races and he does things with them outside of school separately. I always ask why they don't all do things together and his response is "they are just different and like different things." I really think the only thing you can do is to teach your kids to respect differences and to judge people as individuals rather than based on stereotypes. Model tolerance at home, and your kids will be fine.
NP. *accept
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so you are looking for the magic school filled with magic negros? so your kids will grow to understand diversity in all its richness and grow up to be compassionate and caring just by association? .
OP here: Not sure what your angle is but why would I not want my children to have friends of different ethnicities (and nationalities and religions)? I am in a mixed race/religion/nationality family, and I grew up with kids from a wide range of backgrounds. Mixing with people who are not exactly like you is a far more interesting and rewarding way to go through life. You should try it.
Oh, bless your heart. You do realize these kids self-segretate at school, right?
Np. Kids do self-segregate based on culture, which is based on race. I didn't realize the big difference in culture based on race in this country until I had kids. My DC has friends of different races and he does things with them outside of school separately. I always ask why they don't all do things together and his response is "they are just different and like different things." I really think the only thing you can do is to teach your kids to respect differences and to judge people as individuals rather than based on stereotypes. Model tolerance at home, and your kids will be fine.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so you are looking for the magic school filled with magic negros? so your kids will grow to understand diversity in all its richness and grow up to be compassionate and caring just by association? .
OP here: Not sure what your angle is but why would I not want my children to have friends of different ethnicities (and nationalities and religions)? I am in a mixed race/religion/nationality family, and I grew up with kids from a wide range of backgrounds. Mixing with people who are not exactly like you is a far more interesting and rewarding way to go through life. You should try it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We'd really like our kids to attend a diverse middle and then high school, but ones where kids of different races actually become friends and learn to respect each other. All the videos and online slideshows I see of schools in MoCo, Arlington, etc., indicate there's segregation, and I think that's almost worse than attending a more homogeneous school since it teaches kids to discriminate from an early age. Anyone got any ideas?
Segregation? You mean students in the proportion of the general population? If you want every race equally represented , it would be a disproportional representation vis- a- vis the census and would leave rhem with a skewed view of the populace. By integrated then, do you mean " sheltered "?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:so you are looking for the magic school filled with magic negros? so your kids will grow to understand diversity in all its richness and grow up to be compassionate and caring just by association? .
OP here: Not sure what your angle is but why would I not want my children to have friends of different ethnicities (and nationalities and religions)? I am in a mixed race/religion/nationality family, and I grew up with kids from a wide range of backgrounds. Mixing with people who are not exactly like you is a far more interesting and rewarding way to go through life. You should try it.
Oh, bless your heart. You do realize these kids self-segretate at school, right?
Anonymous wrote:We'd really like our kids to attend a diverse middle and then high school, but ones where kids of different races actually become friends and learn to respect each other. All the videos and online slideshows I see of schools in MoCo, Arlington, etc., indicate there's segregation, and I think that's almost worse than attending a more homogeneous school since it teaches kids to discriminate from an early age. Anyone got any ideas?